In her first public appearance in more than a month, Hillary Clinton strongly backed President Obama on both domestic and foreign policy, while saying western democracies like the U.S. and Canada are in an epic “contest” with Islamic extremists and authoritarians.
Clinton spoke to more than 2,000 in Winnipeg, Canada, at a lecture series sponsored by a Canadian bank. She was not asked whether she plans to run for president in 2016, and dodged questions on the Keystone XL pipeline, a thorn in the side of U.S.-Canada relations.
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“You won’t get me to talk about Keystone because I have steadily made clear that I will not express an opinion,” she said while being questioned by Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce CEO Victor Dodig during the Q&A portion of her appearance. The former secretary of state has said she will not weigh in on the controversial pipeline until the Obama administration’s review of the project is complete.
But the likely presidential candidate had plenty of other things to say on a range of other topics.
Iran: Clinton gave a full-throated endorsement of President Obama’s approach to Iran and its nuclear program, rebuffing Republicans and Democrats in Congress who are trying to impose new sanctions on the country. She said the new sanctions, pushed by a bipartisan group of lawmakers friendly to Israel, could lead to “a very serious strategic error.”
They would give Russia and China “an excuse” to drop out of multilateral negotiations or push for a weaker deal with Iran, she said. “Why do we want to be the catalyst for the collapse of negotiations?”
“I feel very strongly about this,” she continued. “If we get to the point where [the Iranians] cheat … all bets are off. But right now, the status quo that we’re in is, in my view, in our interests, so I don’t want to do anything that disrupts that status quo.”
The sanctions are going to be major flashpoint for Obama with his own party this year, so the backing of the party’s likely future leader could be a major asset. “This should help stiffen the backbone of Democrats who were already reluctant to support new sanctions. Hopefully, unified Democratic opposition to sanctions will convince its sponsors to stop their dangerous push,” said Stephen Miles, the advocacy director of a group of 40 anti-war groups called the Win Without War Coalition.
Paris attacks: In her first public remarks on the matter, Clinton said recent terror attacks in Paris and elsewhere have “sharpened the true contours of this struggle” between Western democracy and Islamic extremists. “Islam itself is not the enemy,” she said, but rather a “vicious few” who promote an “ideology of hate.”
“Like previous ideological struggles, this is a generational challenge and it must be waged on many fronts,” she said, calling for an attack on extremist propaganda.
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