Republican presidential hopeful Jeb Bush aggressively went after Hillary Clinton Tuesday night over her tenure as secretary of state, linking her to a broad overall criticism of the Obama administration’s actions in the Middle East.
“Who can seriously argue that America and our friends are safer today than in 2009, when the president and Secretary Clinton — the storied ‘team of rivals’ — took office?” the GOP presidential candidate said in a foreign policy speech delivered at the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library.
RELATED: Clinton and Bush trade fire on Iraq
Bush’s ramped-up rhetoric toward the Democratic presidential front-runner comes after facing criticism earlier this month for not responding more strongly to Clinton’s own critiques of his record.
“Like the president himself, she had opposed the surge … then joined in claiming credit for its success … then stood by as that hard-won victory by American and allied forces was thrown away,” Bush said of Clinton. “In all her record-setting travels, she stopped by Iraq exactly once.”
Clinton’s campaign launched its own counter-attack earlier in the day when senior policy advisor Jake Sullivan held a conference call with reporters to say Bush’s attacks were false and questioned the former Florida governor’s strategy in starting a foreign policy debate over Iraq.
“What is he suggesting we do differently? More boots on the ground?” Sullivan asked. “If that is what he wants — more American boots on the ground in combat in Iraq — he should come out and say so.”
Tuesday night’s speech comes after early missteps in the campaign in which Bush fumbled questions of whether or not he would have ordered the invasion of Iraq in 2003 — ultimately saying that, knowing what we know now, he would not have authorized the war.
Addressing the Iraq issue, Bush said, “No leader or policymaker involved will claim to have gotten everything right in the region, Iraq especially.”He called the surge of military and diplomatic operations a bright spot after failures in both intelligence and combat.
But Bush said the success of the 2007 surge was scuttled. Hitting Obama and Clinton once again, Bush said they were “so eager to be the history-makers, they failed to be the peacemakers.”
The critiques of Obama and Clinton centered on the United States’ withdrawal from Iraq — a move Bush called a “fatal error” — that he says created space for ISIS to grow and opportunity for countries like Iran to exude influence.
Clinton’s campaign was quick to pounce on that attack, saying, “It was President [George W.] Bush who set the withdraw date for Americans from Iraq — not President Obama.”
Jordan Frasier








