The same Iraq question that Jeb Bush struggled to answer on four different occasions was posed to GOP presidential candidate Marco Rubio on Sunday — and it wasn’t any easier for the senator.
Through a tangled interview, Fox News Sunday host Chris Wallace asked the “question of the week,” as he put it to Rubio: “Given what we know now, would you have invaded Iraq in 2003?”
Related: Iraq invasion re-litigated on the 2016 campaign trail
But first, Wallace showed two recent clips of Rubio answering the question in different ways. On Fox News this March, when asked if it was a mistake to go to war in Iraq, Rubio said “the world is a better place because Saddam Hussein doesn’t run Iraq.” Then, during an interview with Charlie Rose this month, when asked if after finding out there were no weapons of mass destruction, would he have not been in favor of an Iraqi invasion, the senator said he wouldn’t have been in favor of going into Iraq.
“Isn’t that a flip?” Wallace asked Rubio Sunday. Rubio defended his answers, saying “these are two different questions,” and attempted to begin to explain “the way the real world works.”
“It was not a mistake. This is the way the real world works. The president, based on the information that was provided –” Rubio said, referring to former President George W. Bush.
“But she was saying based on the information … what we know now,” Wallace interjected, referencing the answer Rubio gave Fox co-host Julie Roginsky six weeks ago.
“Based on what we know now, I wouldn’t have thought Manny Pacquiao was going to beat in that fight,” Rubio cut back in.
Wallace continued to repeat that the questions are the same, attempting to prove that Rubio was giving contradicting answers, but an equally frustrated Rubio shot back: “No, it was not the same question. The question was whether it was a mistake, and my answer was it was not a mistake. I still say it was not a mistake.”
“But based on what we know now –” Wallace said, leading to several more bouts of interruptions.
Rubio continued to argue that the question is not the same when presented in hindsight.









