NASHUA, New Hampshire — Which one of these Republican candidates is not like the other? When it comes to foreign policy and national security, the clear answer is Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul — and he wants New Hampshire voters to know it.
“There’s a group of folks in our party who would have troops in six countries right now, maybe more,” Paul told the crowd at the New Hampshire GOP Leadership Summit on Saturday.
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The high-profile kickoff to the first-in the-nation Republican primary contest features almost every declared and undeclared presidential hopeful in the field. Friday’s lineup included Florida Sen. Marco Rubio, former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, and former Texas Gov. Rick Perry, among others. Saturday’s lineup is set to include Texas Sen. Ted Cruz, South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham, Ohio Gov. John Kasich, Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal, former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee, and businesswoman Carly Fiorina.
Paul played up his non-interventionist take on foreign affairs and libertarian philosophy on civil rights for a crowd that had just heard speaker after speaker run hard in the opposite direction. Still, the Kentucky senator joined the other candidates in criticizing Hillary Clinton’s handling of security in Benghazi ahead of an attack that killed Ambassador Chris Stevens in 2012.
“I think that her dereliction of duty, her not doing her job, her not providing security for our forces, for our diplomatic missions should forever preclude her from holding higher office,” Paul said.
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Unlike his rivals, however, he pivoted from his Clinton attack to ask, “why the hell did we ever go into Libya in the first place?”
“It is something, if you watch closely, that will separate me from [the other] Republicans,” Paul said. “The other Republicans will criticize Obama or Hillary Clinton on foreign policy but they would have done the same thing ten times over.”









