As the presidential candidates prepare for Monday’s final debate on foreign policy, a leading GOP senator is warning his own party’s nominee to avoid sounding and acting like either the 43rd or 44th president.
Senator Lindsey Graham told NBC’s Chuck Todd that Mitt Romney should tout a strategic foreign policy.
“Learn from Bush’s mistakes, don’t oversell to the American people,” he said. “There’s a disconnect between the narrative that President Obama’s giving about the world in large and the reality. Very similar to what happened in Iraq.” He reiterated once again, “learn from Bush’s mistakes” and added “learn from Obama’s mistakes. Be smart. Listen to your commanders.”
Both presidential candidates are expected to clash over Libya once again, after last week’s heated exchange over the September 11, 2012 attack in Benghazi. At the last debate, Mitt Romney drew sustained criticism after arguing that the president failed to declare the Benghazi attack as terrorist-related during his immediate response. In fact the president condemned “acts of terror” in his initial statement, but his administration later suggested the attack grew out of street protests against an anti-Muslim video.
On Sunday, GOP Sen. Marco Rubio reiterated the Romney camp’s claims that the Obama administration shifted its stance on the nature of the attack continually and its explanation was not coherent for days.
In contrast, the Washington Post revealed last week that an intelligence report on the assessment of the attack, conducted by the CIA four days after the incident, tracked closely to the public statements of UN Ambassador Susan Rice:








