Russian President Vladimir Putin is “far
more” of a leader than Barack Obama, Republican presidential nominee
Donald Trump said Wednesday, echoing previous praise for the Kremlin
strongman.
Putin is “very much of a leader,” Trump
said in a televised interview, where he and Democratic nominee Hillary
Clinton were separately grilled over their national security and
military credentials.
Trump has made no secret of his admiration for Putin, who last year praised the US businessman as “very outstanding.”
Putin “has very strong control over a country,” Trump said.
“It’s a very different system, and I
don’t happen to like the system. But certainly in that system he’s been a
leader, far more than our president has been a leader.”
Before Trump spoke, Clinton too was
asked about her security smarts, but also faced questions on the
sprawling email scandal that continues to overshadow her White House
run.
The interviewer, NBC’s Matt Lauer, asked
why it wasn’t “disqualifying” for Clinton to have handled government
emails on a private server while secretary of state.
“It was a mistake to have a personal
account. I would certainly not do it again. I make no excuses for it,”
Clinton responded, stressing she had not improperly handled classified
information.
The forum, held aboard historic aircraft
carrier the USS Intrepid, docked off New York City, did not put the
candidates head-to-head, and Lauer asked them not to waste time
insulting each other.
For the most part they refrained, though
Clinton said Trump had refused to take responsibility for his initial
support for the Iraq War. Trump went on to attack Clinton over her
emails.
The first debate between the one-time friends turned bitter rivals is scheduled for September 26.
– Trump’s military plans –
Earlier Wednesday, Trump pledged to
increase US military spending — already at levels far higher than any
other nation — and to demand a plan to beat the Islamic State (IS) group
if he becomes president.
The Republican presidential candidate told supporters he would ask generals to craft a roadmap to the IS group’s annihilation.
Trump also outlined proposals for an
active army of around 540,000 troops, an air force of at least 1,200
fighter aircraft, a 36-battalion marine corps and a navy of 350 surface
ships and submarines — though he provided no details on how he would
persuade Congress to pay for it all.
Apart from consulting with top generals, Trump remained vague on how he would defeat IS.
“Is the plan you’ve been hiding this whole time asking someone else for their plan?” Lauer asked.
Trump said he didn’t “want to broadcast to the enemy what my plan is.”
The United States for more than two
years has led a coalition bombing IS in Iraq and Syria, and training
local partners on the ground to fight the jihadists.
The air campaign started slowly, but IS
now appears to be on a back foot, having suffered tens of thousands of
casualties and losing many of the important towns it once controlled
across its self-declared “caliphate.”
Clinton provided more specifics, stressing IS would be defeated without US ground troops being deployed.
Currently, America has thousands of
troops in Iraq and hundreds in Syria, but their mission is to train
local forces and not engage in direct combat with IS.
– Attacking the generals –
In a move likely to enrage the brass in
the Defense Department, Trump also blasted the current status of
America’s top officers, saying they had been hamstrung by Obama and
Clinton.
“The generals have been reduced to rubble,” Trump said, before noting he had “faith in certain of the commanders.”
Trump, who has campaigned on a platform
railing against illegal immigration, also said he had no problem with
existing US policy of allowing undocumented immigrants to stay in
America if they serve in the military.
Most national polls show a tight race
with Clinton in the lead as the US presidential race enters its home
stretch with just nine weeks until the November 8 election.
However, Trump is ahead by a wide margin
of 19 percentage points among military and veteran voters, according to
the latest NBC News/SurveyMonkey Weekly Election Tracking poll.
His 55 to 36 percent lead with the group
comes despite recent remarks against the parents of a Muslim-American
soldier killed in Iraq, members of the so-called Gold Star families who
have lost loved ones in military service.
Trump also angered many in the military
community with mocking remarks against US Senator and former prisoner of
war John McCain for being captured in Vietnam.
AFP
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