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"You know, pure private enterprise, more closely probably to what Gov. Romney is involved with, but if it's government-sponsored, it's a mixture of business and government. It's very, very dangerous. Some people say, if it goes to extreme, it becomes fascism," he said. Paul also spoke out forcefully in the debate against military engagement with Iran even if evidence surfaced that the country had nuclear capability
-- a reminder that his strongly isolationist foreign policy views are well out of step with many conservative voters. Paul's supporters push back on this criticism, noting that many tea party activists have expressed skepticism about expensive and prolonged U.S. military entanglements overseas. Paul has also singled out Gingrich for hypocrisy on committing troops to war. In an interview this week, Paul, who served as an Air Force physician during the Vietnam era, noted that Gingrich had avoided that conflict. "He supports all the wars in the Middle East a thousand times more than I would," Paul said Thursday on Fox News. "But, you know when, in the 1960s when I was drafted in the military ... he got several deferments. He chose not to go. Now he'll send our kids to war." Paul's advisers say the attacks on Gingrich are primarily a way for Paul to showcase his own starkly different views on politics and conservatism. "Newt Gingrich chose to leverage his position in Congress into profiting heavily as a Washington insider," Paul strategist Trygve Olson said. "We wanted to raise these issues and show how they contrast with Ron Paul's principled approach." Olson, like several other Paul advisers, worked on the 2010 campaign of Paul's son, Rand, who won a highly competitive Senate race in Kentucky. The team has brought a degree of professionalism to the elder Paul's unconventional campaign that was largely missing in 2008. Jon Downs, who produces the campaign's ads, got his start working for George W. Bush's presidential campaign in 2000. Brendan Nyhan, a Dartmouth College political scientist and media critic, said that Paul's under-the-radar campaign was likely to bear fruit both in Iowa and New Hampshire, where his anti-Gingrich ads have been running strong. "He could certainly beat expectations in both places," Nyhan said. "He gets ignored, but he has money, good ads and could do some damage. He's dangerous."
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