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Here's a look at what they've said: Gingrich, the former House Speaker from Georgia, has faced criticism for his comments on the crisis. He demanded a no-fly zone after Obama said Gadhafi needed to be ousted. Then, Gingrich viewed the focus shifting to a humanitarian mission; Gingrich said he didn't support U.S. involvement for that objective. He also said in one interview that air strikes would oust Gadhafi and then said jets would not be able to end his rule now that fighting had gone into the cities. Romney, who came up short in his 2008 White House bid and is to enter the 2012 race next month, has said he supports the mission in Libya. He's just not a fan of the president who started it or his approach to international affairs. Pawlenty, who entered the presidential
race this week, offered a detailed critique of what could have
been done differently to guarantee a Gadhafi ouster. Barbour told a Jackson, Miss., radio station: "we haven't provided leadership in this administration. In fact, the Obama administration's position has been to say,
'You know, we're just one of the boys. We're not going to try to be the leader.'" He ignored the fact that the United States has led the airstrikes over Libya under the auspices of a United Nations resolution authorizing force in the interest of preventing a humanitarian crisis. And he offered no opinion on an appropriate U.S. response. Sarah Palin, the 2008 GOP vice presidential nominee and former Alaska governor, said: "We've received different messages from our president and from his advisers as to what it is that we are doing there and what the mission is."
"Thus far, the president has been unable to construct a foreign policy, any foreign policy," Romney told Hugh Hewitt's radio show. "I think it's fair to ask, you know, what is it that explains the absence of any discernible foreign policy from the president of the United States?" He didn't detail what the Libya policy would be under a Romney administration.
"The rebels at that time were on the verge of overthrowing
Gadhafi. They had the momentum. They were in position to do it,"
Pawlenty told Fox News Channel. He said Obama left the rebels
without backup and Gadhafi ready to squelch them. But he didn't
say what he would do differently now; aides pointed to the
transcript when given the chance to respond.
She offered a response about how a President Palin would have handled the situation. But it was vague: if she were president, "certainly there would have been more decisiveness."
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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