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"If he wants to take credit for it I have no problem with that at all. I wish he wouldn't use it as a source of negative campaigning. I think that's a big mistake," he said. Romney also tried to clarify another comment from 2007, when candidate Obama was being criticized for saying he would conduct unannounced raids inside Pakistan if high-level terror targets were found to be hiding there. Romney criticized Obama at the time, saying: "I do not concur in the words of Barack Obama in a plan to enter an ally of ours." Romney suggested Tuesday that he had simply criticized Obama for signaling his intentions about what he would do as president. "We always reserve the right to go anywhere to get Osama bin Laden," Romney said. "I said that very clearly in the response that I made, but that I thought
-- and many people believed as I did -- that it was naive on the part of the president at that time, the candidate, to say he would go into Pakistan." Before visiting the fire station, Romney ate breakfast with the current mayor, Michael Bloomberg, a Republican-turned-independent who has avoided endorsing anyone in the presidential race so far. Asked whether he would make an endorsement, Bloomberg didn't shut the door. "I'll see down the road," he said after Romney had departed. He said Obama and Romney are "both very smart, very formidable candidates. They're very different and they give the public a real choice."
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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