After officials said one of the Paris gunmen might have slipped
into Europe among refugees fleeing Syria's war, more Republicans
voiced their opposition to the 10,000 Syrian refugees the White
House wants to admit in the coming year.
"Bringing people into this country from that area of the world I
think is a huge mistake," Republican candidate Ben Carson said on
the "Fox News Sunday" program, echoing comments by fellow Republican
contenders on Saturday.
While the U.S. number is a fraction of the hundreds of thousands of
refugees that Europe is prepared to take, the plan has become a main
point of attack for candidates seeking to show a tougher stance on
terrorism.
The deadliest attack in Europe in a decade could end up reshaping
the race to elect a U.S. president in 2016.
Clinton, a former secretary of state under President Barack Obama,
told a debate on Saturday in Iowa that she supported raising the
refugee intake to 65,000, but only with a careful screening and
vetting process.
Ben Rhodes, deputy national security adviser for Obama, defended the
administration's vetting process as thorough and made a humanitarian
appeal.
"We're also dealing with people who've suffered the horrors of war,
women and children, orphans. We can't just shut our doors to those
people," he said on NBC's "Meet the Press."
Earlier this month, the administration announced plans to accelerate
the process for Syrian refugees hoping to enter the United States
with new screening outposts in Iraq and Lebanon.
More on the Syrian refugee screening process
The events in Paris have highlighted a double-edged foreign policy
problem for Clinton. As America's top diplomat from 2009 to 2013,
she has international experience none of her rivals can match but
can also be called to account for failings on her watch.
Clinton's Democratic and Republican opponents said the
administration had misjudged the Middle East and underestimated
Islamic State, the militant group that claimed credit for bomb and
gun attacks that killed at least 132 people in Paris on Friday.
Republican presidential candidate Senator Lindsey Graham said on
CNN's "State of the Union" on Sunday that if he were elected, the
United States would be "part of a world-wide force to destroy ISIL,"
another acronym for Islamic State.
"Hillary Clinton," he added "seems to be disconnected from what you
need to do. She won’t embrace boots on the ground."
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VETTING UNDER SCRUTINY
Florida Senator Marco Rubio, another Republican candidate, said on
ABC's "This Week with George Stephanopoulos" that just one vetting
oversight could jeopardize public safety.
"You can have a thousand people come in and 999 of them are just
poor people fleeing oppression and violence, but one of them is an
ISIS fighter. ... If that's the case, you have a problem," Rubio
said.
Fellow Republican contenders, Ohio Governor John Kasich and former
Florida Governor Jeb Bush, have been open to accepting more
refugees, but they echoed Rubio's concerns about vetting.
"We can't be in a position of inviting the enemy in, and frankly we
better be careful about looking at Americans that have traveled" in
the region, Kasich said on Fox News' "Sunday Morning Futures with
Maria Bartiromo."
Bush said on "Meet the Press" the United States had a special
responsibility to help Syrian Christians, who he said had no place
in their homeland.
Ahead of the first Democratic nominating contest in Iowa on Feb. 1,
Clinton has opened a commanding lead over main party challenger
Bernie Sanders, who argues the invasion of Iraq, which Clinton
supported in a U.S. Senate vote in 2003, led to the rise of al Qaeda
and Islamic State.
For more on the 2016 U.S. presidential race and to learn about the
undecided voters who determine elections, visit the Reuters website.
(http://www.reuters.com/election2016/the-undecided/).
(Additional reporting by Krista Hughes and Alana Wise; Writing by
Kevin Drawbaugh; Editing by Mary Milliken and Peter Cooney)
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