Republican
candidates Bush and Trump clash over 9/11 remarks
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[October 19, 2015]
By Alana Wise
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Republican
presidential candidate Jeb Bush transitioned from defense to offense on
Sunday after criticism from rival Donald Trump that his brother, former
President George W. Bush, carried some blame for the Sept. 11, 2001,
attacks.
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Trump, the flamboyant front-runner in the 15-candidate Republican
field, again provoked a tit-for-tat with Bush on Friday by saying
his brother must share some of the blame for the attacks that
occurred during his first year in office.
"Look, my brother responded to a crisis, and he did it as you would
hope a president would do," Bush said on CNN’s "State of the Union."
"The great majority of Americans believe that. And I don't know why
he [Trump] keeps bringing this up."
Bush said Trump's comments about the Sept. 11 attacks called his
credibility into question. The former Florida governor attacked
Trump's foreign policy credentials and compared his grip on
international issues to a reality television show the billionaire
businessman formerly hosted.
"Across the spectrum of foreign policy, Mr. Trump talks about things
that - as though he's still on 'The Apprentice,'" Bush said.
Trump doubled down on his comments during an appearance on "Fox News
Sunday," using a oft-repeated Jeb Bush phrase - that his brother
"kept us safe" - against him.
"Jeb said: 'We were safe with my brother. We were safe.' Well the
World Trade Center just fell down," Trump said on the program.
"I'm not blaming George Bush, but I don't want Jeb Bush to say: 'My
brother kept us safe,' because September 11th was one of the worst
days in the history of this country."
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Trump added that his own tough stance on illegal immigration would
have made it difficult for the attacks to be carried out in the
first place.
"I believe that if I were running things, I doubt those families
would have - I doubt that those people would have been in the
country," Trump said.
The 19 hijackers in the attacks all entered the United States
legally on temporary visas, although a 9/11 commission report
criticized flaws in the system that handled their applications.
Bush likened Trump's comments to blaming President Franklin
Roosevelt for the World War Two attack on Pearl Harbor.
"Next week, Mr. Trump is probably going to say that FDR was around
when Japan attacked Pearl Harbor," he said. "It's what you do after
that matters. And that's the sign of leadership."
(Editing by Doina Chiacu, Alan Crosby and Nick Zieminski)
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