Trump seeks to build up U.S. military,
commander in chief test looms
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[September 08, 2016]
By Steve Holland
PHILADELPHIA (Reuters) - Republican
presidential nominee Donald Trump pledged on Wednesday to launch a new
U.S. military buildup as he and Democratic rival Hillary Clinton compete
over who would be more competent at leading the armed forces as
commander in chief.
Buoyed by polls showing him regaining some ground on Clinton, Trump
portrayed himself in an address in Philadelphia
as a defender of traditional Republican values on national security but
with a distinct unwillingness to launch new wars in the Middle East.
He said he would ask Pentagon leaders to present a plan within 30 days
to destroy Islamic State if he wins the Nov 8 election. But he said any
action would be "tempered with realism" and would avoid "toppling
regimes with no plan for what to do the day after."
"I am proposing a new foreign policy focused on advancing America’s core
national interests, promoting regional stability, and producing an
easing of tensions in the world. This will require rethinking the failed
policies of the past," he said.
The New York businessman gave Wednesday's speech in measured tones and
offered more policy details than he often does at campaign rallies.
He called for hundreds more new U.S. ships, planes and submarines, and
vowed to train thousands more combat troops as well as develop a "state
of the art" missile defense system, starting with modernizing 22 Navy
cruisers at a cost of about $220 million apiece.
He told supporters at the invitees-only event in the Union League of
Philadelphia that America is under threat like never before from foes
like radical Islamists, North Korea and China.
"Our adversaries are chomping at the bit," he said, blaming President
Barack Obama and his former secretary of state Clinton for allowing the
United States to lose global influence.
He accused Obama of wanting to reduce the size of the Army to 450,000
troops. Trump said he would raise U.S. troop levels to 540,000. He
echoed late President Ronald Reagan in calling for "peace through
strength."
Trump has some convincing to do on foreign policy. Many national
security experts from past Republican administrations have declared him
unfit for the Oval Office due to his temperament and lack of experience.
Veterans and relatives of military staff killed in action decried what
they called Trump’s unreadiness to be commander in chief at a news
conference outside Trump Tower in New York on Wednesday.
"Please do not disrespect Gold Star families for you have not sacrificed
anything for our freedoms," said Sue Niederer, whose son was killed
while serving in Iraq.
"Sacrifice is not in your vocabulary [or] in your nature,” she said of
Trump, who was criticized by fellow Republicans for getting into a
verbal fight in July with the parents of a Muslim U.S. soldier killed in
Iraq.
END THE SEQUESTER
Trump said on Wednesday he would pay for his buildup by lifting the
defense spending caps mandated by the U.S. Congress in 2011 and known as
the "sequester."
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Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump speaks at the Union
League of Philadelphia in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S. September
7, 2016. REUTERS/Mike Segar
He said he would also seek budget reforms, attrition in the federal
work force, root out inefficiencies in government spending and
collect billions of dollars in unpaid taxes by Americans. Trump did
not give an overall cost estimate for his buildup.
The latest Reuters/Ipsos poll shows Trump with 40 percent support vs
39 percent for Clinton, effectively ending Clinton's bump up in the
polls after the Democratic nominating convention. Other polls show
Clinton's lead has shrunk.
Later on Wednesday, the election opponents are to make back-to-back
appearances at an NBC "commander in chief" forum in New York,
Clinton first, followed by Trump. It will offer a prelude of what to
expect from them when national security issues come up in their
three presidential debates later this month and next.
Clinton is trying to raise questions about Trump's temperament and
fitness for office given his history of incendiary rhetoric, such as
declaring Obama "the founder of ISIS," an acronym for the Islamic
State militant group.
Clinton's campaign accused Trump of relying on "childish insults"
during the Philadelphia speech. "As Hillary Clinton has said, anyone
you can bait this easily is not someone you can trust be Commander
in Chief," Communications Director Jennifer Palmieri said in a
statement.
Neither candidate had an advantage when it came to national
security, according to Reuters/Ipsos polling in August.
Respondents were evenly split between Clinton and Trump when asked
“which presidential candidate do you believe will be better at
keeping us safe?”.
Trump accuses Clinton of backing "military adventurism" for her
handling of conflicts in Libya and the Middle East while she was
Obama's secretary of state from 2009-13.
Trump's engagement with the Middle East, by contrast, would be to
work with governments even if they were not necessarily strong on
democracy, a senior aide said.
(Additional reporting by Amanda Becker in Washington and Gina
Cherelus in New York; Editing by Alistair Bell)
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