Hillary Clinton calls for U.S. to bomb
Syrian air fields
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[April 07, 2017]
By Barbara Goldberg
NEW YORK (Reuters) - In her first interview
since her stunning presidential election defeat by Republican rival
Donald Trump, Hillary Clinton on Thursday called for the United States
to bomb Syrian air fields.
Clinton, in an interview at the Women in the World Summit in New York,
also called Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election a
theft more damaging than Watergate.
Asked whether she now believes that failing to take a tougher stand
against Syria was her worst foreign policy mistake as secretary of state
under President Barack Obama, Clinton said she favored more aggressive
action against Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.
"I think we should have been more willing to confront Assad," Clinton
said in the interview, conducted by New York Times columnist Nicholas
Kristof.
"I really believe we should have and still should take out his air
fields and prevent him from being able to use them to bomb innocent
people and drop sarin gas on them."
Clinton noted that she had advocated for a no-fly zone in Syria after
leaving government, something that Obama opposed.
Her remarks came two days after a poison gas attack in Syria that killed
at least 70 people, many of them children. The U.S. government believes
the chemical agent sarin was used in the attack. The United States and
other Western countries blamed Assad's armed forces for the worst
chemical attack in Syria in more than four years.
Trump said on Thursday that "something should happen" with Assad after
the attack, as the Pentagon and the White House studied military
options.
When asked about Russian interference in the presidential election she
lost as the Democratic candidate in November, Clinton called for a
bipartisan investigation.
"I don't want any Republican candidate to be subjected to what I was
subjected to....I don't want anybody running campaigns to have their
communications stolen," she said.
U.S. intelligence agencies have said that Russia provided hacked
material from the Democratic National Committee to WikiLeaks through a
third party. Russia has denied the hacking allegations.
"It was a more effective theft even than Watergate," Clinton told
Kristof before an audience of about 3,000 people at New York's Lincoln
Center, referring to the U.S. political scandal of the 1970s that led to
the resignation of President Richard Nixon.
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Former U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton appears on stage at
the Women in the World Summit in the Manhattan borough of New York,
U.S. April 6, 2017. REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton
"We aren't going to let somebody sitting in the Kremlin, with bots
and trolls, try to mix up our election. We've got to end that and we
have to make sure that is a bipartisan, American commitment."
Representative Devin Nunes, a Republican, earlier on Thursday
stepped aside from the congressional inquiry into Russian meddling
in the U.S. presidential election because he is under investigation
for disclosing classified information. Representative Mike Conaway,
the second-ranked Republican on the House of Representatives
intelligence committee, will now lead the probe.
Clinton attributed her White House loss to both Wikileaks and FBI
Director James Comey's sending a bombshell letter to Congress only
days before the election announcing he was reinstating an
investigation into her emails.
Asked whether it was bittersweet to watch the stumbles of the Trump
administration in its early days, she declined to agree.
"I don't take any pleasure in seeing the kind of chaotic
functioning," Clinton said.
Clinton said she has no intention of another run for public office
and said she is writing a book that, in part, delves into just what
derailed her attempt to become America's first woman president.
"For people who are interested in this, the nearly 66 million people
who voted for me, I want to give as clear and as credible an
explanation as I can."
(Reporting by Barbara Goldberg; Editing by Leslie Adler)
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