Obama Fires Back on Bush’s “Appeasement of Hitler” Accusation (W/Video)

Just moments ago, Obama fired back on Bush’s outrageous comparison to “Appeasement of Hitler” stating:


“I want to be perfectly clear with George Bush and John McCain, if George Bush and John MCain want to have a debate about protecting America, that is a debate I am willing to have anytime and any place, and that is a debate that I will win, because George Bush and John McCain have a lot to answer for.”

Obama Fires Back on Bush & McCain

Obama set the record straight, saying that he has never stated he will negotiate with terrorists and pointed out McCain’s hypocrisy on this issue which McCain readily denied today:


McCain camp denies he ‘flip-flopped’ on Hamas

The McCain campaign said Friday that his position had remained consistent: no dialogue with rogue or suspected terrorist nations or parties without pre-conditions.

“There should be no confusion, John McCain has always believed that serious engagement would require mandatory conditions and Hamas must change itself fundamentally — renounce violence, abandon its goal of eradicating Israel and accept a two-state solution,” McCain spokesman Tucker Bounds said.

The Arizona senator has criticized Barack Obama for his stated willingness to speak with hostile nations like Iran, and repeatedly raised what he has described as Hamas’ approval of Obama’s candidacy.

In perhaps the first major act of unity of the General Election, Democratic leaders are standing up to Bush’s despicable comparison to “appeasement of Hitler” remarks.

This morning, John Edwards appearing on the Today Show, defended Obama on Bush’s comparison of “apppeasement of Hitler” stating, “It is beneath the President of the United States to make these kind of clearly political accusations when he is addressing the people of Israel on the 60th anniversary of Israel. It shouldn’t have been done, particularly in combination with what has been an absolutely disasterous foreign policy.”

Edwards also said he’s not interested in taking the Vice President position but will work with Obama’s team during the campaign and his administration stating, “right now we’ve got to focus on getting Barack Obama elected as the President of the United States.”

As TomP reported in his diary on DailyKos, “Democrats Coming Together: Clinton and Rubin Defend Obama from Bush Charges” Senator Clinton and her foreign policy advisor, Rubin, also defended Obama:


Rubin stated, “The Obama campaign was right to criticize the president for his remarks and for engaging in partisan politics while overseas.”

Biden weighed in by calling it “bullsh*t:”


Joe Biden, the chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said that if the president disagrees so strongly with the idea of talking to Iran, then he needs to fire his secretaries of state and defense, both of whom Biden said have pushed to sit down with the Iranians.

“This is bulls**t. This is malarkey. This is outrageous. Outrageous for the president of the United States to go to a foreign country, sit in the Knesset … and make this kind of ridiculous statement,” he said.

“He’s the guy who’s weakened us. He’s the guy that’s increased the number of terrorists in the world. His policies have produced this vulnerability the United States has.”

Even Chris Matthews offered a reality check on Bush’s remarks pointing out that appeasement is not talking with leaders but giving up the farm.

As Obama stated today, Bush and McCain have a lot to answer for. The days of lies and fear mongering are quickly coming to an end.


It is sad that President Bush would use a speech to the Knesset on the 6Oth anniversary of Israel’s independence to launch a false political attack. It is time to turn the page on eight years of policies that have strengthened Iran and failed to secure America or our ally Israel. Instead of tough talk and no action, we need to do what Kennedy, Nixon and Reagan did and use all elements of American power — including tough, principled, and direct diplomacy – to pressure countries like Iran and Syria. George Bush knows that I have never supported engagement with terrorists, and the President’s extraordinary politicization of foreign policy and the politics of fear do nothing to secure the American people or our stalwart ally Israel.”

abc news

9 comments

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    • TomP on May 16, 2008 at 21:07

    Thanks.

    • geomoo on May 16, 2008 at 22:41

    I had not seen Obama’s speech.  Thanks for the link.  Others were saying that the meeting that followed it was great as well, with Obama steering things but letting citizens do most of the talking.  He’s a breath of fresh air.  His speech was filled with terrific quotes.

  1. When someone with the oratory skills of Barack H. Obama responds to the foot stomping frustrated lunacy of George W. Bush with calm and truthful certitude, the White House is forced to retreat.

    Dana Perino claims that the “President” was actually referring to Jimmy Carter’s recent dialogs with Hamas.

    Dan Froomkin calls this a “ludicrous denial”, in a very well written article worth reading at WaPo if you have a subscription.

    http://www.washingtonpost.com/

  2. He handled the Q & A session following the speech beautifully too.  He said he’d meet with John McCain any time, any place to debate foreign policy.

    • Benny on May 17, 2008 at 01:32

    That comment was totally out of line.  I was disturbed when I heard it.  

  3. when Bush’s granddaddy traded with the Nazis…  and if there’s any comparison between current events and the Holocaust, it has to do with the people of the Gaza Strip starving to death (much as the Warsaw Ghetto did) because the IDF bulldozed their farms and orchards and cut off their access to the outside.  

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