?:reviewBody
|
-
It feels a little like 2003 lately, with Iraq in crisis and former Vice President Dick Cheney arguing for a muscular intervention to thwart the rise of violent anti-American extremists. Cheney thrust himself into the punditry ring with a Wall Street Journa l op-ed that eviscerated President Barack Obama’s foreign policy and spurred follow-up TV interviews. ABC This Week ’s Jonathan Karl asked Cheney about Obama on June 22, saying it almost seems like you’re accusing the president of treason here, saying he’s intentionally bringing America down a notch. Obama’s withdrawal of troops from Iraq and Afghanistan will allow more terrorists to gain a foothold in those countries and threaten U.S. interests, Cheney said. (We previously checked his claim that the number of terrorists has doubled, which we rated True .) The scope of the problem, in part, is based upon an unwillingness by the president to recognize we have a problem, Cheney said. They're still living back in the day when they claimed we got (Osama) bin Laden, terrorism problem solved. That wasn’t true then, it’s even less true today. The question for us in this fact-check: Did Obama declare the terrorism problem solved after special forces killed bin Laden in 2011? The answer: not that we can find. FactCheck.org looked into a similar claim from Cheney’s June 19 interview with Fox News’ Megyn Kelly. When Kelly called him out for being wrong on Iraq time and time again , Cheney said, Barack Obama has stated repeatedly the terrorist threat is gone, we got bin Laden. After reviewing Obama’s speeches in recent years, FactCheck found no traces of Obama saying the terrorist threat was gone, which obviously means he did not say it repeatedly. Our review turned up similar findings. We did not find any instances in which Obama said threats of terrorism are solved, or gone, or just kaput. Spokespeople for the White House and Cheney could not be reached for comment. Obama did not make that claim the night he announced bin Laden’s death , and he has not dismissed the lingering threat from al-Qaida-affiliated groups and other violent jihadists in public comments since 2011. His usual message is bin Laden’s death is a big deal, but the terrorism fight is not over. The death of bin Laden marks the most significant achievement to date in our nation’s effort to defeat al-Qaida, Obama said May 1, 2011. Yet his death does not mark the end of our effort. There’s no doubt that al-Qaida will continue to pursue attacks against us. We must –- and we will — remain vigilant at home and abroad. In the column Cheney co-wrote with daughter Liz, he pinpointed Obama saying core al-Qaida is on its heels, has been decimated to illustrate the president’s skewed point of view. The statement, pulled from Obama’s remarks in an Aug. 9, 2013, White House press conference , is accurate but out of context. Obama was responding then to a question from Karl (that guy is everywhere), who asked if Obama still believed al-Qaida has been decimated after a previous speech, given terrorist threats across the Middle East and Africa that closed diplomatic outposts. Obama’s response: What I said in the same National Defense University speech back in May that I referred to earlier is that core al-Qaida is on its heels, has been decimated. But what I also said was that al-Qaida and other extremists have metastasized into regional groups that can pose significant dangers. That May 2013 university speech also does not contain a proclamation that the country’s terrorism problem is solved. Obama heralded the deaths of bin Laden and his lieutenants but followed up immediately with a warning: Now, make no mistake, our nation is still threatened by terrorists. During his 2012 re-election campaign, Obama did not consistently follow up on his point that bin Laden is dead with a reminder that the anti-terror fight remains. But even in those cases he usually said al-Qaida was on the run or on the path to defeat. Reporters noticed when he dropped a reference to al-Qaida being on the run in a few of his stump speeches, questioning whether he did it because of the deadly attack on the Benghazi special mission on Sept. 11, 2012. (He later restored t he reference about al-Qaida being on the path to defeat.) Still, Obama never said the problem was solved. Obama has been using the word solve a bit lately, but not in the way Cheney claims. In explaining why he will not deploy American troops to confront ISIS, Obama said June 19, We do not have the ability to simply solve this problem by sending in tens of thousands of troops and committing the kinds of blood and treasure that has already been expended in Iraq. Ultimately, this is something that is going to have to be solved by the Iraqis. We’ll end on an interesting note highlighted by FactCheck. Cheney’s former boss, President George W. Bush, used similar language as Obama to describe his administration’s efforts to beat back al-Qaida, using on the run in 2001 and 2003 as well as decimated . Our ruling So did Obama, as Cheney claimed, say we got bin Laden, terrorism problem solved? No. Obama’s foreign policy speeches since bin Laden’s death have qualified the killing as a major achievement in the battle against terrorism, but not the solution to a complex threat. Obama usually notes the problem remains despite the fact that core al-Qaida has decentralized into regional, still dangerous groups. Cheney is either missing or ignoring Obama’s nuanced statements. We rate Cheney’s statement False.
(en)
|