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  • 29
    Aug
    2012
    10:27pm, EDT

    Rice, McCain defend activist foreign policy

    By Tom Curry, NBC News national affairs writer

    Former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice gave a spirited defense of free trade, foreign aid, a welcoming immigration policy, and a robust national defense Wednesday night at the Republican convention.

    Both Rice and 2008 Republican presidential candidate Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., who spoke earlier in the evening, mocked the Obama administration for the remark an unidentified Obama adviser last year made to describe the U.S. role in the effort to overthrow Moammar Gadhafi in Libya: “leading from behind.”

    Former US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice delivers remarks at the 2012 RNC.

    Rice started her speech on a subdued note with a brief recollection of the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks.

    She then invoked the “freedom agenda” of her old boss, President George W. Bush, saying that “the desire for liberty and freedom is indeed universal” among all people in the world but acknowledged that “the promise of the Arab Spring is engulfed in uncertainty.”

    And she listed some discouraging international trends:

    • “Internal strife and hostile neighbors are challenging the young, fragile democracy of Iraq,"
    • “Dictators in Iran and Syria butcher their people and threaten regional security,"
    • “Russia and China prevent a response” to the oppression in those countries.

    Rice said these developments cause people abroad to wonder, “where does America stand?” She said, “when friends or foes, alike, don't know the answer to that question — unambiguously and clearly — the world is likely to be a more dangerous and chaotic place.”

    She seemed to imply that President Obama had not done enough to champion freedom and democracy in the Arab world.

    Charles Dharapak / AP

    Former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice addresses the Republican National Convention in Tampa, Fla., on Wednesday, Aug. 29, 2012.

    But her speech seemed as much a rebuke to isolationist or anti-global engagement forces in her own party as to Obama.

    Earlier in the evening, the delegates saw a short video tribute to Rep. Ron Paul, R-Texas, one of the few Republicans who voted to oppose the Iraq invasion. Paul has also been a critic of foreign aid.

    Defending foreign aid, Rice explained that it is often “hard to muster the resources to support fledgling democracies and to intervene on behalf of the most desperate — the AIDS orphan in Uganda, the refugee fleeing Zimbabwe, the young woman who has been trafficked into the sex trade in Southeast Asia,” she said. Yet “this assistance — together with the compassionate work of private charities — people of conscience and people of faith — has shown the soul of our country.”

    Former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice speaks with NBC's Andrea Mitchell about the role of America in the world and our country's current foreign policy.

    She added, “I know too that there is a weariness — I know that it feels as if we have carried these burdens long enough.”

    But if America turns inward, she warned, “no one will lead and there will be chaos, or someone will fill the vacuum who does not share our values. My fellow Americans, we do not have a choice. We cannot be reluctant to lead — and you cannot lead from behind.”

    Touching on a topic that divides Republicans, she delivered an argument for an open-hearted immigration policy. “We must continue to welcome the world’s most ambitious people to be a part of us,” she told the delegates. “In that way we stay young and optimistic and determined. We need immigration laws that protect our borders, meet our economic needs and yet show that we are a compassionate nation of immigrants.”

    NBC's Tom Brokaw, Kelly O'Donnell, and David Gregory discuss former Sec. of State Condoleeza Rice's speech to the Republican National Convention in Tampa, Fla., and preview Paul Ryan's remarks.

    Two hours earlier, McCain gave the delegates a more pointed criticism of the man who defeated him four years ago.

    “At our best, America has led. … We have led, when necessary, with the armed might of freedom’s defenders. And always we have led from the front, never from behind,” McCain said. 

    “By committing to withdraw from Afghanistan before peace can be achieved and sustained, the president has discouraged our friends and emboldened our enemies, which is why our commanders did not recommend that decision and why they have said it puts our mission at greater risk,” he said.

    While speaking at the RNC, Senator John McCain, R-Ariz., explains why he disagrees with the way President Obama has handled foreign policy decisions over the past four years.

    McCain accused Obama of “playing no leadership role” in preventing defense spending cuts mandated by last year’s Budget Control Act.

    And McCain said Obama “missed a historic opportunity to throw America’s full moral support behind an Iranian revolution that shared one of our highest interests: ridding Iran of a brutal dictatorship that terrorizes the Middle East and threatens the world.”

    He added, “The situation is far worse in Syria. What began as peaceful protests has now become, 18 months later, a savage and unfair fight” as Bashir Assad uses tanks, helicopters, and fighter jets to kill his opponents.

    “Sadly, for the lonely voices of dissent in Syria, and Iran, and elsewhere, who feel forgotten in their darkness, and sadly for us, as well, our president is not being true to our values.”

    Although he did not mention it in his speech Wednesday, in June McCain advocated helping the Syrian opposition to establish safe havens inside the country, using U.S. airpower to defend the safe areas in Syria, and using the safe havens as “platforms for increased deliveries of food and medicine, communications equipment, doctors to treat the wounded, and other non-lethal assistance. They could also serve as staging areas for armed opposition groups to receive battlefield intelligence, body armor, and weapons.”

    Slideshow: Republican National Convention

    Win Mcnamee / Getty Images

    Republicans gather in Tampa, Florida to officially nominate Mitt Romney and his running mate, Paul Ryan, as the party's candidates for the 2012 presidential election.

    Launch slideshow

    366 comments

    Thank goodness, Mc Cain was not elected in 2008, or I guess we would be in two more wars with Iran and Syria! According to Mc Cain, and his Republican leader followers, we cannot afford to borrow more money to fund Medicaid and Medicare for the poor and our seniors but we could borrow another $10 t …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: election, politics, john-mccain, condoleezza-rice, mitt-romney, featured, decision-2012
  • 13
    Jul
    2012
    3:35pm, EDT

    PRESS Pass Flashback: Rice wasn't interested in VP job

    Mitt Romney's Vice Presidential search is in full swing and one of the names mentioned to be on his short list is former Secretary of State in the Bush Administration, Condoleezza Rice. Watch the above clip from our PRESS Pass interview with Rice in March of this year, to see how she answered when David asked if she would be willing to serve as the number two on the Republican ticket.

    DAVID GREGORY: Would you serve on a Republican ticket, if you were asked?
    CONDOLEEZZA RICE: David, we've been through this question many times in my--
    DAVID GREGORY: I don't remember.
    CONDOLEEZZA RICE: --in my-- (LAUGH)
    (OVERTALK)
    DAVID GREGORY: I’ve asked if you’ll run for President. I never said Number Two
    CONDOLEEZZA RICE: I like policy. I will stay out of the politics.
    DAVID GREGORY: So you wouldn't serve if you were asked, on a ticket?
    CONDOLEEZZA RICE: It's not for me. I love policy, I love public service. I'm very involved in a lot of issues, including this K-12 education issue that Joel Klein and I've been working on.
    DAVID GREGORY: I see a little bit of room there, just a little bit of room.
    CONDOLEEZZA RICE: And -- David, you must-- you must be listening to somebody else. (LAUGH) No, I'm, I’m awfully happy doing what I'm doing.

    Watch David's full interview with Condoleezza Rice from March here.

     


    1 comment

    So sad the thought of Rice being VP would only bring back the shock of the Bin Laden Memo Rice disregarded. Then the overseas charges of War Crimes along with Bush/Cheney.

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    Explore related topics: condoleezza-rice, meet-the-press
  • 25
    Jun
    2012
    11:23pm, EDT

    Condoleezza Rice returns to spotlight for fundraiser

    Alex Moe / NBC News

    Former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice speaks at the ShePAC fundraising event in Washington, D.C., June 25.

    By NBC’s Alex Moe

     

    Follow @AlexNBCNews

     

    WASHINGTON, D.C. -- Former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice stepped back into the political spotlight Monday night as she headlined her first ever fundraiser in the nation’s capital.

    “I am a great optimist,” Rice told attendees, referring to being able to get the country back on track again. She was speaking at an event to raise money for Republican female politicians.

    "A little girl grows up in Birmingham, Alabama,” Rice said, noting that her parents were convinced she “could be President of the United States if she wants to be.”

    "America has a way of making the impossible seem inevitable in retrospect and we are going to do it again,” Rice said. “We are going to strengthen ourselves, our democracy at home, strengthen our economy.”

    Rice, who is currently a professor at Stanford University in California, is viewed as a dark horse choice for presumptive GOP nominee Mitt Romney’s running mate.

    While she did not address anything related to Romney’s choice for VP in front of the few journalists – nor did she refer to her raved-about speech from Romney’s weekend retreat in Utah – some in attendance hope she is strongly considered for the position.

    “It would be great to have a women vice president,” Amanda Abshire of Arlington, Va. said, mentioning she was “inspired” by Rice’s speech tonight. “I think she has the experience and has the respect of the Republican Party and that the core conservatives would support her. It would be such an awesome thing for conservative women too.”

    ShePAC – the political action committee Supporting, Honoring & Electing Republican women – hosted the “DC Kickoff Reception” at the Capitol Hill Club and included nearly a dozen sitting female GOP Congress members and candidates from around the country.

    Prior to addressing the general reception for which guests paid $1,000 to hear Rice speak – during which guests munched on a variety of cheeses, meats, and watermelon soup – Rice spent nearly 30 minutes talking with the elected officials and candidates, focusing on national security issues.

    Rice, a top-ranked official in President George W. Bush’s administration, mentioned Romney just once in her remarks, saying he would be “a terrific president" – she even weighed in slightly to the on-going immigration debate.

    "We need an immigration policy that works but, by the way, we need one that the Congress and the President work out together," Rice said.

    Wrapping up her roughly 10-minute speech just feet away from the House office buildings, Rice encouraged the mostly female crowd to keep fighting for America.

    “It just has to be that the freest and most compassionate and most generous country on the face of the earth has to continue to be the most powerful,” she said.

    Rice remains in Washington Tuesday, where she will give opening remarks at the National Women's Hall of Fame event celebrating 40 years of Title IX.

    Attendees Monday night included: Senate Candidates Deb Fischer (NE), Heather Wilson (NM), Sarah Steelman (MO), House Candidates Martha Zoller (GA), Lisa Wilson-Foley (CT), Karen Harrington (FL), Wendy Rogers (AZ), Kim Vann (CA), Nancy Jacobs (MD), Faith Loudon (MD), Leah Campos-Schandlbauer (AZ), Maria Sheffield (GA) and representing his wife Mayor Mia Love (UT), Jason Love. Current Congresswomen included: Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison (TX), Rep. Sandy Adams (FL), Rep. Marsha Blackburn (TN), Rep. Judy Biggert (IL), and Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen (FL).

    24 comments

    Another unindicted co-conspirator of the Bush/Cheney Iraq invasion.... ......Lying war criminal!

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    Explore related topics: gop, republicans, condoleezza-rice, mitt-romney, decision-2012, alex-moe, shepac
  • 21
    Mar
    2012
    7:26am, EDT

    PRESS Pass: Condoleezza Rice

    Former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice this week dismissed accusations from President Obama’s Republican rivals that the commander-in-chief is not tough enough on Iran.

    She suggested that she has seen a shift in the administration’s position, saying that White House may have learned diplomatic lessons on how to deal with its enemies, but, “now you're not hearing much … from the administration about reaching out a hand of friendship any longer to the Iranians.”

    But the former Bush administration official told David Gregory that the United States is in danger from backing down on its commitments abroad. She acknowledged that “the American people are tired” from the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, and when it comes to facing threats from other countries, “you can feel a sense of perhaps we'll just leave them to their own devices.”

    But she defended President Bush’s foreign policy decisions: “We have to remember what it looked like 11 years ago, in Afghanistan, with the Taliban in power.”  Rice warned that avoiding the threats within countries like Iran and Afghanistan, “has always backfired … even if you have to talk to your enemies, you do so with a big stick next to your side.”

    Rice was in Washington to head a task force that claims it has a new solution to American security issues: education. Rice said that today, many Americans are unfit to serve in the military because they have not received an adequate education. If the school system is not fixed, she believes,  “our national cohesion is really at stake.”

    Watch PRESS Pass above to hear more of David’s interview with Secretary Rice, who is an avid football fan, including her thoughts on Peyton Manning’s move to the Denver Broncos.

    29 comments

    Maybe she should've told Bush to keep his eye on the ball in Afghanistan before going on his and Cheney's fool's mission to Iraq. She was the smartest person in that administration.

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    Explore related topics: condoleezza-rice, meet-the-press, press-pass

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