GOP Contenders Attack Obama's Foreign Policy Despite Bin Laden Killing
Republican presidential hopefuls came out swinging in their first debate Thursday night, attacking President Obama's foreign policy despite his leadership in ordering an operation that killed Usama bin Laden this week. Former Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty congratulated Obama for capturing the world's most wanted terrorist nearly 10 years after the Sept. 11 attacks. "I tip my cap to him in that moment," he said. "But that moment is not the sum total of America's foreign policy. He's made a number of other decisions relating to our security here and around the world that I don't agree with." Pawlenty cited Libya as one example, saying he didn't agree with Obama's decision to defer to the United Nations on how to deal with Muammar Qaddafi's violent crackdown on rebels. "If he says Qaddafi must go, he needs to maintain the option to make Qaddafi go and he didn't do that," he said. Former Pennsylvania Sen. gucci outlet Rick Santorum said the only thing Obama has done right in his foreign policy is continue President George W. Bush's policies. "The decision he made with Usama bin Laden was a tactical decision," he said. "It wasn't a strategic decision.The strategic decision was made by President Bush to go after him. What President Obama has done on his watch, the issues that have come up while he's been president, he's gotten it wrong strategically every single time." Pawlenty and Santorum were among the five participants seeking to prove themselves to be more than the party's B-team as they try to catapult their White House bids into the national spotlight. Fox News and the South Carolina Republican Party sponsored the debate that also featured Texas Rep. Ron Paul, former New Mexico Gov. Gary John and businessman Herman Cain. They are the only candidates who met the sponsors' criteria to participate: forming a presidential exploratory committee, filing state GOP paperwork and paying $25,000 to get on the state primary ballot. The GOP field is still taking shape, with about a dozen Republicans considering a White House bid or taking initial steps toward full-fledged campaigns. Among the notable absences were Sarah Palin, Donald Trump, Mitt Romney, Mike Huckabee and Newt Gingrich. They missed out on a chance to weigh in on the biggest issues of the day, including whether to release a photo of bin Laden's corpse, something that Obama has said he won't do. But four of the five participants said they would release the photo. Cain was the only one who opposed it. At one point, Johnson, a libertarian-leaning Republican who backs gay rights and legalizing some drugs, cried foul over not getting as many questions as his fellow debaters. Fox News' anchor Bret Baier said the moderators would be "fair and balanced" with the questions. Earlier Thursday, each participant toured the debate site. Cain, a former Federal Reserve banker and CEO of Godfather's Pizza, was the first to set foot on stage. Later came Pawlenty, who zinged those rivals who chose to skip the debate. "One of the things about leadership is that you've got to show up," he said. "And if you want to be president of the United States you've got to make a case to the American people that Barack Obama needs to be dismissed from his position." Santorum, who's spent more time in the early voting states than any other candidate this year, cast himself as the most ardent conservative in the White House race. "People that said, you know, put the moral issues aside, or, you know, don't talk about the families, they don't understand what makes America works, they don't understand the dynamic that is at play when that has made America the greatest country in the history of the world," Santorum said. Paul, who renewed his demand for U.S. troops to leave Afghanistan and Iraq Wednesday was the Libertarian Party presidential nominee in 1988. His 2008 GOP-run inspired the modern Tea Party movement and he planned to address the marathon South Carolina Tea Party rally after Thursday's debate.