US foreign policy is indisputably linked to the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks that killed nearly 3,000 people a decade ago, US Representative Ron Paul said on Sunday.
With polls in key states placing him in the top crop of Republican candidates competing to become their party’s nominee to oust Democratic US President Barack Obama from the White House, the Texan is facing growing scrutiny over past controversial statements.
Paul, a longtime advocate of less government, reduced taxes and decriminalizing prostitution and drugs, said US intervention abroad was triggering the ire of violent extremists motivated to act because “we don’t like American bombs to be falling on our country.”
“I think there’s an influence,” Paul told CBS TV’s Face the Nation. “That’s exactly what the 9/11 Commission said. That’s what the DoD [Department of Defense] has said. That’s also what the CIA has said. That’s what a lot of researchers have said.”
The interview came as a Bloomberg News poll has Paul in a statistical dead heat with three other candidates for the Republican lead in Iowa, a critical state in the nominating process that will host on Jan. 3 the first early vote launching next year’s election cycle.
He pointed to the US military’s withdrawal from a base in Saudi Arabia shortly after Sept. 11, 2001, as an example of how US policies are partially responsible for violent actions against Americans.
Paul said that if he became president, he would pull US troops out of bases overseas, claiming that defenses like submarines would be powerful enough as deterrents.
However, he was quick to take issue with those characterizing his position as meaning the attacks were “America’s fault.”
“The average American didn’t cause it. But if you have a flawed policy, it may influence it ... I’m saying policies have an effect, but that’s a far cry from blaming America,” he said. “I mean in America, you’re supposed to be able to criticize your own government without saying you’re un-American and that’s what the implication is.”
Paul’s assertions have previously been met with outrage, including among his fellow Republicans. Political observers have long dismissed him as too far outside the mainstream and too close to libertarian ideals to have a real chance of becoming the Republican nominee.
At the Republican debates, Paul has often sparred with his party rivals on US foreign policy, parting with them by criticizing waterboarding and advocating outreach to Iran despite its nuclear ambitions.
“I think the greatest danger now is for us to overreact,” Paul said. “Iran doesn’t have a bomb. There’s no proof, regardless of this recent report. And for us to overreact and to talk about bombing Iran, that’s much more dangerous.”
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