The debate began with CNN's Wolf Blitzer introducing each
candidate and explaining the rules.
BLITZER: These nine Republicans are positioned on stage
based on their ranking in the recent polls, so let's begin right now. I'd like
to invite each candidate to introduce himself or herself to our audience.
You'll have one minute.
First to you, Senator Paul.
PAUL: The question is, how do we keep America safe
from terrorism? Trump says we ought to close that Internet thing. The question
really is, what does he mean by that? Like they do in North Korea?
Like they do in China?
Rubio says we should collect all Americans' records all of
the time. The Constitution says otherwise. I think they're both wrong. I think
we defeat terrorism by showing them that we do not fear them. I think if we ban
certain religions, if we censor the Internet, I think that at that point the
terrorists will have won. Regime change hasn't won. Toppling secular dictators
in the Middle East has only led to chaos and
the rise of radical Islam. I think if we want to defeat terrorism, I think if
we truly are sincere about defeating terrorism, we need to quit arming the
allies of ISIS. If we want to defeat
terrorism, the boots on the ground -- the boots on the ground need to be Arab
boots on the ground.
As commander-in-chief, I will do whatever it takes to defend
America.
But in defending America, we
cannot lose what America
stands for. Today is the Bill of Rights' anniversary. I hope we will remember
that and cherish that in the fight on terrorism.
BLITZER: Thank you, Senator.
(APPLAUSE)
Governor Kasich?
KASICH: Thank you, Wolf. Just last weekend, just last week,
a friend asked one of my daughters, "Do you like politics?" And my
daughter said, "No, I don't. And the reason I don't like it is because
there's too much fighting, too much yelling. It's so loud, I don't like
it." You know, I turned to my friend and I said, "You know, she's
really on to something."
And when we think about our country and the big issues that
we face in this country; creating jobs, making sure people can keep their jobs,
the need for rising wages, whether our children when they graduate from college
can find a job, protecting the homeland, destroying ISIS,
rebuilding defense. These are all the things that we need to focus on but we'll
never get there if we're divided. We'll never get there if republicans and
democrats just fight with one another.
Frankly, we are republicans and they're democrats but before
all of that, we're Americans. And I believe we need to unify in so many ways to
rebuild our country, to strengthen our country, to rebuild our defense, and for
America
to secure it's place it world; for us, for our children, and for the next
generation.
Thank you.
(APPLAUSE)
BLITZER: Governor Christie?
CHRISTIE: Thank you Wolf.
America
has been betrayed. We've been betrayed by the leadership that Barack Obama and
Hilary Clinton have provided to this country over the last number of years.
Think about just what's happened today. The second largest school district in America in Los
Angeles closed based on a threat. Think about the
effect that, that's going to have on those children when they go back to school
tomorrow wondering filled with anxiety to whether they're really going to be
safe.
Think about the mothers who will take those children
tomorrow morning to the bus stop wondering whether their children will arrive
back on that bus safe and sound. Think about the fathers of Los Angeles, who tomorrow will head off to
work and wonder about the safety of their wives and their children.
What is Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton done to this
country? That the most basic responsibility of an administration is to protect
the safety and security of the American people. I will tell you this, I'm a
former federal prosecutor, I've fought terrorists and won and when we get back
in the White House we will fight terrorists and win again and America will be
safe.
(APPLAUSE) BLITZER: Ms. Fiorina?
FIORINA: Like all of you I'm angry. I'm angry at what's
happening to our nation. Citizens, it's time to take our country back.
Bombastic insults wont take it back. Political rhetoric that
promises a lot and delivers little, won't take it back. All of our problems can
be solved. All of our wounds can be healed by a tested leader who is willing to
fight for the character of our nation.
I have been tested. I have beaten breast cancer. I have
buried a child. I started as a secretary. I fought my way to the top of
corporate America
while being called every B word in the book. I fought my way into this election
and on to this debate stage while all the political insiders and the pundits
told, "it couldn't be done."
I've been told, "no,: all my life. And all my life,
I've refused to accept no as an answer. Citizens, it is time to take our
country back from the political class, from the media, from the liberal elite.
It can be done, it must be done, join me and we will get it done.
(APPLAUSE)
BLITZER: Governor Bush?
BUSH: Our freedom is under attack. Our economy is under
water. The leading democrat is under investigation. And America is
under the gun to lead the free world to protect our civilized way of life.
Serious times require strong leadership, that's what at
stake right now. Regarding national security, we need to restore the defense
cuts of Barack Obama to rebuild our military, to destroy ISIS
before it destroys us. Regarding economic security, we need to take power and
money away from Washington D.C. and empower American families so that
they can rise up again.
Look, America
still is an exceptional country. We love to lead and we love to win. And we do
it, when we take on any challenge and when we take - we support our friends.
As president, I will keep you and our country safe, secure,
and free.
Thank you.
BLITZER: Senator Rubio?
RUBIO: Thank you Wolf.
It's really amazing to be back in Las Vegas. I spent six years as a child
growing not far from where we stand tonight. I use to sit on the porch of our
home and listen to my grandfather tell stories as he smoked one of three daily
cigars.
One of the things my grandfather instilled in me, was that I
was really blessed because I was a citizen of the greatest country in the
history of our mankind. But there have always been people in American politics
that wanted America
to be more like the rest of the world. And In 2008, one of them was elected
president of this country and the result has been a disaster.
Today you have millions of Americans that feel left out and
out of place in their own country, struggling to live paycheck to paycheck,
called bigots because they hold on to traditional values.
And around the world, America's influence has declined
while this president has destroyed our military, our allies no longer trust us,
and our adversaries no longer respect us. And that is why this election is so
important.
That is why I'm running for president. And that's why I'm
going to ask you for your vote tonight. If you elect me president, we will have
a president that believes America
is the greatest country in the world and we will have a president that acts
like it.
(APPLAUSE)
BLITZER: Senator Cruz.
CRUZ: Thank you, Wolf.
America
is at war. Our enemy is not violent extremism. It is not some unnamed
malevolent force. It is radical Islamic terrorist. We have a president who is
unwilling to utter its name. The men and women on this stage, every one of us,
is better prepared to keep this nation safe than is Barack Obama or Hillary
Clinton.
We need a president who understands the first obligation of
the commander-in-chief is to keep America safe. If I am elected
president, we will hunt down and kill the terrorists. We will utterly destroy ISIS.
We will stop the terrorist attacks before they occur because
we will not be prisoners to political correctness. Rather, we will speak the
truth. Border security is national security and we will not be admitting
jihadists as refugees.
We will keep America
safe.
(APPLAUSE)
BLITZER: Dr. Carson.
CARSON:
Thank you, Wolf.
Please join me for a moment of silence and remembrance of
the San Bernardino
victims. Thank you. You know, our country since its inception has been at war,
every 15 or 20 years. But the war that we are fighting now against radical
Islamist jihadists is one that we must win. Our very existence is dependent
upon that.
You know, as a pediatric neurosurgeon, I frequently faced
life and death situations, and had to come up with the right diagnosis, the
right plan, and execute that plan frequently with other colleagues.
Right now, the United States of America is the
patient. And the patient is in critical condition and will not be cured by
political correctness and will not be cured by timidity.
And I am asking the Congress, which represents the people,
to declare a war on ISIS so that we can begin the process of excising that
cancer and begin the healing process, and bring peace, prosperity, and safety
back to America.
(APPLAUSE)
BLITZER: Mr. Trump.
TRUMP: Thank you.
I began this journey six months ago. My total focus was on
building up our military, building up our strength, building up our borders, making
sure that China, Japan, Mexico, both at the border and in
trade, no longer takes advantage of our country.
Certainly would never have made that horrible, disgusting,
absolutely incompetent deal with Iran where they get $150 billion.
They're a terrorist nation. But I began it talking about other things.
And those things are things that I'm very good at and maybe
that's why I'm center stage. People saw it. People liked it. People respected
it.
A month ago things changed. Radical Islamic terrorism came
into effect even more so than it has been in the past. People like what I say. People
respect what I say. And we've opened up a very big discussion that needed to be
opened up.
Thank you very much.
(APPLAUSE)
BLITZER: Thank you.
Since you last debated, Americans have witnessed terror
attacks in Paris and San Bernardino. The FBI director says the
country now faces the greatest terror threat since 9/11. You all have different
approaches to keeping the country safe. And that will be the focus of tonight's
debate.
BLITZER: Mr. Trump, as you mentioned in your opening
statement, part of your strategy is to focus in on America's borders. To keep the
country safe, you say you want to temporarily ban non-American Muslims from
coming to the United States; ban refugees fleeing ISIS from coming here; deport
11 million people; and wall off America's southern border. Is the best way to
make America
great again to isolate it from much of the rest of the world?
TRUMP: We are not talking about isolation. We're talking
about security. We're not talking about religion. We're talking about security.
Our country is out of control. People are pouring across the southern border. I
will build a wall. It will be a great wall. People will not come in unless they
come in legally. Drugs will not pour through that wall.
As far as other people like in the migration, where they're
going, tens of thousands of people having cell phones with ISIS
flags on them? I don't think so, Wolf. They're not coming to this country. And
if I'm president and if Obama has brought some to this country, they are
leaving. They're going. They're gone.
(APPLAUSE)
BLITZER: Governor Bush, you called Mr. Trump
"unhinged" when he proposed banning non-American Muslims from the United States.
Why is that unhinged?
BUSH: Well, first of all, we need to destroy ISIS in the caliphate. That's -- that should be our
objective. The refugee issue will be solved if we destroy ISIS
there, which means we need to have a no-fly zone, safe zones there for refugees
and to build a military force.
We need to embed our forces -- our troops inside the Iraqi
military. We need to arm directly the Kurds. And all of that has to be done in
concert with the Arab nations. And if we're going to ban all Muslims, how are
we going to get them to be part of a coalition to destroy ISIS?
The Kurds are the greatest fighting force and our strongest
allies. They're Muslim. Look, this is not a serious proposal. In fact, it will
push the Muslim world, the Arab world away from us at a time when we need to
reengage with them to be able to create a strategy to destroy ISIS.
So Donald, you know, is great at -- at the one-liners, but
he's a chaos candidate. And he'd be a chaos president. He would not be the
commander in chief we need to keep our country safe.
(APPLAUSE)
BLITZER: Mr. Trump?
TRUMP: Jeb doesn't really believe I'm unhinged. He said that
very simply because he has failed in this campaign. It's been a total disaster.
Nobody cares. And frankly, I'm the most solid person up here. I built a
tremendous company and all I want to do is make America great again.
I don't want our country to be taken away from us, and
that's what's happening. The policies that we've suffered under other
presidents have been a disaster for our country. We want to make America great
again. And Jeb, in all fairness, he doesn't believe that.
BUSH: Look, he mentioned me. I can bring -- I can talk. This
is -- this is the problem. Banning all Muslims will make it harder for us to do
exactly what we need to do, which is to destroy ISIS.
We need a strategy. We need to get the lawyers off the back of the warfighters.
Right now under President Obama, we've created this -- this standard that is so
high that it's impossible to be successful in fighting ISIS.
We need to engage with the Arab world to make this happen.
It is not a serious proposal to say that -- to the people that you're asking
for their support that they can't even come to the country to even engage in a
dialogue with us. That's not a serious proposal. We need a serious leader to
deal with this. And I believe I'm that guy.
(APPLAUSE)
BLITZER: Senator Rubio -- I'm going to go to Senator Rubio
and get his thoughts.
You have said banning Muslims is unconstitutional. But
according to a recent ABC News-Washington Post poll, a majority of Republicans
support Mr. Trump's idea. Why are they wrong?
RUBIO: Well, I understand why they feel that way, because
this president hasn't kept us safe. The problem is we had an attack in San Bernardino. And we
were paying attention to the most important issue we have faced in a decade
since 9/11, and then all the talk was about this proposal, which isn't going to
happen.
But this is what's important to do is we must deal frontally
with this threat of radical Islamists, especially from ISIS.
This is the most sophisticated terror group that has ever threatened the world
or the United States of
America. They are actively recruiting
Americans. The attacker in San
Bernardino was an American citizen, born and raised in
this country. He was a health inspector; had a newborn child and left all that
behind to kill 14 people.
We also understand that this is a group that's growing in
its governance of territory. It's not just Iraq
and Syria.
They are now a predominant group in Libya. They are beginning to pop up
in Afghanistan.
They are increasingly involved now in attacks in Yemen. They have Jordan in their
sights.
This group needs to be confronted with serious proposals.
And this is a very significant threat we face. And the president has left us
unsafe. He spoke the other night to the American people to reassure us. I wish
he hadn't spoken at all. He made things worse. Because what he basically said
was we are going to keep doing what we're doing now, and what we are doing now
is not working.
(APPLAUSE)
BLITZER: Hugh Hewitt, you have a question.
HEWITT: Senator Cruz, you've said you disagree with Mr.
Trump's policy. I don't want a cage match; you've tweeted you don't want a cage
match. But Republican primary voters deserve to know, with the kind of
specificity and responsiveness you delivered in your nine Supreme Court
arguments, how you disagree with Mr. Trump. Would you spell that out with us?
CRUZ: Well, listen, Hugh, everyone understands why Donald
has suggested what he has. We're looking at a president who's engaged in this
double-speak where he doesn't call radical Islamic terrorism by its name.
Indeed, he gives a speech after the San
Bernardino attack where his approach is to try to go
after the constitutional rights of law-abiding citizens rather than to keep us
safe.
And even worse, President Obama and Hillary Clinton are
proposing bringing tens of thousands of Syrian refugees to this country when
the head of the FBI has told Congress they cannot vet those refugees.
I understand why Donald made that proposal. I introduced
legislation in the Senate that I believe is more narrowly focused at the actual
threat, which is radical Islamic terrorism, and what my legislation would do is
suspend all refugees for three years from countries where ISIS or Al Qaida
control substantial territory.
HEWITT: So you're saying you disagree because he's too broad
and you have a narrower focus? Why do you disagree with him?
CRUZ: Well, you know, I'm reminded of what FDR's grandfather
said. He said, "All horse-thieves are Democrats, but not all Democrats are
horse-thieves."
(LAUGHTER)
In this instance, there are millions of peaceful Muslims
across the world, in countries like India, where there is not the problems we
are seeing in nations that are controlled -- have territory controlled by Al
Qaida or ISIS, and we should direct at the problem, focus on the problem, and
defeat radical Islamic terrorism. It's not a war on a faith; it's a war on a
political and theocratic ideology that seeks to murder us.
HEWITT: Carly Fiorina... (APPLAUSE)
... this is the Christmas dinner debate. This will be the
debate that Americans talk about at Christmas. And thus far, in the first 10
minutes, we haven't heard a lot about Ronald Reagan's city on a hill. We've
heard a lot about keeping Americans out or keeping Americans safe and everyone
else out. Is this what you want the party to stand for?
FIORINA: What I think we need to stand for are solutions. I
offer myself as a leader to the people of this country because I think they're
looking for solutions, not lawyers arguing over laws or entertainers throwing
out sound bites that draw media attention. We need to solve the problem.
To solve the problem, we need to do something here at home
and something over there in their caliphate. We need to deny them territory.
But here at home, we need to do two fundamental things.
Number one, we need to recognize that technology has moved on. The Patriot Act
was signed in 2001, roughly. The iPhone was invented in 2007. The iPad was
invented in 2011. Snapchat and Twitter, all the rest of it, have been around
just for several years. Technology has moved on, and the terrorists have moved
on with it.
Let me tell you a story. Soon after 9/11, I got a phone call
from the NSA. They needed help. I gave them help. I stopped a truckload of
equipment. I had it turned around. It was escorted by the NSA into
headquarters. We need the private sector's help, because government is not innovating.
Technology is running ahead by leaps and bound. The private sector will help,
just as I helped after 9/11. But they must be engaged, and they must be asked.
I will ask them. I know them.
(APPLAUSE)
BLITZER: Governor Christie, Americans are clearly more
afraid today than at any time since 9/11. As you mentioned in your opening
statement, today in Los Angeles, 650
schoolchildren didn't go to -- 650,000 schoolchildren didn't go to school
because of an e-mail threat, this two weeks after an attack killed 14 people in
San Bernardino.
Is this the new normal? And if so, what steps would you take as president of
the United States to ensure
that fear does not paralyze America?
CHRISTIE: Wolf, unfortunately, it's the new normal under
Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton. The fact is that if you listen to Hillary
Clinton the other day, what she said to the American people was, as regards to
ISIS, my strategy would be just about the same as the president's.
Just about the same as the president's? We have people across
this country who are scared to death. Because I could tell you this, as a
former federal prosecutor, if a center for the developmentally disabled in San Bernardino, California,
is now a target for terrorists, that means everywhere in America is a
target for these terrorists.
Now, I spent seven years of my life in the immediate
aftermath of September 11th doing this work, working with the Patriot Act,
working with our law enforcement, working with the surveillance community to
make sure that we keep America
safe.
What we need to do, Wolf, is restore those tools that have
been taken away by the president and others, restore those tools to the NSA and
to our entire surveillance and law enforcement community.
We need a president who is going to understand what
actionable intelligence looks like and act on it. And we need a president and a
cabinet who understands that the first and most important priority of the
president of the United
States is to protect the safety and security
of Americans.
As someone who has done it, I will make sure it gets done
again.
(APPLAUSE)
BLITZER: Thank you.
Governor Kasich, one of the killers in San Bernardino was an American who was not on
anyone's watch list. How are you going to find that radicalized person and stop
another such attack?
KASICH: Well, first of all, Wolf, I said last February that
we needed to have people on the ground, troops on the ground in a coalition
similar to what we had in the first Gulf War.
I remember when the Egyptian ambassador to the United States stood in the Rose Garden and
pledged Arab commitment to removing Saddam Hussein from Kuwait. Before
we came out here tonight, I am told that the Saudis have organized 34 countries
who want to join in the battle against terrorism.
First and foremost, we need to go and destroy ISIS. And we need to do this with our Arab friends and
our friends in Europe.
And when I see they have a climate conference over in Paris, they should have been talking about destroying ISIS because they are involved in virtually every
country, you know, across this world.
(APPLAUSE)
Now, you destroy ISIS in a
coalition. You get joint intelligence with our European friends. And then here
at home, there are things called the Joint Terrorism Task Force, headed by the
FBI, and made up of local law enforcement, including state police.
They need the tools. And the tools involve encryption where
we cannot hear what they're even planning. And when we see red flags, a father,
a mother, a neighbor who says we have got a problem here, then we have to give
law enforcement the ability to listen so they can disrupt these terrorist
attacks before they occur.
We can do this, but we've got to get moving. Pay me now or
pay me a lot more later. This is the direction we need to go.
(APPLAUSE)
BLITZER: Thank you.
Dana Bash, you have the next question.
BASH: A crucial question is how to balance surveillance with
privacy and keeping Americans safe.
Senator Cruz, you voted for a bill that President Obama
signed into law just this past June that made it harder for the government to
access Americans' phone records. In light of the San Bernardino attack, was your vote a
mistake?
CRUZ: Well, Dana, the premise of your question is not
accurate. I'm very proud to have joined with conservatives in both the Senate
and the House to reform how we target bad guys.
And what the USA Freedom Act did is it did two things.
Number one, it ended the federal government's bulk collection of phone metadata
of millions of law-abiding citizens.
But number two in the second half of it that is critical. It
strengthened the tools of national security and law enforcement to go after
terrorists. It gave us greater tools and we are seeing those tools work right
now in San Bernardino.
And in particular, what it did is the prior program only
covered a relatively narrow slice of phone calls. When you had a terrorist, you
could only search a relatively narrow slice of numbers, primarily land lines.
The USA Freedom Act expands that so now we have cell phones,
now we have Internet phones, now we have the phones that terrorists are likely
to use and the focus of law enforcement is on targeting the bad guys.
You know what the Obama administration keeps getting wrong
is whenever anything bad happens they focus on law-abiding citizens instead of
focusing on the bad guys.
We need to focus on radical Islamic terrorists and we need
to stop them before they carry out acts of terror.
(APPLAUSE)
BASH: Thank you.
Senator Rubio, Senator Cruz is right there was bipartisan
support for that. But you voted against it. So, is Senator Cruz wrong?
RUBIO: He is and so are those that voted for it. There were
some that voted for it because they wanted to keep it alive and they were
afraid the whole program would expire.
Here's the world we live in. This is a radical jihadist
group that is increasingly sophisticated in its ability, for example, to
radicalize American citizens, in its inability to exploit loopholes in our
legal immigration system, in its ability to capture and hold territory in the Middle East, as I outlined earlier, in multiple
countries.
This is not just the most capable, it is the most
sophisticated terror threat we have ever faced. We are now at a time when we
need more tools, not less tools. And that tool we lost, the metadata program,
was a valuable tool that we no longer have at our disposal.
BASH: Senator Cruz?
CRUZ: Well, you know, I would note that Marco knows what
he's saying isn't true. You know, Mark Levin wrote a column last week that says
that the attack ads his Super PAC is running that are saying the same thing,
that they are knowingly false and they are, in fact, Alinsky-like attacks like
Barack Obama.
And the reason is simple. What he knows is that the old
program covered 20 percent to 30 percent of phone numbers to search for terrorists.
The new program covers nearly 100 percent. That gives us greater ability to
stop acts of terrorism, and he knows that that's the case.
RUBIO: Dana, may I interject here?
BASH: Senator -- Senator -- Senator Rubio, please respond.
RUBIO: Let me be very careful when answering this, because I
don't think national television in front of 15 million people is the place to
discuss classified information. So let me just be very clear. There is nothing
that we are allowed to do under this bill that we could not do before.
This bill did, however, take away a valuable tool that
allowed the National Security Agency and other law -- and other intelligence
agencies to quickly and rapidly access phone records and match them up with
other phone records to see who terrorists have been calling. Because I promise
you, the next time there is attack on -- an attack on this country, the first
thing people are going to want to know is, why didn't we know about it and why
didn't we stop it? And the answer better not be because we didn't have access
to records or information that would have allowed us to identify these killers
before they attacked.
(CROSSTALK)
(APPLAUSE)
BASH: Senator Paul, Senator Paul, I know this is -- this has
been a very big issue for you. You hear many of your colleagues are calling for
increased surveillance by law enforcement. You call that hogwash. Why is that
hogwash?
PAUL: You know, I think Marco gets it completely wrong. We
are not any safer through the bulk collection of all Americans' records. In
fact, I think we're less safe. We get so distracted by all of the information,
we're not spending enough time getting specific immigration -- specific
information on terrorists.
The other thing is, is the one thing that might have stopped
San Bernardino,
that might have stopped 9/11 would have been stricter controls on those who
came here. And Marco has opposed at every point increased security -- border
security for those who come to our country.
On his Gang of Eight bill, he would have liberalized
immigration, but he did not -- and he steadfastly opposed any new border
security requirements for refugees or students.
Last week, I introduced another bill saying we need more
security, we need more scrutiny. Once again, Marco opposed this. So Marco can't
have it both ways. He thinks he wants to be this, "Oh, I'm great and
strong on national defense." But he's the weakest of all the candidates on
immigration. He is the one for an open border that is leaving us defenseless.
If we want to defend the country, we have to defend against who's coming in,
and Marco is -- has more of an allegiance to Chuck Schumer and to the liberals
than he does to conservative policy.
(APPLAUSE)
BASH: Senator Rubio?
RUBIO: I want to thank Rand for another 30 seconds, because,
number one, what he's pointing to is a bill last week that -- amendment that he
voted for that only 10 people voted for. You know why? Because it's not focused
on terrorists. It would have banned anyone from coming here. Someone from Taiwan would
not have been able to come here as a tourist.
Number two, this program, this metadata program is actually
more strict than what a regular law enforcement agency has now. If a regular
law enforcement agency wants your phone records, all they have to do is issue a
subpoena. But now the intelligence agency is not able to quickly gather records
and look at them to see who these terrorists are calling. And the terrorists
that attacked us in San Bernardino
was an American citizen, born and raised in this country. And I bet you we wish
we would have had access to five years of his records so we could see who he
was working with...
(CROSSTALK)
BASH: Governor Christie, Governor Christie...
(CROSSTALK)
(APPLAUSE)
BASH: Governor Christie, I'll come to you in a minute. Go
ahead, Senator Paul.
PAUL: If I was mentioned in the question, can I respond?
BASH: Go ahead, please.
PAUL: Marco still misunderstands the immigration issue. What
I put forward was an amendment that would have temporarily halted immigration
from high-risk terrorist countries, but would have started it up, but I wanted
them to go through Global Entry, which is a program where we do background
checks.
The thing is, is that every terrorist attack we've had since
9/11 has been legal immigration. Marco wants to expand that. I want more rules,
more scrutiny, and to defend the country, you have to defend the border.
(APPLAUSE)
BASH: Senator, we're going to talk about immigration in a
while. But, Governor Christie, just listening to this...
RUBIO: Do I get another 30 seconds? He mentioned me.
BASH: Listening to this, you talked -- you heard Senator
Paul, Senator Cruz talk about how important it is to protect Americans'
privacy, even in a time of grave danger. Why -- what's wrong with that?
CHRISTIE: Listen, I want to talk to the audience at home for
a second. If your eyes are glazing over like mine, this is what it's like to be
on the floor of the United States Senate. I mean, endless debates about how
many angels on the head of a pin from people who've never had to make a
consequential decision in an executive position.
The fact is, for seven years, I had to make these decisions
after 9/11, make a decision about how to proceed forward with an investigation
or how to pull back, whether you use certain actionable intelligence or whether
not to. And yet they continue to debate about this bill and in the subcommittee
and what -- nobody in America
cares about that.
CHRISTIE: What they care about is, are we going to have a
president who actually knows what they're doing to make these decisions? And
for the seven years afterwards, New
Jersey was threatened like no other region in this
country and what we did was we took action within the constitution to make sure
that law enforcement had all the information they needed.
We prosecuted two of the biggest terrorism cases in the
world and stopped Fort Dix from being attacked by six American radicalized
Muslims from a Mosque in New Jersey
because we worked with the Muslim American community to get intelligence and we
used the Patriot Act to get other intelligence to make sure we did those cases.
This is the difference between actually been a federal prosecutor, actually
doing something, and not just spending your life as one of hundred debating it.
Let's talk about how we do this, not about which bill, which
one these guys like more. The American people don't care about that.
BLITZER: Thank you.
Dr. Carson, you're in favor of monitoring mosques and
schools where there is anti-America sentiment, what do you consider anti- America?
CARSON:
First of all, let me just complain a little bit. This is the first time I've
spoken and several people have had multiple questions so please try to pay
attention to that. Now, as far as monitoring is concerned, what my point is, we
need to make sure that any place - I don't care whether it's a mosque, a
school, a supermarket, a theater, you know it doesn't matter. If there are a
lot of people getting there and engaging in radicalizing activities then we
need to be suspicious of it.
We have to get rid of all this PC stuff. And people are
worried about if somebody's going to say that I'm Islamophobic or what have
you. This is craziness because we are at war. That's why I asked congress, go ahead
and declare the war .
We need to be on a war footing. We need to understand that
our nation is in grave danger. You know, what the Muslim Brotherhood said in
the explanatory memorandum that was discovered during the Holy Land Foundation
Trial was that, "they will take advantage of our PC attitude to get us. :"
We have to be better than this. We have to be smarter than
they are.
BLITZER: Dr. Carson, who was right in that little debate
that we just heard between Senator Rubio and Senator Paul?
CARSON:
I think you have to ask them about that. I don't want to get in between them.
Let them fight.
(CROSSTALK)
BLITZER: Hold on a sec, we have a lot more to come and
everybody's going to have their full opportunity.
Governor Bush, six days after 9/11 your brother visited a
mosque and said quote, "Islam is peace." The conversation tonight is
about banning Muslims and surveillance of mosques, are President Bush's words
still relevant in today's Republican party?
BUSH: They are reverent if we want to destroy ISIS. If we want to destroy radical Islamic terrors, we
can't disassociate ourselves from peace loving Muslims. If we expect to do this
on our own, we will fail but if we do it in unison with people who are also are
at risk and threatened by Islamic Radical terrorism, we'll be far more
successful.
Look, the FBI has the tools necessary un-American activities
in our country. It goes on, we shouldn't even be talking about it, to be honest
with you out in the public. Of course they have those capabilities and we should
make sure that we give the FBI, the NSA, our intelligence communities, all the
resources they need to keep us safe.
But the main thing we should be focused on is the strategy
to destroy ISIS. And I laid out a plan that
the Reagan Library before the tragedy of Paris,
and before San Bernardino
to do just that. It requires leadership, it's not filing an amendment and call
it a success.
It is developing a strategy, leading the world, funding it
to make sure that we have a military that's second to none, and doing the job
and making sure that we destroy ISIS there.
That's how you keep America
safe.
BLITZER: Ms. Fiorina, as you pointed out you were a CEO in Silicon Valley on 9/11. Companies there, they say they
won't help the FBI now crack encrypted communication from ISIS,
should they be forced to.
FIORINA: You know, listening to this conversation, let me
just say, we have a lot of argument about laws but none of it solves the
problem. Let's examine what happened, why did we miss the Tsarnaev brothers,
why did we miss the San Bernardino
couple? It wasn't because we had stopped collected metadata it was because, I
think, as someone who comes from the technology world, we were using the wrong
algorithms.
This is a place where the private sector could be helpful
because the government is woefully behind the technology curve. But secondly,
the bureaucratic processes that have been in place since 9/11 are woefully
inadequate as well. What do we now know? That DHS vets people by going into
databases of known or suspected terrorists.
FIORINA: And yet, we also know that ISIS
is recruiting who are not in those databases. So of course, we're going to miss
them. And then we now learn that DHS says, "No, we can't check their
social media."
For heaven's sakes, every parent in America is
checking social media and every employer is as well, but our government can't
do it. The bureaucratic procedures are so far behind. Our government has become
incompetent, unresponsive, corrupt. And that incompetence, ineptitude, lack of
accountability is now dangerous.
It is why we need a different kind of leadership in the
White House that understands how to get bureaucracies competent again.
BLITZER: But my question was: Should these Silicon
Valley companies be forced to cooperate with the FBI?
FIORINA: They do not need to be forced. They need to be
asked to bring the best and brightest, the most recent technology to the table.
I was asked as a CEO. I complied happily. And they will as well. But they have
not been asked. That's why it cost billions of dollars to build an Obama
website that failed because the private sector wasn't asked.
(APPLAUSE)
BLITZER: Mr. Trump, you recently suggested closing that
Internet up, those were your words, as a way to stop ISIS
from recruiting online. Are you referring to closing down actual portions of
the Internet? Some say that would put the U.S.
in line with China and North Korea.
TRUMP: Well, look, this is so easy to answer. ISIS is recruiting through the Internet. ISIS is using the Internet better than we are using the
Internet, and it was our idea. What I wanted to do is I wanted to get our
brilliant people from Silicon Valley and other places and figure out a way that
ISIS cannot do what they're doing.
You talk freedom of speech. You talk freedom of anything you
want. I don't want them using our Internet to take our young, impressionable
youth and watching the media talking about how they're masterminds -- these are
masterminds. They shouldn't be using the word "mastermind." These are
thugs. These are terrible people in ISIS, not masterminds. And we have to
change it from every standpoint. But we should be using our brilliant people,
our most brilliant minds to figure a way that ISIS
cannot use the Internet. And then on second, we should be able to penetrate the
Internet and find out exactly where ISIS is and everything about ISIS. And we can do that if we use our good people.
(APPLAUSE)
BLITZER: Let me follow up, Mr. Trump.
So, are you open to closing parts of the Internet?
TRUMP: I would certainly be open to closing areas where we
are at war with somebody. I sure as hell don't want to let people that want to
kill us and kill our nation use our Internet. Yes, sir, I am.
BLITZER: Thank you.
Governor Kasich, is shutting down any part of the Internet a
good idea?
KASICH: No, I don't think it is. And I want to go back to
two other issues. One is the metadata. We know we have to hold this data for a
longer period of time. And, you know, in a lot of ways, Chris is right. Look,
what a president has to do is take a position. We don't want to err on the side
of having less. We want to err on the side of having more. That's good for our
families.
In addition to that, Wolf, there is a big problem. It's
called encryption. And the people in San
Bernardino were communicating with people who the FBI
had been watching. But because their phone was encrypted, because the
intelligence officials could not see who they were talking to, it was lost.
We have to solve the encryption problem. It is not easy. A
president of the United
States, again, has to bring people together,
have a position. We need to be able to penetrate these people when they are
involved in these plots and these plans. And we have to give the local
authorities the ability to penetrate to disrupt. That's what we need to do.
Encryption is a major problem, and Congress has got to deal with this and so
does the president to keep us safe.
(APPLAUSE)
BLITZER: Thank you, Governor.
The fight against radical Islamic terrorists and ISIS has
been called the war of our time. So let's talk about how each of you, as
commander in chief, would fight this war and win it.
Senator Cruz, you have said you would, quote, "carpet
bomb ISIS into oblivion," testing
whether, quote, "sand can glow in the dark." Does that mean leveling
the ISIS capital of Raqqa in Syria
where there are hundreds of thousands of civilians?
CRUZ: What it means is using overwhelming air power to
utterly and completely destroy ISIS. To put
things in perspective, in the first Persian Gulf War, we launched roughly 1,100
air attacks a day. We carpet bombed them for 36 days, saturation bombing, after
which our troops went in and in a day and a half mopped up what was left of the
Iraqi army.
Right now, Obama is launching between 15 and 30 air attacks
a day. It is photo op foreign policy. We need to use overwhelming air power. We
need to be arming the Kurds. We need to be fighting and killing ISIS where they are.
And let me go back to the earlier discussion a minute ago.
It's not a lack of competence that is preventing the Obama administration from
stopping these attacks. It is political correctness. We didn't monitor the
Facebook posting of the female San
Bernardino terrorist because the Obama DHS thought it
would be inappropriate. She made a public call to jihad, and they didn't target
it.
The Tsarnaev brothers, the elder brother made a public call
to jihad and the Obama administration didn't target it. Nidal Hasan
communicated with Anwar al-Awlaki, a known radical cleric, asked about waging
jihad against his fellow soldiers. The problem is because of political
correctness, the Obama administration, like a lot of folks here, want to search
everyone's cell phones and e-mails and not focus on the bad guys. And political
correctness is killing people.
BLITZER: Thank you. To be clear, Senator Cruz, would you
carpet bomb Raqqa, the ISIS capital, where
there are a lot of civilians, yes or no?
CRUZ: You would carpet bomb where ISIS
is, not a city, but the location of the troops. You use air power directed --
and you have embedded special forces to direction the air power. But the object
isn't to level a city. The object is to kill the ISIS
terrorists.
To make it -- listen, ISIS
is gaining strength because the perception is that they're winning. And
President Obama fuels that perception. That will change when militants across
the globe see that when you join ISIS that you are giving up your life, you are
signing your death warrant, and we need a president who is focused on defeating
every single ISIS terrorist and protecting the
homeland, which should be the first priority.
BLITZER: Thank you. Thank you, Senator.
Senator Rubio, you've been critical of Senator Cruz's
strategy. You say his voting record doesn't match his rhetoric. Why?
RUBIO: Well, let me begin by saying that we have to
understand who ISIS is. ISIS
is a radical Sunni group. They cannot just be defeated through air strikes. Air
strikes are a key component of defeating them, but they must be defeated on the
ground by a ground force. And that ground force must be primarily made up of
Sunni Arabs themselves, Sunni Arabs that reject them ideologically and confront
them militarily.
We will have to embed additional American special operators
alongside them to help them with training, to help them conduct special
missions, and to help improve the air strikes. The air strikes are important,
but we need to have an air force capable of it. And because of the budget cuts
we are facing in this country, we are going to be left with the oldest and the
smallest Air Force we have ever had. We have to reverse those cuts, in addition
to the cuts to our Navy and in addition to the cuts to our Army, as well.
And beyond that, I would say we must win the information war
against ISIS. Every war we have ever been
involved in has had a propaganda informational aspect to it. ISIS
is winning the propaganda war. They are recruiting people, including Americans,
to join them, with the promise that they are joining this great apocalyptic
movement that is going to defeat the West. We have to show what life is really
like in ISIS territory, and we have to show them why ISIS
is not invincible, by going out and conducting these attacks and publicizing
them to those who they recruit.
BLITZER: Because I asked the question, Senator, because you
said this. You said he, referring to Senator Cruz, voted against the Defense
Authorization Act every year that it came up, and I assume that if he voted
against it, he would veto it as president. That's the bill that funds our
troops.
RUBIO: That is accurate. Three times he voted against the
Defense Authorization Act, which is a bill that funds the troops. It also, by
the way, funds the Iron Dome and other important programs. And I have to assume
that if you vote against it in the Senate, you would also veto it as president.
He has also supported, by the way, a budget that is called
the containment budget. And it is a budget that would radically reduce the
amount of money we spend on our military. You can't carpet bomb ISIS if you don't have planes and bombs to attack them
with. And if we continue those cuts that we're doing now, not to mention
additional cuts, we are going to be left with the oldest and the smallest Air
Force this country has ever had, and that leaves us less safe.
BLITZER: Senator Cruz?
CRUZ: Well, you know, Marco has continued these attacks, and
he knows they're not true. Yes, it is true that I voted against the National
Defense Authorization Act, because when I campaigned in Texas
I told voters in Texas that I would oppose the
federal government having the authority to detain U.S. citizens permanently with no
due process. I have repeatedly supported an effort to take that out of that
bill, and I honored that campaign commitment.
CRUZ: But more broadly, you know, the notion Marco is suggesting,
that somehow -- he also has tossed more than a few insults this direction --
let's be absolutely clear. ISIS and radical
Islamic terrorism will face no more determined foe than I will be.
We will utterly destroy them by targeting the bad guys. And
one of the problems with Marco's foreign policy is he has far too often
supported Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama undermining governments in the
Middle East that have helped radical Islamic terrorists.
We need to focus on killing the bad guys, not getting stuck
in Middle Eastern civil wars that don't keep America safe.
BLITZER: Senator Rubio.
RUBIO: Yes, let me -- three points of distinction. The first
is, if you're an American citizen and you decide to join up with ISIS, we're not going to read you your Miranda rights. You're
going to be treated as an enemy combatant, a member of an army attacking this
country.
(APPLAUSE)
Number two, we do need our defense capabilities. It is a
fact that the cuts we are facing today and the cuts that Senator Cruz would
have supported would leave us with an even smaller Air Force and a smaller Navy
than the one we are going to be left with.
And the final point that I would make is Hillary Clinton and
Barack Obama's strategy is to lead from behind. It sounds like what he is
outlining is not to lead at all. We cannot continue to outsource foreign policy.
We must lead. We are the most powerful nation in the world. We need to begin to
act like it, again.
(APPLAUSE)
BLITZER: We are going to have much more on this...
PAUL: Wolf...
BLITZER: We're going to have much more on this. But I want
to move now back to Mr. Trump.
PAUL: Wolf, this legislation...
BLITZER: Hold on. Hold on. Hold on. PAUL: This legislation
on indefinite detention...
BLITZER: We have a lot...
PAUL: ... I think deserves a little more attention.
BLITZER: We have a lot to discuss. I want to move to Mr.
Trump right now. We have a question on this war against ISIS
and how you would fight and win this war. Here's the question from Facebook.
Listen to this.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
JOSH JACOB, COLLEGE STUDENT: I'm Josh Jacob from Georgia
Tech. Recently Donald Trump mentioned we must kill the families of ISIS members. However, this violates the principle of
distinction between civilians and combatants in international law.
So my question is, how would intentionally killing innocent
civilians set us apart from ISIS?
(END VIDEO CLIP)
BLITZER: Mr. Trump.
TRUMP: We have to be much tougher. We have to be much
stronger than we've been. We have people that know what is going on. You take a
look at just the attack in California
the other day. There were numerous people, including the mother, that knew what
was going on.
They saw a pipe bomb sitting all over the floor. They saw
ammunition all over the place. They knew exactly what was going on.
When you had the World
Trade Center
go, people were put into planes that were friends, family, girlfriends, and
they were put into planes and they were sent back, for the most part, to Saudi Arabia.
They knew what was going on. They went home and they wanted
to watch their boyfriends on television. I would be very, very firm with
families. Frankly, that will make people think because they may not care much
about their lives, but they do care, believe it or not, about their families'
lives.
(APPLAUSE)
BUSH: Donald, this has got...
BLITZER: Governor Bush. Governor Bush.
BUSH: This is another example of the lack of seriousness.
Look, this is -- this is troubling because we're at war. They've declared war
on us and we need to have a serious strategy to destroy ISIS.
But the idea that that is a solution to this is just -- is
just crazy. It makes no sense to suggest this. Look, two months ago Donald
Trump said that ISIS was not our fight. Just
two months ago he said that Hillary Clinton would be a great negotiator with Iran. And he
gets his foreign policy experience from the shows.
That is not a serious kind of candidate. We need someone
that thinks this through. That can lead our country to safety and security.
(APPLAUSE)
BLITZER: Mr. Trump.
TRUMP: Look, the problem is we need toughness. Honestly, I
think Jeb is a very nice person. He's a very nice person. But we need tough
people. We need toughness. We need intelligence and we need tough.
Jeb said when they come across the southern border they come
as an act of love.
BUSH: You said on September 30th that ISIS
was not a factor.
TRUMP: Am I talking or are you talking, Jeb?
BUSH: I'm talking right now. I'm talking.
TRUMP: You can go back. You're not talking. You interrupted
me.
BUSH: September 30th you said...
TRUMP: Are you going to apologize, Jeb? No. Am I allowed to
finish?
BLITZER: Just one at a time, go ahead...
TRUMP: Excuse me, am I allowed to finish?
BLITZER: Go ahead, Mr. Trump.
TRUMP: So...
BUSH: A little of your own medicine there, Donald.
TRUMP: ... again...
(CROSSTALK)
BLITZER: Governor Bush, please.
TRUMP: I know you're trying to build up your energy, Jeb,
but it's not working very well.
(LAUGHTER)
BLITZER: One at a time.
TRUMP: Look, look, look. We need a toughness. We need
strength. We're not respected, you know, as a nation anymore. We don't have
that level of respect that we need. And if we don't get it back fast, we're
just going to go weaker, weaker and just disintegrate.
We can't allow that to happen. We need strength. We don't
have it. When Jeb comes out and he talks about the border, and I saw it and I
was witness to it, and so was everyone else, and I was standing there,
"they come across as an act of love," he's saying the same thing
right now with radical Islam.
And we can't have that in our country. It just won't work.
We need strength.
BLITZER: Governor Bush.
BUSH: Donald, you're not going to be able to insult your way
to the presidency. That's not going to happen.
(APPLAUSE)
And I do have the strength. Leadership, leadership is not
about attacking people and disparaging people. Leadership is about creating a
serious strategy to deal with the threat of our time.
BUSH: And I laid out that strategy before the attacks in Paris and before the attacks in San Bernardino. And it is the way forward. We
need to increase our military spending. We need to deal with a no- fly zone in Syria, a safe
zone. We need to focus on building a military that is second-to-none...
BLITZER: Thank you.
BUSH: ... so that we can destroy Islamic terrorism.
TRUMP: With Jeb's attitude, we will never be great again,
that I can tell you. We will never be great again.
BLITZER: All right. Hugh Hewitt and Dana Bash, Hugh, go
ahead with the next question.
HEWITT: Dr. Carson...
(APPLAUSE)
... you mentioned in your opening remarks that you're a
pediatric neurologist surgeon...
CARSON:
Neurosurgeon.
HEWITT: Neurosurgeon. And people admire and respect and are
inspired by your life story, your kindness, your evangelical core support.
We're talking about ruthless things tonight -- carpet bombing, toughness, war.
And people wonder, could you do that? Could you order air strikes that would
kill innocent children by not the scores, but the hundreds and the thousands?
Could you wage war as a commander-in-chief?
CARSON:
Well, interestingly enough, you should see the eyes of some of those children
when I say to them we're going to have to open your head up and take out this
tumor. They're not happy about it, believe me. And they don't like me very much
at that point. But later on, they love me.
Sometimes you -- I sound like him.
(APPLAUSE)
You know, later on, you know, they really realize what's
going on. And by the same token, you have to be able to look at the big picture
and understand that it's actually merciful if you go ahead and finish the job,
rather than death by 1,000 pricks.
HEWITT: So you are OK with the deaths of thousands of
innocent children and civilian? It's like...
CARSON:
You got it. You got it.
HEWITT: That is what war -- can you be as ruthless as
Churchill was in prosecuting the war against the Nazis?
CARSON: Ruthless is not necessarily the word I would use,
but tough, resolute, understanding what the problems are, and understanding
that the job of the president of the United States is to protect the people of
this country and to do what is necessary in order to get it done.
(APPLAUSE)
BASH: Senator Paul, you said ISIS
grew stronger because of the hawks in your party. Do you really think that
Republicans have fueled the rise of ISIS?
PAUL: I think that by arming the allies of ISIS, the Islamic
rebels against Assad, that we created a safe space or made that space bigger
for ISIS to grow. I think those who have
wanted regime change have made a mistake. When we toppled Gadhafi in Libya, I think
that was a mistake. I think ISIS grew
stronger, we had a failed state, and we were more at risk.
I'd like to also go back to, though, another question, which
is, is Donald Trump a serious candidate? The reason I ask this is, if you're
going to close the Internet, realize, America, what that entails. That
entails getting rid of the First amendment, OK? It's no small feat.
If you are going to kill the families of terrorists, realize
that there's something called the Geneva Convention we're going to have to pull
out of. It would defy every norm that is America. So when you ask yourself,
whoever you are, that think you're going to support Donald Trump, think, do you
believe in the Constitution? Are you going to change the Constitution?
(APPLAUSE)
TRUMP: So, they can kill us, but we can't kill them? That's
what you're saying. And as far as the Internet is concerned, we're not talking
about closing the Internet. I'm talking about parts of Syria, parts of Iraq,
where ISIS is, spotting it.
Now, you could close it. What I like even better than that
is getting our smartest and getting our best to infiltrate their Internet, so
that we know exactly where they're going, exactly where they're going to be. I
like that better.
(APPLAUSE)
But we have to -- who would be -- I just can't imagine
somebody booing. These are people that want to kill us, folks, and you're --
you're objecting to us infiltrating their conversations? I don't think so. I
don't think so.
(APPLAUSE)
BASH: Senator Paul, Senator Paul, I want to go back to my
initial question, which is you saying that ISIS
grew stronger because of hawks in your party. And do you think your own party,
the people who you're describing, are responsible for the rise of ISIS?
PAUL: I think that if you believe in regime change, you're
mistaken. In 2013, we put 600 tons of weapons -- us, Saudi
Arabia, and Qatar -- into the war against
Assad. By pushing Assad back, we did create a safe space.
We had people coming to our Foreign Relations Committee and
saying, "Oh, we need to arm the allies of Al Qaida." They are still
saying this. It is a crazy notion. This is the biggest debate we should be
having tonight is is regime change a good idea; has it been a good idea.
There are still people -- the majority on the stage, they
want to topple Assad. And then there will be chaos, and I think ISIS will then
be in charge of Syria.
BASH: Senator, we're going to talk about regime change in a
bit.
But Governor Kasich, would you like to respond to Senator
Paul?
KASICH: Yeah, let me -- let me just suggest to everybody,
and I hear -- last February, I said we needed to have people on the ground in a
coalition with Europe and our allies. This is
not going to get done just by working with the Sunnis. And it is not going to
get done if we just embed a few people.
We have to go massively, like we did in the first Gulf War
where we destroyed Saddam's ability to take Kuwait. We need to have a coalition
that will stand for nothing less than the total destruction of ISIS and we have to be the leader. We can't wait for
anybody else. I served on the Armed Services Committee for 18 years and we must
lead, or the job won't get done, unfortunately, for our country.
(APPLAUSE)
BLITZER: Thank you, Governor.
Senator Rubio? Let's continue this conversation. This is a
critically important issue.
FIORINA: I hope at some point you're going to ask me my
strategy.
BLITZER: We will get to -- we have a lot of time, Ms.
Fiorina.
I want to get to Senator Rubio right now. Let's talk about,
one of the aspects of your strategy, you say the only way to defeat ISIS is with ground forces made up primarily of
Sunni-Arab forces. Those Arab nations, though, as you well know, they've
conducted less than five percent of the airstrikes and actually none since
August. What makes you think they are willing to fight on the ground if they're
not even willing to fight from the air?
RUBIO: Well, they most certainly will have to be worked on
to provide more than what they are doing now. There's no doubt about it. And
there's one -- one major reason why they have not been willing to be a broader
part of the coalition, and that is they have lost complete trust and confidence
in this president. This president cut a deal with their moral enemy, the Shia,
in Iran.
And this is the reason why they no longer trust this president and are willing
to work alongside them.
But they have as much invested in this as we do. In fact,
more so, for it is the king of Saudi
Arabia they want to behead first. It's the
king of Jordan
that they want to dethrone. It's the -- they want to go into Egypt the way they've already gone into Libya.
And on another point that we need to talk about, Assad is
one of the main reasons why ISIS even exists
to begin with. Assad is a puppet of Iran. And he has been so brutal
toward the Sunni within Syria
that he created the space that led to the people of Syria themselves to stand up and
try to overthrow him. That led to the chaos which allowed ISIS
to come in and take advantage of that situation and grow more powerful.
And the fact that this president led from behind meant there
were no alternative groups on the ground to be empowered, leaving ISIS with the prime operating space they needed to become
the force they have now become.
(CROSSTALK)
BLITZER: Thank you, Senator. Stand by.
(APPLAUSE)
BLITZER: Ms. Fiorina, the former defense secretary, Bob
Gates, says the chances of getting Sunni-Arab forces on the ground to get the
job done, his words, "chances very remote." What's your strategy?
FIORINA: Well, first I'll just point out that talking tough
is not the same as being strong. And to wage war, we need a commander in chief
who has made tough calls in tough times and stood up to be held accountable
over and over, not first-term senators who've never made an executive decision
in their life.
One of the things I would immediately do, in addition to
defeating them here at home, is bring back the warrior class -- Petraeus,
McChrystal, Mattis, Keane, Flynn. Every single one of these generals I know. Every
one was retired early because they told President Obama things that he didn't
want to hear.
We must have Sunni-Arabs involved in this coalition. We must
commit leadership, strength, support and resolve. I'll just add that Margaret
Thatcher once said, "If you want something talked about, ask a man; if you
want something done, ask a woman."
(APPLAUSE)
BLITZER: Thank you.
Governor Christie, what's your strategy?
CHRISTIE: Wolf, you sit up here and you listen to this
stuff, and you think that so many of these people have had so much to do in
this national debate, they talk like they were bystanders. You know, we talk
about our military being degraded over time, and yet we've had folks on this
stage who've been a part of Congress who have participated in sequester; who
participated in the degrading of this military over time.
And that's why I think people get so frustrated with Washington, D.C.
now. That's why they're so angry with the -- the electorate is so angry with
everybody who is involved in government in Washington, D.C.
Because if you listen to the folks up here, you think that they weren't even
there; they had nothing to do with this.
CHRISTIE: This is a difference between being a governor and
being in a legislature. See, because when something doesn't work in New Jersey, they look at
me, say: "Why didn't it get done? Why didn't you do it?" You have to
be responsible and accountable.
And so on ISIS, let's be
clear, the president needs to be a force that is trusted in the world. On this
I agree with Marco. You know, this president is not trusted.
If you're the King of Jordan, if you're a part of the royal
family in Saudi Arabia and he's made this deal with Iran which gives them $150
billion to wage a war and try to extend their empire across the Middle East,
why would you want to do it now?
But I will tell you this, when I stand across from King
Hussein of Jordan
and I say to him, "You have a friend again sir, who will stand with you to
fight this fight," he'll change his mind.
BLITZER: Dr. Carson, what is your strategy?
CARSON:
First of all, I've been talking about this for over a year. We have to destroy
their caliphate because that gives them legitimacy to go ahead with the global
Jihad. We have to take their energy because they are -- ISIS
is the richest terrorist organization there is. We have to take their oil, shut
down all of the mechanisms whereby they can disperse money because they go
after disaffected individuals from all over the place, and they're able to pay
them. That makes a difference.
As far as the command centers are concerned in Raqqa and to
a lesser degree Mosul,
cut those off. Do the same kind of thing that we did with Sinjar a few weeks
ago, working with our embedded special forces with the Kurds, shut off the
supply route, soften them up, then we go in with specials ops followed by our
air force to take them over. Those are things that work.
But also, you know, this whole concept of boots on the ground,
you know, we've got a phobia about boots on the ground. If our military experts
say, we need boots on the ground, we should put boots on the ground and
recognize that there will be boots on the ground and they'll be over here, and
they'll be their boots if we don't get out of there now.
BLITZER: Thank you.
Everyone stand by. We're only just beginning. Coming up,
which candidates on this stage tonight want to move foreign policy in a
dramatically new direction?
We'll be right back.
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
BLITZER: Welcome back to the CNN-Facebook Republican
Presidential Debate here at the Venetian, Las
Vegas.
The war against ISIS will
pose many new challenges for the next commander-in-chief. The last two
presidents pursued a Middle East policy that
supported toppling dictators to try to promote democracy.
Senator Cruz, you have said the world would be safer today
if Saddam Hussein were still in power in Iraq,
Moammar Gadhafi ruled Libya,
and Hosni Mubarak ruled Egypt.
So would it be your policy to preserve dictatorships, rather than promoting
democracy in the Middle East?
CRUZ: Wolf, I believe in a America first foreign policy,
that far too often President Obama and Hillary Clinton -- and, unfortunately,
more than a few Republicans -- have gotten distracted from the central focus of
keeping this country safe.
So let's go back to the beginning of the Obama
administration, when Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama led NATO in toppling the
government in Libya.
They did it because they wanted to promote democracy. A number of Republicans
supported them. The result of that -- and we were told then that there were
these moderate rebels that would take over. Well, the result is, Libya is now a
terrorist war zone run by jihadists.
Move over to Egypt.
Once again, the Obama administration, encouraged by Republicans, toppled
Mubarak who had been a reliable ally of the United States, of Israel, and in
its place, Morsi and the Muslim Brotherhood came in, a terrorist organization.
And we need to learn from history. These same leaders --
Obama, Clinton, and far too many Republicans -- want to topple Assad. Assad is
a bad man. Gadhafi was a bad man. Mubarak had a terrible human rights record.
But they were assisting us -- at least Gadhafi and Mubarak -- in fighting
radical Islamic terrorists.
And if we topple Assad, the result will be ISIS will take
over Syria, and it will
worsen U.S.
national security interests. And the approach, instead of being a Woodrow
Wilson democracy promoter...
BLITZER: Thank you.
CRUZ: ... we ought to hunt down our enemies and kill ISIS
rather than creating opportunities for ISIS to
take control of new countries.
BLITZER: Thank you, Senator. Thank you, Senator.
(APPLAUSE)
Senator Rubio, you supported the removal of Moammar Gadhafi
in Libya.
Now that country is in turmoil, as ISIS is
clearly growing there. Senator Cruz says you haven't learned your lesson. Do
you have any regrets for supporting President Obama's intervention in Libya?
RUBIO: To begin with, Moammar Gadhafi and the revolt against
Gadhafi was not started by the United
States. It was started by the Libyan people.
And the reason why I argued we needed to get involved is because he was going
to go one way or the other. And my argument then was proven true, and that is,
the longer that civil war took, the more militias would be formed and the more
unstable the country would be after the fact.
As far as Moammar Gadhafi is concerned, by the way, Moammar
Gadhafi is the man that killed those Americans over Lockerbie, Scotland.
Moammar Gadhafi is also the man that bombed that cafe in Berlin and killed those Marines. And you
want to know why Moammar Gadhafi started cooperating on his nuclear program?
Because we got rid of Saddam Hussein. And so he got scared that he would be
next, and that's why he started cooperating.
Look, we will have to work around the world with less than
ideal governments. The government in Saudi Arabia is not a democracy,
but we will have to work with them. The government in Jordan is not
perfect, but we will have to work with them. But anti-American dictators like
Assad, who help Hezbollah, who helped get those IEDs into Iraq, if they
go, I will not shed a tear.
BLITZER: Senator Cruz?
CRUZ: Well, it's more than not shedding a tear. It's
actively getting involved to topple a government. And we keep hearing from
President Obama and Hillary Clinton and Washington Republicans that they're
searching for these mythical moderate rebels. It's like a purple unicorn. They
never exist. These moderate rebels end up being jihadists.
And I'll tell you whose view on Assad is the same as mine.
It's Prime Minister Netanyahu. Prime Minister Netanyahu has said Israel doesn't have a dog in that fight because
Assad is a puppet of Iran, a
Shia radical Islamic terrorist, but at the same time, Prime Minister Netanyahu
doesn't want to see Syria
governed by ISIS. And we need to focus on
American interests, not on global aspirations...
(CROSSTALK)
BLITZER: Standby. Everybody standby for a moment. Governor
Kasich, go ahead.
KASICH: I don't understand this thing about Assad. He has to
go. Assad is aligned with Iran
and Russia.
The one thing we want to prevent is we want to prevent Iran being able to extend a Shia crescent all
across the Middle East. Assad has got to go.
KASICH: And there are moderates there. There are moderates
in Syria
who we should be supporting. I do not support a civil war. I don't want to be
policeman of the world. But we can't back off of this. And let me tell you, at
the end, the Saudis have agreed to put together a coalition inside of Syria to
stabilize that country.
BLITZER: Thank you.
KASICH: He must go. It will be a blow to Iran and Russia.
BLITZER: We're going to talk about Assad in a moment.
Mr. Trump, are Americans safer with dictators running the
world in the Middle East?
TRUMP: In my opinion, we've spent $4 trillion trying to
topple various people that frankly, if they were there and if we could've spent
that $4 trillion in the United
States to fix our roads, our bridges, and
all of the other problems; our airports and all of the other problems we've
had, we would've been a lot better off. I can tell you that right now.
We have done a tremendous disservice, not only to Middle East, we've done a tremendous disservice to
humanity. The people that have been killed, the people that have wiped away,
and for what? It's not like we had victory.
It's a mess. The Middle East
is totally destabilized. A total and complete mess. I wish we had the $4
trillion or $5 trillion. I wish it were spent right here in the United States,
on our schools, hospitals, roads, airports, and everything else that are all
falling apart.
(APPLAUSE)
FIORINA: That is exactly what President Obama said. I'm
amazed to hear that from a republican presidential candidate. But let's just
start with, who got it wrong? Who really got it wrong?
Hillary Clinton has gotten every foreign policy challenge
wrong. Hitting the reset button with Vladimir Putin - recall that she called
Bashar Al-Assad a positive reformer and then she opened an embassy and then
later she said, over, and over, and over again, "Bashar Al-Assad must
go." Although she wasn't prepared to do anything about it. Recall that
Hillary Clinton was all for toppling Gadhafi then didn't listen to her own
people on the ground. And then of course, when she lied about the terrorist
attack in Benghazi,
she invited more terrorist attacks.
BLITZER: Thank you.
Mr. Trump?
TRUMP: Well, there's nothing to respond to. Well, people
feel differently. I mean, the fact is Benghazi
was a disaster because of Libya,
everything just fell into place. It could not have been worse.
What do we have now? We have nothing. We've spent $3
trillion and probably much more - I have no idea what we've spent. Thousands
and thousands of lives, we have nothing. Wounded warriors all over the place
who I love, we have nothing for it.
And by the way - and Ben said incorrectly - and I'm not
saying this as a knock - he's one of finest men. You're not going to find a
finer men.
But I've been talking about oil for three years. I've been
saying,, "take the oil, take the oil." I didn't say, "just bomb
it," I said," take it and use it and distribute it so that the
wounded warriors -" People, I've been saying this now for many years.
BLITZER: All right.
TRUMP: Now, all of a sudden everybody's saying, "take
the oil." It wasn't so fashionable to take the oil six months ago. I've
been saying it for years.
BLITZER: Thank you.
FIORINA: We've mismanaged going into Iraq.
BLITZER: Dr. Carson, is the Middle East...
FIORINA: We've mismanaged going out of Iraq.
BLITZER: Dr. Carson, is the Middle East
better off with dictators?
CARSON:
No one is ever better off with dictators but there comes a time you know, when
you're on an airplane, they always say, "in case of an emergency oxygen
masks will drop down. Put yours on first and then administer help to your
neighbor." We need oxygen right now.
And we need to start thinking about the needs of the
American people before we go and solve everybody else's problems. The fact of
the matter is, is that the Middle East has been
in turmoil for thousands of years. For us to think that we're going to in there
and fix that with a couple of little bombs and a few little decorations is
relatively foolish.
FIORINA: We actually...
BLITZER: Governor Bush.
BUSH: I think we're focusing a whole...
BLITZER: Hold on Governor Bush., here's the question. You
said, "getting rid of Saddam Hussein in your words was a pretty good
deal." In light of what has happened in Iraq, do you still feel that way?
BUSH: I do. I think the lesson's learned are that we have to
have to have a strategy to get and a strategy to get out. Which means, that you
create a stable situation.
This president and this is what the focus ought to be, it's
not the differences between us, it's Barack Obama does not believe America's
leadership in the world is a force for good. He does not believe that our
strength is a place where security can take place. He leads from behind. He
creates an environment that now we're creating the most unstable situation
we've had since the World War II era.
The focus ought to be on the single fact that Hillary
Clinton wants to double down on a failed foreign policy and we need to be
united to defeat that because we're going to be in a place that is far less
secure than it is today. Don't you all agree?
BLITZER: Senator Paul, was getting rid of Saddam Hussein a
pretty good deal?
PAUL: These are the fundamental questions of our time, these
foreign policy questions, whether or not regime change is a good idea or a bad
idea. I don't think because I think the regime change was a bad idea it means
that Hussein was necessarily a good idea.
There is often variations of evil on both sides of the war.
What we have to decide is whether or not regime change is a good idea. It's
what the neoconservatives have wanted. It's what the vast majority of those on
the stage want.
They still want regime change. They want it in Syria. They
wanted it in Iraq.
They want it in Libya.
It has not worked.
Out of regime change you get chaos. From the chaos you have
seen repeatedly the rise of radical Islam. So we get this profession of, oh, my
goodness, they want to do something about terrorism and yet they're the problem
because they allow terrorism to arise out of that chaos.
(APPLAUSE)
BLITZER: Thank you.
(CROSSTALK)
BLITZER: Hugh Hewitt, go ahead.
(CROSSTALK)
BLITZER: Hold on. Hold on. Hold on. Hold on. Hugh.
CRUZ: The question of whether we should toppling
dictatorships is asking the wrong question. We should be defeating our enemies.
So the problem with defeating...
BLITZER: Senator, Senator, we're going to get to you. Wait
your turn. We have two hours of debate. We'll have plenty of time. Let Hugh ask
his question.
CRUZ: Well, but let me explain, the focus should be...
BLITZER: Senator, please.
CRUZ: ... on defeating our enemies. So, for example...
BLITZER: Senator... CRUZ: ... a regime we should change is Iran...
BLITZER: You'll have plenty of opportunity.
Hugh, go ahead.
CRUZ: ... because Iran has declared war on us. But we
shouldn't be toppling regimes...
(CROSSTALK)
CRUZ: ... that are fighting radical Islamic terrorists that
are helping...
BLITZER: These are the rules all of you agreed to.
Hugh, go ahead with your question.
HEWITT: Mr. Trump, we are talking about the most important
thing, that's why it's heated. And it's, you are OK with Mr. Assad staying in
power, but you are also in favor of winning.
If he stays in power, Iran is winning, Hezbollah is
winning. Iran is winning in Yemen. They are
winning everywhere. If they are winning how can we be winning?
TRUMP: I think Assad is a bad guy, a very bad guy, all
right? Lots of people killed. I think we are backing people we have no idea who
they are. The rebels, we call them the rebels, the patriotic rebels. We have no
idea. A lot of people think, Hugh, that they are ISIS.
We have to do one thing at a time. We can't be fighting ISIS and fighting Assad. Assad is fighting ISIS. He is fighting ISIS.
Russia is fighting now ISIS. And Iran
is fighting ISIS.
We have to do one thing at a time. We can't go -- and I
watched Lindsey Graham, he said, I have been here for 10 years fighting. Well,
he will be there with that thinking for another 50 years. He won't be able to
solve the problem.
We have to get rid of ISIS
first. After we get rid of ISIS, we'll start
thinking about it. But we can't be fighting Assad. And when you're fighting
Assad, you are fighting Russia,
you're fighting -- you're fighting a lot of different groups.
But we can't be fighting everybody at one time.
HEWITT: Governor Christie, is he right? Because if we step back,
Iran
goes nuclear. Is Donald Trump right?
CHRISTIE: Well, I think we have to focus, Hugh, on exactly
what the priorities are. And to me, what I've always said is that the president
has set up an awful situation through his deal with Iran,
because what his deal with Iran
has done is empower them and enrich them. And that's the way ISIS
has been created and formed here. ISIS is created and formed because of the
abuse that Assad and his Iranian sponsors have rained down on the Sunnis in Syria.
And so when we empower Iran, this is why this president --
and when Hillary Clinton says her theory against ISIS will be just about the
same as the president, then get ready for more unrest and more murder and more
violence in the Middle East.
We need to focus our attention on Iran,
because if you miss Iran,
you are not going to get ISIS. The two are
inextricably connected because one causes the other.
HEWITT: Senator Paul, let me ask you, you heard Governor
Kasich say Assad must go. Do you agree?
PAUL: No, I think it's a huge mistake. I think regime change
in Syria,
and this is what -- I've been saying this for several years now. In 2013 when
we first went in, I said, you are going to give arms to the allies of al Qaida,
to radical jihadists? That's crazy.
But the other thing I said is the great irony is you will be
back fighting against your own weapons. Had Assad been bombed when he used
chemical weapons two years ago, ISIS would be in charge of all of Syria now.
We have to have a more realistic foreign policy and not a
utopian one where we say, oh, we're going to spread freedom and democracy, and
everybody in the Middle East is going to love
us. They are not going to love us.
(APPLAUSE)
(CROSSTALK)
KASICH: The foreign policy, you have to know how to pick and
choose. There's no way, if Saddam had not had weapons of mass destruction, I
would have gone, because I don't believe that the U.S. should be involved directly in
civil wars.
I opposed the U.S.
involvement in Lebanon.
We ended up having to withdraw our marines after our barracks were blown up.
There is a difference between Iraq, where you have Sunni, Shia,
and Kurds put together after the First World War by the Western powers. It
doesn't work. It needs to break up into three parts.
KASICH: And for the Russians, frankly, it's time that we
punched the Russians in the nose. They've gotten away with too much in this
world and we need to stand up against them, not just there, but also in Eastern Europe where they threaten some of our most
precious allies.
BLITZER: Let's continue with Russia right now. We have another
question from Facebook. Listen and watch.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
QUESTION: My name is Ashley Tofil. Ms. Fiorina, in November,
you said that you would not talk to Vladimir Putin after you were elected
because you would be communicating from a position of weakness. Do you believe
that it is feasible to not communicate with another world leader? And do you
think that that also is a sign of weakness?
(END VIDEO CLIP)
BLITZER: Ms. Fiorina, as you know, U.S. and Russian warplanes are flying all over Syria right
now. With so many lives on the line, is this a good time for the United States
not to talk to Putin?
FIORINA: I didn't say I would cut off all communication with
Putin. What I said was as president of the United States, now is not the time
to talk with him. Reagan walked away at Reykjavik.
There is a time and a place for everything. There is a time and a place for
talk. And there is a time and a place for action.
I know Vladimir Putin. He respects strength. He lied to our
president's face; didn't both to tell him about warplanes and troops going into
Syria.
We need to speak to him from a position of strength. So as commander in chief,
I will not speak to him until we've set up that no-fly zone; until we've
gathered our Sunni-Arab allies and begun to deny ISIS territory; until I've
called the supreme leader of Iran
and told him new deal -- new deal. We the United States of America are going
to cut off the money flow, which we can do; which we don't need anyone's permission
or collaboration to do.
And I will not speak to him personally until we've rebuilt
the 6th Fleet a little bit right under his nose; rebuilt the missile defense
program in Poland right under his nose; and conducted a few military exercises
in the Baltic states.
And let us remember one other thing. Hillary Clinton and
Barack Obama are responsible for the growth of ISIS because they precipitously
withdrew from Iraq
in 2011 against the advice of every single general and for political
expediency. It's not these people up here. It's Hillary Clinton.
(APPLAUSE)
BLITZER: Thank you, Ms. Fiorina.
Governor Christie, if the U.S. imposed a no-fly zone over
Syria and a Russian plane encroached, invaded that no-fly zone, would you be
prepared to shoot down that Russian plane and risk war with Russia?
CHRISTIE: Not only would I be prepared to do it, I would do
it. A no-fly zone means a no-fly zone, Wolf. That's what it means.
(APPLAUSE)
See, maybe -- maybe because I'm from New Jersey, I just have this kind of plain
language hangup. But I would make very clear -- I would not talk to Vladimir
Putin. In fact, I would talk to Vladimir Putin a lot. But I'd say to him,
"Listen, Mr. President, there's a no-fly zone in Syria; you fly
in, it applies to you." And yes, we would shoot down the planes of Russian
pilots if in fact they were stupid enough to think that this president was the
same feckless weakling that the president we have in the Oval Office is right
now.
(APPLAUSE)
BLITZER: Senator Paul -- Senator Paul, I want you to respond
to what we just heard from Governor Christie. If there was a no-fly zone, you
say that potentially could lead to World War III. Why?
PAUL: Well, I think if you're in favor of World War III, you
have your candidate. You know, here's...
(APPLAUSE)
... the thing. My goodness, what we want in a leader is
someone with judgment, not someone who is so reckless as to stand on the stage
and say, "Yes, I'm jumping up and down; I'm going to shoot down Russian
planes." Russia
already flies in that airspace. It may not be something we're in love with the
fact that they're there, but they were invited by Iraq
and by Syria
to fly in that airspace.
And so if we announce we're going to have a no-fly zone, and
others have said this. Hillary Clinton is also for it. It is a recipe for
disaster. It's a recipe for World War III. We need to confront Russia from a position of strength, but we don't
need to confront Russia
from a point of recklessness that would lead to war.
This is something -- this type of judgment, you know, it's
having that kind of judgment; who you would appoint and how you're going to
conduct affairs, that is incredibly important.
I mean, I think when we think about the judgment of someone
who might want World War III, we might think about someone who might shut down
a bridge because they don't like their friends; they don't want to -- you know,
they want to (inaudible) a Democrat.
So I think we need to be very careful.
BLITZER: Governor Christie?
CHRISTIE: Well, Wolf, I'll tell you what reckless is. What
reckless is is calling Assad a reformer. What reckless is allowing Russia to come into Crimea and Ukraine. What
reckless is is inviting Russia
into Syria to team with Iran. That is
reckless. And the reckless people are the folks in the White House right now.
Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton are the reckless people.
CHRISTIE: And if you think that a no-fly zone is a reckless
policy, you're welcome to your opinion. But how is it working so far? As we
have 250,000 Syrians murdered, slaughtered; millions running around the world,
running for their lives. It's not working. We need to try something else. And
that is not reckless.
(APPLAUSE)
BLITZER: All right, let's go back -- Hugh and Dana?
HEWITT: Governor Bush, a commander-in-chief question. You've
said that Mr. Trump is not qualified to be president because he's not qualified
to deal with Vladimir Putin. Why are you better qualified to deal with Vladimir
Putin than Mr. Trump?
BUSH: Because I -- first of all, I know what I don't know. I
know what I don't know. I would seek out, as I have, the best advice that
exists. I won't get my information from the shows. I don't know if that's
Saturday morning or Sunday morning. I don't know which one.
(LAUGHTER)
I will seek out the best advice, and I will create a
strategy and I will persuade the American people what the role of America should
be. I've laid out a policy of rebuilding our military.
All of the talk that we're seeing here -- most of which I
agree on, frankly -- requires a much stronger military. We now have a lack of
readiness that is quite scary. We have planes that were -- that Harry Truman
inaugurated, the B-52. We have -- the Navy has been gutted and decimated. The
readiness of the Marines is way down.
If we're serious about America's leadership in the world,
then we need to make sure that we have the back of the armed forces. The Armed
Forces Radio is here listening to this today. I hope they know that if I'm
president, I'll be a commander-in-chief, not an agitator- in-chief or a
divider-in-chief, that I will lead this country in a way that will create
greater security and greater safety.
HEWITT: Mr. Trump?
TRUMP: I think it's very sad that CNN leads Jeb Bush,
Governor Bush, down a road by starting off virtually all the questions,
"Mr. Trump this, Mister" -- I think it's very sad. And, frankly, I
watched -- I think it's very sad. And, frankly, I watched the first debate, and
the first long number of questions were, "Mr. Trump said this, Mr. Trump
said that. Mr. Trump" -- these poor guys -- although, I must tell you,
Santorum, good guy. Governor Huckabee, good guy. They were very nice, and I
respect them greatly. But I thought it was very unfair that virtually the
entire early portion of the debate was Trump this, Trump that, in order to get
ratings, I guess. In order to get ratings, I guess.
HEWITT: But, Mr. Trump, it's not CNN -- I was on CNN last
night...
TRUMP: I just think it's very -- excuse me.
HEWITT: ... watching...
TRUMP: Excuse me. I think it's very unprofessional.
HEWITT: But it wasn't -- it wasn't CNN. It was me. I watched
you last night for 16 minutes. It's not CNN.
(APPLAUSE)
TRUMP: Well, I think it's very unprofessional.
HEWITT: It's not CNN. It's America's watching you.
TRUMP: OK, fine.
HEWITT: It's America's
watching.
(CROSSTALK)
BUSH: So I was -- I was -- I was mentioned, so I can bring
up something, I think, right? Look, the simple fact is, if you think this is
tough you're not being treated fairly...
TRUMP: This isn't tough and easy. I wish it...
BUSH: ... imagine what it's going to be like dealing with
Putin or dealing with President Xi.
TRUMP: I wish it was always this easy as you, Jeb.
BUSH: Or dealing with the Islamic terrorism that exists.
TRUMP: Oh, yeah.
BUSH: This is a tough business to run for president.
TRUMP: Oh, I know. You're a tough guy, Jeb. I know.
BUSH: And it's -- and we need...
(LAUGHTER)
... to have a leader that is...
(CROSSTALK) TRUMP: You're tough.
BUSH: You're never going to be president of the United States
by insulting your way to the presidency.
TRUMP: Well, let's see. I'm at 42, and you're at 3. So, so
far, I'm doing better.
BUSH: Doesn't matter. Doesn't matter.
TRUMP: So far, I'm doing better. You know, you started off
over here, Jeb. You're moving over further and further. Pretty soon you're
going to be off the end...
(CROSSTALK)
FIORINA: This doesn't do a thing to solve the problems.
(CROSSTALK)
FIORINA: It doesn't do a thing to solve the problems.
(CROSSTALK)
BLITZER: One at a time. Hugh, go ahead.
KASICH: It sounds more and more what my daughter said that I
said in the beginning, all the fighting and arguing is not advancing us.
FIORINA: It will not solve the problem.
KASICH: It is not the way we're going to strengthen our
country. We will strengthen our country when we come together.
(APPLAUSE)
And, look, you've got Rand Paul, you've got Ted Cruz, you've
got Marco, you've got a lot of people on this stage that have studied these
issues. You know what a leader does? A leader has a sound program, has a good
policy, and then brings people together to solve problems.
(APPLAUSE)
Guess what? Both in Congress in balancing the budget and in Ohio fixing the economy
-- and, by the way, we talk about the fence. The first thing we better get
going is strengthening our economy, because if we don't have a strong economy,
we can't pay for all of this. And the world wants us to be able to function
from strength, believe it or not. Get our economy going, get these people
together in a room. We can fix this, ladies and gentlemen.
(CROSSTALK)
KASICH: We don't have to fight all the time. It can be done,
and we will be great...
HEWITT: Governor -- thank you, Governor.
KASICH: ... when we join together. Thank you, Hugh.
HEWITT: Dr. Carson, commander-in-chief question again.
You've been the head of neurosurgery for a big hospital. You're on a lot of
boards of a lot of companies. You've traveled the world. You're going traveling
again next week. But does that prepare you to command troops from Djibouti to Japan,
troops from Afghanistan to Iraq to be in
charge of the men and women watching on Armed Services Network tonight?
CARSON:
Well, you know, there's a false narrative that only the political class has the
wisdom and the ability to be commander-in- chief. But if you go back and you
study the design of our country, it was really designed for the citizen
statesman.
And we need to be talking about where does your experience
come from? You know, and I've had a lot of experience building things,
organizing things, you know, a national scholarship program.
One of the things that you'll notice if you look through my
life is that I don't do a lot of talking. I do a lot of doing. And really, it
says more about a person than how much they talk. And then some people say
you're weak because, you know, you're not loud and you're not boisterous and
you're not rude. But the fact of the matter is, look and see what I've done.
And that speaks volumes about strength.
BASH: Thank you, Dr. Carson. We've been talking tonight
about programs and policy proposals that you all have to keep Americans safe
and it's a big discussion on the campaign trail. Also about border security and
immigration. So let's talk about immigration.
Senator Rubio. You co-authored a bill with Democrats two
years ago that allowed a path to citizenship for undocumented immigrants. Do
you still support that path to citizenship, which means giving those immigrants
rights, like the right to vote?
RUBIO: Yeah. Immigration is not an issue that I read about
in the newspaper or watch a documentary on PBS or CNN. It's an issues I've
lived around my whole life. My family are immigrants. My wife's family are
immigrants. All of my neighbors are immigrants.
I see every aspect of this problem. The good, the bad, and
the ugly. And here's what we learned in 2013. The American people don't trust
the Federal Government to enforce our immigration laws, and we will not be able
to do anything on immigration until we first prove to the American people that
illegal immigration is under control. And we can do that. We know what it takes
to do that.
It takes at least 20,000 more additional border agents. It
takes completing those 700 miles of fencing. It takes a mandatory e-verify
system and a mandatory entry/exit tracking system to prevent overstays. After
we have done that, the second thing we have to do is reform and modernize the
legal immigration system. And after we have done those two things, I think the
American people are gonna be reasonable with what do you do with someone who
has been in this country for 10 or 12 years who hasn't otherwise violated our
laws -- because if they're a criminal they can't stay. They'll have to undergo
a background check, pay a fine, start paying taxes. And ultimately, they'll
given a work permit and that's all they're gonna be allowed to have for at
least 10 years. But you can't get to that third step until you have done the
other two things, and that was the lesson we learned in 2013. There is no trust
that the Federal Government will enforce the law. They will not support you
until you see it done first.
BASH: Senator, you haven't answered the question. You
described a very long path but does that path end at citizenship?
RUBIO: But I've answered that question repeatedly. I am
personally open -- after all that has happened and after ten years in that
probationary status where all they have is a permit, I personally am open to
allowing people to apply for a green card.
That may not be a majority position in my party, but that's
down the road. You can't even begin that process until you prove to people --
not just pass a law that says you're gonna bring illegal immigration under
control. You're gonna have to do it and prove to people that it's working.
And that was the lesson of 2013. And it's more true today,
than it was then. After a migratory crisis on the border with minors coming
over that you're seeing start up again now, after all these executive orders the
President has issued. More than ever we need to...
BASH: Thank you, senator.
RUBIO: ... prove to people that illegal immigration is under
control.
BASH: Thank you, senator. Senator Cruz.
(APPLAUSE)
BASH: Senator Cruz, on the campaign trail, Senator Rubio has
said that his immigration plan is not that different from yours. Is that true?
CRUZ: Well, he -- he has attempted to muddy the waters, but
I think that anyone who watched the battle that we had. You know, there was a
time for choosing as Reagan put it. Where there was a battle over amnesty and
some chose, like Senator Rubio to stand with Barack Obama and Chuck Schumer and
support a massive amnesty plan.
Others chose to stand with Jeff Sessions and Steve King and
the American people and secure the border.
And let me mention, this issue is actually directly
connected to what we've been talking about. Because the front line with ISIS
isn't just in Iraq and Syria, it's in Kennedy
Airport and the Rio Grande. Border security is national
security. And, you know, one of the most troubling aspects of the Rubio-Schumer
Gang of Eight Bill was that it gave President Obama blanket authority to admit
refugees, including Syrian refugees without mandating any background checks
whatsoever. Now we've seen what happened in San Bernardino. When you are letting people
in, when the FBI can't vet them, it puts American citizens at risk. And I tell
you, if I'm elected president, we will secure the border. We will triple the
border patrol. We will build a wall that works and I'll get Donald Trump to pay
for it.
(APPLAUSE)
BASH: Senator Rubio, please.
RUBIO: Yeah, a couple points. In 2013 we had never faced a
crisis like the Syrian refugee crisis now. Up until that point, a refugee meant
someone fleeing oppression, fleeing Communism like it is in my community.
As far as Ted's record, I'm always puzzled by his attack on
this issue. Ted, you support legalizing people who are in this country
illegally. Ted Cruz supported a 500-percent increase in the number of H-1
visas, the guest workers that are allowed into this country, and Ted supports
doubling the number of green cards.
So I think what's important for us to understand and there
is a way forward on this issue that we an bring our country together on. And
while I'm president I will do it. And it will begin by bringing illegal
immigration under control and proving to the American people.
BASH: Senator Cruz?
CRUZ: Look, I understand Marco wants to raise confusion, it
is not accurate what he just said that I supported legalization. Indeed, I led
the fight against his legalization and amnesty. And you know, there was one
commentator that put it this way that, for Marco to suggest our record's the
same is like suggesting "the fireman and the arsonist because they are
both at the scene of the fire."
He was fighting to grant amnesty and not to secure the
border, I was fighting to secure the border. And this also goes to trust,
listening on to campaign trails. Candidates all the time make promises. You
know, Marco said," he learned that the American people didn't trust the
federal government."
BASH: Senator Cruz?
RUBIO: No, no, give him time.
CRUZ: In Florida
promising to...
(CROSSTALK)
RUBIO: Ted, do you...
CRUZ: go in the fight against amnesty...
RUBIO: Did Ted Cruz fight to support legalizing people that
are in this country illegally?
CRUZ: He campaigned promising to lead the fight against
amnesty.
FIORINA: Ladies and gentleman, this is why the American
people are standing up.
BASH: Senator Cruz, can you answer that question please?
RUBIO: Does Ted Cruz rule out ever legalizing people that
are in this country now?
BASH: Senator Cruz?
CRUZ; I have never supported a legalization...
RUBIO: Would you rule it out?
CRUZ : I have never supported legalization, and I do not
intend to support legalization. Let me tell you how you do this, what you do is
you enforce the law...
(CROSSTALK)
FIORINA: This is why the nation is fed up...
BASH: One at a time please.
CRUZ: Watt you do is enforcement the law...
FIORINA: We have been talking about this...
BASH: Ms. Fiorina, please wait your turn, we're going to get
to you.
FIORINA: Sorry, but you haven't gotten to me. This is why...
CRUZ: What you do...
BASH: Senator Cruz go ahead.
FIORINA: the people are fed up with the political class.
CRUZ: What you do is you enforce the law. I've laid out a
very, very detailed immigration plan on my website, tedcruz.org. It's 11 pages
of existing federal law and in particular the question of what to do with
people who are here now? You enforce the law.
That means you stop the Obama administration's policy of
releasing criminal illegal aliens. Do you know how many aliens Bill Clinton
deported? 12 million. Do you know how many illegal aliens, George W. Bush
deported? 10 million.
We can enforce the laws and if we secure the border, that
solves the problem. And as president I will solve this problem and secure the
border.
BASH: Mr. Trump, you like to say that you restarted this
conversation in the campaign. TRUMP: I believe I did.
BASH: So who do you side with? Who do you side with in this,
Senator Rubio or Senator Cruz?
TRUMP: I have a very hardline position, we have a country or
we don't have a country. People that have come into our country illegally, they
have to go. They have to come back into through a legal process.
I want a strong border. I do want a wall. Walls do work, you
just have to speak to the folks in Israel. Walls work if they're
properly constructed. I know how to build, believe me, I know how to build.
I feel a very, very strong bind, and really I'm bound to this
country, we either have a border or we don't. People can come into the country,
we welcome people to come but they have to come in legally.
BASH: Thank you.
Governor Bush?
BUSH: Yes.
BASH: Listening to this, do you think this is the tone --
this immigration debate that republicans need to take to win back Hispanics
into our party especially states like where we are in Nevada that has a pretty Hispanic community?
BUSH: No it isn't but it is an important subject to talk
about for sure. And I think people have good ideas on this. Clearly, we need to
secure the border. Coming here legally needs to be a lot easier than coming
here illegally.
If you don't have that, you don't have the rule of law. We
now have a national security consideration, public health issues, we have an
epidemic of heroine overdoses in all places in this country because of the ease
of bringing heroine in. We have to secure the border.
It is a serious undertaking and yes, we do need more fencing
and we do need to use technology, and we do need more border control. And we
need to have better cooperation by the way with local law enforcement. There
are 800,000 cops on the beat, they ought to be trained to be the eyes and ears
for law enforcement for the threat against terror as well as for immigration.
This is a serious challenge and if we can get it right, yes,
we'll start winning votes again. The real problem isn't anybody on this stage,
the real problem is Barack Obama has had six years to advocate a position to
fix this and he's done nothing. The congress has funded these programs of
building more fencing and doing all this and he hasn't done it.
He wants to maintain it as a wedge issue and so does Hillary
Clinton. Republicans need to fix it and when we do, we'll be better off.
BLITZER: Governor, thank you very much.
BLITZER: So, Dr. Carson, you recently visited a refugee camp
in Jordan
and you deemed it your words, "really quite nice." Saying the people
there didn't want to come to the United States. Do you think these
camps are a long-term solution of the problem of Syrian refugees?
CARSON:
Well, it was very interesting having an opportunity to talk to the Syrians
themselves. And I asked them: What do you want? What is your supreme desire? Their
supreme desire was to be settled back in their own country. I said, "What
can Americans and other countries do?" They said, "Support the
efforts of those who are trying to provide safety for us, including the
Jordanians."
Of course, they had a brand new hospital, for instance, that
was unstaffed because there wasn't enough money to do it. But here's what's
really neat. If you go into Hasakah province in northeast Syria, that's an area that's as big as Lebanon. It's
controlled by the Kurds, the Christians and the moderate Sunnis. And there are
airstrips and hotels. You could settle a lot of people there.
All we would have to do is be willing to provide them with
some weaponry, some defensive weaponry. And we seem to be afraid to give the
Kurds weaponry. We like to send it for some strange reason through Baghdad, and then they
only get a tenth of it.
And if we would support them, we'd have a perfect ideal
there. We don't need to set this up as we either take a bunch of refugees who
will be infiltrated with terrorists, I guarantee you. For them not to be would
be terrorist malpractice. And we need to -- to choose the right choice, not
these false choices.
BLITZER: Senator Paul, you oppose letting in Syrian refugees
at this time into the United
States. The U.S.
has already accepted 2,000 Syrian refugees, including 13 living here in Las Vegas right now.
Would you send them back? What would you do with these people?
PAUL: You know, I think we need to set the record straight
on this, because I think Marco misspoke about the bill. On the Gang of Eight
bill, there was no provisions really for extra scrutiny or safety for refugees.
At the time the bill came up, two Iraqi refugees came to my home town, Bowling Green, Kentucky.
Their fingerprints were on a bomb from Iraq. They were in the database,
but we didn't pick them up.
We relocated them here, put them in government housing, got
them on food stamps. And we began providing for them, but we didn't have
adequate security. On the Gang of Eight bill, on Marco's bill, we had an
opportunity. There was a conservative consensus for an amendment I put forward
called Trust, But Verify that would have strengthened border security on both
refugees, students and those coming here. And Marco sided and I guess was more
sympathetic to Chuck Schumer and to the president than he was to conservative
principles.
But this goes directly to national defense. And if he wants
to run as a national -- national defense conservative, he's got to explain why
he hasn't stepped up to support border security.
BLITZER: Senator Rubio?
(APPLAUSE)
RUBIO: Well, he's just admitted -- as he's just admitted,
the reason why those refugees were allowed in was because they messed up in how
they used the actual database. They should have know. They didn't because they
didn't run the actual law as it exists now. It didn't work well.
As far as the refugees are concerned, it's not that America doesn't
want to accept refugees, Wolf. It's that we may not be able to, because this is
an issue we have to be 100 percent right on. If we allow 9,999 Syrian refugees
into the United States, and
all of them are good people, but we allow one person in who's an ISIS killer -- we just get one person wrong, we've got a
serious problem.
And there is not a single person in the national defense
apparatus of this country that can guarantee you are going to be 100 percent
right. And that's why as president, I'll take this very seriously.
BLITZER: Senator Paul, you didn't answer the question about
the 2,000 Syrian refugees who are already here in the United States.
Will you send them back or let them stay?
PAUL: What my bill would do would be only for refugees going
forward. So I haven't taken a position on sending anyone home. But I have taken
the position that we have a lot of problems here in our country. And that one
of the things that we do -- charity is about giving your own money. Charity
isn't giving someone else's money. To put everyone in government housing and
food stamps and bring them in from around the world I think is a mistake. To
give of your own money, I've given to my church. My church has helped people
that came from Bosnia.
That's a good thing.
But we shouldn't have a program where we just say that we're
going to take care of the world's refugees. Nobody in the Middle
East is doing anything. Saudi Arabia,
Qatar, Kuwait -- all
the Gulf nations are doing nothing. They need to step up and take...
(CROSSTALK)
(APPLAUSE)
BLITZER: We have another -- we have another question. We
have another question from Facebook. Let's listen.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
QUESTION: My name is Carla Hernandez. I'm from the University of Texas
at Austin. And
my question is directed to all the candidates.
If the Bible clearly states that we need to embrace those in
need and not fear, how can we justify not accepting refugees?
(END VIDEO CLIP)
BLITZER: Governor Christie, you say there should be a pause
in allowing new refugees to come into the United States, including orphans
under the age of five. What do you say to Carla?
CHRISTIE: What I say to Carla is that the first job of the
president of the United
States is to protect your safety and your
security and the security and safety of your family. And this debate stops with
me in the discussions with the FBI director.
CHRISTIE: Now, listen, I'm a former federal prosecutor, I
know Jim Comey. We've worked together. He was the U.S.
attorney in Manhattan when I was a U.S. attorney in New Jersey.
And when Jim Comey gets up before Congress and says, we
cannot effectively vet these people, for me as president, that's the end of the
conversation. We have to put America's
security first.
(APPLAUSE)
The American people -- we on this stage need to open our
ears. We need to open our ears. The American people are not whispering to us.
They are screaming to us. And they're screaming to us that it's our job to
actually make this government work.
It's so dysfunctional under Barack Obama and Hillary
Clinton. It's so ineffective. It's so ineffectual that the American people say,
we don't trust them to do anything anymore. So I'm not going to let Syrian
refugees, any Syrian refugees in this country.
And it was widows and orphans, by the way, and we now know
from watching the San Bernardino
attack that women can commit heinous, heinous acts against humanity just the
same as men can do it.
And so I don't back away from that position for a minute.
When the FBI director tells me that he can vet those people, then we'll
consider it and not a moment before because your safety and security is what's
most important to me.
(APPLAUSE)
BLITZER: Governor Kasich.
KASICH: You know, obviously, as president of the United States,
we've got to keep the people safe. That's first and foremost.
But as governor of Ohio, I
have an obligation to keep the 11.5 million people in Ohio safe. And we have been very effective
with our Joint Terrorism Task Force, being able to make busts.
In fact, we just made one three-four weeks ago against a
person who was favorable to ISIS living in Akron.
But let me tell you what is interesting about the
administration. We had Central American miners that were placed in Ohio, and we never knew
a thing about it. We didn't know where they were. And, in fact, we know now
that some of them, there is a case going on where some of them may have been
human-trafficked.
So when the administration tells me we have a great vetting
process, the proof is in the pudding. They sent these miners to us. Our schools
were disrupted. We didn't know where they were. And bad things happened to
them. And now they tell me that we ought to be able to admit these Syrian
refugees.
So, Wolf, look, people have accused me at times of having
too big of a heart. You know, that's OK. But I have to also to say I must keep
the people of my state safe. So we take a pause.
BLITZER: Thank you, Governor.
There is much more coming up. We are only just beginning.
Coming up, what other global hot spots await the next president of the United States.
(APPLAUSE)
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
BLITZER: Welcome back to the CNN-Facebook Republican
Presidential Debate. We're here at the Venetian Las Vegas. Tonight we have been
focusing on the Middle East, but let's turn to
some other world threats that you will potentially face as Commander in Chief.
Ms. Fiorina, candidates here have called the North Korean
leader Kim Jong-Un a maniac who is mentally unstable. Last week he said he now
has a hydrogen bomb. If you were elected president, what would you do about Kim
Jong-Un?
FIORINA: Well, first, Kim Jong-Un is a dangerous leader,
without a doubt. And both Republican and Democrat administrations have been
completely ineffective in dealing with him. So we must continue to isolate him.
We will need China
as part of that strategy.
China
is a rising adversary. So one of the things we have to do if we want China's support is to push back on China. They,
too, recognize one thing -- strength and their own economic interest.
I have done business in China
for 25 years, so I know that in order to get China to cooperate with us, we must
first actually retaliate against their cyber-attacks so they know we're
serious. We have to push back on their desire to control the trade route
through the South China Sea through which
flows $5 trillion worth of goods and services every year.
We cannot let them control the disputed islands, and we must
work with the Australians, the South Koreans, the Japanese and the Filipinos to
contain China.
And then we must ask for their support and their help with North Korea.
Because believe it or not, China
is as concerned about Kim Jong-Un as we are.
BLITZER: Dr. Carson, what would you do about Kim Jong-Un?
CARSON: Well, I definitely
believe that he is unstable, and I do, in fact, believe that China has a lot
more influence with him than we do. But we also recognize that North Korea is
in severe financial straits, and they have decided to use their resources to
build their military, rather than to feed their people and to take care of the
various humanitarian responsibilities that they have.
We can capitalize upon that. You know, we should use our
economic power in lots of different ways. I think we can use that in order to
keep Putin contained, because he is a one-horse show. Energy. And we have an
abundance of energy, but we have archaic energy exportation rules. We need to
get rid of those, allow ourselves to really make Europe
dependent on us and other parts of the world dependent on us for energy. Put
him back in his little box where he belongs.
And, you know, we need to be doing lots of other things with
the resources that we have. So economic power works just as well as military
power, perhaps even better. And speaking of that, our Military needs to be
upgraded. You know, you look at things like our Ohio Class submarines, they're
25 years old. Our minuteman 3 missiles -- they are 34 years old. Our B-52
bombers -- 50 years old. You know, if we don't get the military right nothing
else matters.
BLITZER: Thank you, Dr. Carson. Dana and Hugh you have
questions as well.
BASH: Governor Christie, you've said if China launches a cyber- attack against the U.S. on your
watch, "they're going to see cyber- warfare like they have never seen
before." What exactly would that response look like?
CHRISTIE: Well, what it would like is, we have one of the
great advantages of America
being the open society that we are. It is, we are not hiding things from the
American people, but China
everyday is conducting business in a way that hides things from their people.
CHRISTIE: So if they want to come in and attack all the
personnel records in the federal government, which they've done, and which --
they now have my Social Security number and my fingerprints, as well as maybe
some other folks' who are on this stage.
The fact is, they need to be fought back on. And what we
need to do is go at the things that they are most sensitive and most embarrassing
to them; that they're hiding; get that information and put it out in public.
Let the Chinese people start to digest how corrupt the Chinese government is;
how they steal from the Chinese people; and how they're enriching oligarchs all
throughout China.
They need to understand that. And we need to take those type
of steps. This president has seen personnel records of people who have
sacrificed for the American people and for the federal government stolen by the
Chinese and he's done nothing in return. This is why -- this is what I said at
the beginning that this administration, Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton
through their foreign policy, have betrayed the American people, because the
weakness they've displayed has led to Putin's incursions in the Middle East and
in eastern Europe, and has led -- has led to significant problems in the Middle
East as well, and the death and murder of lots of folks.
BASH: Governor Bush, what you just heard from Governor
Christie, are you concerned that that could really escalate with China, that
they would retaliate? And, for example, as the NSA has said, attack the U.S. and maybe
it's power grid, which the Chinese have the capability to do?
BUSH: I completely agree with Chris. And this administration
has been so lax. Think about it. Hillary Clinton is using a private server for
-- where classified information go by. This is a -- this is a serious
administration?
The president receives an inspector general's report that
the Office of Personnel Management could be hacked into; they had antiquated
firewalls; 23 million files have been -- are in the hands of the Chinese
allegedly, including, by the way, members of the press, it turns out, last
week. Maybe that's the only part that's good news, so that you guys can get a
feel for what it's like now to see this type of attack.
This is something -- we have to have the best defensive
capabilities. We need to coordinate all of our efforts with the private sector.
We need to give them liability relief so that we can do that. And offensively,
we need to have capabilities second to none. We need to create a situation
where they know that there will be adverse impacts if they continue to do what
they're doing.
They'll respect that. They'll respect a United States
that is serious about protecting our -- our infrastructure. If we don't do it,
we'll continue to see what's -- exactly what's happening, not just from the
Chinese, by the way. The Russians and rogue actors, including ISIS
-- this is a serious part of the 21st century security challenge that we face.
HEWITT: Mr. Trump...
(APPLAUSE)
... Dr. Carson just referenced the single most important job
of the president, the command, the control and the care of our nuclear forces.
And he mentioned the triad. The B-52s are older than I am. The missiles are
old. The submarines are aging out. It's an executive order. It's a
commander-in-chief decision.
What's your priority among our nuclear triad?
TRUMP: Well, first of all, I think we need somebody
absolutely that we can trust, who is totally responsible; who really knows what
he or she is doing. That is so powerful and so important. And one of the things
that I'm frankly most proud of is that in 2003, 2004, I was totally against
going into Iraq because
you're going to destabilize the Middle East. I
called it. I called it very strongly. And it was very important.
But we have to be extremely vigilant and extremely careful
when it comes to nuclear. Nuclear changes the whole ball game. Frankly, I would
have said get out of Syria;
get out -- if we didn't have the power of weaponry today. The power is so
massive that we can't just leave areas that 50 years ago or 75 years ago we
wouldn't care. It was hand-to-hand combat.
The biggest problem this world has today is not President
Obama with global warming, which is inconceivable, this is what he's saying.
The biggest problem we have is nuclear -- nuclear proliferation and having some
maniac, having some madman go out and get a nuclear weapon. That's in my
opinion, that is the single biggest problem that our country faces right now.
HEWITT: Of the three legs of the triad, though, do you have
a priority? I want to go to Senator Rubio after that and ask him.
TRUMP: I think -- I think, for me, nuclear is just the
power, the devastation is very important to me.
HEWITT: Senator Rubio, do you have a response?
RUBIO: I do. First, let's explain to people at home who the
triad -- what the triad is. Maybe a lot of people haven't heard that
terminology before. The triad is our ability of the United States to conduct
nuclear attacks using airplanes, using missiles launched from silos or from the
ground, and also from our nuclear subs' ability to attack. And it's important
-- all three of them are critical. It gives us the ability at deterrence.
Now, some have become more critical than others; for
example, the submarines. And that's the Ohio Class submarine that needs to be
modernized. The air component also needs to be modernized. The B-52, as someone
earlier pointed out, is an outdated model that was flown by the grandparents of
people that are flying it now. And we need a serious modernization program as
well on our silo-launched missiles. All three are critical for the defense of
the country.
BLITZER: Thank you, Senator Rubio.
Some of you on this stage have questioned whether your
opponents have temperament, the right temperament, to be in control of the
nuclear codes.
Dana, you have a question on this?
BASH: Mr. Trump, just this weekend you said Senator Cruz is
not qualified to be president because he doesn't have the right temperament and
acted like a maniac when he arrived in the Senate. But last month you said you
were open to naming Senator Cruz as your running mate.
TRUMP: I did.
BASH: So why would you be willing to put somebody who's a
maniac one heartbeat away from the presidency?
TRUMP: Let me just say that I have gotten to know him over
the last three or four days. He has a wonderful temperament.
(LAUGHTER)
TRUMP: He's just fine. Don't worry about it.
(APPLAUSE)
BASH: Okay.
Senator Cruz. Senator Cruz, you have not been willing to
attack Mr. Trump in public.
TRUMP: You better not attack...
(LAUGHTER)
BASH: But you did question his judgment in having control of
American's nuclear arsenal during a private meeting with supporters. Why are
you willing to say things about him in private and not in public?
CRUZ: Dana, what I said in private is exactly what I'll say
here, which is that the judgment that every voter is making of every one of us
up here is who has the experience, who has the vision, who has the judgment to
be commander in chief. That is the most important decision for the voters to
make. That's a standard I'm held to. And it's a standard everyone else is held
to.
And I will note, you know, in the whole course of this discussion
about our foreign policy threats, it actually illustrates the need for clarity
of focus.
You know, my daughters, Caroline and Catherine, came
tonight. They're 7 and 5. And you think about the Los Angeles schools canceling their schools
today.
And every parent is wondering, how do we keep our kids safe?
We need a commander in chief who does what Ronald Reagan did with communism,
which is he set out a global strategy to defeat Soviet communism. And he
directed all of his...
(CROSSTALK)
CRUZ: I'm answering the question, Dana.
He directed all of his forces to defeating communism.
One of the things we've seen here is how easy it is for
Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton to get distracted from dealing with radical
Islamic terrorism. They won't even call it by its name.
We need a president who stands up, number one, and says, we
will defeat ISIS. And number two, says the
greatest national security threat facing America
is a nuclear Iran.
BASH: Senator, senator, I just...
CRUZ: And we need to be focused on defeating...
BASH: Senator, a lot of people have seen...
CRUZ: ... defeating radical Islamic terrorists.
BASH: ... a lot of people have seen these comments you made
in private. I just want to clarify what you're saying right now is you do
believe Mr. Trump has the judgment to be commander in chief?
CRUZ: What I'm saying, Dana, is that is a judgment for every
voter to make. What I can tell you is all nine of the people here would make an
infinitely better commander in chief than Barack Obama or Hillary Clinton.
(APPLAUSE)
BLITZER: Thank you, senator. Thank you.
CRUZ: And there is a real danger, Dana, when people get
distracted.
I'm answering the question, Wolf.
CRUZ: There's a real danger when people get distracted by
peripheral issues. They get distracted by democracy building. They get
distracted about military conflicts. We need to focus on defeating jihadism.
ISIS and Iran have declared
war on America,
and we need a commander in chief who will do everything necessary to keep our
children safe.
BLITZER: Thank you, Senator.
CRUZ: And I will do everything necessary to keep our
children safe.
BLITZER: Thank you, Senator.
We're a month and a half away now from the first real test
who will be the Republican presidential nominee.
Hugh, you have a question?
HEWITT: My listeners tell me again and again they are
worried that Hillary Clinton will win the White House because you'll run as an
independent. Are you ready to assure Republicans tonight that you will run as a
Republican and abide by the decision of the Republicans?
TRUMP: I really am. I'll be honest, I really am.
(APPLAUSE)
TRUMP: I mean, the people have been putting me...
(APPLAUSE)
TRUMP: I really am.
(APPLAUSE)
HEWITT: Dr. Carson, last week...
TRUMP: Let me just. Can I just finish my...
HEWITT: Please.
TRUMP: I've gained great respect for the Republican
leadership. I've gained great respect for many -- and I'm going to even say --
I mean, in different forms for the people on the dais, in different forms.
(LAUGHTER)
TRUMP: In different forms.
But I have great respect for the people I have met through
this process. I've never done this process before. I've never been a
politician. I mean, for the last six months I've been a politician.
But I will tell you, I am totally committed to the Republican
Party. I feel very honored to be the front runner.
(APPLAUSE) TRUMP: And I think I'll do very well if I'm
chosen. If I'm so fortunate to be chosen, I think I'll do very well.
Polls have come out recently saying I would beat Hillary. I
will do everything in my power to beat Hillary Clinton, I promise you.
(APPLAUSE)
HEWITT: Dr. Carson, Mr. Trump just committed to stay the
distance regardless of the result. How about you?
CARSON: Well, you know, the statement that I made last week,
that I would leave the party was contingent upon whether in fact the party acts
like they have in the past with a lot of subterfuge and dishonesty, or like
they're going act now because I spike to Reince Priebus, and he assured me that
the Washington Post writer had it all wrong, and that they're not be engaging
in anything to thwart the will of the people.
That's why I got into this race, as a member of we the
people, to try bring some honesty and integrity back to the process.
(APPLAUSE)
BLITZER: All right. Candidates, we have more coming up. When
we come back, everyone will have an opportunity to explain why this particular
candidate, each of you on the stage, believes he or she should be the
Republican presidential nominee.
(APPLAUSE)
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
BLITZER: Now it's time for the closing statements from the
candidates. Each one has 30 seconds.
Senator Paul.
PAUL: The greatest threat to our national security is our
debt. We borrow a million dollars a minute. And whose fault is it? Well,
frankly, it's both parties' fault. You have those on the right who clamor and
say, oh, we will spend anything on the military, and those on the left who say
the same for domestic welfare.
But what most Americans don't realize is there is an unholy
alliance. They come together. There's a secret handshake. We spend more money
on everything. And we are not stronger nation if we go further into debt. We
are not projecting power from bankruptcy court.
To me, there is no greater threat than our debt. I'm the
only fiscal conservative on the stage because I'm willing to hold the line on
all spending. I hope you will consider me in the election. Thank you very much.
(APPLAUSE)
BLITZER: Governor Kasich. KASICH: No Republican has ever
been elected president of the United States
without winning Ohio.
Let me give you a little tip on how you win Ohio, it's reform, it's hope, it's growth,
it's opportunity, and it's security.
The people of Ohio are the
people of America.
The people of America are
reflected in Ohio.
Our message has to be big, and bold, and positive, and connect, not just with
people's heads but also connect with their hearts.
If we do it, we will beat Hillary Clinton, and we will run
the White House, and we will strengthen and fix America, I promise you.
(APPLAUSE)
BLITZER: Governor Christie.
CHRISTIE: On September 10th, 2001, I was named chief federal
prosecutor in New Jersey and on September
11th, 2001, my wife and my brother who are in the audience tonight went through
the World Trade
Center and to their offices just
blocks away from the Trade
Center.
I lost touch with them for six hours that day and prayed
that they were alive. Luckily, they were sent home. But many of our friends and
others in our neighborhood lost their lives that day.
Terrorism -- radical jihadist terrorism is not theoretical
to me. It's real. And for seven years, I spent my life protecting our country
against another one of those attacks. You won't have to worry when I'm
President of the Untied States whether that can be done because I've already
done it. I want the chance to do it again to protect you, your children and
your families.
If you give me the chance and give me your vote I will
protect America
from the wars that are being brought to our door step.
BLITZER: Ms. Fiorina.
FIORINA: I too remember September 11th. I remember
immediately putting into place security procedures all throughout our company
that did business in 170 countries where we thought corporate interests would
be attacked next. To take our country back, to keep our nation safe, we have to
begin by beating Hillary Clinton.
We need to unify our party. We need to better than our
government, which 75 percent of the American people now think is corrupt and
incompetent. They're right. We need to better than our politics. 80 percent
think we have a professional/political class of both parties that cares more
about its power, position and privilege than actually on getting anything done.
We need to unify our party, we need a real Conservative in
the White House, and we need to beat Hillary Clinton to take our country back
and keep our nation safe.
I can. I am. And together, if you join me, we will take our
country back.
BLITZER: Governor Bush. BUSH: Ask yourself, which candidate
will keep you and our country safer, stronger and freer?
Hillary Clinton has aligned herself with Barack Obama on
ISIS, Iran
and the economy. It's an alliance doomed to fail. My proven record suggests
that -- my detailed plans will fortify our national and economic security. And
my proven record as governor makes -- will give you a sense that I don't make
false promises. I deliver real results.
For America
to be safe and sound, I ask for you support. Thank you all very much.
BLITZER: Senator Rubio.
RUBIO: Thank you. As we near the end of this year, we enter
one of the most important elections in a generation. For what's at stake in
this election is not simply what party's going to be in charge. But our very
identity as a people and as a nation. For over 200 years this has been a
special country. A unique place where anyone from anywhere can achieve
anything. But now millions of Americans feel like they're being left behind.
Insecure in their future and unsafe in the face of terrorism. This election is
about electing a president that will restore our economic vibrancy so that the
American dream can expand to reach more people and change more lives than ever
before. And rebuild our Military and our intelligence programs so that we can
remain the strongest nation on earth. Tonight I ask you for your vote.
If you do this, we will rebuild this country, and together
we will usher in a new American century -- the greatest era in the history of
this great land.
BLITZER: Senator Cruz.
CRUZ: Judgment, strength, clarity and trust. Barack Obama
has said he doesn't believe in American leadership or America winning
-- he is wrong. America
can win again and we will win again. Ronald Reagan reignited the American
economy, rebuilt the Military, bankrupted the Soviet Union
and defeated Soviet Communism. I will do the same thing.
Cutting taxes, cutting regulation, unleashing small
businesses and rebuilding the Military to defeat radical Islamic terrorism --
our strategy is simple. We win, they lose. We've done it before and we can do
it again.
BLITZER: Dr. Carson.
CARSON:
I've been fortunate enough to travel to 58 different countries and I thank God
everyday that I was born in this country. The most exceptional country that the
world has ever known. And I want to make sure that we preserve that
exceptionalism for the next generation. My mother told me if I work hard and I
really believed in American principles and I believed in God, anything is
possible. I believe that is true, and that's why I'm not anxious to give away
American values and principles for the sake of political correctness.
TRUMP: Our country doesn't win anymore. We don't win on
trade. We don't win on the military. We can't defeat ISIS.
We're not taking care of our great people, the veterans. We're not taking care
of them.
We have to change our whole way, our health care system is a
disaster. It's going to implode in 2017, just like you're sitting there. It
doesn't work. Nothing works in our country. If I'm elected president, we will
win again. We will win a lot. And we're going to have a great, great country,
greater than ever before.
Thank you.
(APPLAUSE)
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