Townhall Celebrates America 250
Where Are the Obamas and the Clintons on the Monsters Taking Over Their...
A Quick Bible Study Vol. 327: God’s Name in the Declaration of Independence
The Leech Has Two Daughters—Give and Give
Don’t Shop at Von’s
12 Score and 10 Years Ago
Make Unsubsidized Passenger Rail a Condition of the Union Pacific-Norfolk Southern Merger
Obamacare's Fraud Bill Just Came Due
Ellison's Independence Day Video Sparks Backlash Amid Pardon Scandal
Operation Patriot Shield Nets 224 Fugitive Arrests Across Missouri, Illinois
Department of War Awards Mike Rowe’s Foundation $10 Million to Rebuild Skilled Trades
Independence Day Revealed the Death Throes of Peak Woke
Two Men Indicted in $35 Million Medicaid Ambulette Fraud Scheme
Illegal Alien CDL Holder Kills Pennsylvania State Trooper in Horrific Accident
House Republicans Celebrate the America That Democrats Are Trying to Destroy
Tipsheet

Warren Struggles Trying to Clarify Her Stance on Soleimani on 'The View'

Warren Struggles Trying to Clarify Her Stance on Soleimani on 'The View'
AP Photo/John Minchillo

How hard is it to condemn a terrorist who has killed Americans? Very hard, apparently, for one of the Democratic presidential frontrunners. As Guy discovered on CNN on Sunday, Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) "offered plenty of criticism for the President of the United States...but could not muster a cross word for Iran's terrorism mastermind," Quds Forces leader Qasem Soleimani, who was killed in a U.S. airstrike last week.

Advertisement

And Guy wasn't the only one to hear her cowardly answer.

She had initially at least referred to Soleimani as a "murderer," but ABC News reporter Cheyenne Haslett noticed that the senator had retreated from that term too. Instead, she once again chose to paint Trump as the bad guy.

Warren was a guest on "The View" on Tuesday and was given the chance from Meghan McCain to clarify her stance, once and for all. Could she finally call Soleimani what he is - a terrorist?

"I don't understand why it was so hard to call him a terrorist," McCain said.

"He is part of a group that's been designated terrorist," Warren responded, referring to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.

McCain wanted a straight answer. Is he a terrorist.

Advertisement

"Of course he is!" Warren finally said. "He's part of a group that our federal government has designated as a terrorist."

Even CNN anchors who played the clip thought it was a "strange" way for Warren to characterize Soleimani.

Warren added that some other questions, like, "is the military action in the interest of the United States?," are more important. It may have been right to take out Saddam Hussein, Warren noted by way of example, calling him a "bad guy," but going to war in Iraq was "not" in our interest.

"The question for the president of the United States is to understand what's going on, have an overall strategy, and pick an appropriate response at an appropriate time," she explained.

Soleimani helped plan deadly attacks on coalition bases in Iraq and the attack on the U.S. embassy in Baghdad. He orchestrated the 1983 bombings on a U.S. Marine barracks in Beirut. He was planning more attacks on Americans before he was struck by a drone.

Was it not the right time?

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement