Trump’s other, other Iraq lie: He’s told differing stories about the 2011 troop withdrawal
Donald Trump blames Hillary Clinton for pulling troops out of Iraq, but in 2011 he blamed the Iraqi government
Topics: 2016 debates, 2016 Elections, Donald Trump, Fox News, Hillary Clinton, Iraq war, Islamic State, National security, Sean Hannity, Terrorism, troop withdrawal, Elections News, Politics News
We find ourselves in a weird political space in which the Republican nominee for the presidency is trying desperately, and without much success, to convince everyone that he vocally opposed George W. Bush’s 2003 invasion of Iraq. The issue came under renewed focus after Monday night’s debate when Donald Trump, confronted with the utter lack of evidence to support his supposedly vocal anti-war position, insisted that he’d expressed his strong war opposition in private conversations with Fox News’ Sean Hannity, who could back him up on this.
Of course, one can’t really take Trump campaign ad star Sean Hannity as a credible source here, and the details of their supposed private Iraq colloquies remain elusive. It’s better to rely on their public statements. And in researching Hannity’s and Trump’s Iraq discussions over the years, I found still another inconsistency that undermines Trump’s position on Iraq and his critiques of Hillary Clinton.
A big part of Trump’s attacks on Clinton’s judgment revolves around the idea that she and President Obama created the Islamic State when they withdrew U.S. troops from Iraq in 2011. He made that exact point at Monday night’s debate:
TRUMP: Well, first I have to say one thing, very important. Secretary Clinton is talking about taking out ISIS. “We will take out ISIS.” Well, President Obama and Secretary Clinton created a vacuum the way they got out of Iraq, because they got out — what, they shouldn’t have been in, but once they got in, the way they got out was a disaster. And ISIS was formed.
So she talks about taking them out. She’s been doing it a long time. She’s been trying to take them out for a long time. But they wouldn’t have even been formed if they left some troops behind, like 10,000 or maybe something more than that. And then you wouldn’t have had them.
That’s a grossly reductive and inaccurate explanation for how the Islamic State expanded into a greater terrorist threat, and Trump himself demanded an immediate withdrawal of U.S. forces in 2006, regardless of the consequences.
Nonetheless, Trump is now wedded to this idea that Obama and Clinton screwed up horribly by choosing not to leave American troops in Iraq in 2011. But that claim is inconsistent with what Trump was saying publicly at the time of the actual withdrawal.
Appearing on Sean Hannity’s Fox News show in December 2011, Trump blamed the withdrawal on the Iraqi government’s refusal to allow a continued U.S. troop presence in the country.