YOUR FRIENDS' ACTIVITY

    Romney focusing on military and foreign policy

    RENO, Nev. (AP) — Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney is accusing President Barack Obama of leaking classified details about the raid that killed Osama bin Laden for political gain.

    Romney was to level his accusation Tuesday afternoon during an address to the Veterans of Foreign Wars convention, his strongest indictment of Obama's foreign policy yet in a close race in which the Republican has largely focused on the nation's sluggish economy.

    "This conduct is contemptible. It betrays our national interest. It compromises our men and women in the field," Romney says, according to excerpts his campaign released before the speech. "And it demands a full and prompt investigation, with explanation and consequence."

    In moving away from his preferred issue, the economy, Romney was venturing further into national security policy, a realm usually viewed as the home turf of the incumbent.

    But by alleging that the Obama administration divulged to reporters on multiple occasions details of secret missions, Romney was suggesting that Obama lacks the discipline for the office.

    The former Massachusetts governor's speech to the veterans group also was a stinging retort to Obama's speech to the same group Monday.

    Obama sought to raise the stakes for Romney's speech with remarks Monday at the VFW convention, casting himself as a steady commander in chief tested by two wars and the successful raid on Osama bin Laden's compound. The president was continuing a Western campaign swing with appearances Tuesday in Oregon and Washington.

    While raising money in California on Monday, Romney offered a preview of his latest critique of Obama, telling about 400 supporters at a hotel in Irvine that "the consequence of American weakness is seen around us in the world."

    However, Obama touted his record as one of promises kept: End the war in Iraq, wind down the conflict in Afghanistan and go after the al-Qaida leader behind the 9/11 attacks.

    Without naming Romney, Obama indirectly suggested his opponent would have kept troops in Iraq indefinitely and criticized him for opposing the president's 2014 timeline for withdrawal from Afghanistan.

    "That's not a plan for America's security," Obama told the veterans group.

    Although Obama suggested that Romney was an inexperienced critic working to polish his own credentials, Romney appeared ready to turn from his chief argument that Obama is a failed steward of the economy and criticize the president on foreign and national security policy.

    Romney noted Sunday that key ally Australia's foreign minister, Bob Carr, had told him during a private meeting that the United States was "in decline." However, Carr on Monday clarified his remarks, saying he wasn't criticizing the U.S. when he spoke of a nation "in decline." Kim Beazley, Australia's ambassador to the United States, said Carr's remarks "represent a considered assessment of the U.S. economy and an antidote to talk of U.S. declinism."

    Romney also suggested Monday that the Obama administration had not been aggressive enough in deterring Iran's nuclear ambitions or in trying to quell the violence in Syria. Romney said he agreed with Obama's call for Syrian President Bashar Assad's departure but said Obama had not shown proper leadership to force it.

    "I think from the very beginning we misread the setting in Syria," Romney told CNBC. "America should've come out very aggressively from the very beginning and said Assad must go. ... The world looks for American leadership and American strength."

    The Obama administration has long called for Assad to leave Syria, relying on a strategy of sanctions and international isolation to pressure Assad into handing over power. ,

    The shift toward world affairs precedes Romney's trip, beginning Tuesday, to Britain, Israel and Poland. It also comes as the campaigns' aggressive tone resumed after a three-day hiatus after the deadly shooting at a Colorado movie theater Friday.

    During a speech Monday night to about 1,000 people at a raucous fundraiser in Oakland, Calif., Obama said the presumptive GOP nominee was "knowingly twisting my words around to suggest I don't value small business."

    Romney had revived his attacks Monday on Obama's comment this month that government is due a share of the credit for business success. The president said Romney was distorting his words and going "a little over the edge" in his political attacks.

    While the weekend truce was fleeting, the Colorado tragedy did not keep either candidate from chasing campaign contributions.

    Romney headlined fundraisers over two days in California, netting $10 million.

    Obama was expected to raise more than $6 million during two days of West Coast fundraising. He headlined three events in the San Francisco Bay area Monday and was to attend four more Tuesday in Seattle and Portland, Ore.

    Among the donors at a $35,800-per-person dinner in Oakland, Calif., were two people connected to Solyndra, a failed California solar energy company that has been part of Romney's attacks on Obama. Solyndra was the first renewable energy company to receive a federal grant under Obama's 2009 stimulus law but went bankrupt last year, leaving taxpayers on the hook for more than $500 million.

    Steve Westly, a Silicon Valley venture capitalist who warned the White House about Solyndra's shaky finances, and Matt Rogers, a former Energy Department official who was part of the Solyndra loan guarantee process, were among the 60 people in attendance at the private home.

    ___

    Associated Press writer Julie Pace in San Francisco contributed to this report.

    Loading...
    • Prison for Ohio woman who buried mom in yard

      COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — A woman who quit her job to care for her elderly mother felt at a loss to support herself when the older woman died so she buried her in the yard of their Florida home and lived off her mother's Social Security checks for 14 years, her lawyers and federal authorities say.

    • Man charged with tossing wife off cruise ship

      SANTA ANA, Calif. (AP) — A California grand jury has indicted a Florida man on charges he strangled his ex-wife and tossed her off a cruise ship in Italy.

    • Stephen Amell: Why I Won't Join Fifty Shades Of Grey Movie

      Stephen Amell has revealed what turned him off to playing sexy billionaire Christian Grey in the upcoming film version of "Fifty Shades of Grey" - and it has nothing to do with the story's rampant sex scenes or nudity.

    • Police: Paraplegic castrated at Philly facility

      PHILADELPHIA (AP) — A 41-year-old man is being held on $5 million bail after police say he castrated a paraplegic during a dispute at an assisted living facility in Philadelphia.

    • Kim and Kanye's Baby Name Is Not That Strange

      It's being reported that rapper Kanye West and his reality star girlfriend Kim Kardashian have named their brand-new baby, born this weekend, Kaidence Donda West. Donda was Kanye's late mother's name, so that makes sense, but, um, Kaidence? What's going on with Kaidence?

    • Father sentenced for binding kids outside Wal-Mart

      LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — A suburban Chicago man was sentenced Wednesday to 30 months in prison for binding and blindfolding two of his children a year ago in a Wal-Mart parking lot in eastern Kansas.

    • Some of Tony Soprano's memorable lines

      NEW YORK (AP) — Some memorable lines spoken by the late James Gandolfini as Tony Soprano in "The Sopranos":

    • Bieber behind wheel as car hits man in Hollywood

      LOS ANGELES (AP) — Video shows Justin Bieber running into a photographer with his white Ferrari in Hollywood, but police say there was no crime and the injuries aren't life-threatening.

    Loading...

    Follow Yahoo! News