Clinton-Obama battle takes toxic new turn
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WASHINGTON (AFP) — White House contenders Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama Monday hurled barbs over foreign policy and fought over an alleged anti-Obama smear, heading into do-or-die contests for the former first lady.
A day before a crucial debate in Ohio, Clinton used a speech here to portray her Democratic rival as a dangerous risk on foreign affairs, implying Obama would need a beginners' guide to the world's hot-spots if elected president.
Before the speech, an Obama aide had already said sound judgment was the most important presidential attribute, highlighting Clinton's Senate vote in 2002 to authorize the Iraq war.
The policy sparring came as a photograph emerged of Obama in African dress, at the start of the candidates' final week of campaigning before primaries in Ohio and Texas on March 4 that are must-win contests for the faltering Clinton.
Obama's campaign accused the Clinton camp of "shameful, offensive fear-mongering" after the picture of Obama dressed in a Somali robe and turban appeared on gossip website Drudge Report.
The picture of Obama, who is bidding to be the first African-American president, was taken during an emotional visit by the candidate to his father's homeland of Kenya in 2006.
Obama campaign manager David Plouffe said the photo represented "exactly the kind of divisive politics that turns away Americans of all parties and diminishes respect for America in the world."
The website said the photo had been circulated by Clinton aides, a claim denied by her campaign, which said the Obama team should be "ashamed" for suggesting that the image could prove divisive in the hard-fought election.
"Hillary Clinton has worn the traditional clothing of countries she has visited and had those photos published widely," campaign manager Maggie Williams said.
"This is nothing more than an obvious and transparent attempt to distract from the serious issues confronting our country today and to attempt to create the very divisions they claim to decry," she said.
The two campaigns also crossed swords over trade, with Obama highlighting Clinton's past support for a North American pact passed by her husband's administration that many in Ohio blame for the loss of thousands of jobs.
With Obama basking in 11 nominating wins in a row, a new poll in Ohio cast doubt on Clinton's capacity to pull off the kind of emphatic victory she now needs to chase down Obama's lead in nominating delegates.
The Quinnipiac University survey showed Clinton leading 51 percent to 40 percent among likely Democratic primary voters -- down from her 55-34 percent lead in a poll by the same organization 11 days before.
"Senator Clinton's lead remains substantial, but the trend line should be worrisome for her in a state that even her husband, former president Bill Clinton, has said she must win," said Peter Brown, assistant director of the Quinnipiac University Polling Institute.
"A week is an awful long time in politics to be playing defense."
A RealClearPolitics.com average of recent polls has the New York senator up nearly nine points in Ohio, where once she led by over 20 points. Texas polls meanwhile show a dead heat between the Democrats.
But Clinton spokesman Howard Wolfson said: "We feel very, very good about our prospects in both Texas and Ohio."
Battling to wrest back the initiative, Clinton said in her speech at George Washington University that unlike Obama, she did not "need a foreign policy instruction manual to guide me through a crisis."
Her voice cracking from the strain of non-stop campaigning, the New York senator took fresh aim at Obama's proposal for summit talks with sworn US foes such as Cuba, Iran and North Korea.
Obama aides shot back by accusing Clinton of joining a "neo-conservative drumbeat" for war with Iran.
"When we talk about experience, it is important to look at not only years on the seat but the substance of that experience," said Obama foreign policy advisor Susan Rice.
Pundits meanwhile sifted the fallout from consumer crusader Ralph Nader's announcement Sunday that he is again running for president.
Nader angrily denied that his candidacy might split the Democratic vote and hand the 2008 election to Senator John McCain, who is poised to win the Republican nomination. |