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Donald Trump gives ‘aid and comfort’ to ISIS recruiters: Hillary Clinton

Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton has accused her rival and Republican’s candidate Donald Trump of giving ‘aid and comfort’ to the recruiters of terror group Islamic State.

India TV News Desk Florida Published on: September 20, 2016 11:35 IST
Hillary Clinton
Hillary Clinton

Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton has accused her rival and Republican’s candidate Donald Trump of giving ‘aid and comfort’ to the recruiters of terror group Islamic State. 

Clinton, a former secretary of state, told reporters that ‘his anti-Muslim rhetoric helps the Islamic State group and other militants such as ISIS recruit new fighters’.

Clinton touted her national security credentials at a hastily arranged news conference outside her campaign plane, accusing Trump of using the incidents -- bombings in New York and New Jersey and stabbings at a Minnesota mall -- to make ‘some kind of demagogic point’.

“I'm the only candidate in this race who's been part of the hard decisions to take terrorists off the battlefield. I know how to do this,” she said. 

But Trump hit back, saying his Democratic rival and the Obama administration hadn't done enough to quell the group's rise.

"Her attacks on me are all meant to deflect from her record of unleashing this monster of evil on us and on the world,” Trump said at a packed Florida rally, referring to Clinton's tenure as secretary of state.

He also insisted the US should "use whatever lawful methods are available" to get information from the Afghan immigrant arrested in this weekend's bombings.

As several Trump supporters shouted "Hang him!" the Republican presidential candidate bemoaned the fact that Ahmad Khan Rahami, a 28-year-old U.S. citizen originally from Afghanistan, would receive quality medical care and legal representation.

"We must deliver a just and very harsh punishment to these people," he said. "These are enemies, these are combatants and we have to be tough, we have to be strong."

Both candidates moved swiftly to capitalize on investigations into a weekend of violent attacks — bombings in New York and New Jersey and stabbings at a Minnesota mall — casting themselves as most qualified to combat terrorism at home and abroad.

The possibility of a home-grown terrorist plot cast a new shadow over the presidential race, diverting both candidates' attention from the daily controversies of the campaign and giving them a high-profile opportunity to make their case to undecided voters.

With Agency Inputs

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