Santorum warns of jihadists
By: Sean Moroney
Issue date: 12/6/07 Section: News
Last update: 12/6/07 at 7:35 AM EST
Last update: 12/6/07 at 7:35 AM EST
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"I'm here because I want to win the war," he said.
At the speech, which was followed by a question-and-answer session, Santorum, a Pennsylvania Republican, discussed the need for Americans to support the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and to better define who is the enemy.
Duke Conservative Union President David Bitner, a sophomore, said he was pleased with the event that DCU organized.
"I was particularly impressed that so many people attended the event, especially in the week before finals when so many people are busy," he said.
Santorum served as a member of the U.S. House of Representatives from 1991 to 1995 and the U.S. Senate from 1995 to 2007. In the 2006 U.S. Senate elections, Democrat Bob Casey defeated Santorum by a margin of 59 percent to 41 percent of the vote-the largest margin of defeat for an incumbent in a Senate race since 1980.
After losing the election, Santorum joined the law firm Eckert Seamans Cherin and Mellott, LLC and also took a position at the Ethics and Public Policy Center, a Washington D.C.-based conservative think tank.
"Maybe [Islamic jihad] is a gathering storm that is a little shower, but the consequences of this could make World War II seem like a walk in the park," Santorum said. "The American people need to be informed. This is why I travel around college campuses and am part of a think tank."
During his speech-which did not draw the protesters or outspoken critics who attended "A Conversation with Karl Rove" Monday-Santorum said both opponents and proponents of the fight against jihadis are the cause of the problem of America's lack of support for the war.
"The commitment of the American people to see this war through, rather than our military seeing it through, is key to victory," he said. "The question is whether we'll have the support of the American people."
Referring to the talk given by former deputy White House chief of staff Rove Monday, Santorum said though he was not at the speech, Rove probably called America's fight in the Middle East the "War on Terror" or "The fight against terrorists."
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Viewing Comments 1 - 1 of 1
Sean, '99
posted 12/06/07 @ 4:43 PM EST
I am across the country, but maybe someone who was at Santorum's speech can explain this to me. Was he really using the recent (and deplorable) punishment of a rape victim in Saudi Arabia to needle the left to support the war?
I have read a number of articles from left-leaning writers who have specifically decried the recent Saudi Arabia situation and who have more generally decried our country's continued alliance with the Saudis in spite of their poor human rights record. (Continued…)
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