CBS News
By Reena Flores
October 18, 2015
Donald
Trump says that if he had been president in 2001, his immigration
policies would have kept terrorists from attacking the World Trade
Center on September 11.
"I
am extremely, extremely tough on illegal immigration. I'm extremely
tough on people coming into this country," Trump said on Fox News
Sunday. "I believe that if I were
running things, I doubt those families would have -- I doubt that those
people would have been in the country."
The
billionaire, in an escalating feud with Republican presidential
contender Jeb Bush, continued his assault on the legacy of former
President George W. Bush.
"Jeb
said 'we were safe with my brother.' 'We were safe.' Well, the World
Trade Center just fell down," Trump continued. "Now, am I trying to
blame him? I'm not blaming
anybody. But the World Trade Center came down. So when he said, 'we
were safe' -- that's not safe. We lost 3,000 people."
And
had his immigration proposals been in place at the time, Trump said,
"there's a good chance that those people would not have been in our
country."
For his part, Bush hasn't appreciated the constant barrage of 9/11 remarks against his brother.
"I
don't know why he keeps bringing this up," Bush told CNN Sunday. "It
doesn't show that he's a serious person as it relates to being
commander-in-chief and being the
architect of a foreign policy."
Rather
than come across as a legitimate contender for the Oval Office, Bush
said, the real estate mogul talks "as though he's still on 'The
Apprentice,'" referring to
the businessman's reality television show.
"I
mean, literally, talking about Syria saying 'ISIS should take out
Assad, then Russia should take out ISIS' as though it was some kind of
board game and not a serious
approach is just - this is just another example of the lack of
seriousness," Bush said.
Next week, he added, "Mr. Trump is probably going to say that FDR was around when Japan attacked Pearl Harbor."
"It's
what you do after that matters. And that's the sign of leadership,"
Bush continued. "Does anybody actually blame my brother for the attacks
on 9/11? If they do,
they're totally marginalized in our society."
The
mounting war between the two has played out on Twitter, where Trump
first fired at the former Florida governor on Friday for his comments
during the Republicans' last
debate in California.
.@JebBush,
At the debate you said your brother kept us safe- I wanted to be nice
& did not mention the WTC came down during his watch, 9/11.
— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) October 17, 2015
Bush took to social media Saturday to bash Trump over his "absurd comments":
.@RealDonaldTrump's absurd comments again raise questions on whether he possesses the judgment to be President:
https://t.co/lLr1SF1jwp
— Jeb Bush (@JebBush) October 17, 2015
Another
leading Republican presidential contender, retired neurosurgeon Ben
Carson, waded into the 9/11 debate, saying he didn't blame former
President Bush for the attacks.
When
asked on ABC News what he made of Trump's suggestions that Bush should
share the blame for the terrorist strikes, Carson said he "would
probably ask [Trump] what
he meant by that."
"I seriously doubt that he's saying that -- that George W. Bush is to blame for it," Carson said. "I certainly don't think so."
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