RAW STORY
WASHINGTON — White House hopeful Mitt Romney recounted Tuesday how he
drove past the smoldering Pentagon on September 11, 2001, saying he was
stunned by “the smell of war” that had reached American shores.
In a somber speech to the National Guard Association in Reno, Nevada,
the Republican presidential nominee said he was putting aside his
differences with President Barack Obama for a day to hail the men and
women who protect America, and who gave their lives 11 years ago in the
worst terror attacks in US history.
While doing so he offered his personal account from September 11,
2001, when he was in the US capital to meet with lawmakers about
security preparations for the upcoming Winter Olympics, which he was
overseeing.
“Someone
rushed into our office (in the Ronald Reagan building, near the White
House) and said that a plane had hit the World Trade Center. I turned on
the small TV on our desk there and watched in shock as flames and smoke
erupted from the North Tower,” Romney told members of the National
Guard.
After calling his wife Ann, he watched on television as the second
plane crashed into the second tower, and he said he realized “these were
terrorist attacks, these were evil and cowardly and heinous attacks.”
He left for neighboring Virginia, across the Potomac River from Washington.
“The highway I was on came within a few hundred yards (meters) of the
Pentagon, which had been hit by then. Cars had stopped where they were,
and people had gotten out, watching in horror,” Romney recalled.
“I could smell burning fuel and concrete and steel. It was the smell
of war, something I never imagined I would smell in America.”
Romney has consistently called for maintaining a strong and muscular
military posture, and he did so in Reno, using the 9/11 anniversary to
reinforce his opposition to severe budget cuts that are due to take
effect next year if Congress does not act.
“It
is true that our armed forces have been stretched to the brink, and
that is all the more reason to repair and rebuild,” he said.
But the return of US troops from Afghanistan after completing “a
successful transition to Afghan security forces by the end of 2014,” he
said, “cannot and must not be used as an excuse to hollow out our
military through devastating defense budget cuts.”
Like Obama, Romney has addressed US military veterans several times
on the campaign trail this year, including a speech to the American
Legion late last month in Indiana, and a July appearance at the national
convention of the Veterans of Foreign Wars.
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