White House hopeful Hillary Clinton urges unity to crush Islamic State

Democratic Presidential hopeful Hillary Clinton (right) gestures next to Huma Abedin after the second Democratic presidential primary debate in the Sheslow Auditorium of Drake University on November 14, 2015 in Des Moines, Iowa. Clinton called for global unity to crush the Islamic State group, as the carnage in Paris took centre stage during Saturday’s Democratic presidential debate. PHOTO | MANDEL NGAN | AFP

What you need to know:

  • The three candidates began their debate with a moment of silence for the victims in France, bringing Friday’s horrific attacks an ocean away to the forefront of the 2016 race as they dominated the first half hour of the political showdown.

  • With all the talk of battling the jihadist wave, the Democrats on stage refused to use the term “radical Islam”, which moderators used on Saturday — and Republicans in the presidential race have used throughout the campaign — to describe the scourge.

DES MOINES, Sunday

White House hopeful Hillary Clinton called for global unity to crush the Islamic State group, as the carnage in Paris took centre stage during Saturday’s Democratic presidential debate.

The three candidates began their debate with a moment of silence for the victims in France, bringing Friday’s horrific attacks an ocean away to the forefront of the 2016 race as they dominated the first half hour of the political showdown.

Clinton, liberal US Senator Bernie Sanders and former Maryland governor Martin O’Malley united in calling for the destruction of the jihadists accused of massacring at least 129 people in the French capital.

“We are not at war with Islam,” said the former secretary of state, choosing her words with care as she warned ordinary Muslims should not be viewed as a threat. “We are at war with violent extremism.”

“Our prayers are with the people of France tonight, but that is not enough,” she said, calling for global resolve to defeat ISIS, “a  barbaric, ruthless, violent jihadist terrorist group.”

The Islamic State group (ISIS or IS) claimed responsibility for the coordinated attacks on a Paris concert hall, restaurants and bars, and outside France’s national stadium — calling it retribution for French air strikes in Syria.

“It cannot be contained, it must be defeated,” Clinton said of the group which has overrun swathes of Syria and Iraq.

JIHADIST WAVE

With all the talk of battling the jihadist wave, the Democrats on stage refused to use the term “radical Islam”, which moderators used on Saturday — and Republicans in the presidential race have used throughout the campaign — to describe the scourge.

“Let’s not fall into the trap of thinking our Muslim-American neighbours ... are the enemy,” O’Malley said.

Former Florida governor and Republican presidential hopeful Jeb Bush spoke from afar during the debate, tweeting: “Yes, we are at war with radical Islamic terrorism.”

While Democrats displayed equal determination to eradicate jihadism, fissures appeared between the candidates on whether the United States should lead the struggle.

AMERICAN LEADERSHIP

Clinton said American leadership was critical in the effort, with all the diplomatic tools at Washington’s disposal beyond just military might, “but this cannot be an American fight”.

That drew a sharp disagreement from O’Malley.

“This actually is America’s fight,” he insisted. “America is best when we are actually standing up to evil in this world.”

WOMAN TO BEAT

Relatively hawkish Clinton, self-described democratic socialist Sanders and low-polling O’Malley took the stage in Des Moines, Iowa, for their second Democratic showdown in the 2016 primary cycle.

With 79 days before the first state-wide vote in Iowa, frontrunner Clinton has reinforced her status as the woman to beat in the race.

Her poll numbers have risen steadily since mid-September, to more than 54 per cent today according to a RealClearPolitics average.

Sanders is at 33 per cent, while O’Malley is languishing at three per cent.

With Sanders eager to take the fight to Clinton on the economy — he is calling for an economic revolution, while knocking Clinton for her ties to Wall Street — the refocus on terrorism shifted the early portion of the debate in favour of the former top diplomat, fluent in foreign policy.