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Summary Obama and Mitt Romney are arguing over how to address US challenges overseas.
US President Barack Obama and Republican challenger Mitt Romney are arguing over how to address U.S. challenges overseas in nearly back-to-back addresses Tuesday at the Clinton Global Initiatives annual meeting.Foreign policy has again taken the spotlight from economic issues in the tight presidential race as Obama also addresses world leaders at the UN General Assembly on Tuesday. His UN visit will be brief so he can get back to campaigning for the less than 10 percent of voters who say they have yet to make up their minds for the November election.The Obama and Romney speeches at the annual gathering founded by former President Bill Clinton follow deadly anti-American protests in Muslim countries in the past two weeks over an amateur anti-Islam film made in the U.S.Romney was to outline plans to rework the U.S. foreign aid system, tying development money to requirements that countries allow U.S. investment and remove trade barriers.Romney on Monday assailed Obamas leadership abroad, criticizing him for what Romney said was minimizing the death of the U.S. ambassador to Libya, Chris Stevens, amid the protests over the film. The White House has deemed the deadly assault on the consulate in Benghazi a terrorist attack.Romney also seized on a comment that Obama made in an interview with CBS 60 Minutes that aired Sunday. Obama said recent violence in the Mideast was due to bumps in the road on the way to democracy.White House press secretary Jay Carney called Romneys accusations desperate and offensive in the late stages of a close race that seems to be trending the presidents way.Romney, under pressure himself from fellow Republicans over the way his campaign is run, said he was shifting to a more energetic schedule of public events, trying to reverse recent erosion in polls of the battleground states likely to decide the election.The U.S. president is not chosen by popular vote but by state-by-state elections, making states that dont reliably vote Democrat or Republican important in a tight race.Obama has gained ground on Romney in recent surveys when potential voters are asked to compare the candidates ability to fix the economy. Sluggish growth and national unemployment of 8.1 percent make the economy by far the dominant issue in the race.Obama also has a healthy lead over Romney when voters are asked which candidate is better equipped to handle foreign policy. The president has not shied away from mentioning his decision to order the secret mission by U.S. forces that killed terrorism mastermind Osama bin Laden in his Pakistani hideout more than a year ago.At the United Nations, Obama planned a sweeping defense of his policy of engagement overseas.
