Former President Donald Trump fired on Monday against one of his predecessors, former President George W. Bush, on Monday in response to comments the latter ex-commander-in-chief made during a Sept. 11 commemoration speech over the weekend. .
Bush raised his eyebrows when he mentioned that international and national terrorists and violent extremists, despite having very different worldviews, are “children of the same evil spirit.” Both, he suggested, pose significant threats to the United States in their own way. He did not specify which national terrorist groups he was talking about, but there was some speculation alluding to the January 6 Capitol revolt.
Trump seems to be among those who think he was talking about a subsection of his supporters and later attacked Bush, whom he blamed for U.S. failures in the Middle East after 9/11. Trump accused Bush of pursuing that “right-wing” national terrorism is “a bigger problem” than “those of foreign countries who hate the United States,” although in reality Bush did not say whether he believed a threat was bigger than the other or even what end of the political spectrum they come from.
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