Trump Must Deliver on His Anti-terror Pledge

On Feb. 20 Army Lt. Gen. Michael McMaster, listened as President Donald Trump made the announcement at Trump's Mar-a-Lago estate in Palm Beach, Fla., that McMaster will be the administration's new national security adviser. (Susan Walsh/AP)

By Monday, 27 February 2017 03:30 PM EST ET Current | Bio | Archive

One of the defining themes of Donald Trump’s candidacy was his repudiation of the willful blindness of the Obama-Clinton administration about the nature of the Shariah-supremacist enemies we confront. Unlike Barack Obama, Mr. Trump made a point of repeatedly calling them "radical Islamic terrorists."

The New York Times has reported, however, that the President’s new national security adviser told his first staff meeting last week that he rejected that characterization. If true, Lt. Gen. H.R. McMaster seems unlikely to advance and execute the Trump strategy for victory over jihad.

Donald Trump’s voters rightly expect him to fulfill his pledge to "make America safe again" against radical Islamic terrorists.

They will hold him accountable for his promise to eradicate such jihadists "from the face of the earth."

His team must, therefore, fully share his vision — and faithfully deliver on his commitments.

Frank Gaffney, Jr. is president of the Center for Security Policy (CSP), a columnist for The Washington Times, and host of the nationally syndicated program, Secure Freedom Radio. Read more reports from Frank Gaffney, Jr. — Click Here Now.

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FrankGaffney
Donald Trump’s voters rightly expect him to fulfill his pledge to make America safe again, against radical Islamic terrorists. His team must fully share his vision, and faithfully deliver on his commitments.
islamic, jihad, terrorists
178
2017-30-27
Monday, 27 February 2017 03:30 PM
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