Republican vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin will not speak at a
rally against the president of Iran next week and White House hopeful
Sen. John McCain said on Thursday organizers had withdrawn her
invitation under pressure from their Democratic rivals. A group of
Jewish organizations had said both Palin and Sen. Hillary Clinton would
speak at the protest near the United Nations on Monday against Iranian
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who has said Israel should be wiped off
the map. But a senior Clinton adviser said the New York Democrat
canceled her appearance after learning Palin was scheduled to address
demonstrators as well. "Gov. Palin was pleased to accept an invitation
to address this rally and show her resolve on this grave national
security issue, regrettably that invitation has since been withdrawn
under pressure from Democratic partisans," McCain said in a
statement. "We stand shoulder to shoulder with Republicans, Democrats
and independents alike to oppose Ahmadinejad's goal of a nuclear armed
Iran," he said. "Sen. Obama's campaign had the opportunity to join us.
Sen. Obama chose politics rather than the national interest." Clinton
decided not to attend because she did not want to take part in
a "partisan political event," her aide said. She lost a hard-fought
battle for her party's nomination to Sen. Barack Obama, but is now
supporting the Democratic nominee for the November 4 U.S. presidential
election. Among those scheduled to attend the protest are Nobel
laureate Elie Wiesel and Speaker of the Knesset Dalia Itzik, publicist
Casey Sanders said on behalf of the organizers. "In order to keep the
focus on Iranian threats and to ensure that this critical message not
be obscured, the organizers of the rally have decided not to have any
American political personalities appear," she said. UN officials have
also said it was possible McCain and Palin might show up on the
sidelines of the opening of the UN General Assembly on Tuesday. This
would give Palin a chance to meet a few world leaders on the day
President George W. Bush and one of his main foes, Iranian President
Ahmadinejad, address the 192 UN member states. Although Palin, 44, has
brought new energy to the McCain campaign and helped narrow Obama's
lead in opinion polls before the election, Democrats say the mother of
five lacks the foreign policy experience a vice president should have.
Iran denies Western allegations that it is seeking atomic weapons, but
has refused to suspend sensitive parts of its nuclear program that
could be used to make atom bomb fuel. Source

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Posted By SF to Jewish And Breaking News at 9/19/2008 10:05:00 AM
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