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Obama: Trump's NATO Comments Show 'Lack of Preparedness'
Image source: CBS/"Face the Nation"

Obama: Trump's NATO Comments Show 'Lack of Preparedness'

Obama said Trump's comments were an admission that the U.S. might not live by NATO's "most central tenet."

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Barack Obama says GOP nominee Donald Trump's recent suggestion that the U.S. might not come to the defense of NATO allies is another sign of Trump's "lack of preparedness" on foreign policy.

Obama said in an interview broadcast Sunday on CBS' "Face the Nation" that Trump's comments to the New York Times — in which Trump suggested allies that haven't paid their NATO dues wouldn't be guaranteed of getting help if Russia invaded — were an admission that the U.S. might not live by NATO's "most central tenet."

Image source: CBS/"Face the Nation"

Obama, speaking before the Democratic National Convention begins Monday, said Trump's comments on NATO last week were "an indication of the lack of preparedness that he has been displaying when it comes to foreign policy."

NATO members promise that an attack against any of them is considered an assault against all.

Trump told the Times that he wouldn't predict the U.S. response in the case of a Russian attack of smaller NATO allies like Estonia or Latvia. "If they fulfill their obligations to us, the answer is 'yes,'" Trump said.

Obama responded: "There is a big difference between challenging our European allies to keep up their defense spending, particularly at a time when Russia's been more aggressive, and saying to them, 'You know what? We might not abide by the central tenant of the most important alliance in the history of the world.'"

In contrast, Obama said that presumptive Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton, who served as secretary of State in his first term, is supremely capable of taking over the reins of power in January. He said he believes there has never been candidate better prepared for the presidency.

"She's not always flashy. And there are better speech makers. But she knows her stuff," Obama said.

Asked what it takes to be an effective president, Obama cited the ability to build a team of talented, hardworking people and "make sure they are all moving in the same direction." Another factor, he said, was "personal discipline in terms of doing your homework, and knowing your subject matter, and being able to stay focused."

And to make all this work "you have to really care about the American people ... not in the abstract," Obama said, noting that is crucial because that will help ground the president in that difficult job and prevent them from being overly influenced by polls, pressure and difficult developments.

If you don't have that sense of grounding, "you will be buffeted and blown back and forth by polls and interest groups and voices whispering in your head," he said. "And you will lose your center of gravity. You will lose your moral compass."

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