Sunday, February 8, 2026
ADVT 
International

Calling Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton 'Founder' Of ISIS Was Sarcasm: Donald Trump

The Canadian Press, 12 Aug, 2016 11:55 AM
    Making a U-turn, Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump today said his controversial remarks that President Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton were "co-founders" of ISIS was merely a sarcasm and blamed the media for misunderstanding it.
     
    Trump tweeted that the media was missing his sarcasm. "Ratings challenged CNN reports so seriously that I call President Obama (and Clinton) 'the founder' of ISIS, & MVP.
     
    THEY DON'T GET SARCASM?" he tweeted.
     
    For the past two days, Trump has been receiving nationwide flake after his remarks that Obama and Democratic presidential nominee Clinton, who served as Secretary of State in the first term of the Obama Administration, were founders of the ISIS.
     
    His remarks on Wednesday, which he repeated on Thursday outraged even his own party leaders.
     
    Trump today tried to calm down the situation by saying he was being sarcastic.
     
    "I love watching these poor, pathetic people (pundits) on television working so hard and so seriously to try and figure me out. They can't!" Trump said in another tweet.
     
    "ISIS gained tremendous strength during Hillary Clinton's term as Secretary of State. When will the dishonest media report the facts!" he said.
     
     
    In an interview to Fox news, Trump alleged that the policies of Obama and Clinton created a vacuum resulting in ISIS gaining ground in Iraq, Syria and Libya.
     
    "We should have never and I have been saying from the beginning we should have never got into Iraq. But once we were in, we should have never left the way we left. We just left it open. And that's when ISIS really came about big league. And now they're in 28 different countries. The President has been trying to play down ISIS like it's not that big of a deal, like they are not as powerful," he said.
     
    "We should knock them out. We should knock the hell out of them. He is not willing to do that. As far as I'm concerned, and I will say it and I will say it to anybody that wants to listen, he is a founder of ISIS. They must love him.
     
    Because without him you wouldn't have the threat, the horrible situation going on around the world with ISIS," Trump told Fox News a day earlier.
     
    "I call him a founder. Look, ISIS could have been knocked out, it could have been knocked out pretty swiftly. The way he got out. We shouldn't have been in Iraq but we shouldn't have gotten out the way we got out. Where he gave a date where he said this is when approximately and even in detail when we're leaving. Look, he has been as a president a disaster bad judgment," he said.
     
     
    "But really bad judgement as said by Bernie Sanders, bad judgment is Hillary Clinton. Bernie Sanders said she suffers from bad judgement. She certainly does. You can throw Libya into the puzzle, you can throw plenty of other things into the puzzle. The two of them have been catastrophic for our country. And he is the founder and she is right there with him," Trump said.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Congresswoman Tulsi Gabbard Launches Campaign For Diwali Stamp In US

    Tulsi Gabbard, the first Hindu to be elected to the US Congress, has launched a signature campaign to ask the country's postal service to issue a stamp for recognising Diwali as a special day.

    Congresswoman Tulsi Gabbard Launches Campaign For Diwali Stamp In US

    4 Indian-Americans Honoured With Great Immigrants Award

    4 Indian-Americans Honoured With Great Immigrants Award
    Four Indian-Americans, including Google CEO Sunder Pichai and McKinsey's Chairman of the Americas Vikram Malhotra, are among 42 eminent professionals honoured with a prestigious immigrants' award for their role in strengthening the country and its democratic society.

    4 Indian-Americans Honoured With Great Immigrants Award

    Indian-Origin BBC Reporter Sima Kotecha Faces Racist Abuse In UK

    Indian-Origin BBC Reporter Sima Kotecha Faces Racist Abuse In UK
    Sima Kotecha was reporting on the aftermath of the June 23 referendum from the town of Basingstoke when she heard someone saying "Paki", a racist term used for South Asian origin migrants in the UK.

    Indian-Origin BBC Reporter Sima Kotecha Faces Racist Abuse In UK

    Indian-Origin Dentist Banned For Having Affair With Married Patient In UK

    Indian-Origin Dentist Banned For Having Affair With Married Patient In UK
    Dr Parag Patel's case came up before a UK General Dental Council (GDC) misconduct hearing this week over his conduct with the female patient, referred to only as Patient 1.

    Indian-Origin Dentist Banned For Having Affair With Married Patient In UK

    Docs 'The Pearl' And 'the Pearl Of Africa' Chronicle Lives Of Transgender Women

    Docs 'The Pearl' And 'the Pearl Of Africa' Chronicle Lives Of Transgender Women
    The East African country is notorious for anti-LGBTQ laws which criminalize same-sex relations. After Kambugu was outed by a tabloid, she went into hiding, relying on her family to bring food and supplies.

    Docs 'The Pearl' And 'the Pearl Of Africa' Chronicle Lives Of Transgender Women

    'Bregret' After 'Brexit': Nearly 2.3 Million Britons Regret Voting For 'Leave' Says Survey

    'Bregret' After 'Brexit': Nearly 2.3 Million Britons Regret Voting For 'Leave' Says Survey
    Nearly 2.3 million people in the UK regret voting for Brexit from the EU in last week's historic referendum, a trend which has come to be referred to as "Bregret", a new survey said today.

    'Bregret' After 'Brexit': Nearly 2.3 Million Britons Regret Voting For 'Leave' Says Survey