Obama quietly shows up Trump in tweet to Barcelona victims

Former President Barack Obama issued a heartfelt statement on Twitter in the wake of the Barcelona terror attack – a day after Donald Trump used a debunked story to apparently endorse the idea of mass executions for Islamist extremists in his own comments.

‘Michelle and I are thinking of the victims and their families in Barcelona. Americans will always stand with our Spanish friends,’ Obama wrote on Twitter on Thursday, adding ‘Un abrazo’, or ‘A hug’ in Spanish.

Fourteen people were killed and more than 100 others were injured after a van mowed down pedestrians in Barcelona, Spain, in what local authorities said was an act of terror. The Islamic State group claimed responsibility.

Obama’s statement was in contrast to a comment made by current President Donald Trump referencing a false story about beating Islamic terrorism by shooting Muslims with bullets dipped in pigs’ blood. 

Former President Barack Obama issued a statement following Thursday’s terror attack, saying he and his wife, Michelle, were ‘thinking of the victims and their families in Barcelona’.

Obama’s statement was in contrast to a comment made by current President Donald Trump referencing a false story about beating Islamic terrorism by shooting Muslims with bullets dipped in pigs’ blood

Trump alluded to a widely debunked account of summary punishment by a US general in the Philippines in the early 1900s in a tweet shortly after the Barcelona terror attack. 

‘Study what General Pershing of the United States did to terrorists when caught. There was no more Radical Islamic Terror for 35 years!’ the president tweeted.

Trump had already issued simpler tweet 45 minutes earlier, writing: ‘The United States condemns the terror attack in Barcelona, Spain, and will do whatever is necessary to help. Be tough & strong, we love you!’

But the reference to Gen. John ‘Black Jack’ Pershing inserted Trump into the day’s most riveting news story in a way his White House could come to regret.

Thursday’s tweet also suggested Trump actually believes a story of Pershing, who was the US governor of largely Muslim Moro province from 1909 to 1913, that many historians say is apocryphal. 

There was criticism of the president for his use of it, with CNN anchor Jake Tapper calling it a ‘lie’, something unlikely to improve his network’s relations with the White House. 

President Donald Trump, pictured Tuesday during a press conference in New York, tweeted his response to Thursday's Barcelona terror attack by citing a military story that never happened

President Donald Trump, pictured Tuesday during a press conference in New York, tweeted his response to Thursday’s Barcelona terror attack by citing a military story that never happened

Trump's tweet about Gen. Pershing refers to a story he told on the campaign trail about deterring Muslim terrorists by capturing them and executing them with bullets dipped in pig's blood

Trump’s tweet about Gen. Pershing refers to a story he told on the campaign trail about deterring Muslim terrorists by capturing them and executing them with bullets dipped in pig’s blood

Trump had already tweeted a more ordinary message of support, but his White House may come to regret the follow-up

Trump had already tweeted a more ordinary message of support, but his White House may come to regret the follow-up

At the time Pershing was in charge, the Philippines was a US colony. And Pershing’s forces had to fight Muslim counterinsurgencies.

The debunked account – which Trump has referred to in the past – is as follows: Pershing’s forces rounded up 50 Muslim insurgents and executed 49 of them with bullets dipped in pig’s blood — considered by Muslims to be unholy.

‘You heard that, right?’ Trump said as a candidate during a rally in February 2016 in South Carolina, alluding to the pig blood part.

‘They were having terrorism problems, just like we do,’ Trump said.

As the story goes, the 50th prisoner was released to tell his fellow fighters about what the Americans had done.

‘And for 25 years, there wasn’t a problem. Okay? Twenty-five years, there wasn’t a problem,’ Trump said.

Historians have expressed skepticism or outright denial that this event took place.

Criticism: Factchecking group PolitiFact rated Trump at the worst end of its scale of error, CNN ancor Jake Tapper called the tweet a 'lie', while Democratic Congressman Ted Lieu and anti-Trump Republican Bill Kristol were united in attacking the tweet

Criticism: Factchecking group PolitiFact rated Trump at the worst end of its scale of error, CNN ancor Jake Tapper called the tweet a ‘lie’, while Democratic Congressman Ted Lieu and anti-Trump Republican Bill Kristol were united in attacking the tweet

According to the fact checking website Politifact, the late military historian Frank Vandiver said in 2003, referring to Pershing: ‘I never found any indication that it was true in extensive research on his Moro experiences. This kind of thing would have run completely against his character.’

Politifact quoted four historians who denied the account.

On Friday, the president began his morning Twitter binge on Friday by reassuring Americans that the country is safe following deadly the terror attacks in Spain.

But then he warned that jihadis are still a major threat, and castigated ‘Obstructionist Democrats’ for standing in the way of his border security goals by tying up his travel ban in federal court.

‘Homeland Security and law enforcement are on alert & closely watching for any sign of trouble. Our borders are far tougher than ever before!’ he wrote at first on Twitter.

Then, shifting gears, he added: ‘The Obstructionist Democrats make Security for our country very difficult. They use the courts and associated delay at all times. Must stop!’

The fire and brimstone came minutes later.

‘Radical Islamic Terrorism must be stopped by whatever means necessary! The courts must give us back our protective rights. Have to be tough!’ Trump tweeted. 

A NOT SO DIRTY WAR AND A RACIALLY-LOADED NICKNAME

Den. Jack Pershing was a military governor of a Philippines province but certainly never carried out mass executions designed to scare Muslims about the fate of their souls

Den. Jack Pershing was a military governor of a Philippines province but certainly never carried out mass executions designed to scare Muslims about the fate of their souls

WHO WAS PERSHING?

Gen. John ‘Black Jack’ Pershing, who would rise to fame in World War I, was a U.S. Army commander and served as governor of the southern Philippines’ mainly Muslim Moro province between 1909 and 1913. His tenure came as the U.S. was consolidating its control over the Philippines, which it had won as a result of the Spanish-American War. Pershing was confronted with a Moro insurgency, which he largely broke in June 1913 in a battle that killed some 500 Moro fighters.

His nickname has an unfortunate history – and was not one of his own making. During a distinguished military career he had commanded the 10th Cavalry in the West . It was one of the original Buffalo Soldiers regiments – African-American troops under the command of white officers.

But when he was posted to West Point as an instructor, he was widely-disliked as a disciplinarian and cadets called him N****r Jack because of his previous command of the Buffalo Soldiers. Over time at West Point it was softened to Black Jack. By 1917, with entry into World War One, Pershing had become famous beyond just the military and the nickname stuck.

His own views on race are complicated. On one hand, he commanded racially-segregated forces in Europe in World War One, and sent messages to the French resisting anything which would appear to challenge segregation and the perceived inferiority of black troops. On the other hand, he wrote after the war: ‘I cannot commend too highly the spirit shown among the colored combat troops, who exhibit fine capacity for quick training and eagerness for the most dangerous work.’ 

WHAT TACTICS IS TRUMP PRAISING?

It’s unclear. Trump did not cite any specific tactic employed by Pershing in his tweet on Thursday. But during the presidential campaign, he told a widely discredited story that Pershing had halted Muslim attacks in the Philippines by shooting rebels with bullets dipped in pigs’ blood. Pork is taboo for Muslims, but that story has been widely debunked by historians as unsubstantiated or exaggerated. Fact-checking organizations such as Politifact rated Trump’s claim as false.

War: There is little doubt that the Moro Rebellion was an unpleasant war with nasty actions, including the execution of prisoners. But historians say there is no evidence for the claims Trump alluded to on Twitter

War: There is little doubt that the Moro Rebellion was an unpleasant war with nasty actions, including the execution of prisoners. But historians say there is no evidence for the claims Trump alluded to on Twitter

However, according to Politifact, Pershing wrote in a memoir that another U.S. commander in the Philippines had at least once ‘seen to it’ that Muslim insurgents’ bodies were buried in the same grave as a dead pig to serve as a warning to others. 

‘It was not pleasant to have to take such measures, but the prospect of going to hell instead of heaven sometimes deterred the would-be assassins,’ Pershing wrote. 

According to Politifact, a footnote to the 2013 edition of the memoir cited another general as telling Pershing in a letter that the practice had long been a custom ‘to discourage crazy lunatics.’

 

Read more at DailyMail.co.uk