President Barack Obama appeared on NBC's
"Meet The Press" on Sunday, talking about the worst day of his presidency especially gun control after the Newtown killings. He said, "Something fundamental in
America has to change."
The president who visited on December 16 with
families of victims of the Newtown, Connecticut, school shootings said Sunday
he will put forth a proposal next year to change firearm laws. Among
the things the legislation will address are assault-style rifles,
high-capacity ammunition magazines and background checks on all firearm
sales.
His comments echoed those
made five days after the shootings in Newtown, where a gunman killed
his mother at home, then 20 children and six adults at an elementary
school.
Obama said he hopes that
the Newtown killings spur Americans to take action and not let the
shootings feel like "one of those routine episodes," the emotions of
which fade with memory.
""It certainly won't feel like that to me. This is something that, you know, that was the worst day of my presidency," he said.
The president said he
wanted to listen to all the parties involved in the gun control debate
but was skeptical about the National Rifle Association's call to put
armed guards in every school as the only solution.
Meanwhile, Obama said December 19 that a task force led by Vice President Joe Biden will have legislative recommendations in January.
Benghazi attack
Obama said the security
failures that led to the deaths of four Americans at the U.S. Consulate
in Benghazi, Libya, were "severe," but he blamed human mistakes.
"There was just some
sloppiness -- not intentional -- in terms of how we secure embassies in
areas where you essentially don't have governments that have a lot of
capacity to protect those embassies," he said.
The State Department will implement all of the 29 recommendations by a review board headed by veteran diplomat Thomas Pickering.
The FBI also has some
"very good leads" into who carried out the September attack that killed
U.S. Ambassador J. Christopher Stevens and three others, Obama said.
Among the
recommendations in the report sent to Secretary of State Hillary Clinton
were strengthening security, adding fire-safety precautions and
improving intelligence collection in high-threat areas. "But we'll try to do more than that," Obama said.
-culled from CNN
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