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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Thompson: Bin Laden should get ‘due process’


Fred Thompson on Monday. Associated Press
 (Associated Press / The Spokesman-Review)
Los Angeles Times The Spokesman-Review

COLUMBIA, S.C. – After three days of saying that Osama bin Laden should be captured and killed, Republican presidential candidate Fred Thompson added the caveat Monday that the al-Qaida leader also should receive “due process.”

Thompson’s comment on bin Laden came as he was attempting to quell the flap set off by a remark he made last week as he launched his candidacy in Iowa.

On Friday outside Sioux City, shortly after the release of a new videotape of the terrorist leader, Thompson said that bin Laden was “more of a symbolism than he is anything else” and that there were greater concerns in fighting terrorism.

The ensuing criticism led Thompson to toughen his language: Bin Laden, he said, “ought to be captured and killed.”

But Monday in South Carolina, Thompson told reporters on his campaign bus that he wasn’t suggesting bin Laden should be killed as soon as he is caught.

“No, no, no, we’ve got due process to go through,” the Associated Press quoted him as saying. “I’m not suggesting those things happen simultaneously.”

The suggestion that bin Laden’s rights deserve protection struck a relatively moderate note at a time when the former Tennessee senator is trying to define himself as the most conservative of his party’s major White House contenders.

Todd Harris, his communications director, offered a clarification of Thompson’s view of bin Laden on Monday afternoon.

“Before he’s killed, we need to pump him for every ounce of information about al-Qaida that we can possibly get,” Harris said.

Thompson’s remark two days later on bin Laden’s “symbolism” triggered a sharp response from Democratic presidential contender John Edwards, who accused him of failing to grasp the importance of capturing the al-Qaida leader.

“Fred Thompson should know better,” the former North Carolina senator said.