Donald Trump is continuing to thrash George W. Bush over his handling of 9/11
"I've heard for years he kept the country safe after 9/11," Trump said. "What does that mean, after? What about during 9/11? I was there. I lost a lot of friends that were killed in that building. The worst attack ever in this country, it was during his presidency. ... By the way, after that, we did ok. That's meaning the team scored 19 runs in the first inning, but after that we played well. I don't think so."
Trump is campaigning in South Carolina ahead of the state's primary contest later this week. The real estate mogul, who is a frontrunner in the race for the Republican presidential nomination, has been touting his opposition to the Iraq War, which some say that Trump has misrepresented.
Trump has used his supposed opposition to the 2003 invasion of Iraq to attack former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, whose brother was the president when the 9/11 terrorist attacks happened. He said at the Republican debate on Saturday night that "the World Trade Center came down during your brother's reign."
He went even further than that at the press conference, implying that the US should not have toppled former Iraqi President Saddam Hussein because he went after terrorists in Iraq.
"Saddam Hussein was a bad guy. But one thing about him, he killed terrorists," Trump said. "Now Iraq is Harvard for terrorism. You want to become a terrorist? You go to Iraq. Saddam Hussein understood, and he killed terrorists."
Trump also said that the US "shouldn't have been" in Iraq and "shouldn't have gotten out the way we got out."
"If the president went to the beach, we would have been better off, believe me," Trump said.
One reporter asked if Trump's attacks on George W. Bush were timed to coincide with his appearance in the state to campaign on behalf of his brother, Republican presidential candidate and former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush.
"No, no," Trump said. "... Not really."