Soft-spoken GOP presidential candidate Ben
Carson on Friday lashed out at the news media for recent stories about
his long-ago past, saying they are bias and amount to a “witch hunt.”
Carson, a retired pediatric neurosurgeon,
has indeed faced intense media scrutiny over the past couple of weeks as
he moves to the front of some national primary polls.
Over the past several days, Politico
published a story questioning whether Carson, a first-time candidate,
receiving a scholarship offer from the U.S. Military Academy at West
Point.
And CNN reported finding no support for
Carson's oft-repeated claim that he tried to stab a close friend as a
teenager. Citing privacy concerns, his campaign has refused to name the
person involved.
"I think what … these kinds of things
show, is there is a desperation on behalf of some to try to find a way
to tarnish me," Carson said Friday night during a news conference
outside West Palm Beach, Fla.
He also said such efforts will only strengthen him among supporters, who “understand this is a witch hunt.”
In an intense exchanged with reporters
during the news conference, Carson argued President Obama didn't receive
the same level of scrutiny in his 2008 White House bid.
“In fact, I remember just the opposite,” he said.
Carson cited Obama’s relationships with
Frank Marshall Davis, who had ties to the Communist Party, and Bill
Ayers, a college professor who in the 1970s led the radical left group
the Weather Underground.
He also asked reporters why they haven’t tried to unseal Obama’s under-graduate records.
“Why are you guys not interested in why his records are sealed?” Carson asked.
Carson has developed a passionate
following based in part on his inspirational personal story and devotion
to Christian values. The only African-American in the Republican 2016
class, he grew up in inner-city Detroit and often speaks about his
childhood brushes with violence and poverty.
Following the Politico story that was
published Friday, the Carson campaign sought to clarify the candidate’s
story about his interest in attending West Point in his breakout book,
"Gifted Hands," in which he outlines his participation with the Reserve
Officers' Training Corps, commonly known as ROTC, while in high school.
"I was offered a full scholarship to West
Point," Carson wrote in the 1996 book. "I didn't refuse the scholarship
outright, but I let them know that a military career wasn't where I saw
myself going. As overjoyed as I felt to be offered such a scholarship, I
wasn't really tempted."
Campaign spokesman Doug Watts said Carson
was "the top ROTC student in the city of Detroit" and "was introduced to
folks from West Point by his ROTC supervisors."
"They told him they could help him get an
appointment based on his grades and performance in ROTC. He considered
it, but in the end did not seek admission," Watts said.
Students who are granted admission to West
Point are not awarded scholarships. Instead, they are said to earn
appointments to the military academy, which come with tuition, room and
board and expenses paid, in exchange for five years of service in the
Army after graduation.
A West Point spokesman on Friday said the
academy "cannot confirm whether anyone during that time period was
nominated to West Point if they chose not to pursue completion of the
application process."
At the Friday news conference, Carson
said, "It was an offer to me. It was specifically made." He said he
could not recall specifically who made the offer. "It's almost 50 years
ago. I bet you don't remember all the people you talked to 50 years
ago," he said.
Pressed further by reporters, Carson said:
"What about the West Point thing is false? What is false about it?"
Asking if he had made a mistake in recounting the story, he said, "I
don't think so. I think it is perfectly clear. I think there are people
who want to make it into a mistake. I'm not going to say it is a
mistake, so forget about it."
Hours earlier, Carson had told Fox News in
an interview, "I guess it could have been more clarified. I told it as I
understood it."
In a post Wednesday on his Facebook page,
Carson wrote that "every signer of the Declaration of Independence had
no elected office experience." About half had been elected members of
colonial assemblies, and Watts acknowledged the error to The Washington
Post.
On another topic, Carson has said the
great pyramids of Egypt were built by the biblical figure Joseph to
store grain, although the accepted science says that they were tombs for
pharaohs.
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