Difficult to say for certain, but looking back to the lead-up to the Iraq war it looks as if the population is being softened up for war against Iran.
Obama
Vs. Romney: Will October Bring a Political Surprise?
1
October 2012
Imagine
the impact on the polls if just days before Election Day,
negotiations between the president and Iran dramatically broke down,
intensifying an already volatile situation and fueling rumors that
his Republican challenger cut a deal with a hostile enemy power to
influence the election.
Would
you be surprised?
Maybe
not, if you remember what happened on the eve of the election in
1980. In that year, negotiations between President Jimmy Carter and
Iran over the release of 52 American hostages collapsed on the Sunday
before Election Day.
Over
the next 72 hours, Carter, who had been trailing Republican
challenger Ronald Reagan by two points, dropped 10 points behind, and
the "October surprise," a game-changing incident in the
final days of the campaign, became firmly rooted in our political
consciousness.
"You
can term any unexpected event in late October or early November an
'October surprise,'" said Larry Sabato, director of the Center
for Politics at the University of Virginia. "The surprising
thing is that we're surprised by it every four years."
The
drama of a potential October surprise comes as much with the ticking
of the clock toward Election Day as it does with the shrinking of the
electoral map. A tight race like this year's, where the candidates
are separated by a few points in battleground states, increases the
likelihood that an unexpected event can shape the polls.
As
in 1980, conflict with Iran looms over the race. Last week, Israeli
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told the United Nations Iran might
have a nuclear weapon by summer.
For
months, the threat that Israel could unilaterally strike Iran's
nuclear facilities has been on the table. Would Iran react by
attacking American interests? Were something to occur in the days
before the election, it's impossible to know how it might affect the
voting.
In
2004, a foreign surprise apparently moved the needle in a tight race,
helping George W. Bush squeeze past Sen. John Kerry in the final days
of the campaign.
Three
years after 9/11, terrorism remained the number one issue in voters'
minds that year, and Osama bin Laden released an audio tape the last
week in October in which he said, "Any state that does not mess
with our security has naturally guaranteed its own security."
On
Oct. 31, 2004, the polls put Bush and Kerry in a dead heat. A week
later, Bush won the election by 2.5 percent of the popular vote.
Sometimes
October surprises are the result of outside factors, like the bin
Laden tape, but they are often the result of planned tactics by the
campaigns.
In
2000, the Bush campaign was confronted with a surprise, though it did
not actually occur until Nov. 2.
Five
days before the 2000 election, Bush admitted to a 1976 arrest for
drunk driving near his family's summer home in Kennebunkport, Maine.
"The
2000 announcement didn't cost Bush the election, but it certainly
cost him the margin. It could not have gotten any closer than it
did," presidential historian Richard Norton Smith told ABC News
in an interview later.
Whether
the Obama and Romney campaigns are holding on to information, waiting
to spring it at the last minute, remains a mystery. But there are
secrets each campaign wants out in the open, including a decades'
worth of Romney's tax returns and Obama's college transcripts.
Moreover,
the economy remains volatile and Romney and Obama have yet to square
off face-to-face in a debate.
The
release of new economic indicators, depending on what they show,
could help either candidate gain a few points.
Televised
debates in the final days of the campaigns in 1960, between John F.
Kennedy and Richard Nixon, and in 1980 between Reagan and Carter,
helped Kennedy and Reagan respectively.
"Regan
nailed it in those debates," said Smith.
Obama
is considered the better debater, but if Romney were to perform
unexpectedly well that could shake up the race.
See
also - ABC News: ‘October
Surprise’ Could Decide Election
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