Martin O'Malley
Related: About this forumO'Malley talks assault weapons ban at Des Moines-area stop.
WINDSOR HEIGHTS, Iowa Democratic presidential candidate Martin OMalley told a seniors group Monday Americans would be safer from domestic terror attacks if combat assault weapons and unlimited ammunition sales were banned as part of comprehensive gun safety legislation.
OMalley, who passed similar legislation as governor of Maryland after the 2012 Sandy Hook school shooting in Connecticut, said last weeks attack in San Bernardino, Calif., pointed to the need for common-sense restrictions and safety measures aimed at keeping weapons out of the hands of people with mental illnesses or intent on doing harm to others.
The former governor said licensing requirements that include mandatory, universal background checks and safety courses for the purchasers of new guns would be part of his goal as the next president to cut the number of deaths by gun violence in half over the next decade. He also called for reinstating the expired federal ban on assault weapons.
We would be better served as a nation if we had these common-sense restrictions at the national level, OMalley told more than 100 people who attended an AARP forum at a local community center.
Last weeks attack that killed 14 people revived fears about domestic threats from groups such as the Islamic State in America and prompted President Barack Obama on Sunday to call for new restrictions that would prevent suspects who are on no-fly lists from getting access to guns as a way to enhance national security.
OMalley told reporters he agreed with a number of points Obama made in his nationally televised speech, including not committing big combat divisions of American troops on the ground in Syria, Iraq and other Middle East hot spots when the situation calls for establishing international coalitions led by Muslim nations with stakes in the region.
He said he also supports the move to place more U.S. special-operations forces in the region in concert with close coalition air support to increase and accelerate the battle tempo to take away safe havens for ISIS in Iraq and Syria.
The challenge is that everybody wants things to be a kind of drive-through McDonalds window here, he said. Its probably going to take a little more time to assemble the coalition necessary to reclaim some of the territory on the ground. It cant be done with air strikes alone.
OMalley said the world faces a whole new era of conflict in which terrorist threats morph and evolve, requiring the development of better international alliances that can adapt as quickly or quicker than the terrorists seeking to destabilize the status quo with new threats.
With domestic threats becoming increasingly common, OMalley called for better preparation, coordination and information sharing by governments at the federal, state and local levels.
He called sales of combat assault weapons and unlimited ammunition both online or at gun shows a glaring vulnerability, but he also called for better scrutiny of the visa waiver program, ramping up state intelligence centers, and better communications among state, federal and local law officers who face a challenge of needing to be 100 percent successful in their terror detection efforts.
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