Congressman defends posting fake Obama photo: 'No one said this wasn't photoshopped'

Congressman defends posting fake Obama photo: 'No one said this wasn't photoshopped'

6 Jan    Finance News

A Republican congressman who tweeted a picture of former President Barack Obama shaking hands with Iranian President Hassan Rouhani Monday defended it as making a valid point after commenters pointed out that the two had never met in person.

Congressman Paul Gosar and his tweet of a Photoshopped image. (Photo illustration: Yahoo News; photo: AP)
Congressman Paul Gosar and his tweet of a Photoshopped image. (Photo illustration: Yahoo News; photo: AP)

In his original post, Paul Gosar proclaimed, “The world is a better place without these guys in power.” Rouhani is still Iran’s president.

Gosar, a former dentist who now represents Arizona’s rural Fourth District, defended posting the doctored image, writing, “no one said this wasn’t photoshopped.” But his original post did not indicate that it was faked.

CNN’s Andrew Kaczynski reported that the original photo showed Obama shaking hands with India’s prime minister, Narendra Modi. The doctored image appears to have first been used in 2015 by a super-PAC supporting Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wis.

Gosar accused Obama of having “coddled, appeased, nurtured and protected the worlds No. 1 sponsor of terror.”

That has been a Republican talking point ever since the Obama administration — together with the United Kingdom, Russia, France and Germany — signed a pact with Iran that lifted economic sanctions in return for a pledge that Iran halt sensitive nuclear development and allow international inspections.

“If the goal is to avoid a war, it would be wise to reject this fundamentally flawed agreement that all but guarantees a nuclear Iran,” Gosar wrote in an op-ed for the Prescott Daily Courier.

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Gosar became briefly notorious in 2018 when his own family made an ad urging people to vote for his opponent.

In 2018, Trump pulled the U.S. out of the nuclear deal with Iran, though Tehran indicated it would abide by the terms as long as the other world powers honored it. Following the American drone strike last week that killed Iranian Gen. Qassem Soleimani, however, Iran reversed that decision, saying it would no longer abide by the agreement.

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