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McCain: Hamas statement mischaracterized

WASHINGTON, May 16 (UPI) -- The campaign of Republican presidential contender John McCain said Friday that a 2006 statement McCain made about dialogue with Hamas had been mischaracterized.

Tucker Bounds, a spokesman for the presumptive nominee's campaign, said accusations from James Rubin, a former U.S. State Department official under U.S. President Bill Clinton, that McCain, R-Ariz., had supported unconditional dialogue with the Palestinian extremist group in 2006 were misleading, CNN reported Friday.

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"There should be no confusion, John McCain has always believed that serious engagement would require mandatory conditions and Hamas must change itself fundamentally -- renounce violence, abandon its goal of eradicating Israel and accept a two-state solution," Bounds said.

The spokesman produced a statement McCain made in 2006 that urged Hamas to renounce violence. However, he didn't say taking such a step would be a precondition for dialogue with the United States.

Rubin said McCain performed "the ultimate flip-flop in American politics" when he criticized Democratic presidential contender Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., for his stated willingness to meet with leaders of hostile countries, including Iran, after supporting dialogue with Hamas.

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