McRINO is the last person who should be attacking someone else’s credibility.

(The Hill) — Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) suggested Sunday that Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) had little credibility in the fight against terror, saying that the Boston bombing had proved his views wrong.

McCain, in an interview on CNN’s State of the Union, was asked to respond to Paul’s statements calling the National Security Agency’s phone tracking program an “all-out assault on the Constitution.”

“Right. Just prior to the Boston bombing, he said the battlefield was no longer in America,” McCain said.

McCain’s comment referenced an interview with Fox News where Paul criticized members of his party for saying that the fight against terror must be global in nature.

“President Obama says this,” Paul said in that interview. “Some members of my party say the battle has no geographic limitations and the laws of war apply. It’s important to know that the law of war that they’re talking about means no due process.”

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