美国总统大选第三场辩论(完整版) Transcript of the Third Presidential Debate BOB SCHIEFFER: Good evening from the campus of Lynn University here in Boca Raton, Florida. This is the fourth and last debate of the 2012 campaign, brought to you by mission on Presidential Debates. This one ’son foreign policy. I’m Bob Schieffer of CBS News. The questions are mine, and I have not shared them with the candidates or their aides. The audience has taken avow of silence —no applause, no reaction of any kind except right now when we e President Barack Obama and Governor Mitt Romney. (Sustained cheers, applause.) Gentlemen, your campaigns have agreed to certain rules and they are simple. They have asked me to divide the evening into segments. I’ ll pose a question at the beginning of each segment. You will each have two minutes to respond, and then we will have a general discussion until we move to the next segment. Tonight ’s debate, as both of your know, comes on the 50th anniversary of the night that President Kennedy told the world that the Soviet Union had installed nuclear missiles in Cuba — perhaps the closest we ’ve e to nuclear war. And it isa sobering reminder that every president faces at some point an unexpected threat to our national security from abroad. So let’s begin. The first segment is the challenge ofa changing Middle East and the new face of terrorism. I’m going toput this into two seg