Posted on 06/17/2008 8:31:23 PM PDT by babyfreep
As the Democratic primary finally grinds to an excruciatingly messy halt, I keep hearing from Hillary Clinton supporters who vow to cast their lot with Republican John McCain now that Barack Obama has wrapped up his partys nomination. Honestly, its an assertion that goes beyond ludicrous and eclipses disastrous, landing somewhere in the neighborhood of apocalyptic.
After over five years of failed policies concerning the war in Iraq (and dont forget that other unfinished war in the country that actually was involved in 9/11), electing McCain would lead this country beyond the point of no return. If George W. Bush is the self-proclaimed War President, then his Republican wannabe heir apparent could easily be dubbed The Armageddon President.
Dont believe it? Look at the record. Remember the November, 2002 Joint resolution to authorize the use of United States Armed Forces against Iraq that Congress bought into hook, line, and sinker? The one that allowed Bush and his cronies to instigate a war that McCain himself has said could last for a hundred years? Not only did Senator McCain vote for that resolution (and every pro-Iraqi War measure since), he was a co-sponsor of the bill.
In February, 2003, on FOXs Hannity & Colmes, shortly before the initial invasion of Iraq, McCain was decidedly more optimistic about the length of the impending war, predicting that it will be brief." On CNN, he said "The success will be fairly easy," and added "I believe we can win an overwhelming victory in a very short period of time." The following month, in a speech on the floor of the Senate, he said, When the people of Iraq are liberated, we will again have written another chapter in the glorious history of the United States of America.
Thats right, while Obama spoke out against the invasion of Iraq from the very beginning; McCain was leading the charge in a war that former White House press secretary Scott McClellan now calls a serious strategic blunder, while accusing the Bush administration of utilizing deception and misinformation to sell it to Congress and America.
Despite the backlash from an admittedly stunned White House, McClellan isnt the first ex-insider to criticize the current administration over Iraq. The Washington Post lists 37 former White House staffers who broke ranks and wrote books or opinion pieces critical of Bush and his inner circles handling of the war. Among those who have questioned the validity and handling of the war are former Joint Chiefs of Staff director of operations Marine Lieutenant General Gregory Newbold, Army Major General Paul Eaton, Major General John Batiste, former Bush anti-terrorism adviser Richard Clarke, and former Army Gen. Eric K. Shinseki.
In an April, 2006 opinion piece in Time magazine, Newbold criticized Donald Rumsfeld and other Bush officials, saying, The consequence of the military's quiescence was that a fundamentally flawed plan was executed for an invented war.
While the release of the McClellan book puts McCain in an uncomfortable position with his hawkish position on Iraq (which he now claims is winnable by 2013), it is his stance on Iran that is even more disturbing.
Appearing on NBCs Meet the Press in April, 2006, Senator McCain spoke about possible sanctions against Iran: We're going to the United Nations Security Council with our European allies. We are seeking sanctions. We must have sanctions against Iran.
He then said that if sanctions failed, the U.S. must be prepared to use military force against Iran: Would it be a difficult military option? Sure, it would be a difficult military option. But you cannot remove it from the table.
Meet the Press host Tim Russert asked McCain what could happen if the U.S. found itself embroiled in two major wars at once.
McCains chilling reply: I think we could have Armageddon.
A year later almost to the day, while speaking at a South Carolina VFW hall in April of 2007, McCain was asked about Iran, or rather, When do we send them an airmail message to Tehran?
McCains response?
That old Beach Boys song? Bomb Iran? (to sporadic and slightly nervous laughter). And then he actually sang a chorus:
Bomb, bomb, bomb, bomb, bomb Iran . And again, the audience laughed.
Senator McCain war is NOT funny. Lives lost, both civilian and military, is no laughing matter. A country pushed to the verge of bankruptcy to fund not one not two but countless conflicts around the globe is not something that America should find laughable.
Armageddon is nothing to joke about.
But McCain hasnt stopped there. He has continued to beat the war drum in speech after speech. This past January, he shocked a crowd of supporters by saying, There's going to be other wars. I'm sorry to tell you, there's going to be other wars. We will never surrender but there will be other wars.
Even staunch conservative Pat Buchanan was critical of McCains aggressive approach to international relations, saying You get John McCain in the White House, and I do believe we will be at war with Iran. That's one of the things that makes me very nervous about him. There's no doubt John McCain is going to be a war president. His whole career is wrapped up in the military, national security. He's in Putin's face, he's threatening the Iranians, we're going to be in Iraq for a hundred years.
So before disgruntled Hillary supporters declare their support for a warmonger whose comments make Bush look like a pacifist, they might want to reconsider. Do we really want a president who thinks its funny to lead our world down the path to Armageddon while singing a chorus of Bomb, bomb, bomb, bomb, bomb Iran?
I have said before that this is one of the most important elections in our nations history. Lets just hope its not the last.
And thats the Faulking Truth.
(Mark Faulks first book, entitled The Naked Truth: Investing in the Stock Play of a Lifetime, is now available at www.toginet.com. And join Mark and Paul Faulk every Saturday from 1-2 PM CST on The Faulking Truth X2 Show at www.toginet.com)
(Editor's note: This is my latest article for the June 6th edition of NONzine, available throughout the Oklahoma City metro area at an www.nonzine.com )
continues to be brilliant and will be remembered in history that way.
Although I like President Bush...I never found myself using the word brilliant thinking of him. lol. I think he is of average intelligence who thinks of America first.
You are right (and witty, too).
ping - I probably should have said “friend from my teen years” instead of “old friend”.
He’s still a nice guy as they go. I disagree with his politics and I’ve told him so.
So speaking the truth is beating a war drum? Human history is full of wars, so saying the U.S. will eventually be in another war is not a call to war. If anything, McCain was just stating the obvious. We have to worry if we get a president who promises they will under no circumstances be in a war.
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