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McCain for Bush/Cheney/Rumsfeld Iraq War (before he was against it)

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Wed Jun 04, 2008 at 06:50:18 AM PST

As a major part of his claim to bipartisanship and moderate-ness, McCain has been making the claim that he opposed the Bush administration's failed strategy and tactics in the Iraq war.  Needless to say, too many of the stenographic press have been reporting this false claim without actually looking into what McCain said and when he said it.

Fortunately the wonderful and always worth reading TomDispatch has a nice run down of some of McCain's support for the Bush/Cheney/Rumsfeld disasterous approach to the Iraq war, when he was indeed onboard as just another typical partisan Republican cheerleader.

Here is just some of the real John McCain in realtime, showing how McCain backed the Bush/Cheney/Rumsfeld/Neocon fantasy on every point:

How would American troops be greeted?:
    "I believe... that the Iraqi people will greet us as liberators."
      (March 20, 2003)

Did Saddam Hussein have a nuclear program that posed an imminent threat to the United States?:
    "Saddam Hussein is on a crash course to construct a nuclear weapon."
      (October 10, 2002)

Will a war with Iraq be long or short?:
    "This conflict is... going to be relatively short."
      (March 23, 2003)

How is the war going?:
     "I would argue that the next three to six months will be critical."
       (September 10, 2003)

How is it going (almost two months later, from the war's "greatest critic")?
    "I think the initial phases of [the war] were so spectacularly successful that
      it took us all by surprise."
      (October 31, 2003)

Is this war really necessary?:
    "Only the most deluded of us could doubt the necessity of this war."
      (August 30, 2004)

How is it going? (Recurring question for the war's "greatest critic"):
    "We will probably see significant progress in the next six months to a year."
      (December 4, 2005)

Will the President's "surge" of troops into Baghdad and surrounding areas that the senator had been calling for finally make the difference?:
    "We can know fairly well [whether the surge is working] in a few months."
      (February 4, 2007)

The of course there was the infamous stroll...

In April 2007, accompanied by several members of Congress, Senator McCain made a surprise visit to Baghdad to assess the surge, had a "stroll" through a market in the Iraqi capital, and then held a news conference where he discussed what he found: "Things are better and there are encouraging signs. I've been here many times over the years. Never have I been able to drive from the airport. Never have I been able to go out into the city as I was today. The American people are not getting the full picture of what's happening here today."

The next evening, NBC's Nightly News provided further details on that "stroll." The Senator and Congressmen were accompanied by "100 American soldiers, with three Blackhawk helicopters, and two Apache gunships overhead." (In addition, the network said, still photographs provided by the military revealed that McCain and his colleagues had been wearing body armor during their entire stroll.)

Five months after the stroll, and seven months after the "we'll know how the surge is going in a few months" comment, McCain continued to offer Friedman units:

on September 12, 2007, McCain again observed that "the next six months are going to be critical."

and again...

Six months later, McCain claimed that the U.S. had finally reached a genuine turning point in Iraq and that his faith in the surge was (once again) vindicated. On March 17, 2008, he reported: "We are succeeding. And we can succeed and American casualties overall are way down. That is in direct contradiction to predictions made by the Democrats and particularly Senator Obama and Senator Clinton. I will be glad to stake my campaign on the fact that this has succeeded and the American people appreciate it."

The obvious (to me anyway) response is that since it is going so well, and since the Iraqi government and army are doing so well, that by say mid-January 2009 (i.e. day after inauguration), it will be time to take the advice of another Republican Senator "The best policy is to declare victory and get out."

Tags: John McCain, Iraq, 2008 (all tags) :: Previous Tag Versions

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