McCain Continues His "Straight Talk" Express, Huh?

So John McCain pulls another Huckabee! McCain claims he is the gentleman of politics and then purposefully misrepresents another candidates' position. This is the same type of thing that McCain caught flack on in South Carolina.

In the course of a few hours, McCain said that Romney once wanted to set a date to withdraw from Iraq, accused him of working on the same side as Hillary Clinton in the Iraq debate, and accused him of disrespecting American servicemen and women. Check out this myth debunked here.

What exactly does McCain mean by demanding that Romney apologize to
American troops? Is McCain suggesting than any American who opposed the surge
was somehow not supporting American troops? Is he saying that it is unpatriotic
to debate American policy in Iraq? It sure sounds like it. And it is an
unbecoming posture for McCain, who has been boasting in
recent days
about the "respectful debate" he would have with Hillary
Clinton, John Edwards or Barack Obama should he win the nomination.

John McCain's statements on Iraq, early on - what a Flip Flopper.

“Mr. President, can anyone seriously argue that another 6 months of United States forces in harm’s way means the difference between peace and prosperity in Somalia and war and starvation there? Is that very dim prospect worth one more American life? No, it is not.” -John McCain Senate Floor, 10/14/93
"There is no reason for the United States of America to remain in Somalia. The American people want them home, I believe the majority of Congress wants them home, and to set an artificial date of March 31 or even February 1, in my view, is not acceptable. The criteria should be to bring them home as rapidly and safely as possible, an evolution which I think could be completed in a matter of weeks.
Our continued military presence in Somalia allows another situation to arise which could then lead to the wounding, killing or capture of American fighting men and women. We should do all in our power to avoid that.
I listened carefully to the President's remarks at a news conference that he held earlier today. I heard nothing in his discussion of the issue that would persuade me that further U.S. military involvement in the area is necessary. In fact, his remarks have persuaded me more profoundly that we should leave and leave soon.
Dates certain, Mr. President, are not the criteria here. What is the criteria and what should be the criteria is our immediate, orderly withdrawal from Somalia. And if we do not do that and other Americans die, other Americans are wounded, other Americans are captured because we stay too long--longer than necessary--then I would say that the responsibilities for that lie with the Congress of the United States who did not exercise their authority under the Constitution of the United States and mandate that they be brought home quickly and safely as possible. . . .
I know that this debate is going to go on this afternoon and I have a lot more to say, but the argument that somehow the United States would suffer a loss to our prestige and our viability, as far as the No. 1 superpower in the world, I think is baloney. The fact is, we won the cold war. The fact is, we won the Persian Gulf conflict. And the fact is that the United States is still the only major world superpower.
I can tell you what will erode our prestige. I can tell you what will hurt our viability as the world's superpower, and that is if we enmesh ourselves in a drawn-out situation which entails the loss of American lives, more debacles like the one we saw with the failed mission to capture Aideed's lieutenants, using American forces, and that then will be what hurts our prestige.
We suffered a terrible tragedy in Beirut, Mr. President; 240 young marines lost their lives, but we got out. Now is the time for us to get out of Somalia as rapidly and as promptly and as safely as possible.
I, along with many others, will have an amendment that says exactly that. It does not give any date certain. It does not say anything about any other missions that the United States may need or feels it needs to carry out. It will say that we should get out as rapidly and orderly as possible."-John McCain Senate Floor, 10/19/93



Straight Talk - John McCain's Straight Talk Express plunges off the road and into a revine exploding a ball of fire.

1 comment:

Christopher said...

McCain is using the military to gather votes in the last minute for himself and using them like pawns, not really spreading the message of freedom, but distorting what Romney said to make himself look better.
McCain should be ashamed of himself, but he isn't, this is the real McCain, just as dirty in politics as Clinton is. America gets what it deserves voting either of them in office. Either one of them will destroy their own party.