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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsI somehow managed to forget this '08 John McCain incident that explains everything about him
What I wrote then.
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The American Tragedy of John McCain
William Rivers Pitt - t r u t h o u t
Between the idea
And the reality
Between the motion
And the act
Falls the Shadow
- T. S. Eliot
Arizona Sen. John McCain took a walk through a Baghdad market on April Fool's Day, and may well have burned his presidential campaign down to the ground in the process. That little stroll has visited upon his head a deluge of humiliation and shame vast and astonishing enough to beggar imagination, and that was before the bodies started hitting the ground.
Translated into mathematical terms, McCain's walk was Pythagorean in scope, squared hypocrisy added to squared idiocy equaling squared disgrace. In political terms, McCain's Baghdad walk was a full-blown, bull-moose, train-wreck disaster of truly galactic proportions: a veritable Hindenberg of campaign photo-op debacles. It was so mind-bendingly ugly and deranged and disgusting that the once-iconic "Dukakis in the Tank" blunder now seems quaint by comparison.
The genesis of this catastrophe, in case you missed it, was a verbal gaffe by McCain during a widely broadcast interview last week. After enduring several minutes of sharp interrogation regarding his staunch support of Bush, the war and the "surge," a neuron within his logic circuits apparently misfired. He claimed, with an entirely straight face, that the streets of Baghdad are today entirely safe for an American to walk down. This whopper made even the most shamelessly craven war apologists shake their heads in public, and forced McCain to undertake a desperate face-saving lunge to recover some shred of credibility.
McCain traveled to Baghdad to prove his claim correct, and the pictures appeared shortly thereafter. In the first available frames, the senator was shown walking through a Baghdad marketplace wearing a Kevlar vest, a general on his right and a troop on his left, and a second troop three steps ahead brandishing his rifle. While this kind of protection detail seemed to undermine his claims of safety, the escort and the vest could easily be understood as normal and necessary precautions taken to protect a visiting dignitary. For a time, McCain appeared to have made his point.
It didn't last. On the heels of those narrow-scope photos came reports of what McCain's entourage was actually comprised of. That "safe" Baghdad market had been flooded with more than one hundred battle-ready troops and armored Humvees. Three Blackhawk helicopters and two Apache attack helicopters roared overhead, and sharpshooters were posted on the surrounding rooftops. Simply put, McCain's "safe" street was one overly loud mouse-fart away from being paved with flaming lead during every step of that little walk.
To compound the calamity, a report emerged two days later describing the abduction and slaughter of 21 Iraqis who worked in the marketplace McCain's mini-Normandy force had stormed the previous Sunday, an obvious act of retribution for his visit by a violent Baghdad militia. Already belied by the revealed firepower he brought along, McCain's "safe" walk in Iraq led directly to yet another horrific Baghdad bloodbath. There is bad, there is awful, and then there is this thing, this quantum singularity of ignominy that bends the very light now shining upon it.
The rest: http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=view_all&address=389x590946
Journeyman
(15,034 posts)I'm certain -- in his mind -- this well-armored stroll proved his point.
More's the pity.
panAmerican
(1,206 posts)His judgement has only gotten worse with age.
elleng
(130,929 posts)Read it today, a DUer recalls that she suggested this reflected poorly on mccain's judgment.
noiretextatique
(27,275 posts)elleng
(130,929 posts)Rice went on leave from the Brookings Institution to serve as a senior foreign policy advisor to Senator Barack Obama in his 2008 presidential campaign. Rice took a disparaging view of Obama's Republican opponent in the campaign, John McCain, calling his policies "reckless" and dismissing the Arizona Senator's trip to Iraq as "strolling around the market in a flak jacket
noiretextatique
(27,275 posts)for telling the truth about his trip to Iraq.
pangaia
(24,324 posts)This guy never forgets a slight. He is a revenge driven lunatic.
SunSeeker
(51,559 posts)trof
(54,256 posts)Now I understand why he's so pissed.
riderinthestorm
(23,272 posts)Exposing him as an idiot??
That makes a LOT of sense
elleng
(130,929 posts)if she's NOT the nominee, Kerry would/might be, and repugs would get a chance for the Mass senate seat.
DreamGypsy
(2,252 posts)The link to http://www.banderasnews.com/0704/eded-johnmccain.htm is still valid.
rhett o rick
(55,981 posts)Chipper Chat
(9,679 posts)backed him up by saying this market was "as safe as a county fair in Indiana on a summer afternoon." I live in Indiana and was shocked to hear these statements. Pence lost all credibility with me.
Submariner
(12,504 posts)His mother is in her 90s and if McCain is as long lived I bet he will try to hang in there like Strom Thurmond. Being an obnoxious bad-ass in politics is his life.
Iwillnevergiveup
(9,298 posts)That's getting up there.
Nika
(546 posts)mountain grammy
(26,622 posts)several thousand people being kicked off medicaid maybe? We know what it cost the Iraqi.. we just pile it on!
Godot51
(239 posts)Never trust a man who refers to himself as a "Maverick" or, for that matter, a woman who refers to herself as "Rogue" (unless she means that she is a dishonest person).
Time was in the Navy that a man would be called a "Maverick" if he enlisted, rose up in the enlisted ranks and then attended Annapolis and became an officer but that wasn't what the average sailor called them. That's what they called themselves and so again was an unearned appellation.
Of course, McCain was an Admiral's son and a shoe-in for the academy.
It's time to decommission The USS McCain and put it in mothballs.
ck4829
(35,077 posts)Agreed.