2008 A Year of Opportunity
for Peace Advocates: McCain's Only Path to the White House is Pro-War,
Thereby Ensuring a Debate on U.S. Militarism
By Kevin Zeese
ccun.org, February 21, 2008
Senator John McCain has only one issue with the chance of uniting the
Republican base and presenting a challenge to the Democrats in the
General Election – war and more of it.
Senator McCain describes the “war” against “Islamic extremism” as the
“transcendent challenge of the 21st century.” He describes Iraq as
a war the U.S. must win and has promised there are “more wars to come.”
He supports the use of military force against Iran, even singing about
bombing Iran jokingly. And he has described the U.S. stay in Iraq as
something that could last 100 years and be fine with him. Pat
Buchanan says that “McCain makes Cheney look like Gandhi.”
McCain knows the election needs to be framed around the question he
describes as “who can best make this nation safer?” If the
presidential debate is about “change,” McCain looses. If it is
about the “war against Islamic extremism” it plays to his strong suit.
As a result the McCain campaign presents an opportunity for the peace
movement to debate whether American militarism is appropriate, effective
and the best use of U.S. resources.
Militarism comes naturally to the military-minded McCain. Sen.
McCain was literally borne into the military – born on a military base
in the Panama Canal Zone in 1936 and his first ten years of school were
on military bases. He graduated from the Naval Academy in 1956,
sixth from the bottom in a class of 899. He graduated from flight school
in 1960 and became a naval pilot. After nearly dying in an
accident aboard an aircraft carrier he told the N.Y. Times in 1967 that
“I always wanted to be in the Navy. I was born into it and I never
really considered another profession.”
Indeed, his grandfather, John McCain, Sr. joined the Navy in 1907 and in
World War II fought in Japan as a Vice Admiral. The stress of combat
resulted in his weight dropping to 100 pounds by the end of the war. He
was awarded a full admiralty posthumously. His father, John
McCain, Jr. was also an admiral who fought in World War II, headed the
Pacific Command during Vietnam and served in various Pentagon posts.
The USS John S. McCain is named after Sen. McCain’s father and
grandfather. Two of his sons, Jimmy and Jack, are now in the
military.
McCain was a prisoner of war in Vietnam from 1967 to 1973 where he was
reportedly tortured and beaten while being held in captivity. He remains
crippled from the experience. He was forced to make propaganda
statements on camera, he gave in to this at times while at other times
resisting. While in captivity he refused to meet with anti-war
groups visiting Vietnam. He retired from the Navy in 1981 as a captain.
One of his final posts was as the Navy liaison to the U.S. Senate. He
has served on the Senate Armed Services Committee since his election to
the U.S. Senate in 1987 (replacing Barry Goldwater).
McCain voted for the Iraq War Resolution describing Iraq as “a clear and
present danger to the United States of America.” He agreed with
President Bush saying that the U.S. would be treated as liberators in
Iraq, but by November 2003 was criticizing Secretary of Defense Donald
Rumsfeld’s handling of the war arguing more troops were needed.
The “surge” is often described as McCain’s plan since he was a
vociferous advocate for more troops in Iraq. He continues to argue
that the only way the U.S. can end the Iraq war is in victory. He
frames the Iraq debate as: “Withdrawal and fail, or commit and succeed.”
With this history, Sen. McCain is well positioned to be the “war”
candidate and to make the campaign about winning in Iraq and fighting
the “terrorists” throughout the world. He has serious differences
with the Republican base on immigration, campaign finance, judicial
appointments and taxes so the ‘war on terror’ and the need to fight in
Iraq to win seems to be the only issue that can unite the Republican
base behind him.
And, in the General Election McCain is poised to challenge the Democrats
on the issue of war and peace. He is critical of Senators Clinton and
Obama for calling for withdrawal timetables – even though neither
senator has ever called for a complete withdrawal. McCain’s
desire to win the presidency on the back of the war presents an
opportunity for peace advocates. McCain will be talking to a
voting public that opposes the Iraq War and wants to see troops coming
home, even one-quarter of Republicans oppose the war.
Ironically, just as the election of President Reagan was helped by the
Iranian hostage situation, another terrorist attack against the United
States would be likely to help Sen. McCain. The fear generated by
such an attack would be apt to push Americans to the experienced warrior
as commander in chief. To add further irony, those who oppose the
United States and want to do it harm, would find Senator McCain prone to
draw the U.S. into another costly quagmire that would further weaken
the nation. McCain very much believes in using the military.
I recall being at a New Republic editorial board meeting in 2003 where
John McCain, even then, was advocating the use of the military against
Iran.
The election will be a time to highlight the choice America has before
it: will it continue to invest in a massive military – the most
powerful and expensive in world history at a time when the U.S. civilian
economy is struggling, losing jobs overseas, has a crumbling
infrastructure, poverty rising and the middle class shrinking? How
much more should be invested in Iraq -- $495 billion so far, plus more
than a trillion in long-term costs on taking care of injured soldiers
and paying the debt on the war? Should a third or even fourth
front be opened up in Iran and Pakistan while both Afghanistan and Iraq
falter? Should militarism be the centerpiece of American foreign
policy or should it be diplomacy, negotiation and multilateralism?
While the two remaining Democrats are far from being peace candidates
they do present an alternative to McCain as both are calling for
withdrawal of some troops as soon as they are elected. And,
Senator Obama provided a framing of the debate that can be a useful
starting point for discussion when he said he wants to “end the mindset
that got us into the war.” And with Cynthia McKinney running as a
clear peace candidate for the Green Party nomination; Ralph Nader, a
long-term anti-war advocate considering a run either as a Green or
independent and the Libertarian Party running several candidates on its
anti-war platform – peace voters will have plenty to work with in the
2008 election.
The peace movement needs to be ready to make this election a real debate
on the future of American militarism. The year is an opportunity
to educate the public about the cost U.S. militarism, the
ineffectiveness of the approach and more effective alternatives to
achieving national security. It needs to be a time to organize
peace voters and get them ready to be a “pressure force” in U.S.
politics that cannot be ignored no matter who is elected president in
November.
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Kevin Zeese is Executive Director of Voters For Peace (
www.VotersForPeace.US ).