May 15, 1999
"Cream Them!"
The Horrors of
Senator John McCain
The top war-monger in Congress has been
Senator John McCain, Republican from Arizona, seeker of the
Republican presidential nomination. In one rhetorical bombing
run after another, McCain has bellowed for "lights out in
Belgrade" and for NATO to "cream" the Serbs. At
the start of May he began declaiming in the US senate for the
NATO forces to use "any means necessary" to destroy
Serbia.
McCain is often called a "war
hero", a title adorning an unlovely resume starting with a
father who was an admiral and graduation fifth from the bottom
at the US Naval Academy, where he earned the nickname "McNasty".
McCain flew 23 bombing missions over North Vietnam, each
averaging about half an hour, total time ten hours and thirty
minutes. For these brief excursions the admiral's son was awared
two Silver Stars, two Legions of Merit, two Distinguished Flying
Crosses, three Bronze Stars, the Vietnamese Legion of Honor and
three Purple Hearts. US Veteran Dispatch calculates our hero
earned a medal an hour, which is pretty good going. McCain was
shot down over Hanoi on October 26, 1967 and parachuted into
Truc Boch Lake, whence he was hauled by Vietnamese, and put in
prison.
A couple of years later he was interviewed in
prison camp by Fernando Barral, a Spanish psychiatrist living in
Cuba. The interview appeared in Granma on January 24, 1970.
Barral's evaluation of McCain is quoted by
Amy Silverman, author of many excellent pieces on McCain in the
Phoenix-based New Times weekly. Here's how Barral described
"the personality of the prisoner who is responsible for
many criminal bombings of the people." Barral goes on,
"He (McCain) showed himself to be intellectually alert
during the interview. From a morale point of view he is not in
traumatic shock. He was able to be sarcastic, and even humorous,
indicative of psychic equilibrium. From the moral and
ideological point of view he showed us he is an insensitive
individual without human depth,who does not show the slightest
concern, who does not appear to have thought about the criminal
acts he committed against a population from the absolute
impunity of his airplane, and that nevertheless those people
saved his life, fed him, and looked after his health and he is
now healthy and strong. I believe that he has bombed densely
populated places for sport. I noted that he was hardened, that
he spoke of banal things as if he were at a cocktail
party."
McCain is deeply loved by the press. As
Silverman puts it, "As long as he's the noble outsider,
McCain can get away with anything it seems - the Keating Five, a
drug stealing wife, nasy jokes about Chelsea Clinton - and the
pundits will gurgle and coo."
Indeed they will. William Safire, Maureen
Dowd, Russell Baker, the New Yorker, the New York Times
Magazine, Vanity Fair, have all slobbered over McCain in
empurpled prose. The culmination was a love poem from Mike
Wallace in 60 Minutes, who managed to avoid any inconvenient
mention of McCain's close relationship with S & L fraudster
Charles Keating, with whom the senator and his kids romped on
Bahamian beaches. McCain was similarly spared scrutiny for his
astonishing claim that he knew nothing of his wife's scandalous
dealings. His vicious temper has escaped rebuke.
McCain's escape from the Keating debacle was
nothing short of miraculous, probably the activity for which he
most deserves a medal. After all, he took more than $100,000 in
campaign contributions from the swindler Keating between 1982
and 1988, while simultaneously log-rolling for Keating on
Captitol Hill. In the same period McCain took nine trips to
Keating's place in the Bahamas. When the muck began to rise,
McCain threw Keating over the side, hastily reimbursed him for
the trips and suddenly developed a profound interest in campaign
finance reform.
The pundits love McCain because of his
grandstanding on soft money's baneful role in politics, thus
garnering for himself a reputation for willingness to court the
enmity of his colleagues.
In fact colleagues in the Senate regard
McCain as a mere grandstander. They know that he already has a
big war chest left over from his last senatorial campaign, plus
torrents of pac money from the corporations that crave his
indulgence, as chairman of the Senate Commerce Committee.
Communications companies (US West, Bell South, ATT, Bell
Atlantic), have been particularly effusive in McCain's treasury,
as have banks, military contractors and UPS. They also know he
has a rich wife and the certain knowledge that his supposed
hopes for an ending to soft money spending will never receive
any practical legislative application.
McCain is the kind of Republican that
liberals love: solid military credentials as a former POW, ever
ready with acceptable sound-bites on campaign finance reform and
other cherished issues. Thus it was that McCain drew
enthusiastic plaudits last year when he rose in the Senate
chamber to denounce theinsertion of $200 million worth of pork
in the military construction portion of the defense
authorisation bill. Eloquently, he spoke of the 11,200 service
families on food stamps, the lack of modern weapons supplied to
the military, the declining levels of readiness in the armed
forces. Bravely, he laid the blame at the doors of his
colleagues: "I could find only one commonality to these
projects, and that is that 90 percent of them happened to be in
the state or districts of members of the Appropriations
Committees." Sternly, in tones befitting a Cato or a
Cicero, he urged his colleagues to ponder their sacred duty to
uphold the defense of the Republic rather than frittering away
the public purse on such frivolous expenditure: "We live in
avery dangerous world. We will have some serious foreign policy
crises. I am not sure we have the military that is capable of
meeting some of these foreseeable threats, but I know that what
we are doing with this $200 million will not do a single thing
to improve our ability to meet that threat."
In the gallery, partisans of pork-free
spending silently cheered while those who hoped to profit from
portions of the $200 million gnashed their teeth in chagrin.
Yet, such emotions were misplaced on either side. This was
vintage McCain. Had he wished to follow words with deeds, he
could have called for a roll-call on the items he had just
denounced so fervently. That way the looters and gougers would
have had to place their infamy on the record. But no, McCain
simply sat down and allowed the offending expenditure to be
authorised in the anonymous babble of a voice vote ("All
those in favor say Aye"). Had McCain really had the courage
of his alleged convictions he could have filibustered the entire
$250 billion authorisation bill, but, inevitably, no such
bravery was in evidence. Instead, when the $250 billion finally
came to a vote, he ^voted for it.
This miserable display provides useful
insights into the reason for McCain's ineffectiveness on issues
such as campaign finance that have garnered him so much
favorable publcity. A conservative Senate staffer offers these
observations on McCain's fundamental weakness of character:
"The real question is why this Senator did not use the
strong leverage he has to insist that his 'ethical' position be
incorporated into a major bill? After all, Senator McCain
couched his concerns in issues of the highest national
importance: readiness, modernization, and the military's ability
to defeat the threats we face (whatever they are).
"Pragmatism is the most commonly heard excuse. If McCain
had made a pain out of himself in insisting on keeping the
unneeded and wasteful pork out of the Milcon Authorization bill,
some people would argue he would have lost comity with his
Senate colleagues. They wouldn't respect him anymore; they would
have been angry with him, because he kept them up late (it was
about 10:30 pm), and they would have been embarrassed by his
showing them up as pork-meisters. This would weaken his ability
to get things done.
"This argument assumes politics in the
US Senate is a popularity contest: if you want to get anything
done around here, you have to go along and get along. Well, this
place is a popularity contest, but it is supposed to be one with
the voters, not one's colleagues. Besides, this place doesn't
really operate that way. Here, they have contempt for fluffy
show pieces. Show them you mean business, and you're someone who
has to be dealt with (rather than a talk-only type), and you'll
begin to get some results. Get ready for a fight, though,
because they are some on the other side who are no push-overs.
Obviously, Mr. McCain was not prepared to make that
investment."
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