July 29, 2008

Undermining McCain

Weekly Standard: How The Bush Administration Is Weakening McCain's Message

  • Along comes George W. Bush to bail out Obama by accepting Al-Maliki's call for a _general time horizon_ for the withdrawal of troops, writes The Weekly Standard.

    Along comes George W. Bush to bail out Obama by accepting Al-Maliki's call for a "general time horizon" for the withdrawal of troops, writes The Weekly Standard.  (CBS)

  • Play CBS Video Video Presidential Campaign Heats Up

    Down in the latest poll, Sen. John McCain has gotten tough in ads against Sen. Barack Obama. Bill Plante reports and Russ Mitchell talks to two analysts about what's next in the campaign.

  • Video Campaign Coverage In Question

    As the presidential race to the White House intensifies, constantly shifting poll numbers concerning John McCain and Barack Obama have muddled the media's campaign coverage. Jeff Greenfield reports.

  • Video McCain Irked By Obama Hype

    John McCain has struggled to be heard during Barack Obama's widely covered overseas tour of the Mideast and Europe. McCain pokes fun at what he calls the media's love affair with Obama in a new ad. Charlie D'Agata reports.

  • Timeline McCain's Quest

    Mileposts in the Arizona senator's race for the GOP nomination and the presidency.

  • Photo Essay Obama in the Mideast

    Democratic presidential hopeful holds talks in Iraq, Afghanistan

(Weekly Standard)  This column was written by Irwin M. Stelzer.
"High flying adored, So Young ... A ... beautiful thing, of all the talents, A cross between a fantasy ... and a saint ... Where do you go from here?" So Che Guevara asked Evita in the Andrew Lloyd Weber-Tim Rice hit musical. Barack Obama's campaign advisers think they have the answer when it comes to their candidate after his European tour: straight to the White House.

The Washington Post calls the trip "a clear success", and the candidate told the press, "The value to me of this trip is, hopefully, it gives voters a sense that I can in fact -- and do -- operate effectively on the international stage."

He might, only might, be right. There is little question that the candidate was a hit in Europe. But then, he was adored in Paris, Berlin, London and throughout Western Europe before he flew in, wrapped in presidential trappings. The real question is whether those Americans who are not sure that they want their next president to be loved in countries that do not share America's sense of danger from terrorists are wildly outnumbered by those who find it comforting that the Democratic candidate can win the hearts and minds of foreigners who have made clear how much they detest American policies.

Yet the John McCain campaign may have unwittingly helped Obama last week, as efforts to offset the media's love-in with Obama fell flat. A trip to an offshore oil rig was cancelled because of a storm in the Gulf of Mexico; visits to coffee shops in Berlin, Pennsylvania and London, Ohio seemed churlish and amateurish. After all, it was McCain who repeatedly had urged Obama to visit Iraq and Afghanistan and other points abroad, and was now complaining that the Democrat had taken him up on the challenge.

More important, while Obama was away the senator from Arizona was attacked by the newly formed campaign team of George W. Bush and Iraq's prime minister, Nouri al-Maliki. On the domestic front, Bush signed onto bills that promised billions in federal money to help distressed homeowners, and extended government regulation to parts of the financial services industry that had heretofore been only very lightly supervised. So much for McCain's attack on Obama as a high-spending regulator.

On the foreign-policy front, the president pulled the rug out from under McCain's most important edge -- the belief of 72 percent of Americans, including a majority of Democrats, that he would make a fine commander-in-chief, and of a majority that Obama would not. McCain supporters lay the blame at the feet of Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, who they say has too much influence over the president, and in turn is overly influenced by the trimmers in her State Department.

McCain has made much of what he considers Obama's reckless promise to call in the generals on his very first day in the Oval Office and order them to devise a plan for ending the war within sixteen months. If they object to such a timetable, he plans to remind them that policy is for the president, implementation is for the military.

McCain ridicules such a timetable, calling it a surrender to the forces of al Qaeda, a notice to the bad guys that all they have to do is sit around for sixteen months and then take over the country, probably with the help of the Iranians. Although Obama has left himself some wriggle room -- some troops to be left to train the Iraqis and stamp out a terrorist revival, or genocide, or instability -- there is a clear difference between the candidates, and for a while McCain had the more plausible story.

Along comes George W. Bush to bail out Obama by accepting Al-Maliki's call for a "general time horizon" for the withdrawal of troops, a period generally understood to be two years or less. The difference between Obama's withdrawal timetable, and the president's "general time horizon", if indeed there is one, is lost on most voters. They now see McCain as wanting to keep U.S. troops in harm's way longer than his opponent, his own president, and Iraq's prime minister deem necessary.

There is worse. McCain has been ridiculing Obama for offering to meet with Iranian representatives with no preconditions. That's not very presidential they argued. Besides, the U.S. position and that of our allies has been that there will be no negotiations unless the Iranians abandon their uranium enrichment program. That, says Iran's President, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, will never happen. Whether he will change his mind as the United States and the EU ramp up sanctions, and whether internal opponents of his extremist positions can gain traction, no one can predict. But no halt to enrichment, no talks, has been the administration's position, supported by McCain, leaving Obama a lone voice calling for a no-conditions meeting.

Then Bush decided to send America's third-highest ranking diplomat to a meeting with the Iranians to discuss the goodies the West is offering Iran in return for an end to that country's development of a nuclear weapon. Our diplomat didn't say a word, says Condi Rice. And don't read too much into our plans to establish a diplomatic presence in Tehran, she might have added.

This U.S. diplomatic flurry is under way even though the Iranians remain unwilling to accept the preconditions President Bush set and McCain supported. Voters can be forgiven for thinking that the president has come around to Obama's point of view, on what the Democratic candidate called in Israel "our single most important threat, both to Israel but also to the United States".

Of course the differences between Obama-Bush-Rice and McCain are not all that stark. McCain would probably withdraw troops as the situation continues to improve in Iraq; Obama would probably leave some forces there to prevent renewed instability. McCain would pursue every diplomatic means to persuade Iran to shed its pariah status, and Obama's advisers are unlikely to allow him to stroll into a meeting with the Iranians, as unprepared as Jack Kennedy was for his first disastrous encounter with Nikita Khrushchev.

But that's a subtlety for political savants. To voters it looks as if McCain is the odd man out.

By Irwin M. Stelzer
© Copyright 2008, News Corporations, Weekly Standard, All Rights Reserved.



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Add a Comment See all 40 Comments
by dashortround July 31, 2008 9:03 PM EDT
@ OldThought:

It''s really not about "experience"; it''s about "brains and ability".

Obama definitely wins in that context.

McCain has been nothing more than a lazy, do-nothing Senate bench-warmer for FAR too long for anybody to seriously believe that now, suddenly, he''s somehow miraculously morphed into America''s only salvation!

Give me a break. The jerk is FAR from poor himself, and he''s married to a woman who is worth $100 million dollars, and yet he STILL cashes his Social Security check every month - as if he really needs it!

If he had any genuine personal integrity at all he would politely decline that monthly Social Security check, and graciously save the poor taxpayers of this country a few bucks.

Apparently, to John, the money is worth more than the principle.
Reply to this comment
by tksk53 July 31, 2008 5:08 PM EDT
NANCY AND RICE
Have too much power and do not use it correctly
Look at their track record
Reply to this comment
by tksk53 July 31, 2008 4:59 PM EDT
The world likes Obama
We need somebody that can work with the World Powers and TRY to solve it''s short comings (tame wording)
The reason we are in all this mess is Bush, and I know this has been run in the ground - but it is true
Here is one example (meeting with Iran to pump more oil- They said OK and what did Bush tell the world when he got back - THAT WON''T HELP - INSTEAD OF SAYING THANKS)
Reply to this comment
by displeased July 31, 2008 10:29 AM EDT
If I only had 143 days of experience, Would you hire me to fix your car?
Posted by OldThought

It depends on your training and well being. An experienced mechanic can still be unethical and rip me off.
Reply to this comment
by erb0087 July 31, 2008 3:47 AM EDT
"From the time Barack Obama was sworn in as a United State Senator, to the time he announced he was forming a Presidential exploratory committee, he
logged 143 days of experience in the Senate. That''''s how many days the Senate was actually in session and working (??)."
- OldThought

If we still had the Lincoln logs, we would find that Abraham Lincoln had logged even less time in political office before running for President.

Senators aren''t like assembly line workers who punch in and out. You don''t measure their experience that way.

P.S. You forgot to subtract from McCain''s esperience, all the times he was asleep in bed.
Reply to this comment
by babooph July 30, 2008 11:59 PM EDT
Both candidates can handle ther presidency-Bush ,having no overseas experience ,was not the problem.His gathering of very lowgrade people & his being a childish fool is his problem.
Reply to this comment
by rayuk-2009 July 30, 2008 11:43 PM EDT
Sooooo... The Weekly Standard is blaming Bush for most of McCain''s problems of poor performance. At the same time, the NRO is asking for the head of the Sr. Senator from Alaska. It seems that the true nature of the GOP is in full view. May I ask, who you plan to vote for in November?
Reply to this comment
by elz523 July 30, 2008 11:04 PM EDT
This is an opinion piece by the Weekly Standard, hardly an Obama cheerleader.
Reply to this comment
by elz523 July 30, 2008 11:02 PM EDT
After 143 days of work experience, Obama believed he was ready to be
Commander In Chief, Leader of the Free World, and fill the shoes of Abraham
Lincoln, FDR, JFK and Ronald Reagan.

143 days -- I keep leftovers in my refrigerator longer than that. This
isn''''t taking into account the days he has missed.

In contrast, John McCain''''s 26 years in Congress, 22 years of military
service including 1,966 days in captivity as a POW in Hanoi now seem more
impressive than ever. At 71, John McCain may just be hitting his stride.
Think about IT!!!

A great many people in this country have obviously gone stark raving mad!


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Posted by OldThought at 07:06 PM : Jul 30, 2008
+ report abuse


Hmmmm, lets see, you only count Obama''s 143 days in the US Senate as his experience, but you count everything McCain has ever done as his experience. You could say that both men have prepared for where they are at today their entire lives, but instead you selectively count what you think will be a benefit to your position. Very con, very Republican.
Reply to this comment
by Netterz July 30, 2008 10:06 PM EDT
Would you hire me???

If I only had 143 days of experience, Would you hire me to fix your car?
Would you hire me to run your company? If I only had 143 days experience
would you hire me to run the country? Something America might want to think
about.

Just how much Senate experience does Barack Obama have in terms of actual
work days? Not much.

From the time Barack Obama was sworn in as a United State Senator, to the
time he announced he was forming a Presidential exploratory committee, he
logged 143 days of experience in the Senate. That''s how many days the Senate
was actually in session and working (??).

After 143 days of work experience, Obama believed he was ready to be
Commander In Chief, Leader of the Free World, and fill the shoes of Abraham
Lincoln, FDR, JFK and Ronald Reagan.

143 days -- I keep leftovers in my refrigerator longer than that. This
isn''t taking into account the days he has missed.

In contrast, John McCain''s 26 years in Congress, 22 years of military
service including 1,966 days in captivity as a POW in Hanoi now seem more
impressive than ever. At 71, John McCain may just be hitting his stride.
Think about IT!!!

A great many people in this country have obviously gone stark raving mad!
Reply to this comment
See all 40 Comments

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