Let me begin with the presumptive Republican presidential nominee, Senator
John McCain (R-AZ). My appreciation is, on the whole, relatively negative.
On the positive side, Senator McCain has built a long history of
independence in the U.S. Senate, so much so that he is often referred
to as a maverick. For example, Sen. McCain has displeased many
Republicans by supporting political finance reform, by denouncing state
torture and even by criticizing initially the way the Bush-Cheney
administration launched the Iraq war. On the last issue, however, it
can be said that Sen. McCain has since backed off and he has aligned
himself more closely with the current Republican White House.
On the question of torture, Sen. McCain has promised to close the
detention center in Guantanamo Bay.
He has declared that he would engage more actively in climate talks (as
long as China and India agreed to emissions cuts). It can also be said
that Sen. McCain does not consider himself a "religious" candidate, and
I doubt very much that he will be holding
weekly Bible sessions,
as George W. Bush is reported having done within the walls of the White
House. These may be inconsequential differences with the current
administration, but I think they are real.
On the negative side, however, the issues on which Sen. McCain agrees
with President George W. Bush and Vice President Dick Cheney are much
more numerous and much more important. On most of the important issues,
it would be "more of the same" with John McCain. That is why President
George W. Bush has said that he is ready to do anything to have Senator
John McCain elected president and that he is going to
raise funds
for him. Bush knows perfectly well that a McCain presidency would be
like a third term for his own failed presidency. Indeed, people who
like what Bush has done or undone during the last eight years should
vote for McCain with little fear of being disappointed. In particular,
they would love his militarism and his bellicose character. On the
other hand, those who have felt betrayed or have been the victims of
the Bush-Cheney administration, and that includes the 81 percent of
Americans who believe their country is
on the wrong track, should think twice before de facto extending the disastrous Bush presidency one day further than necessary.
Let us look at the situation.
For one, Sen. McCain is expected, as one commentator put it, to behave as a
George W. Bush on steroids. Some go as far as depicting him as a candidate who aspires to become
President McBush, because so many of his policies would duplicate Bush's policies. For example, Sen. McCain is partisan of the
imperial presidency theory,
advanced and practiced in recent years by the Bush-Cheney
administration. As recently as last May 6, he confirmed that if he were
elected President, he would enthusiastically throw out the restraint on
power established by the constitutional checks and balances and would
embrace the Bush-Cheney's claim of near
absolute executive power .
McCain is especially worried that the courts could stick to the letter
and spirit of the U.S. Constitution and reject attempts by the
President to establish a quasi dictatorship while dismissing Congress'
prerogatives. In McCain's words, presidential
executive power in the U.S.
is too constrained by a judiciary that "show[s] little regard for the
authority of the president." On this very question, however, Sen.
McCain seems to want it both ways. Is this sincere or is it solely a
way to create confusion? For instance, on May 15, he tried to distance
himself from the Bush-Cheney administration and professed that he now
embraces the constitutional concept of
checks and balances. Which McCain is the real McCain? Obviously, further clarifications are urgently needed.
Secondly, on foreign policy more than anywhere else, McCain can be
expected to be a McBush plus. He can be expected to be a mixture of a
simplistic George W. Bush and of a rabidly nationalistic and
interventionist Dick Cheney, the last two always ready to immorally
bomb people and ask questions later. McCain stands ready to continue
the Bush-Cheney's
insane foreign policy.
Therefore, no one should expect that he would be much different than
what this duo has stood for over the last eight years, which is
aggressive
global interventionism, disastrous
unilateralism and excessive
militarism.
Under McCain, the United States would still be the global bully of the
planet. This will lead to more geopolitical instability worldwide, more
debt for the United States, and more economic disruptions in trade,
especially for oil and commodities. There will be a high economic price
to pay with a McCain presidency, make no mistake about it. The current
slowdown or recession may be only a harbinger of things to come.
Indeed, listening to him, one has the feeling that
Sen. McCain
has never met a war he didn't like. For instance, if it were only up to
him, American soldiers would still be in Vietnam, where he was a pilot,
flying fighter-bombers that dropped bombs over North Vietnam. He has
also said that he would like to intervene even more directly in South
America. And in the Middle East, he has said that he would not mind
having an American military occupation of that region for another
one hundred years. In McCain's view,
Iraq is an American colony forever, thus making sure there will be
permanent war and permanent military occupation
in that part of the world. In 1999, McCain even lobbied the Clinton
administration to have the U.S. invade Yugoslavia with ground troops.
America's Founders would be turning in their graves if they could see
their cherished republic becoming a militaristic empire!
Thirdly, Sen. McCain does not seem to know or care about
international law.
Indeed, not only is Sen. McCain constantly confusing the Sunnis and the
Shi'ites in Iraq, after all these years, but he seems to be completely
lost as to the true meaning of
"preemptive" war versus
"preventive" war.
A preemptive war or a preemptive strike is a self-defensive measure
which is taken against a foreign country that poses an imminent and
inevitable threat because it is about to invade, or is threatening to
attack shortly. A preventive war is rather a war of choice or a war of
aggression that is launched in anticipation of a loss of security or
strategic advantage in a more or less far away future, or to gain
foreign territories and resources. While a preemptive war is
essentially defensive in nature, a preventive war is fundamentally
imperialistic. In McCain's vocabulary, the two notions are confused
since he says that he would not rule out launching
preemptive wars,
when in fact he means launching preventive wars of aggression "against
future enemies" who pose no immediate threat to the United States.
A preemptive war can sometimes be legal and justifiable, and be in accordance with Article 51 of the
United Nations Charter. But a preventive war, because it is a planned and overt act of aggression, is never legal according to international law.
Fourthly, it seems that Mr. McCain is a man who has a chip on his
shoulder, which is also reminiscent of George W. Bush, and that makes
him a dangerous man to be trusted as leader of a heavily armed country
like the United States. For example, remembering his days as a Navy
pilot and a prisoner during the
Vietnam War,
nearly fifty years ago, he now says that he would like to go to Cuba to
"punish" those Cuban soldiers who hurt his buddies in
Vietnam. The Cuban government has answered him that there were no Cuban soldiers in Vietnam, but he keeps the grudge.
Another parallel with Mr. Bush is the fact that Mr. McCain, who will be
72 years old in August, attended a naval academy at Annapolis where he
ranked near the end of this class, 894th out of 899 students. Thus, he
cannot be expected to be a "philosopher president," and would be
expected to lead with his guts rather than his head.
Fifth, Sen. McCain is a
neocon candidate. The
Israel Lobby, indeed, and the
Neocons, that is to say the small clique of
misguided ideologues who have whispered advice into George W. Bush's ears for years, and who have begun whispering into
McCain's ears,
would be delighted to have a militarily hawkish and neoconservative
McCain in the White House. For them, this would be a dream come true.
Their pet project ”a war against Iran” would become a reality.
Sen. McCain was born on a U.S. military base in a foreign country
(Panama), and he is the son and grandson of military career
individuals. That may explain why he is enamored with anything
military. This is a man who believes there is a military solution to
any political problem. He would be expected to follow the
necon-inspired so-called
"Bush Doctrine." He would also be expected to embrace the Neocons' imperialistic and extreme Right Wing
Project for the New American Century
(PNAC) that calls for American global dominance. Armed with these two
"doctrines", Sen. McCain, if elected President, would stand ready to
launch future gratuitous and illegal wars of aggression around the
world to ensure American supremacy. Those who liked George W. Bush will
love John McCain. They will get all the fireworks and more. Whether
this approach is good for the United States, for its economy and for
its reputation, and for stability in the world, is another matter.
Sixth, a John McCain as president would be a gift from heaven to the American
military industrial complex.
It's easy to see why. "”Sen. McCain is on record for advocating to
increase the size of the U.S. armed forces from the current 750,000 to
900,000 members. Under his governance, the Pentagon and a host of
defense contractors would see the
U.S. defense budget,
already bloated to a point of being larger than the defense spending of
all 191 other countries taken together, would increase even further.
Another red flag is the fact that McCain has surrounded himself with a
host of
far right lobbyists
to run his campaign and raise money. This means that if ever he is
elected, he will be a prisoner of these far right elements. Not a
promising perspective.
Seventh, Senator John McCain has supported George W. Bush's huge tax
cuts for the rich, which have resulted in large budget deficits and
which have contributed so much to placing the United States in its
current precarious economic situation, that is to say, being saddled
with a
falling currency and a spreading
financial crisis.
It is no wonder that George W. Bush has enthusiastically endorsed John
McCain, although such an endorsement could prove to be a double-edged
sword, since Bush's approval rating in the U.S. is the lowest of any
American president, while a large majority of Americans believe their
country is heading in the wrong direction.
Eighth, McCain's personal character is open to question. He is known,
and this from his early childhood, to be prone to sudden and
uncontrollable fits of temper tantrums.
It is reported by biographer Robert Timberg ("John McCain: An American
Odyssey") that right up into his twenties, he remained a strikingly
violent man, "ready to fight at the drop of a hat". This rage seems to
be at the core of his personality: describing his own childhood, McCain
has admitted to having a quick temper and a short fuse (see his book
"Worth the Fighting for: A Memoir") and he has confessed that as a
youngster "at the smallest provocation I would go off into a mad
frenzy, and then suddenly crash to the floor unconscious. When I got
angry I held my breath until I blacked out!" Then, his parents would be
forced to soak him in cold water, clothes and all, to wake him up.
A man with such a character is a dangerous man to be entrusted with the
responsibility of custody of nuclear weapons. Even some of his
Republican Senate colleagues
say that he is too reckless to be commander-in-chief. And this is on
top of his aggressive militarist stance in foreign policy and his
obvious and avowed lack of knowledge in economic matters.
Ninth, there is the legitimate question of his age and personal health.
The New York Times has recently been complaining about the lack of
medical information regarding the presumptive Republican candidate and
how little people know about his health. After all, this is not a
trivial matter, since Sen. McCain will be 72 years old in August and he
is recovering from an August 2000 surgery for a
melanoma cancer, the deadliest of all cancers. A recently released
medical report does not alleviate a bit concerns about this very issue.
And ten: Since the media have criticized
Senator Barak Obama
for his close association with an outspoken black minister, it is worth
noting that Senator John McCain has also been endorsed by probably one
of the
worst right-wing religious bigots in the U.S. today, Texan anti-Catholic
televangelist John Hagee.
Let us remember that televangelist (San Antonio megachurch) leader John
Hagee, has said that the 2005 hurricane Katrina was God's punishment to
New Orleans; he has also referred to the Roman Catholic Church as "the
great whore" and called it a "false cult system" and "the apostate
church." (There are 60 million Catholics in the U. S. and they could
resent such insinuations.) And to top that, he has also declared that
God sent [Adolf] Hitler to
perpetrate the Holocaust in order to force Jews to move to Israel!
Therefore, it is certainly legitimate to ask why there is all the media
attention on Senator Barack Obama's association with a controversial
pastor, and hardly any directed at Senator McCain's association with
another controversial pastor. Does this not smack of double standards?
In conclusion, when all the dots are connected, it would seem to be
clear: Senator "100 Years" John McCain must be considered a man too
dangerous and too unpredictable to be entrusted with the presidency of
a heavily armed country. Do Americans really want a man whom some
call "Senator Hothead", to become "President Hothead" and place him
in a position of high responsibility? Let's hope that enough Americans
will reflect about all that before the events unfold, not after. If
Americans really believe that their country is headed in the wrong
direction, does it really make sense to line up behind a candidate who
wants to go even further in the same direction?
There are many more important issues regarding Mr. McCain that the media should raise, but they don't.
For example, let me point out that Senator McCain is still against
public regulation of corporate fat cats who have in the past, and who
continue today to milk the public for billions of dollars. For
instance, Sen. McCain recently opposed a farm bill because the bill
proposed to regulate energy futures trading, a market that was famously
abused when Enron Corp. manipulated California's electricity prices in
2001, and robbed Californians of hundreds of millions of dollars.
Let us also remember that about twenty years ago, Sen. McCain was
accused of corruption after it was discovered that he was deeply
involved in the
Savings & Loans scandal,
after it was found that he and four other senators had intervened to
prevent necessary regulation by the Federal Home Loan Bank Board of
some of the most risky thrifts and loans companies, such as the Lincoln
Savings and Loan Association of Irvine in California. Indeed, Sen.
McCain and the other four senators (the Keating Five: John McCain plus
John Glenn and
Alan Cranston,
Don Riegle, and
Dennis DeConcini)
had received $1.3 million in campaign contributions from chairman
Charles Keating of the Lincoln Saving and Loan Ass. "”Sen. McCain was
rebuked by the Senate Ethics Committee for exercising "poor judgment"
for intervening with the federal regulators on behalf of Keating. The
other four senators have since quit politics, but McCain is still
running strong and is the presumptive
Republican candidate in the 2008 U.S. presidential election.
Let's keep in mind that Sen. McCain has been
behind Bush's Iraq War from day one.
Indeed, Sen. John McCain is the very one who delivered a response to
Sen. Robert Byrd's magistral denunciation of Bush's war, on March 19,
2003, and who defended the Bush-Cheney administration's decision to go
to war. Therefore, those who opposed the Iraq War cannot vote for
McCain, lest they betray their own conscience. Those who like
unprovoked wars of aggression should vote for McCain.
They are many skeletons in Sen. McCain's closet. If only the media were
doing their job, the public would know better before voting for him.
This does not seem to be the case.
Rodrigue Tremblay is professor emeritus of economics at the University of Montreal and can be reached at rodrigue.tremblay@yahoo.com
He is the author of the book 'The New American Empire'
Visit his blog site at: www.thenewamericanempire.com/blog.
Author's Website: www.thenewamericanempire.com/
Check Dr. Tremblay's coming book "The Code for Global Ethics"