Thursday, May 22, 2008

Who Is McCain?

With the Presidential election moving into full swing, I believe it to be appropriate to take a look at the presumptive Republican nominee for President, John McCain.

Who is John McCain? He keeps being described as a war hero. What is the basis for that?

In October of 1967, more than forty years ago, while on a bombing run over Hanoi, his A-4 Skyhawk was hit by surface-to-air missiles; for five and a half years, he would be a prisoner of war. When his captors realized that he was the son of the Commander in Chief Pacific (Cincpac), Admiral John McCain, Jr., they offered to release him ahead of other POWs as a gesture of goodwill. He refused the offer, resulting in even harsher treatment from his guards. 

However, it now appears that a senior officer among the prisoners ordered him to refuse the offer. Thus if McCain had accepted the offer, he would have disobeyed a direct order from a superior and been subject to court marshal. It is hardly heroic to obey an order in the military. Worse, after four days, McCain made an anti-American propaganda "confession.” McCain later said, “everyone has their breaking point” and everyone does, but most prisoners of war did not break.

He spent five years in captivity and was tortured, but so were many others who have never claimed to be heroes, and who never used that to build careers for themselves. McCain deserves sympathy for the pain that was inflicted on him by his Vietnamese captors, but it does not make him a hero.

But how did he get where he is now. He was the son and grandson of four-star admirals. Many expected that he would follow in their footsteps. But he graduated fifth from the bottom of the class of 1958. Because of the influence of his family of famous Admirals, McCain was leapfrogged ahead of more qualified applicants and granted a coveted slot to be trained as a navy pilot. 

On July 3, 1965 McCain married Carol Shepp. In 1980 he divorced her. Only a month after the divorce, McCain married Cindy Lou Hensley, heiress to Phoenix-based Hensley & Co., the nation's second-largest Anheuser-Busch distributor. McCain followed his young, millionaires wife back to Arizona where her father helped catapult McCain into politics. Today, Cindy Hensley McCain is chairwoman of Hensley's board of directors. Hensley and Company financial reports show assets worth a minimum of $28 million for the McCains (Source).

McCain has built a reputation for rectitude, but his record there is more mixed then is generally realized. McCain was one of the Keating five. Keating was convicted of racketeering and fraud in both state and federal court after his Lincoln Savings & Loan collapsed, costing the taxpayers $3.4 billion. McCain intervened on behalf of Charles Keating after Keating gave McCain at least $112,00 in contributions. In the mid-1980s, McCain made at least 9 trips on Keating's airplanes, and 3 of those were to Keating's luxurious retreat in the Bahamas. McCain's wife and father-in-law also were the largest investors (at $350,000) in a Keating shopping center; the Phoenix New Times called it a "sweetheart deal." 

In the Senate McCain created a reputation as a maverick, best known for the McCain-Feingold Campaign Reform Act of 2002, but now that he is running for the Presidency he promises to appoint judges to the Supreme Court like Roberts, Alito, Clarence Thomas, and Scalia, who have been emasculating the act with their decisions.

Furthermore, it now appears that McCain’s campaign is well stocked with lobbyists whose interests one can expect he would protect, just as Bush did. To his embarrassment this has been disclosed and so McCain is now trying to purge them. It is too late. His connections and his allegiances have been revealed.

He voted against the temporary Bush tax cut, on the ground that it was a give-away to the rich and would cause huge deficits, but now as a presidential candidate he insists that we must make it permanent.

He tries to disassociate himself from Bush, but when Bush attacked Obama in an address to the Israeli Knesset equating the willingness to negotiate with enemies with appeasement of Hitler, McCain joined Bush in the smear, ignoring the fact that all previous Presidents negotiated with our adversaries from Nixon and China, To Kennedy and Khrushchev, to Reagan and Gorbachev to Bush and North Korea. He ignores Churchill’s famous quote, “To jaw-jaw is always better than to war-war,” which remarks were made at a White House luncheon on June 26, 1954. 

In South Carolina, McCain was asked when he thought the US Military might "send an air mail message to Tehran. McCain began his answer by changing the words to a popular Beach Boys song, “Bomb, bomb, bomb, bomb, bomb, Iran,” he sang to the tune of Barbara Ann. He seems to have arrived at a point where he makes Bush sound responsible.

He also tried to disassociate himself from Bush by criticizing Bush for the way the Katrina disaster was handled by saying that unlike Bush he would not have flown over the area, but rather would have landed. I wonder how many of the people who lost their homes would be reassured by knowing that the difference between Bush’s neglect and McCain’s is that McCain would have visited them and looked upon their misery first hand.

If McCain was ever the maverick that he has presented himself to be, which is doubtful, he is not that man any longer. 

There is a lot more to be said, but that will wait for another time.