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McCain's Dementia : We will, now, wave the white flag in 2013, 96

by Mike Roberts <MRMR@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > May 15, 2008 at 10:50 AM

John McCain
McCain: Iraq War Can Be Won by 2013


Republican presidential candidate Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.), speaks at 
the Greater Columbus Convention Center, May 15, 2008, in Columbus, Ohio. 
(Associated Press)

Updated 11:39 p.m.
By Michael D. Shear
COLUMBUS, Ohio -- Sen. John McCain predicted today that the Iraq war 
would be won and most American troops would come home by 2013 if he is 
elected president, joining his Democratic rivals for the first time in 
offering a timeline for a large-scale military withdrawal.

McCain said only a small contingent of troops, in non-combat roles, 
would remain in Iraq five years from now. He said the drawdown would be 
possible because al-Qaeda in Iraq would be defeated and a democratic 
government would be operating in the war-torn country.

McCain's speech described in detail the "conditions that I intend to 
achieve" by the time his first term in office ends. He said he will 
"focus all the powers of the office, every skill and strength I 
possess," to make that future a reality.

McCain previously had resisted offering target dates for troop 
withdrawals, saying that to do so would be tantamount to giving 
terrorists a timeline for defeat. During the Florida primary, he blasted 
former Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney for what he said was sup****t 
of a withdrawal timeline. Democrats, meanwhile, pilloried McCain for 
saying American troops could remain in Iraq for up to 100 years -- a 
reference McCain later likened to the presence of U.S. bases in Germany 
or South Korea.

Just last month, McCain said that "to promise a withdrawal of our forces 
from Iraq, regardless of the calamitous consequences to the Iraqi 
people, our most vital interests, and the future of the Middle East, is 
the height of irresponsibility. It is a failure of leader****p.''

But the speech he gave this morning envisioned an America that, by 2013, 
"has welcomed home most of the servicemen and women who have sacrificed 
terribly so that America might be secure in her freedom. The Iraq war 
has been won."

By that time, McCain said, "the United States maintains a military 
presence" in Iraq, "but a much smaller one, and it does not play a 
direct combat role."

Asked to make a withdrawal timeline pledge during a debate last 
September, Democratic Sen. Barack Obama declined, saying that "it's hard 
to project four years from now and I think it would be irresponsible. We 
don't know what contingency will be out there."

But more recently, Obama has said he will remove all combat brigades 
from Iraq within 16 months of becoming president and will leave "some 
troops" in Iraq to protect U.S. embassy personnel there and carry out 
targeted strikes on terrorists.

Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton said during the same debate last year that 
it was her "goal" to have all of the U.S. troops out of Iraq by 2013, 
though more recently she has said she would begin a phased withdrawal 
immediately.

McCain's advisers this morning sharply disputed any similarity between 
their candidate's goals for Iraq and the positions of Democrats. They 
said McCain's promise is to win the Iraq war by the end of his term, 
while his rivals vow to begin pullouts regardless of the conditions in 
the country.

"There is no similarity," said McCain adviser Steve Schmidt.

Immediately after the speech, McCain disputed the idea that he was 
setting a firm date for withdrawal of troops from Iraq, telling 
re****ters that he is "promising that we will succeed in Iraq" but not 
promising that troops will come home if that success has not materialized.

"I'm not putting a date on it. It could be next month. It could be next 
year," he told re****ters on the Straight Talk Express bus. "I said by 
the end of my first term we will have succeeded in Iraq...This is what I 
want to achieve. This is what I believe is achievable."

He repeated his comments from throughout the campaign that setting a 
date for withdrawal would lead to "chaos, genocide and we will be back 
with greater sacrifice."

Aides later stressed that the difference is that Democrats want to 
withdraw troops without any regard to the military situation in Iraq. 
They said a president McCain would leave troops in Iraq beyond his first 
term if the military situation demanded it.

"He's not saying win or lose, they come home in four years," said Mark 
Salter, a top McCain aide.

In the speech, McCain also described the America he hopes will exist 
after four years of his administration.

In that future America, he said, taxes are lower, congressional earmarks 
are eliminated and robust economic growth has returned. He promised a 
new international "League of Democracies" that will have stopped the 
genocide in Darfur. He said construction will have begun on 20 new 
nuclear plants and there will be a free-market plan to reduce greenhouse 
g*****. And he promised to have secured the country's southern border 
and offered a tem****ary worker program to illegal immigrants.

To accomplish those goals, McCain pledged cooperation with Democrats, 
saying that he will "listen to any idea that is offered in good faith 
and intended to help solve our problems, not make them worse."

McCain disavowed "signing statements" often used by President Bush to 
alter the implementation of laws, saying that "I will not subvert the 
purpose of legislation I have signed by making statements that indicate 
I will enforce only the parts of it I like."

And McCain said he will ask Congress to hold regular question-and-answer 
sessions with him, much like the feisty exchanges that take place 
regularly between the British Prime Minister and members of the House of 
Commons.
 




 1 Posts in Topic:
McCain's Dementia : We will, now, wave the white flag in 2013,
Mike Roberts <MRMR@[EM  2008-05-15 10:50:50 

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