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McCain on Iraq
Here is video in two parts of Sen. John McCain speaking to a Hispanic GI Forum in Denver, Colorado, on July 25, 2008. McCain spoke extensively about Barack Obama's failure of leadership in not supporting the Surge Strategy in Iraq. This is McCain's most definitive statement yet on how Obama actively worked against American victory in Iraq and why that makes him unfit to be Commander-in-Chief. McCain closes the speech by telling a moving story about a Hispanic American who won the Congressional Medal of Honor.
PART I
PART II
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From Johnmccain.com
Letter From Retired Admirals and Generals in Support of John McCain
ARLINGTON, VA -- Today, eleven retired Admirals and Generals signed the following letter in support of John McCain and his candidacy for President of the United States:
As retired military officers, we share a natural hesitancy to engage actively in politics. There is a healthy discomfort in our profession with any political involvement because the country rightly depends on our military to support any commander in chief with our best military advice and our actions. But two factors compel us to speak out now and openly support John McCain for President: first, the surprising and inaccurate questioning of his record by some of Senator Obama's leading supporters; and second, the importance to our national security of winning the war we are fighting.
The United States is confronted by many threats to its security and prosperity. Most significantly, we are engaged in a broad conflict with Islamic extremism against enemies espousing the same radical and violent ideology whose full dimensions the American people first glimpsed on September 11, 2001. Success in this war will require not only victory in the "hot" conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan, but as well a balanced and integrated application of all elements of America's national power as we work with our allies around the world to marginalize radicals and build a shared vision for peace with moderate Islam. read more »
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Charles Krauthammer is out with a column that is brilliant. It lays out the case that John McCain can win the election on Iraq. He makes it clear that Obama has taken a position that is at complete odds with the facts on the ground in Iraq. He argues that McCain must make this election a choice between defeat or victory:
In his St. Paul victory speech, Barack Obama pledged again to pull out of Iraq. Rather than "continue a policy in Iraq that asks everything of our brave men and women in uniform and nothing of Iraqi politicians. ... It's time for Iraqis to take responsibility for their future."
We know Obama hasn't been to Iraq in more than two years, but does he not read the papers? Does he not know anything about developments on the ground? Here is the "nothing" that Iraqis have been doing in the last few months:
1. Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki sent the Iraqi army into Basra. It achieved in a few weeks what the British had failed to do in four years: take the city, drive out the Mahdi Army and seize the ports from Iranian-backed militias.
2. When Mahdi fighters rose up in support of their Basra brethren, the Iraqi army at Maliki's direction confronted them and prevailed in every town -- Najaf, Karbala, Hilla, Kut, Nasiriyah and Diwaniyah -- from Basra to Baghdad.
3. Without any American ground forces, the Iraqi army entered and occupied Sadr City, the Mahdi Army stronghold.
4. Maliki flew to Mosul, directing a joint Iraqi-U.S. offensive against the last redoubt of al-Qaeda, which had already been driven out of Anbar, Baghdad and Diyala provinces.
5. The Iraqi parliament enacted a de-Baathification law, a major Democratic benchmark for political reconciliation.
6. Parliament also passed the other reconciliation benchmarks -- a pension law, an amnesty law, and a provincial elections and powers law. Oil revenues are being distributed to the provinces through the annual budget.
7. With Maliki having demonstrated that he would fight not just Sunni insurgents (e.g., in Mosul) but Shiite militias (e.g., the Mahdi Army), the Sunni parliamentary bloc began negotiations to join the Shiite-led government. (The final sticking point is a squabble over a sixth Cabinet position.)
The disconnect between what Democrats are saying about Iraq and what is actually happening there has reached grotesque proportions. Democrats won an exhilarating electoral victory in 2006 pledging withdrawal at a time when conditions in Iraq were dire and we were indeed losing the war. Two years later, when everything is changed, they continue to reflexively repeat their "narrative of defeat and retreat" (as Joe Lieberman so memorably called it) as if nothing has changed. read more »
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Here is video that focuses in on the responses by Sen. John McCain to radical anti-war protesters who interrupted his speech at the Univ. of Denver today. McCain handled it with cool grace under fire. They forget - he's been put under far greater pressure in his life than they can ever bring to bear! His response to them the second time on this video was superb - "I will never surrender - I will never surrender in Iraq."
Here is video of Sen. John McCain clearly defining what success is in Iraq and Afghanistan. He did so during a major Foreign Policy Speech he gave before the World Affairs Council in Los Angeles, CA, March 26, 2008.
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Here is video of comments Sen. John McCain made regarding Iraq following a Town Hall Meeting he held in Chula Vista, California on March 24, 2008. He comments on the situation on the ground in Iraq, as well as challenging the Democrats on their policy of retreat and surrender.
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Here is a Fox News video segment that discusses Sen. John McCain's position on Iraq and how the issue of the Iraq War could impact McCain's campaign.
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Here is a hard-hitting statement from Sen. John McCain's Campaign today on Barack Obama's disastrous plans for withdrawing U.S. Troops from Iraq:
ARLINGTON, VA -- U.S. Senator John McCain's presidential campaign today released the following statement by Senior Advisor Mark Salter on Senator Barack Obama's Iraq speech today:
"Senator Obama says that ending the war will not be easy, that 'there will be dangers involved.' Yet, in that patented way of his, he declines to name those dangers. Let me enumerate a few: al Qaeda, which is now on the run, will survive, claim victory and continue to provoke sectarian tensions that, while they have been subdued by the 'tactics' of the surge, still exist and are ripe for provocation by al Qaeda, which would almost certainly ignite again civil war in Iraq, a civil war that could easily descend into genocide. read more »
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Here's John McCain's Statement today on the 5th year anniversary of the beginning of the War in Iraq:
U.S. Senator John McCain today issued the following statement on the fifth anniversary of the U.S. invasion of Iraq:
"Today in Iraq, America and our allies stand on the precipice of winning a major victory against radical Islamic extremism. The security gains over the past year have been dramatic and undeniable. Al Qaeda and Shia extremists -- with support from external powers such as Iran -- are on the run but not defeated. Tough fighting remains ahead, especially in places like Mosul. Important political gains have also been made, but far more must be done in coming months to cement the gains made in huge cost in American blood and treasure.
"Americans should be proud that they led the way in removing a vicious, predatory dictator and opening the possibility of a free and stable Iraq. Americans should be proud that once we implemented the surge and new counterinsurgency strategy, a dire situation has been dramatically improved. And, Americans know that the consequences of failure would leave our nation less secure for generations to come."
John McCain's campaign today further re-released a web feature on www.johnmccain.com that chronicles the Senator's leadership on Iraq and in the larger fight against Islamic extremists. The page, entitled "Fighting Islamic Extremists: Progress in Iraq," features a four year timeline of John McCain's unrelenting call for a new strategy for victory in Iraq -- the strategy currently winning on the ground.
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