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Five Years after "Mission...
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Five Years after "Mission Accomplished," John McCain is "fine" with 100 more
Thursday, May 1, 2008
Contact: Chuck Oxley
(208) 871-4976 (office)
BOISE, Idaho – Five
years ago today, President Bush landed on the
deck of the U.S.S. Abraham
Lincoln and declared that “major combat
operations in Iraq have ended” in front
of an enormous banner that read, “Mission
Accomplished.” Around that same time,
John McCain said “it’s clear that the end is
very much in sight.”
Now – five
years, more than 4,000 lost lives, and at
least
$500 billion later – John McCain says keeping
our troops in Iraq
for 100
years would be “fine” with him. Instead
of outlining a plan for victory
and an exit strategy in Iraq,
McCain is offering a long-term troop presence
in Iraq
similar to our presence in Germany
and South
Korea,
an approach that he himself admits won’t
work. [ABC News, “Good Morning
America,”
4/9/2003]
“As of today,
30 Idahoans have died serving in
Iraq.
Idahoans
are not “fine” with McCain’s idea to keep our
troops being in Iraq
for
another 100 years,” said R. Keith Roark,
chairman of the Idaho Democratic
Party.
According to an
analysis by PBS’
Online “Newshour” edition,
Idaho and
other Intermountain West states
have given a higher percentage of lives to the
cause than most others in the
country; 20.5 combat deaths per population.
“Idaho
Democrats respect our flag and support our
troops
100-percent. However leaving the door
open to
this military conflict for another century is
unacceptable,” Roark said. “Idaho should not loose
one more soldier’s life before
America
has a
plan for victory and a exit strategy that
brings our troops home – alive – with
the honor and respect they deserve for a job
well done.”
While just 31
percent of Americans approve of President
Bush's handling of the war, McCain continues
to be one of the most vocal
supporters of the President's failed strategy
in Iraq.
As the new
ad by the
Democratic National Committee this week
asks, "If all he offers is
more of the same, is John McCain the right
choice for America's
future?"
“It is time to
start using some of the $12 billion a month
we spend in Iraq to address
the real threats to America's
security, economy, and all the other
challenges we face right here at home.
Clearly, the only way to do that is to put a
Democrat in the White House.”
May 1, 2003: Bush
Declares War Over. “Major combat operations in
Iraq
have
ended.” [Speech by President Bush, 5/1/03]
April 2003: McCain The End Is “Very
Much In Sight.” Senator McCain was
asked “At what point will America
be able to say the war was won?” McCain said
there were oil fields to secure
and “die-hards” to take care of but “it’s
clear that the end is very much in
sight, and today I think Americans should be
very proud of their leadership,
their technology…There are still some
foreigners, Syrians and others hanging
around. But it won’t be long. It will be a
fairly short period of time, but
this happens in wars. I’m confident that once
they are confident the area is no
longer a threat to the Marines and to or army
troops that they’ll start
imposing discipline. In the meantime, we’ll
have a short period of
chaos.” [ABC News, “Good Morning
America,”
4/9/2003]
2005: McCain Rejects
Korea,
Germany Model
for Iraq.
"In fact, when asked specifically if he
thought the U.S. military should
set up shop in Iraq along the lines of what
has been established in post-WWII
Germany or Japan -- something McCain has
repeatedly advocated during the
campaign -- the senator offered nothing short
of a categorical 'no.' 'I would
hope that we could bring them all home,' he
said on MSNBC. 'I would hope that
we would probably leave some military
advisers, as we have in other countries,
to help them with their training and equipment
and that kind of stuff.' Host
Chris Matthews pressed McCain on the issue.
'You've heard the ideological
argument to keep U.S. forces
in the Middle
East. I've heard it from the
hawks. They say, keep United States
military presence in the Middle East, like we
have with the 7th Fleet in Asia. We have the
German...the South Korean component. Do
you think we could get along without it?'
McCain held fast, rejecting the very
policy he urges today. 'I not only think we
could get along without it, but I
think one of our big problems has been the
fact that many Iraqis resent
American military presence,' he responded.
'And I don't pretend to know exactly
Iraqi public opinion. But as soon as we can
reduce our visibility as much as
possible, the better I think it is going to
be.'" [Huffington Post,
4/28/08]
January 2005: "Reduce
Our Visibility As Much As
Possible." "No, I would hope that we
could bring them all
home. I would hope that we would probably
leave some military advisors...As
soon as we can reduce our visibility as much
as possible I think the better
this is going to be." [MSNBC, 4/29/08: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O1iVx4i4tAE]
November 2007: McCain
Rejected Korean Analogy to Iraq.
Asked
by Charlie Rose if he thought the South Korean
model would serve as an
"analogy of where Iraq might be…in terms of an
American presence over the
next, say, 20, 25 years," McCain replied, "I
don't think so."
"Even if there are no casualties?" Rose
questioned.
"No," McCain reiterated. "I can see an
American presence for a
while. But eventually I think because of the
nature of the society in Iraq and the
religious aspects of it that America
eventually withdraws." [The Charlie Rose
Show, 11/27/07; http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=95HVxPuCTes]
January 2008:
McCain Said US May Stay In Iraq For 100
Years, Long Term American Presence
In Iraq Analogous
To South
Korea. At a New Hampshire
town hall when McCain was asked "President
Bush has talked about our
staying in Iraq
for 50 years." McCain responded: "Maybe 100"
and "that
would be fine with me." McCain explained his
100 year remark by drawing an
analogy to the long-term American presence in
South
Korea: "We've been in
Japan
for 60 years. We've been in South
Korea for
50 years or so. That'd be fine with me as long
as Americans are not being
injured or harmed or wounded or killed."
[McCain
Town
Hall, Derry
NH
Opera House, 1/3/2008; New York Times, "The
Caucus," 1/11/2008]