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DonViejo

(60,536 posts)
Sat Feb 2, 2013, 12:20 PM Feb 2013

John McCain’s sad, bitter twilight


The senator's contempt for Chuck Hagel in Thursday's confirmation hearing is all about the guy who nominated him

BY STEVE ERICKSON, THE AMERICAN PROSPECT


“That one,” John McCain famously snarled in a presidential debate four years ago, referring to his opponent, who was a quarter of a century younger than McCain and who had been in the Senate 3 years to McCain’s 20. It’s difficult to imagine a better revelation of the McCain psyche than that moment, but if there is one, then it came yesterday at the meeting of the Senate Armed Services Committee, convened to consider the nomination of Chuck Hagel as Secretary of Defense. The McCain fury is something to behold, almost irresistible for how unvarnished it is in all its forms. In the instance of the 2008 debate, McCain’s dumbfounded antipathy had to do with facing an opponent he so clearly considered unworthy. In the instance of the hearing yesterday, McCain’s bitter blast was at somebody who once was among his closest friends, a former Vietnam warrior and fellow Republican of a similarly independent ilk who supported McCain’s first run for the presidency in 2000 against George W. Bush but then appeared to abandon the Arizona senator eight years later.

If all this suggests political differences born largely of personal dynamics and their breach, it’s because for McCain the two are interchangeable. At this moment, we should make the effort to remind ourselves of what’s commendable about McCain, an admiral’s son who could only live up to his father’s reputation by way of five years in a Hanoi jail, where he walked — or hobbled, given the crippling abuse he suffered at the hands of his captors — the walk of loyalty and didn’t just talk it. When offered freedom halfway through those five years, he refused to leave behind his fellow prisoners of war who had been there longer and were due their freedom first. It’s a story so formidable that 12 years ago Bush supporters resorted to suggesting McCain was a “Hanoi Candidate,” brainwashed in the manner of cinematic Manchurians. So let’s not question McCain’s courage, or a code that means as much to him as patriotism. In that initial presidential run, admiration for the man trumped what disagreements overly romantic voters like myself had when it came time to mark his name on our ballots (as I did in that year’s California primary).

In the time since, two things have happened to McCain. One was the Iraq War, the worst American foreign policy blunder of the post–World War II era, which McCain wholeheartedly supported from the beginning and about which he’s never intimated a second thought. The other was Barack Obama, electoral politics’ upstart lieutenant whose bid to become five-star general, bypassing stops along the way at captain, major and colonel, wasn’t just temerity to a man who waited his turn to be released from prison, but insubordination. Those two things converged yesterday in McCain’s prosecution of Hagel, no less sorry a spectacle on McCain’s part for the fact that Hagel handled it so unimpressively. Perhaps Hagel was startled, figuring his one-time compatriot would be tough but not vicious. If that’s the case, then he never knew McCain as well as he thought or hoped, because if he did then he would know that McCain is a man of grudges. In his memoir “Faith of My Fathers,” in which words like “gallantry” appear without embarrassment (and which no one has more earned the right to use), McCain himself acknowledges being the congenital hothead of legend who’s nearly come to blows with colleagues. Half a century later, he recalls every altercation with every Naval Academy classmate; as a child, rage sometimes drove him to hold his breath until he blacked out. No need to indulge in untrained psychotherapy from afar to surmise that the ability to nurse such a grudge may be what gets you through half a decade of cruel incarceration.

At any rate, what happened yesterday wasn’t about Hagel at all. It wasn’t even about the Iraq War’s 2007 “surge,” which McCain is desperate to justify because he can never justify the war itself, which finds Hagel moved to the right side of history while McCain remains stubbornly on the wrong. It’s about that junior senator from Illinois who crossed McCain early in some obscure backroom Senate deal no one can remember anymore, then denied McCain the presidency in no small part because Obama understood the folly of Iraq better than McCain can allow himself to. McCain’s personal honor in Hanoi was too hard won to be stained now by almost anything he does, including how he’s allowed temperament, pique and ego to steamroll the judgment and perspective that we hope all of our elected officers have, let alone presidents. But his political honor, not to mention whatever might once have recommended him to the presidency, has fallen victim to the way that Obama has gotten fatally under his skin. Even if this once-noble statesman should succeed in denying Hagel’s nomination as he denied Susan Rice’s prospects for Secretary of State (and even the most devout Hagel supporter would have to acknowledge that the Defense nominee’s performance before the Committee was often a shambles), McCain’s unrelenting obsession with the grievance that Obama has come to represent to him is the saddest legacy in memory. The very fact of Obama and all things Obamic has turned McCain into something toxic, maybe even to himself.

http://www.salon.com/2013/02/02/the_bitter_twilight_of_john_mccain_partner/
14 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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graham4anything

(11,464 posts)
2. John McCain hasn't changed. This is McCain. Some people were hoodwinked by his other personality
Sat Feb 2, 2013, 12:27 PM
Feb 2013

but he has always been THIS John MCCain

same as Chris Christie is not a nice person or a democratic persons friend

and this is the same John MCCain who's BFF John Kerry asked to be his VP in 2004 before wrongly giving it to John Edwards

same McCain then now and forever

why are some people surprised?

LiberalFighter

(50,931 posts)
3. He was the worst of the worst Navy brat
Sat Feb 2, 2013, 12:37 PM
Feb 2013

One who thought of himself as better than anyone else. His time as a POW did not change that. Too many strings were pulled for him that allowed him to continue advancing in life.

He is the geezer living next door that gets upset if anyone touches his yard. Ready to blast anyone or anything with his shotgun. He is the geezer that will keep anything or refuse to return anything that ends up in his yard.

He was the bad apple of the Navy and they should had thrown him out. If it had been someone else they would had.

iemitsu

(3,888 posts)
5. That is my reaction too.
Sat Feb 2, 2013, 01:16 PM
Feb 2013

McCain has too many personality flaws to be remembered as anything but a crack-pot. Without his illustrious father and grandfather he would have been nobody (probably true about his wife's money too).
He is the best argument for meritocracy rather than inherited status.

 

xtraxritical

(3,576 posts)
12. You got that right, McCain was always a loose cannon on deck and only Admiral Daddy's
Sat Feb 2, 2013, 02:51 PM
Feb 2013

connections got him into and kept him in Annapolis. McCain has always been just a show off punk.

iemitsu

(3,888 posts)
13. Yep, in fact he was showing off when he was shot down over Hanoi.
Sat Feb 2, 2013, 03:55 PM
Feb 2013

And if his father had been anyone else he would not have been flying at all, after downing power lines in Spain and losing jets.

Cartoonist

(7,316 posts)
7. And far too harsh on Hagel
Sat Feb 2, 2013, 01:50 PM
Feb 2013

(and even the most devout Hagel supporter would have to acknowledge that the Defense nominee’s performance before the Committee was often a shambles)

---
Maybe he should have kept quiet about voting for McCain in the primary, then he wouldn't have had to defend himself by insulting someone else.

 

rhett o rick

(55,981 posts)
6. McCain has been used and tossed aside. He has always been a tool of the elite overlords.
Sat Feb 2, 2013, 01:41 PM
Feb 2013

In 2007 the overlords could see that the masses were getting tired of being screwed by the repubs, so they decided to let the Democrats win the presidency and then obstruct for 4 years to prove to the masses that the Democrats werent saviors. That's the only reason that a tool like McCain got the nomination. And to make sure they choose Sarah Palin as his running mate. IMO McCain didnt pick her. He openly despised her. The overlords are done with McCain and Palin both.

catbyte

(34,393 posts)
8. "Gallantry"? Oh, please.
Sat Feb 2, 2013, 01:55 PM
Feb 2013

Steve Erickson certainly fell for McCain's bullshit, hook, line, & sinker. McCain knew that if he checked out of Hanoi Hilton early, his military career would be over, and any future political career would be DOA. McCain wouldn't even have been captured in the first place if he hadn't have been such a shitty pilot. Describing McCain with a word even remotly related to "gallant" or "gallantry" made me actually gag. He's always been an entitled bully, a small man who, if not for those years in a Vietcong POW camp, couldn't have been elected Dog Catcher, much less a Senator or presidential candidate. The October 2008 Rolling Stone article was magnificent, masterfully eviscerating the Myth of McCain. I am too incompetent to link on this mobile phone--sorry!

catbyte

(34,393 posts)
11. That's the one, thanks! I'm kind of snowed in so maybe I should figure out
Sat Feb 2, 2013, 02:50 PM
Feb 2013

how to use this new-fangled contraption, a Samsung smart phone.

oldandhappy

(6,719 posts)
9. please email McCain's office
Sat Feb 2, 2013, 02:17 PM
Feb 2013

and ask for dignity and decorum and ethics. I did. He needs to hear from us. Thanks for the article. McCain has destroyed himself in history. We do not need to attack him. He has attacked himself.

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