Old Warrior
by
Charley
Reese
by Charley Reese
DIGG THIS
Republicans
waited too late to nominate John McCain. When he ran in 2000, he
was bright and alert, but they chose George W. Bush, the pseudo
good old boy and country-wrecker. Now they want to hand the presidency
to McCain, soon to be 72 years old. He's not up to it.
The senator
has made eight trips to Iraq. The Iraq War, he claims, is his specialty.
He said he's willing to keep American troops in country for 100
years. Well, how can a guy who has been so focused on the war confuse
al-Qaida, which is a Sunni group, with Shiite extremists?
He did that
three times on his last trip. Three times. That's like confusing
the New York Yankees with the Boston Red Sox. On another trip to
Iraq, he came back to the U.S. and told people it was so safe he
could stroll around a marketplace. He neglected to mention that
he was surrounded by security forces, including helicopter gunships
hovering overhead, during his walk until he was called on it by
a journalist.
Forty years
ago, McCain was a hero. It was a noble thing he did when he refused
a Vietnamese offer to be set free and chose to remain with the other
POWs. He's a patriot. He's brave. He also finished near the bottom
of his Naval Academy class. He's never pretended to be a scholar.
Now he's nearly 72 years old, and if he ever did understand the
Middle East, he obviously doesn't now.
Al-Qaida people
are Sunni Muslims of the Wahabi sect. That's the equivalent of the
American Puritans. They are very much fundamentalist. Iran is a
Shiite country. Shiites and Sunnis are roughly comparable to the
Catholics and Protestants when people in both religions took their
beliefs extremely seriously.
So, unlike
what McCain kept saying, Iran is not training or supplying al-Qaida.
When we decided to go to war against Afghanistan, the Iranians were
helpful because both the Taliban and al-Qaida are Sunni. The Iranians
support Shiite militias and Hezbollah in Lebanon. There is no evidence
that they support al-Qaida. On one of the three occasions, Sen.
Joe Lieberman corrected McCain, but he made the same mistake again
on two other occasions.
McCain's handlers,
of course, will try to confine him to prepared scripts. They don't
want him talking off the cuff because he has a tendency to wander
off the subject. Well-disciplined handlers, coupled with a lazy
and inattentive press, could elect a near comatose person, and the
public would never know it. McCain may have good genes and physically
live to a ripe old age. I sincerely hope he does. But the organ
you should be concerned about in a presidential race is the brain.
Bearing in
mind that nobody ever accused McCain of being a brilliant thinker
even in his prime, you should be alert for signs of forgetfulness
and confusion. Presidents don't have to fight or run marathons.
They have to absorb and assess a great deal of information, often
conflicting information, and they have to form very sound judgments.
Unless they are going to be helpless captives of their staff, they
have to be well-read and continue to read and to seek information
"outside the box." Otherwise, they are just puppets and
don't know it. Presidents need sharp minds and almost boundless
energy.
Shakespeare
wrote, "There is a tide in the affairs of men, which taken
at the flood, leads on to fortune; omitted, all the voyage of their
life is bound in shallows and miseries ... we must take the current
when it serves or lose our ventures."
McCain's
flood tide was in 2000, and he missed it. It's sad but true. He
was qualified to be president then; he is not now. We can put it
down as another of those missed opportunities that mark our lives
as vividly as our successes. The old warrior no longer knows who
the enemy is or where he is located.
March
31, 2008
Charley
Reese [send
him mail] has been a journalist for 49 years.
©
2008 by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
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Reese Archives
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