2008 Politics » Candidates | Issues | Calendar | Dispatches | Schedules | Polls | RSS

Page 2 of 2   <      

McCain to Stake Bid On Need to Win in Iraq

Ex-GOP front-runner John McCain is struggling in polls and fundraising.
Ex-GOP front-runner John McCain is struggling in polls and fundraising. (Mario Tama - Getty Images)
Discussion Policy
Comments that include profanity or personal attacks or other inappropriate comments or material will be removed from the site. Additionally, entries that are unsigned or contain "signatures" by someone other than the actual author will be removed. Finally, we will take steps to block users who violate any of our posting standards, terms of use or privacy policies or any other policies governing this site. Please review the full rules governing commentaries and discussions. You are fully responsible for the content that you post.

In early drafts, he criticizes the pace of political progress under Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki but argues that the price of defeatism is lower morale among U.S. troops, according to Renzi and advisers familiar with preparations for the speech. McCain plans to praise the "measurable progress" made by the top U.S. commander in Iraq, Army Gen. David H. Petraeus, particularly in Ramadi, and to urge the public to leave more time on the clock for achieving success.

"This gives him an opportunity to put a marker down on what his foreign policy vision will be and how important it is to win the war in Iraq, and do it in a very specific, cogent way," said one top adviser, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because McCain is set to continue to work on the speech this weekend.

"Iraq is the most important issue facing the country," said Brian Jones, McCain's communications director. "John McCain is going to continue to talk about how we achieve victory in Iraq."

The conflict has at times given the senator opportunities to show his independence from Bush. He was one of the first to call for the firing of Donald H. Rumsfeld as defense secretary. On the stump, he repeatedly decries the "mismanagement" of the war effort under Bush's leadership.

But as the country has turned against the war -- 64 percent of respondents in the most recent Washington Post-ABC News poll said it was not worth fighting -- McCain's repeated echoes of the president's rhetoric haunt his presidential campaign. His upbeat assessment of conditions in a Baghdad marketplace last week drew criticism from Iraqis there and from some journalists.

Wearing a bulletproof vest and surrounded by 100 soldiers in Baghdad's central market, McCain said: "Never have I been able to go out into the city as I was today." Headlines soon after called his statements "propaganda" and a "magic-carpet ride." The Statesman Journal in Salem, Ore., declared: "Brainwashed McCain is a straight-talker no more."

One GOP consultant said of the incident: "That strikes right at the heart of who people thought he was -- a truth teller."

But McCain's advisers are pursuing a political strategy often advocated by White House Deputy Chief of Staff Karl Rove: taking a perceived weakness and attempting to turn it into a strength.

Among the voters who will determine the Republican nominee, support for the war and the president's policies remains strong. In the Post-ABC News poll, 70 percent of Republicans said the Iraq war has been worth fighting. And in a recent Newsweek poll, two-thirds of Republicans said they oppose Democratic legislation calling for a timeline for the withdrawal of U.S. troops from Iraq.

And McCain's top finance officials say the senator's position on the war has, if anything, helped him with many of his wealthy donors.

"He believes that we should be there to win, and not to win is an absolute defeat," said lobbyist and former congressman Tom Loeffler (R-Tex.), who was tapped last week to revamp McCain's fundraising operation. "The people who support John McCain do so because of his straight talk."

Renzi, a McCain supporter, said the Arizona senator and former Vietnam prisoner of war appeared to become even more resolute after the recent visit to Iraq and a military hospital in Germany, where wounded soldiers from the war are being treated.

He said McCain and the delegation met with Iraqi sheiks in Ramadi and later had dinner with Iraq's vice president and other high-level officials at the home of the U.S. ambassador. Renzi said the senator was blunt with them about the need to win the war.

"He's giving it to 'em straight," Renzi said. "There was no lack of clarity in that room when John McCain was done talking."

Renzi said McCain was frustrated with the media coverage of their visit to the marketplace and what he described as an unwillingness to cover positive news from Iraq. But, in several hours of conversations with McCain while they were in Iraq and on the plane, Renzi said, the beginnings of the senator's speech were already coming together.

"He was more determined and dug in," Renzi recalled in an interview. "He said: 'Look, this is the issue. This is the premier issue of my time and the next generation.' He says, 'We're taking fire and we're taking heat, but this is the right thing to do.' "


<       2


More in the Politics Section

Campaign Finance -- Presidential Race

2008 Fundraising

See who is giving to the '08 presidential candidates.

© 2007 The Washington Post Company