There's been a lot of McCain bashing on this blog in recent
days, and I think it's only fair to give him the credit he
deserves. Back when in order to be considered a supporter of the
war you had to be a supporter of Bush's policies, John McCain was
the only prominent Republican who was both unwavering in his
commitment to the mission in Iraq, but convinced that we needed to
change the strategy by sending in more troops to accomplish
victory. He went on TV, used his platform in the Senate, and did a
lot to agitate for what eventually became the surge. While all the
leading Republican candidates expressed support for the surge,
McCain was most tied to the policy, and for much of last year we
were talking about how it was costing him independent voters in New
Hampshire, but he didn't waver. When he went to Iraq and said the
surge was working, he was ridiculed for it by his so-called allies
in the media, but he didn't succumb to their pressure.
During the summer, when his support for the comprehensive
immigration reform bill caused him to crash in the polls, left his
campaign broke, and forced him to fire much of his staff, he was
written off for dead by most wise men. But he said he would keep
fighting, and he did. And with little money and much of the
conservative establishment ferociously against him, he took his
case directly to the voters, and he won.
There's a lot to disagree with McCain on, and I'm not going to
sit here and try to convince everybody to forgive him for all the
various things that he's done that anger them, but I will say this.
We can debate a lot of the other issues such as the Gang of 14 and
campaign finance reform, which I'm not trying to dismiss, but we
cannot lose sight of the big picture. We have a war going on
against a vicious, cunning, and easily adaptable enemy, and we need
the right leader to see us through it. Everybody has their own idea
of what they look for in a wartime leader, but for me the model has
always been Winston Churchill, and this election cycle, I was
looking for somebody who demonstrated that type of guts and grit,
that strength of conviction, and who shares the following
attitude:
You ask, what is our aim? I can answer in one word.
It is victory. Victory at all costs - Victory in spite of all
terrors - Victory, however long and hard the road may be, for
without victory there is no survival.
For a long time, I thought that Rudy Giuliani was that man. But
given the foresight and fortitude McCain showed in his support for
the surge, and the "never surrender" attitude he displayed in
running his campaign, I would say that he is the most Churchilian
leader we have--only as we know, history only gave us one
Churchill.
Any regular readers may have wondered why, over the past year,
I've been so hard on Mitt Romney for his various shifts on issues.
The reason is that, to me, the biggest obstacle we face in fighting
terrorism is ourselves, specifically, the idea that after some
period without a large terrorist attack, we'll conclude that
perhaps its not that big of a threat, and go back to the way things
used to be prior to 9/11. Whenever Romney uttered the words "global
jihad," it came across to me as something he was saying to check
off another box on the conservative issue matrix, rather than a
true conviction. I always had the fear that if a few years into his
presidency, the anti-terrorism issue wasn't polling too well, he'd
be distracted by other things. The recent shift in his campaign
focus to the economy as polling changed, and his deemphasis on
national security in stump speeches I've seen over the recent
weeks, only served to reinforce my position. He has always
represented, to me, the anti-Churchill.
Some conservatives will simply never be able to support McCain,
and I understand that. But I would urge those who support the war
and consider the threat of Islamic terrorism to be the greatest
challenge of our time, to consider the big picture, recognize that
McCain does deserve some credit for the courage and perseverence
he's shown, and at least temper some of the hostility.
topics:
John McCain, Islam, Iraq, Immigration