
Make-Believe
Maverick
A closer look at the life and career of John McCain reveals
a disturbing record of recklessness and dishonesty

By TIM DICKINSON
October 23, 2008
At Fort McNair, an army
base located along the Potomac River in the nation's capital, a
chance reunion takes place one day between two former POWs. It's
the spring of 1974, and Navy commander John Sidney McCain III has
returned home from the experience in Hanoi that, according to legend,
transformed him from a callow and reckless youth into a serious
man of patriotism and purpose. Walking along the grounds at Fort
McNair, McCain runs into John Dramesi, an Air Force lieutenant colonel
who was also imprisoned and tortured in Vietnam.
McCain is studying at
the National War College, a prestigious graduate program he had
to pull strings with the Secretary of the Navy to get into. Dramesi
is enrolled, on his own merit, at the Industrial College of the
Armed Forces in the building next door.
There's a distance between
the two men that belies their shared experience in North Vietnam
— call it an honor gap. Like many American POWs, McCain broke
down under torture and offered a "confession" to his North
Vietnamese captors. Dramesi, in contrast, attempted two daring escapes.
For the second he was brutalized for a month with daily torture
sessions that nearly killed him. His partner in the escape, Lt.
Col. Ed Atterberry, didn't survive the mistreatment. But Dramesi
never said a disloyal word, and for his heroism was awarded two
Air Force Crosses, one of the service's highest distinctions. McCain
would later hail him as "one of the toughest guys I've ever
met."
On the grounds between
the two brick colleges, the chitchat between the scion of four-star
admirals and the son of a prizefighter turns to their academic travels;
both colleges sponsor a trip abroad for young officers to network
with military and political leaders in a distant corner of the globe.
"I'm going to the
Middle East," Dramesi says. "Turkey, Kuwait, Lebanon,
Iran."
"Why are you going
to the Middle East?" McCain asks, dismissively.
"It's a place we're
probably going to have some problems," Dramesi says.
"Why? Where are
you going to, John?"
"Oh, I'm going to
Rio."
"What the hell are
you going to Rio for?"
McCain, a married father
of three, shrugs.
"I got a better
chance of getting laid."
Dramesi, who went on
to serve as chief war planner for U.S. Air Forces in Europe and
commander of a wing of the Strategic Air Command, was not surprised.
"McCain says his life changed while he was in Vietnam, and
he is now a different man," Dramesi says today. "But he's
still the undisciplined, spoiled brat that he was when he went in."
McCAIN FIRST
This is the story of
the real John McCain, the one who has been hiding in plain sight.
It is the story of a man who has consistently put his own advancement
above all else, a man willing to say and do anything to achieve
his ultimate ambition: to become commander in chief, ascending to
the one position that would finally enable him to outrank his four-star
father and grandfather.
In its broad strokes,
McCain's life story is oddly similar to that of the current occupant
of the White House. John Sidney McCain III and George Walker Bush
both represent the third generation of American dynasties. Both
were born into positions of privilege against which they rebelled
into mediocrity. Both developed an uncanny social intelligence that
allowed them to skate by with a minimum of mental exertion. Both
struggled with booze and loutish behavior. At each step, with the
aid of their fathers' powerful friends, both failed upward. And
both shed their skins as Episcopalian members of the Washington
elite to build political careers as self-styled, ranch-inhabiting
Westerners who pray to Jesus in their wives' evangelical churches.
In one vital respect,
however, the comparison is deeply unfair to the current president:
George W. Bush was a much better pilot.
This, of course, is not
the story McCain tells about himself. Few politicians have so actively,
or successfully, crafted their own myth of greatness. In McCain's
version of his life, he is a prodigal son who, steeled by his brutal
internment in Vietnam, learned to put "country first."
Remade by the Keating Five scandal that nearly wrecked his career,
the story goes, McCain re-emerged as a "reformer" and
a "maverick," righteously eschewing anything that "might
even tangentially be construed as a less than proper use of my office."
It's a myth McCain has
cultivated throughout his decades in Washington. But during the
course of this year's campaign, the mask has slipped. "Let's
face it," says Larry Wilkerson, a retired Army colonel who
served as chief of staff to Secretary of State Colin Powell. "John
McCain made his reputation on the fact that he doesn't bend his
principles for politics. That's just not true."
We have now watched McCain
run twice for president. The first time he positioned himself as
a principled centrist and decried the politics of Karl Rove and
the influence of the religious right, imploring voters to judge
candidates "by the example we set, by the way we conduct our
campaigns, by the way we personally practice politics." After
he lost in 2000, he jagged hard to the left — breaking with
the president over taxes, drilling, judicial appointments, even
flirting with joining the Democratic Party.
In his current campaign,
however, McCain has become the kind of politician he ran against
in 2000. He has embraced those he once denounced as "agents
of intolerance," promised more drilling and deeper tax cuts,
even compromised his vaunted opposition to torture. Intent on winning
the presidency at all costs, he has reassembled the very team that
so viciously smeared him and his family eight years ago, selecting
as his running mate a born-again moose hunter whose only qualification
for office is her ability to electrify Rove's base. And he has engaged
in a "practice of politics" so deceptive that even Rove
himself has denounced it, saying that the outright lies in McCain's
campaign ads go "too far" and fail the "truth test."
The missing piece of
this puzzle, says a former McCain confidant who has fallen out with
the senator over his neoconservatism, is a third, never realized,
campaign that McCain intended to run against Bush in 2004. "McCain
wanted a rematch, based on ethics, campaign finance and Enron —
the corrupt relationship between Bush's team and the corporate sector,"
says the former friend, a prominent conservative thinker with whom
McCain shared his plans over the course of several dinners in 2001.
"But when 9/11 happened, McCain saw his chance to challenge
Bush again was robbed. He saw 9/11 gave Bush and his failed presidency
a second life. He saw Bush and Cheney's ability to draw stark contrasts
between black and white, villains and good guys. And that's why
McCain changed." (The McCain campaign did not respond to numerous
requests for comment from Rolling Stone.)
Indeed, many leading
Republicans who once admired McCain see his recent contortions to
appease the GOP base as the undoing of a maverick. "John McCain's
ambition overrode his basic character," says Rita Hauser, who
served on the President's Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board from
2001 to 2004. But the truth of the matter is that ambition is John
McCain's basic character. Seen in the sweep of his seven-decade
personal history, his pandering to the right is consistent with
the only constant in his life: doing what's best for himself. To
put the matter squarely: John McCain is his own special interest.
"John has made a
pact with the devil," says Lincoln Chafee, the former GOP senator,
who has been appalled at his one-time colleague's readiness to sacrifice
principle for power. Chafee and McCain were the only Republicans
to vote against the Bush tax cuts. They locked arms in opposition
to drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. And they worked
together in the "Gang of 14," which blocked some of Bush's
worst judges from the federal bench.
"On all three —
sadly, sadly, sadly — McCain has flip-flopped," Chafee
says. And forget all the "Country First" sloganeering,
he adds. "McCain is putting himself first. He's putting himself
first in blinking neon lights."
THE NAVY BRAT
John Sidney McCain III
has spent most of his life trying to escape the shadow of greater
men. His grandfather Adm. John Sidney "Slew" McCain earned
his four stars commanding a U.S. carrier force in World War II.
His deeply ambitious father, Adm. "Junior" McCain, reached
the same rank, commanding America's forces in the Pacific during
Vietnam.
The youngest McCain was
not cut from the same cloth. Even as a toddler, McCain recalls in
Faith of My Fathers, his volcanic temper was on display. "At
the smallest provocation," he would hold his breath until he
passed out: "I would go off in a mad frenzy, and then, suddenly,
crash to the floor unconscious." His parents cured him of this
habit in a way only a CIA interrogator could appreciate: by dropping
their blue-faced boy in a bathtub of ice-cold water.
Trailing his hard-charging,
hard-drinking father from post to post, McCain didn't play well
with others. Indeed, he concedes, his runty physique inspired a
Napoleon complex: "My small stature motivated me to . . . fight
the first kid who provoked me."
McCain spent his formative
years among the Washington elite. His father — himself deep
in the throes of a daddy complex — had secured a political
post as the Navy's chief liaison to the Senate, a job his son would
later hold, and the McCain home on Southeast 1st Street was a high-powered
pit stop in the Washington cocktail circuit. Growing up, McCain
attended Episcopal High School, an all-white, all-boys boarding
school across the Potomac in Virginia, where tuition today tops
$40,000 a year. There, McCain behaved with all the petulance his
privilege allowed, earning the nicknames "Punk" and "McNasty."
Even his friends seemed to dislike him, with one recalling him as
"a mean little fucker."
McCain was not only a
lousy student, he had his father's taste for drink and a darkly
misogynistic streak. The summer after his sophomore year, cruising
with a friend near Arlington, McCain tried to pick up a pair of
young women. When they laughed at him, he cursed them so vilely
that he was hauled into court on a profanity charge.
McCain's admittance to
Annapolis was preordained by his bloodline. But martial discipline
did not seem to have much of an impact on his character. By his
own account, McCain was a lazy, incurious student; he squeaked by
only by prevailing upon his buddies to help him cram for exams.
He continued to get sauced and treat girls badly. Before meeting
a girlfriend's parents for the first time, McCain got so shitfaced
that he literally crashed through the screen door when he showed
up in his white midshipman's uniform.
His grandfather's name
and his father's forbearance brought McCain a charmed existence
at Annapolis. On his first trip at sea — to Rio de Janeiro
aboard the USS Hunt — the captain was a former student of
his father. While McCain's classmates learned the ins and outs of
the boiler room, McCain got to pilot the ship to South America and
back. In Rio, he hobnobbed with admirals and the president of Brazil.
Back on campus, McCain's
short fuse was legend. "We'd hear this thunderous screaming
and yelling between him and his roommate — doors slamming
— and one of them would go running down the hall," recalls
Phil Butler, who lived across the hall from McCain at the academy.
"It was a regular occurrence."
When McCain was not shown
the pampering to which he was accustomed, he grew petulant —
even abusive. He repeatedly blew up in the face of his commanding
officer. It was the kind of insubordination that would have gotten
any other midshipman kicked out of Annapolis. But his classmates
soon realized that McCain was untouchable. Midway though his final
year, McCain faced expulsion, about to "bilge out" because
of excessive demerits. After his mother intervened, however, the
academy's commandant stepped in. Calling McCain "spoiled"
to his face, he nonetheless issued a reprieve, scaling back the
demerits. McCain dodged expulsion a second time by convincing another
midshipman to take the fall after McCain was caught with contraband.
"He was a huge screw-off,"
recalls Butler. "He was always on probation. The only reason
he graduated was because of his father and his grandfather —
they couldn't exactly get rid of him."
McCain's self-described
"four-year course of insubordination" ended with him graduating
fifth from the bottom — 894th out of a class of 899. It was
a record of mediocrity he would continue as a pilot.
BOTTOM GUN
In the cockpit, McCain
was not a top gun, or even a middling gun. He took little interest
in his flight manuals; he had other priorities.
"I enjoyed the off-duty
life of a Navy flier more than I enjoyed the actual flying,"
McCain writes. "I drove a Corvette, dated a lot, spent all
my free hours at bars and beach parties." McCain chased a lot
of tail. He hit the dog track. Developed a taste for poker and dice.
He picked up models when he could, screwed a stripper when he couldn't.
In the air, the hard-partying
McCain had a knack for stalling out his planes in midflight. He
was still in training, in Texas, when he crashed his first plane
into Corpus Christi Bay during a routine practice landing. The plane
stalled, and McCain was knocked cold on impact. When he came to,
the plane was underwater, and he had to swim to the surface to be
rescued. Some might take such a near-death experience as a wake-up
call: McCain took some painkillers and a nap, and then went out
carousing that night.
Off duty on his Mediterranean
tours, McCain frequented the casinos of Monte Carlo, cultivating
his taste for what he calls the "addictive" game of craps.
McCain's thrill-seeking carried over into his day job. Flying over
the south of Spain one day, he decided to deviate from his flight
plan. Rocketing along mere feet above the ground, his plane sliced
through a power line. His self-described "daredevil clowning"
plunged much of the area into a blackout.
That should have been
the end of McCain's flying career. "In the Navy, if you crashed
one airplane, nine times out of 10 you would lose your wings,"
says Butler, who, like his former classmate, was shot down and taken
prisoner in North Vietnam. Spark "a small international incident"
like McCain had? Any other pilot would have "found themselves
as the deck officer on a destroyer someplace in a hurry," says
Butler.
"But, God, he had
family pull. He was directly related to the CEO — you know?"
McCain was undeterred
by the crashes. Nearly a decade out of the academy, his career adrift,
he decided he wanted to fly combat in Vietnam. His motivation wasn't
to contain communism or put his country first. It was the only way
he could think of to earn the respect of the man he calls his "distant,
inscrutable patriarch." He needed to secure a command post
in the Navy — and to do that, his career needed the jump-start
that only a creditable war record could provide.
As he would so many times
in his career, McCain pulled strings to get ahead. After a game
of tennis, McCain prevailed upon the undersecretary of the Navy
that he was ready for Vietnam, despite his abysmal flight record.
Sure enough, McCain was soon transferred to McCain Field —
an air base in Meridian, Mississippi, named after his grandfather
— to train for a post on the carrier USS Forrestal.
With a close friend at
the base, an alcoholic Marine captain, McCain formed the "Key
Fess Yacht Club," which quickly became infamous for hosting
toga parties in the officers' quarters and bringing bands down from
Memphis to attract loose women to the base. Showing his usual knack
for promotion, McCain rose from "vice commodore" to "commodore"
of the club.
In 1964, while still
at the base, McCain began a serious romance with Carol Shepp, a
vivacious former model who had just divorced one of his classmates
from Annapolis. Commandeering a Navy plane, McCain spent most weekends
flying from Meridian to Philadelphia for their dates. They married
the following summer.
That December, McCain
crashed again. Flying back from Philadelphia, where he had joined
in the reverie of the Army-Navy football game, McCain stalled while
coming in for a refueling stop in Norfolk, Virginia. This time he
managed to bail out at 1,000 feet. As his parachute deployed, his
plane thundered into the trees below.
By now, however, McCain's
flying privileges were virtually irrevocable — and he knew
it. On one of his runs at McCain Field, when ground control put
him in a holding pattern, the lieutenant commander once again pulled
his family's rank. "Let me land," McCain demanded over
his radio, "or I'll take my field and go home!"
TRIAL BY FIRE
Sometimes 3 a.m. moments
occur at 10:52 in the morning.
It was July 29th, 1967,
a hot, gusty morning in the Gulf of Tonkin atop the four-acre flight
deck of the supercarrier USS Forrestal. Perched in the cockpit of
his A-4 Skyhawk, Lt. Cmdr. John McCain ticked nervously through
his preflight checklist.
Now 30 years old, McCain
was trying to live up to his father's expectations, to finally be
known as something other than the fuck-up grandson of one of the
Navy's greatest admirals. That morning, preparing for his sixth
bombing run over North Vietnam, the graying pilot's dreams of combat
glory were beginning to seem within his reach.
Then, in an instant,
the world around McCain erupted in flames. A six-foot-long Zuni
rocket, inexplicably launched by an F-4 Phantom across the flight
deck, ripped through the fuel tank of McCain's aircraft. Hundreds
of gallons of fuel splashed onto the deck and came ablaze. Then:
Clank. Clank. Two 1,000-pound bombs dropped from under the belly
of McCain's stubby A-4, the Navy's "Tinkertoy Bomber,"
into the fire.
McCain, who knew more
than most pilots about bailing out of a crippled aircraft, leapt
forward out of the cockpit, swung himself down from the refueling
probe protruding from the nose cone, rolled through the flames and
ran to safety across the flight deck. Just then, one of his bombs
"cooked off," blowing a crater in the deck and incinerating
the sailors who had rushed past McCain with hoses and fire extinguishers.
McCain was stung by tiny bits of shrapnel in his legs and chest,
but the wounds weren't serious; his father would later report to
friends that Johnny "came through without a scratch."
The damage to the Forrestal
was far more grievous: The explosion set off a chain reaction of
bombs, creating a devastating inferno that would kill 134 of the
carrier's 5,000-man crew, injure 161 and threaten to sink the ship.
These are the moments
that test men's mettle. Where leaders are born. Leaders like . .
. Lt. Cmdr. Herb Hope, pilot of the A-4 three planes down from McCain's.
Cornered by flames at the stern of the carrier, Hope hurled himself
off the flight deck into a safety net and clambered into the hangar
deck below, where the fire was spreading. According to an official
Navy history of the fire, Hope then "gallantly took command
of a firefighting team" that would help contain the conflagration
and ultimately save the ship.
McCain displayed little
of Hope's valor. Although he would soon regale The New York Times
with tales of the heroism of the brave enlisted men who "stayed
to help the pilots fight the fire," McCain took no part in
dousing the flames himself. After going belowdecks and briefly helping
sailors who were frantically trying to unload bombs from an elevator
to the flight deck, McCain retreated to the safety of the "ready
room," where off-duty pilots spent their noncombat hours talking
trash and playing poker. There, McCain watched the conflagration
unfold on the room's closed-circuit television — bearing distant
witness to the valiant self-sacrifice of others who died trying
to save the ship, pushing jets into the sea to keep their bombs
from exploding on deck.
As the ship burned, McCain
took a moment to mourn his misfortune; his combat career appeared
to be going up in smoke. "This distressed me considerably,"
he recalls in Faith of My Fathers. "I feared my ambitions were
among the casualties in the calamity that had claimed the Forrestal."
The fire blazed late
into the night. The following morning, while oxygen-masked rescue
workers toiled to recover bodies from the lower decks, McCain was
making fast friends with R.W. "Johnny" Apple of The New
York Times, who had arrived by helicopter to cover the deadliest
Naval calamity since the Second World War. The son of admiralty
surviving a near-death experience certainly made for good copy,
and McCain colorfully recounted how he had saved his skin. But when
Apple and other reporters left the ship, the story took an even
stranger turn: McCain left with them. As the heroic crew of the
Forrestal mourned its fallen brothers and the broken ship limped
toward the Philippines for repairs, McCain zipped off to Saigon
for what he recalls as "some welcome R&R."
VIOLATING THE
CODE
Ensconced in Apple's
villa in Saigon, McCain and the Times reporter forged a relationship
that would prove critical to the ambitious pilot's career in the
years ahead. Apple effectively became the charter member of McCain's
media "base," an elite corps of admiring reporters who
helped create his reputation for "straight talk."
Sipping scotch and reflecting
on the fire aboard the Forrestal, McCain sounded like the peaceniks
he would pillory after his return from Hanoi. "Now that I've
seen what the bombs and napalm did to the people on our ship,"
he told Apple, "I'm not so sure that I want to drop any more
of that stuff on North Vietnam." Here, it seemed, was a frank-talking
warrior, one willing to speak out against the military establishment
in the name of truth.
But McCain's misgivings
about the righteousness of the fight quickly took a back seat to
his ambitions. Within days, eager to get his combat career back
on track, he put in for a transfer to the carrier USS Oriskany.
Two months after the Forrestal fire — following a holiday
on the French Riviera — McCain reported for duty in the Gulf
of Tonkin.
McCain performed adequately
on the Oriskany. On October 25th, 1967, he bombed a pair of Soviet
MiGs parked on an airfield outside Hanoi. His record was now even.
Enemy planes destroyed by McCain: two. American planes destroyed
by McCain: two.
The next day, McCain
embarked on his fateful 23rd mission, a bombing raid on a power
plant in downtown Hanoi. McCain had cajoled his way onto the strike
force — there were medals up for grabs. The plant had recently
been rebuilt after a previous bombing run that had earned two of
the lead pilots Navy Crosses, one of the force's top honors.
It was a dangerous mission
— taking the planes into the teeth of North Vietnam's fiercest
anti-aircraft defenses. As the planes entered Hanoi airspace, they
were instantly enveloped in dark clouds of flak and surface-to-air
missiles. Still cocky from the previous day's kills, McCain took
the biggest gamble of his life. As he dived in on the target in
his A-4, his surface-to-air missile warning system sounded: A SAM
had a lock on him. "I knew I should roll out and fly evasive
maneuvers," McCain writes. "The A-4 is a small, fast"
aircraft that "can outmaneuver a tracking SAM."
But McCain didn't "jink."
Instead, he stayed on target and let fly his bombs — just
as the SAM blew his wing off.
To watch the Republican
National Convention and listen to Fred Thompson's account of John
McCain's internment in Vietnam, you would think that McCain never
gave his captors anything beyond his name, rank, service number
and, under duress, the names of the Green Bay Packers offensive
line. His time in Hanoi, we're to understand, steeled the man —
transforming him from a fighter jock who put himself first into
a patriot who would henceforth selflessly serve the public good.
There is no question
that McCain suffered hideously in North Vietnam. His ejection over
a lake in downtown Hanoi broke his knee and both his arms. During
his capture, he was bayoneted in the ankle and the groin, and had
his shoulder smashed by a rifle butt. His tormentors dragged McCain's
broken body to a cell and seemed content to let him expire from
his injuries. For the next two years, there were few days that he
was not in agony.
But the subsequent tale
of McCain's mistreatment — and the transformation it is alleged
to have produced — are both deeply flawed. The Code of Conduct
that governed POWs was incredibly rigid; few soldiers lived up to
its dictate that they "give no information . . . which might
be harmful to my comrades." Under the code, POWs are bound
to give only their name, rank, date of birth and service number
— and to make no "statements disloyal to my country."
Soon after McCain hit
the ground in Hanoi, the code went out the window. "I'll give
you military information if you will take me to the hospital,"
he later admitted pleading with his captors. McCain now insists
the offer was a bluff, designed to fool the enemy into giving him
medical treatment. In fact, his wounds were attended to only after
the North Vietnamese discovered that his father was a Navy admiral.
What has never been disclosed is the manner in which they found
out: McCain told them. According to Dramesi, one of the few POWs
who remained silent under years of torture, McCain tried to justify
his behavior while they were still prisoners. "I had to tell
them," he insisted to Dramesi, "or I would have died in
bed."
Dramesi says he has no
desire to dishonor McCain's service, but he believes that celebrating
the downed pilot's behavior as heroic — "he wasn't exceptional
one way or the other" — has a corrosive effect on military
discipline. "This business of my country before my life?"
Dramesi says. "Well, he had that opportunity and failed miserably.
If it really were country first, John McCain would probably be walking
around without one or two arms or legs — or he'd be dead."
Once the Vietnamese realized
they had captured the man they called the "crown prince,"
they had every motivation to keep McCain alive. His value as a propaganda
tool and bargaining chip was far greater than any military intelligence
he could provide, and McCain knew it. "It was hard not to see
how pleased the Vietnamese were to have captured an admiral's son,"
he writes, "and I knew that my father's identity was directly
related to my survival." But during the course of his medical
treatment, McCain followed through on his offer of military information.
Only two weeks after his capture, the North Vietnamese press issued
a report — picked up by The New York Times — in which
McCain was quoted as saying that the war was "moving to the
advantage of North Vietnam and the United States appears to be isolated."
He also provided the name of his ship, the number of raids he had
flown, his squadron number and the target of his final raid.
THE CONFESSION
In the company of his
fellow POWs, and later in isolation, McCain slowly and miserably
recovered from his wounds. In June 1968, after three months in solitary,
he was offered what he calls early release. In the official McCain
narrative, this was the ultimate test of mettle. He could have come
home, but keeping faith with his fellow POWs, he chose to remain
imprisoned in Hanoi.
What McCain glosses over
is that accepting early release would have required him to make
disloyal statements that would have violated the military's Code
of Conduct. If he had done so, he could have risked court-martial
and an ignominious end to his military career. "Many of us
were given this offer," according to Butler, McCain's classmate
who was also taken prisoner. "It meant speaking out against
your country and lying about your treatment to the press. You had
to 'admit' that the U.S. was criminal and that our treatment was
'lenient and humane.' So I, like numerous others, refused the offer."
"He makes it sound
like it was a great thing to have accomplished," says Dramesi.
"A great act of discipline or strength. That simply was not
the case." In fairness, it is difficult to judge McCain's experience
as a POW; throughout most of his incarceration he was the only witness
to his mistreatment. Parts of his memoir recounting his days in
Hanoi read like a bad Ian Fleming novel, with his Vietnamese captors
cast as nefarious Bond villains. On the Fourth of July 1968, when
he rejected the offer of early release, an officer nicknamed "Cat"
got so mad, according to McCain, that he snapped a pen he was holding,
splattering ink across the room.
"They taught you
too well, Mac Kane," Cat snarled, kicking over a chair. "They
taught you too well."
The brutal interrogations
that followed produced results. In August 1968, over the course
of four days, McCain was tortured into signing a confession that
he was a "black criminal" and an "air pirate."
"John allows the
media to make him out to be the hero POW, which he knows is absolutely
not true, to further his political goals," says Butler. "John
was just one of about 600 guys. He was nothing unusual. He was just
another POW."
McCain has also allowed
the media to believe that his torture lasted for the entire time
he was in Hanoi. At the Republican convention, Fred Thompson said
of McCain's torture, "For five and a half years this went on."
In fact, McCain's torture ended after two years, when the death
of Ho Chi Minh in September 1969 caused the Vietnamese to change
the way they treated POWs. "They decided it would be better
to treat us better and keep us alive so they could trade us in for
real estate," Butler recalls.
By that point, McCain
had become the most valuable prisoner of all: His father was now
directing the war effort as commander in chief of all U.S. forces
in the Pacific. McCain spent the next three and a half years in
Hanoi biding his time, trying to put on weight and regain his strength,
as the bombing ordered by his father escalated. By the time he and
other POWs were freed in March 1973 as a result of the Paris Peace
Accords, McCain was able to leave the prison camp in Hanoi on his
own feet.
Even those in the military
who celebrate McCain's patriotism and sacrifice question why his
POW experience has been elevated as his top qualification to be
commander in chief. "It took guts to go through that and to
come out reasonably intact and able to pick up the pieces of your
life and move on," says Wilkerson, Colin Powell's former chief
of staff, who has known McCain since the 1980s. "It is unquestionably
a demonstration of the character of the man. But I don't think that
it is a special qualification for being president of the United
States. In some respects, I'm not sure that's the kind of character
I want sitting in the Oval Office. I'm not sure that much time in
a prisoner-of-war status doesn't do something to you. Doesn't do
something to you psychologically, doesn't do something to you that
might make you a little more volatile, a little less apt to listen
to reason, a little more inclined to be volcanic in your temperament."
"A BELLICOSE
HAWK"
The reckless, womanizing
hotshot who leaned on family connections for advancement before
his capture in Vietnam emerged a reckless, womanizing celebrity
who continued to pull strings. The real difference between the McCain
of 1967 and the McCain of 1973 was that the latter's ambition was
now on overdrive. He wanted to study at the National War College
— but military brass turned him down as underqualified. So
McCain appealed the decision to the top: John Warner, the Secretary
of the Navy and a friend of his father. Warner, who now serves in
the Senate alongside McCain, overruled the brass and gave the POW
a slot. McCain also got his wings back, even though his injuries
prevented him from raising his hands above shoulder height to comb
his own hair.
McCain was eager to make
up for lost time — and the times were favorable to a high-profile
veteran willing to speak out in favor of the war. With the Senate
moving to cut off funds for the Nixon administration's illegal bombing
of Cambodia, the president needed all the help he could get. Two
months after his release, McCain related his harrowing story of
survival in a 13-page narrative in U.S. News & World Report,
at the end of which he launched into an energetic defense of Nixon's
discredited foreign policy. "I admire President Nixon's courage,"
he wrote. "It is difficult for me to understand . . . why people
are still criticizing his foreign policy — for example, the
bombing in Cambodia."
In the years to come,
McCain would continue to fight the war his father had lost. In his
meetings with Nixon, Junior was known for chomping on an unlit cigar,
complaining about the "goddamn gooks" and pushing to bomb
enemy sanctuaries in Cambodia. His son was equally gung-ho. "John
has always been a very bellicose hawk," says John H. Johns,
a retired brigadier general who studied with McCain at the War College.
"When he came back from Vietnam, he accused the liberal media
of undermining national will, that we could have won in Vietnam
if we had the national will."
It was the kind of tough
talk that made McCain a fast-rising star in far-right circles. Through
Ross Perot, a friend of Ronald Reagan who had championed the cause
of the POWs, McCain was invited to meet with the then-governor of
California and his wife. Impressed, Reagan invited McCain to be
the keynote speaker at his annual "prayer breakfast" in
Sacramento.
Then, at the end of 1974,
McCain finally achieved the goal he had been working toward for
years. He was installed as the commanding officer of the largest
air squadron in the Navy — the Replacement Air Group based
in Jacksonville, Florida — training carrier pilots. It was
a post for which McCain flatly admits, "I was not qualified."
By now, however, he was unembarrassed by his own nepotism. At the
ceremony commemorating his long-sought ascension to command, his
father looking on with pride, McCain wept openly.
BOOZE AND PORK
If heroism is defined
by physical suffering, Carol McCain is every bit her ex-husband's
equal. Driving alone on Christmas Eve 1969, she skidded out on a
patch of ice and crashed into a telephone pole. She would spend
six months in the hospital and undergo 23 surgeries. The former
model McCain bragged of to his buddies in the POW camp as his "long
tall Sally" was now five inches shorter and walked with crutches.
By any standard, McCain
treated her contemptibly. Whatever his dreams of getting laid in
Rio, he got plenty of ass during his command post in Jacksonville.
According to biographer Robert Timberg, McCain seduced his conquests
on off-duty cross-country flights — even though adultery is
a court-martial offense. He was also rumored to be romantically
involved with a number of his subordinates.
In 1977, McCain was promoted
to captain and became the Navy's liaison to the Senate — the
same politically connected post once occupied by his father. He
took advantage of the position to buddy up to young senators like
Gary Hart, William Cohen and Joe Biden. He was also taken under
the wing of another friend of his father: Sen. John Tower, the powerful
Texas Republican who would become his political mentor. Despite
the promotion, McCain continued his adolescent carousing: On a diplomatic
trip to Saudi Arabia with Tower, he tried to get some tourists he
disliked in trouble with the authorities by littering the room-service
trays outside their door with empty bottles of alcohol.
As the Navy's top lobbyist,
McCain was supposed to carry out the bidding of the secretary of
the Navy. But in 1978 he went off the reservation. Vietnam was over,
and the Carter administration, cutting costs, had decided against
spending $2 billion to replace the aging carrier Midway. The secretary
agreed with the administration's decision. Readiness would not be
affected. The only reason to replace the carrier — at a cost
of nearly $7 billion in today's dollars — was pork-barrel
politics.
Although he now crusades
against wasteful military spending, McCain had no qualms about secretly
lobbying for a pork project that would pay for a dozen Bridges to
Nowhere. "He did a lot of stuff behind the back of the secretary
of the Navy," one lobbyist told Timberg. Working his Senate
connections, McCain managed to include a replacement for the Midway
in the defense authorization bill in 1978. Carter, standing firm,
vetoed the entire spending bill to kill the carrier. When an attempt
to override the veto fell through, however, McCain and his lobbyist
friends didn't give up the fight. The following year, Congress once
again approved funding for the carrier. This time, Carter —
his pork-busting efforts undone by a turncoat Navy liaison —
signed the bill.
In the spring of 1979,
while conducting official business for the Navy, the still-married
McCain encountered Cindy Lou Hensley, a willowy former cheerleader
for USC. Mutually smitten, the two lied to each other about their
ages. The 24-year-old Hensley became 27; the 42-year-old McCain
became 38. For nearly a year the two carried on a cross-country
romance while McCain was still living with Carol: Court documents
filed with their divorce proceeding indicate that they "cohabitated
as husband and wife" for the first nine months of the affair.
Although McCain stresses
in his memoir that he married Cindy three months after divorcing
Carol, he was still legally married to his first wife when he and
Cindy were issued a marriage license from the state of Arizona.
The divorce was finalized on April 2nd, 1980. McCain's second marriage
— rung in at the Arizona Biltmore with Gary Hart as a groomsman
— was consummated only six weeks later, on May 17th. The union
gave McCain access to great wealth: Cindy, whose father was the
exclusive distributor for Budweiser in the Phoenix area, is now
worth an estimated $100 million.
McCain's friends were
blindsided by the divorce. The Reagans — with whom the couple
had frequently dined and even accompanied on New Year's holidays
— never forgave him. By the time McCain became a self-proclaimed
"foot soldier in the Reagan Revolution" two years later,
he and the Gipper had little more than ideology to bind them. Nancy
took Carol under her wing, giving her a job in the White House and
treating McCain with a frosty formality that was evident even on
the day last March when she endorsed his candidacy. "Ronnie
and I always waited until everything was decided and then we endorsed,"
she said. "Well, obviously, this is the nominee of the party."
THE CARPETBAGGER
As his marriage unraveled,
McCain's naval career was also stalling out. He had been passed
over for a promotion. There was no sea command on the horizon, ensuring
that he would never be able to join his four-star forefathers. For
good measure, he crashed his third and final plane, this one a single-engine
ultralight. McCain has never spoken of his last crash publicly,
but his friend Gen. Jim Jones recalled in a 1999 interview that
it left McCain with bandages on his face and one arm in a sling.
So McCain turned to politics.
Receiving advance word that a GOP congressional seat was opening
up outside Phoenix, he put the inside edge to good use. Within minutes
of the incumbent's official retirement announcement, Cindy McCain
bought her husband the house that would serve as his foothold in
the district. In sharp contrast to the way he now markets himself,
McCain's campaign ads billed him as an insider — a man "who
knows how Washington works." Though the Reagans no longer respected
him, McCain featured pictures of himself smiling with them.
"Thanks to my prisoner-of-war
experience," McCain writes, "I had, as they say in politics,
a good story to sell." And sell it he did. "Listen, pal,"
he told an opponent who challenged him during a candidate forum.
"I wish I could have had the luxury, like you, of growing up
and living and spending my entire life in a nice place like the
first district of Arizona, but I was doing other things. As a matter
of fact, when I think about it now, the place I lived the longest
in my life was Hanoi."
To finance his campaign,
McCain dipped into the Hensley family fortune. He secured an endorsement
from his mentor, Sen. Tower, who tapped his vast donor network in
Texas to give McCain a much-needed boost. And he began an unethical
relationship with a high-flying and corrupt financier that would
come to characterize his cozy dealings with major donors and lobbyists
over the years.
Charlie Keating, the
banker and anti-pornography crusader, would ultimately be convicted
on 73 counts of fraud and racketeering for his role in the savings-and-loan
scandal of the 1980s. That crisis, much like today's subprime-mortgage
meltdown, resulted from misbegotten banking deregulation, and ultimately
left taxpayers to pick up a tab of more than $124 billion. Keating,
who raised more than $100,000 for McCain's race, lavished the first-term
congressman with the kind of political favors that would make Jack
Abramoff blush. McCain and his family took at least nine free trips
at Keating's expense, and vacationed nearly every year at the mogul's
estate in the Bahamas. There they would spend the days yachting
and snorkeling and attending extravagant parties in a world McCain
referred to as "Charlie Keating's Shangri-La." Keating
also invited Cindy McCain and her father to invest in a real estate
venture for which he promised a 26 percent return on investment.
They plunked down more than $350,000.
McCain still attributes
the attention to nothing more than Keating's "great respect
for military people" and the duo's "political and personal
affinity." But Keating, for his part, made no bones about the
purpose of his giving. When asked by reporters if the investments
he made in politicians bought their loyalty and influence on his
behalf, Keating replied, "I want to say in the most forceful
way I can, I certainly hope so."
THE KEATING FIVE
In congress, Rep. John
McCain quickly positioned himself as a GOP hard-liner. He voted
against honoring Martin Luther King Jr. with a national holiday
in 1983 — a stance he held through 1989. He backed Reagan
on tax cuts for the wealthy, abortion and support for the Nicaraguan
contras. He sought to slash federal spending on social programs,
and he voted twice against campaign-finance reform. He cites as
his "biggest" legislative victory of that era a 1989 bill
that abolished catastrophic health insurance for seniors, a move
he still cheers as the first-ever repeal of a federal entitlement
program.
McCain voted to confirm
Robert Bork and Clarence Thomas to the Supreme Court. In 1993, he
was the keynote speaker at a fundraiser for a group that sponsored
an anti-gay-rights ballot initiative in Oregon. His anti-government
fervor was renewed in the Gingrich revolution of 1994, when he called
for abolishing the departments of Education and Energy. The following
year, he championed a sweeping measure that would have imposed a
blanket moratorium on any increase of government oversight.
In this context, McCain's
recent record — opposing the new GI Bill, voting to repeal
the federal minimum wage, seeking to deprive 3.8 million kids of
government health care — looks entirely consistent. "When
jackasses like Rush Limbaugh say he's not conservative, that's just
total nonsense," says former Sen. Gary Hart, who still counts
McCain as a friend.
Although a hawkish Cold
Warrior, McCain did show an independent streak when it came to the
use of American military power. Because of his experience in Vietnam,
he said, he didn't favor the deployment of U.S. forces unless there
was a clear and attainable military objective. In 1983, McCain broke
with Reagan to vote against the deployment of Marine peacekeepers
to Lebanon. The unorthodox stance caught the attention of the media
— including this very magazine, which praised McCain's "enormous
courage." It was the beginning of a beautiful friendship. McCain
recognized early on how the game was played: The Washington press
corps "tend to notice acts of political independence from unexpected
quarters," he later noted. "Now I was debating Lebanon
on programs like MacNeil/Lehrer NewsHour and in the pages of The
New York Times and The Washington Post. I was gratified by the attention
and eager for more."
When McCain became a
senator in 1986, filling the seat of retiring Republican icon Barry
Goldwater, he was finally in a position that a true maverick could
use to battle the entrenched interests in Washington. Instead, McCain
did the bidding of his major donor, Charlie Keating, whose financial
empire was on the brink of collapse. Federal regulators were closing
in on Keating, who had taken federally insured deposits from his
Lincoln Savings and Loan and leveraged them to make wildly risky
real estate ventures. If regulators restricted his investments,
Keating knew, it would all be over.
In the year before his
Senate run, McCain had championed legislation that would have delayed
new regulations of savings and loans. Grateful, Keating contributed
$54,000 to McCain's Senate campaign. Now, when Keating tried to
stack the federal regulatory bank board with cronies, McCain made
a phone call seeking to push them through. In 1987, in an unprecedented
display of political intimidation, McCain also attended two meetings
convened by Keating to pressure federal regulators to back off.
The senators who participated in the effort would come to be known
as the Keating Five.
"Senate historians
were unable to find any instance in U.S. history that was comparable,
in terms of five U.S. senators meeting with a regulator on behalf
of one institution," says Bill Black, then deputy director
of the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation, who attended
the second meeting. "And it hasn't happened since."
Following the meetings
with McCain and the other senators, the regulators backed off, stalling
their investigation of Lincoln. By the time the S&L collapsed
two years later, taxpayers were on the hook for $3.4 billion, which
stood as a record for the most expensive bank failure — until
the current mortgage crisis. In addition, 20,000 investors who had
bought junk bonds from Keating, thinking they were federally insured,
had their savings wiped out.
"McCain saw the
political pressure on the regulators," recalls Black. "He
could have saved these widows from losing their life savings. But
he did absolutely nothing."
McCain was ultimately
given a slap on the wrist by the Senate Ethics Committee, which
concluded only that he had exercised "poor judgment."
The committee never investigated Cindy's investment with Keating.
The McCains soon found
themselves entangled in more legal trouble. In 1989, in behavior
thecouple has blamed in part on the stress of the Keating scandal,
Cindy became addicted to Vicodin and Percocet. She directed a doctor
employed by her charity — which provided medical care to patients
in developing countries — to supply the narcotics, which she
then used to get high on trips to places like Bangladesh and El
Salvador.
Tom Gosinski, a young
Republican, kept a detailed journal while working as director of
government affairs for the charity. "I am working for a very
sad, lonely woman whose marriage of convenience to a U.S. senator
has driven her to . . . cover feelings of despair with drugs,"
he wrote in 1992. When Cindy McCain suddenly fired Gosinski, he
turned his journal over to the Drug Enforcement Administration,
sparking a yearlong investigation. To avoid jail time, Cindy agreed
to a hush-hush plea bargain and court-imposed rehab.Ironically,
her drug addiction became public only because she and her husband
tried to cover it up. In an effort to silence Gosinski, who was
seeking $250,000 for wrongful termination, the attorney for the
McCains demanded that Phoenix prosecutors investigate the former
employee for extortion. The charge was baseless, and prosecutors
dropped the investigation in 1994 — but not before publishing
a report that included details of Cindy's drug use.
Notified that the report
was being released, Sen. McCain leapt into action. He dispatched
his top political consultant to round up a group of friendly reporters,
for whom Cindy staged a seemingly selfless, Oprah-style confession
of her past addiction. Her drug use became part of the couple's
narrative of straight talk and bravery in the face of adversity.
"If what I say can help just one person to face the problem,"
Cindy declared, "it's worthwhile."
FAVORS FOR DONORS
In the aftermath of the
Keating Five, McCain realized that his career was in a "hell
of a mess." He had made George H.W. Bush's shortlist for vice
president in 1988, but the Keating scandal made him a political
untouchable. McCain needed a high horse — so his long-standing
opposition to campaign-finance reform went out the window. Working
with Russ Feingold, a Democrat from Wisconsin, McCain authored a
measure to ban unlimited "soft money" donations from politics.
The Keating affair also
taught McCain a vital lesson about handling the media. When the
scandal first broke, he went ballistic on reporters who questioned
his wife's financial ties to Keating — calling them "liars"
and "idiots." Predictably, the press coverage was merciless.
So McCain dialed back the anger and turned up the charm. "I
talked to the press constantly, ad infinitum, until their appetite
for information from me was completely satisfied," he later
wrote. "It is a public relations strategy that I have followed
to this day." Mr. Straight Talk was born.
Unfortunately, any lessons
McCain learned from the Keating scandal didn't affect his unbridled
enthusiasm for deregulating the finance industry. "He continues
to follow policies that create the same kind of environment we see
today, with recurrent financial crises and epidemics of fraud led
by CEOs," says Black, the former S&L regulator. Indeed,
if the current financial crisis has a villain, it is Phil Gramm,
who remains close to McCain. As chair of the Senate Banking Committee
in the late 1990s, Gramm ushered in — with McCain's fervent
support — a massive wave of deregulation for insurance companies
and brokerage houses and banks, the aftershocks of which are just
now being felt in Wall Street's catastrophic collapse. McCain, who
has admitted that "the issue of economics is not something
I've understood as well as I should," relies on Gramm to guide
him.
McCain also did his part
to loosen regulations on big corporations. In 1997, McCain became
chairman of the powerful Senate Commerce Committee, which oversees
the insurance and telecommunications industries, as well as the
CEO pay packages of those McCain now denounces as "fat cats."
The special interests with business before the committee were big
and well-heeled. All told, executives and fundraisers associated
with these firms donated $2.6 million to McCain when he served as
the chairman or ranking member.
The money bought influence.
In 1998, employees of BellSouth contributed more than $16,000 to
McCain. The senator returned the favor, asking the Federal Communications
Commission to give "serious consideration" to the company's
request to become a long-distance carrier. Days after legislation
benefiting the satellite-TV carrier EchoStar cleared McCain's committee,
the company's founder celebrated by hosting a major fundraiser for
McCain's presidential bid.
Whatever McCain's romantic
entanglements with the lobbyist Vicki Iseman, he was clearly in
bed with her clients, who donated nearly $85,000 to his campaigns.
One of her clients, Bud Paxson, set up a meeting with McCain in
1999, frustrated by the FCC's delay of his proposed takeover of
a television station in Pittsburgh. Paxson had treated McCain well,
offering the then-presidential candidate use of his corporate jet
to fly to campaign events and ponying up $20,000 in campaign donations.
"You're the head
of the commerce committee," Paxson told McCain, according to
The Washington Post. "The FCC is not doing its job. I would
love for you to write a letter."
Iseman helped draft the
text, and McCain sent the letter. Several weeks later — the
day after McCain used Paxson's jet to fly to Florida for a fundraiser
— McCain wrote another letter. FCC chair William Kennard sent
a sharp rebuke to McCain, calling the senator's meddling "highly
unusual." Nonetheless, within a week of McCain's second letter,
the FCC ruled three-to-two in favor of Paxson's deal.
Following his failed
presidential bid in 2000, McCain needed a vehicle to keep his brand
alive. He founded the Reform Institute, which he set up as a 501(c)(3)
nonprofit — a tax status that barred it from explicit political
activity. McCain proceeded to staff the institute with his campaign
manager, Rick Davis, as well as the fundraising chief, legal counsel
and communications chief from his 2000 campaign.
There is no small irony
that the Reform Institute — founded to bolster McCain's crusade
to rid politics of unregulated soft money — itself took in
huge sums of unregulated soft money from companies with interests
before McCain's committee. EchoStar got in on the ground floor with
a donation of $100,000. A charity funded by the CEO of Univision
gave another $100,000. Cablevision gave $200,000 to the Reform Institute
in 2003 and 2004 — just as its officials were testifying before
the commerce committee. McCain urged approval of the cable company's
proposed pricing plan. As Bradley Smith, the former chair of the
Federal Election Commission, wrote at the time: "Appearance
of corruption, anyone?"
"HE IS HOTHEADED"
Over the years, John
McCain has demonstrated a streak of anger so nasty that even his
former flacks make no effort to spin it away. "If I tried to
convince you he does not have a temper, you should hang up on me
and ridicule me in print," says Dan Schnur, who served as McCain's
press man during the 2000 campaign. Even McCain admits to an "immature
and unprofessional reaction to slights" that is "little
changed from the reactions to such provocations I had as a schoolboy."
McCain is sensitive about
his physical appearance, especially his height. The candidate is
only five-feet-nine, making him the shortest party nominee since
Michael Dukakis. On the night he was elected senator in 1986, McCain
exploded after discovering that the stage setup for his victory
speech was too low; television viewers saw his head bobbing at the
bottom of the screen, his chin frequently cropped from view. Enraged,
McCain tracked down the young Republican who had set up the podium,
prodding the volunteer in the chest while screaming that he was
an "incompetent little shit." Jon Hinz, the director of
the Arizona GOP, separated the senator from the young man, promising
to get him a milk crate to stand on for his next public appearance.
During his 1992 campaign,
at the end of a long day, McCain's wife, Cindy, mussed his receding
hair and needled him playfully that he was "getting a little
thin up there." McCain reportedly blew his top, cutting his
wife down with the kind of language that had gotten him hauled into
court as a high schooler: "At least I don't plaster on the
makeup like a trollop, you cunt." Even though the incident
was witnessed by three reporters, the McCain campaign denies it
took place.
In the Senate —
where, according to former GOP Sen. Bob Smith, McCain has "very
few friends" — his volcanic temper has repeatedly led
to explosive altercations with colleagues and constituents alike.
In 1992, McCain got into a heated exchange with Sen. Chuck Grassley
over the fate of missing American servicemen in Vietnam. "Are
you calling me stupid?" Grassley demanded. "No, I'm calling
you a fucking jerk!" yelled McCain. Sen. Bob Kerrey later told
reporters that he feared McCain was "going to head-butt Grassley
and drive the cartilage in his nose into his brain." The two
were separated before they came to blows. Several years later, during
another debate over servicemen missing in action, an elderly mother
of an MIA soldier rolled up to McCain in her wheelchair to speak
to him about her son's case. According to witnesses, McCain grew
enraged, raising his hand as if to strike her before pushing her
wheelchair away.
McCain has called Paul
Weyrich, who helped steer the Republican Party to the right, a "pompous
self-serving son of a bitch" who "possesses the attributes
of a Dickensian villain." In 1999, he told Sen. Pete Domenici,
the Republican chairman of the Senate Budget Committee, that "only
an asshole would put together a budget like this."
Last year, after barging
into a bipartisan meeting on immigration legislation and attempting
to seize the reins, McCain was called out by fellow GOP Sen. John
Cornyn of Texas. "Wait a second here," Cornyn said. "I've
been sitting in here for all of these negotiations and you just
parachute in here on the last day. You're out of line." McCain
exploded: "Fuck you! I know more about this than anyone in
the room." The incident foreshadowed McCain's 11th-hour theatrics
in September, when he abruptly "suspended" his campaign
and inserted himself into the Wall Street bailout debate at the
last minute, just as congressional leaders were attempting to finalize
a bipartisan agreement.
At least three of McCain's
GOP colleagues have gone on record to say that they consider him
temperamentally unsuited to be commander in chief. Smith, the former
senator from New Hampshire, has said that McCain's "temper
would place this country at risk in international affairs, and the
world perhaps in danger. In my mind, it should disqualify him."
Sen. Domenici of New Mexico has said he doesn't "want this
guy anywhere near a trigger." And Sen. Thad Cochran of Mississippi
weighed in that "the thought of his being president sends a
cold chill down my spine. He is erratic. He is hotheaded."
McCain's frequently inappropriate
humor has also led many to question his self-control. In 1998, the
senator told a joke about President Clinton's teenage daughter at
a GOP fundraiser. "Why is Chelsea Clinton so ugly?" McCain
asked. "Because her father is Janet Reno!"
More recently, McCain's
jokes have heightened tensions with Iran. The senator once cautioned
that "the world's only superpower . . . should never make idle
threats" — but that didn't stop him from rewriting the
lyrics to a famous Beach Boys tune. In April 2007, when a voter
at a town-hall session asked him about his policy toward Tehran,
McCain responded by singing, "bomb bomb bomb" Iran. The
loose talk was meant to incite the GOP base, but it also aggravated
relations with Iran, whose foreign minister condemned McCain's "jokes
about genocide" as a testament to his "disturbed state
of mind" and "warmongering approach to foreign policy."
"NEXT UP,
BAGHDAD!"
The myth of John McCain
hinges on two transformations — from pampered flyboy to selfless
patriot, and from Keating crony to incorruptible reformer —
that simply never happened. But there is one serious conversion
that has taken root in McCain: his transformation from a cautious
realist on foreign policy into a reckless cheerleader of neoconservatism.
"He's going to be
Bush on steroids," says Johns, the retired brigadier general
who has known McCain since their days at the National War College.
"His hawkish views now are very dangerous. He puts military
at the top of foreign policy rather than diplomacy, just like George
Bush does. He and other neoconservatives are dedicated to converting
the world to democracy and free markets, and they want to do it
through the barrel of a gun."
McCain used to believe
passionately in the limits of American military power. In 1993,
he railed against Clinton's involvement in Somalia, sponsoring an
amendment to cut off funds for the troops. The following year he
blasted the idealistic aims of sending U.S. troops to Haiti, taking
to the Senate floor to propose an immediate withdrawal. He even
started out a fierce opponent of NATO air strikes on Serbia during
the war in the Balkans.
But such concerns went
out the window when McCain began gearing up to run for president.
In 1998, he formed a political alliance with William Kristol, editor
of the neoconservative Weekly Standard, who became one of his closest
advisers. Randy Scheunemann — a hard-right lobbyist who was
promoting Iraqi exile Ahmad Chalabi — came aboard as McCain's
top foreign-policy adviser. Before long, the senator who once cautioned
against "trading American blood for Iraqi blood" had been
reborn as a fire-breathing neoconservative who believes in using
American military might to spread American ideals — a belief
he describes as a "sacred duty to suffer hardship and risk
danger to protect the values of our civilization and impart them
to humanity." By 1999, McCain was championing what he called
"rogue state rollback." First on the hit list: Iraq.
Privately, McCain brags
that he was the "original neocon." And after 9/11, he
took the lead in agitating for war with Iraq, outpacing even Dick
Cheney in the dissemination of bogus intelligence about the threat
posed by Saddam Hussein. "There's other organizations besides
Mr. bin Laden who are bent on the destruction of the United States,"
he warned in an appearance on Hardball on September 12th. "It
isn't just Afghanistan. We're talking about Syria, Iraq, Iran, perhaps
North Korea, Libya and others." A few days later, he told Jay
Leno's audience that "some other countries" — possibly
Iraq, Iran and Syria — had aided bin Laden.
A month after 9/11, with
the U.S. bombing Kabul and reeling from the anthrax scare, McCain
assured David Letterman that "we'll do fine" in Afghanistan.
He then added, unbidden, "The second phase is Iraq. Some of
this anthrax may — and I emphasize may — have come from
Iraq."
Later that month on Larry
King, McCain raised the specter of Saddam's weapons of mass destruction
before he peddled what became Dick Cheney's favorite lie: "The
Czech government has revealed meetings, contacts between Iraqi intelligence
and Mohamed Atta. The evidence is very clear. . . . So we will have
to act." On Nightline, he again flogged the Czech story and
cited Iraqi defectors to claim that "there is no doubt as to
[Saddam's] avid pursuit of weapons of mass destruction and the means
to deliver them. That, coupled with his relations with terrorist
organizations, I think, is a case that the administration will be
making as we move step by step down this road."
That December, just as
U.S. forces were bearing down on Osama bin Laden in Tora Bora, McCain
joined with five senators in an open letter to the White House.
"In the interest of our own national security, Saddam Hussein
must be removed from power," they insisted, claiming that there
was "no doubt" that Hussein intended to use weapons of
mass destruction "against the United States and its allies."
In January 2002, McCain
made a fact-finding mission to the Middle East. While he was there,
he dropped by a supercarrier stationed in the Arabian Sea that was
dear to his heart: the USS Theodore Roosevelt, the giant floating
pork project that he had driven through over President Carter's
veto. On board the carrier, McCain called Iraq a "clear and
present danger to the security of the United States of America."
Standing on the flight bridge, he watched as fighter planes roared
off, en route to Afghanistan — where Osama bin Laden had already
slipped away. "Next up, Baghdad!" McCain whooped.
Over the next 15 months
leading up to the invasion, McCain continued to lead the rush to
war. In November 2002, Scheunemann set up a group called the Committee
for the Liberation of Iraq at the same address as Chalabi's Iraqi
National Congress. The groups worked in such close concert that
at one point they got their Websites crossed. The CLI was established
with explicit White House backing to sell the public on the war.
The honorary co-chair of the committee: John Sidney McCain III.
In September 2002, McCain
assured Americans that the war would be "fairly easy"
with an "overwhelming victory in a very short period of time."
On the eve of the invasion, Hardball host Chris Matthews asked McCain,
"Are you one of those who holds up an optimistic view of the
postwar scene? Do you believe that the people of Iraq, or at least
a large number of them, will treat us as liberators?"
McCain was emphatic:
"Absolutely. Absolutely."
Today, however, McCain
insists that he predicted a protracted struggle from the outset.
"The American people were led to believe this could be some
kind of day at the beach," he said in August 2006, "which
many of us fully understood from the beginning would be a very,
very difficult undertaking." McCain also claims he urged Bush
to dump Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld. "I'm the only one
that said that Rumsfeld had to go," he said in a January primary
debate. Except that he didn't. Not once. As late as May 2004, in
fact, McCain praised Rumsfeld for doing "a fine job."
Indeed, McCain's neocon
makeover is so extreme that Republican generals like Colin Powell
and Brent Scowcroft have refused to endorse their party's nominee.
"The fact of the matter is his judgment about what to do in
Iraq was wrong," says Richard Clarke, who served as Bush's
counterterrorism czar until 2003. "He hung out with people
like Ahmad Chalabi. He said Iraq was going to be easy, and he said
we were going to war because of terrorism. We should have been fighting
in Afghanistan with more troops to go after Al Qaeda. Instead we're
at risk because of the mistaken judgment of people like John McCain."
MR. FLIP-FLOP
In the end, the essential
facts of John McCain's life and career — the pivotal experiences
in which he demonstrated his true character — are important
because of what they tell us about how he would govern as president.
Far from the portrayal he presents of himself as an unflinching
maverick with a consistent and reliable record, McCain has demonstrated
an unwavering commitment to taking whatever position will advance
his own career. He "is the classic opportunist," according
to Ross Perot, who worked closely with McCain on POW issues. "He's
always reaching for attention and glory."
McCain has worked hard
to deny such charges. "They're drinking the Kool-Aid that somehow
I have changed positions on the issues," he said of his critics
at the end of August. The following month, when challenged on The
View, McCain again defied those who accuse him of flip-flopping.
"What specific area have I quote 'changed'?" he demanded.
"Nobody can name it."
In fact, his own statements
show that he has been on both sides of a host of vital issues: the
Bush tax cuts, the estate tax, waterboarding, hunting down terrorists
in Pakistan, kicking Russia out of the G-8, a surge of troops into
Afghanistan, the GI Bill, storing nuclear waste at Yucca Mountain,
teaching intelligent design, fully funding No Child Left Behind,
offshore drilling, his own immigration policy and withdrawal timelines
for Iraq.
In March, McCain insisted
to The Wall Street Journal that he is "always for less regulation."
In September, with the government forced to bail out the nation's
largest insurance companies and brokerage houses, McCain declared
that he would regulate the financial industry and end the "casino
culture on Wall Street." He did a similar about-face on Bush's
tax cuts, opposing them when he planned to run against Bush in 2001,
then declaring that he wants to make them larger — and permanent
— when he needed to win the support of anti-tax conservatives
this year. "It's a big flip-flop," conceded tax abolitionist
Grover Norquist. "But I'm happy he's flopped."
In June of this year,
McCain reversed his decades-long opposition to coastal drilling
— shortly before cashing $28,500 from 13 donors linked to
Hess Oil. And the senator, who only a decade ago tried to ban registered
lobbyists from working on political campaigns, now deploys 170 lobbyists
in key positions as fundraisers and advisers.
Then there's torture
— the issue most related to McCain's own experience as a POW.
In 2005, in a highly public fight, McCain battled the president
to stop the torture of enemy combatants, winning a victory to require
military personnel to abide by the Army Field Manual when interrogating
prisoners. But barely a year later, as he prepared to launch his
presidential campaign, McCain cut a deal with the White House that
allows the Bush administration to imprison detainees indefinitely
and to flout the Geneva Conventions' prohibitions against torture.
What his former allies
in the anti-torture fight found most troubling was that McCain would
not admit to his betrayal. Shortly after cutting the deal, McCain
spoke to a group of retired military brass who had been working
to ban torture. According to Wilkerson, Colin Powell's former deputy,
McCain feigned outrage at Bush and Cheney, as though he too had
had the rug pulled out from under him. "We all knew the opposite
was the truth," recalls Wilkerson. "That's when I began
to lose a little bit of my respect for the man and his bona fides
as a straight shooter."
But perhaps the most
revealing of McCain's flip-flops was his promise, made at the beginning
of the year, that he would "raise the level of political dialogue
in America." McCain pledged he would "treat my opponents
with respect and demand that they treat me with respect." Instead,
with Rove protégé Steve Schmidt at the helm, McCain
has turned the campaign into a torrent of debasing negativity, misrepresenting
Barack Obama's positions on everything from sex education for kindergarteners
to middle-class taxes. In September, in one of his most blatant
embraces of Rove-like tactics, McCain hired Tucker Eskew —
one of Rove's campaign operatives who smeared the senator and his
family during the 2000 campaign in South Carolina.
Throughout the campaign
this year, McCain has tried to make the contest about honor and
character. His own writing gives us the standard by which he should
be judged. "Always telling the truth in a political campaign,"
he writes in Worth the Fighting For, "is a great test of character."
He adds: "Patriotism that only serves and never risks one's
self-interest isn't patriotism at all. It's selfishness. That's
a lesson worth relearning from time to time." It's a lesson,
it would appear, that the candidate himself could stand to relearn.
"I'm sure John McCain
loves his country," says Richard Clarke, the former counterterrorism
czar under Bush. "But loving your country and lying to the
American people are apparently not inconsistent in his view."