July 18, 2008
McCain declares Mission Accomplished in Iraq
McCain didn't cite any specific developments
John McCain claimed victory in Iraq Thursday, saying that the U.S. military has "succeeded."
McCain is claiming that the troop "surge" has been achieved.
The shocking statement comes as Barack Obama prepares to travel to Iraq for the first time as a presidential candidate and to Afghanistan for the first time ever.
"I am happy to stand in front of you to tell you that this strategy has succeeded. It has succeeded. It has succeeded," McCain said first at a Kansas City, Mo., town hall meeting.
Aboard his campaign bus, McCain said "I repeat my statement that we have succeeded in Iraq - not we are succeeding - we have succeeded in Iraq," he said. "The strategy has worked and we now have the Iraqi government and military in charge in the major cities in Iraq. Al Qaeda is on their heels and on the run," McCain said.
He added that progress on the ground is still tenuous.
"The success that we have achieved is still fragile and could be reversed, and it's still - if we do what Senator Obama wants to do, then all of that could be reversed and we could face again the chaos, increased Iranian influence and American loss and defeat," he added, noting that he hopes his Democratic rival comes around to his view during his visit to the war zone.
Obama has in recent days argued that the Iraq war is a distraction, and that more U.S. resources must be devoted to fighting terrorists in Afghanistan and securing loose nuclear material. Democrats accuse McCain of wanting to prolong a war with virtually no end.
At a second press conference called to clarify conflicting messages in the campaign about its view of Obama's trip overseas, McCain elaborated again on his declaration of success.
"We have succeeded in Iraq. We have succeeded and if we continue the strategy we will win the war," he said. "This is a fragile victory. This is a fragile success. . If we will continue this, we will win this war."
Asked whether any recent event led him to the declaration, McCain didn't cite any specific developments, instead noting that he has witnessed "dramatic" military, economic and political improvement on the ground during recent weeks and months.
Asked if he thinks the war is won, McCain responded: "I can say that the war will be won when we will have a majority of Americans ... returned."
© Mark Will - NewsGirl.Org
|