McCain Invokes POW Days to Repel Attacks, Court Votes (Update1)
By Edwin Chen
May 20 (Bloomberg) -- Whether he's deflecting criticism over
his health-care plan or mocking a tribute to the Woodstock music
festival, Senator John McCain has a trump card: the Hanoi Hilton.
That's the nickname for the site where he spent 5 1/2 years
as a prisoner of war in Vietnam, a past that McCain regularly
recalls on the campaign trail to fend off policy attacks, score
political points and give voters a glimpse of his sentimental
side. He campaigns with squadrons of POWs and made a video to
mark the 35th anniversary of his release from prison.
When Elizabeth Edwards, wife of former Senator John Edwards,
rebuked McCain's medical-care proposal and noted that he'd always
enjoyed government health benefits, McCain responded that he
knows what it's like to get inadequate care -- ``from another
government.'' During an October debate, while knocking a Hillary
Clinton plan to help fund a museum celebrating Woodstock, McCain
said he missed the 1969 festival because he was ``tied up at the
time.'' Even his rivals applauded.
The McCain campaign brings up the war ``often enough to make
sure it stays in people's minds, but not so much that it seems
exploitative and crass,'' said Paul Waldman, co-author of ``Free
Ride,'' a book that argues the press has treated the 71-year-old
Arizona Republican gently.
No Guarantees
While military service often earns public accolades, it
doesn't guarantee success in presidential politics.
In 2004, John Kerry, a decorated Vietnam veteran, lost to
George W. Bush, who had enlisted in the National Guard to avoid
the Vietnam War. Bush supporters raised questions about Kerry's
heroic conduct that dominated the debate for weeks.
Four years earlier, Bush defeated another Vietnam veteran,
Al Gore. In 1992, Bill Clinton, who evaded military service, beat
out a field of Democratic contenders that included Bob Kerrey, a
Medal of Honor winner. In his re-election campaign, Clinton
defeated Bob Dole, a World War II hero.
McCain is aware of the limits of military heroism at the
ballot box. Before the 2004 presidential race, he told Kerry that
even heroes-turned-politicians need a compelling message.
McCain said former Ohio Senator John Glenn, a decorated
Korean War pilot and the first American to orbit the Earth,
failed in his 1984 bid for the Democratic presidential nomination
even though he was ``a bigger hero than either one of us.''
``It'll get you an admission ticket,'' McCain warned Kerry.
``But then you have to have something to say.''
Reluctant to Talk
In the years after he returned from Vietnam in 1973, McCain
wouldn't talk about his time as a prisoner of war. A Navy pilot,
he was shot down during a bombing mission over Hanoi.
McCain discovered the political cachet of his POW
experiences while running for a House seat in Arizona -- after
living there for just two years.
At a candidates' forum, he dismissed accusations that he was
a carpetbagger with a well-timed ad lib: ``The place I lived the
longest in my life was Hanoi.''
The audience burst into applause, and ``the race was
effectively over right then,'' McCain would write in ``Worth the
Fighting For,'' a 2002 book about his political career.
Under fire as a senator for questionable dealings with an
Arizona friend and supporter during the savings-and-loan scandal,
McCain fumed: ``Even the Vietnamese didn't question my ethics.''
McCain also touted his POW years at the 1996 Republican
National Convention while nominating Dole as the party's
standard-bearer.
Not Holding Back
This time around, McCain and his strategists aren't holding
back either. They've created posters and aired television
advertisements showing him as prisoner, lying on his back,
holding a cigarette.
One vignette that he tells elicits tears from audiences. It
involves a now-deceased POW, Mike Christian, who wouldn't be
deterred from sewing American flags out of rags, no matter how
severely his captors beat him, so prisoners could recite the
Pledge of Allegiance daily.
McCain also talks about a guard who covertly loosened the
ropes around his arms at night; he was the one Vietnamese whom
McCain had hoped to see again when he returned to the Southeast
Asian nation as a congressman 11 years later.
Answering Critics
He referred to his POW days today in Miami in a response to
questions from reporters about accusations from Democrats that
he's changed his positions on Cuba over the years.
``My record is unchanged and consistent for 24 years,''
McCain said. ``A Cuban officer and enlisted men came to Hanoi and
tortured my friends -- killed one of them. My position on Cuba
has been exactly the same.''
``A big part of the campaign is about character, and the
campaign sees they have in McCain a real contrast with Barack
Obama on the issue of service and being prepared to be commander-
in-chief on day one,'' said Scott Reed, a Republican strategist
who managed Dole's presidential campaign. ``The POW references
are a part of it.''
Mark Salter, McCain's longtime Senate chief of staff and
adviser, said he sees nothing wrong with highlighting the
candidate's POW experiences, including his refusal to be released
ahead of prisoners who had been captured earlier.
``Every candidate has a narrative, a life story to tell,''
Salter said.
For McCain, touting his POW years ``is not necessarily a
deal-closer,'' said Republican pollster Tony Fabrizio. But
against Obama, he said, ``it puts a bright underline on a couple
of key differences between the two men: experience and stature.''
To contact the reporter on this story:
Edwin Chen in Washington at
echen32@bloomberg.net
.
Last Updated: May 20, 2008 15:51 EDT