John Sidney McCain III
(PHOTO: John Hume Kennerly/GETTY IMAGES)
The eulogies for the recently deceased John McCain, a US Senator for
Arizona, have been plentiful, and so far as the American mainstream media is
concerned, they have verged on the hagiographic. He has been variously
described as a “patriot”, a “war hero” and a “defender of freedom”. Most
perplexingly, McCain was lauded as a “warrior for peace”. But while praise for
McCain has been dutifully administered in reverential terms by both liberal and
conservative figures, the truth is that there is widespread dissent about
McCain’s legacy as a man, as a military officer, as well as a politician.
Perhaps, most worrisome is the construction of McCain’s legacy as one of the
resolutely principled maverick and insatiable peace seeker. On the contrary,
McCain operated at the highest echelons of the American Establishment, a
closeted world of vested interests comprising a network geared towards the
enrichment of the American elite. He was a captive of the defence industry and
an unceasingly aggressive spokesperson for the post-Cold War era militarism
that has compromised the United States and brought it down low in the eyes of
the global community of nations.
So why the
almost uncritical eulogising of a controversial life beset by allegations of
incompetence, corruption and disloyalty?
Perhaps it is
the tradition of the people of the United States to venerate their warriors.
From the highest serving general to the lowest level footsoldier, Americans
have a penchant for what might be termed ‘soldier worship’. There is also a
tendency for disparate groups of people to pull together behind someone when
confronted by an idea or by a person to whom they feel repugnance. It is
certainly the case that the transition from life to death brings out the
sentimental in people whether such death is sudden or prolonged. And, of
course, as with most cultures, Americans are cautious about speaking ill of the
dead.
Each of these
has doubtlessly played a part in the positive reviews of the life of John
McCain since his passing. John Sidney McCain III was born into a family of
naval servicemen, two of who reached the rank of admiral. He served as a naval
aviator during the Vietnam War and later retired as a captain. McCain also
engaged in a well-publicised, long-running feud with Donald Trump who as a
polarising figure has succeeded in arraigning different strands of his
countrymen against his presidency. His demise, caused by the effects of a
malignant brain tumour, was a cruel one. Glioblastoma is the most aggressive
form of cancer.
But there is
much to question about McCain.
McCain joined
the US Navy following in the footsteps of his father and grandfather. Each man
had reached the pinnacle of service and became the first father and son pair to
achieve the rank of four-star admiral. When he retired in 1981, McCain had been
the recipient of a Silver Star and Purple Heart. He had also received a
Distinguished Flying Cross for his “exceptional courage, superb airmanship, and
total devotion to duty” during a bombing raid over Hanoi in 1967, and had been
awarded the Legion of Merit with Combat “V” award “for exceptionally
meritorious conduct in the performance of outstanding services to the
Government of the United States while interned as a Prisoner of War in North
Vietnam from October 1967 to March 1973.”
But the
competence of the future senator as an aviator has been consistently
questioned. For instance, in 1960 while on a training exercise, he crashed his
plane into Corpus Christi Bay, in the process shearing the skin off its wings.
The following year, while serving with an aircraft carrier in the Mediterranean
theatre, he flew through electrical wires in southern Spain causing a power
failure in the surrounding area. And in 1965, while en route to Philadelphia
for the Army-Navy football game, he crashed a T-2 trainer jet in Virginia.
These
incidents, caused by a carefree attitude described as “cocky, occasionally
cavalier and prone to testing limits”, led to rebukes by the naval authorities.
They also explain a great deal about the allegations surrounding his
responsibility for two more serious incidents.
Sarcastically
dubbed ‘Ace McCain’ by his commanders, McCain’s career as an aviator was,
nonetheless, allowed to continue. Although the official inquiry into the
catastrophic fire onboard the USS Forrestal in July 1967 was officially blamed
on the accidental firing of a rocket caused by an electrical power surge during
preparations for a strike against a target in North Vietnam, the claim that the
disaster, which killed 134 sailors while injuring another 161, was caused by
McCain ‘wet-starting’ his jet has refused to die. ‘Wet-starting’ refers to
where pilots flood the combustion chamber of their craft with extra fuel before
ignition in order to create either a loud bang or a plume of flame.
McCain is
claimed by some to have done this and that the ensuing concatenation of
maladies are traceable to his reckless act.
That he avoided the consequences of his actions is said to be due to the
seniority and influence of his high-ranking father who some, including Admiral
Thomas Moorer, a former Chief of Naval Operations and Chairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff, allege was at the time cooperating with the cover-up
pertaining to the deliberate attack on the USS Liberty by the armed forces of
the state of Israel, which had occurred the previous month. Three months later,
McCain was shot down while conducting a bombing sortie over North Vietnam.
No official
blame has ever been attached to McCain for his shooting down. But as his
aircraft was lost behind enemy lines, its remains were not subjected to the
same sort of forensic analysis as had occurred after the earlier mishaps while
in control of the cockpit. In all three incidents, McCain’s skill and judgement
had been called into question.
Aviators like
McCain had been trained to stay at altitudes of 4,000 to 10,000 feet in
environments where there were heavy deployments of surface-to-air missile
launchers. They had equipment which warned the pilot that they were being
tracked and also when a missile locked on them. These missiles were relatively
easy to out-manoeuvre up to a point. This changed when there were multiple
launches of between 6 and 12 missiles. McCain claimed in his autobiography that
22 missiles were fired at his squadron that day and that one blew off his right
wing. He had been flying at an altitude of 3,000 feet above Hanoi.
It is
McCain’s conduct as a prisoner of war which has brought him the most public
scrutiny. Officially, he is a hero for withstanding torture: beatings, the withholding
of medical treatment and a lengthy spell in solitary confinement, although he
wilted and made at least one propaganda broadcast for North Vietnamese radio in
which he pronounced himself guilty of “crimes against the Vietnamese country
and people.”
The United
States military Code of Conduct prohibits prisoners of war from accepting
parole or other favours from the enemy, although during the Vietnam War,
latitude was generally given to those who were seriously ill or injured.
McCain, who
sustained two broken arms and a broken leg when ejecting from his plane, has
been accused by some fellow veterans who were held at the same camps as he, as
one who sold out his fellow prisoners and other servicemen by cooperating with
his captors in order to be the beneficiary of a cushy captivity. His detractors
accuse him of making broadcasts designed to infringe upon the morale of his
fellow servicemen and of giving up military secrets such as that related to his
flight, rescue ships and the order of attacks.
And while
they allow that McCain refused an offer of early repatriation unless all
prisoners were released, some allege that he was given special treatment with
two other ‘defectors’ for cooperating. In fact, they argue that McCain’s
refusal was an easy one given that he knew that his future prospects in the
military and any public office would have been ruined. Many veterans claimed
that those who were granted early release in three sets of releases in 1968
were collaborators who they dubbed ‘the slipperies’, ‘the slimies’ and ‘the sleazies’,
and that McCain had acknowledged this.
To be sure,
several of McCain’s co-prisoners have spoken on his behalf over the years. His
one-time cellmate, Colonel George Day, who recommended him for a post-war
medal, said that McCain had forced his interrogators to “drug him and torture
him to get any cooperation” and had suffered "tortuous abuse”. Men like George
Day and Orson Swindle confirm that torture was regularly administered and that
they were forced to talk, although they attempted to mislead their captors by
telling untruths. In McCain’s case, he claims his response to questions asking
him about future bombing runs was simply to give those that had already taken
place. He also claims to have given the names of the offensive line up of the
Green Bay Packers football team as members of his squadron.
Render
Crayton, McCain’s co-prisoner for one year (1971-1972) at the camp referred to
as the ‘Hanoi Hilton’, has often spoken up on behalf of McCain and claims that
McCain “gave hell to his captors”. An example of this was deciding one morning
to loudly sing the Pledge of Allegiance and the National Anthem. The penalty
for this insubordination was to be removed from a “big room” to “smaller cell
rooms”.
This does not
impress those veterans against McCain who assert that no one witnessed the
series of tortures he claimed to have endured. Indeed, in an interview conducted
in 2008 with the Italian newspaper, Corriere
della Sera, the chief guard of his prison, Nguyen Tien Tran, said that
McCain was not tortured. In his autobiography, Faith of My Fathers, McCain admitted that he felt guilty throughout
his captivity because he knew that he was being treated more leniently than his
fellow POWs owing to the fact that he was the son of the commander-in-chief of
all US forces in the Pacific region, including Vietnam. His captors referred to
him as the ‘Crown Prince’.
They also
point to the tremendous lengths McCain went towards blocking the release of
classified documents during the 1991-1993 Senate Committee hearings on
Prisoners of War and those Missing in Action as evidence of his having a
personal interest in suppressing information which would discredit him. Through
McCain’s efforts, documents such as related to all the Pentagon debriefings of
returned prisoners were classified by legislation. A ‘Truth Bill’, which had
been twice introduced to ensure transparency over missing men was bitterly
opposed by McCain who then sponsored a new bill which sought to create a
bureaucratic maze ensuring that only a few non-descript documents could be
released. It was passed into law.
His rationale
that the sealing of these files was for reasons of privacy and preventing the
reviving of painful memories were not accepted by those who point to the fact
that debriefings from returning Korean War prisoners of war are available to
the public, and, as was the case with Korea, could have provided useful leads
in so far as the fate of those who were missing in action in Vietnam, Laos and
Cambodia.
Those who
opposed McCain were often subjected to vitriolic abuse by a man who developed a
renowned temper. He referred to individuals and groups campaigning for
information on MIAs as “hoaxers”, “charlatans” and “conspiracy theorists”. They
retorted by dubbing him the ‘Manchurian Candidate’. In fact many of them along
with the veterans against McCain often refer to his conduct while in captivity
as having been nothing less than treachery.
Claims that
McCain was on a list of 33 American prisoners of war earmarked to be executed
for treason cannot be corroborated. But possible retribution against him by
hardline military officers was rendered impossible by the US Defense Department
whose officials had adopted a general policy of “honour-and-forgive” for
returning prisoners of war. One specific element of this policy was not to
prosecute any prisoners of war for making pro-North Vietnamese propaganda
statements while in captivity. And to back this up, a move in 1973 by an Air
Force colonel charging seven enlisted men of collaborating with the enemy while
they were held as prisoners of war by North Vietnam was dismissed by the secretaries
of the Army and Navy for lack of evidence and the mitigating circumstances of
the “long hardship” they endured while in captivity.
While McCain
is perceived by his detractors as having escaped punishment for his
‘disloyalty’ while in uniform, some point to his treatment of his first wife as
evidence of his capacity for betrayal. A beautiful divorcee who he had married
in 1965, Carol McCain had remained loyal to her husband during the period of
his captivity. However, in 1969, she was badly injured in a motor accident and
had to undergo numerous operations. She lost several inches in height and
gained weight. McCain confessed that he returned home to a wife who appeared to
be a different woman. He admitted to philandering and eventually divorced her
to marry a woman who was 18 years younger than him.
His critics
make the case that McCain lost interest in spouse who was no longer the ‘trophy
wife’ he had married and replaced her with an extremely attractive woman whose
family were very wealthy and well-connected in the state of Arizona, where he
would begin his political career. His critics cite this as evidence of McCain’s
ruthless and calculating streak, which was guided neither by virtue nor by
principle.
As a
politician, McCain has been lauded as having been guided by a code of “honour,
courage, integrity and duty.” His maverick reputation is seen as evidence of
his ability to eschew the narrow confines of partisan politics. But his tenure
as a senator was beset by allegations of corrupt practices, of being a
pork-barrel politico in the thrall of the military industry and Israel lobby,
and of being a warmonger who supported America’s recent wars, which has led to
the destruction of whole countries and of countless innocent casualties.
As a new senator
in the early 1990s, McCain was involved in a corruption scandal after he and
four senators from the Democratic Party were accused of trying to intimidate
regulators on behalf of a campaign donor who was eventually imprisoned for
corrupt management practices. He escaped with a reprimand for having “exercised
poor judgement”, but with the accompanying judgement that his actions “were not
improper”.
In August
2006, McCain was captured in a photograph going onboard a luxury yacht rented
by the Italian con-man Raffaello Follieri in Montenegro. It was here that
McCain met the Russian oligarch Oleg Deripaska for a second time, after an initial
meeting in Davos. Both meetings had been arranged by Rick Davis, who like Paul
Manafort has been a long-time conduit between American big shots and the Russian
ultra-rich. Nathaniel Rothschild, who has large business interests in
Montenegro, a country that granted him citizenship in 2013, also met with
McCain.
Events unfolded
to reveal that McCain had been part of an elaborate scheme which enabled
Western financiers to buy up Montenegro and bribe influential members of the
country’s elite who would be pliable to the idea of prising Montenegro away
from Serbia. The long-term goal was for Montenegro to declare its independence
and pave the way for its accession to membership of the North Atlantic Treaty
Organisation (NATO), an objective that came to fruition in 2017.
McCain’s
scheming in regard to Montenegro highlights his connections to the wealthy
interests who control Western politicians, both of who work hand-in-hand in
advancing Western geopolitical interests. The co-opting of Montenegro into the
Western financial sphere and its membership of (NATO) were manoeuvres
calculated to injure Russia’s commercial and military interests.
First of all,
the oil and gas explorations subsequently embarked upon in the outlying
Adriatic Sea is designed to create a market which aims to undercut or totally
nullify Russian ambitions to supply oil and gas to countries in the region via
a South Stream pipeline project. Secondly, transforming its military status
from one of neutrality to being part of the Atlantic Alliance is in keeping
with NATO’s post-Cold War eastward expansion, a policy which is designed to
intimidate Russia, and which is in defiance of the agreement reached at the end
of the Cold War between the leaders of the West and the former Soviet Union,
that Germany reunification was predicated on the condition that NATO would not
expand eastwards.
John McCain,
by words and deeds, demonstrated his support for the anti-Russian sentiment
that has permeated corridors of power in the United States since the coming to
power of Vladimir Putin, a nationalist who brought to an end the mass plunder
of Russia’s resources by Western interests during the government led by Boris
Yeltsin. Indeed, no politician better embodied the twin doctrines that
encapsulate the militarism pursued by the United States in the aftermath of the
US-Soviet Cold War than McCain. These are philosophies espoused by Paul
Wolfowitz and Zbigniew Brzezinski. The former provided that American policy was
to ensure that after the fall of the Soviet Union, no other power should be
permitted to rise and compete with the United States for global influence,
while the latter was fixated on militarily intimidating Russia while seeking
its dismemberment and relegation to a region designed to serve the energy needs
of the West.
His dismissal
of Russia as a “gas station masquerading as a country” and his forthright
comment that Montenegro’s accession to NATO was “vital for regional stability
and the joint effort of the Western allies to resist a resurgent Russia”, provided
clear evidence of his position.
McCain’s
anti-Russian posture ensured an enduring animus between himself and Vladimir
Putin. Although McCain claimed that the Russo-Georgian War of 2008 was “a
mistake” initiated by Mikheil Saakashvili, then president of Georgia, Putin
accused the United States of fomenting the conflict in order to strengthen
McCain’s bid for the White House. “The suspicion arises”, Putin claimed, “that
someone in the United States especially created this conflict to make the
situation tenser and create a competitive advantage for one of the candidates
fighting for the post of US president.”
While Putin’s
allegations were pooh-poohed by the White House as “patently false” and by the
state department as “ludicrous”, events in Ukraine in 2014 clearly demonstrated
McCain’s involvement in the American-sponsored overthrow of the elected
government led by Viktor Yanukovytch. This was made possible by utilising the
street muscle of ultranationalist groups such as Pravy Sektor. McCain was
repeatedly photographed with Oleh Tyahnybok, the leader of the far right
Svoboda Party which has been accused of being neo-Nazi in ideology while being
vocally Russophobic and anti-Jewish.
McCain, who
wielded a great deal of power as a long-term senator, allegedly chaired an
important CIA meeting in Cairo that was pivotal in fomenting the so-called Arab
Spring. And just as he met with political extremists in Kiev prior to the
US-backed coup, in 2011 he was seen walking the streets of Benghazi where he
was photographed meeting anti-Gaddafi rebels who embraced the Islamist creed of
al-Qaeda, the alleged perpetrators of the September 11th attacks on the United
States. He called the rebels “heroic” and lobbied for US military intervention
weeks before NATO began its bombardment and training of the al-Qaeda-affiliated
Libyan Islamic Fighting Force (LIFG). And given his vocal support for
overthrowing the government of Gaddafi and his ‘fact-finding’ tour, he was also
likely to have been influential in paving the way for President Barack Obama’s
decision to authorise the use of predator drones. McCain would later be
pictured with Senators Lindsey Graham and Richard Blumenthal giving an award to
Abdel Hakim Belhaj, the leader of the now disbanded LIFG.
The Libyan
intervention, enabled by the United Nations resolution based on the
‘Responsibility to Protect’ doctrine, of course ended in human disaster.
Gaddafi was toppled, but a nation which was once Africa’s most prosperous
country soon degenerated into a failed state composed of warring militias,
Islamist strongholds that have imposed rule by Sharia, and the establishment of
slave markets composed of human chattel of Black African origin. The removal of
Gaddafi which McCain cheered on has led to a deterioration of security beyond
Libya as Islamist terror groups situated in the Maghreb (Al-Qaeda in the
Islamic Maghreb) and further down in the Lake Chad Basin (Boko Haram) have been
strengthened because of the availability of large quantities of arms and
munitions previously owned by the fallen Libyan army.
McCain’s
dallying with extremists also extended to illegally entering into Syrian
territory in 2013 and meeting with anti-government rebels who he described as
“brave fighters who are risking their lives for freedom”, but who most neutral
observers would classify as terrorists.
McCain’s
support respectively for the Iraq War which overthrew Saddam Hussein, the
Western-backed insurgencies in Libya and Syria, NATO expansion and
confrontation with nuclear-armed Russia clearly mark him out as a supporter of
American militarism, a geopolitical policy that has caused tremendous harm to
American prestige among the community of nations, caused hundreds of thousands
of deaths, caused large-scale human displacement and a refugee crisis, and
which has persistently kept NATO and Russia at loggerheads. It makes a mockery
of Congressman John Lewis’s attempt to eulogise him as a “warrior for peace”.
Indeed, it was no surprise that the arms giant Lockheed Martin, which has
profited from the wars supported by McCain, issued a tribute after his death.
That he
sympathised with the neoconservative ideology and was beholden to the
objectives of the Israel lobby is beyond doubt. His support for American
interventions in the Arab world targeting secular governments perceived as not
towing the line with Israel was apparent in his role in fomenting insurgencies
in Libya and Syria, the latter in regard to which he unceasingly promoted a
more direct form of US involvement.
It is also
confirmed by his long-term attitude of belligerence towards Iran, which he
consistently denounced during his presidential campaign in 2008. While on the
hustings, he notoriously broke out in song by substituting the lyrics of the
Beach Boys hit Barbara Ann with “Bomb
Iran”. His statements tended to indicate that he would have been in favour of attacking
Iran at the behest of Israel and its US-based lobby groups, an action that was
strongly resisted by Barack Obama. McCain, not surprisingly was dismissive of
the Obama administration’s deal with Iran over its nuclear strategy, which he
derisively referred to as a “feckless” approach to foreign policy.
McCain was
despite his maverick label an establishment man adept at manoeuvring between
the public spotlight and the shadowy, largely unseen world of what many now
understand to be the ‘Deep State’. He was almost certainly a key player in the machinations
of America’s ‘double government’ and its formulation of national security
policy which, as Professor Michael Glennon pointed out in a lengthy research
paper, has essentially remained unchanged from successive administrations
starting with George W. Bush, through to the one headed by Barack Obama, and
now that of Donald Trump.
Far from the
mainstream narrative that he was a beloved figure, McCain has gone to his grave
leaving a great number disgruntled for various reasons. For many veterans, he
will forever be ‘Johnny Songbird’ of ‘Hanoi Hilton’ infamy; like his father, a
man of the establishment who covered up many unflattering secrets of the state
including that pertaining to the sinking of the USS Liberty which he never
sought to redress.
To his former
Vietnamese foes he remains the celebrity captive, the admiral’s son
immortalised as an ‘air pirate’ depicted in a statute bent on his knees next to
the lake from where he was retrieved after parachuting from his downed
aircraft.
To white
nationalists he is a ‘race traitor’ who supported successive amnesties for
illegal immigrants and to the anti-war segment of the political left, he does
not deserve praise for participating in a colonial war of aggression against
the Vietnamese people, while the isolationist segment of the political right
decried his persistent support for foreign wars of intervention.
John McCain
was not a straightforward hero. Nor was he an exceptional politician. The
unbridled facts of his life and career in the military and as a public figure
embody much of what is dysfunctional about the American republic. To succumb to
the blatant myth-making and obfuscation of his life represents a failure of the
nation to properly reflect and critically examine itself.
That cannot
bode well for the future.
© Adeyinka
Makinde (2018)
Adeyinka
Makinde is a writer based in London, England.
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