By Jason Maoz
Arizona Sen. John McCain, the early front-runner for the 2008
Republican presidential nomination, had a potential John Connally/Mike
Dukakis/John Kerry moment earlier this month, and hardly anyone seems
to have noticed.
What McCain did was make some disturbing informal remarks to the
Israeli daily Haaretz – informal only in the sense that as a still
undeclared candidate, his comments, as Haaretz’s Amir Oren wrote,
"reflect the personal opinion of a senior and influential figure in the
area of defense policy in the United States Senate, rather than an
attempt to formulate policy guidelines for his administration."
McCain told Haaretz that as president, he would "micromanage" U.S.
policy toward Israel and the Palestinians and would dispatch "the
smartest guy I know" to the region, presumably to jump-start a new push
for a comprehensive accord.
Asked who that "smartest guy" might be, McCain responded: "Brent
Scowcroft, or James Baker, though I know that you in Israel don’t like
Baker."
McCain foresaw "concessions and sacrifices by both sides" and indicated
that Israel would be expected to "Defend itself and keep evacuating."
Asked whether that meant "movement toward the June 4, 1967 armistice
lines, with minor modifications," McCain, reported Haaretz, "nodded in
the affirmative."
McCain’s statements are jarring not only because they reflect the view,
long championed by the State Department and both the moderate and
liberal wings of the Democratic party, that the U.S. can somehow
"micromanage" a fair and equitable Mideast peace (code for unilateral
Israeli concessions, since the Palestinians have nothing concrete to
concede), but as well for the almost cavalier dismissal of concerns
about an interlocutor on the order of a James Baker.
(McCain’s mention of Scowcroft, whose Mideast views and chilly attitude
toward Israel are indistinguishable from those usually attributed to
Baker, is equally instructive and should serve as one more caveat for
McCain supporters in the pro-Israel community.)
Judging from the Mideast-related mishaps of previous high-profile
presidential wannabes, the reaction to McCain’s comments would have
been far less muted had he made them later in the campaign cycle (the
first presidential primaries are still some 20 months away and McCain,
as noted by Amir Oren, hasn’t officially declared his candidacy). Time
will tell whether his remarks in Haaretz were an aberration or a
harbinger.
McCain’s reference to James Baker was especially curious given the
flurry of criticism that descended on John Kerry during the 2004
presidential campaign when the Massachusetts senator told the Council
on Foreign Relations that if elected president he would appoint the
"uniquely qualified" Jimmy Carter, James Baker or Bill Clinton as his
Middle East peace envoy.
Kerry only made things worse when he claimed afterward – despite
evidence to the contrary in the "as prepared for delivery" version of
the speech posted on his own website – that the offending passage had
been inserted into the speech at the last minute by staffers.
Michael Dukakis was another candidate who stumbled badly when
attempting to lay out a Mideast policy. Speaking at a forum sponsored
by the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations
in April 1988, the Democratic Massachusetts governor appeared
unfamiliar with basic Israeli history and unsure of where he stood on a
variety of important issues. Many in the audience of Jewish leaders
pronounced themselves decidedly unimpressed, and the next day’s Daily
News article on the meeting was headlined "Duke is milk and honey, and
waffle."
Kerry and Dukakis both went on to win their party’s nomination, though
both had their White House hopes dashed by men named George Bush. John
Connally didn’t even come close. The Democrat-turned-Republican former
Texas governor gave a speech in October 1979 to the Washington Press
Club in which he demanded that Israel halt what he called its "creeping
annexation of the West Bank" and return all territory captured in 1967.
Connally was lambasted by conservatives and liberals alike (times
certainly have changed), and his once promising presidential campaign
quickly withered.
Within days of Connally's speech, two prominent Jewish members of the
Connally campaign committee quit and the New York Republican Committee
rescinded an invitation for Connally to address its Lincoln Day event.
Connally campaign chair Winton Blount called the fallout over the
speech "devastating."
Wrote New York Times columnist William Safire: "After John Connally's
speech last week, supporters of Israel – along with many others
concerned with noisy U.S. weakness in the face of Soviet military and
Arab economic threats – made a reassessment of Ronald Reagan and
decided he looked ten years younger."
By the time Connally dropped out of the primaries, he’d spent $11
million and won the support of exactly one Republican convention
delegate.
Original
Source
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