*McCain the Stalwart *
by Charles Krauthammer
Friday, October 24, 2008

http://townhall.com/columnists/CharlesKrauthammer/2008/10/24/mccain_the_stalwart?page=full&comments=true


WASHINGTON -- Contrarian that I am, I'm voting for John McCain. I'm not
talking about bucking the polls or the media consensus that it's over before
it's over. I'm talking about bucking the rush of wet-fingered conservatives
leaping to Barack Obama before they're left out in the cold without a single
state dinner for the next four years.

I stand athwart the rush of conservative ship-jumpers of every stripe -- neo
(Ken Adelman), moderate (Colin Powell), genetic/ironic (Christopher Buckley)
and socialist/atheist (Christopher Hitchens) -- yelling "Stop!" I shall have
no part of this motley crew. I will go down with the McCain ship. I'd rather
lose an election than lose my bearings.

First, I'll have no truck with the phony case ginned up to rationalize
voting for the most liberal and inexperienced presidential nominee in living
memory. The "erratic" temperament issue, for example. As if McCain's risky
and unsuccessful but in no way irrational attempt to tactically maneuver his
way through the economic tsunami that came crashing down a month ago renders
unfit for office a man who demonstrated the most admirable equanimity and
courage in the face of unimaginable pressures as a prisoner of war, and who
later steadily navigated innumerable challenges and setbacks, not the least
of which was the collapse of his campaign just a year ago.

McCain the "erratic" is a cheap Obama talking point. The 40-year record
testifies to McCain the stalwart.

Nor will I countenance the "dirty campaign" pretense. The double standard
here is stunning. Obama ran a scurrilous Spanish-language ad falsely
associating McCain with anti-Hispanic slurs. Another ad falsely claimed
McCain supports "cutting Social Security benefits in half." And for months
Democrats insisted that McCain sought 100 years of war in Iraq.

McCain's critics are offended that he raised the issue of William Ayers.
What's astonishing is that Obama was himself not offended by William Ayers.

Moreover, the most remarkable of all tactical choices of this election
season is the attack that never was. Out of extreme (and unnecessary)
conscientiousness, McCain refused to raise the legitimate issue of Obama's
most egregious association -- with the race-baiting Rev. Jeremiah Wright.
Dirty campaigning, indeed.

The case for McCain is straightforward. The financial crisis has made us
forget, or just blindly deny, how dangerous the world out there is. We have
a generations-long struggle with Islamic jihadism. An apocalyptic
soon-to-be-nuclear Iran. A nuclear-armed Pakistan in danger of
fragmentation. A rising Russia pushing the limits of revanchism. Plus the
sure-to-come Falklands-like surprise popping out of nowhere.

Who do you want answering that phone at 3 a.m.? A man who's been cramming on
these issues for the last year, who's never had to make an executive
decision affecting so much as a city, let alone the world? A foreign policy
novice instinctively inclined to the flabbiest, most vaporous
multilateralism (e.g., the Berlin Wall came down because of "a world that
stands as one"), and who refers to the most deliberate act of war since
Pearl Harbor as "the tragedy of 9/11," a term more appropriate for a bus
accident?

Or do you want a man who is the most prepared, most knowledgeable, most
serious foreign policy thinker in the United States Senate? A man who not
only has the best instincts, but has the honor and the courage to, yes, put
country first, as when he carried the lonely fight for the surge that turned
Iraq from catastrophic defeat into achievable strategic victory?

There's just no comparison. Obama's own running mate warned this week that
Obama's youth and inexperience will invite a crisis -- indeed a crisis
"generated" precisely to test him. Can you be serious about national
security and vote on Nov. 4 to invite that test?

And how will he pass it? Well, how has he fared on the only two significant
foreign policy tests he has faced since he's been in the Senate? The first
was the surge. Obama failed spectacularly. He not only opposed it. He tried
to denigrate it, stop it and, finally, deny its success.

The second test was Georgia, to which Obama responded instinctively with
evenhanded moral equivalence, urging restraint on both sides. McCain did not
have to consult his advisers to instantly identify the aggressor.

Today's economic crisis, like every other in our history, will in time pass.
But the barbarians will still be at the gates. Whom do you want on the
parapet? I'm for the guy who can tell the lion from the lamb.

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