McCain Mocks Obama's Iraq
Comments
By LIBBY QUAID
Associated Press Writer
Feb 27, 1:08
PM EST
TYLER, Texas (AP) -- Republican presidential hopeful
John McCain mocked Democrat Barack Obama on Wednesday for saying he would take action as president "if al-Qaida is forming
a base in Iraq."
"When you examine that statement, it's pretty remarkable,"
McCain told a crowd in Tyler, Texas.
"I have some news. Al-Qaida is in Iraq. It's called
al-Qaida in Iraq,'" McCain said, drawing laughter at Obama's expense.
Obama quickly answered back, telling a rally at
Ohio State University in Columbus, "I do know that al-Qaida is in Iraq."
"So I have some news for John McCain," he added,
saying there was no al-Qaida presence in Iraq until President Bush invaded the country. (Please checkout the video link above of 1992 Vice-President Candidate Al Gore talk of Iraq's ties to world
terrorism.)
Noting that McCain likes to tell audiences that
he'd follow Osama bin Laden to the "gates of hell" to catch him, Obama taunted: "All he (McCain) has done is to follow George
Bush into a misguided war in Iraq."
McCain said he had not watched the Democratic presidential
debate on Tuesday night but was told of Obama's response when asked if as president he would reserve the right to send U.S.
troops back into Iraq to quell an insurrection or civil war.
Obama did not say whether he'd send troops but responded:
"As commander in chief, I will always reserve the right to make sure that we are looking out for American interests. And if
al-Qaida is forming a base in Iraq, then we will have to act in a way that secures the American homeland and our interests
abroad."
Throughout the primary season, McCain has repeatedly
attacked Obama and Democratic rival Hillary Rodham Clinton for saying they would withdraw troops from Iraq.
"And my friends, if we left, they (al-Qaida) wouldn't
be establishing a base," McCain said Wednesday. "They'd be taking a country, and I'm not going to allow that to happen, my
friends. I will not surrender. I will not surrender to al-Qaida."
He said that withdrawing troops would be "waving the white flag."
In the debate, Clinton did not answer the question about re-invasion of Iraq on grounds
it contained "lots of different hypothetical assessments."
For years, McCain has urged sending more troops into Iraq, even before President Bush
adopted such a strategy about a year ago.
"I knew enough from talking to the men and women who are serving that this new strategy
was what we needed, and I'm telling you, it is succeeding," McCain said. "So what needs to happen, we need to continue this
strategy. It should be General Petraeus' recommendation, not that of a politician running for higher office, as to when and
how we withdraw."
He was referring to Gen. David Petraeus, the top American commander in Iraq.
As he began a swing through President Bush's home state, which holds a presidential
primary election on Tuesday, McCain made sure to play up a line he always uses: "I also think it might be nice for President
Bush to get a little credit that there's not been another attack on the United States of America," he said to applause.