John McCain: War Criminal, Not War Hero

“I hate the gooks,” Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) doubled down when asked on the 2000 presidential campaign trail about his continued use of the racist slur for Vietnamese people. “I will hate them as long as I live.”

In the mind of the settler-colonialist, the white invader is always the victim and the people he invades, occupies, expels or exterminates are always the aggressors, going all the way back to the Native American genocide. McCain was never able to understand that in Vietnam, as in just about everywhere else they went, Americans were the invaders, not the victims. Even as McCain deserves praise and perhaps even admiration for the manner in which he endured the unendurable while imprisoned in Vietnam, we conveniently forget what he was doing when he was shot down over Hanoi. That day, US warplanes were bombing and strafing a light bulb factory in the densely populated capital, where thousands of innocent men, women and children were being killed by relentless American aerial attacks.

One Man’s Terrorist…

Bombing civilian targets is a war crime. It was a war crime in Vietnam and it was a war crime in Serbia too, one of the at least 13 countries McCain wanted to bomb, bomb, bomb over the course of his congressional career. As Bill Clinton, Tony Blair and other NATO powers waged the 1999 air war against the Serbian people in order to preserve the alliance’s “credibility,” McCain supported the brutal bombing campaign, which targeted utilities, hospitals, apartment buildings, nursing homes, railways, bridges, marketplaces and media outlets. Here’s a little refresher on the Article 54 of the Geneva Convention:

It is prohibited to attack, destroy, remove, or render useless objects indispensable to the survival of the civilian population, such as foodstuffs, crops, livestock, drinking water installations and supplies, and irrigation works.

McCain had previously backed bombing Iraq’s water purification plants during the first Gulf War, a war crime later proven to be part of a US plan to cripple that country’s infrastructure through sanctions that killed hundreds of thousands of Iraqis, many of them children. Many would call this an act of terrorism, but McCain was never one to shy away from supporting terror when he felt it necessary. He personally donated $400 to Nicaraguan Contra rebels while angrily declaring that “historians will look back and view the vote that cut off… aid to the Contras as a low point in United States history.” Congress banned such aid after widespread reports of horrific Contra atrocities like this one:

Rosa had her breasts cut off. Then they cut into her chest and took out her heart. The men had their arms broken, their testicles cut off. They were killed by slitting their throats and pulling the tongue out through the slit.

Of course, one man’s terrorist is another’s freedom fighter, or perhaps both at once. The People’s Mujahedin of Iran, better known by its Farsi acronym MEK, was a State Department-designated terrorist group that had previously assassinated half a dozen US officials back when it was fighting the Shah’s regime. After the Shah’s ouster, MEK waged a guerrilla terror war against the Islamic Republic, endearing it to US leaders including McCain who supported and arranged secret training for its fighters in Nevada.

In 2009, McCain was part of a delegation of conservative senators who traveled to Libya to meet longtime dictator Muammar Gaddafi, who briefly flirted with US rapprochement after agreeing to scrap his weapons of mass destruction program. McCain even promised to help the Gaddafi regime acquire US weapons. But the love affair was short lived and by 2011 McCain was a leading voice for war against Libya, accusing Gaddafi of having “American blood on his hands.” Then-secretary of state Hillary Clinton was more than willing to amplify McCain’s war call, pressing a reluctant Barack Obama to add Libya to the Bush-beating list of countries he bombed.

The Woman and the Ape

Iran was a longtime target of McCain’s threats, with the senator infamously channeling his inner Beach Boys on the presidential campaign trail in 2007. McCain’s animus toward Iranians, a nation whose people are among the most America-loving in the world, bordered on pathological. Upon learning that $158 million worth of American cigarettes were exported to Iran in violation of US sanctions he quipped, “maybe that’s a way of killing them.”

Oh, McCain was a joker, all right. Here’s one of his greatest hits: during his initial run for Senate back in 1986, McCain asked a Washington, DC audience if they’d heard “the one about the woman who is attacked on the street by a gorilla, beaten senseless, raped repeatedly and left to die?” Ready for the knee-slapping punchline? “When she finally regained consciousness and tries to speak,” McCain continued, “her doctor leans over to hear her sigh contently and to feebly ask, Where is that marvelous ape?’”

McCain’s periodic misogyny spared no one. During a 1992 campaign stop, his wife Cindy playfully noted that the then-56-year-old was losing his hair. “At least I don’t plaster on the makeup like a trollop, you cunt,” he lovingly retorted. It was more than just shocking words — when it came to issues of reproductive rights, equal pay, workplace discrimination and sexual harassment, McCain repeatedly demonstrated a disdain for women that’s been forgotten in all the lofty eulogizing.

No to MLK Day, Veterans and 9/11 First Responders

His relationship with black people was just as fraught with controversy. McCain vehemently opposed the national Martin Luther King Jr. holiday, a popular move in a state known for its racism but a shock to millions of Americans who watched McCain vote against the holiday even after President Ronald Reagan finally approved it. He also supported flying the Confederate flag at the South Carolina capitol and, more importantly, consistently pushed policies and actions that fueled racial economic disparities and the disproportionate mass incarceration of people of color.

What’s arguably most confounding about the recent media fawning over McCain is the myth-making surrounding his record on veterans’ issues. Lost amid all the gushing over McCain’s patriotic service is the fact that he voted dozens of times against funding for veterans’ health care and other crucial services, claiming they were “too expensive.” Yet McCain had no problem waging and expanding the never-ending “War on Terror” that has cost more than a million lives and more than five trillion taxpayer dollars. McCain’s reluctance to spend public funds to care for the men and women who put their lives on the line while fighting to advance the government’s agenda is indeed curious given it was the public who financed his own education at the United States Naval Academy.

Also too expensive for McCain’s taste was the 9/11 first responders’ health care bill, which provided life-saving medical care for the thousands of police officers, firefighters, paramedics and others who selflessly rushed to the burning Twin Towers that fateful morning and who suffered from deadly cancers and other diseases years later. A watered-down version of the bill was ultimately passed after months of Republican objection.

Grading McCain

McCain surely gets an “A+” grade from the military-industrial complex, for endless war spending was always one of his top priorities. Taking care of those who fight, and who are physically and mentally maimed by fighting, not so much. That’s likely why the nonpartisan Disabled American Veterans graded him a 2 out of 10 for his poor record on veterans issues, and why Afghanistan Veterans of America gave him a “D” for, among other travesties, voting against additional body armor and PTSD funding for troops.

He also gets an “F” for peace. McCain seemed to deplore peacemakers. When activists interrupted a congressional appearance by Henry Kissinger, who promoted and protected genocide, illegal wars and invasions, military coups, terrorism and torture on every inhabited continent, McCain ordered Capitol police to remove the “low life scum.” Not Kissinger, mind you, but rather the protesters. Ask yourself, who are “low life scum,” those, like Kissinger and McCain with the blood of millions of innocent men, women and children on their hands, or those trying to stop such slaughter?

War Hero? War Criminal.

John McCain is only a “hero” in the settler-colonialist mind. By the letter of the law, he was a war criminal, in addition to a white collar criminal for his role in the Keating scandal. We Americans may praise McCain for opposing Bush-era waterboarding, or for standing up to the bigot who called Obama a Muslim at a campaign rally, or for casting the deciding vote that saved millions of Americans’ health insurance. Yet one is reminded of Chris Rock reality-checking a black man boasting about how he pays his child support and stays out of jail. “You’re supposed to pay your child support, you’re supposed to stay out of jail,” the comedian retorts. Well, you’re supposed to be against torture and racism and people dying because they can’t afford insurance. In a sane world, these things wouldn’t even be up for debate.

Alas, this is no sane world and so we see the surreal, Orwellian spectacle of a war criminal hailed as a war hero, of a warmonger praised by purported peace-lovers like Bernie Sanders and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, of someone who staunchly opposed MLK Day being fondly remembered by the NAACP and by America’s first black president. Americans have short, convenient memories. We also love lionizing monsters, from Columbus to Andrew Jackson to Henry Kissinger. In a nation built upon a foundation of genocide and slavery and maintained through global militarism, Olympic feats of mental gymnastics are regularly performed in service of empire. McCain faithfully served the empire and will be rewarded with a lofty place in the official narrative. But in the annals of truth, the John McCain story will read quite differently.

This article was originally published at Counterpunch.

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Comments

It's like a Holocaust survivor hating and using slurs against all Germans.
It's wrong, but it's understandable.

I'm sure various middle east people feel the same way. Especially those who did time in Gitmo.

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I've seen lots of changes. What doesn't change is people. Same old hairless apes.

Outsourcing Is Treason's picture

@The Voice In the Wilderness
Holocaust survivors generally didn’t drop bombs on Germany.

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"Please clap." -- Jeb Bush

@Outsourcing Is Treason
And the Jewish scientists on the Manhattan project wanted it used on Germany not Japan.

Again, I'm not saying that group hate against oppressors is morally right, but it is very very human.

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I've seen lots of changes. What doesn't change is people. Same old hairless apes.

Wink's picture

I knew AO-C would
@The Voice In the Wilderness
appear in the piece. {rolls eyes}

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the little things you can do are more valuable than the giant things you can't! - @thanatokephaloides. On Twitter @wink1radio. (-2.1) All about building progressive media.

EdMass's picture

He felt based on personal experience "enhanced interrogation" is not allowed, ever (even though it wasn't even close to what happened at the Hanoi Hilton).

Of course any torture is wrong, yet, bombing the shit out of everyone everywhere cause Merica? That's totally fine and encouraged.

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Prof: Nancy! I’m going to Greece!
Nancy: And swim the English Channel?
Prof: No. No. To ancient Greece where burning Sapho stood beside the wine dark sea. Wa de do da! Nancy, I’ve invented a time machine!

Firesign Theater

Stop the War!

CS in AZ's picture

Thank you! I’ve been avoiding the mass media hagiography as much as possible, but it’s hard to escape. People around me at work are parroting the “hero” stuff and “he was honorable” and blah blah blah. A neighbor put up his American flag, flying at half staff, this week. I am sooooo tired of swallowing my true feelings and responses to all this rewriting of history and unwarranted worship of McCain. I knew it would happen and have been bracing for it, but still... it’s hard to take.

It is sickening what an evil, ethically empty person he truly was. Even more sickening how it all gets erased because he died. Articles like this are a good antidote. Thank you for the work and research to put this together. Very much needed and appreciated.

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Brett Wilkins's picture

@CS in AZ Thanks!

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Big Al's picture

Our fucking country is a war crime. While it's good to pile on McCain, he deserves it, and Sanders/Ocasio-Cortez etc., they deserve it, the opportunity should be seized by as many as possible to point out the criminal nature of U.S. imperialism in general. Calling him a war criminal then muddling it by bringing up his misogyny, bigotry, and overall assholishness sort of bypasses the bigger point that needs to be made.

Pointing out McCain called the Vietnamese a slur in 2000 or his engagements with terrorists is fine, but what about all those politicians that voted for NDAA 2019? What about all the politicians involved in enabling the Vietnam war that set McCain there in the first place? Aren't they war criminals too? Aren't they representing the people by voting for the programs that carry out U.S. imperialism and therefore the murders of innocent people and the destruction of countries for the ruling class?

Relative to Sanders and "AOC", imagine what they would say about war criminals Obama and Clinton if they suddenly passed on? A war criminal is a war criminal, like a murderer is a murderer.

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EdMass's picture

@Big Al

Why don't you just really tell us what you think.

** checks notes **

Oh you did.

Never mind.

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Prof: Nancy! I’m going to Greece!
Nancy: And swim the English Channel?
Prof: No. No. To ancient Greece where burning Sapho stood beside the wine dark sea. Wa de do da! Nancy, I’ve invented a time machine!

Firesign Theater

Stop the War!

Alligator Ed's picture

Instead of opening mouths, to praise Caesar McCain, people should in fact have been silenced by honesty. The eulogizers of McStain, including Bernie and AOC, reveal themselves to be lying, complicit knaves to their alleged anti-war stances. Bernie, why didn't you just shut the fuck up. AOC, younger and dumber, you should have engaged your brain before putting your mouth in gear.

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Wink's picture

@The Voice In the Wilderness @Alligator Ed

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the little things you can do are more valuable than the giant things you can't! - @thanatokephaloides. On Twitter @wink1radio. (-2.1) All about building progressive media.

snoopydawg's picture

In the mind of the settler-colonialist, the white invader is always the victim and the people he invades, occupies, expels or exterminates are always the aggressors, going all the way back to the Native American genocide.

McCain wasn't the only one who didn't realize that. The military worshippers think that we have the right to invade any country we want because we're "the good guys." And the story that he spent 5 years being tortured is being debated because he got special treatment because of who his father was.

standing up to the bigot who called Obama a Muslim

"No ma'am. He is a decent family man." As if saying that Muslims men are not decent family men. "No ma'am. He is a Christian who was born in this country " would have been a better answer because that was what she was asking. IMO.

Great compilation of who the real John McCain was. One thing that isn't getting enough attention is how he shut down investigations into the POWs that didn't come home after the 'war' ended. I've posted links in a few other essays here. Hope that people had a chance to read them. That too was the real McCain. It's been nice not reading comments here that say, "I may not have ... McCain, but ..."

Just like people are fawning over everything Mueller and the other FBI agents involved in Russia Gate they are now falling all over themselves to praise him. Gag me! Thanks for posting your article here. I refuse to go to Fakebook to comment on CP articles. Don't know why so many sites have done that and are still doing it even though they are being censored by it.

BTW and off topic, but take a gander at the article I've linked in my sig.

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Was Humpty Dumpty pushed?

Brett Wilkins's picture

@snoopydawg Fair enough on the "he's not a Muslim" comment; I was mostly going from memory and McCain's words now seem like a damned profile in courage given the current occupant of the White House.

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snoopydawg's picture

@Brett Wilkins

He said it just like that, but I'm repeating what others are saying about how people are praising him for saying that and what they think it implied.

Again it's great to have you posting here.

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Was Humpty Dumpty pushed?

gulfgal98's picture

not a hero. Further. he was a self absorbed spoiled military brat who relied upon his grandfather and his father to bail him out of multiple transgressions in his younger years.

One of the people I follow on YouTube is Seething Frog who is a conservative, mostly of the libertarian stripe, but someone who is not afraid to speak his mind. Seething Frog lives in Arizona and he has very strong opinions about John McCain, none of which are flattering.

Seething Frog has done two videos on his disgust with the deification of John McCain already. And then today, he dropped his third video about John McCain and those who speak kindly of him in death. Needless to say, it was not flattering to either John McCain nor his defenders of McCain's memory.

[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iuvdgRbnUjU]

Qanon has called McCain, No Name. It is apropos for someone who was a traitor like John McCain.

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

EdMass's picture

@gulfgal98

He experienced what he did.

He married rich at least 2x

His family were Admirals.

It's really not his fault that he evolved has he did.

Do I agree with him? No.

But, there's always a but, he was an honorable man to his principles and beliefs, agree or not, and we have damn few of them left.

Where can I buy some of Nancy's wine here in TX?

Just askin

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Prof: Nancy! I’m going to Greece!
Nancy: And swim the English Channel?
Prof: No. No. To ancient Greece where burning Sapho stood beside the wine dark sea. Wa de do da! Nancy, I’ve invented a time machine!

Firesign Theater

Stop the War!

@gulfgal98 a communist???? A typical Democratic collaborationist is what she is. Sometimes I think the DNCC big shots would collaborate with Genghis Khan if he promised then privilege and perks.

What I would like to know, and what Mr. Seething kind of doesn't get around to mentioning, is how does a spoiled brat cut-up get into politics in the first place?

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Mary Bennett

Pricknick's picture

to piss on his grave.
I think I'm up to it.

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Regardless of the path in life I chose, I realize it's always forward, never straight.

Bollox Ref's picture

is completely wrong.

He was a hopeless student. A hopeless pilot. A hopeless husband. A hopeless presidential candidate..........

And yet we are to mourn.

I assume Edward II was a wonderful King of England.

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Gëzuar!!
from a reasonably stable genius.

TheOtherMaven's picture

@Bollox Ref

in that his father was the supercompetent Edward I "Longshanks". It was going to be very difficult for II to measure up, even if he had the stuff - and even if he could resist ogling all the handsome young men at court.

Fortunately for England, Edward II's son was another supercompetent - Edward III.

That's the trouble with hereditary monarchy, you never know how the dice will roll.

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There is no justice. There can be no peace.

@Bollox Ref his arms, his honor and his reputation on the field of Bannockburn. Younger sons hoping for Scottish estates were left forever disappointed. Throughout their early history, the English were never kind to weak monarchs. Richard I was forgiven his homosexuality, which was known about at the time, never mind the nervous suppressions of Victorian historians, and his neglect of England because he was seen as a glorious Christian warrior.

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Mary Bennett

so fuck him.

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