Informed Comment

Thoughts on the Middle East, History, and Religion

Juan Cole is President of the Global Americana Institute

Thursday, September 25, 2008

McCain Rushes Campaign to Nowhere

Mao Zedong announced the adage by which John McCain is clearly living now: "The enemy advances, we retreat. / The enemy camps, we harass. / The enemy tires, we attack." Mao was describing not a conventional but a guerrilla war, and McCain is now unexpectedly playing the Filipino insurgents of 1899 to Obama's America. Guerrilla wars are waged by the weak but wily. McCain has all but announced that his conventional campaign has crashed and burned. We do not know if the prepping for the debate was a disaster, or it turns out you really can't let Palin be interviewed freely by normal people, or whether terror set in that a second great depression will turn the country starkly to the left for the foreseeable future.

Far from challenging Obama in swing states such as Michigan, Pennsylvania and Colorado, McCain is suddenly behind substantially in all three (McCain 45% to Obama's 49% in Colorado; McCain 44% to Obama 51% in Michigan).

McCain thus threw off his stiff officer's uniform and donned the silky black pyjamas of the guerrilla, beating a hasty retreat before the Obama surge. The retreat was dressed up as a "suspension" of the campaign and a "postponement" of the debate (a debate that would have been McCain's Waterloo. Forced to debate a charismatic policy wonk on top of economic issues on the very week of the financial meltdown, the economically challenged McCain would have gone down flaming to decisive defeat.

Thus McCain's Long March back to Washington and his suspension of a campaign he cannot win by conventional means.

The panic of Wall Street and its Republican ventriloquists is palpable. What must be running through their heads? Is this another 1929? Will they lose everything? Is Obama another FDR, with a New Deal in his coat pocket, which the public is now primed to demand? Is the Iraq gravy train really finished? Is universal health care an assured thing? What will happen to their vacation homes in the Hamptons, or the pieds-a-terre in Jamaica, or the private jet for spontaneous partying in Rio? How will they ever get ahead again if they have to pay their fair share of taxes? Could Obama and Biden preside over 16 years of Democratic Raj? Could their entire fate for decades have been sealed as early as Friday night?

Nothing is more difficult than to execute an orderly retreat in the face of superior enemy firepower. The troops are constantly tempted to break and run, in which case the army is lost. Mustafa Kemal (later Attaturk) pulled off a fighting retreat in northern Syria as the Ottomans withdrew to Anatolia, thereby saving his army.

McCain made several perhaps fatal mistakes on his Long March. He allowed Sarah Palin to be interviewed on television again, this time by Katie Couric. It is therefore McCain's fault that Palin was permitted to respond to a question of whether the US faces a second Great Depression, "Unfortunately, that is the road that America may find itself on."

It is not a message that from a Republican party strategic point of view, should, in such stark terms, have been delivered to an already anxiety-ridden public here is the video:



The greatest calamity of all struck the McCain camp on the David Letterman show, when David found out that contrary to his assurances, McCain was not on his way to Washington. Rather, McCain had deliberately substituted a serious interview by tv news anchor Couric for a more light-hearted appearance on Letterman.

David Letterman, among the more feared interviewers on television, who has reduced Cindy Crawford and Paris Hilton to tears for the fun of it and went mano-a-mano with Madonna over their respective headgear, was not a man to be trifled with.

He actually got hold of video of McCain getting made up for the Katie Couric interview, having not left for the airport in any case. It was one thing for McCain to cancel, it was another for his campaign to blow off Letterman in favor of Couric.



McCain's retreat has been hasty and poorly planned, so that it looks more like a rout than a clever guerrilla movement. Not all guerrilla wars succeed, after all-- the Philippines was subdued by US forces with long hard fighting. McCain, having lost to a guerrilla war, may now face the irony that he is not only not successful in conventional struggles, but has not mastered the form of his greatest enemies.

And the American public, who had expected him to stand his ground and fight, had been expecting an Eisenhower, not a Ho Chi Minh, will hardly be delighted.

17 Comments:

At 5:11 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

If Obama wasn't black, he would be so far ahead as to make the election unnecessary. The economy could not have been in deeper trouble and McCain leads the incumbent party. McCain also appears to be held together by duct-tape, and talking from the wrong orifice.

But if I was Obama, I would do my best to lose. The US economy and its status in the world will be in free fall no matter what the next president does.

If Obama wins, the American people will say in the future that he lost America, and that they should never have elected a black man!

 
At 5:59 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

McCain made several perhaps fatal mistakes on his Long March. He allowed Sarah Palin to be interviewed on television again, this time by Katie Couric. It is therefore McCain's fault that Palin was permitted to respond to a question of whether the US faces a second Great Depression, "Unfortunately, that is the road that America may find itself on."

It is not a message that should, in such stark terms, have been delivered to an already anxiety-ridden public.


You've got to be kidding!? You're in favor of "managed" news? Only what's "safe" for the public to hear?

I guess that explains your censoring comments critical of Barack Obama?

 
At 6:43 AM, Blogger anewc2 said...

But note that Ho Chi Minh won, and Eisenhower's successors lost.

 
At 7:08 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Fair Deal on Debt CIC is a non- profitable organization.We provide services as Fair deal on debt,Debt management,Debt advice,Energy efficiency,Debt counseling,Energy saving,Credit Card Debt,loan schemes,personal loan,trade credit loan scheme,consumer loan scheme,personal loan for salaried women,personal loan for real estate builder,personal loan for pensioners

 
At 7:55 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Dear Professor Cole,

Thank you for your clever post. But...

You write, "McCain is now unexpectedly playing the Filipino insurgents of 1899 to Obama's America."

America betrayed the Philippines. America water-boarded Filipinos.

Your analogy is amusing for a moment but it is not just.

Obama in 2008 is a better America than America itself in 1898-99.

 
At 9:27 AM, Blogger Ed Webb said...

"Atatürk" - only two 't's. Turkish "Ata" means father.

Disorderly retreat rather than guerilla war, I think. But a tactical retreat - he'll find a way to counter-attack, probably by increasing the number and nastiness of ads pandering to racial and other prejudice, which is about all the McCain camp has going for it at this point.

 
At 11:39 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

I thought your analogy was brilliant.

 
At 11:48 AM, Blogger Beth in VA said...

Thank you Juan Cole,
This is one of the best posts ever. And you probably didn't have to work that hard: your depth of knowledge is easily reached as you need to find the most insightful analogies and historical referents appropriate for the moment.

Brilliant, thank you for this blog. Your voice is such a wonderful addition to those ADULT voices we so desperately need in our public discourse.

 
At 11:56 AM, Blogger James-Speaks said...

President Bush has called McCain and Obama into conference.

Let's review:

Bush has no clue. This has been demonstrated. Left to his own devices, he would probably mock the missing funds by pretending to look for them under the lectern in the same way he mocked the missing WMDs.

McCain has no clue. He canceled his Letterman interview in favor of a puff piece with Katie Couric, apparently unaware that modern technology allows CBS's Letterman access to live feeds from CBS's Couric? That Letterman's show is taped in the late afternoon, at the same time the interview was going to be?

So, is it possible that Bush called Obama into conference to pick his brain about a possible resolution to the crisis? That Obama speaks to them both, in supposed executive session, only then to have McCain trot out the "agreed upon" solution in a game of "let's play a trick on the black man?"

This would be the same Rovian trick as claiming, in 2000, that there was not much difference between Bush and Gore except that Bush had character.

 
At 12:11 PM, Blogger Aleks said...

McCain thus threw off his stiff officer's uniform and donned the silky black pyjamas of the guerrilla
********
You mean ninja? I doubt McCain is that physically or mentally spry.

Why would you make Cindy Crawford cry? Paris Hilton I'd run over with a bus, but what did Cindy do?

 
At 1:40 PM, Blogger ArtSparker said...

Oddly enough, I've been thinking of Obama as Eisenhower = practical workhorse. Have also been thinking of Truman.

Oh, how I am longing also for a smart president! Give me a wonk over a guy with testosterone poisoning any day.

 
At 4:17 PM, Blogger BratsBrats said...

I agree with the commentor who noted the coming, soon, of the truly vile negative advertising. We always knew it was gonna be there, but this does bring it closer and sooner. For me, it's something we have to get through. In the end, the racists and the haters will know they have been rejected.

 
At 4:38 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

I have to agree with fairdeal.

 
At 6:40 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Interestingly, there may be another dimension to your metaphor about McCain as a guerilla:

http://dneiwert.blogspot.com/2008/09/quiet-racial-campaign-against-obama.html

To be fair, McCain's campaign probably is not involved in this.

 
At 12:20 AM, Blogger Peter Attwood said...

To say that Sarah Palin's remark about a new Great Depression should never have been said has nothing to do with being in favor of managed news. Read the context and you'll find that it is not about news but McCain campaign strategy. No matter how unmanaged we might want the news to be, we could still believe it's dumb campaign strategy for Palin to speak thus on behalf of their campaign.

On another point, the Philippine-American War was not an insurgency, which is a rebellion against a legally constituted authority. It was a naked aggression against a sovereign state - unworthy in the eyes of American white supremacists to be recognized as such, but that doesn't change the truth. This aggression was successful, through a campaign of mass murder that killed hundreds of thousands of innocent people.

This is pertinent today, when anyone resisting the most noble empire is considered an insurgent, since, after all, the empire is entitled to rule the whole world and only rebels can imagine that they are entitled to be sovereign in their own country. The consequence of this perspective is to consider behavior legitimate, with its consequences to human beings, which appears to us otherwise in such events as the Nazi invasion of Poland in 1939 - very similar in its "justifications" and in its effects on people to the American invasion of Iraq.

 
At 3:03 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

"...the Philippine-American War was not an insurgency, which is a rebellion against a legally constituted authority. It was a naked aggression against a sovereign state..."

Thank you! And there is no insurgency in Iraq either. What happened in Iraq in 1991 when Iraqis tried to overthrow the government - that was an insurgency. Nothing that has happened in Iraq since 2003 can legitimately be called an insurgency, and when people use that term they are just helping to "catapult the propaganda".

 
At 3:08 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Regarding Sarah Palin's interview with Katy Couric, the only appropriate thing that anyone could say after any of those segments is.....LIVE FROM NEW YORK, IT'S SATURDAY NIIIIIIIIIGHT!

It is simply unbelievable as a serious interview with a serious candidate for a serious office. And we thought Bush was bad - little did we know that it could get even worse!

 

Post a Comment

<< Home