McCain: Rebels Are “My Heroes” – With Video

April 22nd, 2011 (6) Posted By Pat Dollard.

BENGHAZI, Libya (AP) — U.S. Sen. John McCain, one of the strongest proponents in Congress of the American military intervention in Libya, said Friday that Libyan rebels fighting Muammar Qaddafi’s troops are his heroes.

The top Republican on the Senate Armed Services Committee made the remark after arriving in Benghazi, a city that has been the opposition capital in the rebel-held eastern Libya.

McCain said he was in Benghazi “to get an on the ground assessment of the situation” and planned to meet with the rebel National Transition Council, the de-facto government in the eastern half of the country, and members of the rebel military.

“They are my heroes,” McCain said of the rebels as he walked out of a local hotel in Benghazi. He was traveling in an armored Mercedes jeep and had a security detail. A few Libyans waved American flags as his vehicle drove past.

McCain’s visit is the highest yet by an American official to the rebel-held east and a boost to the anti-Qaddafi forces. Details of the trip were shrouded in secrecy due to heightened security in a country fiercely divided by the two-month-old anti-Qaddafi rebellion.

McCain’s trip comes as Defense Secretary Robert Gates announced Thursday that President Barack Obama has authorized armed Predator drones against forces loyal to Qaddafi. It is the first time that drones will be used for airstrikes since the United States turned over control of the operation to NATO on April 4.

The rebels have complained that NATO airstrikes since then have largely been ineffective in stopping Qaddafi forces.

Invoking the humanitarian disasters in Rwanda and Bosnia in the 1990s, McCain pressed for U.S. military intervention in Libya in February, weeks before the U.N. Security Council authorized military action to protect civilians and impose a no-fly zone.

When Obama acted with limited congressional consultation, McCain — who was the 2008 Republican presidential contender running against Obama — defended the president, saying he couldn’t wait for Congress to take even a few days to debate the use of force. If he had, “there would have been nothing left to save in Benghazi,” the rebels’ de-facto capital.

But as the U.S. handed operational control over to NATO — and withdrew U.S. combat aircraft — McCain criticized the administration.

“For the United States to withdraw our unique offensive capabilities at this time would send the wrong signal,” McCain said. He said the U.S. must not fail in Libya and said he spoke as someone experienced in a lost conflict, a reference to his time as a prisoner of war in Vietnam, where he served as a Navy pilot.

McCain also has pushed for arming the rebels, saying the U.S. and its partners cannot allow Qaddafi to consolidate his hold on one section of the country and create a military deadlock.

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  • franchie

    he’s still missed by these times !

  • Amy

    The rebels are his heroes, really? We don ‘t even know how many of them are al queda, numb nuts. :gun:

  • midTN

    McCain is going senile….. :!:

  • derised1

    When will McCain retire and just go away with some dignity intact? Sigh…

    • YERMOM

      at this point it would be impossible for him to have any dignity intact….

      will settle for him just fucking going away.

  • Phil Byler

    Excuse me, guys, but John McCain on the ground in Iraq 2004-2007 talking to Captains and Lieutenants learned what he did and consistently advocated for an increase in the number of troops in Iraq. What became the surge strategy announced in January 2008 and thereafter successful was a vindication of what for years McCain said we needed to do in Iraq.

    McCain has known and still does know his stuff with respect to military matters, foreign policy and national security. We as a country are suffering now because Obama is Commander in Chief and not McCain. So if McCain is saying what he is concerning Libya, then McCain should respectfully be listened to as someone with a track record. It is not senility affecting McCain in his advice concernig Libya, but a knowledge that amidst the forces of change in the Middle East, we cannot afford to appear weak and we need to support as best we can those who will struggle to bring a more democratic Libya.

    And what may I ask is now the alternative? If we leave Ghaddafi in power, we look weak and invite more grief from the radical Islamists. Obama has very badly mishandled the Libyan situation.