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McCain: Obama is 'totally lacking in experience'
The Atlantic's Jeffrey Goldberg has a good interview with John McCain about Iran, Barack Obama, Israel, and the Holocaust. Here's an excerpt:
JG: What do you think motivates Iran?
JM: Hatred. I don't try to divine people's motives. I look at their actions and what they say. I don't pretend to be an expert on the state of their emotions. I do know what their nation’s stated purpose is, I do know they continue in the development of nuclear weapons, and I know that they continue to support terrorists who are bent on the destruction of the state of Israel. You'll have to ask someone who engages in this psycho stuff to talk about their emotions.
JG: Senator Obama has calibrated his views on unconditional negotiations. Do you see any circumstance in which you could negotiate with Iran, or do you believe that it’s leadership is impervious to rational dialogue?
JM: I'm amused by Senator Obama’s dramatic change since he’s gone from a candidate in the primary to a candidate in the general election. I've seen him do that on a number of issues that show his naivete and inexperience on national security issues. I believe that the history of the successful conduct of national security policy is that, one, you don't sit down face-to-face with people who are behave the way they do, who are state sponsors of terrorism.
Senator Obama likes to refer to President Kennedy going to Vienna. Most historians see that as a serious mistake, which encouraged Khrushchev to build the Berlin Wall and to send missiles to Cuba. Another example is Richard Nixon going to China. I've forgotten how many visits Henry Kissinger made to China, and how every single word was dictated beforehand. More importantly, he went to China because China was then a counterweight to a greater threat, the Soviet Union. What is a greater threat in the Middle East than Iran today?
Senator Obama is totally lacking in experience, so therefore he makes judgments such as saying he would sit down with someone like Ahmadinejad without comprehending the impact of such a meeting. I know that his naivete and lack of experience is on display when he talks about sitting down opposite Hugo Chavez or Raul Castro or Ahmadinejad.













Well,
I'm pretty sure the Bay of Pigs was a bigger signal than Vienna alone.
The Chinese Mistake
quote: "More importantly, he went to China because China was then a counterweight to a greater threat, the Soviet Union."
Correct me if I am wrong, but, a common sense second part of this phrase is: "otherwise we wouldn't talk to China in the first place and that situation might have continued up until very recently even now..."
So China policy was a mistake? and maybe Mr. MacCain would correct that as soon as he would become president? there is a lot that can be said about this but I need to run to Walmart and Target to buy the last Chinese products before they become scarce! Thanks God at least there are no cheap Iranian products that I am used to now!