podesta-emails
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Hello All,
Just got off the phone with our tracker, Evan, on the ground in Orlando, FL.
Below are the notes from our call.
Big Highlights
- Attacks on Obama and promises to vets largely a repetition, verbatim,
of speech to DAV 2 weeks ago; plus a section on Georgia
- Again hits Obama on judgment and "shifting positions", says "not
content to merely predict failure in Iraq, [Obama] tried to legislate
failure"
- On Georgia, repeats warnings of Russia hitting BTC pipeline, says we
must view them a "threat to the peace"
- Major changes from prev. speech
- Directly addresses Obama charge he'll privatize VA; adamant that
this is an expansion
- Directly addresses Obama criticsm GI bill, says it would've been
politically easier to sign GI bill but "I sought a better bill"
- Says he will "save billions" by vetoing every earmark, which can be
used for vets care
- Repeats blames on Congress for exacerbating problems in vet health care
and energy problems
- Accuses Obama of not "listen[ing] to the troops on the ground when they
say ... 'Let us win'"
- Compares conflict in Georgia to Balkan conflict
Orlando, FL: McCain Speech at VFW 08/18/08
(Disclaimer: The following are notes, not direct quotes. If you'd like a
quotable transcript or video of any part below, please email us.)
Background Details
- about 4,000 in attendance in venue w/ seats for 10k
- Heavy press: 10 or so cameras, mix of natl and local
- Tracker had no problem getting in: VFW staffers doing check-in; tracker
didn't see any McCain staffers
- Ruslan Aushev, Soviet cmdr in Afghan war and Pres. of
Ingushetia, speaks of cooperation b/t Russ. vet group (CIS) and VFW and
need for international vet. affairs assoc.
- George Lisicki Cmmnder. in Chief of VFW, intros Cindy (she runs across
stage w/o speaking); intros John with brief bio and notes 1992 Americanism
award
- 1 woman in audience held "John McCain for President" sign
- Tracker didn't see any protesters
- McCain reading from paper, not teleprompter
- In addition to top military personnel named in speech, McCain thanks
Orange County Mayor Rich Crotty, Sen. Mel Martinez (from Cuba, 'a great
success story'), and Lindsay Graham and Lieberman for attendance
*
*
*LINK TO FULL REMARKS: http://thepage.time.com/mccains-address-to-the-vfw/*
REMARKS BY JOHN MCCAIN TO THE 109TH ANNUAL VETERANS OF FOREIGN WARS OF THE
UNITED STATES NATIONAL CONVENTION
Thank you all very much. National Commander George Lisicki, thank you for
the kind introduction. Ladies Auxiliary President Virginia Carmen, Incoming
National Commander Glen Gardner, Incoming Ladies Auxiliary President Dixie
Hild, Adjutant General Gunner Kent, Executive Director Bob Wallace: I thank
you all for the warm welcome. I am honored to be in the company of all my
fellow members of the VFW, and especially anyone here who might hail from
Post 7401 in Chandler, Arizona.
I'm proud to count many of you in this room as personal friends, including
my good friend retired Marine Corps Sergeant Major Paul Chevalier of New
Hampshire. And there's another gentleman here I know you'll want to welcome.
He's as fine a friend as a man could have in a tough spot, Lieutenant
Colonel Orson Swindle of the United States Marine Corps.
All of us take pride in being members of this great organization. After its
founding in 1914, the VFW served many of the more than four million American
veterans of the First World War. Today just one of those veterans survives,
a man of 107 named Frank Buckles. Frank lives in West Virginia. And I have a
feeling that word will reach him if we all join in a round of applause for
the last doughboy.
In all the years since, the men and women of the VFW have stayed faithful to
their mission of serving those who have served their country. In Europe,
Asia, the Middle East, and elsewhere, America's veterans have faced
different enemies, but they have always found the same friend and ally in
the VFW. All of us returned from war with a few experiences we'd gladly
forget, but the friendships and camaraderie we brought home are forever. For
keeping us all together, and helping those most in need, we're all in the
debt of the VFW.
The men and women of the VFW know the value of freedom, because you have
been its protectors. You were there when your country needed you. You
shouldered heavy burdens and accepted great risks. I'm sure many of you will
also recall from your experiences in war, as I do from mine, that when
you're somewhere on the other side of the world in the service of America
you pay attention to the news from back home. It affects morale. And even
during this election season, with sharp differences on the wisdom and
success of the surge in Iraq, Americans need to speak as one in praise of
the men and women who fight our battles. They are the best among us, as you
were before them, and I know you will join me in applauding the courage and
skill that will see America through to victory.
Though victory in Iraq is finally in sight, a great deal still depends on
the decisions and good judgment of the next president. The hard-won gains of
our troops hang in the balance. The lasting advantage of a peaceful and
democratic ally in the heart of the Middle East could still be squandered by
hasty withdrawal and arbitrary timelines. And this is one of many problems
in the shifting positions of my opponent, Senator Obama.
With less than three months to go before the election, a lot of people are
still trying to square Senator Obama's varying positions on the surge in
Iraq. First, he opposed the surge and confidently predicted that it would
fail. Then he tried to prevent funding for the troops who carried out the
surge. *Not content to merely predict failure in Iraq, my opponent tried to
legislate failure. *This was back when supporting America's efforts in Iraq
entailed serious political risk. It was a clarifying moment. It was a moment
when political self-interest and the national interest parted ways. For my
part, with so much in the balance, it was an easy call. As I said at the
time, I would rather lose an election than lose a war.
Thanks to the courage and sacrifice of our soldiers, sailors, airmen, and
Marines and to brave Iraqi fighters the surge has succeeded. And yet* Senato
**r Obama still cannot quite bring himself to admit his own failure in
judgment. Nor has he been willing to heed the guidance of General Petraeus,
or to listen to our troops on the ground when they say -- as they have said
to me on my trips to Iraq: "Let us win, just let us win."* Instead, Senator
Obama commits the greater error of insisting that even in hindsight, he
would oppose the surge. Even in retrospect, he would choose the path of
retreat and failure for America over the path of success and victory. In
short, both candidates in this election pledge to end this war and bring our
troops home. The great difference is that I intend to win it first.
Behind all of these claims and positions by Senator Obama lies the ambition
to be president. What's less apparent is the judgment to be commander in
chief. And in matters of national security, good judgment will be at a
premium in the term of the next president -- as we were all reminded ten
days ago by events in the nation of Georgia.
It's been a while since most Americans -- including most of our leaders and
diplomats -- have viewed Russia as a threat to the peace. But the Russian
government's assault on a small democratic neighbor shows why this needs
revising. As I have long warned, Russia under the rule of Vladimir Putin is
becoming more aggressive toward the now democratic nations that broke free
of the old Soviet empire.
Russia also holds vast energy wealth. And this heavy influence in the oil
and gas market has become a political weapon that Russia is clearly prepared
to use. Georgia stands at a strategic crossroads in the Caucasus.
The*Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline,
*which brings oil from the Caspian to points west, traverses Georgia. And if
that pipeline were destroyed or controlled by Russia, global energy supplies
would be even more vulnerable to Russian influence with serious consequences
on the world energy market.
For some time now, I have been making the case for a dramatic acceleration
of domestic energy production. With high prices and growing demand for oil
and gas, Americans cannot remain dependent upon others for the most vital of
commodities. Now we are reminded that energy policy is also a matter of the
highest priority not only for our economy, but for our nation's security.
Disruptions of supply abroad can suddenly raise energy prices, inflicting
great harm on our economy and on America workers. And in the term of the
next president, skillful handling of such a crisis could be the difference
between temporary hardship and far-reaching disaster.
When Russia first invaded Georgia, some people may have wondered why events
in this part of the world should be any concern of ours. After all, Georgia
may seem a small, remote and obscure place. But many of you served in places
that once seemed remote and obscure. And the veterans of foreign wars know
better than anyone how inattention to small crises can invite much larger
ones. There are many reasons why the Russian invasion of Georgia is of grave
concern to America and to our allies. Above all, Georgia is a struggling
democracy where Soviet tyranny is still fresh in memory. There are reports
now of Georgian villages being razed, civilians being rounded up, and
innocent civilians shot. *We have seen such things before, as in the Balkans
** and in earlier periods of European history, and now we must ensure that
events in Georgia do not unfold into a tragedy of greater scale.* When young
democracies are threatened or attacked, and innocent civilians are targeted,
they should be able to count on the free world for support and solidarity.
If I am elected president, they will have that support. And in cooperation
with our friends and allies in Europe, we will make it clear to Russia's
rulers that acts of violence and intimidation come at a heavy cost. There
will be no place among G-8 nations, or in the WTO, for a *modern Russia that
acts at times like the old Soviet Union. *The Cold War is over, the Soviet
empire is gone, and neither one is missed. Least of all is that empire
missed by the once captive nations of Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland,
Ukraine, and Georgia. These brave young democracies have joined the free
world, and they are not going back.
Through decades of struggle, free nations prevailed over tyranny in large
measure because of the sacrifices of the men and women of the United States
armed forces. And it will fall to the next commander in chief to make good
on the obligation our government accepts every time any man or woman enters
the military, and again when they receive their DD 214. Those we depend on
as troops should know, when they become veterans, that they can depend on
us. Honoring this obligation will require leadership. And *I pledge to you
that as president I will lead -- from the front -- to reform our VA system
and make sure that veterans receive the respect and care they have earned.*
*The Walter Reed scandal was a disgrace unworthy of this nation -- and I
intend to make sure that nothing like it is ever repeated. *There are other
problems as well that have not received as much media attention. And my
administration will do the hard and necessary work of fixing them, even when
the press and the public are not watching.
Reform begins with appointing a Secretary of Veterans Affairs who is a
leader of the highest caliber, and who listens to veterans and veterans'
service organizations. My VA secretary must be a forceful advocate for
veterans and forthright advisor to me, so we can make the right choices
about budgeting, health care, and other veterans' benefit issues. He or she
will also need to be a high-energy leader, too, because we'll have a lot of
work to do in improving service to veterans.
Veterans must be treated fairly and expeditiously as they seek compensation
for disability or illness. We owe them compassion and hands-on care in their
transition to civilian life. *We owe them training, rehabilitation, and
education. *We owe their families, parents and caregivers our concern and
support. Veterans should never be deprived of quality medical care and
mental health care coverage for illness or injury incurred as a result of
their service to our country.
As president, I will do all that is in my power to ensure that those who
serve today, and those who have served in the past, have access to the
highest quality health, mental health and rehabilitative care in the world.
And I will not accept a situation in which veterans are denied access to
care on account of travel distances, backlogs of appointments, and years of
pending disability evaluation and claims. We should no longer tolerate
requiring veterans to make an appointment to stand in one line for a ticket
to stand in another.
I'm not here to tell you that there is a cost that is too high to be paid in
the care of our nation's veterans. I will make sure that Congress funds the
VA health care budget in a sufficient, timely, and predictable manner. But I
will say that every increase in funding must be matched by increases in
accountability, both at the VA and in Congress. And this requires an end to
certain practices and abuses that serve neither our veterans, our country,
nor the reputation of Congress itself.
Exactly because funding VA programs command bipartisan support, some in the
Congress like to attach unrelated appropriations and earmarks to VA bills.
The result is to mix vital national priorities with wasteful and often
worthless political pork. Earmarks show up in bills of every kind, and not
just VA bills. That's how we end up budgeting hundreds of millions of
dollars for bridges to nowhere, or lesser sums for Woodstock museums and the
like. When that earmark for a million bucks to fund a Woodstock museum
didn't come through, I don't imagine that many veterans had to change their
vacation plans. And the principle here is simple: Public money should serve
the public good. If it's me sitting in the Oval Office, at the Resolute
desk, those wasteful spending bills are going the way of all earmarks,
straight back to the Congress with a veto. [PARAPHRASE - NOT IN PREPARED
REMARKS - You will know their names. I will make them famous and we'll make
it clear that this wasteful spending must end. *And that will save billions,
which can be used for veterans' care*.]
When we make it clear to Congress that no earmark bill will be signed into
law, that will save many billions of dollars that can be applied to
essential priorities, and above all to the care of our veterans. But reform
doesn't end there. We must also modernize our disability system to make sure
that eligible service members receive benefits quickly, based on clear,
predictable, and fair standards. And we must address the problems of
capacity and access within our VA health care system. While this will
involve a wide range of initiatives, I believe there is a simple and direct
reform we should make right away.
My administration will create a Veterans' Care Access Card to be used by
veterans with illness or injury incurred during their military service, and
by those with lower incomes. This card will provide those without timely
access to VA facilities the option of using high-quality health-care
providers near their homes. For many veterans, the closest VA facility isn't
close enough. And many of their local providers are already familiar with
the most common needs of veterans. Often, all that prevents them from
receiving local care is a system for sharing medical records among VA, DOD,
and civilian hospitals and doctors. My reform will improve care, reduce
risks, and broaden access all at the same time.
This card is not intended to either replace the VA or privatize veterans'
health care, as some have wrongly charged. I believe the VA should always be
there to provide top-quality care for our veterans. And I believe that the
VA should continue to provide broad-spectrum health care to eligible
veterans, in addition to specialized care in areas such as spinal injuries,
prosthetics, and blindness -- services in which the VA sets the standard in
medical care.
Even so, there are veterans eligible for care who are not currently able to
receive it, on account of distance, wait times, or the absence of certain
specialties. And for this group, the new card I propose will offer better
alternatives, to provide the benefits they have earned.
Reform must also recognize that greater care is needed for certain types of
injuries. In the Senate, I co-authored the Wounded Warrior Act, which was
the first major legislative initiative to address post-traumatic stress
disorder and traumatic brain injury. As president, I will build on this
legislation to improve screening and treatment for these severe injuries
suffered by many in Iraq and Afghanistan.
The VA must also broaden its care for the women who are entering the armed
forces in greater numbers than ever. The growing ranks of women in uniform
have left the VA lagging behind in the services it provides. And here the
Veterans Care Access Card will prove especially valuable, affording women
medical options while the VA improves capacity and expands services.
These are among the elements of my reform agenda for the VA system. And t*oday,
as other occasions, I have stated in the plainest, most straightforward
terms that the Veterans Health Care Access Card will expand existing
benefits. I don't expect this will deter the Obama campaign from
misrepresenting my proposals, but lest there be any doubt you have my
pledge: My reforms would not force anyone to go to a non-VA facility. They
will not signal privatization of the VA.* And they will not replace any
scheduled expansion of the VA network -- including those facilities designed
to serve veterans living in rural and remote areas.
*I suppose from my opponent's vantage point, veterans concerns are just one
more issue to be spun or worked to advantage. This would explain why he has
also taken liberties with my position on the GI Bill. In its initial
version, that bill failed to address the number one education request that
I've heard from career service members and their families* -- the freedom to
transfer their benefits to a spouse or a child. The bill also did nothing to
retain the young officer and enlisted leaders who form the backbone of our
all-volunteer force.
*As a political proposition, it would have much easier for me to have just
signed on to what I considered flawed legislation. But the people of
Arizona, and of all America, expect more from their representatives than
that, and instead I sought a better bill. I'm proud to say that the result
is a law that better serves our military, better serves military families,
and better serves the interests of our country.*
No one who has worn the uniform of his or her country can ever take these
matters lightly. We all learned an ethic in the service of looking after one
another, of leaving no one behind, and this commitment did not end when we
left the service. As a matter of duty and of honor, whatever our commitments
to veterans cost, if I am president those commitments will be kept.
The next president will have many responsibilities to the American people,
and I take them all seriously. But I have one responsibility that outweighs
all the others and that is to use whatever talents I possess, and every
resource God has granted me to protect the security of this great and good
nation from all enemies foreign and domestic.
It is every veteran's hope that should their children be called upon to
answer a call to arms, the battle will be necessary and the field well
chosen. But that is not their responsibility. It belongs to the government
that called them. As it once was for us, their honor will be in their answer
not their summons. Whatever we think about how and why we went to war in
Iraq, we are all humbled by and grateful for their example. They now deserve
the distinction of the best Americans, and we owe them a debt we can never
fully repay. We can only offer the small tribute of our humility and our
commitment to do all that we can do, in less trying and costly
circumstances, to help keep this nation worthy of their sacrifice.
*Many of them have served multiple tours in Iraq and Afghanistan. Many had
their tours extended. Many returned to combat sooner than they had been led
to expect. It was a sad and hard thing to ask so much more of Americans who
have already given more than their fair share to the defense of our country.
Few of them and their families will have received the news about additional
and longer deployments without aiming a few appropriate complaints in the
general direction of people like me, who helped make the decision to send
them there. *And then they shouldered a rifle or climbed in a cockpit and
risked everything -- everything -- to accomplish their mission, to protect
another people's freedom and our own country from harm.
It is a privilege beyond measure to live in a country served by them. I have
had the good fortune to know personally a great many brave and selfless
patriots who sacrificed and shed blood to defend America. But I have known
none braver or better than those who do so today. They are our inspiration,
as I suspect all of you were once theirs. And I pray to a loving God that He
bless and protect them. Thank you.
--
Sara DuBois
Tracking / Communications Manager
ProgressiveAccountability.org
[email protected]
202-609-7681 (office)
410-967-7306 (cell)
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