McCain fights back in fact spat
2008 RACE | Insists he knows exactly when Iraq surge started
BETHLEHEM, Pa. -- Republican John McCain pushed back on Wednesday against Democratic criticism that he misstated when the troop buildup ordered by President Bush began, saying elements were put in place before Bush announced the strategy in early 2007.
He told reporters during an unscheduled stop in a supermarket that what the Bush administration calls ''the surge'' was actually ''made up of a number of components,'' some of which began before the president's order for more troops.
It's all a matter of semantics, he suggested.
McCain said Army Col. Sean MacFarland started carrying out elements of a new counterinsurgency strategy as early as December 2006.
At issue are McCain's comments in a Tuesday interview with CBS.
The Arizona senator disputed Democrat Barack Obama's contention that a Sunni revolt against al-Qaida combined with the dispatch of thousands more U.S. combat troops to Iraq to produce the improved security situation there. McCain called that a ''false depiction.''
Democrats jumped on his comments. They said McCain's remarks showed he was out of touch, because the rebellion of U.S.-backed Sunni sheiks against al-Qaida terrorists in Iraq's Anbar province was under way well before Bush announced in January 2007 his decision to send 30,000 additional U.S. troops.
McCain asserted he knew that and didn't commit a gaffe. ''A surge is really a counterinsurgency made up of a number of components . . . . I'm not sure people understand that 'surge' is part of a counterinsurgency.''
Speaking on CBS Tuesday of a Sunni sheik who approached Col. MacFarland, McCain said, ''Because of the surge, we were able to go out and protect that sheik and others. And it began the Anbar awakening.''
AP





