John Mccain
Defeated by George Bush in 2000, Senator McCain remains a popular figure, but his support for the Iraq war may yet cost him, writes Ewen MacAskill.
John McCain received two bad beatings in his life. One was physical, as a prisoner of war during the Vietnam war. The other was psychological, delivered by George Bush's campaign team in a dirty tricks operation in South Carolina in 2000 that cost him the Republican nomination and, almost certainly, the presidency.
Both were formative in the complex life of the Arizona senator. His five-and-a-half years in jail in Hanoi forced a rethink of his attitude to war and foreign policy, the dominant theme of his subsequent years as a senator and presidential candidate. The defeat in South Carolina caused him to re-evaluate his approach to campaigning: the legacy is the way he will fight for the 2008 Republican presidential nomination - more establishment, more calculating, less maverick.
Although Rudy Giuliani took a surprise early lead in the Republican contest this time round, it is likely that McCain will be one of the front-runners going into the primaries in January and February 2008. He has a volatile but likeable personality, the necessary political experience, and is a good campaigner.
Journalists like him because he is has not been formed by focus groups and media advisers but remains identifiably human, given to mood swings, inconsistent, prepared to change his mind and policies. And he is very funny. He is also open: almost everything he says on his campaign bus, The Straight Talk Express, is on the record.
Although the public mood swung decisively towards the Democrats in the 2007 November congressional elections, it does not follow that the electorate will automatically opt for a Democrat in the presidential election. Americans have demonstrated in presidential election after presidential election a preference for the candidate of the centre, and there will be none more centrist than McCain. If he were to become president he would, at 72, be the oldest incumbent to hold the office.
McCain was born into a military family: his father and grandfather were both admirals, and he too joined the navy. As a navy pilot, he had an extremely lucky escape in the early stages of the Vietnam war when a rocket was fired accidentally, hitting his plane as he was preparing to take off from a carrier. The fire killed 132 but he survived.
Shot down four months later over Hanoi, he was beaten up so badly that it inflicted lasting damage. He was to Hoa Lo prison, nicknamed the Hanoi Hilton by US servicemen. When the Vietnamese learned six months later that his father was commander of the Pacific command, he was offered the chance to return home early but refused. He spent five more years in jail, plenty of time to reflect on US policy in Vietnam, and emerged with a more considered view of American power.
He stood by America's decision to intervene but drew up a narrow mental tick list of criteria that would justify future interventions elsewhere in the world.
He retired from the navy in 1981 and began his political career a year later when he was elected to the House of Representatives. Applying the new worldview he acquired in the Hanoi Hilton to world politics, he urged the withdrawal of US forces from Lebanon at a time when such a view was regarded as near treason by Republican leaders - before a suicide bomber killed 241 Americans in Beirut, prompting a speedy exit. Another test came in 1991 when the senator - he was elected in 1986 - opposed US troops pushing on from Kuwait to Baghdad.
But McCain changed again, disgusted by the war in Bosnia, to a wider view of when it is right to intervene. And, having been opposed to pushing on from Kuwait to Baghdad, in 1997 he embraced the Iraqi exiles, including Ahmed Chalabi, and said he been mistaken in his opposition to overthrowing Saddam Hussein.
In the 2000 race for the Republican nomination for the presidency, McCain seemed a near certainty, as a real-life American hero: fighter pilot and prisoner of war. He easily beat Bush in the first of the primaries but then came South Carolina, where Bush had the support of the Christian right. A nasty campaign was waged against McCain in which rumours were circulated that he had fathered a black child: in fact, he had adopted a Bangladeshi girl. He lost South Carolina and, despite taking Arizona and Michigan, never regained momentum.
McCain had been popular with both Republicans and Democrats but lost some of the Democratic support in 2004 later when he gave his support to Bush - in spite of what Mr Bush's campaign team had done to him in South Carolina - turning down an offer from the Democrats to run as John Kerry's vice-president.
For 2008, he has adopted a less maverick approach. He has recruited aides familiar with dirty tricks, but whether this is a defensive or aggressive move will only become apparent in the course of the campaign. And he reached an uneasy peace with the Christian right, delivering a graduation speech at Liberty University, the spiritual home of Jerry Falwell, in May 2006. But his big problem this time round is unlikely to be the Christian right or dirty tricks, but Iraq.
McCain was a cheerleader for the war, though within months of the invasion he visited Iraq and concluded that it had been a mistake to go in with so few US troops, and that has been a constant refrain ever since. In January this year, President Bush finally announced he was to send extra troops. But if this troop "surge" fails, McCain, as an advocate of this policy, would be among the political losers.
Life and times
Born: August 29 1936 in the Panama Canal Zone, Panama
Family: Married to Cindy Hensley McCain, with children Sydney McCain, Doug Shepp, Andy Shepp, Meghan McCain, John Sidney McCain IV, James McCain, Bridget McCain
Education: Graduated from the United States Naval Academy in 1958; National War College, 1973
Career: McCain served in the air force during the Vietnam war and was shot down and captured in 1967. He spent five-and-a-half years as a prisoner of war and was repeatedly tortured. After his release, McCain remained in the US Navy until 1981. Moved to Arizona and won a seat in the US House of Representatives in 1983. He was elected to the Senate in 1986. Ran for Republican presidential nomination in 2000
Religion: Episcopal
Campaign manager: Terry Nelson, political director of George Bush's 2004 campaign
Pollster: Rick McInturff
Fundraising manager: Tom Loeffler
Chief strategist: John Weaver
Media consultant: Mike Murphy
Website:
johnmccain.com
Senate website:
mccain.senate.gov
MySpace:
myspace.com/johnmccain
Both were formative in the complex life of the Arizona senator. His five-and-a-half years in jail in Hanoi forced a rethink of his attitude to war and foreign policy, the dominant theme of his subsequent years as a senator and presidential candidate. The defeat in South Carolina caused him to re-evaluate his approach to campaigning: the legacy is the way he will fight for the 2008 Republican presidential nomination - more establishment, more calculating, less maverick.
Although Rudy Giuliani took a surprise early lead in the Republican contest this time round, it is likely that McCain will be one of the front-runners going into the primaries in January and February 2008. He has a volatile but likeable personality, the necessary political experience, and is a good campaigner.
Journalists like him because he is has not been formed by focus groups and media advisers but remains identifiably human, given to mood swings, inconsistent, prepared to change his mind and policies. And he is very funny. He is also open: almost everything he says on his campaign bus, The Straight Talk Express, is on the record.
Although the public mood swung decisively towards the Democrats in the 2007 November congressional elections, it does not follow that the electorate will automatically opt for a Democrat in the presidential election. Americans have demonstrated in presidential election after presidential election a preference for the candidate of the centre, and there will be none more centrist than McCain. If he were to become president he would, at 72, be the oldest incumbent to hold the office.
McCain was born into a military family: his father and grandfather were both admirals, and he too joined the navy. As a navy pilot, he had an extremely lucky escape in the early stages of the Vietnam war when a rocket was fired accidentally, hitting his plane as he was preparing to take off from a carrier. The fire killed 132 but he survived.
Shot down four months later over Hanoi, he was beaten up so badly that it inflicted lasting damage. He was to Hoa Lo prison, nicknamed the Hanoi Hilton by US servicemen. When the Vietnamese learned six months later that his father was commander of the Pacific command, he was offered the chance to return home early but refused. He spent five more years in jail, plenty of time to reflect on US policy in Vietnam, and emerged with a more considered view of American power.
He stood by America's decision to intervene but drew up a narrow mental tick list of criteria that would justify future interventions elsewhere in the world.
He retired from the navy in 1981 and began his political career a year later when he was elected to the House of Representatives. Applying the new worldview he acquired in the Hanoi Hilton to world politics, he urged the withdrawal of US forces from Lebanon at a time when such a view was regarded as near treason by Republican leaders - before a suicide bomber killed 241 Americans in Beirut, prompting a speedy exit. Another test came in 1991 when the senator - he was elected in 1986 - opposed US troops pushing on from Kuwait to Baghdad.
But McCain changed again, disgusted by the war in Bosnia, to a wider view of when it is right to intervene. And, having been opposed to pushing on from Kuwait to Baghdad, in 1997 he embraced the Iraqi exiles, including Ahmed Chalabi, and said he been mistaken in his opposition to overthrowing Saddam Hussein.
In the 2000 race for the Republican nomination for the presidency, McCain seemed a near certainty, as a real-life American hero: fighter pilot and prisoner of war. He easily beat Bush in the first of the primaries but then came South Carolina, where Bush had the support of the Christian right. A nasty campaign was waged against McCain in which rumours were circulated that he had fathered a black child: in fact, he had adopted a Bangladeshi girl. He lost South Carolina and, despite taking Arizona and Michigan, never regained momentum.
McCain had been popular with both Republicans and Democrats but lost some of the Democratic support in 2004 later when he gave his support to Bush - in spite of what Mr Bush's campaign team had done to him in South Carolina - turning down an offer from the Democrats to run as John Kerry's vice-president.
For 2008, he has adopted a less maverick approach. He has recruited aides familiar with dirty tricks, but whether this is a defensive or aggressive move will only become apparent in the course of the campaign. And he reached an uneasy peace with the Christian right, delivering a graduation speech at Liberty University, the spiritual home of Jerry Falwell, in May 2006. But his big problem this time round is unlikely to be the Christian right or dirty tricks, but Iraq.
McCain was a cheerleader for the war, though within months of the invasion he visited Iraq and concluded that it had been a mistake to go in with so few US troops, and that has been a constant refrain ever since. In January this year, President Bush finally announced he was to send extra troops. But if this troop "surge" fails, McCain, as an advocate of this policy, would be among the political losers.
Life and times
Born: August 29 1936 in the Panama Canal Zone, Panama
Family: Married to Cindy Hensley McCain, with children Sydney McCain, Doug Shepp, Andy Shepp, Meghan McCain, John Sidney McCain IV, James McCain, Bridget McCain
Education: Graduated from the United States Naval Academy in 1958; National War College, 1973
Career: McCain served in the air force during the Vietnam war and was shot down and captured in 1967. He spent five-and-a-half years as a prisoner of war and was repeatedly tortured. After his release, McCain remained in the US Navy until 1981. Moved to Arizona and won a seat in the US House of Representatives in 1983. He was elected to the Senate in 1986. Ran for Republican presidential nomination in 2000
Religion: Episcopal
Campaign manager: Terry Nelson, political director of George Bush's 2004 campaign
Pollster: Rick McInturff
Fundraising manager: Tom Loeffler
Chief strategist: John Weaver
Media consultant: Mike Murphy
Website:
johnmccain.com
Senate website:
mccain.senate.gov
MySpace:
myspace.com/johnmccain

Use the feedback form below to submit your comments.

Use the form below to email this article to your friends.

- Sen. Chuck Hagel and Sen. John McCain Square Off on Iraq
- John McCain Will Be Our Next President
- Senator John McCain: Any War Will Do
- Is John Mccain Democrats' Worst Nightmare?
- Giuliani Endorses 'friend and Fellow Republican' John Mccain
- John McCain secures Republican Nomination
- Tom Coburn Endorses John McCain for President
- Schwarzenegger Endorses John Mccain
- John Mccain
- John McCain: About Turn on Ethanol
- People
- The Nearly Man
- McCain Victor on Super Tuesday as Obama Claims Narrow Lead
- Clinton, McCain Claim Victories in New Hampshire
- The End of Organized Conservatism
- The Democrats' Nightmare is a Sweet Republican Dream
- McCain Nomination Marked By President's Endorsement
- New York Times Faces Backlash After Mccain Article
- Wisconsin Voters Brave Cold to Cast Ballots
- Romney to Endorse Republican Frontrunner Mccain, Reports Say



