McCain hails bravery of UK troops in Iraq
LONDON (AP) - March 20, 2008 McCain discussed Iraq with British Prime Minister Gordon Brown
in their first-ever meeting - a 45-minute discussion in London that
also touched on the economy and climate change, McCain said.
McCain's political fortunes are linked to the war he strongly
backs and the four-term Arizona senator said Iraq would likely be
the defining issue of the election. McCain has clinched enough
delegate support to win the Republican Party's nomination.
Brown has said he hopes to cut British forces, based near the
southern city of Basra, from 4,000 to about 2,500 in coming months.
McCain said this week, however, that pulling out of Iraq quickly
would be a mistake that would boost Iran and al-Qaida. On Thursday,
he said Americans were increasingly backing the U.S. troop increase
strategy and believed the tactic was bringing success.
"That will be, frankly, a very big issue for the country,
whether we withdraw and have al-Qaida win and announce to the world
they have won and have things collapse there, or whether we see
this strategy through to success," McCain said.
But he insisted that his warnings about the dangers of a
precipitate withdrawal from Iraq were about U.S. forces only.
Britain's decision "is made by the British government and
people," he said.
Brown has stressed that British troops would be withdrawn only
on the advice of defense chiefs. Some officials suggest fragile
security in Basra may force the U.K. to delay any pullout.
"We appreciate enormously the long service and sacrifice of the
British men and women in the military both in Iraq and
Afghanistan," McCain told reporters outside Brown's official
residence in London.
McCain's visit to Britain was part of a weeklong tour of Middle
East and Europe. He was traveling as part of a U.S. congressional
delegation - including Sens. Joe Lieberman, I-Conn., and Lindsey
Graham, R-S.C. - that already has visited Iraq, Jordan and Israel.
The McCain campaign has defended the trip - at taxpayers'
expense - as critical for members of the Senate Armed Services
Committee. However, McCain was using some of his time overseas to
collect money for his White House bid. He had a $1,000 per person
fundraising lunch at London's Spencer House.
"Having just come from Iraq, I can tell you unequivocally that
the situation has improved dramatically over the last year,"
McCain said. "Al-Qaida is on the run. They are not defeated."
But he acknowledged some mistakes had been made in postwar
planning. "The problem with Iraq, in my view, is because it was
mishandled after the initial success, that caused great
frustration, sacrifice and sorrow on the part of the American
people and our allies," he said.
McCain also met Thursday with Britain's opposition Conservative
party leader David Cameron at the Houses of Parliament, where a
host of Conservative lawmakers lined a courtyard beneath the Big
Ben clock tower to greet McCain as he arrived.
"Our conversation centered on Afghanistan," Cameron said.
"The senator and I also spent time discussing our shared interests
and how we can broaden the appeal of moderate Conservatism."
McCain also planned a meeting with Europe's environment
commissioner, Stavros Dimas, to discuss U.S. climate change policy,
European Commission spokeswoman Emilia Hinkkanen said.
Dimas is attempting to win support from the three major
presidential candidates for a plan to establish carbon trading in
the U.S. to help cut carbon emissions.
"I am convinced that if we work at it, we will be able to
convince India and China that it is in their interest to be part of
a global agreement to reduce greenhouse gas emissions," McCain
said after meeting Brown. "I believe that we can achieve a global
agreement."
He planned a trip to Paris on Friday to meet with French
President Nicolas Sarkozy, whom he called a leader with
"pro-American tendencies."