There have only been 19 Sundays so far this year, and Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) has appeared on one of the major-network Sunday shows 11 times, more than anyone else in the country. Why a network hasn’t just given him his own Sunday show is not yet clear.
And true to form, McCain made the most of his appearance by saying exactly what he was expected to say. He’s certain there’s a Benghazi “cover-up” (though he still doesn’t know what’s been covered up); he wants a special committee on Benghazi (though he doesn’t know why); and he insists Hillary Clinton was “in the loop” (though he doesn’t know which loop).
But what struck me as especially interesting were McCain’s comments on Syria. The Republican senator said the Assad government would be in trouble if “they move in” and if the U.S. “can give them the heavy weapons that they need.” ABC News’ Martha Raddatz asked a couple of good questions.
RADDATZ: Who’s them?
MCCAIN: I know them. I’ve met them. They’re there.
RADDATZ: But how do you pick out good rebels and bad rebels? You’ve got al Qaeda rebels running around.
MCCAIN: Martha, these are legitimate questions you’re asking, but they are there. And you put them inside Syria….These jihadists – there aren’t that many of them. They’re just so good, because they’ve been fighting all over the Middle East for all these years and they are not afraid to die…. Look, we can do this.
So, let’s review. John McCain, whom the media still perceives as a credible voice on foreign policy despite all of the evidence to the contrary, wants to vouch — personally — for the reliability of Syrian rebels. What about the inconvenient detail that many of the rebels have already pledged allegiance to al Qaeda? McCain considers that a “legitimate” question for which he has no legitimate answer.
After all, there aren’t “that many” al Qaeda allies fighting in Syria, so we shouldn’t feel qualms about giving them weapons and support. Why? Because “they are there.”
Behold, the Republicans’ top voice on matters related to international affairs.
Wait, it gets worse.
McCain also made some curious remarks about U.S. policy in Syria to the New Yorker.









