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Senator John
McCain and Senator
Barack Obama
Presidential Debate
Transcript, The
University Of
Mississippi Debate.
September 26, 2008
LEHRER: Good evening
from the Ford Center
for the Performing
Arts at the
University of
Mississippi in
Oxford. I’m Jim
Lehrer of the
NewsHour on PBS, and
I welcome you to the
first of the 2008
presidential debates
between the
Republican nominee,
Senator John McCain
of Arizona, and the
Democratic nominee,
Senator Barack Obama
of Illinois.
The Commission on
Presidential Debates is the sponsor of this event and the three other
presidential and vice presidential debates coming in October.
Tonight’s will
primarily be about foreign policy and national security, which, by
definition, includes the global financial crisis. It will be divided
roughly into nine-minute segments.
Direct exchanges
between the candidates and moderator follow-ups are permitted after each
candidate has two minutes to answer the lead question in an order
determined by a coin toss.
The specific subjects
and questions were chosen by me. They have not been shared or cleared
with anyone.
The audience here in
the hall has promised to remain silent, no cheers, no applause, no noise
of any kind, except right now, as we welcome Senators Obama and McCain.
(APPLAUSE)
Let me begin with
something General Eisenhower said in his 1952 presidential campaign.
Quote, “We must achieve both security and solvency. In fact, the
foundation of military strength is economic strength,” end quote.
With that in mind,
the first lead question.
Gentlemen, at this
very moment tonight, where do you stand on the financial recovery plan?
First response to
you, Senator Obama. You have two minutes.
OBAMA: Well, thank
you very much, Jim, and thanks to the commission and the University of
Mississippi, Ole Miss, for hosting us tonight. I can’t think of a more
important time for us to talk about the future of the country.
You know, we are at a
defining moment in our history. Our nation is involved in two wars, and
we are going through the worst financial crisis since the Great
Depression.
And although we’ve
heard a lot about Wall Street, those of you on Main Street I think have
been struggling for a while, and you recognize that this could have an
impact on all sectors of the economy.
And you’re wondering,
how’s it going to affect me? How’s it going to affect my job? How’s it
going to affect my house? How’s it going to affect my retirement savings
or my ability to send my children to college?
So we have to move
swiftly, and we have to move wisely. And I’ve put forward a series of
proposals that make sure that we protect taxpayers as we engage in this
important rescue effort.
Number one, we’ve got
to make sure that we’ve got oversight over this whole process; $700
billion, potentially, is a lot of money.
Number two, we’ve got
to make sure that taxpayers, when they are putting their money at risk,
have the possibility of getting that money back and gains, if the
market—and when the market returns.
Number three, we’ve
got to make sure that none of that money is going to pad CEO bank
accounts or to promote golden parachutes.
And, number four,
we’ve got to make sure that we’re helping homeowners, because the root
problem here has to do with the foreclosures that are taking place all
across the country.
Now, we also have to
recognize that this is a final verdict on eight years of failed economic
policies promoted by George Bush, supported by Senator McCain, a theory
that basically says that we can shred regulations and consumer
protections and give more and more to the most, and somehow prosperity
will trickle down.
It hasn’t worked. And
I think that the fundamentals of the economy have to be measured by
whether or not the middle class is getting a fair shake. That’s why I’m
running for president, and that’s what I hope we’re going to be talking
about tonight.
LEHRER: Senator
McCain, two minutes.
MCCAIN: Well, thank
you, Jim. And thanks to everybody.
And I do have a sad
note tonight. Senator Kennedy is in the hospital. He’s a dear and
beloved friend to all of us. Our thoughts and prayers go out to the lion
of the Senate.
I also want to thank
the University of Mississippi for hosting us tonight.
And, Jim, I—I’ve been
not feeling too great about a lot of things lately. So have a lot of
Americans who are facing challenges. But I’m feeling a little better
tonight, and I’ll tell you why.
Because as we’re here
tonight in this debate, we are seeing, for the first time in a long
time, Republicans and Democrats together, sitting down, trying to work
out a solution to this fiscal crisis that we’re in.
And have no doubt
about the magnitude of this crisis. And we’re not talking about failure
of institutions on Wall Street. We’re talking about failures on Main
Street, and people who will lose their jobs, and their credits, and
their homes, if we don’t fix the greatest fiscal crisis, probably
in—certainly in our time, and I’ve been around a little while.
But the point is—the
point is, we have finally seen
Republicans and Democrats sitting down
and negotiating together and coming up with a package.
This package has
transparency in it. It has to have accountability and oversight. It has
to have options for loans to failing businesses, rather than the
government taking over those loans. We have to—it has to have a package
with a number of other essential elements to it.
And, yes, I went back
to Washington, and I met with my Republicans in the House of
Representatives. And they weren’t part of the negotiations, and I
understand that. And it was the House Republicans that decided that they
would be part of the solution to this problem.
But I want to
emphasize one point to all Americans tonight. This isn’t the beginning
of the end of this crisis. This is the end of the beginning, if we come
out with a package that will keep these institutions stable.
And we’ve got a lot
of work to do. And we’ve got to create jobs. And one of the areas, of
course, is to eliminate our dependence on foreign oil.
LEHRER: All right,
let’s go back to my question. How do you all stand on the recovery plan?
And talk to each other about it. We’ve got five minutes. We can
negotiate a deal right here.
But, I mean, are
you—do you favor this plan, Senator Obama, and you, Senator McCain? Do
you—are you in favor of this plan?
OBAMA: We haven’t
seen the language yet. And I do think that there’s constructive work
being done out there. So, for the viewers who are watching, I am
optimistic about the capacity of us to come together with a plan.
The question, I
think, that we have to ask ourselves is, how did we get into this
situation in the first place?
Two years ago, I
warned that, because of the subprime lending mess, because of the lax
regulation, that we were potentially going to have a problem and tried
to stop some of the abuses in mortgages that were taking place at the
time.
Last year, I wrote to
the secretary of the Treasury to make sure that he understood the
magnitude of this problem and to call on him to bring all the
stakeholders together to try to deal with it.
So—so the question, I
think, that we’ve got to ask ourselves is, yes, we’ve got to solve this
problem short term. And we are going to have to intervene; there’s no
doubt about that.
But we’re also going
to have to look at, how is it that we shredded so many regulations? We
did not set up a 21st-century regulatory framework to deal
with these problems. And that in part has to do with an economic
philosophy that says that regulation is always bad.
LEHRER: Are you going
to vote for the plan, Senator McCain?
MCCAIN: I—I hope so.
And I...
LEHRER: As a United
States senator...
MCCAIN: Sure.
LEHRER: ... you’re
going to vote for the plan?
MCCAIN: Sure. But—but
let me—let me point out, I also warned about Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac
and warned about corporate greed and excess, and CEO pay, and all that.
A lot of us saw this train wreck coming.
But there’s also the
issue of responsibility. You’ve mentioned
President Dwight
David Eisenhower. President Eisenhower, on the night before the Normandy
invasion, went into his room, and he wrote out two letters.
One of them was a
letter congratulating the great members of the military and allies that
had conducted and succeeded in the greatest invasion in history, still
to this day, and forever.
And he wrote out
another letter, and that was a letter of resignation from the United
States Army for the failure of the landings at Normandy.
Somehow we’ve lost
that accountability. I’ve been heavily criticized because I called for
the resignation of the chairman of the Securities and Exchange
Commission. We’ve got to start also holding people accountable, and
we’ve got to reward people who succeed.
But somehow in
Washington today—and I’m afraid on Wall Street·greed
is rewarded, excess is rewarded, and corruption—or certainly failure to
carry out our responsibility is rewarded.
As president of the
United States, people are going to be held accountable in my
administration. And I promise you that that will happen.
LEHRER: Do you have
something directly to say, Senator Obama, to Senator McCain about what
he just said?
OBAMA: Well, I think
Senator McCain’s absolutely right that we need more responsibility, but
we need it not just when there’s a crisis. I mean, we’ve had years in
which the reigning economic ideology has been what’s good for Wall
Street, but not what’s good for Main Street.
And there are folks
out there who’ve been struggling before this crisis took place. And
that’s why it’s so important, as we solve this short-term problem, that
we look at some of the underlying issues that have led to wages and
incomes for ordinary Americans to go down, the -- a health care system
that is broken, energy policies that are not working, because, you know,
10 days ago, John said that the fundamentals of the economy are sound.
LEHRER: Say it
directly to him.
OBAMA: I do not think
that they are.
LEHRER: Say it
directly to him.
OBAMA: Well,
the—John, 10 days ago, you said that the fundamentals of the economy are
sound. And...
MCCAIN: Are you afraid
I couldn’t hear him?
(LAUGHTER)
LEHRER: I’m just
determined to get you all to talk to each other. I’m going to try.
OBAMA: The—and I just
fundamentally disagree. And unless we are holding ourselves accountable
day in, day out, not just when there’s a crisis for folks who have power
and influence and can hire lobbyists, but for the nurse, the teacher,
the police officer, who, frankly, at the end of each month, they’ve got
a little financial crisis going on.
They’re having to
take out extra debt just to make their mortgage payments. We haven’t
been paying attention to them. And if you look at our tax policies, it’s
a classic example.
LEHRER: So, Senator
McCain, do you agree with what Senator Obama just said? And, if you
don’t, tell him what you disagree with.
MCCAIN: No, I—look,
we’ve got to fix the system. We’ve got fundamental problems in the
system. And Main Street is paying a penalty for the excesses and greed
in Washington, D.C., and in the Wall Street.
So there’s no doubt
that we have a long way to go. And, obviously, stricter interpretation
and consolidation of the various regulatory agencies that weren’t doing
their job, that has brought on this crisis.
But I have a
fundamental belief in the goodness and strength of the American worker.
And the American worker is the most productive, the most innovative.
America is still the greatest producer, exporter and importer.
But we’ve got to get
through these times, but I have a fundamental belief in the United
States of America. And I still believe, under the right leadership, our
best days are ahead of us.
LEHRER: All right,
let’s go to the next lead question, which is essentially following up on
this same subject.
And you get two
minutes to begin with, Senator McCain. And using your word
“fundamental,” are there fundamental differences between your approach
and Senator Obama’s approach to what you would do as president to lead
this country out of the financial crisis?
MCCAIN: Well, the
first thing we have to do is get spending under control in Washington.
It’s completely out of control. It’s gone—we have now presided over the
largest increase in the size of government since the Great Society.
We Republicans came
to power to change government, and government changed us. And the—the
worst symptom on this disease is what my friend, Tom Coburn, calls
earmarking as a gateway drug, because it’s a gateway. It’s a gateway to
out-of-control spending and corruption.
And we have former
members of Congress now residing in federal prison because of the evils
of this earmarking and pork-barrel spending.
You know, we spent $3
million to study the DNA of bears in Montana. I don’t know if that was a
criminal issue or a paternal issue, but the fact is that it was $3
million of our taxpayers’ money. And it has got to be brought under
control.
As president of the
United States, I want to assure you, I’ve got a pen. This one’s kind of
old. I’ve got a pen, and I’m going to veto every single spending bill
that comes across my desk. I will make them famous. You will know their
names.
Now, Senator Obama,
you wanted to know one of the differences. He has asked for $932
million of earmark pork-barrel spending, nearly a million dollars for
every day that he’s been in the United States Senate.
I suggest that people
go up on the Web site of Citizens Against Government Waste, and they’ll
look at those projects.
That kind of thing is
not the way to rein in runaway spending in Washington, D.C. That’s one
of the fundamental differences that Senator Obama and I have.
LEHRER: Senator
Obama, two minutes.
OBAMA: Well, Senator
McCain is absolutely right that the earmarks process has been abused,
which is why I suspended any requests for my home state, whether it was
for senior centers or what have you, until we cleaned it up.
And he’s also right
that oftentimes lobbyists and special interests are the ones that are
introducing these kinds of requests, although that wasn’t the case with
me.
But let’s be clear:
Earmarks account for $18 billion in last year’s budget. Senator McCain
is proposing—and this is a fundamental difference between us -- $300
billion in tax cuts to some of the wealthiest corporations and
individuals in the country, $300 billion.
Now, $18 billion is
important; $300 billion is really important. And in his tax plan, you
would have CEOs of Fortune 500 companies getting an average of $700,000
in reduced taxes, while leaving 100 million Americans out.
So my attitude is,
we’ve got to grow the economy from the bottom up. What I’ve called for
is a tax cut for 95 percent of working families, 95 percent.
And that means that
the ordinary American out there who’s collecting a paycheck every day,
they’ve got a little extra money to be able to buy a computer for their
kid, to fill up on this gas that is killing them.
And over time, that,
I think, is going to be a better recipe for economic growth than the—the
policies of President Bush that John McCain wants to—wants to follow.
LEHRER: Senator
McCain?
MCCAIN: Well, again,
I don’t mean to go back and forth, but he...
(CROSSTALK)
LEHRER: No, that’s
fine.
MCCAIN: Senator Obama
suspended those requests for pork-barrel projects after he was running
for president of the United States. He didn’t happen to see that light
during the first three years as a member of the United States Senate,
$932 million in requests.
Maybe to Senator
Obama it’s not a lot of money. But the point is that—you see, I hear
this all the time. “It’s only $18 billion.” Do you know that it’s
tripled in the last five years? Do you know that it’s gone completely
out of control to the point where it corrupts people? It corrupts
people.
That’s why we have,
as I said, people under federal indictment and charges. It’s a system
that’s got to be cleaned up.
I have fought against
it my career. I have fought against it. I was called the sheriff, by
the—one of the senior members of the Appropriations Committee. I didn’t
win Miss Congeniality in the United States Senate.
Now, Senator Obama
didn’t mention that, along with his tax cuts, he is also proposing some
$800 billion in new spending on new programs.
Now, that’s a
fundamental difference between myself and Senator Obama. I want to cut
spending. I want to keep taxes low. The worst thing we could do in this
economic climate is to raise people’s taxes.
OBAMA: I—I don’t know
where John is getting his figures.
Let’s just be clear.
What I do is I close
corporate loopholes, stop providing tax cuts to corporations that are
shipping jobs overseas so that we’re giving tax breaks to companies that
are investing here in the United States. I make sure that we have a
health care system that allows for everyone to have basic coverage.
I think those are
pretty important priorities. And I pay for every dime of it.
But let’s go back to
the original point. John, nobody is denying that $18 billion is
important. And, absolutely, we need earmark reform. And when I’m
president, I will go line by line to make sure that we are not spending
money unwisely.
But the fact is that
eliminating earmarks alone is not a recipe for how we’re going to get
the middle class back on track.
OBAMA: And when you
look at your tax policies that are directed primarily at those who are
doing well, and you are neglecting people who are really struggling
right now, I think that is a continuation of the last eight years, and
we can’t afford another four.
LEHRER: Respond
directly to him about that, to Senator Obama about that, about the—he’s
made it twice now, about your tax— your policies about tax cuts.
MCCAIN: Well—well,
let me give you an example of what Senator Obama finds objectionable,
the business tax.
Right now, the United
States of American business pays the second-highest business taxes in
the world, 35 percent. Ireland pays 11 percent.
Now, if you’re a
business person, and you can locate any place in the world, then,
obviously, if you go to the country where it’s 11 percent tax versus 35
percent, you’re going to be able to create jobs, increase your business,
make more investment, et cetera.
I want to cut that
business tax. I want to cut it so that businesses will remain in—in the
United States of America and create jobs.
But, again, I want to
return. It’s a lot more than $18 billion in pork-barrel spending. I can
tell you, it’s rife. It’s throughout.
The United States
Senate will take up a continuing resolution tomorrow or the next day,
sometime next week, with 2,000 -- 2,000 -- look at them, my friends.
Look at them. You’ll be appalled.
And Senator Obama is
a recent convert, after requesting $932 million worth of pork-barrel
spending projects.
So the point is, I
want people to have tax cuts. I want every family to have a $5,000
refundable tax credit so they can go out and purchase their own health
care. I want to double the dividend from $3,500 to $7,000 for every
dependent child in America.
I know that the worst
thing we could possibly do is to raise taxes on anybody, and a lot of
people might be interested in Senator Obama’s definition of “rich.”
LEHRER: Senator
Obama, you have a question for Senator McCain on that?
OBAMA: Well, let me
just make a couple of points.
LEHRER: All right.
OBAMA: My
definition—here’s what I can tell the American people: 95 percent of you
will get a tax cut. And if you make less than $250,000, less than a
quarter-million dollars a year, then you will not see one dime’s worth
of tax increase.
Now, John mentioned
the fact that business taxes on paper are high in this country, and he’s
absolutely right. Here’s the problem:
There are so many
loopholes that have been written into the tax code, oftentimes with
support of Senator McCain, that we actually see our businesses pay
effectively one of the lowest tax rates in the world.
And what that means,
then, is that there are people out there who are working every day, who
are not getting a tax cut, and you want to give them more.
It’s not like you
want to close the loopholes. You just want to add an additional tax cut
over the loopholes. And that’s a problem.
Just one last point I
want to make, since Senator McCain talked about providing a $5,000
health credit. Now, what he doesn’t tell you is that he intends to, for
the first time in history, tax health benefits.
So you may end up
getting a $5,000 tax credit. Here’s the only problem: Your employer now
has to pay taxes on the health care that you’re getting from your
employer. And if you end up losing your health care from your employer,
you’ve got to go out on the open market and try to buy it.
It is not a good deal
for the American people. But it’s an example of this notion that the
market can always solve everything and that the less regulation we have,
the better off we’re going to be.
MCCAIN: Well, you
know, let me just...
LEHRER: We’ve got to
go to another lead question.
MCCAIN: I know we
have to, but this is a classic example of walking the walk and talking
the talk.
We had an energy bill
before the United States Senate. It was festooned with Christmas tree
ornaments. It had all kinds of breaks for the oil companies, I mean,
billions of dollars worth. I voted against it; Senator Obama voted for
it.
OBAMA: John, you want
to give oil companies another $4 billion.
MCCAIN: You’ve got to
look at our record. You’ve got to look at our records. That’s the
important thing.
Who fought against
wasteful and earmark spending? Who has been the person who has tried to
keep spending under control? Who’s the person who has believed that the
best thing for America is—is to have a tax system that is fundamentally
fair? And I’ve fought to simplify it, and I have proposals to simplify
it.
Let’s give every
American a choice: two tax brackets, generous dividends, and, two—and
let Americans choose whether they want the -- the existing tax code or
they want a new tax code.
And so, again, look
at the record, particularly the energy bill. But, again, Senator Obama
has shifted on a number of occasions. He has voted in the United States
Senate to increase taxes on people who make as low as $42,000 a year.
OBAMA: That’s not
true, John. That’s not true.
MCCAIN: And that’s
just a fact. Again, you can look it up.
OBAMA: Look, it’s
just not true. And if we want to talk about oil company profits, under
your tax plan, John—this is undeniable·oil
companies would get an additional $4 billion in tax breaks.
Now, look, we all
would love to lower taxes on everybody. But here’s the problem: If we
are giving them to oil companies, then that means that there are those
who are not going to be getting them. And...
MCCAIN: With all due
respect, you already gave them to the oil companies.
OBAMA: No, but, John,
the fact of the matter is, is that I was opposed to those tax breaks,
tried to strip them out. We’ve got an emergency bill on the Senate floor
right now that contains some good stuff, some stuff you want, including
drilling off-shore, but you’re opposed to it because it would strip away
those tax breaks that have gone to oil companies.
LEHRER: All right.
All right, speaking of things that both of you want, another lead
question, and it has to do with the rescue— the financial rescue thing
that we started—started asking about.
And what—and the
first answer is to you, Senator Obama. As president, as a result of
whatever financial rescue plan comes about and the billion, $700
billion, whatever it is it’s going to cost, what are you going to have
to give up, in terms of the priorities that you would bring as president
of the United States, as a result of having to pay for the financial
rescue plan?
OBAMA: Well, there
are a range of things that are probably going to have to be delayed. We
don’t yet know what our tax revenues are going to be. The economy is
slowing down, so it’s hard to anticipate right now what the budget is
going to look like next year.
But there’s no doubt
that we’re not going to be able to do everything that I think needs to
be done. There are some things that I think have to be done.
We have to have
energy independence, so I’ve put forward a plan to make sure that, in 10
years’ time, we have freed ourselves from dependence on Middle Eastern
oil by increasing production at home, but most importantly by starting
to invest in alternative energy, solar, wind, biodiesel, making sure
that we’re developing the fuel-efficient cars of the future right here
in the United States, in Ohio and Michigan, instead of Japan and South
Korea.
We have to fix our
health care system, which is putting an enormous burden on families.
Just—a report just came out that the average deductible went up 30
percent on American families.
They are getting
crushed, and many of them are going bankrupt as a consequence of health
care. I’m meeting folks all over the country. We have to do that now,
because it will actually make our businesses and our families better
off.
The third thing we
have to do is we’ve got to make sure that we’re competing in education.
We’ve got to invest in science and technology. China had a space launch
and a space walk. We’ve got to make sure that our children are keeping
pace in math and in science.
And one of the things
I think we have to do is make sure that college is affordable for every
young person in America.
And I also think that
we’re going to have to rebuild our infrastructure, which is falling
behind, our roads, our bridges, but also broadband lines that reach into
rural communities.
Also, making sure
that we have a new electricity grid to get the alternative energy to
population centers that are using them.
So there are
some—some things that we’ve got to do structurally to make sure that we
can compete in this global economy. We can’t shortchange those things.
We’ve got to eliminate programs that don’t work, and we’ve got to make
sure that the programs that we do have are more efficient and cost less.
LEHRER: Are you—what
priorities would you adjust, as president, Senator McCain, because of
the—because of the financial bailout cost?
MCCAIN: Look, we, no
matter what, we’ve got to cut spending. We have—as I said, we’ve let
government get completely out of control.
Senator Obama has the
most liberal voting record in the United States Senate. It’s hard to
reach across the aisle from that far to the left.
The point—the point
is—the point is, we need to examine every agency of government.
First of all, by the
way, I’d eliminate ethanol subsidies. I oppose ethanol subsidies.
I think that we have
to return—particularly in defense spending, which is the largest part of
our appropriations—we have to do away with cost-plus contracts. We now
have defense systems that the costs are completely out of control.
We tried to build a
little ship called the Littoral Combat Ship that was supposed to cost
$140 million, ended up costing $400 million, and we still haven’t done
it.
So we need to have
fixed-cost contracts. We need very badly to understand that defense
spending is very important and vital, particularly in the new challenges
we face in the world, but we have to get a lot of the cost overruns
under control. I know how to do that.
MCCAIN: I saved the
taxpayers $6.8 billion by fighting a contract that was negotiated
between Boeing and DOD that was completely wrong. And we fixed it and we
killed it and the people ended up in federal prison so I know how to do
this because I’ve been involved these issues for many, many years. But I
think that we have to examine every agency of government and find out
those that are doing their job and keep them and find out those that
aren’t and eliminate them and we’ll have to scrub every agency of
government.
LEHRER: But if I hear
the two of you correctly neither one of you is suggesting any major
changes in what you want to do as president as a result of the financial
bailout? Is that what you’re saying?
OBAMA: No. As I said
before, Jim, there are going to be things that end up having to be ...
LEHRER: Like what?
OBAMA: ... deferred
and delayed. Well, look, I want to make sure that we are investing in
energy in order to free ourselves from the dependence on foreign oil.
That is a big project. That is a multi-year project.
LEHRER: Not willing to
give that up?
OBAMA: Not willing to
give up the need to do it but there may be individual components that we
can’t do. But John is right we have to make cuts. We right now give $15
billion every year as subsidies to private insurers under the Medicare
system. Doesn’t work any better through the private insurers. They just
skim off $15 billion. That was a give away and part of the reason is
because lobbyists are able to shape how Medicare works.
They did it on the
Medicaid prescription drug bill and we have to change the culture.
Tom—or John mentioned me being wildly liberal. Mostly that’s just me
opposing George Bush’s wrong headed policies since I’ve been in Congress
but I think it is that it is also important to recognize I work with Tom
Coburn, the most conservative, one of the most conservative Republicans
who John already mentioned to set up what we call a Google for
government saying we’ll list every dollar of federal spending to make
sure that the taxpayer can take a look and see who, in fact, is
promoting some of these spending projects that John’s been railing
about.
LEHRER: What I’m
trying to get at this is this. Excuse me if I may, senator. Trying to
get at that you all—one of you is going to be the president of the
United States come January. At the—in the middle of a huge financial
crisis that is yet to be resolved. And what I’m trying to get at is how
this is going to affect you not in very specific—small ways but in major
ways and the approach to take as to the presidency.
MCCAIN: How about a
spending freeze on everything but defense, veteran affairs and
entitlement programs.
LEHRER: Spending
freeze?
MCCAIN: I think we
ought to seriously consider with the exceptions the caring of veterans
national defense and several other vital issues.
LEHRER: Would you go
for that?
OBAMA: The problem
with a spending freeze is you’re using a hatchet where you need a
scalpel. There are some programs that are very important that are under
funded. I went to increase early childhood education and the notion that
we should freeze that when there may be, for example, this Medicare
subsidy doesn’t make sense.
Let me tell you
another place to look for some savings. We are currently spending $10
billion a month in Iraq when they have a $79 billion surplus. It seems
to me that if we’re going to be strong at home as well as strong abroad,
that we have to look at bringing that war to a close.
MCCAIN: Look, we are
sending $700 billion a year overseas to countries that don’t like us
very much. Some of that money ends up in the hands of terrorist
organizations. We have to have wind, tide, solar, natural gas, flex fuel
cars and all that but we also have to have offshore drilling and we also
have to have nuclear power.
Senator Obama opposes
both storing and reprocessing of spent nuclear fuel. You can’t get there
from here and the fact is that we can create 700,000 jobs by building
constructing 45 new nuclear power plants by the year 2030. Nuclear power
is not only important as far as eliminating our dependence on foreign
oil but it’s also responsibility as far as climate change is concerned
and the issue I have been involved in for many, many years and I’m proud
of the work of the work that I’ve done there along with President
Clinton.
LEHRER: Before we go
to another lead question. Let me figure out a way to ask the same
question in a slightly different way here. Are you—are you willing to
acknowledge both of you that this financial crisis is going to affect
the way you rule the country as president of the United States beyond
the kinds of things that you have already—I mean, is it a major move? Is
it going to have a major affect?
OBAMA: There’s no
doubt it will affect our budgets. There is no doubt about it. Not
only—Even if we get all $700 billion back, let’s assume the markets
recover, we’ holding assets long enough that eventually taxpayers get it
back and that happened during the Great Depression when Roosevelt
purchased a whole bunch of homes, over time, home values went back up
and in fact government made a profit. If we’re lucky and do it right,
that could potentially happen but in the short term there’s an outlay
and we may not see that money for a while.
And because of the
economy’s slowing down, I think we can also expect less tax revenue so
there’s no doubt that as president I’m go doing have to make some tough
decision.
The only point I want
to make is this, that in order to make the tough decisions we have to
know what our values are and who we’re fighting for and our priorities
and if we are spending $300 billion on tax cuts for people who don’t
need them and weren’t even asking for them, and we are leaving out
health care which is crushing on people all across the country, then I
think we have made a bad decision and I want to make sure we’re not
shortchanging our long term priorities.
MCCAIN: Well, I want
to make sure we’re not handing the health care system over to the
federal government which is basically what would ultimately happen with
Senator Obama’s health care plan. I want the families to make decisions
between themselves and their doctors. Not the federal government. Look.
We have to obviously cut spending. I have fought to cut spending.
Senator Obama has $800 billion in new spending programs. I would suggest
he start by canceling some of those new spending program that he has.
We can’t I think
adjust spending around to take care of the very much needed programs,
including taking care of our veterans but I also want to say again a
healthy economy with low taxes would not raising anyone’s taxes is
probably the best recipe for eventually having our economy recover.
And spending
restraint has got to be a vital part of that. And the reason, one of the
major reasons why we’re in the difficulties we are in today is because
spending got out of control. We owe China $500 billion. And spending, I
know, can be brought under control because I have fought against
excessive spending my entire career. And I got plans to reduce and
eliminate unnecessary and wasteful spending and if there’s anybody here
who thinks there aren’t agencies of government where spending can be cut
and their budgets slashed they have not spent a lot of time in
Washington.
OBAMA: I just want to
make this point, Jim. John, it’s been your president who you said you
agreed with 90 percent of the time who presided over this increase in
spending. This orgy of spending and enormous deficits you voted for
almost all of his budgets. So to stand here and after eight years and
say that you’re going to lead on controlling spending and, you know,
balancing our tax cuts so that they help middle class families when over
the last eight years that hasn’t happened I think just is, you know,
kind of hard to swallow.
LEHRER: Quick
response to Senator Obama.
MCCAIN: It’s
well-known that I have not been elected Miss Congeniality in the United
States Senate nor with the administration. I have opposed the president
on spending, on climate change, on torture of prisoner, on - on
Guantanamo Bay. On a—on the way that the Iraq War was conducted. I have
a long record and the American people know me very well and that is
independent and a maverick of the Senate and I’m happy to say that I’ve
got a partner that’s a good maverick along with me now.
LEHRER: All right.
Let’s go another subject. Lead question, two minutes to you, senator
McCain. Much has been said about the lessons of Vietnam. What do you see
as the lessons of Iraq?
MCCAIN: I think the
lessons of Iraq are very clear that you cannot have a failed strategy
that will then cause you to nearly lose a conflict. Our initial military
success, we went in to Baghdad and everybody celebrated. And then the
war was very badly mishandled. I went to Iraq in 2003 and came back and
said, we’ve got to change this strategy. This strategy requires
additional troops, it requires a fundamental change in strategy and I
fought for it. And finally, we came up with a great general and a
strategy that has succeeded.
This strategy has
succeeded. And we are winning in Iraq. And we will come home with
victory and with honor. And that withdrawal is the result of every
counterinsurgency that succeeds.
MCCAIN: And I want to
tell you that now that we will succeed and our troops will come home,
and not in defeat, that we will see a stable ally in the region and a
fledgling democracy.
The consequences of
defeat would have been increased Iranian influence. It would have been
increase in sectarian violence. It would have been a wider war, which
the United States of America might have had to come back.
So there was a lot at
stake there. And thanks to this great general, David Petraeus, and the
troops who serve under him, they have succeeded. And we are winning in
Iraq, and we will come home. And we will come home as we have when we
have won other wars and not in defeat.
LEHRER: Two minutes,
how you see the lessons of Iraq, Senator Obama.
OBAMA: Well, this is
an area where Senator McCain and I have a fundamental difference because
I think the first question is whether we should have gone into the war
in the first place.
Now six years ago, I
stood up and opposed this war at a time when it was politically risky to
do so because I said that not only did we not know how much it was going
to cost, what our exit strategy might be, how it would affect our
relationships around the world, and whether our intelligence was sound,
but also because we hadn’t finished the job in Afghanistan.
We hadn’t caught bin
Laden. We hadn’t put al Qaeda to rest, and as a consequence, I thought
that it was going to be a distraction. Now Senator McCain and President
Bush had a very different judgment.
And I wish I had been
wrong for the sake of the country and they had been right, but that’s
not the case. We’ve spent over $600 billion so far, soon to be $1
trillion. We have lost over 4,000 lives. We have seen 30,000 wounded,
and most importantly, from a strategic national security perspective, al
Qaeda is resurgent, stronger now than at any time since 2001.
We took our eye off
the ball. And not to mention that we are still spending $10 billion a
month, when they have a $79 billion surplus, at a time when we are in
great distress here at home, and we just talked about the fact that our
budget is way overstretched and we are borrowing money from overseas to
try to finance just some of the basic functions of our government.
So I think the lesson
to be drawn is that we should never hesitate to use military force, and
I will not, as president, in order to keep the American people safe. But
we have to use our military wisely. And we did not use our military
wisely in Iraq.
LEHRER: Do you agree
with that, the lesson of Iraq?
MCCAIN: The next
president of the United States is not going to have to address the issue
as to whether we went into Iraq or not. The next president of the United
States is going to have to decide how we leave, when we leave, and what
we leave behind. That’s the decision of the next president of the United
States.
Senator Obama said
the surge could not work, said it would increase sectarian violence,
said it was doomed to failure. Recently on a television program, he said
it exceed our wildest expectations.
But yet, after
conceding that, he still says that he would oppose the surge if he had
to decide that again today. Incredibly, incredibly Senator Obama didn’t
go to Iraq for 900 days and never asked for a meeting with General
Petraeus.
LEHRER: Well, let’s
go at some of these things...
MCCAIN: Senator Obama
is the chairperson of a committee that oversights NATO that’s in
Afghanistan. To this day, he has never had a hearing.
LEHRER: What about
that point?
MCCAIN: I mean, it’s
remarkable.
LEHRER: All right.
What about that point?
OBAMA: Which point?
He raised a whole bunch of them.
LEHRER: I know, OK,
let’s go to the latter point and we’ll back up. The point about your not
having been...
OBAMA: Look, I’m very
proud of my vice presidential selection, Joe Biden, who is the chairman
of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, and as he explains, and as
John well knows, the issues of Afghanistan, the issues of Iraq, critical
issues like that, don’t go through my subcommittee because they’re done
as a committee as a whole.
But that’s Senate
inside baseball. But let’s get back to the core issue here. Senator
McCain is absolutely right that the violence has been reduced as a
consequence of the extraordinary sacrifice of our troops and our
military families.
They have done a
brilliant job, and General Petraeus has done a brilliant job. But
understand, that was a tactic designed to contain the damage of the
previous four years of mismanagement of this war.
And so John
likes—John, you like to pretend like the war started in 2007. You talk
about the surge. The war started in 2003, and at the time when the war
started, you said it was going to be quick and easy. You said we knew
where the weapons of mass destruction were. You were wrong.
You said that we were
going to be greeted as liberators. You were wrong. You said that there
was no history of violence between Shia and Sunni. And you were wrong.
And so my question is...
(CROSSTALK)
LEHRER: Senator
Obama...
OBAMA: ... of
judgment, of whether or not—of whether or not·if
the question is who is best-equipped as the next president to make good
decisions about how we use our military, how we make sure that we are
prepared and ready for the next conflict, then I think we can take a
look at our judgment.
LEHRER: I have got a
lot on the plate here...
MCCAIN: I’m afraid
Senator Obama doesn’t understand the difference between a tactic and a
strategy. But the important—I’d like to tell you, two Fourths of July
ago I was in Baghdad. General Petraeus invited Senator Lindsey Graham
and me to attend a ceremony where 688 brave young Americans, whose
enlistment had expired, were reenlisting to stay and fight for Iraqi
freedom and American freedom.
I was honored to be
there. I was honored to speak to those troops. And you know, afterwards,
we spent a lot of time with them. And you know what they said to us?
They said, let us win. They said, let us win. We don’t want our kids
coming back here.
And this strategy,
and this general, they are winning. Senator Obama refuses to acknowledge
that we are winning in Iraq.
OBAMA: That’s not
true.
MCCAIN: They just
passed an electoral...
OBAMA: That’s not
true.
MCCAIN: An election
law just in the last few days. There is social, economic progress, and a
strategy, a strategy of going into an area, clearing and holding, and
the people of the country then become allied with you. They inform on
the bad guys. And peace comes to the country, and prosperity.
That’s what’s
happening in Iraq, and it wasn’t a tactic.
LEHRER: Let me see...
OBAMA: Jim, Jim, this
is a big...
MCCAIN: It was a
stratagem. And that same strategy will be employed in Afghanistan by
this great general. And Senator Obama, who after promising not to vote
to cut off funds for the troops, did the incredible thing of voting to
cut off the funds for the troops in Iraq and Afghanistan.
OBAMA: Jim, there are
a whole bunch of things we have got to answer. First of all, let’s talk
about this troop funding issue because John always brings this up.
Senator McCain cut—Senator McCain opposed funding for troops in
legislation that had a timetable, because he didn’t believe in a
timetable.
I opposed funding a
mission that had no timetable, and was open-ended, giving a blank check
to George Bush. We had a difference on the timetable. We didn’t have a
difference on whether or not we were going to be funding troops.
We had a legitimate
difference, and I absolutely understand the difference between tactics
and strategy. And the strategic question that the president has to ask
is not whether or not we are employing a particular approach in the
country once we have made the decision to be there.
The question is, was
this wise? We have seen Afghanistan worsen, deteriorate. We need more
troops there. We need more resources there. Senator McCain, in the rush
to go into Iraq, said, you know what? We’ve been successful in
Afghanistan. There is nobody who can pose a threat to us there.
This is a time when
bin Laden was still out, and now they’ve reconstituted themselves.
Secretary of Defense Robert Gates himself acknowledges the war on
terrorism started in Afghanistan and it needs to end there.
But we can’t do it if
we are not willing to give Iraq back its country. Now, what I’ve said is
we should end this war responsibly. We should do it in phases. But in
16 months we should be able to reduce our combat troops, put—provide
some relief to military families and our troops and bolster our efforts
in Afghanistan so that we can capture and kill bin Laden and crush al
Qaeda.
And right now, the
commanders in Afghanistan, as well as Admiral Mullen, have acknowledged
that we don’t have enough troops to deal with Afghanistan because we
still have more troops in Iraq than we did before the surge.
MCCAIN: Admiral
Mullen suggests that Senator Obama’s plan is dangerous for America.
OBAMA: That’s not the
case.
MCCAIN: That’s what
...
OBAMA: What he said
was a precipitous...
MCCAIN: That’s what
Admiral Mullen said.
OBAMA: ... withdrawal
would be dangerous. He did not say that. That’s not true.
MCCAIN: And also
General Petraeus said the same thing. Osama bin Laden and General
Petraeus have one thing in common that I know of, they both said that
Iraq is the central battleground.
Now General Petraeus
has praised the successes, but he said those successes are fragile and
if we set a specific date for withdrawal— and by the way, Senator
Obama’s original plan, they would have been out last spring before the
surge ever had a chance to succeed.
And
I’m—I’m—understand why Senator Obama was surprised and said that the
surge succeeded beyond his wildest expectations.
MCCAIN: It didn’t
exceed beyond mine, because I know that that’s a strategy that has
worked and can succeed. But if we snatch defeat from the jaws of victory
and adopt Senator Obama’s plan, then we will have a wider war and it
will make things more complicated throughout the region, including in
Afghanistan.
LEHRER: Afghanistan,
lead—a new—a new lead question. Now, having resolved Iraq, we’ll move to
Afghanistan.
(LAUGHTER)
And it goes to you,
Senator Obama, and it’s a—it picks up on a point that’s already been
made. Do you think more troops—more U.S. troops should be sent to
Afghanistan, how many, and when?
OBAMA: Yes, I think
we need more troops. I’ve been saying that for over a year now.
And I think that we
have to do it as quickly as possible, because it’s been acknowledged by
the commanders on the ground the situation is getting worse, not better.
We had the highest
fatalities among U.S. troops this past year than at any time since 2002.
And we are seeing a major offensive taking place—Al Qaida and Taliban
crossing the border and attacking our troops in a brazen fashion. They
are feeling emboldened.
And we cannot
separate Afghanistan from Iraq, because what our commanders have said is
we don’t have the troops right now to deal with Afghanistan.
So I would send two
to three additional brigades to Afghanistan. Now, keep in mind that we
have four times the number of troops in Iraq, where nobody had anything
to do with 9/11 before we went in, where, in fact, there was no Al Qaida
before we went in, but we have four times more troops there than we do
in Afghanistan.
And that is a
strategic mistake, because every intelligence agency will acknowledge
that Al Qaida is the greatest threat against the United States and that
Secretary of Defense Gates acknowledged the central front—that the place
where we have to deal with these folks is going to be in Afghanistan and
in Pakistan.
So here’s what we
have to do comprehensively, though. It’s not just more troops.
We have to press the
Afghan government to make certain that they are actually working for
their people. And I’ve said this to President Karzai.
Number two, we’ve got
to deal with a growing poppy trade that has exploded over the last
several years.
Number three, we’ve
got to deal with Pakistan, because Al Qaida and the Taliban have safe
havens in Pakistan, across the border in the northwest regions, and
although, you know, under George Bush, with the support of Senator
McCain, we’ve been giving them $10 billion over the last seven years,
they have not done what needs to be done to get rid of those safe
havens.
And until we do,
Americans here at home are not going to be safe.
LEHRER: Afghanistan,
Senator McCain?
MCCAIN: First of all,
I won’t repeat the mistake that I regret enormously, and that is, after
we were able to help the Afghan freedom fighters and drive the Russians
out of Afghanistan, we basically washed our hands of the region.
And the result over
time was the Taliban, Al Qaida, and a lot of the difficulties we are
facing today. So we can’t ignore those lessons of history.
Now, on this issue of
aiding Pakistan, if you’re going to aim a gun at somebody, George
Shultz, our great secretary of state, told me once, you’d better be
prepared to pull the trigger.
I’m not prepared at
this time to cut off aid to Pakistan. So I’m not prepared to threaten
it, as Senator Obama apparently wants to do, as he has said that he
would announce military strikes into Pakistan.
We’ve got to get the
support of the people of—of Pakistan. He said that he would launch
military strikes into Pakistan.
Now, you don’t do
that. You don’t say that out loud. If you have to do things, you have to
do things, and you work with the Pakistani government.
Now, the new
president of Pakistan, Kardari (sic), has got his hands full. And this
area on the border has not been governed since the days of Alexander the
Great.
I’ve been to
Waziristan. I can see how tough that terrain is.
It’s ruled by a
handful of tribes.
And, yes, Senator
Obama calls for more troops, but what he doesn’t understand, it’s got to
be a new strategy, the same strategy that he condemned in Iraq. It’s
going to have to be employed in Afghanistan.
And we’re going to
have to help the Pakistanis go into these areas and obtain the
allegiance of the people. And it’s going to be tough. They’ve
intermarried with Al Qaida and the Taliban. And it’s going to be tough.
But we have to get the cooperation of the people in those areas.
And the Pakistanis
are going to have to understand that that bombing in the Marriott Hotel
in Islamabad was a signal from the terrorists that they don’t want that
government to cooperate with us in combating the Taliban and jihadist
elements.
So we’ve got a lot of
work to do in Afghanistan. But I’m confident, now that General Petraeus
is in the new position of command, that we will employ a strategy which
not only means additional troops—and, by the way, there have been 20,000
additional troops, from 32,000 to 53,000, and there needs to be more.
So it’s not just the
addition of troops that matters. It’s a strategy that will succeed. And
Pakistan is a very important element in this. And I know how to work
with him. And I guarantee you I would not publicly state that I’m going
to attack them.
OBAMA: Nobody talked
about attacking Pakistan. Here’s what I said.
And if John wants to
disagree with this, he can let me know, that, if the United States has
Al Qaida, bin Laden, top-level lieutenants in our sights, and Pakistan
is unable or unwilling to act, then we should take them out.
Now, I think that’s
the right strategy; I think that’s the right policy.
And, John, I—you’re
absolutely right that presidents have to be prudent in what they say.
But, you know, coming from you, who, you know, in the past has
threatened extinction for North Korea and, you know, sung songs about
bombing Iran, I don’t know, you know, how credible that is. I think this
is the right strategy.
Now, Senator McCain
is also right that it’s difficult. This is not an easy situation. You’ve
got cross-border attacks against U.S. troops.
And we’ve got a
choice. We could allow our troops to just be on the defensive and absorb
those blows again and again and again, if Pakistan is unwilling to
cooperate, or we have to start making some decisions.
And the problem,
John, with the strategy that’s been pursued was that, for 10 years, we
coddled Musharraf, we alienated the Pakistani population, because we
were anti-democratic. We had a 20th-century mindset that
basically said, “Well, you know, he may be a dictator, but he’s our
dictator.”
And as a consequence,
we lost legitimacy in Pakistan. We spent $10 billion. And in the
meantime, they weren’t going after Al Qaida, and they are more powerful
now than at any time since we began the war in Afghanistan.
That’s going to
change when I’m president of the United States.
MCCAIN: I—I don’t
think that Senator Obama understands that there was a failed state in
Pakistan when Musharraf came to power. Everybody who was around then,
and had been there, and knew about it knew that it was a failed state.
But let me tell you,
you know, this business about bombing Iran and all that, let me tell you
my record.
Back in 1983, when I
was a brand-new United States congressman, the one—the person I admired
the most and still admire the most, Ronald Reagan, wanted to send
Marines into Lebanon.
And I saw that, and I
saw the situation, and I stood up, and I voted against that, because I
was afraid that they couldn’t make peace in a place where 300 or 400 or
several hundred Marines would make a difference. Tragically, I was
right: Nearly 300 Marines lost their lives in the bombing of the
barracks.
And then we had
Somalia—then we had the first Gulf War. I supported—I supported that.
I supported us going
into Bosnia, when a number of my own party and colleagues was against
that operation in Bosnia. That was the right thing to do, to stop
genocide and to preserve what was necessary inside of Europe.
I supported what we
did in Kosovo. I supported it because ethnic cleansing and genocide was
taking place there.
And I have a
record—and Somalia, I opposed that we should turn·turn
the force in Somalia from a peacekeeping force into a peacemaking force,
which they were not capable of.
So I have a record. I
have a record of being involved in these national security issues, which
involve the highest responsibility and the toughest decisions that any
president can make, and that is to send our young men and women into
harm’s way.
And I’ll tell you, I
had a town hall meeting in Wolfeboro, New Hampshire, and a woman stood
up and she said, “Senator McCain, I want you to do me the honor of
wearing a bracelet with my son’s name on it.”
He was 22 years old
and he was killed in combat outside of Baghdad, Matthew Stanley, before
Christmas last year. This was last August, a year ago. And I said, “I
will—I will wear his bracelet with honor.”
And this was August,
a year ago. And then she said, “But, Senator McCain, I want you to do
everything—promise me one thing, that you’ll do everything in your power
to make sure that my son’s death was not in vain.”
That means that that
mission succeeds, just like those young people who re-enlisted in
Baghdad, just like the mother I met at the airport the other day whose
son was killed. And they all say to me that we don’t want defeat.
MCCAIN: A war that I
was in, where we had an Army, that it wasn’t through any fault of their
own, but they were defeated. And I know how hard it is for that—for an
Army and a military to recover from that. And it did and we will win
this one and we won’t come home in defeat and dishonor and probably have
to go back if we fail.
OBAMA: Jim, let me
just make a point. I’ve got a bracelet, too, from Sergeant - from the
mother of Sergeant Ryan David Jopeck (ph), given to me ingrain bin green
bay. She asked me, can you please make sure another mother is not going
through what I’m going through.
No U.S. soldier ever
dies in vain because they’re carrying out the missions of their
commander in chief. And we honor all the service that they’ve provided.
Our troops have performed brilliantly. The question is for the next
president, are we making good judgments about how to keep America safe
precisely because sending our military into battle is such an enormous
step.
And the point that I
originally made is that we took our eye off Afghanistan, we took our eye
off the folks who perpetrated 9/11, they are still sending out
videotapes and Senator McCain, nobody is talking about defeat in Iraq,
but I have to say we are having enormous problems in Afghanistan because
of that decision.
And it is not true
you have consistently been concerned about what happened in Afghanistan.
At one point, while you were focused on Iraq, you said well, we can
“muddle through” Afghanistan. You don’t muddle through the central front
on terror and you don’t muddle through going after bin Laden. You don’t
muddle through stamping out the Taliban.
I think that is
something we have to take seriously. And when I’m president, I will.
LEHRER: New ...
MCCAIN: You might
think that with that kind of concern that Senator Obama would have gone
to Afghanistan, particularly given his responsibilities as a
subcommittee chairman. By the way, when I’m subcommittee chairman, we
take up the issues under my subcommittee. But the important thing
is—the important thing is I visited Afghanistan and I traveled to
Waziristan and I traveled to these places and I know what our security
requirements are. I know what our needs are. So the point is that we
will prevail in Afghanistan, but we need the new strategy and we need it
to succeed. But the important thing is, if we suffer defeat in Iraq,
which General Petraeus predicts we will, if we adopted Senator Obama’s
set date for withdrawal, then that will have a calamitous effect in
Afghanistan and American national security interests in the region.
Senator Obama doesn’t seem to understand there is a connected between
the two.
LEHRER: I have some
good news and bad news for the two of you. You all are even on time,
which is remarkable, considering we’ve been going at it ...
OBAMA: A testimony to
you, Jim.
LEHRER: I don’t know
about that. But the bad news is all my little five minute things have
run over, so, anyhow, we’ll adjust as we get there. But the amount of
time is even.
New lead question.
And it goes two minutes to you, Senator McCain, what is your reading on
the threat to Iran right now to the security of the United States?
MCCAIN: My reading of
the threat from Iran is that if Iran acquires nuclear weapons, it is an
existential threat to the State of Israel and to other countries in the
region because the other countries in the region will feel compelling
requirement to acquire nuclear weapons as well.
Now we cannot a
second Holocaust. Let’s just make that very clear. What I have proposed
for a long time, and I’ve had conversation with foreign leaders about
forming a league of democracies, let’s be clear and let’s have some
straight talk. The Russians are preventing significant action in the
United Nations Security Council.
I have proposed a
league of democracies, a group of people - a group of countries that
share common interests, common values, common ideals, they also control
a lot of the world’s economic power. We could impose significant
meaningful, painful sanctions on the Iranians that I think could have a
beneficial effect.
The Iranians have a
lousy government, so therefore their economy is lousy, even though they
have significant oil revenues. So I am convinced that together, we can,
with the French, with the British, with the Germans and other countries,
democracies around the world, we can affect Iranian behavior.
But have no doubt,
but have no doubt that the Iranians continue on the path to the
acquisition of a nuclear weapon as we speak tonight. And it is a threat
not only in this region but around the world.
What I’d also like to
point out the Iranians are putting the most lethal IEDs into Iraq which
are killing young Americans, there are special groups in Iran coming
into Iraq and are being trained in Iran. There is the Republican Guard
in Iran, which Senator Kyl had an amendment in order to declare them a
sponsor of terror. Senator Obama said that would be provocative.
So this is a serious
threat. This is a serious threat to security in the world, and I believe
we can act and we can act with our friends and allies and reduce that
threat as quickly as possible, but have no doubt about the ultimate
result of them acquiring nuclear weapons.
LEHRER: Two minutes
on Iran, Senator Obama.
OBAMA: Well, let me
just correct something very quickly. I believe the Republican Guard of
Iran is a terrorist organization. I’ve consistently said so. What
Senator McCain refers to is a measure in the Senate that would try to
broaden the mandate inside of Iraq. To deal with Iran.
And ironically, the
single thing that has strengthened Iran over the last several years has
been the war in Iraq. Iraq was Iran’s mortal enemy. That was cleared
away. And what we’ve seen over the last several years is Iran’s
influence grow. They have funded Hezbollah, they have funded Hamas, they
have gone from zero centrifuges to 4,000 centrifuges to develop a
nuclear weapon.
So obviously, our
policy over the last eight years has not worked. Senator McCain is
absolutely right, we cannot tolerate a nuclear Iran. It would be a game
changer. Not only would it threaten Israel, a country that is our
stalwart ally, but it would also create an environment in which you
could set off an arms race in this Middle East.
Now here’s what we
need to do. We do need tougher sanctions. I do not agree with Senator
McCain that we’re going to be able to execute the kind of sanctions we
need without some cooperation with some countries like Russia and China
that are, I think Senator McCain would agree, not democracies, but have
extensive trade with Iran but potentially have an interest in making
sure Iran doesn’t have a nuclear weapon.
But we are also going
to have to, I believe, engage in tough direct diplomacy with Iran and
this is a major difference I have with Senator McCain, this notion by
not talking to people we are punishing them has not worked. It has not
worked in Iran, it has not worked in North Korea. In each instance, our
efforts of isolation have actually accelerated their efforts to get
nuclear weapons. That will change when I’m president of the United
States.
LEHRER: Senator, what
about talking?
MCCAIN: Senator Obama
twice said in debates he would sit down with Ahmadinejad, Chavez and
Raul Castro without precondition. Without precondition. Here is
Ahmadinenene (ph), Ahmadinejad, who is, Ahmadinejad, who is now in New
York, talking about the extermination of the State of Israel, of wiping
Israel off the map, and we’re going to sit down, without precondition,
across the table, to legitimize and give a propaganda platform to a
person that is espousing the extermination of the state of Israel, and
therefore then giving them more credence in the world arena and
therefore saying, they’ve probably been doing the right thing, because
you will sit down across the table from them and that will legitimize
their illegal behavior.
The point is that
throughout history, whether it be Ronald
Reagan, who wouldn’t sit down with Brezhnev, Andropov or Chernenko until
Gorbachev was ready with glasnost and perestroika.
Or whether it be
Nixon’s trip to China, which was preceded by Henry Kissinger, many times
before he went. Look, I’ll sit down with anybody, but there’s got to be
pre-conditions. Those pre-conditions would apply that we wouldn’t
legitimize with a face to face meeting, a person like Ahmadinejad. Now,
Senator Obama said, without preconditions.
OBAMA: So let’s talk
about this. First of all, Ahmadinejad is not the most powerful person in
Iran. So he may not be the right person to talk to. But I reserve the
right, as president of the United States to meet with anybody at a time
and place of my choosing if I think it’s going to keep America safe.
And I’m glad that
Senator McCain brought up the history, the bipartisan history of us
engaging in direct diplomacy.
OBAMA: Senator McCain
mentioned Henry Kissinger, who’s one of his advisers, who, along with
five recent secretaries of state, just said that we should meet with
Iran—guess what—without precondition. This is one of your own advisers.
Now, understand what
this means “without preconditions.” It doesn’t mean that you invite them
over for tea one day. What it means is that we don’t do what we’ve been
doing, which is to say, “Until you agree to do exactly what we say, we
won’t have direct contacts with you.”
There’s a difference
between preconditions and preparation. Of course we’ve got to do
preparations, starting with low-level diplomatic talks, and it may not
work, because Iran is a rogue regime.
But I will point out
that I was called naive when I suggested that we need to look at
exploring contacts with Iran. And you know what? President Bush recently
sent a senior ambassador, Bill Burns, to participate in talks with the
Europeans around the issue of nuclear weapons.
Again, it may not
work, but if it doesn’t work, then we have strengthened our ability to
form alliances to impose the tough sanctions that Senator McCain just
mentioned.
And when we haven’t
done it, as in North Korea—let me just take one more example—in North
Korea, we cut off talks. They’re a member of the axis of evil. We can’t
deal with them.
And you know what
happened? They went—they quadrupled their nuclear capacity. They tested
a nuke. They tested missiles. They pulled out of the nonproliferation
agreement. And they sent nuclear secrets, potentially, to countries like
Syria.
When we
re-engaged—because, again, the Bush administration reversed course on
this—then we have at least made some progress, although right now,
because of the problems in North Korea, we are seeing it on shaky
ground.
And—and I just—so I
just have to make this general point that the Bush administration, some
of Senator McCain’s own advisers all think this is important, and
Senator McCain appears resistant.
He even said the
other day that he would not meet potentially with the prime minister of
Spain, because he—you know, he wasn’t sure whether they were aligned
with us. I mean, Spain? Spain is a NATO ally.
MCCAIN: Of course.
OBAMA: If we can’t
meet with our friends, I don’t know how we’re going to lead the world in
terms of dealing with critical issues like terrorism.
MCCAIN: I’m not going
to set the White House visitors schedule before I’m president of the
United States. I don’t even have a seal yet.
Look, Dr. Kissinger
did not say that he would approve of face-to-face meetings between the
president of the United States and the president—and Ahmadinejad. He did
not say that.
OBAMA: Of course not.
MCCAIN: He said that
there could be secretary-level and lower level meetings. I’ve always
encouraged them. The Iranians have met with Ambassador Crocker in
Baghdad.
What Senator Obama
doesn’t seem to understand that if without precondition you sit down
across the table from someone who has called Israel a “stinking corpse,”
and wants to destroy that country and wipe it off the map, you
legitimize those comments.
This is dangerous. It
isn’t just naive; it’s dangerous. And so we just have a fundamental
difference of opinion.
As far as North Korea
is concerned, our secretary of state, Madeleine Albright, went to North
Korea. By the way, North Korea, most repressive and brutal regime
probably on Earth. The average South Korean is three inches taller than
the average North Korean, a huge gulag.
We don’t know what
the status of the dear leader’s health is today, but we know this, that
the North Koreans have broken every agreement that they’ve entered into.
And we ought to go
back to a little bit of Ronald Reagan’s “trust, but verify,” and
certainly not sit down across the table from·
without precondition, as
Senator Obama said he did twice, I mean, it’s just dangerous.
OBAMA: Look, I mean,
Senator McCain keeps on using this example that suddenly the president
would just meet with somebody without doing any preparation, without
having low-level talks. Nobody’s been talking about that, and Senator
McCain knows it. This is a mischaracterization of my position.
When we talk about
preconditions—and Henry Kissinger did say we should have contacts
without preconditions—the idea is that we do not expect to solve every
problem before we initiate talks.
And, you know, the
Bush administration has come to recognize that it hasn’t worked, this
notion that we are simply silent when it comes to our enemies. And the
notion that we would sit with Ahmadinejad and not say anything while
he’s spewing his nonsense and his vile comments is ridiculous. Nobody is
even talking about that.
MCCAIN: So let me get
this right. We sit down with Ahmadinejad, and he says, “We’re going to
wipe Israel off the face of the Earth,” and we say, “No, you’re not”?
Oh, please.
OBAMA: No, let me
tell...
(CROSSTALK)
MCCAIN: By the way,
my friend, Dr. Kissinger, who’s been my friend for 35 years, would be
interested to hear this conversation and Senator Obama’s depiction of
his—of his positions on the issue. I’ve known him for 35 years.
OBAMA: We will take a
look.
MCCAIN: And I
guarantee you he would not—he would not say that presidential top level.
OBAMA: Nobody’s
talking about that.
MCCAIN: Of course he
encourages and other people encourage contacts, and negotiations, and
all other things. We do that all the time.
LEHRER: We’re going
to go to a new...
(CROSSTALK)
MCCAIN: And Senator
Obama is parsing words when he says precondition means preparation.
OBAMA: I am not
parsing words.
MCCAIN: He’s parsing
words, my friends.
OBAMA: I’m using the
same words that your advisers use.
Please, go ahead.
LEHRER: New lead
question.
Russia, goes to you,
two minutes, Senator Obama. How do you see the relationship with Russia?
Do you see them as a competitor? Do you see them as an enemy? Do you see
them as a potential partner?
OBAMA: Well, I think
that, given what’s happened over the last several weeks and months, our
entire Russian approach has to be evaluated, because a resurgent and
very aggressive Russia is a threat to the peace and stability of the
region.
Their actions in
Georgia were unacceptable. They were unwarranted. And at this point, it
is absolutely critical for the next president to make clear that we have
to follow through on our six-party—or the six-point cease-fire. They
have to remove themselves from South Ossetia and Abkhazia.
It is absolutely
important that we have a unified alliance and that we explain to the
Russians that you cannot be a 21st-century superpower, or
power, and act like a 20th-century dictatorship.
And we also have to
affirm all the fledgling democracies in that region, you know, the
Estonians, the Lithuanians, the Latvians, the Poles, the Czechs, that we
are, in fact, going to be supportive and in solidarity with them in
their efforts. They are members of NATO.
And to countries like
Georgia and the Ukraine, I think we have to insist that they are free to
join NATO if they meet the requirements, and they should have a
membership action plan immediately to start bringing them in.
Now, we also can’t
return to a Cold War posture with respect to Russia. It’s important that
we recognize there are going to be some areas of common interest. One is
nuclear proliferation.
They have not only
15,000 nuclear warheads, but they’ve got enough to make another 40,000,
and some of those loose nukes could fall into the hands of Al Qaida.
This is an area where
I’ve led on in the Senate, working with a Republican ranking member of
the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Dick Lugar, to deal with the
proliferation of loose nuclear weapons. That’s an area where we’re
going to have to work with Russia.
But we have to have a
president who is clear that you don’t deal with Russia based on staring
into his eyes and seeing his soul. You deal with Russia based on, what
are your—what are the national security interests of the United States
of America?
And we have to
recognize that the way they’ve been behaving lately demands a sharp
response from the international community and our allies.
LEHRER: Two minutes
on Russia, Senator McCain.
MCCAIN: Well, I was
interested in Senator Obama’s reaction to the Russian aggression against
Georgia. His first statement was, “Both sides ought to show restraint.”
Again, a little bit
of naivete there. He doesn’t understand that Russia committed serious
aggression against Georgia. And Russia has now become a nation fueled by
petro-dollars that is basically a KGB apparatchik-run government.
I looked into Mr.
Putin’s eyes, and I saw three letters, a “K,” a “G,” and a “B.” And
their aggression in Georgia is not acceptable behavior.
I don’t believe we’re
going to go back to the Cold War. I am sure that that will not happen.
But I do believe that we need to bolster our friends and allies. And
that wasn’t just about a problem between Georgia and Russia. It had
everything to do with energy. There’s a pipeline that runs from the
Caspian through Georgia through Turkey. And, of course, we know that the
Russians control other sources of energy into Europe, which they have
used from time to time.
It’s not accidental
that the presidents of Latvia, Estonia,
Lithuania, Poland,
and Ukraine flew to Georgia, flew to Tbilisi, where I have spent
significant amount of time with a great young president, Misha
Saakashvili.
MCCAIN: And they
showed solidarity with them, but, also, they are very concerned about
the Russian threats to regain their status of the old Russian to regain
their status of the old Russian empire.
Now, I think the
Russians ought to understand that we will support—we, the United
States—will support the inclusion of Georgia and Ukraine in the natural
process, inclusion into NATO.
We also ought to make
it very clear that the Russians are in violation of their cease-fire
agreement. They have stationed additional troops in Abkhazia and South
Ossetia.
By the way, I went
there once, and we went inside and drove in, and there was a huge
poster. And this is—this is Georgian territory. And there was a huge
poster of Vladimir Putin, and it said, “Vladimir Putin, our president.”
It was very clear,
the Russian intentions towards Georgia. They were just waiting to seize
the opportunity.
So, this is a very
difficult situation. We want to work with the Russians. But we also have
every right to expect the Russians to behave in a fashion and keeping
with a—with a—with a country who respects international boundaries and
the norms of international behavior.
And watch Ukraine.
This whole thing has got a lot to do with Ukraine, Crimea, the base of
the Russian fleet in Sevastopol. And the breakdown of the political
process in Ukraine between Tymoshenko and Yushchenko is a very serious
problem.
So watch Ukraine, and
let’s make sure that we—that the Ukrainians understand that we are their
friend and ally.
LEHRER: You see
any—do you have a major difference with what he just said?
OBAMA: No, actually,
I think Senator McCain and I agree for the most part on these issues.
Obviously, I disagree with this notion that somehow we did not
forcefully object to Russians going into Georgia.
I immediately said
that this was illegal and objectionable. And, absolutely, I wanted a
cessation of the violence, because it put an enormous strain on Georgia,
and that’s why I was the first to say that we have to rebuild the
Georgian economy and called for a billion dollars that has now gone in
to help them rebuild.
Because part of
Russia’s intentions here was to weaken the economy to the point where
President Saakashvili was so weakened that he might be replaced by
somebody that Putin favored more.
Two points I think
are important to think about when it comes to Russia.
Number one is we have
to have foresight and anticipate some of these problems. So back in
April, I warned the administration that you had Russian peacekeepers in
Georgian territory. That made no sense whatsoever.
And what we needed to
do was replace them with international peacekeepers and a special envoy
to resolve the crisis before it boiled over.
That wasn’t done. But
had it been done, it’s possible we could have avoided the issue.
The second point I
want to make is—is the issue of energy. Russia is in part resurgent and
Putin is feeling powerful because of petro-dollars, as Senator McCain
mentioned.
That means that we,
as one of the biggest consumers of oil -- 25 percent of the world’s
oil—have to have an energy strategy not just to deal with Russia, but to
deal with many of the rogue states we’ve talked about, Iran, Venezuela.
And that means, yes,
increasing domestic production and off-shore drilling, but we only have
3 percent of the world’s oil supplies and we use 25 percent of the
world’s oil. So we can’t simply drill our way out of the problem.
What we’re going to
have to do is to approach it through alternative energy, like solar, and
wind, and biodiesel, and, yes, nuclear energy, clean-coal technology.
And, you know, I’ve got a plan for us to make a significant investment
over the next 10 years to do that.
And I have to say,
Senator McCain and I, I think agree on the importance of energy, but
Senator McCain mentioned earlier the importance of looking at a record.
Over 26 years,
Senator McCain voted 23 times against alternative energy, like solar,
and wind, and biodiesel.
And so we—we—we’ve
got to walk the walk and not just talk the talk when it comes to energy
independence, because this is probably going to be just as vital for our
economy and the pain that people are feeling at the pump—and, you know,
winter’s coming and home heating oil—as it is our national security and
the issue of climate change that’s so important.
LEHRER: We’ve got time
for one more lead question segment.
We’re way out of...
(CROSSTALK)
LEHRER: Quick
response and then...
(CROSSTALK)
MCCAIN: No one from
Arizona is against solar. And Senator Obama says he’s for nuclear, but
he’s against reprocessing and he’s against storing. So...
OBAMA: That’s just
not true, John. John, I’m sorry, but that’s not true.
MCCAIN: ... it’s hard
to get there from here. And off-shore drilling is also something that is
very important and it is a bridge.
And we know that, if
we drill off-shore and exploit a lot of these reserves, it will help, at
temporarily, relieve our energy requirements. And it will have, I think,
an important effect on the price of a barrel of oil.
OBAMA: I just have to
respond very quickly, just to correct— just to correct the record.
MCCAIN: So I want to
say that, with the Nunn-Lugar thing...
LEHRER: Excuse me,
Senator.
OBAMA: John?
MCCAIN: ... I
supported Nunn-Lugar back in the early 1990s when a lot of my colleagues
didn’t. That was the key legislation at the time and put us on the road
to eliminating this issue of nuclear waste and the nuclear fuel that has
to be taken care of.
OBAMA: I—I just have
to correct the record here. I have never said that I object to nuclear
waste. What I’ve said is that we have to store it safely.
And, Senator McCain,
he says—he talks about Arizona.
LEHRER: All right.
OBAMA: I’ve got to
make this point, Jim.
LEHRER: OK.
OBAMA: He objects...
MCCAIN: I have voted
for alternate fuel all of my time...
OBAMA: He—he—he
objects...
(CROSSTALK)
LEHRER: One at a time,
please.
OBAMA: He objected...
LEHRER: One at a
time.
MCCAIN: No one can be
opposed to alternate energy.
OBAMA: All right,
fair enough. Let’s move on. You’ve got one more energy—you’ve got one
more question.
LEHRER: This is the
last—last lead question. You have two minutes each. And the question is
this, beginning with you, Senator McCain.
What do you think the
likelihood is that there would be another 9/11-type attack on the
continental United States?
MCCAIN: I think it’s
much less than it was the day after 9/11. I think it—that we have a
safer nation, but we are a long way from safe.
And I want to tell
you that one of the things I’m most proud of, among others, because I
have worked across the aisle. I have a long record on that, on a long
series of reforms.
But after 9/11,
Senator Joe Lieberman and I decided that we needed a commission, and
that was a commission to investigate 9/11, and find out what happened,
and fix it.
And we were—we were
opposed by the administration, another area where I differed with this
administration. And we were stymied until the families of 9/11 came, and
they descended on Washington, and we got that legislation passed.
And there were a
series of recommendations, as I recall, more than 40. And I’m happy to
say that we’ve gotten written into law most of those reforms recommended
by that commission. I’m proud of that work, again, bipartisan, reaching
across the aisle, working together, Democrat and Republican alike.
So we have a long way
to go in our intelligence services. We have to do a better job in human
intelligence. And we’ve got to—to make sure that we have people who are
trained interrogators so that we don’t ever torture a prisoner ever
again.
We have to make sure
that our technological and intelligence capabilities are better. We have
to work more closely with our allies. I know our allies, and I can work
much more closely with them.
But I can tell you
that I think America is safer today than it was on 9/11. But that
doesn’t mean that we don’t have a long way to go.
And I’d like to
remind you, also, as a result of those recommendations, we’ve probably
had the largest reorganization of government since we established the
Defense Department. And I think that those men and women in those
agencies are doing a great job.
But we still have a
long way to go before we can declare America safe, and that means doing
a better job along our borders, as well.
LEHRER: Two minutes,
Senator Obama.
OBAMA: Well, first of
all, I think that we are safer in some ways. Obviously, we’ve poured
billions of dollars into airport security. We have done some work in
terms of securing potential targets, but we still have a long way to go.
We’ve got to make
sure that we’re hardening our chemical sites. We haven’t done enough in
terms of transit; we haven’t done enough in terms of ports.
And the biggest
threat that we face right now is not a nuclear missile coming over the
skies. It’s in a suitcase.
This is why the issue
of nuclear proliferation is so important. It is the—the biggest threat
to the United States is a terrorist getting their hands on nuclear
weapons.
And we—we are
spending billions of dollars on missile defense. And I actually believe
that we need missile defense, because of Iran and North Korea and the
potential for them to obtain or to launch nuclear weapons, but I also
believe that, when we are only spending a few hundred million dollars on
nuclear proliferation, then we’re making a mistake.
The other thing that
we have to focus on, though, is Al Qaida. They are now operating in 60
countries. We can’t simply be focused on Iraq. We have to go to the root
cause, and that is in Afghanistan and Pakistan. That’s going to be
critical. We are going to need more cooperation with our allies.
And one last point I
want to make. It is important for us to understand that the way we are
perceived in the world is going to make a difference, in terms of our
capacity to get cooperation and root out terrorism.
And one of the things
that I intend to do as president is to restore America’s standing in the
world. We are less respected now than we were eight years ago or even
four years ago.
OBAMA: And this is
the greatest country on Earth. But because of some of the mistakes that
have been made—and I give Senator McCain great credit on the torture
issue, for having identified that as something that undermines our
long-term security—because of those things, we, I think, are going to
have a lot of work to do in the next administration to restore that
sense that America is that shining beacon on a hill.
LEHRER: Do you agree
there’s much to be done in a new administration to restore...
(CROSSTALK)
MCCAIN: But in the
case of missile defense, Senator Obama said it had to be, quote,
“proven.” That wasn’t proven when Ronald Reagan said we would do SDI,
which is missile defense. And it was major—a major factor in bringing
about the end of the Cold War.
We seem to come full
circle again. Senator Obama still doesn’t quite understand—or doesn’t
get it—that if we fail in Iraq, it encourages Al Qaida. They would
establish a base in Iraq.
The consequences of
defeat, which would result from his plan of withdrawal and according to
date certain, regardless of conditions, according to our military
leaders, according to every expert, would lead to defeat—possible
defeat, loss of all the fragile sacrifice that we’ve made of American
blood and treasure, which grieves us all.
All of that would be
lost if we followed Senator Obama’s plan to have specific dates with
withdrawal, regardless of conditions on the ground.
And General Petraeus
says we have had great success, but it’s very fragile. And we can’t do
what Senator Obama wants to do.
That is the central
issue of our time. And I think Americans will judge very seriously as to
whether that’s the right path or the wrong path and who should be the
next president of the United States.
LEHRER: You see the same connections that Senator
McCain does?
OBAMA: Oh, there’s no
doubt. Look, over the last eight years, this administration, along with
Senator McCain, have been solely focused on Iraq. That has been their
priority. That has been where all our resources have gone.
In the meantime, bin
Laden is still out there. He is not captured. He is not killed. Al Qaida
is resurgent.
In the meantime,
we’ve got challenges, for example, with China, where we are borrowing
billions of dollars. They now hold a trillion dollars’ worth of our
debt. And they are active in countries like— in regions like Latin
America, and Asia, and Africa. They are—the conspicuousness of their
presence is only matched by our absence, because we’ve been focused on
Iraq.
We have weakened our
capacity to project power around the world because we have viewed
everything through this single lens, not to mention, look at our
economy. We are now spending $10 billion or more every month.
And that means we
can’t provide health care to people who need it. We can’t invest in
science and technology, which will determine whether or not we are going
to be competitive in the long term.
There has never been
a country on Earth that saw its economy decline and yet maintained its
military superiority. So this is a national security issue.
We haven’t adequately
funded veterans’ care. I sit on the Veterans Affairs Committee, and
we’ve got—I meet veterans all across the country who are trying to
figure out, “How can I get disability payments? I’ve got post-traumatic
stress disorder, and yet I can’t get treatment.”
So we have put all
chips in, right there, and nobody is talking about losing this war. What
we are talking about is recognizing that the next president has to have
a broader strategic vision about all the challenges that we face.
That’s been missing
over the last eight years. That sense is something that I want to
restore.
MCCAIN: I’ve been
involved, as I mentioned to you before, in virtually every major
national security challenge we’ve faced in the last 20-some years. There
are some advantages to experience, and knowledge, and judgment.
And I—and I honestly
don’t believe that Senator Obama has the knowledge or experience and has
made the wrong judgments in a number of areas, including his initial
reaction to Russian invasion— aggression in Georgia, to his—you know,
we’ve seen this stubbornness before in this administration to cling to a
belief that somehow the surge has not succeeded and failing to
acknowledge that he was wrong about the surge is—shows to me that
we—that—that we need more flexibility in a president of the United
States than that.
As far as our other
issues that he brought up are concerned, I know the veterans. I know
them well. And I know that they know that I’ll take care of them. And
I’ve been proud of their support and their recognition of my service to
the veterans.
And I love them. And
I’ll take care of them. And they know that I’ll take care of them. And
that’s going to be my job. But, also, I have the ability, and the
knowledge, and the background to make the right judgments, to keep this
country safe and secure.
Reform, prosperity,
and peace, these are major challenges to the United States of America. I
don’t think I need any on-the-job training. I’m ready to go at it right
now.
OBAMA: Well, let me
just make a closing point. You know, my father came from Kenya. That’s
where I get my name.
And in the ‘60s, he
wrote letter after letter to come to college here in the United States
because the notion was that there was no other country on Earth where
you could make it if you tried. The ideals and the values of the United
States inspired the entire world.
I don’t think any of
us can say that our standing in the world now, the way children around
the world look at the United States, is the same.
And part of what we
need to do, what the next president has to do· and
this is part of our judgment, this is part of how we’re going to keep
America safe—is to—to send a message to the world that we are going to
invest in issues like education, we are going to invest in issues
that—that relate to how ordinary people are able to live out their
dreams.
And that is something
that I’m going to be committed to as president of the United States.
LEHRER: Few seconds.
We’re almost finished.
MCCAIN: Jim, when I
came home from prison, I saw our veterans being very badly treated, and
it made me sad. And I embarked on an effort to resolve the POW-MIA
issue, which we did in a bipartisan fashion, and then I worked on
normalization of relations between our two countries so that our
veterans could come all the way home.
I guarantee you, as
president of the United States, I know how to heal the wounds of war, I
know how to deal with our adversaries, and I know how to deal with our
friends.
LEHRER: And that ends
this debate tonight.
On October 2nd,
next Thursday, also at 9:00 p.m. Eastern time, the two vice presidential
candidates will debate at Washington University in St. Louis. My PBS
colleague, Gwen Ifill, will be the moderator.
For now, from Oxford,
Mississippi, thank you, senators, both.
I’m Jim Lehrer. Thank
you, and good night.
(APPLAUSE)
END
.ETX
Sep 26, 2008 22:57 ET
.EOF
Source: John
McCain 2008 |