Jim
Bramlett
(6 May 2008)
"Getting to Know John McCain"
Dear friends:
I am not usually into political articles, but the below was
sent to me by a pastor friend and it seems profound and relevant enough to send
it along to you. With the imploding Democratic candidates self-destructing, it
is possible that John McCain will be the next President of the United States.
It would be good to know more about his
character.
Jim
______________________________________________
Getting to Know John McCain
By Karl Rove
The Wall
Street Journal
It came to me while I was having dinner with
Doris Day. No, not that Doris Day. The Doris Day who is married to Col.
Bud Day, Congressional Medal of Honor recipient, fighter pilot, Vietnam POW and
roommate of John McCain at the Hanoi Hilton.
As we ate near the Days'
home in Florida recently, I heard things about Sen. McCain that were deeply
moving and politically troubling. Moving because they told me things about him
the American people need to know. And troubling because it is clear that Mr.
McCain is one of the most private individuals to run for president in
history.
When it comes to choosing a president, the American people want
to know more about a candidate than policy positions. They want to know about
character, the values ingrained in his heart. For Mr. McCain, that means they
will want to know more about him personally than he has been willing to
reveal.
Mr. Day relayed to me one of the stories Americans should hear.
It involves what happened to him after escaping from a North Vietnamese prison
during the war. When he was recaptured, a Vietnamese captor broke his arm and
said, "I told you I would make you a cripple."
The break was designed to
shatter Mr. Day's will. He had survived in prison on the hope that one day he
would return to the United States and be able to fly again. To kill that hope,
the Vietnamese left part of a bone sticking out of his arm, and put him in a
misshapen cast. This was done so that the arm would heal at "a goofy angle," as
Mr. Day explained. Had it done so, he never would have flown again.
But
it didn't heal that way because of John McCain. Risking severe punishment,
Messrs. McCain and Day collected pieces of bamboo in the prison courtyard to use
as a splint.
Mr. McCain put Mr. Day on the floor of their cell and,
using his foot, jerked the broken bone into place. Then, using strips from the
bandage on his own wounded leg and the bamboo, he put Mr. Day's splint in
place.
Former POW Earnest Brace describes conversations
with John McCain through the walls of a Hanoi prison.
Years later,
Air Force surgeons examined Mr. Day and complimented the treatment he'd gotten
from his captors. Mr. Day corrected them. It was Dr. McCain who deserved the
credit. Mr. Day went on to fly again.
Another story I heard over dinner
with the Days involved Mr. McCain serving as one of the three chaplains for his
fellow prisoners. At one point, after being shuttled among different prisons,
Mr. Day had found himself as the most senior officer at the Hanoi Hilton. So he
tapped Mr. McCain to help administer religious services to the other
prisoners.
Today, Mr. Day, a very active 83, still vividly recalls Mr.
McCain's sermons. "He remembered the Episcopal liturgy," Mr. Day says, "and
sounded like a bona fide preacher." One of Mr. McCain's first sermons took as
its text Luke 20:25 and Matthew 22:21, "render unto Caesar what is Caesar's and
unto God what is God's." Mr. McCain said he and his fellow prisoners shouldn't
ask God to free them, but to help them become the best people they could be
while serving as POWs. It was Caesar who put them in prison and Caesar who would
get them out. Their task was to act with honor.
Another McCain story,
somewhat better known, is about the Vietnamese practice of torturing him by
tying his head between his ankles with his arms behind him, and then leaving him
for hours. The torture so badly busted up his shoulders that to this day Mr.
McCain can't raise his arms over his head.
One night, a Vietnamese guard
loosened his bonds, returning at the end of his watch to tighten them again so
no one would notice. Shortly after, on Christmas Day, the same guard stood
beside Mr. McCain in the prison yard and drew a cross in the sand before erasing
it. Mr. McCain later said that when he returned to Vietnam for the first time
after the war, the only person he really wanted to meet was that
guard.
Mr. Day recalls with pride Mr. McCain stubbornly refusing to
accept special treatment or curry favor to be released early, even when gravely
ill. Mr. McCain knew the Vietnamese wanted the propaganda victory of the son and
grandson of Navy admirals accepting special treatment. "He wasn't corruptible
then," Mr. Day says, "and he's not corruptible today."
The stories told
to me by the Days involve more than wartime valor.
For example, in 1991
Cindy McCain was visiting Mother Teresa's orphanage in Bangladesh when a dying
infant was thrust into her hands. The orphanage could not provide the medical
care needed to save her life, so Mrs. McCain brought the child home to America
with her. She was met at the airport by her husband, who asked what all this was
about.
Mrs. McCain replied that the child desperately needed surgery and
years of rehabilitation. "I hope she can stay with us," she told her husband.
Mr. McCain agreed. Today that child is their teenage daughter Bridget.
I
was aware of this story. What I did not know, and what I learned from Doris, is
that there was a second infant Mrs. McCain brought back. She ended up being
adopted by a young McCain aide and his wife.
"We were called at midnight
by Cindy," Wes Gullett remembers, and "five days later we met our new daughter
Nicki at the L.A. airport wearing the only clothing Cindy could find on the trip
back, a 7-Up T-shirt she bought in the Bangkok airport." Today, Nicki is a high
school sophomore. Mr. Gullett told me, "I never saw a hospital bill" for her
care.
A few, but not many, of the stories told to me by the Days have
been written about, such as in Robert Timberg's 1996 book "A Nightingale's
Song." But Mr. McCain rarely refers to them on the campaign trail. There is
something admirable in his reticence, but he needs to overcome
it.
Private people like Mr. McCain are rare in politics for a reason.
Candidates who are uncomfortable sharing their interior lives limit their
appeal. But if Mr. McCain is to win the election this fall, he has to open
up.
Americans need to know about his vision for the nation's future,
especially his policy positions and domestic reforms. They also need to learn
about the moments in his life that shaped him. Mr. McCain cannot make this a
biography-only campaign – but he can't afford to make it a biography-free
campaign either. Unless he opens up more, many voters will never know the
experiences of his life that show his character, integrity and essential
decency.
These qualities mattered in America's first president and will
matter as Americans decide on their 44th president.
Mr. Rove is the
former senior adviser and deputy chief of staff to President George W.
Bush.