Joy Over U.S. Crisis, Support for McCain
By Joby
Warrick and
Karen
DeYoung
Washington
Post Staff
Writers
October 22,
2008 --
"Washington
Post" --
Al-Qaeda is
watching the
U.S. stock
market's
downward
slide with
something
akin to
jubilation,
with its
leaders
hailing the
financial
crisis as a
vindication
of its
strategy of
crippling
America's
economy
through
endless,
costly
foreign wars
against
Islamist
insurgents.
And at least
some of its
supporters
think Sen.
John McCain
is the
presidential
candidate
best suited
to continue
that trend.
"Al-Qaeda
will have to
support
McCain in
the coming
election,"
said a
commentary
posted
Monday on
the
extremist
Web site al-Hesbah,
which is
closely
linked to
the
terrorist
group. It
said the
Arizona
Republican
would
continue the
"failing
march of his
predecessor,"
President
Bush.
The Web
commentary
was one of
several
posted by
Taliban or
al-Qaeda-allied
groups in
recent days
that
trumpeted
the global
financial
crisis and
predicted
further
decline for
the United
States and
other
Western
powers. In
language
that was by
turns
mocking and
ominous, the
newest
posting
credited
al-Qaeda
with having
lured
Washington
into a trap
that had
"exhausted
its
resources
and
bankrupted
its
economy." It
further
suggested
that a
terrorist
strike might
swing the
election to
McCain and
guarantee an
expansion of
U.S.
military
commitments
in the
Islamic
world.
"It will
push the
Americans
deliberately
to vote for
McCain so
that he
takes
revenge for
them against
al-Qaeda,"
said the
posting,
attributed
to Muhammad
Haafid, a
longtime
contributor
to the
password-protected
site.
"Al-Qaeda
then will
succeed in
exhausting
America."
It was
unclear how
closely the
commentary
reflected
the views of
al-Qaeda
leader Osama
bin Laden,
who has not
issued a
public
statement
since the
spring. Some
terrorism
experts said
the support
for McCain
could be
mere bluster
by a group
that may
have more to
fear from a
McCain
presidency.
In any
event, the
comments
summarized
what has
emerged as a
consensus
view on
extremist
sites, said
Adam Raisman,
a senior
analyst for
the Site
Intelligence
Group, which
monitors
Islamist Web
pages. Site
provided
translations
of the
comments to
The
Washington
Post.
"The idea in
the jihadist
forums is
that McCain
would be a
faithful
'son of
Bush' --
someone they
see as a
jingoist and
a war hawk,"
Raisman
said. "They
think that,
to succeed
in a war of
attrition,
they need a
leader in
Washington
like
McCain."
Islamist
militants
have
generally
had less to
say about
Sen. Barack
Obama of
Illinois.
Leaders of
the
Iranian-backed
group
Hezbollah
expressed a
favorable
view of
Obama during
the primary
campaign but
later
rejected the
Democrat
after he
delivered
speeches
expressing
support for
Israel.
In an e-mail
response,
senior
McCain
foreign
policy
adviser
Randy
Scheunemann
noted that
al-Qaeda
leaders have
repeatedly
said that
America "did
not have the
stomach to
fight them
over the
long haul,"
which the
Arizona
senator has
pledged to
do.
"Whatever
musings and
bravado on
radical
websites the
Washington
Post chooses
to quote,
the fact
remains that
only John
McCain has
the
experience,
judgment and
fortitude to
lead a
country at
war," he
said. The
Obama
campaign
declined to
comment on
the Web
postings.
Both the
Bush
administration
and the two
major
presidential
campaigns
have
rejected any
suggestion
that the
economic
downturn
will
undermine
the
country's
fight
against
al-Qaeda.
Obama and
McCain have
stepped
gingerly
around the
issue of how
they would
adjust their
priorities
in a
recession
and have
spoken of
the
importance
of
maintaining
a strong
defense.
Both have
advocated
expanding
the size of
the U.S.
military
overall, but
neither has
explained in
detail how
to pay for
it.
From shortly
after the
Sept. 11,
2001,
al-Qaeda
attacks to
last year,
U.S. defense
spending
rose from 3
to 4 percent
of gross
domestic
product, but
it remains
far below
the 45-year
average of
5.5 percent.
The
Pentagon's
budget for
fiscal 2009
is $527
billion, a
figure that
does not
include Iraq
and
Afghanistan
war costs,
which have
totaled more
than $800
billion
since 2001.
"History
shows us
that nations
that are
strong
militarily
over time
have to have
a strong
economy,"
McCain said
this month.
He has said
the United
States must
send more
troops to
Afghanistan
while
avoiding a
withdrawal
timetable
from Iraq.
Obama has
tied an Iraq
withdrawal
to increased
forces in
Afghanistan
and the
ability to
fund
domestic
programs.
The
continued
fight in
Iraq "means
we can't
provide
health care
to people
who need
it," Obama
said in his
first debate
with McCain.
"Nobody is
talking
about losing
this war,"
Obama said
of Iraq.
"What we are
talking
about is
recognizing
that the
next
president
has to have
broader
strategic
vision."
It is not
the first
time
al-Qaeda and
its allies
have weighed
in on a
Western
election.
Bin Laden
released a
video
message Oct.
29, 2004,
days before
the U.S.
presidential
election,
warning of
plans for
further
attacks on
U.S.
targets.
Some
strategists
for Sen.
John F.
Kerry
(Mass.), the
Democratic
nominee,
have said
the timing
of the
message
tipped the
balance
toward Bush,
who defined
himself as
the
anti-terrorism
candidate.
The deadly
train
bombings in
Spain that
year were
seen as an
attempt by
al-Qaeda to
bring down
then-Prime
Minister
José María
Aznar, who
had sent
troops to
Iraq. Aznar
lost his
reelection
bid three
days after
the bombing.
Recent polls
suggest that
Iraq and
terrorism
are less
important to
most
Americans
than the
economy.
Still,
terrorism
experts have
warned that
al-Qaeda may
indeed
launch a
major strike
before the
U.S.
election or
shortly
afterward.
"The idea of
testing a
new
president or
hitting us
when we're
off-balance
is
enormously
attractive
to them,"
said Bruce
Hoffman, a
Georgetown
University
terrorism
expert.
Staff
researchers
Madonna
Lebling and
Julie Tate
contributed
to this
report.