/ 29 October 2008

McCain renews attacks on Obama links to radical

Republican John McCain renewed his attacks on Barack Obama’s ties to a 1960s radical on Wednesday as he targeted voters in the key battleground state of Florida.

McCain, who has refrained from linking Obama to Bill Ayers during recent campaign speeches, went back on the offensive six days before the November 4 polls in an interview with a Spanish-language radio station in Miami.

”I think this whole issue of the relationship with Bill Ayers needs to be known by the American people,” he told Radio Mambi. ”Senator Obama said it was just a guy in the neighbourhood. We know much more than that.”

Ayers was a member of the ”Weathermen” movement, classified by the FBI as a ”domestic terrorist organisation,” which carried out a series of attacks to protest the Vietnam War, including on the Pentagon and US Capitol.

Obama met Ayers early in his political career in 1995 but his campaign has said he has not spoken by phone or exchanged email messages with him since Obama became a United States senator in 2005.

McCain went on to accuse the Los Angeles Times of refusing to publish a video it had obtained of Ayers attending an event with a member of the Palestine Liberation Organisation (PLO).

”I don’t care much about an old, washed-up unrepentant terrorist, and his wife who was on an FBI top-10 wanted list,” McCain said.

”But we should know about their relationship, including apparently information that is held by the Los Angeles Times concerning an event that Mr Ayers attended with a PLO spokesperson.”

”The Los Angeles Times refuses to make that videotape public. I’m not in the business of talking about media bias but what if there was a tape with John McCain with a neo-Nazi outfit being held by some media outlet?

”I think the treatment of the issue would be slightly different,” he said, saying Ayers had a ”long relationship” with Obama, who was eight years old when the Weathermen were waging their radical campaign.

”It’s not that Barack Obama was eight years old when Mr Ayers was committing acts of terror, it’s all about the long relationship on foundations, for his book and launching his political career in Mr Ayers’s living room,” McCain said.

The interview was one of several given by the 72-year-old senator to local radio in Miami as he attempts to woo the influential Hispanic vote in Florida, a state he almost certainly must win in order to take the White House.

Later McCain took aim at recent comments by former Cuba president Fidel Castro, who had ridiculed the former pilot’s low grades at naval academy.

”I notice in the past couple of days that Fidel has made his preferences known in the campaign and had some very unkind things to say about me,” McCain said. ”My feelings are hurt.”

More than one million Cuban-Americans live in Florida, and McCain said he was acutely aware of the group’s possible influence in the election race.

He attempted to tap into anti-Castro sentiment by vowing to ”restore freedom and democracy” on the island, criticising Obama for advocating a policy of diplomatic engagement.

”I think we all know that the Cuban-American vote can be vital to whether I win Florida or not,” McCain said. ”So I do want to say again that we will never waver in our mission to restore freedom and democracy. — AFP

 

AFP