... not just that Maliki moved to Obama's position but that Bush did as well,"
Obama's reception in Iraq puts McCain in difficult spot51 minutes ago
WASHINGTON (AFP) — First to call for a "surge" in Iraq, Republican White House hopeful John McCain may be the last to endorse the idea of a timetable for the withdrawal of US soldiers.
His rival Barack Obama left Iraq on Tuesday after Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki voiced support for the departure of US combat troops by the end of 2010, a deadline similar to what the Democratic candidate has proposed.
Maliki's stance gave a boost for Obama and presented McCain with a dilemma.
McCain could embrace the idea of a timetable for troop withdrawal and sacrifice one of his principal arguments against Obama, or continue to argue against a timeline as "surrender" and risk appearing intransigent.
Neither option looks attractive for the Arizona senator, according to analysts and pundits in the US media.
The Iraqi prime minister's stance gave Obama "a measure of credibility as a prospective world leader," wrote The New York Times, while the move had "complicated Mr. McCain's leading argument against him: that a withdrawal timeline would be tantamount to surrender and would leave Iraqis in dangerous straits."
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McCain's "reluctance to support a 'time horizon' now differs not only with the position of his Democratic opponent but also with those of the White House and the Iraqi prime minister," the political website Politico wrote.
"It's a devastating blow to the McCain campaign, not just that Maliki moved to Obama's position but that Bush did as well," said Richard Holbrooke, former US ambassador to the United Nations for the Clinton administration.
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