Home > Political Insider > Archives > 2006 > October > 09 > Entry

Of North Korea, Iraq, Foley — and Casey Cagle

At a fund-raiser for the Republican candidate for lieutenant governor of Georgia — let us repeat the strangeness of this venue — at a fund-raiser for the Republican candidate for lieutenant governor of Georgia, the following topics were seriously addressed:

The North Korea nuclear situation, the difficulties of partitioning Iraq, and — inevitably — the impact of former U.S. Rep. Mark Foley’s alleged predilection for House pages.

And yes, U.S. Sen. John McCain, a presumed member of the ’08 presidential field, said some very nice things about Casey Cagle, the aforementioned candidate for lieutenant governor.

Who beat Ralph Reed in the July primary. See details below, but suffice it to say that McCain is no fan of Reed.

“We know that this was a very high visibility race in the primary, for obvious reasons,� McCain told reporters after giving a closed-door speech to 90 Cagle supporters at an Atlantic Station function. Tickets were $1,000 or so.

Did the 12-point margin over Reed make it more pleasant?

“I think it made it more pleasant, but I would point out that Casey Cagle had a resume that was pretty impressive. I think he won the race on the merits,� McCain said.

“This young man went through one of the one of the most difficult primaries in the history of lieutenant governor elections. I think he ran an honorable campaign,� the senator reiterated.

But there were more important things to talk about.

On the world’s latest nuclear crisis:

“I would like to emphasize that China has a responsibility here. China has influence over North Korea.

“China must understand that increased tensions in Asian and on the Korean peninsula are not good for China. China should act in its self-interest, which is as a mature world power, instead of hanging back, not doing what they should do — and that is exercising enormous influence over North Korea to stop this nonsense immediately.

“This is a very dangerous step, escalation. It’s in China’s court as well as that of the U.N. Security Council.

“If China would enact serious sanctions on North Korea, they could cripple their economy in a matter of days. So they have the influence.

“If China’s willing to be a responsible member of the world community as a superpower, they should act now, act responsibly, and bring this crisis to an end.�

On whether Iraq should be partitioned:

“We have to look at all options, but we’ve tried partitions in the past. Partitions of other countries have always turned out far more difficult than we have anticipated. In Baghdad, Sunni and Shiia live in the same neighborhood.�

On President Bush’s enlistment of Jim Baker to examine alternatives in Iraq:

“I think it’s clear he’s trying to find additional measures that can be taken in Iraq.

“I don’t know what they are. I think he’s an incredibly credible individual, but I certainly see no sign on the part of Jim Baker that we are willing to set a date for withdrawal from Iraq, which is what the Democrats want to do.�

On Mark Foley:

“We should ask for a group of respected, retired congressmen and senators, a small group, to examine this quickly and come up with an allocation of responsibility and recommendations for future action.

“The quicker we put closure to this, the more likely it is we can move on and regain some support from Americans who are unhappy with the situation.�

And on the F-22 made in Marietta:

“My stance on the F-22 was that I supported strongly the F-22 — in fact increased production.

“I opposed multi-year production because I felt that that might precluded decisions that might have to be made in the future.�

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