The Borneo Post (Sabah)

America mourns John McCain, war hero and political icon

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PHOENIX: America paid tribute to John McCain, the Vietnam War hero and two-time presidenti­al candidate with a legendary temper whose personal courage and insistence on treating even his foes with respect earned him near-universal admiration.

McCain died on Saturday, four days shy of his 82nd birthday, following a yearlong battle with an aggressive form of brain cancer. He is survived by his wife Cindy and seven children, three of them from an earlier marriage.

Flags flew at half-mast over the White House and US Capitol in honor of McCain, as organisers announced he will lie in state at the US Capitol Rotunda. That honor has been accorded to only a few notable Americans, including John F Kennedy, Ronald Reagan and civil rights icon Rosa Parks.

A memorial service will take place at the massive National Cathedral overlookin­g Washington before McCain is laid to rest according to his wishes at the US Naval Academy in nearby Annapolis, Maryland, on Sept 2, his office said.

Ahead of the national ceremonies, McCain will lie in state at the Arizona State Capitol Rotunda and a memorial service will take place at the North Phoenix Baptist Church.

“This is a rare and distinct occurrence for a truly special man,” said Arizona Governor Doug Ducey, adding: “John McCain is Arizona.” In Phoenix, a succession of ordinary Arizonans left flags or flowers at McCain’s office or a local mortuary to honor the man who represente­d them in Congress for 35 years.

Former presidents George W Bush, a Republican, and Barack Obama, a Democrat – his successful rivals in, respective­ly, the 2000 and 2008 elections – are set to speak at the national memorial service, according to The New York Times. Media reports earlier this year said the senator had expressly asked that President Donald Trump not be invited. Instead, Vice-President Mike Pence is expected to attend.

As tributes poured in from the US and abroad, Trump said simply that he sent his ‘deepest sympathies and respect’ to the McCain family.

McCain cast a decisive vote last year that killed Republican attempts to repeal Obama’s health care reforms. The repeal was a Trump priority, and the president never forgave McCain.

The hawkish McCain was an unrelentin­g critic of Obama’s foreign policy, saying the Democratic president was weak on Libya, Iraq and Syria. Still, Obama said he and the senator “shared, for all our difference­s, a fidelity to something higher – the ideals for which generation­s of Americans and immigrants alike have fought, marched and sacrificed.”

Bush, whose tough campaign against McCain in 2000 left both sides bruised, praised the Arizonan as ‘a man of deep conviction and a patriot of the highest order.’

McCain spent more than three decades in the Senate, looming large in debates over war and peace and the moral direction of the nation. As chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, he was a powerful advocate for the nation’s veterans. As a fervent Atlanticis­t, a persistent critic of authoritar­ian leaders, and a frequent congressio­nal traveller, he earned respect around the globe.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel called McCain “one of the great political figures of our time (who) fought tirelessly for a strong transatlan­tic alliance.” Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said he was ‘an inspiratio­n to millions.’

McCain ‘embodied the idea of service over self,’ according to British Prime Minister Theresa May, while French President Emmanuel Macron saluted ‘a true American hero.’

Praise for McCain however was not universal: Chinese social media users called him an ‘enemy of China’ for his hawkish foreign policy views. And comments on the US far-right Breitbart website slammed the senator for his key vote against the Obamacare repeal. — AFP

This is a rare and distinct occurrence for a truly special man. John McCain is Arizona. Doug Ducey, Arizona Governor

 ?? — AFP photo ?? Honour guard David Carrasco, 78, of Phoenix, Arizona stands with the flag outside the AL Moore-Grimshaw Mortuary in Phoenix, Arizona where the body of McCain is being held.
— AFP photo Honour guard David Carrasco, 78, of Phoenix, Arizona stands with the flag outside the AL Moore-Grimshaw Mortuary in Phoenix, Arizona where the body of McCain is being held.

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