Balkan, Caucasus Nations Mourn Loss of Close Friend McCain
The death of Senator John McCain after a year-long battle with brain cancer has drawn an outpouring of condolences from every corner of the globe, some of the most poignant and diverse of which came from southeastern Europe, where the Arizona Republican’s unique brand of personal diplomacy forged bonds with democratic leaders and irritated illiberal regimes.
Known for packing Congressional recesses with extensive global travels, McCain, a war hero, statesman, and international human rights advocate, used his office to shed light on conflicts underreported by major Western news outlets.
«If I learned one thing from John it’s that you cannot protect America sitting in Washington,” Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.), who accompanied McCain on nearly 50 trips to Iraqi and Afghan war zones, told Josh Rogin of The Washington Post. “You can’t learn how this world works watching cable news.»
His August 2008 Wall Street Journal op-ed, «We Are All Georgians»—published upon the ceasefire that followed Russia’s invasion of Georgia’s breakaway enclave of Abkhazia—was a dire warning against Western diplomatic complacency.
«For anyone who thought that stark international aggression was a thing of the past, the last week must have come as a startling wake-up call,» he said of the first major cross-border military invasion on European soil in nearly half a century. «The world has learned at great cost the price of allowing aggression against free nations to go unchecked.»
Penned in the latter stages of his last failed presidential bid, the editorial proved prescient in Ukraine upon Russia’s 2014 annexation of Crimea.
«Sad news for all Ukrainian people—a great friend of Ukraine, Senator John McCain, has died,» tweeted Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko, whose nation routinely hosted the U.S. legislator.