"Our armed forces will fight for peace in Iraq, a peace built on more secure foundations than are found today in the Middle East. Even more important, they will fight for two human conditions of even greater value than peace: liberty and justice"
About this Quote
McCain’s line performs a neat rhetorical magic trick: it turns war from a grim necessity into a moral upgrade. “Fight for peace” is the deliberate paradox that does the heavy lifting, inviting listeners to accept violence as the midwife of stability. Then he raises the stakes with a hierarchy of virtues: peace is good, sure, but “even greater” are “liberty and justice.” That ordering isn’t accidental. It preemptively answers the most corrosive question about Iraq: even if the immediate outcome is chaos, wasn’t the aim nobler than mere quiet?
The phrase “more secure foundations” smuggles in a construction metaphor that makes nation-building sound like engineering rather than politics. Security becomes something you can pour, reinforce, and guarantee. It’s also a quiet rebuke to the status quo “found today in the Middle East,” framing the existing regional order as structurally unsound and therefore fair game for renovation by force.
Subtextually, the quote isn’t just selling a military campaign; it’s defending an American self-image. McCain positions U.S. troops as agents of universal goods, not geopolitical interests. That’s classic post-9/11 language, when “freedom” and “justice” became elastic terms: capacious enough to cover preemption, occupation, and the messy gap between toppling a regime and building a workable state.
The intent is persuasion through moral elevation. If you can redefine the mission as liberty-and-justice work, dissent risks sounding not merely strategic, but ethically suspect.
The phrase “more secure foundations” smuggles in a construction metaphor that makes nation-building sound like engineering rather than politics. Security becomes something you can pour, reinforce, and guarantee. It’s also a quiet rebuke to the status quo “found today in the Middle East,” framing the existing regional order as structurally unsound and therefore fair game for renovation by force.
Subtextually, the quote isn’t just selling a military campaign; it’s defending an American self-image. McCain positions U.S. troops as agents of universal goods, not geopolitical interests. That’s classic post-9/11 language, when “freedom” and “justice” became elastic terms: capacious enough to cover preemption, occupation, and the messy gap between toppling a regime and building a workable state.
The intent is persuasion through moral elevation. If you can redefine the mission as liberty-and-justice work, dissent risks sounding not merely strategic, but ethically suspect.
Quote Details
| Topic | Freedom |
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