Click photo to enlarge
Republican Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin speaks as Republican
presidential candidate, Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz.,
introduces her as his Vice Presidential running mate on
Friday. Photo Kiichiro Sato/AP.
Cindy McCain says Republican vice presidential pick Sarah
Palin understands what's at stake in national security issues
in part because she is governor of Alaska, located in close
proximity to Russia.
The wife of soon-to-be Republican presidential nominee
Senator John McCain also said she's "offended" by Democrats
calling her husband elitist because of the number of homes
their family owns.
Asked about Palin's credential, Cindy McCain told ABC
television's This Week: "The experience that she comes from
is with what she's done in the government. And also,
remember: Alaska is the closest part of our continent to
Russia. So, it's not as if she doesn't understand what's at
stake here."
Reminded that Democrats are calling Palin too inexperienced
to be a heartbeat away from the presidency, she responded by
saying that Palin's son is about be deployed to Iraq.
"I asked her, how do you feel about this? This is two things
you have to do, is not only possibly be a vice presidential
candidate, but also, you know, listen, to worry about your
son," Cindy McCain recounted of her conversation with Palin
before the vice presidential announcement.
"And she looked me square in the eye and she said, `You know
something? I'm a mother. I can do it'."
Democratic Senator John Kerry, his party's 2004 presidential
nominee, disputed Palin's credentials a few minutes later on
the show, saying the Alaska governor has "zero, zero
experience in foreign policy."
It's unusual for the spouse of a presidential candidate to go
on a Sunday talk show, but Cindy McCain used her 10 minutes
to defend her husband from charges of elitism.
She also signaled she would want to focus on humanitarian
crises as first lady, talking about her meetings in Georgia
last week with refugees of the recent Russian invasion.
Georgia "is a wonderful, young democracy," McCain said. "We
can't let it go. We can't let a country come back in and take
it back down to a Soviet-style government. This is democracy,
and that's what we're all about."
She added: "The United States is the best at what we do.
We're the ones that give the most and give the earliest,
every time something happens. And I'd like to continue that,
and also encourage others to get involved. You don't have to
cross an ocean to be of help."
McCain bristled at charges by Democratic presidential nominee
Barack Obama that her husband is out of touch with most
Americans because of the eight homes their family owns.
"My husband was a Navy boy. His father and mother were in the
Navy. I mean, there's nothing elitist about that," she said.
"I'm offended by Barack Obama saying that about my husband."
Both McCain's father and paternal grandfather were four-star
admirals in the US Navy. His father commanded all the US
naval forces in the Pacific when McCain, a Navy pilot, was a
prisoner of war during the Vietnam War.