USA TODAY | - |
President
Obama -- criticized in a new book by his former Defense secretary
Robert Gates -- found an unusual source of sympathy on Sunday: John
McCain.
The Republican senator from Arizona, who lost the 2008 presidential election to Obama, told CNN that Gates should have delayed publication of his new book, perhaps until the end of U.S. combat operations in Afghanistan.
"If I (had been) giving him advice, I would have waited," McCain said on CNN's State of the Union.
McCain also called Gates "one of the finest public servants that I've known," and he has the right "to voice his views any time he wants to."
Other lawmakers have also questioned the timing of Gates' book.
Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., while a Republican critic of Obama, told CBS' Face The Nation that "my preference would be that people would refrain from writing these sorts of things until the president is out of office because I think it undermines the ability to conduct foreign policy."
Rep. Elijah Cummings, D-Md., also on CBS, praised Gates' service, but said, "I just wish he could have waited a little bit longer."
In Duty: Memoirs of a Secretary of War, Gates also criticizes Vice President Biden, former president George W. Bush, and members of Congress, as well as Obama.
"He's obviously very frustrated and felt -- which by the way surprised all of us who know him -- and he's decided to really kind of let loose," McCain told CNN's Candy Crowley.
Gates does praise Obama's decisions in Afghanistan -- including the deployment of more U.S. troops to the conflict -- but questions whether the president truly believed his policy.
The book is due for public release on Tuesday.
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