"It is not difficult in Washington to find high-level military 
officials who have had close encounters with John McCain's temper, 
and who find it worrisome. Politicians sometimes scream for effect, 
but the concern is that McCain has, at times, come across as out of 
control. It is difficult to find current or former officers willing 
to describe those encounters in detail on the record. That's because, 
by and large, those officers admire McCain. But that doesn't mean 
they want his finger on the proverbial button, and they are 
supporting Clinton or Obama instead. 

"I like McCain. I respect McCain. But I am a little worried by his 
knee-jerk response factor," said retired Maj. Gen. Paul Eaton, who 
was in charge of training the Iraqi military from 2003 to 2004 and is 
now campaigning for Clinton. "I think it is a little scary. I think 
this guy's first reactions are not necessarily the best reactions. I 
believe that he acts on impulse." 

"I studied leadership for a long time during 32 years in the 
military," said retired Air Force Maj. Gen. Scott Gration, a one-time 
Republican who is supporting Obama. "It is all about character. Who 
can motivate willing followers? Who has the vision? Who can inspire 
people?" Gration asked. "I have tremendous respect for John McCain, 
but I would not follow him." 

"One of the things the senior military would like to see when they go 
visit the president is a kind of consistency, a kind of reliability," 
explained retired Gen. Merrill McPeak, a former Republican, former 
chief of staff of the Air Force and former fighter pilot who flew 285 
combat missions. McPeak said his perception is that Obama is "not 
that up when he is up and not that down when he is down. He is kind 
of a steady Eddie. This is a very important feature," McPeak said. On 
the other hand, he said, "McCain has got a reputation for being a 
little volatile." McPeak is campaigning for Obama. 

Stephen Wayne, a political science professor at Georgetown who is 
studying the personalities of the presidential candidates, agrees 
McCain's temperament is of real concern. "The anger is there," Wayne 
said. If McCain is the one to answer the phone at 3 a.m., he 
said, "you worry about an initial emotive, less rational response." 

Most recently, Wayne has been studying Clinton's personality. "I just 
gave a presentation on Hillary's temperament for the presidency. I 
came to the conclusion that it is not really a good presidential 
temperament, with one caveat -- if you compare it with McCain's." 

http://www.salon.com/news/feature/2008/03/06/commander_in_chief/

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