Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

Gen. McCaffrey praises U.S. troops in war on terror at USAREUR Land Combat Expo
Stars and Stripes ^ | Sept. 26, 2005 | Nancy Montgomery

Posted on 09/25/2005 6:21:15 PM PDT by FairOpinion

HEIDELBERG, Germany — Barry McCaffrey fought in two wars — Vietnam and the Persian Gulf War — before retiring at the top, the most highly decorated four-star general in the U.S. Army.

He knows, he said, a lot about fighting. He learned it early, but not in military battle, McCaffrey said Friday during a speech to a ballroom full of soldiers. He learned it as an “untalented but undefeated” college boxer.

“I was scared to death every time I got in the ring,” McCaffrey said.

That sort of fear is necessary any time the United States uses its armed forces, he said.

“I want us to get in the ring thinking, ‘This is a very tricky proposition,’” said McCaffrey, who now enjoys a career advising Congress and the media on national security issues. “You’re never sure where it’s going to end up.”

McCaffrey’s talk, at the U.S. Army Europe’s Land Combat Expo, was designed to give his assessment of how well the U.S. is confronting the terrorist threat to members of what he calls the second “pillar” in the U.S. response to terrorism: military power.

That second pillar, the soldiers, sailors and airmen and Marines, has been doing a lot of the heavy lifting. Taking away al-Qaida sanctuaries in Afghanistan was an important intervention, he said. And although there had been debate about the wisdom of invading Iraq — and a “shameful failure of intelligence” going into the Iraq, “I thought then and still do that it was the right thing to do,” McCaffrey said.

McCaffrey has been critical of Pentagon decisions in how to fight the war, long saying there were too few troops, and too little planning, and that the Pentagon had responded to its own missteps not with corrective action but arrogance and denial.

But at Friday’s speech, he omitted such criticisms, instead lauding the work of the troops in his audience.

“The military component has been simply magnificent,” he said. “You’ve been at this now pushing four years. The country trusts you. They understand the sacrifice.”

McCaffrey said the killed and injured troops from Iraq and Afghanistan number about a battalion a month, but that total is “reasonably light, from a historical perspective,” he said.

The first pillar in confronting terrorism is the CIA, FBI and their international counterparts, he said. They are working on “a global campaign in intelligence communities and law enforcement to create new mechanisms of cooperation.” That effort is working “pretty well,” he said, praising in particular the CIA.

McCaffrey said that the Army, now fighting wars in two countries was the smallest it had been since 1939, and that the U.S. had the smallest percentage of its people serving in the military ever during a time of crisis.

“The U.S. armed forces are at war, the CIA’s at war, and that’s it,” McCaffrey said. “How do we get the nation to see this as their struggle?”

The third pillar — domestic security — was struggling the most in McCaffrey’s view.

Although the aviation system and nuclear power plants are far better secured than they were, the borders better protected and drug remedies for biological agents stockpiled, the effort, McCaffrey said, was “under-resourced.”

It would take another five to 15 years for the Department of Homeland Security to become cohesive, he said, noting in passing the “dreadful, shameful meltdown” in Louisiana and Mississippi after hurricane Katrina.

One of the biggest future concerns, he said, is the ability of terrorist groups to use nuclear, chemical or biological weapons. “If you can make beer, you can make mustard gas,” he said.

“It’s astonishing to me we haven’t been attacked again,” he said. “We will see attacks in the future.”

At the same time, he said, efforts to protect Americans must not diminish their freedoms.

“Don’t damage the thing we hold most dear: the Bill of Rights,” he said. “There are 290 million of us. However, nobody’s in charge. And we like it that way.”


TOPICS: News/Current Events; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: afghanistan; gwot; iraq; mccaffrey; oef; oif; praise; troops
The military option and our troops are a crucial part of the War on Terror, to deny terrorists sancturies and so we can fight them outside of our own country, instead of in it.
1 posted on 09/25/2005 6:21:18 PM PDT by FairOpinion
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | View Replies]

To: FairOpinion
The military option and our troops are a crucial part of the War on Terror, to deny terrorists sancturies and so we can fight them outside of our own country, instead of in it.

Exactly right - Being proactive and taking the fight to our enemies must be part of any intellectually honest policy in continuing to effectively fight the GWOT -

2 posted on 09/25/2005 6:31:55 PM PDT by SevenMinusOne
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: DevSix
Not only was our intelligence wrong on Iraq, but so was the rest of the world. That said, we blooded the nose of the big bully on the block, and gained a degree of respect where it was needed. Now in phase two we are sucking the terrorists into a meat grinder where they are losing their trained cadre.
3 posted on 09/25/2005 8:25:13 PM PDT by GarySpFc (Sneakypete, De Oppresso Liber)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 2 | View Replies]

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson