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Zinni's Plan
me

Posted on 05/09/2006 7:51:33 PM PDT by SCHROLL

just wondering if any one has a link to what his casualty projections were in his plan for Iraq. Any one know? Seems that it might be a way to challenge his version of things.


TOPICS: Miscellaneous
KEYWORDS: casualties; zinni
any help would be appreciated
1 posted on 05/09/2006 7:51:36 PM PDT by SCHROLL
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To: SCHROLL

I'd like a link to what I saw on tv a few yers ago of Arafat trapped like a rat in his Ramahdi compund crying like a bitch for general Zeeneee.

If anyone has it, please post a link.


2 posted on 05/09/2006 7:54:20 PM PDT by NeoCaveman (Free Brett Kavanaugh already!!!!)
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To: SCHROLL

Huh


3 posted on 05/09/2006 7:55:07 PM PDT by RushCrush (There is nothing more unattractive than a male Democrat.)
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To: RushCrush

well Zinni is going around saying how wrong Bush and Rummy are, so I'd like to see how he says doing things his way would have cost us casualtywise. Odds are most likely in Bush and Rummy's favor. I'd like to have Zinni's own words to throw in the face of his new found worshipers. Maybe if it's thrown into the public debate, people will see exactly what an a$$hat Zinni is.


4 posted on 05/09/2006 7:59:10 PM PDT by SCHROLL (Liberalism isn't a political philosophy - it's a mental illness)
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To: SCHROLL
Well, there's this. I'll see what else I can dig up.
5 posted on 05/09/2006 8:02:22 PM PDT by Gordongekko909 (I know. Let's cut his WHOLE BODY off.)
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To: SCHROLL
Zinni's "Plan" was to invade Iraq with a larger number of troops than we actually had available to invade Iraq with. As such, it was DOA. One might as well discuss Zinni's "Plan" to make a perpetual-motion machine.

Seems to me a wise man once said something about going to war with the army you have, not the army you wish you had....

6 posted on 05/09/2006 8:05:24 PM PDT by Dr. Frank fan
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To: SCHROLL

Wiki has this:

Opinions on 2003 invasion of Iraq
In the late 1990s, Zinni said that the U.S. risked entering a "Bay of Goats" if it relied on exiles such as the Iraqi National Congress to liberate Iraq, a reference to the failed Bay of Pigs invasion.

In May 2004, his memoir (Battle Ready), co-authored with noted military writer Tom Clancy, was published. It featured stinging criticism of the planning for the 2003 invasion of Iraq and, more specifically, the post-battle planning. In a widely reported speech at a dinner in May 2004, Zinni detailed 10 serious criticisms of the rationale and execution of the war, summarised below:

1) The war planners "misjudged the success of containment" - the existing policy of trade sanctions and maintaining troops in the area.
2) The "strategy was flawed" - the strategy being that invading, occupying, and setting up a new government in Iraq would help solve the broader conflicts in the Middle East. Zinni "couldn't believe what I was hearing about the benefits of this strategic move."
3) The Bush administration "had to create a false rationale for going in to get public support." Zinni said that "the books were cooked, in my mind. The intelligence (that supported the claims made to support the need for war) was not there."
4) The war planners failed "to internationalize the effort," by gaining the support of allies or unambiguously gaining UN endorsement of an invasion.
5) The "fifth mistake was that we underestimated the task." Zinni clarified this in his speech to mean the broader task of creating a free, democratic, and functional Iraq.
6) The sixth mistake was "propping up and trusting the exiles." The exiles Zinni refers to are groups like the Iraqi National Congress and its controversial leader Ahmed Chalabi.
7) Zinni criticised the "lack of planning" - not so much for the military confrontation, the planning of which he praised fulsomely, but for the post-war stablization and reconstruction of Iraq.
8) "The eighth problem was the insufficiency of military forces on the ground." Zinni, in his former position, had devised a battle plan for conquering and occupying Iraq in the 1990s, which featured far more troops, as did alternative plans presented to Donald Rumsfeld before the war. The extra troops were needed to "freeze the security situation because we knew the chaos that would result once we uprooted an authoritarian regime like Saddam's."
9) "The ninth problem has been the ad hoc organization we threw in there." Zinni criticises what he views as the lack of staff, skills, experience, and clear structure in the Coalition Provisional Authority.
10) According to Zinni, "that ad hoc organization has failed", "leading to the 10th mistake, and that's a series of bad decisions on the ground". These bad decisions include the excessive zeal in "de-Baathification," removing people only peripherally involved in the Baath Party who were Baathists purely to be permitted to conduct their profession or business, the decision to disband the Iraqi army.


7 posted on 05/09/2006 8:05:41 PM PDT by Mr. Jazzy (VPD of LCpl Smoothguy242, USMC, somewhere in Afghanistan's Kunar Province.)
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To: SCHROLL
Momento mi amiga....

I thought I would practice our new language...

Zinni et.al. are only objecting because they are being sponsored to do so. The main objection is the $billions
each year!

This is money not available to buy votes!

That is what this is about!

I agree we are spending far more than these worthless people deserve. We should stop all spending, let them kill one another and secure the military bases against the katuska's (RPGs).

If Human Rights Org wants in, let them go unattended. If the U.N. wants in, same thing. If ACLU or MSM wants in, same thing.

Do not allow them on the bases. Secure the bases and let the Iraqi kill one another. And if the wrong side starts to win, arm the other. Let it go on until all sides are minimized (few left alive) or finally are tired of the killing.

The Dems want a strategy....I just gave them one. What is their answer?
8 posted on 05/09/2006 8:07:24 PM PDT by Prost1 (Sandy Berger can steal, Clinton can cheat, but Bush can't listen!)
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To: SCHROLL
I've got a conspicuously unsourced reference to 10,000 to 20,000 casualties in the first 90 days.

The estimates of casualties for a war in Iraq under CENTCOM's (Gen Zinni's 1997) plan were 10,000 - 20,000 Americans killed in 90 days. That much I do know. So anyone who believes this is an incompetently run campaign doesn't know what the projections were and what the assumptions underlying them were (and I'm not privy to all those items either -- but I DO know the casualty figures were 10K-20K in 90 days. I had a friend who worked on the QDR and he definitively told me so. I was shocked [incensed is more like it] that we would plan for those kind of losses and refuse to tell the American people we were doing so. And that is what I remember about those two gentlemen. They are wrong and should be ashamed of themselves.)

I'm not sure how much I trust that. It's second- or third-hand hearsay.

9 posted on 05/09/2006 8:08:55 PM PDT by Gordongekko909 (I know. Let's cut his WHOLE BODY off.)
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To: Mr. Jazzy
removing people only peripherally involved in the Baath Party who were Baathists purely to be permitted to conduct their profession or business ...

Would Zinni have given a sweetheart deal to the Nazis too?

Oh, that's right. The fact that their COUNTRY was destroyed probably made it easier.

10 posted on 05/09/2006 8:11:30 PM PDT by VeniVidiVici (ICE, ICE Baby.)
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To: VeniVidiVici

Wise point.

Guarenteed to have been overlooked by the media.



You latin types are always on top of things.


11 posted on 05/09/2006 8:17:00 PM PDT by Mr. Jazzy (VPD of LCpl Smoothguy242, USMC, somewhere in Afghanistan's Kunar Province.)
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To: Mr. Jazzy
So Zinni doesn't think the invasion of Iraq will have any impact on the behaviors of other bad actors in the Middle East. I guess he hasn't seen this from the US Army Professional Writing Collection. While not the sole reason, it definitely played a part in Libya's change of attitude..

Rehabilitating a Rogue: Libya's WMD Reversal and Lessons for U.S. Policy
These two explanations, while plausible, have sidelined the role of deliberate, long-term US policies toward Libya that likely facilitated Qadhafi's WMD reversal. Three additional factors affected Libya's WMD reversal. First, in addition to the pressures exerted by the 2003 US invasion of Iraq, Qadhafi had reason to foresee greater security benefits to be gained by closer ties with the United States and the West. In particular, Libya's concern about al Qaeda influenced its desire to ally with the United States. Second, while seeking an end to the stifling US and UN sanctions for economic motives, Qadhafi also sought to end Libya's pariah status. Qadhafi's concern about his own reputation and Libya's international image and credibility motivated his decision. Third, the Pam Am 103 victims' families and their advocates on Capitol Hill wielded agenda-setting influence, strengthening the negotiating position of the United States vis-à-vis Libya. Each of these factors reflects one of three US foreign policy approaches applied toward Libya over the past 15 years. Each factor also yields implications for current and future US national security strategies, offering prescriptive lessons to policymakers confronting rogue regimes acquiring WMD programs.

Has he always been this shallow?

12 posted on 05/09/2006 8:31:32 PM PDT by gov_bean_ counter (Self appointed RNC Press Secretary for Smarmy Sound Bites.)
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To: Mr. Jazzy

May 2004? 20/20 hidnsight.

I'd be more impressed with his 1999 plans to prevent say, USS Cole bombing... or how he would have solved the riddle of Saddam's terrorist sponsorship, oil-for-food scam, or WMD pursuit some other way *before* it happened ...
There were *lots* of plans to say 'get Bin Laden' but they never happened.


13 posted on 05/09/2006 8:35:46 PM PDT by WOSG (Do your duty and support our Country and our Troops - VOTE!)
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To: Gordongekko909

that's more along the lines of what I'm looking for if I could find a link to the DOD version of it, that'd be great.


14 posted on 05/09/2006 8:43:39 PM PDT by SCHROLL (Liberalism isn't a political philosophy - it's a mental illness)
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To: Gordongekko909
This is SOME article! I read or skip read parts of it. If Zinni wrote this certainly there are more than four or five military phrases.

Over and over he used the same words and phrases. I still don't know what he was getting at except the Defense Department needed more money and that they were not ready. Yet he warned of Iran, Iraq and Sudan,

Also he made a great deal out of India and Pakistan and how volatile they were. Especially since they had just revealed they each had nuclear weapons. He seemed to warn that they may use these weapons against each other. That was 16 years ago, as yet they have not done so.

Mostly he continually, IMO, bragged how much they were doing to be ready for any conflict. Though I felt he didn't think we were quite ready.

I might be wrong. But that was the impression I got.

To me it was a lot of "babel".
15 posted on 05/09/2006 8:45:27 PM PDT by frannie (Be not afraid of tomorrow - God is already there!)
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To: SCHROLL
I only post this as a novelty. Reading through the Congressional Record ( search: Zinni AND Iraq ) brings forth all of these suspects. If you search the CR you will laugh at how Wesley Clark and this Zinni appear to be advancing hand-in-hand to their positions of power. I'll see if I can find anything about the casualties count.


Sidestepping Bosses, Four Star General Lobbied for Jetliner

(By John Donnelly)

The U.S. commander in the Middle East recently went over
the heads of his Pentagon bosses by persuading a key lawmaker
to buy the military a $63 million jetliner which the Pentagon
not only didn't request but explicitly opposed, Defense Week
has learned.
On several occasions over the last year, Marine Corps Gen.
Anthony Zinni told Rep. John Murtha (D-Pa.) how U.S. Central
Command needs a new, bigger aircraft to replace the aging EC-
135 that now ferries Zinni and his staff between their Tampa,
Fla., headquarters and places such as Saudi Arabia and
Pakistan, according to Murtha's spokesman and several
congressional aides.
As a result, Murtha--the top Democrat on the House
Appropriations Committee's defense panel and, like Zinni, a
Marine--made sure money for a new Boeing 737-300 ER was
inserted in the fiscal 2000 funding bill the House passed
last July, Murtha's spokesman, Brad Clemenson, confirmed.
A four-star's advocacy of his command's needs, and a
congressman's generosity, may not be scandalous. In fact,
Zinni will have retired before the new plane arrives; and the
aircraft arguably may be needed. But the incident illustrates
one way the Pentagon's budget bloats: a general personally
lobbying for money--in this case one of the biggest boosts to
this year's Air Force procurement request--to buy a jet his
employers had already said costs too much.
16 posted on 05/09/2006 9:01:08 PM PDT by Jim_Curtis
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To: Mr. Jazzy

Other than numbers 1,3, and 4. He's on the mark.


17 posted on 05/09/2006 9:18:03 PM PDT by Wolfhound777 (It's not our job to forgive them. Only God can do that. Our job is to arrange the meeting)
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To: Jim_Curtis
In addition, Saddam has been playing a shell-game with chemical and
biological weapons stockpiles. As General Zinni, commander-in-chief of
the US central command acknowledged in December, ``we do not have a
good sense of what he has and where he has it''; and we do not know the
location of mobile missile sites.

( posting this Zinni stuff for future reference )
18 posted on 05/09/2006 9:30:02 PM PDT by Jim_Curtis
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To: Mr. Jazzy
Interesting, thanks for finding...

1) The war planners "misjudged the success of containment" - the existing policy of trade sanctions and maintaining troops in the area.

Not even clear what this means, let alone how it has any bearing on the actual war plan.

2) The "strategy was flawed" - the strategy being that invading, occupying, and setting up a new government in Iraq would help solve the broader conflicts in the Middle East.

Whoa there! This isn't a criticism of the war plan, it's a criticism of the (supposed) "Neocon Grand Strategy". Zinni's entitled to his opinion about that of course but let's not mix apples & oranges and pretend that Zinni's policy disagreement equates to a criticism of the war plan.

3) The Bush administration "had to create a false rationale for going in to get public support."

So far, the closest thing we have to an actual criticism; one could legitimately claim that if the rationale was "false", that unduly risked undermining public support for the war when the truth came out. I don't happen to think the rationale was "false", but at least this is a substantive critique (not really a military one, but a political one).

4) The war planners failed "to internationalize the effort," by gaining the support of allies or unambiguously gaining UN endorsement of an invasion.

Argh! Another non-critique critique. I mean yes, it's true that we did not convince France, Germany etc. to help us to invade Iraq. But that's a lament about reality, not a "criticism of the execution of the war". We asked, and they didn't want to. That's reality. "We should have gotten them to fight with us" is not a critique, it's a lament. Yes 'twould've been nice, but they! didn't! want! to! "Get countries XYZ to fight with us" is NOT a 'war plan', it's a hope for a war plan. They might not want to! Argh.

5) The "fifth mistake was that we underestimated the task." Zinni clarified this in his speech to mean the broader task of creating a free, democratic, and functional Iraq.

Bleh. Could this be any more vague and sloppy? Is he just trying to stretch the list to 10 cuz that's a nice round number?

6) The sixth mistake was "propping up and trusting the exiles." The exiles Zinni refers to are groups like the Iraqi National Congress and its controversial leader Ahmed Chalabi.

Ok, another (the second) substantive critique, but it's a baldface assertion. How/why was it a "mistake"? In what sense did we "trust" them? To do what? With what bad results? It's also a critique that's primarily political rather than military in nature. Wasn't this guy a general? Is all this political/bureaucratic stuff the worst he can say about a war? If so, I'd have to say we must've done all right....

7) Zinni criticised the "lack of planning" - not so much for the military confrontation, the planning of which he praised fulsomely, but for the post-war stablization and reconstruction of Iraq.

It's pretty easy to criticize the "lack of planning". Would be much more interesting to state what a good "plan for the post-war stabilization and reconstruction of Iraq" might look like. I've always wondered what sort of magical "plan" people imagine could have been constructed which would have prevented all bad things from happening. For example, what sort of "plan" exactly would have prevented the dethroned, resentful Sunni minority from embracing insurgency?

8) "The eighth problem was the insufficiency of military forces on the ground."

Heh. I knew this was coming. We should have used more troops than we had available - got it.

9) "The ninth problem has been the ad hoc organization we threw in there."

You know, this really smells like a vaguely-melded rehash of many of the previous items. Didn't he already say "bad plan", "shouldn't have trusted Chalabi", "no plan"? Is he going to keep stretching out this list of "mistakes" by just repeating "bad plan" over and over again?

leading to the 10th mistake, and that's a series of bad decisions on the ground [de-Baathification]"

Oh-kay. The 1st - 9th mistakes were "bad plan", the 10th mistake is "bad decisions from bad plan". Et cetera, ad infinitum. Talk about substantive. I guess there's one substantive example (de-Baathification) to chew on.

But really, let me boil it all down to the core of the argument for y'all:

1. I don't like Neocons.

2. We should have invaded with more troops than we could spare.

19 posted on 05/09/2006 9:45:23 PM PDT by Dr. Frank fan
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To: Jim_Curtis
From 1999. Just found it interesting in regards to those who claim Iran is years away from nukes. We should ask Zinni what he thinks about that question today.

--

Second, Iran tested a medium range missile last July that is capable
of reaching Israel and U.S. forces throughout the Middle East. This
missile, the Shahab-3, may already be in production and Iran, with
Russian assistance, is developing a longer-range missile capable of
reaching Central Europe. Russian missile assistance to Iran has
continued despite intensive U.S. efforts to halt this deadly trade. As
CIA Director Tenet noted in testimony last month to the Armed Services
Committee, ``Especially during the last six months, expertise and
materiel from Russia has continued to assist the Iranian missile effort
in areas ranging from training, to testing, to components.'' General
Zinni, our CENTCOM commander has stated that Iran may have nuclear
weapons within five years. Iran has been typically bloody-minded in its
propaganda. During a military parade in Tehran last year, slogans were
written on sides of missiles that read ``Israel should be wiped off the
map'' and ``the USA can do nothing''.
20 posted on 05/09/2006 9:47:27 PM PDT by Jim_Curtis
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