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You Call This A War?
dansargis.org ^ | June 28, 2006 | Dan Sargis

Posted on 06/28/2006 6:09:35 PM PDT by Dr.Syn

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To: singfreedom
My only fear regarding the "alternative tactics" types is that their concerns, over tactics or "Rules of Engagement", will be interpreted as opposition to this WOT

How can you say that when the article obviously urges a more severe WOT butt kicking for America's enemies...including the liberals. The author is much to the right of GW...at least all of his articles are.

41 posted on 06/28/2006 7:17:19 PM PDT by Dr.Syn
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To: gotribe

Good description. I penned a blog entry back when we first started going into Afghanistan and said that the only way to defeat Islamic radicals is to make their suffering so terrible that they will pray in the name of Jesus for deliverance. Their defeat lies in destroying their faith, because that's what sustains them.

With Germany, we had to destroy their assumption of being a race of supermen. With Japan, we had to make the Emperor look impotent, which is why the A-bomb was effective. With Islamic facists, the job is to make it appear that they have been abandoned by Allah.

We might be trying to achieve this objective by secularizing them, providing infrastructure, security, and consumerism. This approach will take decades whereas a concerted pattern of strategic bombing will take the wind out of their sails much more quickly.


42 posted on 06/28/2006 7:21:19 PM PDT by gregwest
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To: Frumious Bandersnatch
That is a very true statement and something many of us either don't know or are inclined to forget. Having been old enough to remember some of the media coverage post-WWII, I can tell you, from some quarters, there was very negative reporting concerning Germany's democratic potential. Unfortunately, much of it did come from the same sources we are hearing from today.

When these "sources" were proved to be wrong, it's a damn shame they didn't just fade away! That would have killed several birds with one stone.
43 posted on 06/28/2006 7:29:59 PM PDT by singfreedom ("Victory at all costs,.......for without victory there is no survival."--Churchill--that's "Winston")
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To: Dr.Syn
In the first hour of the first day of the Battle of the Somme in WW1 over 50,000 men fell. Chew on that.
44 posted on 06/28/2006 7:30:17 PM PDT by Phlap (REDNECK@LIBARTS.EDU)
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To: enotheisen

And the choir said: AMEN!! Thank you for your service.


45 posted on 06/28/2006 7:34:01 PM PDT by singfreedom ("Victory at all costs,.......for without victory there is no survival."--Churchill--that's "Winston")
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To: Dr.Syn
No, no, no, sorry, if I gave that impression. My concern is that ANYONE who questions the tactics of this war will be considered AGAINST the war by the anti-war media pollsters and left wing nut-jobs--in spite of the fact that these folks are questioning only TACTICS and NOT the actual war itself. I also am afraid those in Washington will misinterpret these statements. (I hope that clarified my statement.)
46 posted on 06/28/2006 7:48:56 PM PDT by singfreedom ("Victory at all costs,.......for without victory there is no survival."--Churchill--that's "Winston")
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To: Clemenza
I stopped reading right there

Sometimes the truth hurts. I don't agree with his parallels between nam and iraq, however his point about nam is well taken.

47 posted on 06/28/2006 8:10:35 PM PDT by paul51 (11 September 2001 - Never forget)
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To: Clemenza

Yup.


48 posted on 06/28/2006 8:25:23 PM PDT by rlmorel (John Murtha: Out of touch, Out of His Mind. Lets make him Out of Congress! DIANA IREY FOR CONGRESS!)
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To: Darkwolf377

I always stop reading when people resort to using movies as analogies. Once in a while is okay. Liberals do it all the time, as if they can't find appropriate analogies in real life.


49 posted on 06/28/2006 8:28:44 PM PDT by rlmorel (John Murtha: Out of touch, Out of His Mind. Lets make him Out of Congress! DIANA IREY FOR CONGRESS!)
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To: LdSentinal
How many aides does he need?

You're joking, right?

50 posted on 06/28/2006 8:38:20 PM PDT by pcottraux (It's pronounced "P. Coe-troe.")
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To: rlmorel

Yeah, liberals DO quote movies all the time. That's because liberalism, like movies, doesn't exist in the realms of reality: it's more of a hyperdimensional theoretical dreamland, where everybody loves everyone else, and no one wants to hurt anyone (except the big bad conservatives), and we can all be charitable brethren if we just try. It really can be easily traced to Marxist roots.


51 posted on 06/28/2006 8:40:46 PM PDT by pcottraux (It's pronounced "P. Coe-troe.")
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To: Gordongekko909
What we're fighting now is NOT the Iraqi army. Command and control works differently for Al Quaeda

Exactly. This is a complicated war without set piece battles. The fool who wrote this article reminds me of the countless mouth-breathers that keep blurting out, "Let's frickin' nuke the whole place!"

Idiots.

52 posted on 06/28/2006 8:41:16 PM PDT by GOP_Party_Animal
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To: GOP_Party_Animal; Gordongekko909

Yeah, since most of the insurgency are actually foreign militants from Iran, and since they themselves have been bombing and slaughtering innocent Iraqis, I doubt they'd care if we leveled some cities. Unless they were in them, of course.


53 posted on 06/28/2006 8:45:22 PM PDT by pcottraux (It's pronounced "P. Coe-troe.")
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To: pcottraux; GOP_Party_Animal
Exacly. Shock and awe on the freaks we're fighting now would work something like this:

Phase 1: Comms located and shut down.

Phase 2: Assets frozen.

Phase 3: We send them a message saying "omg u haev been haXXor'd lol"

Phase 4: AQ shifts to different channels.

Phase 5: We send them another message, on the new channels, saying "waht prat of haXXor'd do u not udnrasentd roflmfaobbq!!!!111!!111"

54 posted on 06/28/2006 8:52:20 PM PDT by Gordongekko909 (I know. Let's cut his WHOLE BODY off.)
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To: rlmorel

Yep, I'm the same way. It tends to make me doubt they're an expert in anything other than where the TV Guide is.


55 posted on 06/28/2006 8:58:06 PM PDT by Darkwolf377
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To: Dr.Syn

ping


56 posted on 06/29/2006 12:14:39 AM PDT by SR 50 (Larry)
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To: miliantnutcase

I attended the "Vietnam and the Iraq War" presentation given at the University of Chicago Law School by Professor Geoffrey Stone 20 January 2005. As a veteran of the Vietnam War from August of 1969 to January of 1971, serving as an infantry squad leader in a mechanized infantry company, and with another unit as a tank commander on an M48A3 tank; I was keenly interested in the form that the lecture might take. After a cursory reading of Professor Stone's curriculum vitae, I suspected that Professor Stone's take on the South East Asian conflict might indicate a general disapproval of the United States war effort. My suspicions were proven correct. The lecture was an attempt to paint the American war effort in Vietnam as misguided at best and an imperialistic effort to establish SE Asian capitalistic hegemony at worst. The antiwar left was portrayed as being noble and idealistic rather than populated by a hard core that actively hoped and worked for a US defeat, the US government as destructive of basic civil liberties in its attempt to monitor their activities, and the North Vietnamese and Vietcong as nationalists who wished to preserve their unique culture against an imperialistic onslaught. He described the South Vietnamese government in terms that were heedless of the South Vietnamese government’s struggle to survive a relentlessly ruthless Communist assault while he stated the South Vietnamese government was engaged in an unwarranted assault on human rights. He neglected to mention ANY of the numerous genocidal atrocities of the Vietcong (VC) and North Vietnamese Army (NVA). He described the Tet Offensive as a surprise for the United States in which 1100 American soldiers died and 2300 ARVN soldiers, and not much more about it.

I challenged Professor Stone on the following. The reason that the United States opposed nationwide elections that were to be held in accordance with the 1954 Geneva accords was due to the murder and intimidation campaigns carried out by Ho Chi Minh. This fact is in Professor R. J. Runnel's book Death by Government, in which he cites a low estimate of 15,000 and a high figure of 500,000 people in the “murder by quota” campaign directed by the North Vietnamese Communist Party Politburo that would have made the election a corrupt mockery. This campaign stipulated that 5% of the people living in each village and hamlet had to be liquidated, preferably those identified as members of the "ruling class." All told says Runnel, between 1953 and 1956 it is likely that the Communists killed 195,000 to 865,000 North Vietnamese. These were non combatant men, women, and children, and hardly represent evidence of the moral high ground claimed by many in the antiwar movement. In 1956, high Communist official Nguyen Manh Tuong admitted that "while destroying the landowning class, we condemned numberless old people and children to a horrible death." The same genocidal pattern became the Communists’ standard operating procedure in the South too. This was unequivocally demonstrated by the Hue Massacre, which the press did a great deal to downplay in its reporting of the Tet Offensive of 1968.

I pointed out that the National Liberation Front was the creation of the North Vietnamese Third Party Congress of September 1960, completely directed from North Vietnam. I pointed out that the Tet Offensive of 1968 was a disastrous military defeat for the North Vietnamese and that the VC were almost wiped out by the fighting, and that it took the NVA until 1971 to reestablish a presence using North Vietnamese troops as local guerrillas. I pointed out how the North Vietnam military senior commanders repeatedly said that they counted on the U.S. antiwar movement to give them the confidence to persevere in the face of their staggering battlefield personnel losses and defeats. I pointed out the antiwar movement prevented the feckless President Lyndon Johnson from granting General Westmoreland's request to enter Laos and cut the Ho Chi Minh Trail or end his policies of publicly announced gradualist escalation. The North Vietnamese knew cutting this trail would severely damage their ability to prosecute the war. Since the North Vietnamese could continue to use the Ho Chi Minh Trail lifeline, the war was needlessly prolonged for the U.S. and contributed significantly to the collapse of South Vietnam. The casualties sustained by the NVA and VC were horrendous, (1.5 million dead) and accorded well with Gen. Ngyuen Giap’s publicly professed disdain for the lives of individuals sacrificed for the greater cause of Communist victory. They were as thoroughly beaten as a military force can be given the absence of an invasion and occupation of their nation. The Soviets and Chinese recognized this, and they put pressure on their North Vietnamese allies to accept this reality and settle up at the Paris peace talks. Hanoi's party newspaper Nhan Dan angrily denounced the Chinese and Soviets for "throwing a life bouy to a drowning pirate" and for being "mired on the dark and muddy road of unprincipled compromise."

To this day the anti-war movement as a whole refuses to acknowledge its part in the deaths of millions in Laos and Cambodia and in the subsequent exodus from South East Asia as people fled Communism, nor the imprisonment of thousands in Communist re-education camps and gulags.

When he tried to say that United States should have known it could not put down a local popular insurgency, I pointed out that the final victorious North Vietnamese offensive was a multidivisional, combined arms effort lavishly equipped with Soviet and Chinese supplied tanks, self-propelled artillery, and aircraft. I pointed out to him that it was the type of blitzkrieg that Panzer General Heinz Guederian would have easily recognized. I said how I didn't recall seeing any barefoot, pajama-clad guerrillas jumping out of those tanks in the newsreel footage that showed them crashing through the gates of the presidential palace in Saigon. This spectacle was prompted by the pusillanimous withdrawal of Congressional support for the South Vietnamese government in the wake of the Watergate scandal, which particularly undermined this aspect of President Nixon’s foreign policy. It should be noted that a similar Communist offensive in the spring of 1972 was smashed, largely by US air power; with relatively few US ground troops in place. At the Paris Accords in 1973, the Soviet Union had agreed to reduce aid in offensive arms to North Vietnam in exchange for trade concessions from the US, effectively ending North Vietnams hopes for a military victory in the south. With the return of cold war hostilities in the wake of the Yom Kippur war after Congress revoked the Soviet's MFN trading status, the Reds poured money and offensive military equipment into North Vietnam. South Vietnam would still be a viable nation today were it not for this nation's refusal to live up to it's treaty obligations to the South Vietnamese.

There were legions of half-truths and omissions that this professor spoke to in his extremely biased lecture. When I asked him why he left out so much that was favorable to the American effort in Vietnam, he airily dismissed my argument as being just another perspective, but tellingly he did not disagree with the essential truth of what I said.

Professor Stone struck me as just another liberal masquerading as an enlightened academic.

He was totally unable to relate how the situation in Iraq is comparable to the situation in Vietnam, so I volunteered a comparison for him. A seditious near traitorous core of anti-war protesters is trying to undermine U.S. efforts there with half-truths, lies, and distortions. I said that in that respect, the war in Iraq and the war in Vietnam are very similar. A significant difference is that thus far the current anti-war movement has not succeeded in manifesting contempt for the American military on the part of the general U.S. public as it did in the Vietnam era.

When I was in Vietnam, I recall many discussions with my fellow soldiers about the course of the war in Vietnam and their feelings about it. Many, if not most felt that "We Gotta Get Outta this Place," to cite a popular song of the time by Eric Burden and the Animals, but for the most part they felt we should do it by fighting the war in a manner calculated to win it. I do not recall anyone ever saying that they felt the North Vietnamese could possibly defeat us on the battlefield, but to a man they were mystified by the U.S. Government’s refusal to fight in a manner that would assure military victory. Even though there was much resentment for the antiwar movement, and some (resentment) toward career professional soldiers, I never saw anyone who did not do his basic duty and many did FAR MORE THAN THAT as a soldier. Nineteen of my friends have their names on the Vietnam War Memorial Wall in Washington DC. They deserve to have the full truth told about the effort for which they gave their young lives. The U.S. public is not well served by half-truths and lies by omission about such a significant period in our history, particularly with their relevance toward our present fight in Iraq and Afghanistan.


57 posted on 06/29/2006 8:44:24 PM PDT by DMZFrank
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To: DMZFrank

Great post. Thanks for the wealth of info. I'll have to print this out.


58 posted on 06/29/2006 10:30:12 PM PDT by miliantnutcase
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