Posted on 11/19/2006 12:16:09 AM PST by MinorityRepublican
One welcome dividend of Donald Rumsfelds departure from the Pentagon is that the United States will now have a chance to rebuild the Army he spent most of his tenure running down.
Mr. Rumsfeld didnt like lessons the Army drew from Vietnam that politicians should not send American troops to fight a war of choice unless they went in with overwhelming force, a clearly defined purpose and strong domestic backing. He didnt like the Clintonian notion of using the United States military to secure and rebuild broken states.
And when circumstances in Afghanistan and Iraq called for just the things Mr. Rumsfeld didnt like, he refused to adapt, letting the Army, and American interests, pay the price for his arrogance.
So one of the first challenges for the next defense secretary and the next Congress is to repair, rebuild and reshape the nations ground forces. They need to renew the morale and confidence of Americas serving men and women and restore the appeal of career military service for the brightest young officers.
That will require building a force large enough to end more than three years of unsustainably rapid rotations of units back into battle, misuse of the National Guard, overuse of the Reserves and conscription of veterans back into active service.
Congress also needs to work harder at rebuilding the links between the battlefront and the home front that a healthy democracy needs. That does not require reinstating the draft a bad idea for military as well as political reasons. It requires a Congress willing to resume its proper constitutional role in debating and deciding essential questions of war and peace. If Congress continues to shirk that role, expanding the ground forces would invite some future administration to commit American forces recklessly to dubious wars of choice.
(Excerpt) Read more at nytimes.com ...
So I thank you for your service. I too served in this man's army. Went to Gern]many, sat on a tank and drank ber and chased frauliens--gov't tax dollars at work. No one shot at me so I left after four.
40 years--now thats a stint!
Yes, but the Democrats see that 4+% as billions of dollars with which they can buy VOTES....
I don't think they (Rangel included) ever intended for a draft to be implemented. It was a scare tactic designed to instil in the American public that things were so bad in Iraq that a volunteer force couldn't handle it and that a general population draft would be necessary. Nothing makes a liberal crap his pants more than the thought of forced military service.
The VA sent me a letter, but all it said was that a computer with my personal information on it had been stolen.
I don't believe in the 'repeating history' thing. History never repeats itself. It might run in a fashion that is similar to something in the past but there will always be new factors involved that make each situation totally unique. This situation is no different. You can point back at Vietnam and see similarities but it is folly to assume the same solutions to Vietnam would apply in this situation.
We can use history as a rough guideline but only if we keep in mind that our own situation is new and unique and might require a different solution than any history has to offer us.
That the media are reporting in a negative manner is totally mundane and predictable. Nothing new or amazing there. The Pentagon used this to their advantage in the build up to and during the initial invasion in 2003. That things wouldn't go according to plan was also an elementary assumption (things never go according to plan).
If President Bush had hoped to have Iraq and Afghanistan all 'tidied up' by the elections, this was a faulty assumption. I have yet to understand why he sacked Rumsfeld in the manner he did. You don't stand by a guy 100% and then turn around and fire him. If he really believed in Rumsfeld he should have stuck with him- come what may.
What the administration needs to focus on now is committing us to a policy in the Middle East that will be impossible for any subsequent president or congress to withdraw from. Personally, I think that was already accomplished when we invaded Iraq. To withdraw now would be the ultimate humiliation for America and I don't even think the democrats are that stupid (although I know some Freepers will comment on that one).
If we withdraw, we'll be right back over there again in no time at all. This is obvious. Must be obvious to even the most embittered liberal.
I disagree. The Kerry plank included compulsory national service.
Nothing makes Elitists more happy than compulsory service.
I don't remember it that way back when I was in the military in 68, particularly those who are not the Democratic Elite. But, it could be different now.
It's possible that Rumsfeld simply attempted to resign yet again, and this time could not be convinced to stick around.
Why would he resign if he's doing a great job?
At the end of the day, it doesn't matter anymore. He's out.
What matters is coming up with a solution on the ground in Iraq. I don't care who has the solution I just want one that works. If Kofi effing Anan has a solution I would be interested to hear it. If Hillary has a solution that would work I don't mind listening to that either. If the French have a workable solution, I am all ears (assume 5 million 'F--k the French' and 'they will surrender' posts). But honestly, I don't care where the solution comes from, I just want one that works.
Personally,Ithink the Army needs ,oh 3 or four more Airborne units,but that's just me.
Ranger, SF, Special Ops, and maybe Air Assault, but Airborne? There was a jump into Kandahar early on, Panama, Granada and one in Vietnam. What's the demand for straight airborne troops right now? Appears to me the 101st and the 82nd are being used as regular grunts right now?
Don't get me wrong, Airborne qualification should continue to be part of the Army Infantry and as needed in the other services.
My biggest objection to the way the war in Iraq is being run is that our military forces are being used as a reactive police force and not an active military force.
If you believe that, I've got a ski resort in Tikrit to sell you. Cheap.
This is a deeply politicized war, and the military commanders in Iraq understand that with greater clarity than you can imagine. It would be abject career suicide for them to ask for resources outside of the party line limits, even privately. The Pentagon doesn't want to hear it, and they don't want their officers to think it.
Just because they run a much tighter ship than the Republicans doesn't mean they all agree.
I doubt that the NYT is proposing we build the military back up to pre-Clinton levels, but you raise an excellent point. Presidents Clinton and Bush Sr cut the military far down from the 80s levels we enjoyed, but President Bush has yet to build them back. Blaming President Clinton for over-cutting the military was a very fair criticism in 2001. In 2005, not so much.
Unadulterated tripe.
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