Posted on 08/11/2003 10:29:47 AM PDT by CMClay
Bad Call on Iraq
By David H. Hackworth
A whole bunch of folks here in the USA and around this beat-up globe are all worked up over George W. Bushs 16 shifty words in his Let's Do Saddam State of the Union speech when they should be taking a harder look at the president's judgment on the most critical matter to a state: war.
After all, most Oval Office dwellers during my lifetime told their fair share of whoppers. Just to name a few of the super-doozies: Ike and the Gary Powers spy-plane fiasco; LBJ and the phony Tonkin Gulf incident; Nixon and Watergate; Clinton and I did not have sex with that woman.
Our covert war against Iraq began under Clinton and became increasingly more aggressive under Bush right up until he officially declared we were at war last March. For several years before the war became overt, a group of sergeants and junior officers kept reporting to me that they were eyeballing enough satellite imagery and radio-intercept documents to convince these good soldiers that Saddam had a well-stocked arsenal of weapons of mass destruction. No 16-word nuke weapons, mind you, but enough tons of biological and chemical weapons to cause serious pain.
Before sounding off, Id always ring former Marine and weapons inspector Scott Ritter and bounce the hot skinny off him. And this brave and so far most prescient analyst would always shoot it down: Hack, Saddam doesn't have WMD. Full stop.
But I figured my info was solid, particularly since it tracked with what the president and all his chicken hawks were putting out. Let's face it they had a $30-billion network sucking intelligence from worldwide sources.
I even went to Mike Wallace at 60 Minutes to voice my constituencys deep concern about how many of our heroes especially Reserve and National Guard units were inadequately prepared for the WMD threat.
And on the night of April 9, as our tanks were rolling into Baghdad and Saddams statue was getting the heave-ho, I railed on Larry King Live that too many of our troopers had dropped their guards and their gas masks and were treating the war like a day at the beach and that our commanders out there ought to jack up their troops regarding adequate WMD protection.
Still, throughout Bushs almost two-year rush to use the military solution against Iraq, I became increasingly convinced that the Butcher of Baghdad was not a threat to our national security and was far from the main event. No way in my military mind could I see how he represented anywhere near the clear and present danger of a dirty-bomb-armed al-Qaeda or a North Korea with nukes and a missile-delivery system probably capable of frying our West Coast at the push of a button.
So I was opposed to employing the military solution against Iraq because: Wed lose our focus on dealing with the main contenders; wed use too many military assets and too many tax dollars; and wed end up with an already overstretched military force stuck in the Iraqi sand for years.
So what if Saddam had bio/chem WMD? I thought at the time. So did at least a dozen other rogue countries. And how would he deliver them anyway? Pour them into a wheelbarrow, paddle a raft across the Atlantic, land on the East Coast and then double-time it to the White House and dump it on the peoples lawn?
Iraq would have been a snap to contain, and wed have used no more than 10 percent of the force were presently employing to seal every road and port and close down the oil biz. Without those bucks, the Tikriti tribe would already have sent Saddam to swim with the fishes, replaced him with this decades American-approved despot and made Texacos day as well as the tribe's own.
The moral of the story? Don't have heartburn over those 16 words. Have it instead over the folks whove gotten our nation in a megamess that might cost hundreds more casualties and around $100 billion by Christmas, a figure this regimes Liars Club is busy doing its best to hide.
Judgment is the essence of leadership. It seems sorely lacking when it comes to the presidents Iraqi solution.
Birds of a feather....
What they do in the bedroom should be kept private.
That says it all, in a nutshell.
Before sounding off, Id always ring former Marine and weapons inspector Scott Ritter and bounce the hot skinny off him.
Well, the Supreme Court says theres no law against it Hack, as long as Ritters willing.
Does he make you dress up in a Burger King uniform?
Feel free to read into that what you want.
Just because they were saying what we wanted to hear, doesn't necessarily mean they were on our side.
Male menopause
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