Posted on 04/16/2004 5:07:20 AM PDT by dennisw
AN EMAIL FROM THE FRONT:
Here's an email from a soldier I first corresponded with when he was a cadet at West Point. He's legit - and his email is worth printing in full, I think. I'm not endorsing everything he says, but it's worth hearing what a very bright and committed young soldier is going through right now:
Troop strength - I think we have consistently underestimated the number of troops it would take to pacify Iraq. Gen Shinseki's original estimates were much closer to the mark. The fact that the 1st Armored Division (my unit) has now been extended for at least 4 months shows there aren't enough troops - in order to deal with a fairly minor uprising we had to break the one-year-boots-on-ground pledge. If we had had a strategic reserve, this would not be necessary. However, the dirty secret is that there aren't any more troops to be had - at least not the active-duty armor/infantry brigades and divisions requried to fight a tough enemy. Furthermore, the frenetic destruction that occured after the fall of Baghdad set us way back in terms of reconstruction - more troops could have limited if not prevented the extensive looting.Good and bad. But it's only one year.
Sadir et al. - Although his uprising is seen as a ominious sign for the coalition, it does have an upside. His poorly trained and poorly equiped rag-bad militia is being chewed up by our army. His defeat and eventual marginalization will serve the coalition well. After one year of occupation, I think many Iraqis have come to see the army as rather toothless - we get blown up by roadside bombs or mortars and yet we continue to rebuild schools, enforce the laws, train police etc. Now because of Fallujah and what has been going on in Baghdad, our potency and resolve are on full display. My task force alone has killed many insurgents in the last two weeks - something that was not happening before. By confronting us in a conventional way, Sadir et al. are playing to our military strengths - and it isn't going well for them.
Long term prospects - I have to admit that after one year here I am largely pessimistic. Iraqi society is sick in many ways. Sometimes it's hard to tell if Saddam was the problem or the symptom. I just don't know how a society so divided along ethnic and tribal lines, with no democratic or liberal traditions and almost zero respect for the rule of law can build any kind of society accept and autocratic one. I'm not ashamed that the US came here with good intentions and noble sentiments about the universality of our values - democracy, liberty, the rule of law etc., but I think all our efforts might be eventually futile. In essence, we have given the Iraqis an enormous gift, but they don't seem to be seizing the opportunity. You can lead a horse to water, but you can't make him drink...
The Army - Most soldiers in my unit were pretty demoralized by the extension. We were promised a one year tour and now that promise has been broken. Retention will certainly suffer. However, we are facing a difficult time in Iraq and our continued presence is necessary. What I would like to hear and I think most soldiers feel the same way - is for someone high up to say "Look, we didn't plan for this. Things have gotten screwed up and we need your continued sacrifice. This is why it is so important you stay." Instead we have gotten vague comments about "managing the troop redeployment" - as if it were some little snafu or inconvenience. The truth is, our division is now getting ready for another bloody and hellishly hot summer that none of us expected to ever go through again.
P.S. your answer still avoids the basis of my original comments that the neocons are revolutionary ideologues and central planners who reject reality and that there is nothing conservative about them.
--- Richard Perle, Defense Policy Board . . . from a 2002 interview with PBS
This dope actually believed that the U.S. could win a war in Iraq simply by using a small group of special forces to support a military force comprised almost entirely of Iraqis.
No surprise here, though. This is the jackass who suggested in a television interview in 1998 that the U.S. could accomplish the same thing with no ground troops at all.
Richard Perle, Defense Policy Board . . . from his 2000 testimony before Congress.
And world power!
That some great power from outside the region must dominate those countries
Yep
and if that is the case then it should be us that does it. It's an imperialistic position
Better our "imperialism" than that of Russia or China.
but not indefinable form a hardcore world view standpoint
You can be called softcore where the world's bounty, everything tra la la, falls into your lap because you are an American. That you can have a nice comfy American lifestyle without America exerting itself in this world. Without gambles such as Iraq.
however it does put the lie to all the reasons for the war told to the American public.
P.S. your answer still avoids the basis of my original comments that the neocons are revolutionary ideologues and central planners who reject reality and that there is nothing conservative about them.
You are tossing around catch phrases that don't apply. Neos are not central planners but it sure sounds nice to accuse them of it. Perhaps they are central planners compared to libertarians
Point #1: Ill served by advisors. Correct in part. Rummy would not accept the abundant professional advice offered regarding the number of troops necessary to occupy and pacify Iraq. I suspect that he knew that IF he accepted an enlarged US Army with an extended multi-division expeditionary commitment in Iraq that any chance of "transformation" would disappear into the Pentagon miasma. He was right about this, but wrong to let his desire for transformation to govern his Iraq plan. If we fail in Iraq, the only transformation will be Kerry or, more likely Hillary gutting our armed forces. In short, Rummy won his bureaucratic battle but did not interpret the battlezone information correctly. How much responsibility Bush bears for this is uncertain-but it could be a lot. By allowing the advice of Wilsonians like Powell to play a role, Bush may have allowed Rummy to believe there really was a chance of a "free Iraq" coming into existence which could help us out and repress the bad guys side-by-side with us, eventually replacing us in this role. If we fail, this fantsay will be what does us in.
Point #2: Will cost him the election. Bush needs victory in Iraq to be reelected. There is no question about this. He does not need all matters settled, just like Lincoln did not need Lee's surrender to win in 1864-but until Sherman burned Atlanta, Lincoln was seen as likely to lose. Bush needs a similar, bold, simple-to-understand step that tells the booboisie that victory is in hand. Without it, he is going home in January. He does have six months to pull it off, and while his listening to bad advice about postwar Iraq and his neo-Wilsonian tendencies are both reasons to be concerned, he's not finished yet.
If he nukes Najaf, I'm fairly sure he'll be upwards of 400 electoral votes come November. If he's negotiating with camel-humping barbarians while we lose 60 guys a week come November, anybody-even John 'effin Kerry-can and will beat him easily.
Your credibility diminishes substantially the moment you insert the term "lefty" into one of your posts to me. I'll stack my conservative credentials up against just about anyone else on this site . . . the fact that I've opposed this war from the start ought to be a very telling sign to anyone who knows me.
< If the Bush administration had publicly stated what you just posted here, it would have obtained neither public support nor (almost by definition) Congressional approval for the war.
Absolutely correct, and that's precisely why they chose to emphasize both the WMD and the humanitarian "lraqi liberation" angles. But just because the admin didn't publicly state our true intentions in the region doesn't make those intentions invalid. It's in our national defense interest (to put it mildly) to keep a sharp eye on terrorist enablers in the region and to make sure the oil keeps flowing our way no matter what kind of world crisis we face. Those reasons are good enough for me, and the fact that the admin chose not to use them in its pro-war argument in no way affects my view that our engagement over there is justified.
Now, how we're engaged over there is another matter entirely, and I'm not a fan (to say the least) of our insistence on "winning the hearts and minds of the Iraqi people" - a nauseatingly overused phrase if there ever was one - at the expense of the lives of our brave fighting men. Way too much PC bullsh/t from my point of view, and a strategy that's bound to fail to boot -- liberated peoples invariably end up despising their liberators (see France), and these particular people wouldn't understand the concept (let alone successfully run) a democratic republic if you shoved it down their throats for decades.
I am truly amazed at how many conservatives have completely bought into the "weapons of mass destruction" nonsense
Although, as I mentioned above, there were more important reasons for taking the war to Iraq than finding Saddam's WMD stockpiles, the fact of the matter remains that he did have them prior to '98. ....so it was far from unreasonable to assume that they were still in his possession. Do you think it's reasonable to assume that a power-mad dictator like Saddam would intentionally destroy his most potent and feared weapons and then not show proof of their destruction (as was demanded by resolution 1441)? I don't. The only reason he'd destroy them would be to save his sorry ass, and the only way his sorry ass would've been saved is if he showed proof of their destruction. But he didn't, which leads me to believe that he didn't destroy them.
So where are they then, you ask? Well, he probably whisked them to either his Ba'athist buddies in Syria or to Libya ......or perhaps to one of the nations on Saddam's payroll that benefitted from the UN's "oil for food" program. Wherever they are, Saddam probably throught that he'd survive this conflict just like he's survived all the others, and that he'd be getting his goodies back in due time.
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.