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Victor Davis Hanson: Military Solutions? Myths About the US Military; what we need in Iraq ...
pajamasmedia.com ^ | January 3, 2007 | Victor Davis Hanson

Posted on 01/09/2007 11:01:24 AM PST by Tolik

Myths About the US Military

There is often voiced pessimism about our current military, to such a degree that it is termed broken or exhausted. But how true is that?

The traveler to Iraq is struck not by dearth, but opulence—everything imaginable from new SUVs to Eskimo Pies. Internet Service there was far faster than from my home in rural Fresno County.

So far recruitment levels are being met. No one in the military has warned that it is a bad idea to create more brigades of ground troops. Such a caveat about the current proposed expansion we would expect if we could not even meet our present manpower targets.

We have a tripartite military—air, sea, and ground. While the Marines and Army have rough going in Iraq, there have been very few Air Force and Navy material or human losses. Surely our air wings and ships are not “worn out” from patrolling in Iraq. There might be thousands of trashed humvees and worn out Bradleys, but not frigates, F-16s, or carriers. This is not 1943 when the US military was fighting in Sicily, as B-17s fell from the sky, as our merchant marine was under U-boat attack.

After Serbia, Kosovo, Bosnia, and Afghanistan, the mantra was that the Army and Marines were not getting their fair share of service in Rumsfeld’ revolution in military affairs that envisioned Special Forces on donkeys zeroing in GPS bombs from 20,000 feet onto clueless Taliban. But suddenly after a little more three years in Iraq, we are supposed to believe that a few thousand insurgents have “ruined” what until 2003 was an underused force? It would be interesting to trace the origins of this pessimism that now appears in the columns of op-ed pages: does it arise from tired and demoralized officers, or anti-war critics eager to see something again like the 1976 American military?

Does Experience Count for Anything?

But more importantly, few have asked more existential questions: are our ground forces better or worse prepared to fight jihadists than they were on September 11? At some point, the millions of hours of experience fighting Islamists from the Hindu Kush to Anbar Province must count for something. William Tecumseh Sherman’s frightening Army of the West that tramped through Washington DC in April 1865 made any Union force of 1861 seem pathetic by comparison—despite he tragic losses of thousands during the war.

Ruined and Then There Is Ruined!

In the past, there have been modern divisions of the American army that have been nearly ruined, but nothing of the sort has transpired in Iraq. Here one thinks of the 6th Marine Division that did the most gruesome fighting on Okinawa and suffered over 8,000 killed or wounded in less than 90 days—nearly half its original combat strength attrited in a single battle.

After 24 hours of fighting in the first day of the Bulge, the US 28th and 106th infantry divisions ceased to exist as effective combat units, with nearly half their soldiers killed, wounded, or captured. The 7th and 2nd infantry divisions that retreated from the Yalu River under attack by hundreds of thousands of Chinese communists were nearly decimated. To say that the American military is ruined after fighting in Iraq is preposterous by both present and past standards of combat losses.

So What’s Wrong?

What then is the problem since we are still fighting in both Afghanistan and Iraq after brilliant victories over the Taliban and Saddam Hussein?

Most obvious is the inability of our conventional forces to translate amazing tactical success in Afghanistan and Iraq into rapid strategic victory, a transition of establishing a stable postbellum government that requires everything from winning hearts and minds to inspired counter-insurgency. These questions about the transition from conventional to asymmetrical warfare always have nagged—why did the armies of Sherman and Grant who crushed nearly half-a-million Confederate soldiers in a little over a year from summer 1864 to spring 1865, not secure Reconstruction in 12 miserable years of failure, in the face of a few thousands Klansmen, and assorted night riders?

In the case of Iraq, when the easier conventional war ceased in victory after a few days, our generals (cf. Tommy Franks) simply retired. Political restrictions (pulling back from first Fallujah or allowing Moqtadar Sadr to be freed from his encirclement) hampered military options and projected a sense of perceived weakness. Too often retired generals simply blamed the present problem in establishing security on “too few troops”, as if Donald Rumsfeld alone had drawn up the plans of the invasion, or that an army that defeated Saddam Hussein in three weeks was inherently unable to squash an insurgency of far fewer combatants. And it is always easier to shoot a uniformed Republican Guard marksman than to pick out a terrorist from his ten brothers and sisters after his bomb attack on a US squad stringing telephone wire or painting schools.

It is now a cliché that there “is no military solution” in Iraq. But, in fact, the political solution—three successful elections and a constitutional government in place—has outpaced the military effort. What we need is a massive clamp-down on militias and terrorists to give the government confidence and public support, and that can’t be accomplished when we do not crush the terrorists, whether inside Iraq or flowing in from Syria and Iran.

The Same Old, Same Old.

Nothing that we see in Iraq is unique by any historical standards. Generals always rue that they have too few combat troops. Go back and read about Dwight D. Eisenhower’s complaints in late 1944, and the controversy over a “broad” and “narrow” front in approaching the Rhine. Patton raged about political constraints that stopped the 3rd Army from taking Prague, and the 1st from targeting Berlin. MacArthur was relieved over his inability to widen the war to target Chinese troop build-ups in Manchuria. Secretary of War Stanton interfered with Sherman’s administration of Savannah, despite the culmination of a brilliant March to the Sea. No need to mention Vietnam and the micromanaging of campaigns from the White House.

In short, the history of American ground operations is that troops are often sent into battle complaining of too few numbers, too many political constraints, and too vague objectives. We know all that is the unfortunate price to be paid in a democracy that reluctantly musters its forces, and has too many would-be military geniuses behind the lines that hamper smooth operations at the front. It has never been an American tradition to say, “There is the enemy, go do what you wish to win,” but rather “There is the enemy, these are the parameters under which you must operate to win.”

So what we do not need now is any more furor over the should’ve/could’ve/would’ve troop levels in 2003. Even when we talk of a “surge” the present disagreement is really over only about 30,000 additional troops in a coalition of nearly 180,000, that, along with Iraq Security Forces, reaches a total force of almost 500,000.

An Existential Question.

Thus the better question is why haven’t a half-million Iraqi and coalition troops been able to defeat at most 20,000-30,000 insurgents, especially when over 11 million Iraqis voted for their own democratic representatives? The answer is that the restrictive rules of engagement, the open borders to Iran and Syria, and the perception of American impotence have all combined to suggest to most Iraqis that the radical beheading/IEDing/kidnapping/assassinating minority within their midst will be running things in their neighborhood once the far larger, more static, far nicer, and far more restrained coalition troops dissolve or leave. People in advance always make the necessary adjustments to popular perceptions.


Avoir de l’audacité, toujours l’audacité, encore une fois l’audacité?

At some point it would be stunning for a US military official to step forward, and assure victory. No more acrimony over what should have, could have or might have been. No more retired generals talking to reporters at midnight “off the record”, or appearing as “unnamed senior military official” in the footnotes of the latest journalistic expose about Iraq. No more complaints about had Paul Bremmer not, had Donald Rumsfeld not, had Tommy Franks not, but rather something instead like: “Here is how we are going to defeat the jihadists”.

Most Americans do not want to hear any more suggestions from the Iraqi Study Group, anymore meae culpae from John Kerry or Hillary Clinton about how they were brainwashed by faulty intelligence, or any more assessments of the war from moralists and geniuses like Donald Trump and Bill Maher.

Instead, we need to hear from the very top echelon of the American military, that despite all the roadblocks put in their way, and the difficulty of the present task (it isn’t easy to secure a democracy in the heart of the ancient caliphate surrounded by Khomeinist Iran, Wahhabist Saudi Arabia, and Baathist Syria), that they will defeat these insurgents—and here’s how they plan to do it.

Somewhere in the US military right now is a Grant, Sherman, Patton, Ridgeway, or Abrams, who has been shouting and we haven’t been listening. Now is the time to let them come forward—as they have always arisen from obscurity in past American wars when their nation’s hour of need has come.


TOPICS: Editorial; Foreign Affairs; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: iraq; military; vdh; victordavishanson
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To: johnny7
“Bob, I want you to take Buna, or not come back alive ... And that goes for your chief of staff, too.”

They took Buna and a lot of soldiers didn't come back alive. My father joined the 32nd ID in Australia as a replacement in early '43 after the Buna campaign. After some R&R and further training they returned to New Guinea until Nov. '44, when they went and retook the Philippines for MacArthur. Everyone knows about the Bulge and the race to the Rhine, but not New Guinea, Leyte, and Luzon, which occurred in the same time frame. (/pet peeve)

21 posted on 01/09/2007 1:35:36 PM PST by Homer_J_Simpson
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To: billbears

Your history needs some updating. Try reading newer works on Grant's administration and you will find that the media did a fine job of spinning lies back then too. Read Scaturro's President Grant Reconsidered. Racism towards the Indian was not limited to Sherman either. But that aside, it does not change the nuts and bolts of VDH's assertion that it is not the numbers put in place to face a situation rather then the artificial handcuffs placed on the numbers that can doom the majority success over the minority. Further, in studying history, if you find it hard to relate the past to the present, and believe that a war in another country or time AND place, have nothing in common with the American Civil War, you ARE doomed to repeat the mistakes as well. Perhaps a 6th grade World History class could help you out here.


22 posted on 01/09/2007 1:41:00 PM PST by Embers143 (Governments are attracted to any science that justifies enlarging their powers.)
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To: Homer_J_Simpson

Ever read up on Herman Boettcher?


23 posted on 01/09/2007 1:43:54 PM PST by johnny7 ("We took a hell of a beating." -'Vinegar Joe' Stilwell)
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To: johnny7
Yes. Wasn't he a German immigrant who joined the army and received the Medal of Honor posthumously for his deeds during the Buna campaign? IIRC he got a battlefield commission. I read a 32nd Division profile that ran in Look magazine in late 1945. Or maybe it was the Post. Anyway, Boettcher was prominent in the story and his death was a great blow to the whole Division.

How do you know about him. That article was the only place I ever saw him mentioned.

24 posted on 01/09/2007 1:55:36 PM PST by Homer_J_Simpson
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To: Nancee
Well, how does it feel?

It feels wonderful, a high, I guess.

If I get fired it'll be a low!! LOL

25 posted on 01/09/2007 1:55:45 PM PST by melancholy
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To: Patrick1

I love this guy. I'd love to see him rip Chrissie a new one.


26 posted on 01/09/2007 2:00:33 PM PST by lawnguy (Give me some of your tots!!!)
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To: Patrick1

The principle of the problem is this - stop being nice. Start making the assault stick. How is it when Connan the Barbarian is queried with this question: How do you define victory? When the battlefield is heaped with dead, your enemies run before you, and you hear the lamentations of their women.

Stop being nice, we are not there to impress anyone, we are their to impose our idea of foreign policy. Al Qaeda and the Taliban HAVe to stop, and there is only one way to stop them. By killing them - to kill them is not being nice. Keep killing them, and keep kicking their butts until they come into alignment with U.S. foreign policy.

The same goes with liberals. When they indicate conservatives are not nice, or that conservative ARE hate filled. Ask them how they plan on fixing the issue.

If the U.N comes out in their discussion - point out to them we are still in Kosovo, and that solution with the U.N. at the helm was not served.

It is time for us, as conservative Americans to begin standing up before the treasonous liberal menace.

The question I have for the guy who wrote this article - Did you serve ANY military time? The response should be the same at any time. If you are NOT qualified, you should NOT comment.

SS


27 posted on 01/09/2007 2:02:17 PM PST by Sword_Svalbardt (Sword Svalbardt)
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To: Homer_J_Simpson
How do you know about him.

I've read quite a bit about the Pacific Theater in WWII. The Aussies really proved their mettle early-on in New Guinea... by stopping the Japs on the Kokoda Trail. What a miserable place.

28 posted on 01/09/2007 2:16:19 PM PST by johnny7 ("We took a hell of a beating." -'Vinegar Joe' Stilwell)
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To: 2oldfdrs
Tolik has perhaps the best ping list on FR.

I highly suggest you consider having him add you to it.

Cheers,

knewshound

http://www.knewshound.blogspot.com/
29 posted on 01/09/2007 2:52:56 PM PST by knews_hound (Sarcastically blogging since 2004.)
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To: Tolik

30 posted on 01/09/2007 3:27:35 PM PST by Gritty (There is no escape from the war Iran is waging against us, intensifying every passing hour-M Ledeen)
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To: KC_Conspirator
Precisely the point many are making now; if this is stressing our Army, what is going to happen when they see another Pusan or Bastonge.

On a related note, the VA is finding that the gals are not holding up well...but try to get those statistics. They're as tough to find out about as the current condition of Linda Bray.

31 posted on 01/09/2007 3:37:58 PM PST by MSF BU
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To: LS

#####these kinds of claims about the American military being "broken" pop up in EVERY SINGLE WAR we've had,#####

Does your book go all the way to Gulf War One? I remember reading for weeks before the "start", how Saddam had bunkers that were impregnable and intricate, and a 'supergun' that had a barrel larger than anyone had ever built before, and a Republican Guard that outmeasured our forces in every category, etc etc.

How did western reporters get so taken in by smoke and mirrors?


32 posted on 01/09/2007 3:59:26 PM PST by maica (America will be a hyperpower that's all hype and no power -- if we do not prevail in Iraq)
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To: Sword_Svalbardt
Ask them (liberals) how they plan on fixing the issue.

They do not have to fix any issue. They only promise to spend more money on what ever is causing bad "feelings."

Example of above situation: Most large cities in the US with dem administrations since the days of Johnson's War on Poverty have worse social problems now than they did in the 1960s. No problem! They "wanted" to fix the problems. They will always look for the ideal over the possible and call us mean-spirited for attempting to address problems by doing what is possible.

33 posted on 01/09/2007 4:07:07 PM PST by maica (America will be a hyperpower that's all hype and no power -- if we do not prevail in Iraq)
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To: maica

oh yeah, that "republican guard" was fierce!


34 posted on 01/09/2007 5:05:39 PM PST by Rakkasan1 ((Illegal immigrants are just undocumented friends you haven't met yet!))
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To: maica

Oh yes, the book has a lot of "predictions" from the Gulf War. It goes right up to Iraq, and the paperback ed., due out in May, is updated through 2006.


35 posted on 01/09/2007 5:14:59 PM PST by LS
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To: kinghorse

My sentiments exactly. Unfortunately, noone asks us.


36 posted on 01/09/2007 6:31:10 PM PST by DuncanWaring (The Lord uses the good ones; the bad ones use the Lord.)
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To: Tolik

Reasoned optimism. How refreshing!


37 posted on 01/09/2007 6:40:11 PM PST by dervish (Rachel weeps for her children, she refuses to be consoled. Shalit, Goldwasser, Regev)
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To: LS

Thanks, I will look for it.


38 posted on 01/09/2007 6:41:28 PM PST by maica (America will be a hyperpower that's all hype and no power -- if we do not prevail in Iraq)
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To: billbears
Great post, billbears. Grant and Sherman were not interested in equality or freeing slaves. They destroyed the South (and then the Native Americans) and placed puppet regimes in charge of Southern states. Corruption and greed were rampant. One of the biggest blights in American history; hardly "brilliant."

VDH is no WBTS historian. He's out of his league on this period (especially Reconstruction). I wish he would stick to ancient Greek history.

39 posted on 01/09/2007 9:19:05 PM PST by stainlessbanner
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To: stainlessbanner
Actually, VDH is right on with most of his Civil War history. It's my second area in grad school, and he does know what he's talking about. Sherman did not free a lot of slaves because he was marching "light," foraging for everything he got, and he saw numerous "contraband" as slowing him down. He also was something of a racist. But he fully understood the need for emancipation and absolutely knew he was doing the work of emancipation.

As for corruption, Reconstruction was no different than antebellum Alabama or Arkansas or Mississippi. The corruption there was epidemic, all by Democrats.

40 posted on 01/10/2007 5:58:09 AM PST by LS
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