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No Way to Win a War
GreatMindsThinkRight ^ | 5/30/07 | JB Williams

Posted on 05/30/2007 8:09:19 AM PDT by captjanaway

1 - There is only one reason to go to war - Whenever and wherever evil rises up to threaten peace and prosperity for decent people, good men must do something or evil will prevail.

#2 - There is only one time to go to war – Once convinced that evil can not be put down without going to war and before war comes to your own doorstep.

#3 – and there is only one way to go to war - United in the single purpose of winning that war, no matter the expense.

In the world-wide war against terrorism, Washington DC has failed in all three basic rules of war and continues to fail today.

(Excerpt) Read more at greatmindsthinkright.com ...


TOPICS: News/Current Events; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: iraq; military; terrorism; war
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To: onedoug

So, what do we do? It is frustrating that we are trying to be “civilized” while fighting barbarians. We have put so many restrictions on our soldiers it’s unreal.

I’m not a military expert, but we better start fighting this thing to win soon!


21 posted on 05/30/2007 9:19:50 AM PDT by captjanaway
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To: CharlesWayneCT; Paperdoll

Very well said!


22 posted on 05/30/2007 9:22:41 AM PDT by jazusamo (http://warchronicle.com/TheyAreNotKillers/DefendOurMarines.htm)
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To: onedoug
Unfortunately, George Bush will not fight this war to win it.

There is a lot of truth to that.

However, he did fight the war in Afghanistan to win, and win we did.

He did fight the war against Sadam's government in Iraq to win, and it was a stunning victory.

Where he faltered was on how to take the next step to stabilizing the region.

In my opinion he simply put too much faith in the Iraqi people, and did to little to seal Iraq's borders and prevent the flood of foreign terrorists.

However, his efforts still might have proved much more successful (and they have had considerable success) if it were not for the media and the far left's constant rooting for the enemy and encouraging them that the will of the American people could be broken with their help.

The war we are losing isn't the one of military engagements, it's the political war, and we are losing it mainly because the media and nearly half our own nation doesn't seem to want us to win.

The only solution to this that I can see is that Bush should have invaded Iran as well, and pummeled Syria as well. That would have resulted in a lot more loss of life, and would have made much of the world very, very nervous about our actions out of fear that we might really become a power-hungy, imperialistic country.

I don't know if it would have worked out better then, however it looks like we are still going to have to invade Iran and possibly Syria if we ever want success in the War on Terror. However it does appear that Bush doesn't have the stomach for it. It definitely doesn't help that the State department is stuffed full of liberals, communists, and peace at any cost nuts. But in the end Bush is the commander in chief, and his leadership has fallen short.

23 posted on 05/30/2007 9:55:09 AM PDT by untrained skeptic
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To: untrained skeptic
However, he did fight the war in Afghanistan to win, and win we did.

Jury's still out on that one. If we really wanted to decisively win the war in Afghanistan, we'd have bombed the smithereens out of Western Pakistan. That's where the Taliban and bin Laden are hanging out.

It's like that whole damn Parrot's Beak part of Cambodia that we wouldn't touch for so long. Nixon waited until public support for the war had evaporated before going in to Cambodia to cut off VC supply lines from the Ho Chi Minh trail. Prince Sihanouk of Cambodia was alternately playing China and the US like a violin, and only after he was deposed in a coup, did we do anything about that steaming pile of crap.

I guess Bush is waiting for muzzie terrorists to depose that blabbering idiot Musharraf before we finish the job.

24 posted on 05/30/2007 10:11:40 AM PDT by hunter112 (Change will happen when very good men are forced to do very bad things.)
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To: hunter112
Jury's still out on that one. If we really wanted to decisively win the war in Afghanistan, we'd have bombed the smithereens out of Western Pakistan. That's where the Taliban and bin Laden are hanging out.

We devastated the Taliban in Afghanistan and forced the remnants to flee into hiding elsewhere.

We won the war in Afghanistan to the same extent that we won the war in Iraq.

However, terrorists don't need vast armies. Strategically the war is won. The Taliban and Al Queda are beaten militarily. They can't defeat our forces, they cannot force their way back into power. If they did, we could crush them once again like we already have.

The only way for them to win now is for us to surrender to the relatively small groups of insurgents, most of whom are foreigners.

At the same time, the only way to have a reasonably stable victory is to cut off the funding for those insurgents and force the nations that are sponsoring these terrorists to stop.

We've gone from waging war to hunting terrorists. It's a matter of semantics as to if we have really won the wars in those two locations. The insurgents really only control territory if we allow them to do so while trying to get the new governments in those two nations to become more self sufficient. When we have given up on the domestic forces being able to handle it on their own, we have been able to quickly defeat the insurgent forces and uproot those we don't kill.

The problem is that we are never going to win the overall war on terror as long as we are unwilling to stomp out the major sponsors of it.

We are winning all the real battles. However, as long as we continue to tolerate the actions of Iran, Syria, and even Palestine, we will not have peace.

We could not win in Korea or Vietnam because our rules of engagement would not allow us to win. We were unwilling to go after those who were supporting and funding the fight against us.

Our enemies have learned how to defeat us, and it isn't on the battle field. All they have to do is make a quick victory impossible and prevent us from being willing to expand the conflict.

As soon as we invaded Iraq, liberals started predicting that Iraq would turn into a quagmire like Vietnam. However, they weren't simply predicting it, they were actively working to make it happen.

25 posted on 05/30/2007 10:41:04 AM PDT by untrained skeptic
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To: CharlesWayneCT
A hydra has many heads. All of them have to cut off to kill it. And diligence is
necessary to see that it doesn't grow more...regardless what "the world" thinks.
26 posted on 05/30/2007 10:48:36 AM PDT by onedoug
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To: griswold3

Bush made a number of mistakes.

Invading Afghanistan - good

Invading Iraq - good

Removing Saddam - good

Ignoring the Ayatollahs and Syrian Baathists - BAD

Wasting American military strength, time, lives and dollars in a social experiment - BAD

We should have cleaned out Saddam, cleaned out the Ayatollahs, cleaned out the Syrian Baathists, and PULLED OUT. Example made and taken note of by Islamic nuts. We could have then let the U.N. and the Euroweenies worry about picking up the pieces.

Alternatively, we could have set up an independent Kurdistan in the north which would have been more than capable of taking care of itself, turned over Sunni territory AND Sunni oil wells to Jordan and let the Jordans take care of their own (their “techniques” are very very effective - far more than ours and they would have been more than happy to have some oil), and turned over the Shiite areas to an Ayatollah purged Iran.

Bush was probably listening to the Brits who created this mess by “constructing” Iraq, as the “constructed” many of thier former colonies, or to his globalist idiot father, in trying to create a social democracy in a territory which never knew democracy in its entire history and is more of a geographic expression and collection of independent tribes than a nation state.

Unfortunately you have to work with the material you have, not the material you woul like to have and Americans, as you so lucidly point out, are not Romans - they haven’t the stomach for a long, drawn out bloodletting. Unlike Romans or Mongols or even Arabs, they don’t enjoy killing (most of them anyway - some of us are exceptions). Osama isn’t the brightest bulb in the chandelier but even HE figured that out.


27 posted on 05/30/2007 11:07:03 AM PDT by ZULU (Non nobis, non nobis Domine, sed nomini tuo da gloriam. God, guts and guns made America great.)
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To: CharlesWayneCT
But now the "war" we fight is to leave a stable, democratic, pro-american Iraq. If we pull out, it will collapse into a theocracy that hates us. If we kill too many people, we could end up with an autocratic dictatorship that hates us, or a democracy that hates us.

How did the Japanese feel about us after the war? I think we killed a few of their people, and somehow they don't hate us now.

28 posted on 05/30/2007 11:26:26 AM PDT by Defiant (A nation of frontiersmen needs a frontier, or it turns into.....Europe.)
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To: RightWhale

Those are the “well-trained well-motivated and dedicated military personnel we have” I referred to. Unfortunately they comprise a very small segment of the voting public.

If we were back in WW1 or WW2 days, the vast majority of Americans, civilian as well as military, was wupportive of the war effort. But back then we were in a conventional war.

Today we are fighting a “shadow” war PLUS a guerilla war in Iraq and Afghanistan and these require a very dedicated, well-informed and patriotic public to support.

The Administration itself and Congress are ambivalent about the entire thing and I don’t even think Bush and most Republicans or the Democrats really get it.

The enemy is Islam. Its an anti-western, anti-pluralistic, intolerant, primitive belief system. Not all Muslims fall into this category of course, but a significant number of them do - probably more than admit it - especially in America. Islam is out to dominate the world. It is doing this militarily in Asia and Africa and by using infiltrators in Europe and North America. BOTH sources of “infection” must be addressed.

We have to identify the enemy and not be ashamed or politically intimidated into NOT identifying it.


29 posted on 05/30/2007 11:26:50 AM PDT by ZULU (Non nobis, non nobis Domine, sed nomini tuo da gloriam. God, guts and guns made America great.)
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To: untrained skeptic
I'm in general agreement with you, but I feel that we should (if the opportunity has not totally passed us, militarily or politically) finish the job. The villages of Western Pakistan are no less dangerous to us than were the cities of Afghanistan. We need to bomb the bejeezus out of Iraqi towns that deploy IEDs against our troops.

Your comments about the ROE in Korea and Vietnam are just as applicable in the War on Terror.

30 posted on 05/30/2007 11:41:44 AM PDT by hunter112 (Change will happen when very good men are forced to do very bad things.)
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To: Defiant

Well, we were at war with the entire nation on that one.

In this case, we SAID we were only at war with Saddam and is loyalists, and we were trying to “rescue” the rest of the citizens of the country.

And then, having defeated Saddam, now we aren’t at “war” with any regular army, just “insurgents” and “terrorists”.


31 posted on 05/30/2007 12:18:44 PM PDT by CharlesWayneCT
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To: CharlesWayneCT
That sounds about right. The fact is this “war” has been a victim of circumstance. The amount of negative pressure from the Rats is having a negative effect at home, the media helps none either. On the other side, we cannot go all out in this fight. We have power, but we have to use it wisely. It is like something super man said in a Episode of “The Justice league”. I will quote it now, “ I am always having to control myself, I can never use all my strength, or get mad or even excited. Because this world is like cardboard to me, I have to be careful not to break my glass. Not to go through a wall. I have to hold it all in.” The only reason I wrote that is to illustrate the kind of power a country like us has. We must help the people or nation that need it, but we must also defend ourselves. That is the real issue. This country is the Superman of this world, we have more power than 99% of the world. So we must exorcise restraint. Basically meaning we cannot use our full power to fight these "enemys" if you can call them that. Also, this fight has become too political for it to ever work! Politics help run our country, not run our fights or wars! I feel that at the root of all this is the fact that our enemy is not a man, or an army, but a mob, a gang, a ragtag group with some training and a hole lot of guns. We, on the other hand, have a true military, with men and women, highly trained and disciplined.

In the long run, we may never “Beat” the terrorists unless we once use our full power. But their is that Superman issue. Our military is powerful, but power is nothing, without leadership and the ability to be used. Something the UN has effectively done, we cannot use our full power because of laws that were made their. Correct me if I am wrong, please.

But I just do not feel that Bush has ever gotten a fair chance to protect us. The Congress and Senate have too much influence.

32 posted on 05/30/2007 12:59:34 PM PDT by AhOmEsChOoLeDmInD
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To: griswold3; onedoug; WOSG
You all have excellent comments. We don’t know ourselves that well. At least idealists like Bush did not. Frankly, I had no idea that Iraq would be that hard. After all, Afghanistan was surprisingly easy, and most of the Iraqi’s wanted Saddam gone, but we underestimated the influence of Syria, Iran and the strength of the Sunni insurgency that Saddam had the foresight to set up prior to our invasion. The far left doesn't care for a USA anyway, they want a world without borders (Remember Imagine, the song by John Lennon). Even liberals that believe in America have a vision for a socialist, state run country with abortion on demand, and no Christian influence. They fear Christians more than Muslim fanatics.
33 posted on 05/30/2007 1:30:59 PM PDT by GeorgefromGeorgia
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To: Santiago de la Vega
Playing defense - as the US is now doing - is a losing tactic. It allows the enemy to choose the time and place of battle. In this fight the US can only chase after them in an endless war of attrition.

Thank Bush for that. The war was botched from the beginnings, for too many reasons to count, but the one that stands out to me is this: Parts of Iraq were never "conquered" (lousy word, but one that fits best). I'm not talking in a sense of firebombed or leveled like parts of Germany or Japan during WWII, but just that we never had the troop strength during and immediately after March 2003 to make all of Iraq feel that it had been conquered.

Some blame the Turks for not letting our 4th Mechanized into the north of Iraq, but that's just a small part of it.

I would say the bigger problem, is that after 9/11, when it was clear that we were going to be engaged in a war without end, that we needed to ramp up the size of the military. Why Bush did not boost authorized troop levels is beyond me - his father and Clinton gutted the military of many that would have been mid and senior-level, both in terms of NCOs and Officers, and Bush should have done a lot more on that front after 9/11.

In a country of 25 million, surrounded by many hostile nations, and full of radicals with centuries of hatred for one another, we needed to go in, with a lot more force, to all parts of the country, and we needed to keep the Iraqi military and government together (barring those who committed crimes against the Iraqi people), similar to how we treated Germany in the late '40s. Instead, we just let them fade away, and parts of Iraq did not see much, if any of an American presence, and as a result, the radicals become emboldened, along with the neighboring countries. Way too much Iraqi military hardware was left laying around, and rather than relying on experienced Iraqi soldiers and bureaucrats (the same people we are trying to recruit now), we thought we could build a military and government from the ground up. That's not working to well.

I think the war can be salvaged, I just don't think Bush can or will do so - he's beginning to weaken, as are those around him, with their comments and innuendos about pulling out large numbers in 2008.

The North Vietnamese always felt that if they could just hold out, eventually we would leave. I'm sure many in Al Qaeda are thinking the same thing.

Our troops are winning the battles in Iraq and Afghanistan, but unfortunately our government is acting like we are losing the war.
34 posted on 05/30/2007 1:36:51 PM PDT by af_vet_rr
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To: hunter112
We need to bomb the bejeezus out of Iraqi towns that deploy IEDs against our troops.

The problem with that is that it isn't the towns that are attacking our troops, it is relatively small groups of insurgents that are attacking from those towns. The average resident of those towns has a pretty limited ability to do something about relatively better armed and better trained insurgents, and we have often stepped back and left the Iraqi's on their own in the hopes that they would take care of some of these problems themselves.

We can't just level towns that are filled with mostly non-combatants. Striking at genuine military targets and incidentally killing some innocents is undesirable, but an unfortunate part of war when the enemy hides among non-combatants. However that is different than attacking a whole town simply because we know some enemy combatants are hiding there.

We are going to have to clear some insurgents out of populated areas, but that isn't how we are going to win the war. The Middle East is full of discontent youth that have been raised on hate and lies. Even if we keep killing insurgents, they will keep sending more as long as they have the resources to do so.

We need to take Iran out of the picture. We need to get those in Saudi Arabia that are also trying to create strife in Iraq to stop as well. How do we take Iran out of the picture? We attack them at home so they are too busy there to spend money and other resources waging war against us in Iraq.

If we can significantly cut down on the foreign money and foreign terrorists flowing into Iraq, then the Iraqis themselves can be much more effective at policing themselves. Those people in those towns might also start trusting their government or us enough to start reporting where the remaining insurgents are operating from within those towns, so we can take them out without killing large numbers of non-combatants.

35 posted on 05/30/2007 1:49:21 PM PDT by untrained skeptic
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To: untrained skeptic
If your town was about to be blown to smithereens because some insurgents were using the roads to attack US troops, wouldn't you post a 24/7 guard on them? Wouldn't you shoot those who were putting your life in jeparody?

Hell, these towns SHIELD the "insurgents". Look at the few polls of Iraqi citizens, they hate us. They LIKE seeing American Humvees blow up.

Bottom line, fight like WWII, win like WWII, fight like Vietnam, lose like Vietnam. It sounds to me like your strategy is what they teach military commanders from that war. If you'll recall, we came in second place there. We cannot afford to when dealing with islamunists.

36 posted on 05/30/2007 2:49:50 PM PDT by hunter112 (Change will happen when very good men are forced to do very bad things.)
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To: GeorgefromGeorgia
They fear Christians more than Muslim fanatics.

Without realizing that without Christianity there would be no America.

37 posted on 05/30/2007 3:07:29 PM PDT by onedoug
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To: onedoug

Yes. Without Christianity there would be no Western Civilization.


38 posted on 05/30/2007 4:39:49 PM PDT by GeorgefromGeorgia
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