View Full Version : Vietnam's Forgotten Lessons
SWJED
04-11-2006, 08:52 AM
11 April Washington Post commentary - Vietnam's Forgotten Lessons (http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/04/10/AR2006041001027.html) by Richard Cohen.
...We all know the cliche about generals fighting the last war, but in Iraq it is not the tactics that were duplicated -- certainly not compared to the Persian Gulf War -- but the tendency of the military to do what it was told and keep its mouth shut. Shelton, who retired in 2001, cannot be blamed for this and maybe no one but Donald Rumsfeld can, but the fact remains that the United States fought a war many of its military leaders thought was unnecessary, unwise, predicated on false assumptions and incompetently managed. Still, no one really spoke up.
Now, some have -- although from retirement. In recent days, three former senior officers have called for Rumsfeld to be sacked. The most recent is Marine Lt. Gen. Greg Newbold, who does not stop at faulting Rumsfeld but blames himself as well. "I now regret that I did not more openly challenge those who were determined to invade a country whose actions were peripheral to the real threat -- al-Qaeda," he writes in a Time magazine article this month. He joins Maj. Gen. Paul D. Eaton, who commanded the training of Iraqi security forces and who has also called on President Bush to fire Rumsfeld. "President Bush should accept the offer to resign that Mr. Rumsfeld says he has tendered more than once," Eaton wrote in a New York Times op-ed piece.
The third retired general is Anthony Zinni, a four-star Marine with vast experience in the Middle East. (He was Bush's Israeli-Palestinian negotiator for a while.) He goes further than (merely) recommending Rumsfeld's political defenestration. He also strongly suggests that something is broken in the American military, that its priories are misplaced. Too many senior officers put their careers first and candor or honesty second. One who did not, the then-Army chief of staff, Eric K. Shinseki, was rebuked by Rumsfeld and his career essentially ended. After that, the brass knew that the path to promotion was to get with the program. They saluted Rumsfeld and implemented a plan many of them thought was just plain irresponsible...
Merv Benson
04-11-2006, 04:01 PM
Cohen recycles the Shinseki myth. The General served his full term before retiring.
Cohen also tries to make a comparison between McNamara and Rumsfeld which fails when faced with the facts. McNamara turned down requests for troops and Rumsfeld did not. Rumsfeld has said tht he was prepared to provide 400,000 or more troops for the Iraqi operation, but that General Franks and General Abizaid told him they did not need that many.
I am not being critical of that judgement on their part, but if you are going to criticize the decision on the number of troops, it should be focused on the General's decisions and their rational and not on some mythical restrictions by the President and Secretary of Defense who have consistently said that the troops levels are a decision made by the commanders. If you have any doubt on this, just read the Prolog to Tommy Franks' book American Soldier.
I think guys like Cohen know they could not win a debate with the generals so they keep hacking away at a strawman argument.
Having former generals second guessing those who succeeded them is nothing new. Many have made a career of it on TV. Cohen just likes Zinni et.al. because they reinforce his prejudice. There are a lot of former generals out there who probably support the decisions of Franks and Abizaid, but because of that fact their opinions are not news.
In case you are not aware of the arguments for the smaller number of troops, there are several including an offensive based on a rapid advance that disorients and overwhelms the enemy. More troops would have made this much more difficult because of the logistical support train needed for the additional troops. Winning in three weeks pretty well confirms Franks' judgement on that point. In terms of troops needed after major combat operations, Abizaid wanted to have the Iraqis take over the combat space as soon as possible. When the Iraqi Army disintegrated during the war, rebuilding became a major task, with several blips along the way. However, the new Iraqi Army is taking shape and taking over much of the battle space and is giving the force to space ratio needed to make the insurgency less effective.
There is obviously more to it than I can summarize in this space, but if you read Franks book you will not regret it.
Nat Glozer
04-11-2006, 06:41 PM
There are so many contradictory points out there. In his book, Cobra II, General Trainor expresses the view that CENTCOM was micro-managed by Rumsfeld and the civilians in OSD, and that the low troop levels were pushed on Franks. So what is the truth? Don't know what your sources are, Merv, perhaps you do know the answer. But with all due respect, unless you were there, I don't see how you can say what the truth is regarding this question given that several credible sources say completely different things. The more important question is whether more troops would have limited or prevented the insurgency. I think that the vitriol and bad faith on the part of the media and anti-war politicians has prevented this important debate from taking place. The conversation should focus on that so that we can better our game for the next round.
Merv Benson
04-12-2006, 12:51 AM
Please read the Prolog to General Franks' American Soldier. It is not even arguable. I would also add that General Pace confirmed the issue on troops levels in a press briefing today. Trainor may be relying too much on his NY Times co author. His assertions are clearly refuted by the statements of Franks and his component commanders. If you get further into the book, Franks lays out his reasons for his requested force levels. At no time does he suggest that he got less than what he asked for.
I would add that even Sen. Kerry backed off the Shinseki myth when reporters confronted him with the facts during the 2004 campaign.
BTW, the Trainor book also seriously misstates the events surrounding the flap over Gen. Wallace's purported statements concerning whether there was adequate wargaming on dealing with the Fedayeen. They also overlook the rather clever way the Centcom staff found to deal with the Fedayeen. I base this last comment on the excerpt of the book I saw in the NY Times that dealt with that kerfufle.
SWJED
04-12-2006, 09:29 AM
12 April Los Angeles Times - Top General Disputes Criticism Against Rumsfeld (http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-rumsfeld12apr12,1,7886502.story?coll=la-headlines-nation).
Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld, facing calls for his resignation by three retired senior officers for his handling of the Iraq war, received a full-throated endorsement Tuesday from the U.S. military's top general, who insisted that "this country is exceptionally well served" by Rumsfeld's leadership.
Marine Gen. Peter Pace, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, disputed accusations from retired top officers that Rumsfeld had forced the uniformed military into an invasion plan they didn't fully support.
"We had then, and have now, every opportunity to speak our minds, and if we do not, shame on us because the opportunity is there," Pace said at a Pentagon news conference. "The plan that was executed was developed by military officers, presented by military officers, questioned by civilians as they should, revamped by military officers, and blessed by the senior military leadership."
Pace's remarks, the most pointed on the Pentagon's leadership since he assumed the chairman's post in September, were prompted by a series of highly critical articles and interviews in recent weeks by former generals who were directly involved in the war or who served in top positions...
Merv Benson
04-12-2006, 01:52 PM
CNN's (http://edition.cnn.com/2006/POLITICS/04/11/rumsfeld.iraq/index.html) report on Pace's statments includes the following:
Rumsfeld said Newbold "never raised an issue publicly or privately when he was here that I know of." Pace also said he was unaware of any objections Newbold raised.
Pace said plans for the invasion were significantly overhauled between the time Newbold retired and the day American troops crossed the Iraqi frontier in March 2003.
He said members of the Joint Chiefs of Staff signed on to the war plan presented by Gen. Tommy Franks, then-commander of U.S. forces in the Middle East, before it was presented to Rumsfeld and President Bush, and top officers had "every opportunity to speak our minds."
"And if we do not, shame on us, because the opportunity is there. It is elicited from us, and we're expected to," Pace said. (Emphasis added.)
Merv Benson
04-12-2006, 09:24 PM
Here is the full transcript (http://www.defenselink.mil/transcripts/2006/tr20060411-12800.html) of remarks that the above news articles discuss.
This is a brief excerpt:
...
Let me just give you Pete Pace's rendition of how the process worked building up to Iraq. First of all, once it became apparent that we may have to take military action, the Secretary of Defense asked Tom Franks, who was the commander of Central Command, to begin doing some planning, which he did. Over the next two years, 50 or 60 times, Tom Franks either came to Washington or by video teleconference, sat down with the Secretary of Defense, sat down with the Joint Chiefs and went over what he was thinking, how he was planning. And as a result of those iterative opportunities and all the questions that were asked, not once was Tom told, "No, don't do that. No, don't do this. No, you can't have this. No, you can't have that." What happened was, in a very open roundtable discussion, questions about what might go right, what might go wrong, what would you need, how would you handle it, and that happened with the Joint Chiefs and it happened with the Secretary.
And before the final orders were given, the Joint Chiefs met in private with General Franks and assured ourselves that the plan was a solid plan and that the resources that he needed were going to be allocated. We then went and told the Secretary of Defense our belief in Tom's plan and in the resources, and I know for a fact, because I was there, that when the Joint Chiefs were called over to the White House, several of the questions that the president asked specifically were about our understanding and belief in the plan, and whether or not the amount -- proper amount of resources had been allocated. He did that both with us, just the Joint Chiefs, and then again when all the combatant commanders were in from around the globe well before a final decision was made.
...
This description is consistent with Gen. Franks description of the process. As I have pointed out before in the Prolog to his book Gen. Franks has the transcript of each component commander telling the President and Secretary of Defense that they had everything they needed for the mission.
There are probably enough people invested in the myth of "Rumsfeld did not give them enough troops" that it will keep popping up. However, a more constructive debate would involve asking the commanders why they chose the makeup of the force that they did, instead of assuming something that clearly is not so.
Strickland
04-12-2006, 10:59 PM
While I have and will continue to trust and obey the orders of those appointed over me, and thus have no reason not to believe or doubt the integrity and moral courage of the senior leadership of our military, General Krulak once told me that "perception + truth = reality." Based off this formula, the truth may not be a clear cut as we would like. However, as all of us know that have participated in an planning session, "you dance with the girl you brought," or the girl your boss tells you to dance with; thus if all the commanders knew that asking for more troops was akin to asking where Jimmy Hoffa was buried, you develop courses of action consistent with assigned forces.
SWJED
04-13-2006, 06:38 AM
13 April Washington Post - Rumsfeld Rebuked By Retired Generals (http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/04/12/AR2006041201114.html) by Tom Ricks.
The retired commander of key forces in Iraq called yesterday for Donald H. Rumsfeld to step down, joining several other former top military commanders who have harshly criticized the defense secretary's authoritarian style for making the military's job more difficult.
"I think we need a fresh start" at the top of the Pentagon, retired Army Maj. Gen. John Batiste, who commanded the 1st Infantry Division in Iraq in 2004-2005, said in an interview. "We need leadership up there that respects the military as they expect the military to respect them. And that leadership needs to understand teamwork."
Batiste's comments resonate especially within the Army: It is widely known there that he was offered a promotion to three-star rank to return to Iraq and be the No. 2 U.S. military officer there but he declined because he no longer wished to serve under Rumsfeld...
Batiste said he believes that the administration's handling of the Iraq war has violated fundamental military principles, such as unity of command and unity of effort. In other interviews, Batiste has said he thinks the violation of another military principle -- ensuring there are enough forces -- helped create the Abu Ghraib abuse scandal by putting too much responsibility on incompetent officers and undertrained troops...
SWJED
04-14-2006, 06:53 AM
14 April Washington Post - White House Defends Rumsfeld's Tenure (http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/04/13/AR2006041301689.html).
The White House came to the aid of Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld yesterday, rebuffing calls from several retired generals for his resignation and crediting him with leading the Pentagon through two wars and a transformation of the military.
"The president believes Secretary Rumsfeld is doing a very fine job during a challenging period in our nation's history," White House press secretary Scott McClellan said at a briefing. He went on to read long quotations from the nation's top military officer, Marine Gen. Peter Pace, praising Rumsfeld's dedication and patriotism.
The defense of Rumsfeld is a perennial exercise for the White House whenever a fresh round of Rumsfeld-must-go demands arise on Capitol Hill or elsewhere in Washington. The difference this time is that those insisting that the secretary should step down are recently retired flag officers who appear to reflect widespread sentiment among people still in uniform...
SWJED
04-14-2006, 07:20 AM
14 April Washington Times - Retired General's Call Puzzles Rumsfeld Aides (http://www.washtimes.com/national/20060413-113036-4341r.htm).
Of the smattering of retired generals who have called on Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld to resign, none has surprised the Pentagon's inner circle more than retired Army Maj. Gen. John Batiste.
Gen. Batiste commanded the 1st Infantry Division, responsible in Iraq for the hot spots of Tikrit and Samarra, north of Baghdad. On a chilly December night in 2004, he introduced Mr. Rumsfeld to his soldiers thus: "This is a man with the courage and the conviction to win the war on terrorism."
A Rumsfeld aide said that when the two talked privately, the general voiced no complaints on how Washington, or Mr. Rumsfeld, was waging war...
Five retired generals hardly constitute a groundswell among what the Pentagon estimates are 9,000 active and retired generals and admirals. But Pentagon officials fear there will be more such calls against Mr. Rumsfeld.
The list now reads: Gen. Batiste; Gen. Riggs; retired Marine Corps Gen. Anthony Zinni, who opposed the Iraq invasion from the start; Marine Corps Lt. Gen. Gregory Newbold and Army Maj. Gen. Paul Eaton.
"I was particularly taken aback by Batiste," said Larry Di Rita, a senior Rumsfeld adviser. "It seemed very contrary to the interaction I saw in Iraq."
SWJED
04-14-2006, 10:16 AM
13 April National Review commentary - Dead-end Debates: Critics Need to Move On (http://www.nationalreview.com/hanson/hanson200604130743.asp) by Victor Davis Hanson.
Currently there are many retired generals appearing in frenetic fashion on television. Sometimes they hype their recent books, or, as during the three-week war, offer sharp interviews about our supposed strategic and operational blunders in Iraq imperial hubris, too few troops, wrong war, wrong place, and other assorted lapses...
Imagine that, as we crossed the Rhine, retired World War II officers were still harping, in March, 1945, about who was responsible months during Operation Cobra for the accidental B-17 bombing, killing, and wounding of hundreds of American soldiers and the death of Lt. Gen. Leslie McNair; or, in the midst of Matthew Ridgeway's Korean counteroffensives, we were still bickering over MacArthur's disastrous intelligence lapses about Chinese intervention that caused thousands of casualties. Did the opponents of daylight bombing over Europe in 1943 still damn the theories of old Billy Mitchell, or press on to find a way to hit Nazi Germany hard by late 1944?
More troops might have brought a larger footprint that made peacekeeping easier but also raised a provocative Western profile in an Islamic country. More troops may have facilitated Iraqization or, in the style of Vietnam, created perpetual dependency. More troops might have shortened the war and occupation or made monthly dollar costs even higher, raised casualties, and ensured that eventual troop draw-downs would be more difficult. More troops might have bolstered U.S. prestige through a bold show of power or simply attenuated our forces elsewhere, in Japan, Okinawa, Korea, and Europe, and invited adventurism by our enemies. Too few troops were the fault of the present Administration or the chickens that came home to roost after the drastic cutbacks in the post-Cold war euphoria of the 1990s.
"Troop transformation" has become equally calcified. We know the script. Pensioned Army and Marine generals appear ever more ubiquitously to assure the public that we have near criminally shorted ground troops. They alone are now speaking for the silenced brave majors and dutiful colonels stuck on the ground in Afghanistan and Iraq with too few soldiers as their four-star Pentagon brass sold out to Mr. Rumsfeld's pie-in-the-skies theorists in Washington.
Maybe but then again, maybe not. The counterarguments are never offered. If hundreds of billions of dollars were invested in sophisticated smart shells and bombs, drones, and computers, to ensure far greater lethality per combatant, then must traditional troop levels always stay the same? How many artillery pieces is a bomber worth, with ordinance that for the first time in military history doesn't often miss? Has the world become more receptive to large American foreign bases? Or depots to housing tens of thousands of conventional troops and supplies? And did lessons of the Balkans and Afghanistan prove the need for far more ground troops and traditional armor and artillery units?
The point is simple: Somewhere between the impractical ideas that the U.S. military was to become mostly Special Forces on donkeys guiding bombs with laptops, or, instead, a collection of huge divisions with tanks and Crusader artillery platforms, there is a balance that the recent experience of war, from Panama to the Sunni Triangle, alone distills. And it isn't easy finding that center when we had enemies as diverse as Slobodan Milosevic, Mullah Omar, Osama bin Laden, and Saddam Hussein.
SWJED
04-15-2006, 09:57 AM
15 April Washington Times - Generals Defend Rumsfeld (http://www.washtimes.com/national/20060414-110537-1839r.htm).
Several retired generals who worked with Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld, including a former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, yesterday decried calls for the secretary's resignation from other retired officers.
President Bush repeated his support for his point man in the war against terrorists.
"I think what we see happening with retired general officers is bad for the military, bad for civil-military relations and bad for the country," retired Air Force Gen. Richard B. Myers, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs under Mr. Bush, said in an interview with The Washington Times. He said he would elaborate his views in an op-ed essay.
"I'm hurt," said retired Marine Corps Lt. Gen. Michael P. DeLong, who was deputy commander of U.S. Central Command during the invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq, and briefed Mr. Rumsfeld at the Pentagon.
"When we have an administration that is currently at war, with a secretary of defense that has the confidence of the president and basically has done well -- no matter what grade you put on there, he has done well -- to call for his resignation right now is not good for the country," he said.
SWJED
04-15-2006, 07:36 PM
16 April New York Times - Generals Break With Tradition Over Rumsfeld (http://www.nytimes.com/2006/04/16/washington/16generals.html?).
This week, as the chorus of retired generals demanding Donald H. Rumsfeld's resignation grew larger and louder, Gen. Peter Pace stood beside the embattled defense secretary and did what some experts say is his military duty.
"As far as Pete Pace is concerned, this country is exceptionally well-served by the man standing on my left," General Pace, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told reporters at the Pentagon. "Nobody, nobody works harder than he does to take care of the P.F.C.'s and lance corporals and lieutenants and the captains. He does his homework. He works weekends, he works nights...
Critics of Mr. Rumsfeld, who agree with the former generals who have derided him as wrongheaded and arrogant, may see General Pace's endorsement as fulsome flattery...
But the comments by General Pace of the Marines were more than a public plug for a boss under fire. Scholars who study the armed forces say they were a public restatement of a bedrock principle of American governance: civilian control of the military.
"This is what the chairman of the joint chiefs is expected to do by tradition and law," said Dennis E. Showalter, a military historian at Colorado College who has taught at the Air Force Academy and West Point. Short of submitting his own resignation, General Pace had little choice but to offer a public show of support, Mr. Showalter said.
"If he had not spoken out, he would have been making a very strong statement," he said.
The idea that civilian leaders, as representatives of the people, should have the ultimate say in how the country's military power is wielded dates to colonial resentment of British rule and is embedded in the Constitution.
Tensions between civilian leaders and the military brass are routine and occasionally erupt into public view. But the principle of civilian supremacy has never been seriously challenged; the last plotters of a military coup d'ιtat in American history were disgruntled officers faced down by General George Washington at Newburgh, N.Y., in 1783.
In fact, Article 88 of the Uniform Code of Military Justice prescribes court martial for any commissioned officer who "uses contemptuous words against the president, the vice president, Congress, the secretary of defense" or other federal or state officials.
That prohibition, of course, does not forbid serving officers from speaking candidly in private when asked for advice on military matters. Some of Mr. Rumsfeld's critics also fault General Pace and others for not being more forceful in questioning the guidelines put forward by Pentagon civilians that have kept American forces relatively lean in Iraq, and which led to the quick disbanding of the Iraqi Army.
Neither does the prohibition on "contemptuous words" apply to retirees. And the propriety of the onslaught of attacks on Mr. Rumsfeld's leadership from recently retired senior military leaders, including some who served in Iraq, is a matter of intense debate....
SWJED
04-16-2006, 08:22 AM
16 April Washington Post commentary - Behind the Military Revolt (http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/04/14/AR2006041401451.html) by Richard Holbrooke.
The calls by a growing number of recently retired generals for the resignation of Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld have created the most serious public confrontation between the military and an administration since President Harry S. Truman fired Gen. Douglas MacArthur in 1951. In that epic drama, Truman was unquestionably correct -- MacArthur, the commanding general in Korea and a towering World War II hero, publicly challenged Truman's authority and had to be removed. Most Americans rightly revere the principle that was at stake: civilian control over the military. But this situation is quite different.
First, it is clear that the retired generals -- six so far, with more likely to come -- surely are speaking for many of their former colleagues, friends and subordinates who are still inside. In the tight world of senior active and retired generals, there is constant private dialogue. Recent retirees stay in close touch with old friends, who were often their subordinates; they help each other, they know what is going on and a conventional wisdom is formed. Retired Marine Lt. Gen. Greg Newbold, who was director of operations for the Joint Chiefs of Staff during the planning period for the war in Iraq, made this clear in an extraordinary, at times emotional, article in Time magazine this past week when he said he was writing "with the encouragement of some still in positions of military leadership." He went on to "challenge those still in uniform . . . to give voice to those who can't -- or don't have the opportunity to -- speak."
These generals are not newly minted doves or covert Democrats. (In fact, one of the main reasons this public explosion did not happen earlier was probably concern by the generals that they would seem to be taking sides in domestic politics.) They are career men, each with more than 30 years in service, who swore after Vietnam that, as Colin Powell wrote in his memoirs, "when our turn came to call the shots, we would not quietly acquiesce in half-hearted warfare for half-baked reasons." Yet, as Newbold admits, it happened again. In the public comments of the retired generals one can hear a faint sense of guilt that, having been taught as young officers that the Vietnam-era generals failed to stand up to Defense Secretary Robert McNamara and President Lyndon Johnson, they did the same thing...
SWJED
04-16-2006, 09:52 AM
16 April New York Times - Pentagon Memo Aims to Counter Rumsfeld Critics (http://www.nytimes.com/2006/04/16/washington/16rumsfeld.html?).
The Defense Department has issued a memorandum to a group of former military commanders and civilian analysts that offers a direct challenge to the criticisms made by retired generals about Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld.
The one-page memorandum was sent by e-mail on Friday to the group, which includes several retired generals who appear regularly on television, and came as the Bush administration stepped up its own defense of Mr. Rumsfeld...
The memorandum begins by stating, "U.S. senior military leaders are involved to an unprecedented degree in every decision-making process in the Department of Defense." It says Mr. Rumsfeld has had 139 meetings with the Joint Chiefs of Staff since the start of 2005 and 208 meetings with the senior field commanders.
Seeking to put the criticism of the relatively small number of retired generals into context, the e-mail message also notes that there are more than 8,000 active-duty and retired general officers alive today...
SWJED
04-16-2006, 11:15 AM
16 April New York Times commentary - The Good Fight, Done Badly (http://select.nytimes.com/2006/04/16/opinion/16brooks.html) by David Brooks.
...Donald Rumsfeld, who graduated from Princeton in 1954, was of this type. Athletic, heroic, he never met an organization he didn't try to upend. He made it to Congress in the early 1960's and challenged the existing order. He was hired by Richard Nixon and quickly reorganized the Office of Economic Opportunity, slashing jobs and focusing the organization. He wrote to Nixon that he would upset the education bureaucrats and destroy "their comfortable world."
As his career went on, he took his streamlining zeal to the Pentagon, and then to G. D. Searle & Company, where he dismissed hundreds of executives, spun off losing businesses and streamlined the bureaucracy.
Rumsfeld's style appealed to political leaders who were allied with the corporate world, but hostile to self-satisfied corporate fat cats. Nixon loved Rumsfeld, and George W. Bush, the rebel in chief, quickly hired him.
On Sept. 10, 2001, Rumsfeld held a town meeting in the Pentagon that almost perfectly summarizes his career. There is an organization that threatens the security of the United States, he warned. "With brutal consistency, it stifles free thought and crushes new ideas." The adversary is close to home, he concluded: "It's the Pentagon bureaucracy."
Anti-Organization Men like Rumsfeld value the traits needed to mount frontal assaults on vast bureaucracies: first, unshakable self-confidence; second, a willingness to stir up opposition and to be unmoved in the face of it (on the contrary, to see it as the inevitable byproduct of success).
Anti-Organization Men tend to love fast-moving technology for the way it renders old structures obsolete. They tend to see themselves as event-making characters who exist above their organizations, or in a tightly organized renegade band. Rumsfeld wrote his own rules, and many of them sing the glories of disruption: "You can't cut a swath through the henhouse without ruffling some feathers."...
SWJED
04-16-2006, 11:42 AM
15 April Gateway Pundit blog - Judge Rumsfeld by His Successes And Failures (http://gatewaypundit.blogspot.com/2006/04/judge-rumsfeld-by-his-successes-and.html).
Before Abu Ghraib was known as a prison of barking dogs, nadedness and pyramiding but was a slaughterhouse where thousands of innocent Iraqis were executed under the Saddam Regime...
Before there were democratic elections in Afghanistan and Iraq...
Before documents were released showing links between Saddam and Al Qaeda...
Before feminists were so Anti-Jew...
Before the Butcher of Baghdad was given a smackdown as he was dragged from his spider hole...
And, after all of this was accomplished with record low military casualties, civilian casualties and military fatalities...
The mainstream media has been after Donald Rumsfeld...
SWJED
04-17-2006, 09:06 AM
17 April Washington Times - Gen. Myers Says Critics of Rumsfeld Out of Line (http://www.washtimes.com/national/20060417-122459-2531r.htm).
Retired generals who are criticizing Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld's prewar planning are out of line and need to remember who their boss is, top military and civilian officials -- including a former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff -- said on yesterday's political talk shows.
Air Force Gen. Richard B. Myers said yesterday that the behavior and comments from six generals is "inappropriate" for military officers...
"It's inappropriate because it's not the military that judges our civilian bosses. We'd be in a horrible state in this country, in my opinion, if the military was left to judge the civilian bosses, because when you judge Secretary Rumsfeld, you're also judging the commander in chief, because that's the chain of command, and that's just not appropriate," Gen. Myers told ABC's "This Week" program.
The generals -- four from the Army and two from the Marine Corps -- now say the defense secretary intimidated senior officers and "meddled" in war plans that, they say, resulted in "poor war planning" after Iraqi strongman Saddam Hussein was deposed. The retired generals said Mr. Rumsfeld lacked ground troops and failed to foresee the insurgency in Iraq by al Qaeda terrorists.
Gen. Myers said the generals did not question the prewar plans, and went a step further by saying that any military officer would be derelict in his duty if he did not voice his concerns...
SWJED
04-19-2006, 03:04 PM
19 April Los Angeles Times commentary - A General Disgrace (http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/commentary/la-oe-boot19apr19,0,6685016.column?coll=la-news-comment-opinions) by Max Boot.
The American officer corps tried to blame the fall of Saigon on their civilian masters. If not for political restrictions in particular, no invasion of North Vietnam the U.S. would have won the war. So argued the late Col. Harry Summers in his celebrated 1981 book, "On Strategy: The Vietnam War in Context." That was, at best, a gross oversimplification.
As then-Maj. Andrew Krepinevich showed in "The Army and Vietnam" (1986), the U.S. defeat could be attributed in large part to the inappropriate, firepower-intensive strategy adopted by the Army. In the absence of a better counterinsurgency doctrine, not even occupying all of Vietnam, as the French had once done, would have won the war. If the generals wanted to know who was to blame for their defeat, Krepinevich suggested, they should have looked in the mirror.
His analysis is now widely accepted, yet we are in the early stages of another stab-in-the-back myth in which officers line up to blame their civilian bosses for the setbacks we've suffered in Iraq. In the last few weeks, six retired generals and counting have called for the resignation of Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld.
As it happens, I agree with their advice. As I first said on this page two years ago, I too think that Rumsfeld should go. But I am nevertheless troubled by the Revolt of the Generals, which calls into question civilian control of the armed forces. In our system, defense secretaries are supposed to fire generals, not vice versa.
The retired generals, who claim to speak for their active-duty brethren, premise their uprising on two complaints. First, many (though not all) say we should not have gone into Iraq in the first place. Former Lt. Gen. Greg Newbold calls it "the unnecessary war," and former Gen. Anthony Zinni claims that "containment worked remarkably well."
That is a highly questionable judgment, and one that is not for generals to make. They are experts in how to wage war, not when to wage it. If we had listened to their advice, we would not have gone into Kuwait or Bosnia or Kosovo.
Their second complaint about how the war has been fought is more valid. There is no doubt that the president and his top aides blundered by not sending enough troops and not doing enough occupation planning. But what about the blunders of the generals?
To listen to the retired brass, the only mistake they and their peers made was not being more outspoken in challenging Rumsfeld. But that's not the picture that emerges from the best account of the invasion so far: "Cobra II" by veteran correspondent Michael Gordon and retired Marine Lt. Gen. Bernard Trainor. They present copious evidence of Rumsfeld's misguided micromanagement. But they also show that Gen. Tommy Franks, the top military commander, was guilty of major misjudgments of his own...
Merv Benson
04-19-2006, 05:28 PM
There is no evidence that civilian leadership turned down any troop request for Iraq. There is abundant evidence that civilian leadership asked the military if they had what they needed for the war in Iraq and if they were satisfied with the plan that Centcom had put together. It wasn't just Gen. Franks who developed this plan. His component commanders were assigned by the Joint Chiefs and they all signed off on the plan. Events have demonstrated that no additional troops were needed through Phase III of the plan which ended with the liberation of Iraq. It is the Phase IV part of the plan that should be the focus of the debate. The person primarily responsible for that part of the plan has been Gen. Abizaid, yet his name never comes up in this debate nor his rationale for his "small footprint" strategy.
It should also be pointed out that the "not enough troops" chorus has not suggested that the US should have waited till it could get more troops into Afghanistan where even fewer troops were used to liberate that country. And, where fewer troops have been needed for Phase IV operations. Logic, history and terrain all suggest that Afghanistan should be the location of the strongest insurgency, but that has not been the case. The insurgency there is even weaker than the weak insurgency in Iraq.
It is time to move this debate from the civilians who approved the plan the military came up with and have an honest debate about the virtues or lack thereof of the "small footprint" strategy during Phase IV.
It is my view that the best way to defeat an insurgency is by having a force to space ratio that prevents enemy movement and denies sanctuaries. Clearly we did not have a force sufficient to do that initially. We attempted to make up for this by focusing on getting actionable intelligece on the enemy. In the meantime we force our troops to buy the same real estate more than once, becuase we did not have enough troops to take and hold areas. The creation of the Iraqi army has had a positive effect in both getting actionable intelligence and in having enough force to take and hold an area and deny enemy movement.
While H.R. McMaster is credited with writing the bible on generals speaking out, his most important work in the Iraq war was his innovative liberation of Tal Afar with the help of Iraqi forces. That is the model the military should be looking at, instead of his book on the history of the joint chiefs of the 1960's. It also shows that civilian leadership did not get in the way of his using his best military judgement in taking effective action in Iraq. Did any of the complaining generals suggest such a plan while they were in Iraq? If so, was it rejected by civilian leadership? I think the evidence is pretty clear.
BTW, Boot is still clinging to the assertion that the insurgency in Vietnam was successful. History shows that after the failure of Tet, the insurgency never had a chance to topple South Vietnam. Conventional warfare was needed to conquer South Vietnam after the Democrats cut off funding for the South Vietnamese and refused to let the US use its air power to stop the communist conventional attack.
SWJED
04-20-2006, 01:16 AM
It's Solitaire for Rummy (http://www.nydailynews.com/news/ideas_opinions/story/409097p-346282c.html) - New York Daily News Editorial
The Generals War (http://www.opinionjournal.com/editorial/feature.html?id=110008249) - Wall Street Journal Editorial
Growing Calls for Rumsfeld's Dismissal (https://registration.ft.com/registration/barrier?referer=&location=http%3A//news.ft.com/cms/s/c26d7ec2-cdad-11da-afcd-0000779e2340.html) - Financial Times Editorial
The War Against Rumsfeld (http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/opinion/chi-0604190018apr19,0,7415696.story?coll=chi-newsopinion-hed) - Chicago Tribune Editorial
Retired Summer Soldiers (http://www.washtimes.com/commentary/20060418-085948-6705r.htm)- Washington Times Commentary
Generals Put Us On Slippery Slope (http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/opinion/267124_center19.html) - Seattle Post-Intelligencer Commentary
Why Are They Speaking Up Now? (http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/04/18/AR2006041801172.html) - Washington Post Commentary
Wrong Debate Over Rumsfeld (http://www.washtimes.com/op-ed/20060418-091037-9879r.htm) - Washington Times Commentary
Court of Inquiry (http://www.realclearpolitics.com/articles/2006/04/court_of_inquiry.html) - Real Clear Politics Commentary
David vs. Goliath in Washington (http://www.nypost.com/postopinion/opedcolumnists/67207.htm) - New York Post Commentary
A General Disgrace (http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/commentary/la-oe-boot19apr19,0,6685016.column?coll=la-news-comment-opinions) - Los Angeles Times Commentary
A Case for Accountability (http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/04/18/AR2006041801164.html) - Washington Post Commentary
Seven days in April (http://www.washtimes.com/op-ed/20060417-094715-2092r.htm) - Washington Times Commentary
Listen to the Brass (http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/04/17/AR2006041701260.html) - Washington Post Commentary
Political Hothouse Perennial (http://www.washtimes.com/commentary/20060417-094712-2610r.htm) - Washington Times Commentary
Roots of the Uprising (http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/04/17/AR2006041701262.html) - Washington Post Commentary
Public Criticism of Rumsfeld Says it All (http://www.boston.com/news/globe/editorial_opinion/oped/articles/2006/04/18/public_criticism_of_rumsfeld_says_it_all/)- Boston Globe Commentary
Why America's Generals Out For Revenge (http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,6-2138690,00.html) - London Times Commentary
Rumsfeld's Job Security (http://www.nypost.com/postopinion/opedcolumnists/67123.htm) - New York Post Commentary
Generally Speaking... With Hindsight (http://www.washtimes.com/commentary/20060416-103032-8282r.htm) - Washington Times Commentary
The Good Fight, Done Badly (http://select.nytimes.com/2006/04/16/opinion/16brooks.html) - New York Times Commentary
Behind the Military Revolt (http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/04/14/AR2006041401451.html) - Washington Post Commentary
A General Misunderstanding (http://www.nytimes.com/2006/04/16/opinion/16delong.html) - New York Times Commentary
An Officer Responds To David Ignatius (http://www.realclearpolitics.com/blog/2006/04/an_officer_responds_to_david_i.html)- Real Clear Politics Commentary
Rumsfeld Staying Put (http://www.realclearpolitics.com/articles/2006/04/rumsfeld_staying_put.html) - Real Clear Politics Commentary
Dead-End Debates (http://www.nationalreview.com/hanson/hanson200604130743.asp)- National Review Commentary
Why Didn't Generals Resign? (http://www.suntimes.com/output/otherviews/cst-edt-ref17.html) - Chicago Sun-Times Commentary
Reconcilable Differences (http://conways.nationalreview.com/archives/094868.asp) - National Review Blog
The Troubles of Donald Rumsfeld (http://fallbackbelmont.blogspot.com/2006/04/troubles-of-donald-rumsfeld.html) - Belmont Club Blog
The Incoherence of the Former Generals (http://prairiepundit.blogspot.com/2006/04/incoherence-of-former-generals.html) - Prairie Pundit Blog
Jack Kelly on the Rumsfeld Flap (http://www.irishpennants.com/archives/2006/04/fred_kaplan_is.php) - Irish Pennants Blog
Donald Rumsfeld and the Media, A Bitter Love (http://gatewaypundit.blogspot.com/2006/03/donald-rumsfeld-and-media-bitter-love.html)- Gateway Pundit Blog
Ignatius Makes A Case About Rumsfeld (http://www.captainsquartersblog.com/mt/archives/006759.php) - Captain's Quarters Blog
Judge Rumsfeld by His Successes And Failures (http://gatewaypundit.blogspot.com/2006/04/judge-rumsfeld-by-his-successes-and.html) - Gateway Pundit Blog
Rumsfeld and the Generals (http://zenpundit.blogspot.com/2006/04/rumsfeld-and-generals-there-has-been.html) - ZenPundit Blog
Dear Generals: Please Stop, Immediately (http://www.theadventuresofchester.com/archives/2006/04/dear_generals_p.html) - The Adventures of Chester Blog
The Rumsfeld Detractors (http://www.washtimes.com/op-ed/20060419-095404-3995r.htm) - Washington Times Commentary
Why Bush Should Keep Rumsfeld (http://www.realclearpolitics.com/articles/2006/04/why_bush_should_keep_rumsfeld.html) - Real Clear Politics Commentary
The Generals are Revolting (http://www.realclearpolitics.com/articles/2006/04/the_generals_are_revolting.html) - Real Clear Politics Commentary
Rumsfeld Must Resign (http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/opinion/oped/bal-op.resign20apr20,0,4004852.story?coll=bal-oped-headlines) - Baltimore Sun Commentary
Railing at Rummy (http://www.nypost.com/postopinion/editorial/64724.htm) - New York Post Commentary
Sour Grapes and Cheap Shots (http://www.washtimes.com/commentary/20060420-085559-5621r.htm) - Washington Times Commentary
The Generals' Dangerous Whispers (http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/04/20/AR2006042001379.html) - Washington Post Commentary
A 4-star Defense of the Republic (http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/commentary/la-oe-brooks21apr21,0,4735076.column?coll=la-news-comment-opinions) - Los Angeles Times Commentary
The Anger At Rumsfeld (http://www.realclearpolitics.com/blog/) - Real Clear Politics Blog
Former President Ford Defends Rumsfeld (http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/04/21/AR2006042101841.html) - Washington Post
Generals’ Complaint Arrives Too Late (http://news.bostonherald.com/opinion/view.bg?articleid=136153) - Boston Herald Editorial
They Put Our Side in Danger (http://www.miami.com/mld/miamiherald/news/opinion/14402207.htm) - Miami Herald Commentary
It's About Time We Focus on the Enemy (http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/opinion/chi-0604210174apr21,0,4204421.story?coll=chi-newsopinioncommentary-hed) - Chicago Tribune Commentary
All-Star Shame (http://www.washtimes.com/commentary/20060422-110639-4735r.htm) - Washington Times Commentary
Honor in Discretion (http://www.opinionjournal.com/extra/?id=110008275) - Wall Street Journal Commentary
What Generals Have to Say Matters a Lot (http://www.miami.com/mld/miamiherald/news/opinion/14399295.htm) - Miami Herald Commentary
Batiste: Why Rumsfeld Must Leave (http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/editorial/outlook/3811292.html) - Houston Chronicle Commentary
Good Thing Civilians Direct Generals (http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/editorial/outlook/3811845.html) - Houston Chronicle Commentary
Generals' Revolt Still a Hot Topic (http://www.irishpennants.com/archives/2006/04/the_generals_re.php) - Irish Pennants Blog
Footprints in Iraq (http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/06113/684143-108.stm) - Pittsburgh Post-Gazette Commentary
Generals May Need to Stage Retreat (http://www.philly.com/mld/inquirer/news/front/14409315.htm) - Philadelphia Inquirer Commentary
Rumsfeld's Pentagon (http://www.washtimes.com/commentary/20060425-085311-3335r.htm) - Washington Times Commentary
Rage at Don (http://www.opinionjournal.com/columnists/bminiter/?id=110008284) - Wall Street Journal Commentary
Behind the Revolt (http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/04/25/AR2006042501587.html) - Washington Post Commentary
A Dereliction of Duty (http://www.nationalreview.com/owens/owens200604270710.asp) - National Review Commentary
SWJED
04-23-2006, 03:11 PM
23 April New York Times - Young Officers Join the Debate Over Rumsfeld (http://www.nytimes.com/2006/04/23/washington/23military.html?_r=1&oref=slogin).
The revolt by retired generals who publicly criticized Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld has opened an extraordinary debate among younger officers, in military academies, in the armed services' staff colleges and even in command posts and mess halls in Iraq.
Junior and midlevel officers are discussing whether the war plans for Iraq reflected unvarnished military advice, whether the retired generals should have spoken out, whether active-duty generals will feel free to state their views in private sessions with the civilian leaders and, most divisive of all, whether Mr. Rumsfeld should resign.
To protect their careers, the officers were granted anonymity so they could speak frankly about the debates they have had and have heard. The stances that emerged are anything but uniform, although all seem colored by deep concern over the quality of civil-military relations, and the way ahead in Iraq.
The discussions often flare with anger, particularly among many midlevel officers who have served in Iraq and Afghanistan and face the prospect of additional tours of duty.
"This is about the moral bankruptcy of general officers who lived through the Vietnam era yet refused to advise our civilian leadership properly," said one Army major in the Special Forces who has served two combat tours. "I can only hope that my generation does better someday."
An Army major who is an intelligence specialist said: "The history I will take away from this is that the current crop of generals failed to stand up and say, 'We cannot do this mission.' They confused the cultural can-do attitude with their responsibilities as leaders to delay the start of the war until we had an adequate force. I think the backlash against the general officers will be seen in the resignation of officers" who might otherwise have stayed in uniform.
One Army colonel enrolled in a Defense Department university said an informal poll among his classmates indicated that about 25 percent believed that Mr. Rumsfeld should resign, and 75 percent believed that he should remain. But of the second group, two-thirds thought he should acknowledge errors that were made and "show that he is not the intolerant and inflexible person some paint him to be," the colonel said...
SWJED
04-26-2006, 12:50 PM
24 April Financial Times - Rumsfeld Continues to Come Under Fire (http://news.ft.com/cms/s/b045e176-d3e3-11da-b2f3-0000779e2340.html).
Donald Rumsfeld, US defence secretary, on Monday came under more fire after another retired general joined the growing list of retired brass gunning for his resignation.
Retired Lieutenant General Paul Van Riper, a three-star general who retired in 1997, told Fox News that Mr Rumsfeld was not capable of leading the Pentagon effort in Iraq. He is the eighth former general to call for Mr Rumsfeld to step down.
When I look at where we are in this war to date, and imagine where we could have been if the right number of troops had been put in at the right time and had been employed correctly, then I think we need new leadership, said Lt Gen Van Riper. If I was the president, I would have relieved him three years ago....
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