It also stacks up a bit too neatly with what I interpreted as Tom Rick's not too subtle hatchet job on Odierno in Fiasco.
There is a dissonance between the way that Odierno was depicted in Rick's book and in this article , and my personal experience of meeting the man and having heard him speak quite a few times at the CFE in Taji.
I think that two things have occurred here. Firstly, Odierno and his Division's action when they first got to Iraq are being viewed with the clarity of 20 / 20 hindsight. I beleive that the criticisms that are levelled at Odierno and his Div are equally applicable to 99% of the coalition force in country at the time in one respect or another. Now that apparently 'everyone' knew at that time that an insurgency was developing, people seem to forget that the situation on the ground at the time was remarkably less clear than many now claim. The amount of revisionsim that I have noticed occuring about who 'understood first or most' does neither the journalists, historians, commentators or soldiers involved in it any credit. Nor does it actually change anything.
Which leads me into my second point. Great stories or narratives need heroes and villains. For every saint you need a sinner. So the 'popular' Iraq COIN narrative serves us up both. Problem is if you look at it objectively and critically you can make out either sinner or saint to be in either camp, depending on your haigiographical bent. (I don't see Ricks and the cheer squad up for a robust analysis of MNSTC-I triumphs during 2004/2005 for some reason....)
Granted, I only saw Odierno as MNC-I commander. But there was no doubt in my mind that he not only 'got it', but that he was driving the bus regarding the day to day conduct of the surge (which was his job - the MNF-I job is and was distinctly different). Now, maybe he did have a 'road to Damascus' moment between Div Comd and Corps Comd. But I doubt it. So I think it is a bit rich that the correspondent presents the situation vis a vis his appointment in such a manner.
In a related observation, I think that a portion of the 'COIN community of interest' needs to 'chill' and to move beyond the Animal Farm style simplistic reductionism that is becoming evident in their increasingly strident calls for more change.
The way ahead is through professional, objective engagement, underpinned by logic and reason. Backhand , offhand or inaccurate comments about key players are unlikely to help.
Cheers
Mark
Bookmarks