http://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2007/01/who_betrayed_the_military.html

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January 07, 2007 


Who betrayed the military?


Douglas Hanson
The exchange and
<http://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2007/01/rewriting_the_rules_of_war_an.h
tml>  rebuttal  about our failures in prosecuting post-WW II conflicts to
total victory has brought to light critical issues that need to be resolved
for ensuring success in the Iraq Campaign and the larger Global War on
Terror.  However, in an otherwise reasonable critique of Greg Richards'
comments, Col. Snodgrass makes an astonishing charge against the President:

In my opinion, Bush has betrayed the military by not enlarging the force to
cope with the enormous worldwide mission he has given it, by not sending
enough force to Iraq to deal with an insurgency, and by not trashing the
Vietnam-era limited war ROE and destroying the logistical resupply sources
for the war in Iran and Syria.

While I have strongly spoken out for the need for additional resources and
troops, Col. Snodgrass goes over the top by first, even levying the serious
charge of betrayal, and second, by dumping on one man the Herculean task of
cleaning up the fetid swamp that is the DC political and military
establishment.  In my opinion, Snodgrass is simply continuing a Vietnam era
tradition of placing all responsibility
<http://www.americanthinker.com/2006/05/the_counterinsurgency_bugaboo.html>
for failed wartime operations solely on the political leadership in an
attempt to defend Pentagon and flag officer bureaucratic shenanigans.
Therefore, the record needs to be compared to the Colonel's broad-brush
assertions.

 

Snodgrass reminds us that "Bush came to office pledging to the U.S. military
that 'help was on the way.'"  I also complained about this unfulfilled
promise
<http://www.americanthinker.com/2006/07/a_warning_from_the_army_chief.html>
last summer, but provided detail on some players in the military hierarchy
who were more interested in turf protection and deflecting past misdeeds
than in winning wars.

 

The troop strength question and the need to expand the force are hot-button
issues that have been fraught with deception and media spin much to the
delight of former and current leaders who after 9-11, continued to play the
90s game of sandbagging
<http://www.weeklystandard.com/Content/Public/Articles/000/000/003/613twavk.
asp>  the Congress and the President on troop requirements.  Snodgrass seems
to think GW, who by all accounts, respects and values military judgment
should have been able to peek into the darkest recesses of the minds of
generals who played fast and loose with the facts during
<http://www.americanthinker.com/articles.php?article_id=4922>  congressional
testimony on strength figures and unit readiness.

 

As a seasoned player in Washington, perhaps Rumsfeld should have seen
through this charade, but he didn't; or if he did, he certainly failed to
fix the problem.  Therein is the real issue.  

 

We can fault the President and his SecDef for tolerating this sorry
situation and for ignoring the need to clean out the Pentagon cesspool; but
the mess is largely of the military's own making
<http://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2006/04/the_shinseki_troop_strength_my.
html>  .  Claiming that the President "betrayed the military" is like
complaining the new CEO won't underwrite your previous deficit spending and
concurrently place the blame on his new VP for operations for the fabricated
financial reports that were submitted to the board for the past decade.
This of course, has been the standard tactic for deflecting responsibility
for outcomes in war: blame the boss using pithy media-supplied sound
<http://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2006/05/colin_powells_latest_rehabilit.
html>  bites, or simply gloss
<http://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2006/11/karpinskis_delusions.html>
over  gross battlefield incompetence.

 

On funding the war, Snodgrass pays special attention to "the typical
Republican attempt to 'do defense on the cheap.'"  I also agree with his
assessment in a general sense, especially concerning the party that has
historically portrayed itself as being the pro-defense bunch.  But leaving
out the disloyal opposition is disingenuous, especially since the entire
Congress collectively holds the purse strings to fund an expansion of the
military.

 

Case in point: Hillary Clinton and the DLC convened in July of 2005 and
announced <http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,163619,00.html>  an
initiative to increase our troop strength by 100,000 to ensure victory in
Iraq (stop laughing).  Here's the catch; Americans must vote for Democrats
to regain the majority in Congress for this to happen.  Of course, the good
Senator and her compatriots fail to explain why something so vital for the
war effort would have to wait until January of 2007.  I guess we'll all find
out the secret plan to boost our troop strength in the next few weeks (I'm
not holding my breath).

 

In addition to typical Capitol Hill political maneuverings over money,
Snodgrass apparently forgets that the administration has been using the same
appropriation model that FDR and our WW II Congress used
<http://www.americanthinker.com/2006/12/money_and_waging_war_the_myth.html>
to fund that global conflict.  However, there was a critical difference in
force readiness that spoke volumes about our military leadership and its
beltway money games.  FDR and Congress funded a two year military build up
prior to Pearl Harbor, while GW and the American taxpayer had to spend an
additional $46 billion to bring our deployable troop strength up to what it
should have been on 9-11 - a level that for years was repeatedly touted by
the beltway military machine as reflecting reality.

 

Life's good, if you don't really have to deliver on your ability to deploy
troops to battle.  Pity the Commander-in-Chief who actually has the chutzpah
to order our military to war without permission from those who ostensibly
work for him.

 

And finally there's the question of the limited-war ROE.  Again, I have
addressed the need for a concerted regional approach
<http://www.americanthinker.com/2004/10/where_we_stand_ii.html>   to winning
the war that entails dealing with Iraq's
<http://www.americanthinker.com/2004/04/advantage_iran.html>  neighbors.
So, are we to believe that the President was solely responsible for not
lifting limited war restrictions?  Was this another of his "betrayals?"

 

Absolutely not.

 

Col. Snodgrass cites Col. Harry Summers' excellent book, On
<http://www.amazon.com/Strategy-Critical-Analysis-Vietnam-War/dp/0891415637/
sr=1-1/qid=1167945415/ref=pd_bbs_sr_1/104-3667035-4387900?ie=UTF8&s=books>
Strategy to educate us on our basic misunderstanding of the geo-strategic
alignment during the Vietnam War.  But he neglects to mention Summers'
equally important revelations of our military's flawed approach to
accomplishing the strategic goals of the war, as vague as they were.

 

Simply put, while LBJ and McNamara micro-managed the war and had a habit of
shunning advice from the Joint Chiefs, the military for its part had little,
if anything to offer the civilian leadership.  Keeping quiet or being "yes"
men on important strategy sessions for fear of digging into someone else's
rice bowl or perceiving a threat to one's career was the order of the day
for operations in Iraq as well as in Vietnam.

 

Prior to major GWOT operations, several public accounts confirm that the
President pointedly asked military leaders if the units and support assets
assigned were sufficient for victory.  This was also GW's primary concern
for any decision
<http://www.amazon.com/My-Year-Iraq-Struggle-Future/dp/0743273893/sr=1-1/qid
=1167961676/ref=pd_bbs_1/104-2978765-5631131?ie=UTF8&s=books>  on
reconstruction operations.  Here is what he got in return for all of his
deference to his generals:

*       A campaign in Afghanistan that while successful, played up "new
wave" warfare using Special Forces and precision munitions as the
end-all-be-all, while ignoring the decisive contribution of indigenous
mechanized forces.  See; we can do it on the cheap, said CENTCOM. 
*       A classic lightning campaign in Iraq that toppled a regime, and then
ignoring <http://www.americanthinker.com/2005/08/strategy_and_saddam.html>
tens of thousands of loyal Baathist troops and intelligence operatives still
roaming the countryside.  Without hunting down and killing or capturing the
sizable remnants of Saddam's forces, a transition to stability and support
operations was made based on an overwhelming desire to just get the hell
out. 
*       The military denied
<http://www.americanthinker.com/2006/06/saddams_wmd_discovery_and_deni.html>
that its own units recovered substantial amounts of WMD despite open source
accounts and eye witness reports.  The Defense Intelligence Agency also
fought release of unclassified documents supporting an Iraq-Al-Qaeda link.

This of course, was all Bush's fault.

 

Col. Snodgrass can certainly make the case that the President and the SecDef
were extremely lax in keeping the American's head in the game, and were
indecisive in altering the course of the war in contravention of the tons of
advice from highly credentialed
<http://www.americanthinker.com/2006/11/the_generals_fantasy_wars.html>
active and retired soldier-statesmen.  But in light of an embedded
opposition to all things Bush, and the missteps and power plays in the
military establishment, I must ask: who has really betrayed whom?



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