Reflections on the War in Iraq - Part III: Execution [112c]
65
THE GAME CHANGES
MY VIEWS ON WAR are situational. Wars are a horrific, but sometimes necessary instrument of political power; I am not one to say they should never be used; I don't even say they should be used pre-emptively because you can never predict every situation that may confront a nation. But, in ALL cases, war should be used rarely and very carefully. History as shown, however, most recently from Vietnam, that when a nation decides to go to war, there should be no holding back. It should be prosecuted to the fullest extent possible with the maximum amount of resources the nation has available to it and with careful, complete, and comprehensive strategic, operational, and tactical planning for pre- and post-war operations.
We didn't do this for Vietnam and vowed never to make this mistake again; when I went to Air War College in 1991-1992, they drilled that concept into our heads. As I have said in other hubs, I was a supporter of our involvement in Vietnam and even had to volunteer to serve over there after I finished flight training in 1972. I am still convinced America made the right decision in trying prevent North Vietnam from overrunning the South; to me it was both a humanitarian and national security issue. I felt the same way for Panama, Iraq I, but not Granada; I feel the invasion of Afghanistan clearly a just war.
And now, on March 30, 2003, when President Bush ordered American troops back into Iraq second time to finish what many thought his father had left undone, we were committed to another, simultaneous war. Consequently, my views about what we must do in Iraq had to change and as a result, I because a reluctant, but nevertheless resolute supporter of strong action in Iraq; I absolutely was against being there in the first place, but, once there, it was clear we must prosecute the war with as much ferocity, focus on purpose, with clear objectives as possible with no turning back.
Of the wars, or combat actions I listed so far following Vietnam; Granada, Panama, Iraq I, Afghanistan, and Iraq, in only three of those, Granada, Panama, and Iraq I, did we follow the dictum we learned from Vietnam on how to fight such engagements. It is obvious to me that President Bush II, Dick Cheney, and Donald Rumsfeld never attended Air War College for they did, at the strategic level, about everything wrong that you could think of from six months before they pulled the trigger.
How Not To Fight a War
I won't spend too much time rehashing all of the failures of the Bush administrations in executing their war, but I do think some highlighting will be beneficial. The ineptitude of the trio who ran the Iraq war, Bush-Cheney-Rumsfeld, only became clear in hindsight, but hints of the lack of planning and lack of understanding did come soon after the invasion began.
The initial invasion plan, the operational and tactical plan seemed to be sound; Hussain's forces crumbled under superb execution by our troops. But then things started to fall apart as indicated by:
1) the lack of control our forces had over Iraq's nationaltreasures and museums; there apparently was no plans to secure these extremely valuable historic and cultural artifacts and records; it is not like they didn't have plenty of time and man power to do so.
2) a complete lack of understanding of where the sentiments of the populuslay; thinking the Shi'a majority would automatically lay out the red carpet for us, not realizing they were still very angry over President Bush I leaving them to hang out to dry and die after the first Iraq War.
3) a complete lack of understanding of the tribal hatred between the Sunnis, Shi'a, and Kurds and the nature of tribalism.
4) a refusal to learn from the history of the British in Iraq and an apparent determination to repeat their mistakes.
5) a refusal to learn from Vietnam about how to fight counter-insurgency operations (the cold-war, tank-oriented lobby in the military never lost control even after the Vietnam fiasco)
This all became apparent just a year or two into the war, not too long after "Mission Accomplished" was declared by the President, where there were many more years to go and several thousand lives yet to be lost. "Mission wasn't Accomplished" because, instead of applying overwhelming force history shows was necessary, Rumsfeld convinced Bush he could "win" this war on the cheap; he lied and he violated many basic rules of warfare in doing so.
There is also no question anymore that the Sunni's intransigence, the al-Qeada's appearance and growth, and the radical Shi'a cleric Sayyid Muqtadā al-Ṣadr (Arabic: سيد مقتدى الصدر) revolt, caught Bush-Cheney-Rumsfeld completely by surprise; except for Sadr, this should not have happened, they were predictable. They, and the American military were not prepared to dealwith the ensuing three-pronged onslaught. America suffered from a mishandled war from 2004 to 2007, until President Bush finally "saw the light" and changed tactics, with a little help from Senator McCain and a plethora of Democratic critics, to a proper counter-insurgency operation run by actual military counter-insurgency professionals, headed by General Petraeus, instead of cold-war left-overs.
The war was at it heights as was the death rate and cost when the surge began and General Petraeus took over changing forever, I hope, the way we fight these wars. The new way of fighting began in Feb 2007 and was fully implemented by Jun 2007, when the last of the surge troops arrived; casualty and hostility figures began to fall dramatically, never to rise again after four long years of futile, then failing effort; we were heading toward another Vietnam.
$900 billion spent, over 33,000 wounded, over 4000 killed. Such is the price of hubris and ineptitude.
On December 20, 2011, the battle flag of the last American forces from Iraq reached American soil, the Iraq War was officially over.
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RELATED LINKS
- Twin Towers on September 11, 2001
Can you remember what you were doing ten years ago on March 3 or August 9 (If one of those is your birthday or anniversary, please disregard lol)? How about eight years ago? Seven? Ok, TWO years ago, anything? I didn't think so. What's the problem?.. - What I Remember The Day The Twin Towers Fell
It’s been 10 years. On Sept. 11, 2001 I was getting ready for work and I was watching the Today program. I popped into the living room where the television was playing, and glanced up to see a shot of a tall building with a river behind it. I saw... - Sept 11, 2001 NYC-An Eyewitness Account
September 11, 2001 was a beautiful day in NYC. The sun was shining like a gigantic diamond, surrounded by a surreal blue. Everything looked good and clean-the sky looked good enough to eat. I was smiling at world and it seemed to be smiling back... - Remembering Sept 11th 2001, The Pentagon and World T...
September 11, 2001 is another day that will live in infamy. It is certainly a day I will never forget for it struck as close to home to me without me actually being in the Pentagon. This is my rememberence. - Reflections on the War in Iraq - Part I [107a]
On December 15, 2011, America's military involvement, which began March 30, 2003, in Iraq officially ended, although there are a few more troops left to move to Kuwait and then bring home. I worked in or near the Pentagon, it depended on the year, du - Reflections on the War in Iraq - Part 2 [107b]
On December 15, 2011, America's military involvement, which began March 30, 2003, in Iraq officially ended, although there are a few more troops left to move to Kuwait and then bring home. I worked in or near the Pentagon, it depended on the year, du
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ME, the hegomony that you speak of is pretty expensive. Besides being obligated to take on all the worlds problems, how have we benefitted? We have been shown the limitations of miliary power, as it appears that people are going to do as they please ultimately, anyway. Everybody snuggles under the nuclear umbrella we provide, without cost to them.Being number 3 does not mean that I have to submit to domination from someone else. The focus is now on economic affairs as the concept of who has the biggest battleships was a measuring stick a century ago. We need to focus on being number one in R&D, education, economic growth that is sustainable, saber rattling never seems to get us there.
We may have to agree to disagree on this one. We may not have an objective of conquest in a military sense, but American influence has been counterproductive in many circumstances. By our example we perpetuate the "big stick' attitude of using your status to imtimidate others. While, it may seem unrealistic to think that nations could coexist as equals, we have to diffuse the bomb that will unravel our world at some point.The arrogant big shot by definition can never be the benovolent good guy, not really. Perhaps, it is from the perspective of who is observing.
Thanks for listening...
Yeah, ME, I am an addict with too much time on his hands
Why is the drive to be number 1? I don't know that I want to pay the price for being number 1 as it seems more fraught with disadvantages for the man in the street and is form of bragging rights that has no real substance. I could be a Denmark with more attention spent on internal matters and less on controlling the planet. We all know that hindsight is always 20/20. The real issues were not so much Communism, but the need to control others from an economic standpoint. What do you think were the real reasons surrounding the Cuban revolution. You are right, we shouldn't let our guard down, put having 1000 military installation around the globe is overkill. Let's focus on our own defense in the least globally invasive way possible. As we learned in school eventually enough kids will get together to bring down any bully. We need better diplomats as we have seen that the 'big stick' idea his limited practical application in todays world. Just a few thoughts, Cred 2
I am still convinced America made the right decision in trying prevent North Vietnam from overrunning the South; to me it was both a humanitarian and national security issue. I felt the same way for Panama, Iraq I, but not Granada; I feel the invasion of Afghanistan clearly a just war
We may disagree here, when I look at the casualties and money spent Vietnam it was an abyssmal failure. This is all just geopolitical games that we can no longer afford to engage in. Afghanistan is justified as a direct pursuit after an enemy who has attacked American soil, all the rest, I question. Panama and Granada were skirmishes. IraqI was superb because of international cooperation and shared risks and burdens.
We cannot, due to restraints on the treasury and material resources, police the planet as the right seems to endlessly advocate, nor do I have a desire to. The planet has been a ball of confusion since the beginning, so what makes us think that we can untangle the yarn? World War II was really the last good war. We cannot afford anymore Koreas and cold war politics.
As always this is a great article, happy holidays Cred2
Your welcome Esoteric...it's old Horrors for me. 8 years of horrific madness. And for people to say "Oh forget it, it's over"...I will never understand that attitude.
To me, bringing that madhouse to Justice is the answer to our problems now.
But not enough people agree, and they will sail on as if it never happened.
Anything we face since then is simply the reaping of what they sowed, IMO.
Here's interesting info:
"At A congressional hearing examining the march to war in Iraq, Republican congressman Walter Jones posed "a very simple question" about the administration's manipulation of intelligence: "How could the professionals see what was happening and nobody speak out?"
Colonel Lawrence Wilkerson, Colin Powell's former chief of staff, responded with an equally simple answer: "The vice president."
Timeline of lies:









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My Esoteric Hub Author 5 months ago
Credence, I have a feeling we aren't that far apart in reality and the real difference is that I am not stating my position effectively such that it reflects what you suggest, because there is little I disagree with in what your say, yet still gets across my feeling on never letting another Soviet Union take hold in the world, nor becoming isolationists. Maybe that will come out in other hubs that I write.