3/24/2008 8:21:42 AM
The credible threat of force is an important piece of diplomacy and a strong military is worth having.The problem lies with these 'half-assed' wars such as Vietnam and Iraq II: The Return of Bush. Politicians lack the political strength to allow the military to do what it's supposed to do: wreak havoc and destruction. As a result, we fail. In the case of Iraq, the military is also being called upon to rebuild a country and prop up a foreign government--something it was never designed to do.The lessons of how political and military objectives need to align for victory is nothing new. Clausewitz has been telling us this since 1832. Too bad civilian leaders aren't required to do the same reading as military leaders.
3/24/2008 8:51:29 AM
Exactly, if the time comes to war it should be a situation where the majority of americans support it, congress declares it, and america mobilize into a full on war where we absolutely crush whoever we are against. None of this business as usual oh by the way we are at war.
3/24/2008 11:03:45 AM
3/24/2008 8:02:49 PM
I agree with TerdFerguson when it comes to war or things truly resembling it -- in other words, what we have in Iraq now. I'm confident that if we'd mobilized our full efforts towards this conflict as we have towards others in the past, something much more closely resembling victory could've been achieved by now.However, I am not of the opinion that US military forces should only be deployed for full-on wars. A far lesser level of involvement seemed to do the Kosovars OK, whether they deserved it or not.
3/25/2008 3:07:47 AM
I can't speak for TerdFerguson, but I didn't mean to imply that the military should only be used in all-out conflict, or that Iraq should be a fully involved conflagration. By 'half-assed' I meant that conflicts are not given both the political and military attention that they deserve, i.e. not ensuring that conditions are conducive for victory both politically and militarily. In the case of Iraq, political needs (minimal number of troops, restricted budget, minimal casualties) have diverged so far from military needs (more troops, more resources, and a freer hand in dealing with insurgents) that failure has become a much more realistic outcome than victory.MacArthur and Japan are certainly a nation building success story, but I'm hard pressed to think of another example. Regardless, I believe the initial conditions that lead to the successful rebuilding of Japan (namely our demonstrated willingness to use whatever force necessary and the destruction of Japan's social, political, and economic structure) are not present in Iraq.
3/27/2008 10:47:46 AM
bttt
5/21/2008 10:30:10 PM