"New Iraqi Army" (Posted September 30, 2003)
I'm not sure what to make of this.
We are planning to build the new Iraqi army up to 40,000
strength in one year instead of two as originally planned:
The most controversial aspect of the new
plan, in Washington if not Iraq, is likely
to be its reliance on officers from the old Iraqi army. That marks a sharp
break with the strategy of wholesale "de-Baathification"
that has been pressed by Ahmed Chalabi, a member of
the interim Governing Council who until recently was the Pentagon's favorite
Iraqi.
Are we abandoning de-Baathification in the new Iraqi army?
I hope not. I felt that it
would be possible to use lower ranking Iraqis from the former military and that
a general rule of getting rid of colonels and above would be enough to de-Baathify the Iraqi military. Lower ranking Baathists could be cashiered on an individual basis as
required, of course, but the higher ranks should go. This article doesn't say
what ranks we will rely on. Nor does it explain if wholesale de-Baathification meant total or just deep.
This article
says our de-Baathification was top-level only:
During the party's
34-year-rule, as many as 1.5 million of Iraq's 24 million
people were members. But only about 25,000 to 50,000 had full-fledged party positions
— the elite targeted by U.S. officials.
Man, I hope we aren't
relaxing this depth of purging to allow higher ranking Baathists
in. We shouldn't risk letting Baathists corrupt the
new army. But lower ranking Baathists need a reason
to join the government (and coalition's) side. (And note too, how our purges
work: the purged Baathists are allowed to apply for
early retirement benefits.)
And while I'm at it, how was
"disbanding" the Iraqi military in May a mistake? I could have sworn
the Iraqi army collapsed and went home en masse during the campaign. Wasn't
"disbanding" it a mere formality at that point? Just how many formed
Iraqi units were sitting around the barracks waiting to work for us?
I hope the administration
isn't letting the panic mongers push them into an unwise decision.
"Pakistani Tribal Areas" (Posted September 30, 2003)We are working on the Pakistani "tribal areas" adjacent to Afghanistan to hunt Taliban and al Qaeda thugs, but the locals are not hospitable to our efforts.
The Pakistani government reached an agreement with tribal elders in Waziristan about 10 months ago to allow army checkpoints and patrols in their territory in return for building schools and hospitals and improving irrigation.The tribal area Pakistanis are not happy with the civic improvements delivered and are sympathetic to the Taliban and al Qaeda.
This region is not quite a sanctuary but the local support and inability of the US and Pakistani forces to have a persistent presence in the area means small groups can operate there and get into Afghanistan to make mischief. It certainly means that one man-if Osama really is alive, although I tend to think he is with Jimmy Hoffa now-can elude capture for a while.
A hostile Pakistan would make this situation a heck of a lot worse. We balance so many competing forces to fight the terrorists and terrorist-supporting states. It is a wonder we do so well.
"Still Defending the Baathists" (Posted September 29, 2003)
Jessica Mathews of the Carnegie Endowment for American Defeat (oops, that's "International Peace" at the end) is at it again. After her earnest pre-war attempts to keep Saddam in power with armed inspection regimes and threats of nuclear annihilation if they ever used WMD, Mathews is trying to get the Baathists into the government of Iraq and turn over the reins of power as fast as possible:
Beginning with the decision to send the Iraqi army home without pay, and reinforced by "de-Baathification" and other decisions, the message has been inadvertently sent that the United States considers Sunnis, Baathists and Saddam Hussein loyalists to be one and the same. They are not. With no political party and what many feel to be no voice in the present government, Sunnis feel disenfranchised. It is no coincidence that the worst violence is in Sunni regions. This is not an issue that can wait.The poor former torturers and killers feel disenfranchised. The poor babies can't get a dangling chad counted if their lives depended on it, I guess. Is this woman serious? Just what does it take to become the president of her organization?
I'm seriously impressed with her ability to examine the facts and draw conclusions. (And let's just ignore her misinterpretation of Powell' six-month "deadline" for writing a constitution. First, he explained it was not a deadline. Second, he made it clear that it was a timeline after a drafting convention is formed. Two big factors, I'd say). Is she really saying that ruling out the senior elements of the Baath party's terror apparatus is wrong? What would this say to the people who had their ears lopped off and their tongues ripped out by those formerly enfranchised Sunni Baathists? What kind of sick puppy is she that she thinks the victims should just forget two decades and more of oppression and death? Sunnis can play a role in Iraqi society-once they stop shielding the Baathists and accept that they cannot control 100% of the pie with 15% of the population. They must accept that killing Shias and Kurds in mass numbers for fun and profit is not a civil right of the Baathist Sunnis.
But this sums up her attitude, I guess:
It is, after all, their country. The sooner we can convince Iraqis and the rest of the world that we understand this, and the sooner we can add the legitimacy conferred by a U.N. political role, the greater our still slim chances of success. We will need all the help we can get.The Iraqis seem to understand they are better off now. And I don't give a rip about a world that sees Iraqis with a boot on their neck as superior to allowing the United States to lead the effort to remove the boot. The UN's legitimacy role is small and we should give up little to get it. And with success adding up, that she still sees our chances of success as slim is amazing. Can we fail? You bet. But our chances of success are immeasurably better without the sad advice of Mathews. Mostly, I'm unhappy she uses the pronoun "their" when she says it is after all, "their country." I may be unfair but she seems to think "their" refers to the Sunni Baathists who used to provide the deadly stability she supported so warmly.
"The UN Should Have No Significant Role in Iraq" (Posted September 29, 2003)
I continue to believe that only cosmetic or secondary roles should be given to the UN in regard to Iraq. Too much rides on our success to trust the UN to do the right thing. As this article notes:
If the U.N.'s position is that neither it nor its personnel can take the risks that United States personnel are taking routinely, then it is hard to see how it can fulfill any role in Iraq. Indeed, turning over civil authority, or any authority, to an organization that is afraid to enter the country it is supposed to administer is self-evidently absurd.Truly, the way the UN has turned tail and run away after naively thinking they were "different" than the US (read that "better") and so immune to enemy attack, should show us how they would do. Bosnia should show us what a full blown UN commitment would result in: UN forces only concerned about force protection and counting the number of times the enemy commits atrocities. At some point, the UN will be embarrassed enough to issue tough talk but then will not follow through. I shudder to think of what would happen within any UN "safe havens" in the Sunni triangle.
So enough talk of turning over Iraq to the UN. That is only a (short) step to turning Iraq over to the Baathists.
We're doing just fine, thank you. Iraq is demonstrably better and we don't need to be rescued.
Exit strategy, indeed. We work for victory.
"The Press and Iraq"
(Posted September
26, 2003)
Given the complaints in the blogosphere about overly negative press coverage on Iraq,
an exchange on MSNBC's "Countdown with Keith Oberman" (or whatever
his names is—I rarely watch it and only did because a story on Alanis Morissette was mentioned—I
like her, live with it) was amusing and heartening.
Keith introduced the story on
the bombing of the NBC headquarters in Baghdad, asserting it is one more in a long line of bad
things happening in Iraq. But when he went to Bob Arnott
in the field, Arnott directly contradicted Keith by
noting all the good things that are happening and that the bombing actually
masked this news!
It was a pleasure to hear. I
don't expect or want feel-good news since we need information to determine how
we are doing. But I think maybe the overly negative tone may subside in favor
of some balance. Maybe I'm too hopeful but this exchange was a pleasure to
behold. Kudos to Arnott.
"Pakistani Cooperation" (Posted September 26, 2003)
Given the problems we are
having with shutting down the Taliban and al Qaeda in
Pakistan, the topics of this meeting by
the Pakistan Defense Consultative Group are
interesting. I hope the upbeat assessment by the US in the statement will be felt on the ground real
fast.
"The Saddam-al Qaeda Links" (Posted September 25, 2003)Will the yahoos who still deny any al Qaeda-Saddam link read this and explain to me just who is lying about this connection? God, they can see connections between the war and somebody who knows a guy who knows Cheney who owns some Haliburton stock, but this they can't see...
I am seriously getting peeved about the repeated denials by the anti-war side that Saddam had any links to terrorism. And for the last time, nobody on the pro-war side said that Saddam directed or planned 9-11.
"The Anti-War Side Misleads (Again)" (Posted September 25, 2003)
The anti-war side has been debating with itself over whether Iraq posed an "imminent" threat to us. The pro-war side never said it. The anti-war side has been feverish in its repeated arguments that there is no link between Saddam and 9-11 despite the fact that the pro-war side has not argued such a link.
Now there is a new lie for the anti-war side to promote. The idea that it is an outrage that the President wants to spend $87 billion on rebuilding Iraq. The anti-war side is outraged that we would spend so much when they have domestic programs they'd love to fund. The only problem is that this figure too is a lie. $65 billion is for military operations while $22 billion is for reconstruction work. I'm not saying this is chump change, but the members of Congress claiming we are seeking the full amount for Iraq are just willingly spreading a lie. It is all the more shocking that they are upset since they are the "nation building" party that complained the administration wasn't serious about the post-war. This is another lie, of course. We underestimated how bad Iraq was even without any bombing at all (and we did avoid hitting the infrastructure) and we thought we'd get oil flowing faster after we prevented the destruction of the oil wells. Now, we need our money to jump start this.
I would love it if the opposition would debate instead of seeking to score debating points.
I'd be ecstatic if I thought they wanted to debate means to achieving victory.
"Baghdad Residents Not in Revolt" (Posted September 24, 2003)
A new
Gallup poll surveying the opinions of Baghdad residents is out. Sixty-two percent think ousting Saddam was worth the hardships they have
endured since the invasion. Also, 47 percent said the country is worse off than
before the invasion and 33 percent said it is better off. Clearly, the
residents are weighing the freedom and elimination of torture against the
short-term difficulties with electricity and other utilities. Consider too that
part of this decline in electricity is because we ended the Saddam policy of siphoning
energy from the rest of Iraq to supply Baghdad's Sunnis. Also consider that a lot of those
Sunnis may still be nostalgic for Saddam.
It is also
comforting to see that people think Iraq will be better off in five years than
before the invasion by a 67-8 percent margin. Sixty percent think the Iraqi
governing council is doing a good job and half think the US authorities are doing a better job than
two months ago. These are all good signs of support in the Sunni triangle to
rebuke the Rallean view that the Iraqis are itching
to kill us, drive us out, and restore Saddam.
Of course, some
of those 67% who think Iraq will be better in 5 years may be Sunnis
who think this way because they believe Saddam will return them to their glory
days of privilege and stomping on throats.
We will stay to
make sure a stable Iraq based on rule of law prevails.
"Pakistan Safe
Havens" (Posted September
24, 2003)
More evidence
that the Pakistanis are not working hard enough to prevent the Taliban from
using Pakistani territory as a base for attacks in Afghanistan.
We simply have to shut down
this base area. I assume our intel
and special forces people are working the ground, but if Pakistani elements are
shielding the Taliban or letting sympathizers in the border area shield them,
we are operating at a severe handicap.
"Hot Line" (Posted September 23, 2003)
From strategypage.com,
again:
September 21, 2003: Taiwan and the US have set up
a "hot line" (a secure and robust communications system between
government officials in both countries.) The existence of this communications
system was kept quiet until recently. The system implies that America would
quickly come to the aid of Taiwan if China attacked,
because such "hotlines" are only created to deal with crises
situations..
Well, it sort of shows we are
planning for war. But we've always prepared for war over Taiwan. What it really says is that we did not like the
situation we found ourselves in during the 1996 crisis when we deployed two
carrier battle groups east of Taiwan as a show of support to Taiwan in the face of Chinese provocations. We really didn't
like that we had no idea what the Taiwanese were doing or planning to do. They
could have started shooting and there we'd be.
What this story really says
is that we are not writing Taiwan a blank check to get us into a shooting war with the
PRC. It is more useful to diffuse a crisis, not fight a war. If something
happens out there, we will have more information to decide what to do—and to
influence Taiwan decisions.
"More on Stryker Brigades" (Posted September 23, 2003)
Once again, from strategypage.com,
more on Strykers:
September 23, 2003: The Stryker
brigades were created to get mobile American combat units to far off places in
a hurry. Each Stryker brigade contains 3494 troops and over 300 Stryker LAVs (of various types.) The total weight of the brigade is
about 13,000 tons. In addition, you need a steady flow of supplies (about 600
pounds per man per day) to keep the brigade in action. That adds another 1,000
tons (or more) a day. You want to have the Stryker brigade go in with a least three days of supplies, and have another 30 days worth
stockpiled nearby. No problem moving a Stryker brigade by ship. It takes about
40 hours to load, or unload, the brigade from typical ships. Getting a Stryker
brigade to Korea (the port of Pusan), from Washington State, would thus
take about 11 days (loading, sea travel, unloading). The original concept was
to airlift the Stryker brigades to distant combat zones. But this has never
been practical because of a shortage of transports, higher priority users (like
the air force supporting their warplanes overseas) and the difficulty of
getting all that stuff on and off the transports. One recent RAND study
calculated that a Stryker brigade could get to Seoul, Korea (from Seattle,
Washington) faster by ship (by a couple of hours) than the same brigade could do
by air (from Washington State to Osan, Korea), mainly
because of the operational difficulties of moving a ready-for-combat ground
unit. It takes a lot of time, and precious airbase space, to load a Stryker
brigade onto transports, and then unload them at the other end. The basic
problem is that the air force has never seen it's
transports as practical transportation for any ground combat units except
paratroopers and small numbers of armored vehicles. Sure, the specs for air
transports always list what kinds of armored vehicles they can carry, but
that's mainly for show. The air transports are much more useful, and valuable,
moving spare parts for armored vehicles, crews for armored vehicles and just
about anything but the armored vehicles themselves. But sometimes fantasies
come to life, and that's what seems to have happened with the concept of moving
Stryker brigades by air.
I may be too suspicious, but
I suspect the calculations for getting a Stryker brigade from Washington State to Korea is a proxy for getting them from Washington State to the equally distant Taiwan. I wouldn't want light Strykers
in combat against the North Koreans. I'd want big ol'
Abrams and Bradleys.
Plus, I do have some doubts
about the airlifting of whole brigades. The one admitted scenario where it made
some sense is the Gulf to protect Kuwait from a sudden Iraqi
invasion and we need to rush armor to the front—and we took care of that scenario. For peacekeeping, another useful
scenario, we will never need to speedily airlift a Stryker brigade for this
mission.
Still, being able to airlift
even a task force or a team of Strykers for tactical
missions or to reinforce a paratrooper or airmobile airhead could be really
useful. We sent in a small amount of
heavy armor for the 173rd AB brigade in northern Iraq and a larger Stryker contingent may have been better.
I still think the Taiwan mission is most likely combat mission for the Stryker
brigade. They seem to be getting set up in the Pacific region and they would be
good in a fight against Chinese paratroopers or light infantry/marines trying
to invade Taiwan. In this scenario, sure, a boat ride might be just as
fast, but what if the Chinese are attacking Taiwan and going full tilt with a submarine blockade of Taiwan? It would take time to clear sea lanes and we might
not have that luxury. In that case, airlifting Strykers
in might be the only option to save Taiwan and show concrete and effective support.
"More Troops for Iraq?" (Posted September 23, 2003)
A resounding
"no" as I've been saying, too. We don't need Americans on static
guard duty and presence patrols. That's an Iraqi job. We must give the Iraqis a
stake in security and not just encourage an attitude of "let the Americans
do it." For the real combat jobs, we have enough and in the months to
come, the rotation plan will significantly reduce the number of our combat
brigades in Iraq. The article notes we've gone from 25 engagements per
day in July to about 15 today. They usually last a few minutes and so are not
terribly significant. I also agree that using Saddam's former security people
is a mistake. De-Baathification must be thorough or
we will undermine the new security institutions that we are building right from
the start.
"Law of the Jungle" (Posted September 23, 2003)
The President spoke to the UN
today and this is what Kofi Annan
had
to say about our invasion of Iraq:
In a speech to be
delivered minutes before Bush was due to speak, Annan
took an unusually blunt swipe at the world's only superpower, saying that
unilateral military action without U.N. authority risked returning the world to
the law of the jungle.
"My concern
is that, if it were to be adopted, it could set precedents that resulted in a
proliferation of the unilateral and lawless use of force, with or without
credible justification," Annan warned in his
prepared text.
My word,
what idiocy. It is so good I don't
even need to comment on Chirac's statements.
What was going on inside Iraq before April of this year if not the law of the
jungle? What was going on when Saddam invaded Kuwait in 1990 if not the law of the jungle? What would you
call Saddam's invasion of Iran (admittedly a nutso regime,
too, but where was the UN then?) if not the law of the jungle? What was the use
of poison gas on soldiers and unarmed civilians? What was the firing of
missiles at civilians in Israel if not the law of the jungle? In short, just what the
Hell is Annan even talking about? Is it really so
hard to recognize that we did more for the Iraqi people with our invasion than
the UN did with nearly a score of resolutions over a decade?
And given Iraq's own record of unilateral and lawless use of force,
is Annan seriously saying we are establishing
precedent? God, the idiocy of those saying that only now will
there be a proliferation of naked aggression because we attacked and liberated Iraq is truly stunning.
I like the precedent we set:
mess with us and you die.
"Central Front in the War on Terror?" (Posted September 23, 2003)
I am uncomfortable with the
idea that Iraq is the central front in the war on terror. Oh sure,
Islamists are rushing to their jihad by going to Iraq to fight us, but we did not invade Iraq to attract them in a "flypaper" strategy.
Yes, one reason we invaded Iraq was the fear that Saddam would funnel WMD to
terrorists. Yes, Saddam did support terrorism. Yes, Saddam had ties to al Qaeda. So, I do concede that destorying
Saddam's regime has a positive impact on the war on terror. But Saddam did not
order 9-11 and the major benefits of destroying Saddam are not directly linked
to the war on terror. The Iraq War was the elimination of a state pursuing
nuclear weapons that threatened vital interests in the Middle East (yes, that
includes oil you silly conspiracy mongers) whether they had nukes or not. This
is why North
Korea
was not first on the list. Ending Saddam's sheer evilness was a bonus rather
than a basic security reason for toppling his regime.
Iraq is only the central front in the war on terror in the
sense that it is the most prominent place we are currently fighting terrorists.
Even here, it is the Baathist resistance that is most
important to defeat. Once those lovelies are gone, Islamofascists
who flock to their Disney-like notion of Jihadworld are
a local threat for Iraqis to hunt down.
Even Afghanistan can't be counted as the central front anymore. At one
time, Afghanistan was the most prominent place and the central front
since it shielded al Qaeda and provided their
training, planning, and a logistics base. With the Taliban out, Afghanistan is just another place where Islamofascists
die on a regular basis. It is a localized problem for the new Afghan government
to solve (with our help).
Since the fall of the
Taliban, the "centra"l front of the war on
terror is global as law enforcement and intelligence agencies from friendly
countries ferret out diffused and scattered al Qaeda thugs
and their sympathizers. I have long said that the war on terror is not
primarily a military war. Calling Iraq the central front of the war on terror is misleading
and may make us think the war on terror is a series of military campaigns.
The Axis of Evil states
represent threats above and beyond terrorism by al Qaeda
scum. The war on Iraq was, in part, a preemptive war against nuclear rogue states
threatening us in the future. Yes, the possibility of terrorists getting nukes
is one supporting reason to end these states, but they would be dangerous
states even if Islamist terrorism did not exist. Just as true, al Qaeda is still dangerous even if they never get their hands
on WMD.
I concede that each is less
dangerous if the other element is destroyed, but the Axis of Evil and al Qaeda (and their fellow terrorists) are
separate although sometimes overlapping threats that must be dealt with on
their own terms. I strongly believe nailing Saddam was unquestionably in our
interests and will improve our safety. I just don't buy the idea that going
after Iraq was an integral part of the war on terror or that the
present fighting there is the central front. We get too confused when we
conflate the terror and nuclear threats. It also allows opponents of the war to
make the ridiculous claim that we created this new central front.
Actually, the terrorists
themselves make an error when they conflate the two. Instead of running off to Iraq where they face our battle-tested troops, they should
be attacking the West in our homes. Maybe there is something to that flypaper
strategy after all.
"Motive" (Posted September 22, 2003)
Interesting, if this
terrorist is believable (and if his assertions are checkable), but the 9-11
planning is supposed to have began in 1996.
For the last two years, some
even in this country have been saying that we deserved this attack. That Bush
was too aggressive and unilateral. That we failed to get the
Palestinians a state and were too tight with Sharon's Israel.
Yet planning apparently began
in 1996, in the age of lip-biting, sophisticated Euro-friendly American foreign
policy. The al Qaeda planning began before a cowboy
entered the White House. Before we expressed support for Sharon. Before Clinton's failed last-ditch effort to get an
Israeli-Palestinian deal. And certainly before we hit Sudan, Afghanistan, and Iraq in 1998.
What, pray tell, did we do to
deserve this? What policies are we supposed to embrace to end the hatred?
And remember, too, all that
silly talk about judging the "imminence" of Saddam's threats that
opponents of the war with Iraq insisted we engage in last year and which they
are reviving today. I guess al Qaeda wasn't an
imminent threat in 1996. Or 1997. Or
1998 when we launched a few cruise missiles at Osama
and a pharmaceutical plant. Certainly not in 1999.
Or 2000. Yet September 11, 2001 arrived anyway.
"Well This Should Get Their Attention"
(Posted September
22, 2003)
The President's speech to the
UN will apparently include this bit:
President Bush will tell the United
Nations on Tuesday that he was right to order the invasion of Iraq even without
the organization's explicit approval, and he will urge a new focus on
countering nuclear proliferation, arguing that it is the only way to avoid
similar confrontations.
Translation: I told you last
year that you yahoos needed to get serious about keeping nukes out of the hands
of madmen. I said I'd do something about it if you didn't. You didn't so I did.
Now, with the example of what America did this year, I repeat to you: do something
constructive or we will act—again. And, no, Mr. de Villepin,
don't wait for the translation before you answer.
Good. I would correct the
point that we just didn't have the UN's recent
approval rather than explicit
approval as the article says, given the status of all the prior resolutions and
the ceasefire that was based on Saddam obeying those resolutions.
"Power Outage Sparks Justified
Anger" (Posted September
22, 2003)
The vice mayor had this
to say about the power outages in the D.C. area:
"It is true we're spoiled. We're
used to the creature comforts," Hudnut said.
"But at this point, the power has been out for 72 hours. . . . I think
we've crossed that threshold where we're justified in being angry."
Explain to me again how the
Iraqi reaction to power shortages this summer means the Iraqis want us out of
their country and are positively pining for the days when there was power
enough for Baghdad air conditioners and wiring up the testicles of
Shiites. Ah, those were the days!
I'd say the Iraqis have been pretty understanding of the time it is taking to get
power back on.
Of course, D.C. area
residents don't have to weigh the benefits of living in a torture-free,
prosperous, democracy against power shortages. We did give the Iraqis the
chance to make that calculation now didn't we? As some might say, I suppose it
is a good thing that Saddam is gone.
"Excess to the Needs of the Army in Europe for Military Operational Reasons" (Posted
September 20)The US Army is closing two sites in the Netherlands where I believe we stored a set of equipment for a heavy brigade at each site:
The Department of Defense today announced that on Feb. 29, 2004, the U.S. Army, Europe (USAREUR) will cease operations at two military sites in the Netherlands. These facilities are the Combat Equipment Base Brunssum at Brunssum and Combat Equipment Base Vriezenveen in Almelo. Both of these sites had been used to store and maintain the Army's prepositioned stocks.
The closures will be completed incrementally as the Army Material Command consolidates the Army prepositioned stocks mission in Europe. These facilities in the Netherlands were identified as excess to the needs of the Army in Europe for military operational reasons.What a blast from the past and a sign of how far we've come since the Berlin Wall fell and the Soviet Union disintegrated. At one time, based on the position of troops at the end of World War II, American troops were based in southern German to defend the NATO front. A hodgepodge of nationalities defended on the North German Plain where the major Soviet offensive would try to reach the Rhine. To make up for this imbalance, we started to place equipment in the north so that we could airlift troops to the north to man the brigades and strengthen the northern front. (In addition to the equipment sets with the two American corps in the Fulda Gap and Hof Corridor.)
Now that equipment is excess to our needs. Outstanding. After so many years of struggling worldwide against Soviet advances, facing the Soviets in Europe, and turning back those in this country who thought we and the Soviet gulag state were morally equivalent, we won it all.
It is good to remember that tough struggles can be won. Even in the face of those who think we cannot win.
"Iraq
Casualties" (Posted September
19, 2003)
The report on our wounded in
action in Iraq during the month of August indicated a much higher
rate of action than previous post-Saddam fall combat. I think half of our WIA up
that point occurred in August. I looked at some killed in action figures when
the numbers didn't seem to add up. This is all by checking out press reports
and so is not a rigorous check.
First of all, through most of
June, casualties were still low enough that precise figures for American KIA
were not given. They'd say "about a dozen" or some such thing. On
June 20, we'd lost 16 KIA (16 in 50 days from May 1): about one every third
day. On July 1, we'd lost 22 (6 in 11 days from June 20): about one every other
day. The overall from May 1 still stood at about one KIA every third day 22 in
61 days). By July 9 we'd lost 29 and by July 10 we'd lost 31. By July 24 we'd
lost 41 and by August 1, when we started to see almost a week's lull, we'd lost
52 KIA. From July 1 to August 1 we therefore lost 28 in 31 days, or almost one
per day. On August 8 we lost 55 up to that point, on August 19 we
had lost 61, on August 24 we'd lost 64, and on September 2, right at another
lull, we'd lost 67 KIA since May 1. This works out to 15 lost in the 32 days
from August 1 to September 2. This is about one every other day. From September
2 to September 19, we lost 9 more bringing the total KIA since May 1 to 76.
Those last 9 KIA took place over 17 days, again at a rate of one every other
day.
So from May 1 to July 1 we
lost one soldier every third day. From July 1 to August 1 we lost nearly one
per day. From August 1 to September 2 we lost one every other day. That every
other day trend has continued through September.
So despite the upsurge in WIA
during August, that month was actually half as deadly for KIA than July. We
apparently stopped offensive action in August, perhaps letting our troops get
hit first more often rather than going after the enemy and therefore suffering
more WIA—but fewer KIA as we seem to have focused on force protection more
(more generously, we mistakenly thought the dead-enders were beaten). We've
gone back on the offensive, though more focused, in September and KIA rates have
not increased. Hopefully the WIA have dropped as we
regain the initiative.
It just isn't as dramatic as
I thought it would be—pretty steady in fact despite the increased infiltration
from neighboring states that has been reported. We must be getting them at a
pretty hefty clip.
Still, these are American
lives to be mourned and not counted as a metric of failure or success. It is
pretty low level and does not impact our ability to carry on operations. Enemy
casualties are nice but not a metric of success, either.
This is a better measure
of success.
"Iraq and al Qaeda" (Posted September 19, 2003)
Never thought Iraq directly sponsored or directed 9-11 attacks. I don't
recall the administration saying there was a direct command link—just that
"in light of" 9-11 we must look at Iraq under Saddam with a new perspective. So the fact that
the President explicitly said there is no 9-11-Saddam link should stand alone.
But anti-war critics are doing what they did for the last two years—refuted the
Saddam-9-11 link that was not made and then concluded that Saddam had no ties
to al Qaeda or terrorism generally.
Let us repeat this together—Saddam sponsored,
had ties to, and carried out terrorist acts. We took down Saddam's government
for the general terrorism sponsorship (among other reasons) and to prevent a
more lethal 9-11—not to avenge 9-11.
"Whither France?"
(Posted September
18, 2003)
I think I've been going easy
on France lately. We had an intern from France start in my office this fall. Although I suspected
colleagues were colluding in creating a hostile work environment for an entire
year, she seems perfectly nice. She is also about as far away from Paris without being Corsican or Italian, so my
Parisian-centered French bias continues unthreatened. Anyway, I can't keep this
bottle up forever.
So, this is how Friedman's column
starts today:
It's time we Americans came to terms with
something: France is not just our annoying ally. It is not just our jealous rival. France is becoming our enemy.
He recounts France's actions in the Iraq War question, is astounded that
France is posing as the champion of democracy in Iraq today, and is perplexed that France thinks it is in its national interest to see America fail in Iraq:
What
is so amazing to me about the French campaign — "Operation America Must Fail" —
is that France seems to have given no thought as to how
this would affect France. Let me spell it out in simple English: if America is defeated in Iraq
by a coalition of Saddamists and Islamists, radical
Muslim groups — from Baghdad to the Muslim slums of Paris — will all be
energized, and the forces of modernism and tolerance within these Muslim
communities will be on the run. To think that France, with its large Muslim minority, where
radicals are already gaining strength, would not see its own social fabric
affected by this is fanciful.
Friedman has to blame Bush
arrogance for failing to reach out after the fall of Baghdad to soften France's
attitude but this ignores the whole decade of the 90s when France opposed us in
Iraq and worked to protect Saddam. And this was during the humble Clinton administration. Friedman would have us believe that France would have changed its calculation of its interest if
only we'd been less "arrogant." Hogwash.
Unless Friedman is peddling the French "moderate" faction theory, I
don't think Paris was about to throw away its view of its national
interests in favor of a warm and fuzzy moment with Rumsfeld.
In the end, even Friedman admits he has doubts that this would have worked (so
why say it other than to snipe at the administration?)
Yet this is what is
happening:
Clearly,
not all E.U. countries are comfortable with this French mischief, yet many are
going along for the ride. It's stunning to me that the E.U., misled by France, could let itself be written out of the
most important political development project in modern Middle East history. The whole tone and direction of
the Arab-Muslim world, which is right on Europe's
doorstep, will be affected by the outcome in Iraq. It would be as if America said it did not care what happened in Mexico because it was mad at Spain.
I suppose I am too simplisme
to understand the subtleties of de Villepin's
geostrategic genius.
What really gets me is that
we are blamed for this possible breach. France has been screwing us over for a long time and we
ignore them, recalling Yorktown and the Statue of Liberty, and maybe getting all
wistful over the Left Bank. I wonder when the French elite start debating
"who lost America?"
Time to
read up on the Quasi
War again.
"Strategic Cooperation?" (Posted September 18, 2003)
The Chinese like to say they
are our friend in the war on terror. One part of our September 10 world we
should not forget is the crisis China provoked early in the Bush administration by ramming
one of our planes over international waters. The EP-3 incident gave
China information:
The F-8 pilot's death nevertheless
appears to have brought Beijing unforeseen
benefits in terms of access to highly sensitive US equipment
and information. "VQ-1 crews carry classified materiel as a matter of
routine. Classified materiel is necessary in executing the flight
mission," the JAGMAN report states, although subsequent detail is masked
out in the version provided to JDW.
"Destruction of classified materiel
in flight included jettisoning classified materiel out of the starboard overwing hatch (after PR-32 recovered from its uncontrolled
and rapid descent following the collision); smashing equipment with the onboard
axe and other hard objects and, upon landing, hand-shredding classified
papers."
However, the investigation concludes,
the effects of shock combined with a lack of sufficient time before the
emergency landing at Hainan's Lingshui
airfield failed to produce the desired result. "Compromise by the People's
Republic of China of
undestroyed classified materiel on PR-32 is highly probable and cannot be ruled
out," the report determines.
They may not be an enemy yet (and
may never be if we are lucky) but the Chinese are no friends yet either. Work
with them where our interests coincide but watch them carefully.
"Don't Count Europe as Lost" (Posted September 17, 2003)
As much as the governments of
France, Germany and Belgium along with the official EU bureaucracy tick me off,
we should not let our frustration rule out efforts to win the hearts and minds
of Europeans. Some of them like us and others at least share common goals. Do
not just accept the EU as an inevitable superpower. We should not promote
European political unity and we should not shrug our shoulders and say we might
as well accept it.
Just get our State Department
on board this idea and we may yet win over those who are winnable. Letting the
EU run Europe is no way to promote our interests. Check out Applebaum's article
on this.
"And Another One"
(Posted September
17, 2003)
I really wonder what O'Hanlon
is smoking. I seriously question his judgment based on his recent writings.
I used to not dismiss him out of hand, but did his PhD elevate him to echelon
above reality? His latest column builds on earlier suggestion that he most
certainly insists is neither appeasement nor giving in to blackmail or
otherwise being a tweed-jacket-wearing surrender monkey.
North
Korea
promised not to build nukes and we agreed to pay them. We paid and North Korea either has or soon will have nukes. O'Hanlon's strategy in response?
Faced with this dilemma, we need to
think bigger. We must offer much more to North Korea but demand
far more in return.
Wow. They took what we gave
and ignored their promises. So in his mind we should offer more but—here's the
reality-denying part—demand more. If Kim Jong Il was unwilling to give up his nukes, why not demand he
give up all WMD and toss in huge reductions in his conventional forces too! And
give up drug running, and kidnapping, and terrorism, and counterfeiting, and
everything else that earned him the Bronze in the Axis of Evil competition!
What imagination! What "thinking
outside the box!" And just look at all those footnotes backing him up (I'm
just guessing here).
What a crock.
Think bigger, indeed. I can
just imagine the North Korean meeting after this offer is made! They won't be
able to believe their good luck. Why the Hell shouldn’t the Pillspsycho
Doughboy not agree to accept more stuff in exchange
for bigger promises? Heck, he'll want to negotiate every few years after being
caught lying by a shocked West. He'll be rolling in DVDs and well-fed joy
brigade chicks at this rate.
O'Hanlon does let his PhD
credential show when he adds this caveat, "Of course, this approach might
well fail." Gee, ya think?
Gently and slowly squeeze the
nutjobs in Pyongyang so they don't get all agitated and they will break
without lashing out. We have time yet. Not much but we have time.
In the meantime, Iran beckons.
How close are they to getting nukes? I still say stopping the rogue without
nukes (and with Islamofascist terrorist links) from
getting its first nuke trumps stopping the isolated state with a couple nukes
from getting a dozen.
"Dunderhead" (Posted September 17, 2003)
Blix says that Saddam "probably" destroyed
most of his WMD ten years ago.
Yet in the mid-90s we
discovered his hitherto undiscovered biological warfare program and on the eve
of war this year the Iraqis agreed to destroy prohibited missiles. Is Blix really arguing that Saddam would not have had all the
WMD he wanted within 6 months of the UN signing off on Saddam's disarmament?
(Ok, longer for nukes I admit)
Ok, to be fair, Blix is only probably
a dunderhead. That we should have entrusted our security and our lives to this
man's judgment is a truly amazing proposition.
I will repeat my position in
brief on WMD and reasons for war. We went to war over his conventional and
terrorist threat to us and his neighbors; we went to war over his brutality to
his own people; and we went to war to deprive him of WMD. On WMD, I expected
that he did not have nukes but had the know-how, that he may have had
biological weapons but probably not, and that he did have chemical weapons
since he had them and used them repeatedly. I expected that if we left Saddam
in power (or his sons) that one day he would have all the WMD he wanted and he
would then pursue his Hellish nightmare of glory and probably use those weapons
again.
I still want to know what
happened to the chemical weapons and understand why everybody thought Saddam
had chemical weapons ready to use. Although Saddam's intentions were always the
most important thing about Iraqi WMD, this is still a crucial question to
understand.
"Pakistan Pisses Off al Qaeda" (Posted September 17, 2003)
Ok, I've worried that we
won't really nail al Qaeda and the Taliban in Afghanistan until we get the Pakistani border areas under
control. I've worried that Pakistan isn't doing enough and that maybe we need to get
tougher.
The problem for anyone
commenting on the war on terror is that we basically don't know jack. I've
repeatedly noted that the vast majority of what is going on in the war on
terror is unseen or ill-publicized (either from design or reporters finding it
easier to report elsewhere). Yet I and others must (ok, it isn't
"must" but we do) comment on the basis of what we read and hear—a
fraction of the truth.
From the always informative strategypage.com,
I find that the Pakistanis are doing more:
September 15, 2003: Pakistan is trying to
mend faces with local Islamic radicals in the face of al Qaeda
calling for the overthrow of the Pakistani government. Al Qaeda
is understandably upset because Pakistan has arrested, and turned over to the
US, some 500 real or suspected al Qaeda members in
the last two years. And recently, army troops and police have started moving
into tribal areas that have never been entered that way in the past. Al Qaeda had considered the tribal areas a sanctuary. However,
the Pakistani move does not cover all the tribal areas, but does make it more
likely that government forces would enter a tribal area where American and
Pakistani intelligence believes key al Qaeda members (like
Osama bin Laden) are hiding. Pakistan has also
been allowing numerous Americans in civilian clothes to operate with Pakistani
troops in tribal areas. These Americans have been seen regularly by tribesmen
and are probably CIA, FBI or Special Forces (who will often wear civilian
clothes when working for the CIA.)
The US has agreed
to provide spare parts and upgrades for Pakistanis two decade old F-16
fighters.
It is good that al Qaeda is angry since a serious threat against the
Pakistanis will lead them to seriously crack down on Islamists rather than try
to manage their anger away from Islamabad.
I'm not happy to hear that
the Pakistanis are trying to "mend fences" with the nutballs, though. Our job is to make sure they view each
other as enemies.
"Our Friends the French—Again" (Posted September 16, 2003)
The French government's
Transport Ministry pulled
the plug on a charter airline's contract to carry British troops to Iraq:
Transport
ministry officials were reported yesterday as saying the move had nothing to do
with safety but was a result of the intervention of the foreign ministry.
The
foreign ministry denied the report, saying there was "no political
motive". But British defence officials appeared
to confirm that the ban was political and not technical.
Ah yes. What is it about the
French and their precious air space? In
1986, we had to fly our F-111s around France to strike Libya. Did we and the British exceed our flight hours over France in 1944?
Perhaps an inquiry to the
French Ministry of Being a Total Pain to 'Allies' is in order.
[Note: I wrote this before I
read the Instapundit comment on this—with the above
passages quoted. One of the frustrations of blogging
is having someone beat me to the punch when I know I discovered it! One of the
pleasures is beating the big boys to a point. Alas, I posted too late for this
to be in the latter category…]
"Our Press is Free—And
They Were Free to Ignore the Truth" (Posted September 16, 2003)
John Burns has a sobering
account of how the Western press looked the other way in Iraq. For all the complaints about the loss of objectivity
for being embedded with American units in the war, as yet nobody has even begun
to address how news organizations embed themselves in totalitarian
governments—sucking up to maintain access. Reporting politely
so they can talk live from the scene. Never saying they are told what
not to say and led to say other things friendly to the regime. This they call
'news.'
Now, of course, the reporters
are reporting problems in Iraq—or at least the problems within a days drive from Baghdad. You think they're still looking away? Refusing to report
the truth? Or have they all suddenly decided that they will report what is actually
going on?
I'm betting on still
misreporting the truth. They're so embedded in their Vietnam analogy that no good news is possible for the most
part.
"Who Owns the Flag?" (Posted September 15, 2003)
So who owns the flag? The pro-Iraq War side or the anti-war side? An interesting
article on the "peace" protesters the last two years is illuminating.
The part at the end about the US flag really got me.
Peace demonstrators in 2003 took pains
to shun overt displays of anti-American sentiment and made a point of
displaying American flags, but most Americans were still put off by their
message.
Yes, the pro-war side does
not "own" the American flag. But I'd be a little more sympathetic if
those who do not want the public to disassociate them with patriotism didn't
simultaneously complain about those who "wrap themselves in the
flag," argue that we deliberately target civilians, sneer at "flag
waving," assert that patriotism is the "last refuge of a
scoundrel," and otherwise complain that displaying the flag creates a
"hostile environment" and is jingoistic and exclusive. Then they
throw in a cheap shot that the pro-war types only want to wrap granny in the
flag prior to shoving her off on an ice flow without social security benefits!
Those anti-war types
complaining about the public saying they are not patriotic really shouldn't get
so uncomfortable around the American flag in the absence of lighter fluid and
matches.
The broader issue of the
article of who was in the anti-war side is interesting too given that the
complaints we hear now are that the war should not have been fought without the
UN's approval or without concrete evidence of actual WMD ready to use in 2003.
The anti-war side could not be convinced and arguments that we should have
addressed their concerns are misplaced:
Those
who were strongly opposed to our invasion of Iraq were indifferent to the role of the United
Nations. About one-fifth opposed our military activity regardless of whether
the United
States had U.N. support or Iraq had weapons of mass destruction. A Gallup poll taken in early April 2003 showed that
15 percent of the respondents opposed the war "even if the U.S. finds conclusive evidence that Iraq has weapons of mass destruction."
One-tenth of all voters said that we should "never" have attacked Iraq. In another poll, about one-tenth of all
Americans said that they are "antiwar in general." And in yet another
public-opinion survey conducted in March 2003, almost one-fifth said that war
is "never morally justified."
Face it, they wouldn't be
convinced of the need to fight if—oh, I don't know—let's say if we lost 3,000
innocents in a single day to fanatics who seized our airplanes. Truly,
if the fourth plane brought down in Pennsylvania on 9-11 had been headed for
the Women's Studies Department at Berkeley, the anti-war side still would have
opposed the war to destroy terrorists and terrorist-supporting states (contrary
to my earlier assertions). I really
would like to know if they fight for anything. What sad lives that they have
nothing they hold dear.
Yes, we all own the flag.
It's just not my fault that some run from it so hard.
Oh, and to be clear, since
everyone owns the flag and you can't judge motives by this little thing, when I
display mine it means I want our military and intelligence services to kill
every damn bastard that has killed or is even thinking about killing one of us.
And although I put out my flag at half staff on 9-11 because the president
requested we do so, it stuck in my throat. I wanted it to fly high in angry and
determined defiance not lowered in victimhood and sadness. Mourn the dead on
9-10, their last full day of life. On September 11, let's commemorate what we
are doing to our enemies. We can all fly the flag, right?
"Post-War Reconstruction" (Posted September 15, 2003)
From the The Globe and Mail, no less, a little
perspective on how well we are doing in Iraq compared to Germany (via Instapundit):
Six
months after V-E Day, The New York Times reported that
Germany was awash in "unrest and
lawlessness." More than a million "displaced persons" roamed the
country, many of them subsisting on criminal activities. The heavy-handed
presence of American soldiers was deeply resented by many Germans, especially
young men, who had come to believe that the G.I.s were stealing their women.
There
were still a lot of rogue Nazis causing trouble. It took months for British
investigators to determine that Adolf Hitler had
killed himself, and many thought his hand could be detected behind the crime
and violence. Worse, the attacks on soldiers, General Dwight D. Eisenhower
warned, revealed a deeper resentment of the occupation: "The sentiments
below them may provide popular rallying points for activities which might grow
into organized resistance directed against the occupation forces."
Nobody
in the army had expected to be thrust into the position of running a country,
certainly not for months after the war ended. The army is "ill-fitted by
training, experience and organization for civil government," wrote The New
York Times, describing "confusion and chaos" in the leadership. Berlin still didn't have even its most rudimentary
infrastructure running in its American-occupied quarter. "It is impossible
to plan for the future and a little less difficult to act in the present,"
one senior U.S. officer complained.
The
army wanted out, and the Germans wanted the American army out. But the White
House was not prepared to let Germans run their own country, lest the
terrorists take charge. "It is apparent that a long period of political
organization and political education will be necessary before the German people
can safely be entrusted with the complete control of their own government,"
Gen. Eisenhower said. It would be almost a year before any governing structure
was established.
The
Americans, desperate, asked allies to help. The French refused to get involved.
The British, barely able to feed their own people, angrily accused Washington of being stingy, of enriching its own
people while Germans starved.
Meanwhile,
the world was outraged by the scenes of suffering and disorder coming from Germany. The people were going hungry: A report
conducted in November,1945, indicated that 60 per cent
of them weren't getting the bare ration of 1,550 calories per day (2,000
calories is generally considered a healthy minimum). The world waited for the
president of the United States to announce a plan.
Could we all just put away
the white surrender flags please? I swear the anti-war side is eager to just
surrender to the thugs blowing up buildings in Iraq. War is sometimes difficult and defeats set us back.
I might be a little more understanding of the critics if we faced real
difficulties or if we had suffered any real defeats. The willingness to throw away the fruits of
victory in a real war to protect ourselves just because we haven't completely
pacified the country yet is disheartening.
We're doing fine. We're not
in Vermont yet, but sheesh, have some
patience.
"Strykers to Iraq"
(Posted September
15, 2003)
"The
Stryker is ... uniquely controversial it's such a different idea," said
Patrick Garrett, an analyst at Virginia-based GlobalSecurity.org. "You've
got people jumping up and down and screaming bloody murder over this, and you
have people who are willing to let the Army try it and see what happens. And
everyone will be watching to see how effective they are in Iraq."
The
Stryker vehicles are intended to support a nimble, high-tech fighting force
that can offer more firepower, battlefield intelligence and troop protection
than a traditional light-infantry brigade equipped with thin-skinned Humvees.
And
the Stryker vehicles, unlike cumbersome tank brigades, can be flown rather than
shipped to hot spots around the world.
From strategypage.com:
September 11, 2003: Although
the U.S. Marines were
quite pleased with the performance of their LAVs
(wheeled armored vehicles) in Iraq, there is
some doubt if the U.S. Army's new
Stryker LAVs will do as well. The marines used their
LAV battalions to move quickly to seize key objectives and provide rapid
scouting and guarding of flanks. But the Stryker is over seven tons heavier
than the marine LAV, and considered somewhat top heavy and more prone to
breakdowns. There is also some concern about the way the Strykers
are armored. For example, an area behind the wheel wells is unarmored, and
vulnerable to bullets or shell fragments. The army is aware of these
differences, and this may be one reason why they are eager to get at least one
Stryker brigade to Iraq. There's
nothing like a battlefield test to find out which problems are hypothetical and
which are real. It's always been that way with new weapons, and this may be one
reason why a Stryker brigade was not sent to Iraq for the
heavy fighting. The current skirmishing with terrorists and irregulars will get
far fewer Stryker troops killed if the dire predictions about Stryker
performance turn out to be true.
Yes, a lot will be riding on
the performance of the Stryker Brigade in Iraq when it deploys in October. It is supposed to test
concepts for the Future Combat system while critics say it is just an expensive
hunk of junk that doesn't fit on a C-130, can't travel off roads, and is too
vulnerable to enemy fire.
I suspect we would have been
better off using M-113 variants for the tracks and expense, but I think some of
the complaints are off base. The Stryker can be destroyed? Well what armored
fighting vehicle other than an M-1 (assuming it does not face top-attack
rounds) isn't? Are the critics really saying M-113s can't be dispatched just as
easily? The Stryker needs 15 minutes on the ground after it squeezes out of a
C-130 in order to reattach protruding equipment that must be removed to put it
inside? So what? If the situation at the airhead is so dire that Strykers need to fight their way down the ramp and out of
the plane with guns blazing—well, we're screwed right there. Planes should not
be landing if the airhead is that hot. I know the Army said this is a
requirement, but seriously.
The concept of a medium
brigade is fine with me. It can bridge the gap between paratroopers and heavy
brigades. Whether the Stryker Brigade Combat Teams as currently established fit
this bill, I don't know. If it is for peacekeeping, yeah, it might be good. Lots
of mobile, protected infantry. But I am skeptical we
need that much infantry with it otherwise. I'd rather see more Stryker gun
systems and missile units for anti-tank work at the expense of mechanized
infantry. As I've said, I've recently concluded that the Stryker Brigades make
the most sense for a Taiwan scenario where we must rush help to stop a surprise
Chinese parachute, amphibious, and missile assault on Taiwan designed to rapidly conquer the country. A small
country with a good road net means they could fire brigade around trying to
stomp Chinese light infantry holding air- and beachheads.
Remember too, when we assess
the brigade in Iraq, that the Stryker is also supposed to simultaneously test concepts for
the Future Combat System. Some of the expense of the vehicle is for preparing
the Army to fight in a networked environment. So just buying LAVs that the Marines use wasn't in the cards. It would
have been expensive to wire up those or M-113s too, although probably not
nearly as expensive, as I understand it. On the experimentation issue, I am quite
skeptical, as I say in a Military Review
article
from last year. I suspect we will find we really can't get power and lightness
all at once.
Those Stryker lads are going
to carry an awful lot on their shoulders—even aside from that little thing of
stomping Baathist dead-enders and jihadists.
And keep in mind what we are
doing here. We are taking a unit that has been made light in order to be able
to rush it to an active battlefield when we do not have the luxury of time to ship in
heavy armor. It is, as I noted above, a bridge between the paratroopers and
heavy armor. So why are we even sending
it to Iraq in a pre-planned rotation? We gave it the advantage
of strategic mobility at the price of protection. This isn't a rush, people,
and so it will suffer for its lightness while gaining us nothing for its
strategic mobility.
My guess? The soldiers themselves will do just fine but the
Stryker vehicles will be knocked out just like our armored Humvees
are now. This is not a fair test of its capabilities for the scenarios for
which it is intended.
"Pakistan" (Posted September 13)Pakistan is a problem.
We needed Pakistan's help to nail the Taliban.
We nailed the Taliban.
Iraq is neutralized as a military threat.
Pakistan is continuing to destabilize India in Kashmir and is not-to say the least-helpful in Afghanistan. Until we can work freely in the Pakistan border areas we will be at a severe disadvantage in finishing off bin Laden.
Pakistan is not helpful in missile in nuclear proliferation.
Pakistan is not yet in the grips of the fundamentalists but important levers of power (the intelligence services in particular and the border wild west lands) are up to their eyeballs in Islamofascists. The dictatorship is not helping since it lets the Islamists pose as democrats.
We need a reckoning with Pakistan at some point soon. India will probably be helpful.
First Iran. Then Pakistan? I know North Korea is on the Axis of Evil but the threats in the Islamofascist realm are more important to deal with than the psycho regime in North Korea.
And keep Pakistani forces out of Iraq. Seriously. I would like to trust the Pakistanis since they were allies for a long time. But they have let the Islamist nutballs run loose in Pakistan and we can't trust them. I can't believe they have nukes.
What kind of contingency plan do we work up for this threat?
Did I mention this decade sucks?
"Combat Training for Non-combat Troops" (Posted September 13, 2003)
Recently, I wrote about my experience of minimal combat training as a signal soldier and the need to provide such soldiers with combat training that will cover likely combat situations.
Strategypage.com goes into this in an article on the inadequacy of any training for fighting by rear echelon types.. I have to say that I think the author's assertion that Army basic training has been co-ed since 1978 is off by at least a decade since I went to basic training in 1988 and it was not co-ed. And things are apparently much worse since we did focus on basic soldier skills. Lots of M-16 firing and cleaning. Lots of marching. Lots of chemical drills and Claymore mines and LAW firing (dry runs of course) and first aid and bayonet drills. We weren't infantry but at the end of basic we all felt like it. (Wrongly of course, but apparently a lot closer than current training provides.) It was appropriately tough.
Every MOS should have as part of it the basics of organizing self-defense, ambushes, overcoming roadblocks (as strategypage noted), and other likely combat scenarios. If we don't, we might as well hire civilian contractors for this stuff.
"Pending Dictatorship?" (Posted September 12, 2003)
I had reason to go to some left-wing web site and a brief review led me shocked that people intelligent enough to connect their PCs to the web and type actually believe that Bush is pushing us toward a dictatorship like Nazi Germany. I won't go into much but one "fact" that the dunderheads thought was proof positive that Bush is making the military loyal to him personally was the year-old directive that Bush is the only "commander-in-chief." I remember this, and it was only a clarification since at the time, American regional commanders were known as CINCs--commanders-in-chief. Rumsfeld thought it inappropriate and confusing when all lawful orders come from the commander-in-chief ultimately. A mundane thing taken as a link in the steady goose step to dictatorship. unfreakingbelievable.
"Tough on Iranian Nuclear Ambitions" (Posted September 12, 2003)
The IAEA gave Iran a deadline of October 31 to come clean on its nuclear programs. The Iranians are not happy. By God, I do believe we are dragging our allies along in finally isolating Iran. We're not there yet but if we can cut Iran off from the world, maybe we can tip them over the edge. Maybe the opposition will gain the courage to knock off the mullahs with the knowledge that the West will not let the mullahs get their bomb.
Iran has to be next to go. With an internal opposition that wants Iran to be free, we have an opportunity to put one in the win column without using our own troops. Promoting success in Iraq would be enhanced by knocking off this charter member of the Axis of Evil, too.
Speaking of Iraq, I read on strategypage.com some speculation that the so-called open borders with Syria and Saudi Arabia are not actually a weakness. I realize that the simplest explanation for the apparent infiltration of foreign jihadists is that we have failed to control the borders, but this is such a basic failure that the alternative explanation is attractive. Namely, that we are using our superb aerial surveillance tools to track just about every jihadist coming over the border and we are killing them. Advertising this would leave the jihadists in their home countries safe from our troops. Instead, we are letting them in to kill them. I must say, this possibility did not occur to me. It should have given that my first response to a report that we can't infiltrate al Qaeda was that we have in fact done so. And as I think about it, special forces are in charge of the areas in the southwest of Iraq facing Saudi Arabia. Hopefully, the silent warriors are doing lots away from the press.
I still believe lots is going on that we don't see. I've always believed that the war on terror would be mostly out of sight. It takes a lot of guts to take the public criticism for "doing nothing" while knowing that we are actually doing a lot.
Hope so.
Ugly accident in Iraq when US forces, with an assist by Jordanian security people, killed eight Iraqi security/police officers (their status is not clear). Of course, this type of incident is one reason I am wary of foreign troops replacing American and British troops. Even our well trained forces make mistakes. Other countries may not be as disciplined and ugly incidents could proliferate. I still think it is worth it to get some allied forces in Iraq so we are not manning so many checkpoints but we must be careful where we put them. And it is a risk-not the joyous symbol of internationalism that so many make foreign troops out to be. It is just a risk I think we must be willing to run under the circumstances. If we really are doing a lot in the shadows, I'll feel better about the risk.
"Another Good One" (Posted September 11, 2003)
James Lileks. He knows we are at war. His server was down so
he didn't make it in earlier.
"Another Good Essay" (Posted September 11, 2003)
Lee Harris. On why it
is impossible to say how we can prevent another 9-11 and why it is futile to
play the blame game. As administration opponents scream that the President's
course of action makes us less safe, it is tempting to retort "What did Clinton do?" That is a mistake. Yes, he—and the rest of
us—made mistakes in our holiday from reality in the 1990s. But 9-11 was the
fault of bin Laden and his enablers. Not America's wealth. Or President Clinton.
Or anybody but the terrorists. The next attack—and it
will come one day, whether in this administration or the Dean administration or
the Kerry administration—will also be the fault of the terrorists. We just
don't know what we need to do to stop another 9-11. Even the best strategy can
let one 9-11 through just as the wrong strategy (or no strategy at all) could
"succeed" for a few years or even decades. And a little less hatred
among ourselves would surely help.
"Commentary on the War" (Posted September 11, 2003)
The best and worst I read
today. In no particular order.
The best:
Victor Hanson.
On what we've achieved in the last two years. We're
doing great. Incredibly great as a matter of fact.
Ralph Peters.
On how we—and not our enemies—can beat us. This does
worry me. Too many of us do not think we are at war with an enemy that seeks
our death.
Jim
Hoagland. On what good diplomacy can do for us. As I've said, the military
is only one small component of the larger war.
Mark
Steyn. On the amazing success we have achieved
and the equally amazing ability of the administration's foes to deny that
success.
The worst:
Gwynne Dyer. On how the fact
that we are winning against terror means we should stop fighting. Huh?
Jonathan Schell. On why it would be a good thing for America to pull out of Iraq in defeat. Is this what all the anti-war people really think?
This shows why I distrust the criticism coming from the anti-war side.
Ted
Rall. On why Bush is bad.
Everything that happens is apparently a reason for a column on the badness of
Bush. Actually, Ted Rall would have to be in a
listing of the worst on any subject so I'm just being lazy here.
"Remember Why We Fight" (Posted September 11, 2003)
No nukes were used.
No bio weapons.
No dirty bomb.
No nerve gas.
Just box
cutters.
And a
hatred for us, our freedoms, and our prosperity.
And they did
this to us. Three thousand of us were murdered. As far as the Islamofascist terrorists are concerned, this was just the
beginning. They hoped to kill 50,000 if the World Trade Center came down quickly enough. God help us if we let them
live long enough to get a nuclear device or one of the lesser weapons of mass
destruction.
Remember why we are fighting
terrorists and terrorist states.
But mostly, remember that
even on that black day in 2001, we fought back. The passengers of the fourth
plane did not let the terrorists complete their portion of the plan. The
terrorists like to pretend that they are braver and think that we fight and win
only because of our technology and wealth. But the passengers on that plane had
no weapons, and no technology other than cell phones that let them know we were
at war. Yet the Americans on that plane struck back and won our first victory
with only their courage to sustain them. This was an important lesson for our
enemies to see.
I want this day to be a
yearly reminder that we are seeking out those who did this to us and those who
cheered it and would inflict worse on us.
If you are interested, this
is my original
essay, written a few days after the assault, on the war that we started to
wage on September 11, 2001. I
think it still holds up pretty well.
Remember 9-11.
"The Western Front" (Posted September 10, 2003)
One of my biggest errors in
predicting what would happen in the Iraq War was my belief that something big
was going on in Jordan. I thought that the main armored effort would go west of the Euphrates and that a drive out of Jordan made more sense than an attack out of Kuwait where we had to commit the 101st AB
Division to clearing cities along the supply line. We did not, of course, have
a big armored force come out of Jordan.
But we did have a big special
forces-led effort. From the invaluable strategypage.com
(again) about the effort that began at the Jordanian airfield called H-5:
H-5's population quickly grew to some
6,000 troops, including pilots and ground crews for helicopters from SOCOMs 160th Aviation Regiment and an U.S. Air Force
detachment, including several A-10 warplanes. There were also British and
Australian commandoes and people from CIA, DIA (Defense Intelligence Agency)
and NSA (National Security Agency). Jordan declared
that foreign troops were not in the country. Jordan had backed Iraq during the
1991, and suffered greatly as a result. They were not going to make the same
mistake twice, but they weren't going to antagonize Saddam's many fans in the
Arab world by admitting they were allowing non-Moslem troops to operate against
Iraq from bases
in Jordan.
It quickly became apparent that Charlie
Company was there to provide backup for the commando operations, and to guard
base areas to be captured inside Iraq. And before
the war officially began, Charlie Company rolled into Iraq in the
middle of the night, along with Special Forces A
Teams, commandos and assorted groups who preferred to remain unidentified.
Working, usually at night, with aircraft, helicopters, satellites and UAVs overhead, the troops scoured western Iraq for missile
launchers. On April 5th, Charlie Company came into possession of an Iraqi
airbase, recently captured by U.S. Army
Rangers, and turned it into a commando base. Called "H-1", the base
was also a holding area for prisoners. Some of these were Iraqi, but many were
not. Apparently these were al Qaeda. Charlie Company stood guard while the prisoners were questioned,
and then flown to Saudi Arabia and, for some of the prisoners, Guantanamo, Cuba. Special
Forces and commandos drove, or flew, in and out of H-1 as they eliminated all
resistance in the desert that comprised the western third of Iraq. This
operation was largely unknown, until foreign journalists, driving from Baghdad to Jordan in April,
found that they had to get past Australian commandos manning roadblocks on the
main highway. By May 5th, H-1 was closed and Charlie Company moved back to H-5
in Jordan, picked up
their gear and were sent to Baghdad, where they
provide security for key government buildings.
I've read bits on this but
this was a nice summary in a piece otherwise focusing on one ARNG unit. And I
did pick up well before the war that something was up in Jordan, so I've got that going for me.
Oh, and note the bit about al
Qaeda prisoners. Guess our invasion didn't cause the
scum to run to Iraq after all.
"North Korean Military Parade" (Posted September 10, 2003)
You know, I did wonder why
the North Koreans didn't parade their armor and missiles. I wondered if they
were keeping as much as they can forward deployed just
in case. From strategypage.com:
September 9, 2003: North Korea held it's annual parade to celebrate the establishment of the
communist government. What was unusual about it this year was that there was no
display of military equipment, just civilians and soldiers marching past the
reviewing stand for 90 minutes. Some interpret this as
a gesture to peace, others feel that the North Koreans
are so short of fuel that they decided to save thousands of gallons by leaving
out the drive by of tanks and missile launchers.
Yikes, some thought it a
gesture of peace? Unbelievable. But the gasoline
thing? That would put a crimp in
their ability to threaten us, now wouldn't it?
"Mistakes" (Posted September 10, 2003)
As I alluded to below and as
I have written before, criticism of the war effort is not treason or defeatism.
Blind rah-rahing does our troops no good if it masks real problems that need to
be fixed. But the criticism that Kennedy and others heap upon our war effort
does not seem honest to me. I never get the sense that it is a debate over
means to a good end that they engage in. They did not and do not think it was a
good idea to invade Iraq and they are simply ignoring progress and in most
cases sexing up ordinary problems into lies and defeat.
We have faced four main
problems in Iraq that were not anticipated as the war ended. Given the
many errors the anti-war side made in their predictions of doom, this isn't so
bad.
One, we didn't expect the
Islamists (unless you accept the flypaper strategy was intended and I do not
believe it was deliberate) to bring fresh energy to resisting the post-war
pacification. Baathists are sick bastards but their
failure to fight to the end in the cities shows that self preservation means a
lot to them. The Islamofascists are true dead-enders
who will gladly die to fight us. Our problem is packing them off to the
afterlife fast enough.
Two, we spent a lot of effort
to get Iraqi army units to surrender or capitulate as units so we could use
them for security under our watch. Instead, they discarded their weapons and
uniforms and went home. Related, we did not expect the Iraqi civilian police to
disintegrate. Without these forces immediately available, we had to press our
troops into static and routine security duties that Iraqis should do. On this
duty they are targets. We are putting Iraqis back in uniform and for the short
term would like another division of foreign troops to relieve us. Plus, we
always want to pull out our well-trained, high tech combat troops once the
fighting ends and replace them with allied infantry and police. That's how we
do it and Iraq is no exception.
Three, after assuming the oil
fields could be torched and preparing to rush in to put out the flames over
maybe two years, I think we thought we were lucky when only ten wells were
torched. I get the feeling that we thought we could now get away with not
priming the pump with our money and instead very quickly rely on oil revenue
for reconstruction of Iraq. We are probably back to our
original assumption that we will need time to rebuild the Iraqi oil
infrastructure. Except now it is from neglect and not sabotage and we waited
four months to start.
Fourth, in a related problem we
actually aren't "reconstructing" Iraq as much as we are "constructing" it. We
avoided attacking the civilian infrastructure in Iraq because we were looking to the post-war.
Unfortunately, just refraining from destroying the infrastructure was not
enough. It was run down and kept going with baling wire and duct tape and now
we have to fix it all.
In my view, these were all
reasonable errors. We have to change course to correct them but to portray them
as defeat or lies is dishonest on the part of the critics. And we will face
future problems. If we stand firm, we can solve them and win.
The war on terror will be
long and I fear for our resolve when critics counsel surrender after so little
time and when we are in fact winning.
"Winning in Iraq" (Posted
September 10, 2003)
The President's request for
$87 billion to support the troops in Iraq and to jump start the Iraqi economy and government
has been met with a flurry of
criticism by opponents of the war and those who want more troops. Ted
Kennedy really takes the cake (and here I leave out the bilious rantings of Senator Byrd):
Sen.
Edward M. Kennedy (D-Mass.) said he plans to introduce an amendment that would
hold up future relief and reconstruction funds until Bush provides Congress
with a report that includes a schedule for the withdrawal of foreign and U.S. troops and a definition of success.
Given the tremendous progress
we have made already and the building wet dream that opponents like Kennedy are
experiencing just yearning to relive their Vietnam protest days, I'd personally like to know just how
Kennedy defines success. And since he thinks more troops are necessary, I'd
kind of like to know when he would pull those additional troops out of Iraq.
The sheer silliness of such
"demands" is hard to overstate.
As for "victory,"
since Kennedy doesn't recognize that we won the Iraq War and he can't
distinguish between the obvious end of major combat against organized Iraqi
military/paramilitary units and the post-conflict stabilization mission we are
in now, how would he recognize victory?
As for withdrawing out
troops, I see here the stirrings for an "exit strategy," that
misbegotten term that substitutes for "victory" in the minds of so
many. I do not want an exit strategy. I want to win. Let the foreign Islamists
worry about an exit strategy. We should focus on killing them and keeping them
out in the first place. We will be able to gradually withdraw troops and/or
place them in garrison roles as the already low level of violence subsides. It
was only in August after we abandoned the offensive against the insurgents that
we suffered a spike in casualties in the Sunni triangle. So far this month, we
went a week with no KIA. The opposition refuses to recognize the threat to our
lives or admit the success we have achieved, and so in my mind forfeit any
claim that they are criticizing to help us correct errors to win:
Sitting
alongside Wolfowitz, Air Force Gen. Richard B. Myers,
the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, engaged in an unusual bit of
rhetorical escalation about the stakes in Iraq and in the war on terrorism. "You may
have to go back to the Civil War to find a time when the values that we hold
dear have been threatened like they've been threatened today," Myers said.
At
one point, Myers appeared to lecture the committee on the need for patience,
commitment and willpower. "We've got to have the will to win," he
said. "This is a battle of wills."
That
statement drew a tart rebuke from Kennedy, among others. "General Myers,
no one questions whether our troops possess the patience and the commitment and
the will to win," Kennedy said. "We all assume that. The only
question is whether the administration has a policy to stabilize Iraq. That's the issue."
Once again, Kennedy refused
to see that it is his patience, commitment, and will to win that are in
question—not our troops—as he pretends to have confidence in them. That is the
issue.
When will we win? I wish the
good senator from Massachusetts was as firm about defining when a government
spending program "succeeds" and when we can end—or at least
reduce—spending on that program. I wish we knew when we could stop naming West Virginia rest stops and outhouses after Senator Byrd. On a
more serious note, I wish we knew when we could finish the one-year troop commitment
in Bosnia that President Clinton assured us was all we needed when our troops
rolled in at the end of 1995.
I don't know when we will finally
defeat the Islamists and Baathists in Iraq for sure. Nobody can know. But we'll lose it for sure
(and I did say we could still lose this post-war phase back after we won the
war) if our so-called leaders in Congress insist we are losing when we are not,
and if they get their "exit
strategy."
We leave when we win. Period.
"Turks to the West" (Posted September 9, 2003)
The issue of
Turkish troops in Iraq is possible despite Kurdish worries:
BAGHDAD, Iraq -
Iraq (news - web sites)'s acting president would welcome up to 10,000 Turkish
peacekeepers if they are sent under a U.N. resolution and deploy in the far
west of the country away from Kurdish territory, his spokesman said Tuesday.
As I noted, it just depends
on where they are sent and the Iraqis (at least the acting Iraqi president)
could live with Turkish troops in the west away from Kurdish areas.
Add in an Indian-led division
in the more populated areas and we may have more foreign troops than we've said
we want. Maybe we're low-balling to enhance the whole international flavor once
the troops are committed.
Of course, this all depends
on facing down any Euro blackmail on the authorizing resolution that would
deprive the Coalition of effective control in Iraq.
"Remembering 9-11" (Posted September 9, 2003)
The second anniversary of
September 11 is almost here. Almost two years have passed without another 9-11
and with two hideous regimes pulled down and the vicious terrorists
running—desperate to strike at us (or anyone for that matter).
I am still angry.
I have to work at it
sometimes as our life has apparently gotten back to normal. But I never forget
we are at war and that our troops still fight and die to protect us. I do not
forget that we are still all at risk. When I think hard I can still vividly recall
the disbelief and shock at the first news of the impacts on the Twin Towers. The hopeful belief that surely
those towers can't come down even under such a terrible assault, right?
The stunned feeling of hearing the Pentagon was struck and the worry over the
missing plane (or did they say two?)and where it might
be going. I can still hear the horrific thuds of bodies slamming into the
ground as desperate people gained a minute or two more of life by flinging themselves
from their trapped and burning offices above the impact points. (or I think I remember this, anyway. Did the news record
this?) I remember the shock of the towers coming down and the worry that our
President might be a target too. I remember the disgust at reports of joy in
some Moslem communities. I remember all this rapidly turning to rage and a
determination that our enemies must die and pay for this outrageous act of war
on our people. There was no doubt that we were at war from that moment on. Even
now, the tears of sorrow and anger can be called up. Even now I cannot
understand those who do not see that we are at war with an enemy that would
kill every one of us if it were within their power.
Christopher Hitchens (via NRO) says he does
not want the weepy commemoration or flag waving on this day:
What is required is a steady,
unostentatious stoicism, made up out of absolute, cold hatred and contempt for
the aggressors, and complete determination that their defeat will be utter and
shameful. This doesn't require drum rolls or bagpipes or banners. The French
had a saying during the period when the provinces of Alsace and Lorraine were lost to
them: "Always think of it. Never speak of it." (Yes, Virginia, we can learn things
from the French, even if not from Monsieur Chirac.)
Far be it from me to
criticize a French saying, but what exactly did this get the French? The French
lost the two provinces in the Franco-Prussian War and for nearly fifty years
the Germans ruled them. France regained them only after the Germans foolishly
attacked in 1914 and even more foolishly lost in 1918. The French offensive in
1914 to regain the provinces was an expensive failure and nearly cost the
French the war as they focused almost exclusively eastward while the Germans
swept through Belgium and northern France almost to the gates of Paris itself.
For fifty years, thinking
always but not speaking of their loss got them nothing. The thinking kept the
loss alive but failing to speak let the French government do nothing to reclaim
the land. To be fair, there was probably nothing the French government could
have done, but we can—and are—doing something about our loss of 9-11.
This should not be a day of
mourning, with a Dianneified
weepiness. Yes, on this day remember our dead of 9-11, but mostly it should be day for
remembering our troops who carry our flag to distant corners of the globe to
crush our enemies. We cannot focus too narrowly on just the perpetrators of
9-11 while other enemies seek to kill us. This is why we overthrew Saddam and
this is why we have more enemies to deal with before we can say we have won.
September 11, 2003 should be a day to anticipate the recovery of our
peaceful 9-10 world. So I say wave flags. Remember the 3,000 dead we lost that
day and the hundreds we lost in Afghanistan and Iraq and elsewhere in our war. And by all means speak
loudly about making sure we do not face a nuclear or biological 9-11. I'm sure
as Hell not willing to wait fifty years for the day that we can live in
security again. Kill the bastards who did this to us. Make sure no new ones
arise.
"Iraq Calm"
(Posted September 8, 2003)
So what gives?
The report
says, "For the seventh day in a row, the U.S.
military reported no combat deaths Monday — a rare period of calm."
After we changed strategy in Iraq in early August and stopped our offensives in the Sunni
triangle, our casualties mounted. Not Army-breaking levels, but noticeable. Now,
after we changed again to go back on the offensive (but with more focused
strikes in the Sunni triangle) our casualties dry up? Are we back to rocking
them on their heels? Did the attackers burn themselves up in their August
attacks that inflicted a good chunk of casualties? <sarcasm>Did
we double our troop strength while I wasn't looking? Because that's the only
way to end the attacks, right?</sarcasm>
Of course, body counts are not the measure of whether we
are winning. If they were, we'd have won Vietnam and the Battle of Mogadishu. (and
lost the Civil War for that matter) I swear to God this will send me over the
edge, but opponents of the war are demanding an "exit strategy." Lord
help us. If they wanted us to win, they'd ask
"how are we going to win." No, they want an exit strategy. A strategy
that in essence assumes our defeat and only asks that we plan it properly so we
don't have to evacuate US dependents from the roof of the Baghdad embassy at the last moment. Exit strategy, indeed. We need
to win this and the body count mentality won't help us. Nonetheless, a lull
gives us time to win where it counts—setting up a secure and free Iraq—without
the near-daily press pronouncements on our battle deaths and the development of
the dearly hoped for "quagmire." I'd rather have a press capable of
perspective and patience but that's not going to happen.
Too early for a trend but after three weeks of heavier losses,
I'll be happy for the moment. I will eagerly watch the news for explanations.
"WIA" (Posted September 8, 2003)
Strategypage.com
put our KIA in the Iraq War at 14%. I had figured 10% so my 9 wounded for every
one death assumption was off by a good mark. Say 6:1. Oh,
and the 260 KIA I cited should be lower: I believe that number includes
non-combat deaths. Still, our post-major combat operations WIA
numbers should not be a shock to anybody.
"Foreign Troops in Iraq"
(Posted September 8, 2003)
Shiite Iraqis in particular are acutely
conscious that their Arab and Muslim brethren didn't support the war against
Saddam. Indeed, Iraqis watched on Arab satellite television with bitter enmity
and black humor the antiwar demonstrations throughout the Middle East (and in Europe).
But I do want Americans off
of static guard posts and routine presence patrols. Until we can stand up
enough Iraqis to do the job, I welcome foreign Moslem troops as long as we
consider local feelings and recognize that Moslems are not interchangeable. Turks,
for example, should not be in the Kurdish zones or the Shia
zones. The Turks are former colonial masters and this would look like pre-World
War I all over. But, placing Turks to patrol the border with Syria in largely Sunni areas would be pretty nice. The Sunnis
are hostile to us anyway and as the author notes, would fear them more. Plus,
the Syrians might take controlling their border a little more seriously if the
Turks were facing Syria on two fronts. Pakistanis may do more harm than good—they once guarded
the Saudis who are not exactly kissing cousins of the Iraqis and they may be
too infected with radical ideas from the Afghanistan frontier.
And for all the hand wringing
about going to the UN, we aren't talking about a lot of people here. Maybe another 20,000 foreign soldiers, thus keeping this an
American operation. If we incorporate foreign elements wisely into our
plan rather than abdicating to the UN, this will work out just fine. We've
always needed to get low-tech allies to take over routine security functions
after we win the war. We went in heavy in Bosnia and Kosovo only to scale back in favor of allies for
numbers. We must do the same in Iraq. With American troops on the offensive against the Sunni
resistance, we will eventually be able to scale back our troops as the
resistance fades.
So we can focus on that mission
and get our guys off the ramparts, we need low-tech allied infantry for
security operations. The complete collapse of Iraqi security forces when we
hoped that we could keep them in place and weed out Baathists
has caused a short-term problem. This has been exacerbated by the release of
tens of thousands of common criminals by Saddam prior to the war. Even in
dictatorial Iraq, murders, thieves, kidnappers, and rapists were
imprisoned and deserved to be jailed. I dare say if we emptied our prisons
while dismissing all the local police, our security situation would look pretty
bad too.
It is not defeat to get cover
from the UN for foreign help. As long as we are prepared to walk away from a bad
deal, there is no harm. At worst, the negotiations may get us over the bad part
until stability becomes more apparent and the people who want more US troops
settle down from their panic.
We don't need more US troops and an increase in foreign troops is not a
suicide pact if they fit in to our plans. And we do have a plan. It involves
security, building utilities infrastructures, creating an economy, and building
democracy and rule of law in Iraq. This will take time—and money. It does not take more
US troops. It also takes some patience to see this
through to final victory. As the President said
Sunday night:
Two
years ago, I told the Congress and the country that the war on terror would be
a lengthy war, a different kind of war, fought on many fronts in many places. Iraq is now the central front. Enemies of
freedom are making a desperate stand there -- and there they must be defeated.
This will take time and require sacrifice. Yet we will do what is necessary, we
will spend what is necessary, to achieve this essential victory in the war on
terror, to promote freedom and to make our own nation more secure.
The President and the rest of
the administration need to speak to this more often.
"Excuse Me? They Want What?" (Posted September 7, 2003)The French and Germans are upset about our draft UN resolution because it fails to specify a timetable for the Iraqi people to assume control of their government?
France and Germany, which opposed the war on Iraq, are conditioning their approval of the resolution on a more rapid transition of power from the Governing Council to a new government elected by Iraqis.Given that the Axis of Weasels were perfectly content to see Saddam Hussein stay in power indefinitely until he died a peaceful death in his own bed and passed on power to his sons, how dare they pretend they care when the Iraqi people are in charge? Are they seriously arguing that our rule in the short run is worse than the Ba'ath party's long reign of terror?
Now, I know that the Germans and French continue to help us in Afghanistan and Africa and in many other ways in the war on terror. I do appreciate that help. If they do not want to help in Iraq that is their right. What I did not and do not forgive is their decision to work against us on the Iraq question. They went far beyond simply opting out and actively opposed a move we deemed vital to our national interest. So while I thank them for the help they do give, I do not forgive them for the opposition they still exert. And they still are opposing us on Iraq. That is unforgivable. And quite hypocritical.
It is also interesting that Kofi Annan wants to meet with the UNSC permanent members to resolve the Iraq resolution questions. I think this shows we went to Liberia in order to get a UN resolution on Iraq.
"Iraqi WMD Evidence?" (Posted September 5, 2003)
I have never doubted that preventing Saddam from getting WMD was a good reason to invade Iraq. I have wondered why our intelligence thought Saddam had chemical weapons in firing condition on the eve of invasion. I want to know what happened. But Saddam was determined to have bugs, chemicals , and nukes and it is a relief that he is in some safehouse in Texas-I mean Tikrit. (Saddam really doesn't like the American redistricting plan for Iraq)
I hear that we will have a WMD report soon. I imagine it will be good. I say this because as I think about it, ever since Kay briefed American Congressional leaders back in July (?), Congressional opponents to the war have stopped complaining about the lack of WMD evidence. They still complain, mind you, but it is as if they were briefed, said, "well this line won't go well when this evidence is presented," and then went on to other imagined sins and omissions.
Sure hope so.
"We Go to the UN-Again" (Posted September 5, 2003)
I keep hearing that our going to the UN for a resolution in order to give countries some cover to send troops to Iraq or otherwise help us is supposed to be a surrender, or groveling, or an admission of our "failed" strategy. Why?
All along, I have premised American conventional wars in the war on terror as those that we largely wage, with some help from allies, and then we turn over most of the peacekeeping duties to friends. This recognizes that few allies can stand next to us on the battlefield and not just get in the way. We must carry the burden in conventional war (other than Korea). But peacekeeping can be done by any well-trained soldier. And if the environment is benign enough, even not-so-well-trained soldiers won't screw up badly enough to harm us. I wanted this pattern for the Iraq War.
The problem is, we counted on having Iraqis for the peacekeeping. We spent a lot of effort wooing Iraqi regular army commanders prior to the war in the hope that they would defect with their units. Had this worked out, we would have had several divisions of Iraqi regulars to reform into light infantry battalions for security work. As it turns out, the regulars mostly evaporated and went home. Although we are training up Iraqis in security units, border units, police, civil defense, and a new army, we don't have enough yet. So, as a result, American units are being used as guards and getting shot up. Not a lot. But more than we want. We'd rather have our troops on the offensive (and thankfully we are going back on the offensive after calling it quits in early August when we thought we'd won after two months of ripping up the opposition in the Sunni triangle).
As long as we do not give up any meaningful control over military, economic, or political matters I see no harm in pushing for a new UN resolution. I imagine Kofi Anan will help since we probably paid for his backing by spearheading the Liberia intervention with a Marine Expeditionary Unit.
As long as we are willing to walk away if the French and Germans try to make the price too high. There are things worse than not getting UN backing and more help from other countries.
"Patriotic Iraqis?" (Posted September 4, 2003)
When Americans display
patriotism, the anti-war left likes to say that patriotism is the last refuge
of a scoundrel. When some Iraqis resist our troops and kill them and Jordanians
and UN workers and other Iraqis, the lunatics like Ted Rall
and his ilk proclaim the Iraqis as proud patriots resisting a foreign invasion.
Well here's the
face of that Iraqi resistance, a bomb-maker who died while building a bomb:
Dayikh's life and,
perhaps more telling, his death provide a glimpse into the obscure world of the
campaign against U.S. troops occupying Iraq -- of the interplay between crime
and resistance, of the fear that still prevails in the parts of Baghdad where
the U.S. presence and police are rarely seen, and of the anger that the
lawlessness breeds.
A known criminal, suspected guerrilla
and most likely both, Dayikh lived on the fringes of
Baghdad's underworld, where residents say U.S. officials and their Iraqi allies
are unprepared and ill-equipped to face resistance that has persisted for
months.
Remember all those prisoners
Saddam released before the war? They're still there. Getting Iraqi police,
security, and courts up and running is another measure needed to end the unrest
in the Sunni triangle.
Don't hold your breath
waiting for Johnny Depp to call them scoundrels.
"Casualty Aversion and Casualties" (Posted September 4, 2003)
Ok, I wrote that August was a
bad month for us—here's
why, via Instapundit:
On
August 6, Lt. Gen. Ricardo Sanchez announced that the military would
dramatically cut back its aggressive operations because of a perception that
the rate of return had peaked; militant attacks were declining. Further raids, one
newspaper warned, "could unintentionally be creating a
reservoir of support for the insurgents or even spurring revenge attacks by
ordinary citizens."
I thought we were continuing
with our offensive actions but apparently not. We screwed up. We had been
knocking the bastards back on their heels and we decided to stop:
June and July were very good
months for US forces in Iraq.
Over just six weeks of aggressive fighting the US
detained thousands of suspected Iraqi militants in hundreds of military raids.
The Sunni triangle was shrinking. At the height of the new offensive militant
attacks against US forces had been cut in half. By early August several days in
a row passed without the loss of single US
soldier in combat -- a seemingly inconsequential but notable feat.
I'll be generous and say our
generals thought we had beaten them and didn't want to alienate the winnable
public by bouncing rubble for no good effect. I hope the story I linked to
earlier about smaller and more targeted raids is a recognition that we need to
get back on the offensive and yet still avoid the large dragnets that—to be
fair—could alienate people who could be won over. Although the article notes
that Ralph Peters rightly said that we should not worry about alienating people
who are already actively hostile to us, we need better intelligence to show us
who wants to get on with their live in a new Iraq even in the Sunni triangle of
resistance. If we can map this, we can be massive in resistance areas and
focused in wavering areas.
But the key is never letting
up until we are sure we won. Were we going into a casualty avoidance mode? Sure
looks like it. And see what we got? More casualties. We
were winning without the extra US troops that so many say we need now. If we add more
and keep the same defensive strategy, we will simply provide more targets.
Bottom line: we don't need
more troops, just the proper strategy again. The way to end casualties is to
win the war. Focus on the objective here and casualties will go down.
"UN Mandate" (Posted September 3, 2003)
The US will seek
a UN mandate to provide cover for other countries to contribute troops to Iraq. As long as the US remains in charge of security and largely in control
of the economic and political side as well, no problem. I've always wanted us
to get our troops disentangled from peacekeeping duties as soon as possible. Plus
it is good to have other countries with an interest in success instead of
sniping at us.
US troops will need to remain
in Iraq for years to come, but by early 2005 they could well
be garrison troops available for use as our Germany-based troops are and not
actively engaged in operations.
"Our Enemies and Our Friends" (Posted September 3, 2003)
By their very nature [the Islamists, not the French], their grievances against the world can never be removed, and they are
capable of pretty well anything.
He also says that Britain is the real home of the brains of the Islamists and
not France, so this isn't an exercise in French bashing. Still, will the
French, British, and Europeans (and what the heck, the Blue state people over
here) wake up to what we are fighting? That we are fighting?
Sifaoui's
book has sold 60,000 copies in France. It is to be hoped that its readers include President
Chirac and his Foreign Minister, Dominique de Villepin, and that the book will
have had an educative effect on French thinking, though I wouldn't bet on it.
The French book L'Effoyable Imposture (The Dreadful Fraud), which claimed that
the 11 September attack was the work of the Jews and the CIA, sold over
100,000.
The sad thing is that those
who keep seeking the "root cause" of terror always point to America as the guilty party. The truth is, we must kill them
because their grievances are with who we are and not what we do. Worse, the
source of their grievances lies within their twisted minds.
As for those who say we
failed to engage our allies in the war on terror by going after Saddam and
losing our focus and allies, what in the European outlook—as represented by France in this book review—provides us with any hope that
they could see this as a fight for civilization even if we were UN-worshipping
multilateralists?
I hope it isn't just America and a few others in a band of brothers facing our
foes. But even if is our fight alone, we must still fight.
"Saudis Quietly Fighting" (Posted September 3, 2003)
The Saudis, since May 12 when
they experienced their own serious terror attacks, have been vigorously but
quietly going after the Islamists in their own country. From Strategypage.com:
Meanwhile, there are raids and gun
battles nearly every day in Saudi
Arabia. Most of these incidents never make the
press. Unless you are plugged into the SINN (Saudi Informal News Network),
you'd never know that one of the most active theaters of the War on Terror is Saudi
Arabia.
This doesn't mean that we and
the Saudis are on the same page here. But for now, let the Saudis fight since
it serves our interests. In time, when the Saudi security forces beat down the
Islamists, we can decide what we need to do about Saudi Arabia if they are still a force for radical Islam.
Of course, Congress and the
press can still whack at the Saudi government. I'm always of two minds on this.
The Senators know that the Saudis are doing more yet criticize them for doing
"nothing." This seems completely self serving and dishonest. On the
other hand, it has always been a useful bargaining tool for a president to be
able to say to a foreign government, "Look, you have to do something—you
know I wouldn't press you on this since I know
your good intentions—but if you don't cough up results I don't know if I can
restrain Congress from passing a law that will really tie my hands."
Bottom line: I won't complain
about Saudi
Arabia
for now or the President's handling of this. The Saudi government as it presently
is constituted is a long-term problem for us. In the short term, they are
acting in our interests on the terror front in the Gulf.
Meanwhile, the mullahs of
Iran must go.
"What's Next?" (Posted September 3, 2003)
There seems to be a general
unease that we are failing to maintain the initiative in the war on terror and
that we must strike anew. Even supporters of the war are arguing that we are
spinning our wheels in Iraq and should devote more troops to the fight.
There seems to be three
components: 1) We have failed to maintain momentum and need to resume the
offensive; 2) Who do we target to regain the momentum?;
and 3) What do we do to that target?
First of all, questioning the
conduct of the war is not treason. We want to fight this right and so must
offer criticisms. Yet we don't want to undermine troop morale, too. This is
always a difficult balancing act that is easier when you trust the motives of
the person doing the criticizing. I freely admit that I do not trust many who
offer criticism—and who have since September 12, 2001 criticized every action we've taken in our defense.
But back to
the questions at hand.
In regard to the first
question, after two wars in two years I do not think we have the freedom to
jump to new wars quickly. This is not World War II where the soldiers are in
for the duration and you can jump troops, after resting and regrouping, on to
the next campaign as strategy dictates. Our troops are volunteers and can leave
if over-committed. Plus, our base active duty strength is still at peacetime
levels with reserves mobilized for a year or two only. Sure, we can keep
mobilizing different reservists but our basic military is still sized for a
time before 9-11 that too many thought would have little to challenge our
troops other than peacekeeping until China became a peer competitor. And mobilizing reservists
too often will cause these volunteers to leave also.
Plus, we are a democracy and
we just cannot embark on endless wars as if conducting a war college exercise.
Unless bombs start going off on our buses and malls, we need reasons that
convince the people to go to war. As much as I think the war on terror is
critical to preserving our security, in one important way these campaigns are
"luxury" wars. That is, we have the power to reach out and try to
forestall threats before they reach our shores. We have chosen to do so. This military
capability weakens the ability to make the case for war, as the time passing
since 9-11 shows. And given the difficulties of persuading majorities that even
the Afghanistan and Iraq campaigns were justified, this is a real problem.
Nor is the sheer wear and
tear on a peacetime military's equipment and ammunition stocks irrelevant. Part
of the pause is caused by having a military that will be strained to fight one
war at the moment and we have no idea if we have the luxury of choosing who the
enemy will be. If we choose wrong and find ourselves with two wars on top of ongoing
duties in Iraq, Afghanistan, the Balkans, and Sinai, we are screwed.
The second question of who to
target is complicated by the motives of those who make the suggestion. Some,
who insist that the Israel-Palestinian conflict is paramount, would probably do
nothing anywhere else until this problem is solved. Good luck. Others argue
that North
Korea
is the priority although few of those who argued for North Korea first prior to the Iraq War still seem to be in this
camp. Others argue that we must completely pacify Iraq. But many of these argued we had to pacify and
rebuild Afghanistan first before even thinking about attacking Iraq. Some who argue for more troops and money for Iraq supported the war and are uncomfortable about the
failure to quickly pacify Iraq. Others opposed the war to begin with and so I'm not
sure what the motivation is. Others say Iran must go. Others say Syria. Others, Saudi Arabia. Some think that the war on al Qaeda
trumps all else and we should do nothing until this is finished.
The "what do we do to
whatever target we choose" third question is quite varied depending on the
target chosen. Suggestions? Getting
"tough" with Saudi Arabia. Making Pakistan shut down their border areas. Invading North Korea. Bombing North Korea. Threatening Syria. Squeezing North Korea. Appeasing North Korea. Supporting government "moderates" in Iran. Supporting democrats in Iran. Revitalizing our alliances to go
after bin Laden thoroughly. Pouring money into Afghanistan or Iraq for rebuilding. Turning to the UN to take over Afghanistan or Iraq. Sending in more US and/or UN troops to Afghanistan or Iraq.
So many
questions.
I've been thinking about the
questions and I conclude there is no "next." All of the
"nexts" that one group or another supports as problem number one must
be dealt with. The biggest problem is our stretched military, the Army
especially. It is in our interest to avoid another war in the next two years in
order to maximize the fear that we will choose a target. Once we commit to a
new war, we are toothless short of nukes (Or punishing aerial bombardments that
leave our enemies to choose when they've endured enough—or not. And then what
do we do?) until the war is won.
So, as a result, we simply cannot
afford go to war preemptively against North Korea to solve this problem. And lesser military options
are pointless. Air and missile strikes cannot disarm Pyongyang and practically speaking we can't mass enough troops
to invade without provoking a North Korean invasion of the South before we get
set. This sets aside getting South Korean and Japanese cooperation to invade—no
small matters. If we do start to deploy and North Korea attacks, how will South Korea's morale hold up if they believe we
"provoked" the war? The O'Hanlon strategy of buying them off should
be out of bounds, too, I should hope. We should probably pass some word to the
North Koreans that we will not invade—as the UN charter provides—as long as
they keep their nukes to themselves. We should intercept their ships at sea and
send spooks and special forces to fight in the shadows
against proliferation.
We should go to full
containment mode. If our allies want to send some aid to the North out of fear
of being targeted, so be it. I doubt it will be enough to save the regime. If the Soviet Union could be brought down, so too can North Korea. Missile defense will protect us, and our allies will
face the greatest danger of living with a psycho state in their midst. Do I
like containing a nutjob North Korea with scores of nukes? Hell no. Yes, North Korea is a charter member of the Axis of Evil, but they are
not Islamofascists. The idea of fighting a war that
will be very expensive in lives, money, and time when North Korea is "only" the potential atomic armer of Islamic terrorism seems folly. Such a war will
damage our military even as we win it to the point where we will be years away
from rebuilding our military for any other threats. Plus, I do believe that North
Korea is brittle and could collapse at any time under some careful pressure
from us. Heck, it might not take any pressure at all.
Remember what we want—no
North Korean arms to terrorists or terrorist states. If our allies in the
region don't mind a nuclear-armed North Korea enough to do something about it, who are we to make
them care? Maybe our allies will stiffen if they see we are not too worried
about them getting nuked if they don't care about our security needs. In
addition, unlike the Gulf region where we can only count on the British and
Australians to pitch in (and total maybe 10% of ground forces), in Northeast Asia, we have powerful allies who would fight alongside us
there in case of war and provide the bulk of ground forces. I'd rather run the
risk of letting our enemy strike first there than elsewhere where we are mostly
alone.
This basic choice for strong
containment frees our military (barring a North Korean decision to attack the
Republic of Korea, of course) to focus on the arc of crisis from West Africa to
Central Asia and down to Indonesia. This is where the war on terror must be
won. There are a number of targets here.
Saudi responsibility for
funding the rise of Wahabbi (you know, it might be
"Wahhabi" but I don't care enough to look
it up—never have) fanaticism and their complicity in its support today is
undeniable. Still, they feel under attack by the fanatics more today than they
did two years ago. Sadly, their position atop the largest single oil spigot on
the planet argues for extreme caution in the short run. With the Iraq War won,
we can afford to squeeze the Saudis for cooperation more and their survival
instincts will probably not lead them to cut back on oil production too much
since they need the cash to survive. Personally, I'd sink oil wells right
through Alaska Caribou to add to the total supply. If you feel like requiring
SUV mileage targets, fine. Supply and demand as they say. Just lessen Saudi
leverage. In the long run maybe a Shia revolt will be
to our advantage if it strips the oil producing east coast away from the Wahabbis in the interior Islamic holy places. Or we do what
we at least thought about in the late 1970s—invade Saudi Arabia and take over the oil fields and put the Shias in charge. All this assumes we manage to get Shias friendly to us by our success in Iraq and Iran, of course.
Iran needs to be the focus of our efforts with the
military held in reserve as the hammer should it be needed. I fall back on my
gut feeling that it is better to stop a state without nukes from getting their
first than to stop a state with 3 nukes from getting their 4th—or
even fiftieth. We need a full court press on the mullahs with support for the
dissidents in Iran. I had hoped that the Iraq War would inspire the people of Iran but the mullahs were thorough in suppressing dissent
with terror and intimidation. We are not about to get lucky, here. Screw the
State Department. There are no moderates in the Iranian government who might
help. Our support should be open as well as covert. And it should begin
yesterday. We need time to successfully carry out a Poland Solidarity strategy
and we need to see if it can work before Tehran gets nukes. If the regime change strategy fails, we
will need to go military.
Syria is a problem that is probably vulnerable to serious
economic warfare. Without Iraqi money, they have nothing but drugs from Lebanon to earn cash. The government rests on a tiny Alawite base of support that most Moslems consider heretical
and not really Moslem. We need Turkey and Israel on board to squeeze them. The Syrian people could use
some relief from dictatorship, God knows.
Afghanistan must be pacified and the economy improved. As I've
written, I am worried that the Taliban have massed to attack recently. Break
them up. I still don't think we should add more troops as this will make it
seem like a foreign occupation and strengthen Taliban arguments. This will be
slow as we build up an effective Afghan government that is a confederation
rather than a unitary state ruled from the center—which the periphery would
oppose in any case.
Iraq should be transitioned to Iraqi and foreign troops
for routine security while we focus our special forces
and troops, in smaller numbers over time, on targeted operations designed to
kill and capture the terrorists. Iraqis (properly de-Baathified)
need to take over running their country as soon as possible. No influx of US
troops but more money to fix the infrastructure would be welcome.
Pakistan needs to be nudged toward democracy before the Islamofascist whackjobs there get
to portray themselves as true democrats out to overthrow the corrupt
dictatorship. In the short term it may have been necessary to keep things quiet
there while we took down Saddam, but support for Musharraf
hasn't bought us an end to the Pakistan sanctuary for the Taliban and al Qaeda.
If Pakistan goes nutso, India will probably have something to say about it. We
wouldn't be alone. I'd rather have Pakistan friendly but I don't see what that friendship is buying
us in Afghanistan. I could easily be wrong, I concede.
The
Palestinian question? Don't know.
I don't blog on this since it is a subject one could
exclusively write about. I am not optimistic about solving this problem. And
everyone gets upset no matter what you write. It has been a problem for so long
that opinions are set in stone. I don't need that headache. Israel is our friend and a democracy. Palestinians surely
have the right to their own viable state. Yet Palestinian terror tactics have
ripped away sympathy I had for them in the short run. Israel may torque me off sometimes but there is no
comparison in my mind here. Whatever else one might say, requiring this problem
be solved first before anything else is a recipe for failure. I'm not convinced
there is any way to slice the Gordian knot on this one—muddling through may be
all we can do. Besides, we'll be blamed for whatever we decide is the
"solution" anyway.
The war against al Qaeda is a police and intelligence fight now, for the most
part. The idea that we have to put our military machine on hold when their role
is fairly small in this fight (just about 10,000 troops in Afghanistan) is just silly to me. And our allies are cooperating
just fine on this manner. Charges that we have lost focus by going after Iraq are silly.
So for what it is worth, this
is what I have settled on as the course for the major actors in this. I'll have
to mull these conclusions in the months ahead as events unfold.
Did I mention this decade
sucks? (not to sound pessimistic—I think we are winning)
"Casualties" (Posted September 2, 2003)
In addition to the deaths in
combat that we are suffering at a rate of one every other day, or so, we are
suffering wounded. The Washington
Post article says:
But alongside those Americans killed in
action, an even greater toll of battlefield wounded continues unabated, with an
increasing number being injured through small-arms fire, rocket-propelled
grenades, remote-controlled mines and what the Pentagon refers to as
"improvised explosive devices."
Given our medical and
protective technology, I assumed a number of wounded even without reports. I'd
have been shocked to find few wounded. Especially since other reports say we
are hammering the resistance and inflicting heavy losses. The article says we
suffered an average of ten a day in August and says that last week, 55 were
wounded. That's eight a day so I'm not sure what the trend lines are recently.
Overall, since May 1, we lost 574 WIA. Since August 1, we've suffered 297 WIA
(during major combat operations we suffered 550 WIA). August has clearly been a
bad month.
Still, I am torn between
viewing this news as just what one would expect and is only disheartening to
see it in print or is it a real problem that we are not addressing. I tend to
the former. Building up Iraqi police, a reformed army, local militias, economic
opportunities, more secure utilities, and local government will all make things
better as we press forward.
I do not want to see
something like this used to argue for more US troops sent to Iraq to drive
around on patrols or stand guard for no purpose just to become targets. More
troops also mean more supply convoys and hence more targets. RPGs, IEDs, and remote-controlled
mines are all best used against road-bound forces. Keep the special
forces and regulars going after the guerrillas and terrorists at our
initiative and get Iraqis and foreign troops on guard duty and patrols. And we
are getting
better at the offensives. I never liked the big operations that swept up
innocents in a dragnet:
The
new approach reflects the views of senior commanders that the American
military's large sweeps that sometimes rounded up several hundred ordinary
Iraqis were alienating the public. At the same time, officials said, Iraqis are
providing more and better information about suspected supporters of Mr. Hussein
that has enabled the military to plan raids that are better focused on specific
targets.
As to American WIA, I'm not
upset that such numbers are not announced. As I said, if you have half a brain,
you know that when we lose one dead, there are probably up to 9 wounded too. Actually,
if I'd stopped to calculate what I would have expected, our actual WIA are lower. With about 260 KIA, I'd have expected perhaps
2,340 WIA—twice our actual count. Apparently, with less exposure to artillery
shrapnel and small arms relatively speaking, and bigger explosions, we're
losing more KIA.
When asked, the military told
the WIA totals, so it is no secret. However, we do not want a body count
mentality to develop to show who is "winning." Advertise ours and the
tendency will be to advertise their losses too. Then, we will either emphasize
enemy bodies to up their side of the equation or emphasize combat avoidance to
lower our losses. That is no way to win.
Upsetting to read? You bet.
But since I thought we were winning when I only knew that theoretically we were
suffering WIA, knowing we are suffering X number of WIA does not change my
assessment. We are slowly winning. We must win.
"China 'Reduces' Its Military" (Posted September 1, 2003)China is cutting 200,000 soldiers, but will likely transfer them to the People's Armed Police. This PAP has absorbed all the simple leg infantry units that have been 'cut' from the PLA. Now 1 million strong, the PAP has all those old infantry units that can now be focused on defeating the people of China should they decide the corrupt elite in Peking should go.
On top of Desert Storm, and the Kosovo air war, the recent Iraq War has deeply impressed the Chinese military that high technology is indeed key to warfare. Shunting infantry to the PAP should allow the military budget to focus on modernization. Rest assured however that Taiwan has not strayed from the communist dictatorship's minds:
Western military analysts said the PLA would still be designed and able to reclaim Taiwan, or at least be daunting enough to prevent the self-ruled island, which Beijing considers a renegade province, declaring independence.
Everything is focused on Taiwan," said a Western diplomat.Power projection forces to envelop and capture Taiwan and simultaneously ward off American forces-primarily our carrier battle groups-from intervening.
And remember that everything is focused on Taiwan when you think that the Chinese in Peking are reasonable and unwilling to risk their positions on war. Au contraire, they stake their rule on reclaiming Taiwan.
"We Do the Impossible" (Posted September 1, 2003)
We should all be very impressed. According to critics of the war who continue to seek ways to restart the "should we go to war" debate, we created the Islamic fundamentalist-Baathist alliance that appears to be working in Iraq. "Alliance" is of course too strong a word, but you get the idea. How we did this when the anti-war side constantly belittled the very idea that secular Baathists could cooperate at all with Islamic terrorists is amazing.
Apparently, such cooperation against a common enemy isn't so amazing after all. The good part of this new realization of a very old concept that should have been apparent all along is that when the story of pre-war al Qaeda-Saddam links is more publicized, the anti-war side will concede this point. Let me add that I am not asserting a link between Saddam and 9-11. I don't understand why any discussion of links between the groups is automatically escalated by the anti-war side into a faux debate over 9-11 links. Never said it. Still not saying it. Don't know of anybody in the administration who ever said it.
As I said, "alliance" is too strong a word. Whoever did the Najaf bombing, Saddam's side is denying any involvement. Who did it? Al Qaeda? Rival Shias? Iranians? Saudi Wahhabis? Baathists despite the denial? Don't know.
Adding another division as McCain wants is not the solution. I continue to believe we have the troops strength needed to win. And we are winning. But we do need more Iraqi guards and light infantry. We need a more robust electricity, oil, and water infrastructure so that one bombing doesn't shut down the network for very long. We need to make sure that government functions are transferred to Iraqis on the road to democracy and rule of law. These things will speed up the process of winning.
Robert Kagan thinks we need more American troops in Iraq. I respect him and so quote here:
One thing is certain: There are not sufficient forces in Iraq today to create the secure environment within which essential political and economic development can proceed. The Bush administration knows this better than anyone. That's why it has suddenly launched an all-out drive to get a new U.N. resolution, and is contemplating negotiations and compromises with the French that would have been unimaginable even a month ago. Whence comes this unprecedented bout of multilateralist spirit? It derives exclusively from the need to get more foreign forces on the ground in Iraq so that American forces now holding static positions can get to the vital task of hunting proliferating numbers of Iraqi and non-Iraqi terrorists and saboteurs. Or, to put it another way: To make up for the fact that we don't have enough troops.Yes, more foreign troops will free up Americans guarding static positions and patrolling. But many of these troops aren't line combat troops. They are tank crews, artillery troops, and air defense soldiers, and others who are using their generic soldier skills rather than their specific combat skills. We can use foreign troops to get these troops out of Iraq and back to their home bases where they can regain their combat skills as tankers, gunners, and air defense shooters.
And yes, we do need to bite the bullet and increase the Army just for rotation purposes. More Military Police battalions and brigades for the medium term. Another two divisions for the long term. Sure, some of the combat infantry can be focused on offensive missions but this should be seen as a pure short-term boost prior to their rotation out. I won't turn away in-country troops freed for taking the fight to the enemy, but this is not the solution for the long term.
But in the short term, the focus should be on more Iraqis and foreign troops for police functions. And better intelligence to focus the efforts of our special forces and combat forces as they seek out the Baathists and Islamists who have flocked to Iraq (since before the war I might add).With all due respect to Mr. Kagan, I disagree.
One good thing that comes out of the Najaf tragedy might be a stronger willingness by Iraqis to finger the foreign jihadists in their midst even in the Sunni areas. Attacks against the UN may have been done to frighten the UN aid workers out but it may just show Iraqis that the guerrillas and terrorists are hurting the Iraqi people. Likewise, the Najaf bombing may convince Iraqi holdouts that the terrorists are directly attacking the Iraqi people rather than being a national resistance that they claim to be.
We are winning. Let's not panic when the enemy gets desperate.
Najaf Bombing" (Posted September 1, 2003)
The terrorist bombing in Najaf does not mean we need to blanket Iraq with US troops. Terror bombings took place during Saddam's reign and I dare say he had Iraq blanketed with troops and was ruthless against enemies. But those bombings didn't get the same publicity. And sadly, nobody in the West suggested they meant Saddam should leave Iraq.
The Iraqis arrested people pretty fast. Did they already know them? Did the local authorities leave them alone from some misguided notions of keeping anti-American types in reserve? If so, this shows that the Shias must toss in their lot with us.
Remember, just because our enemies manage to successfully do something doesn't mean we are failing. War is action and reaction--not a flawless execution of our plan that inevitably reaches victory. The enemy reacted and scores of Iraqis died. Keep doing what we are doing and we will win this.