60 online
 
Most Popular Choices
Share on Facebook 10 Printer Friendly Page More Sharing
OpEdNews Op Eds   

Does the Bush Administration Support the Troops? Yes, Like a Noose Supports a Hanging Man!

By       (Page 1 of 2 pages)   2 comments
Message Walter Uhler
Become a Fan
  (18 fans)

On August 2, 2000, while accepting the Republican Party's nomination as Vice President of the United States, Dick Cheney told the U.S. military, "help is on the way." Cheney used the occasion to savage the Clinton administration: "Rarely has so much been demanded of our armed forces and so little given them in return." Yet, Cheney's rebuke has proven to be vastly more applicable today than it has been for the past thirty years. When it comes to abuse and neglect of our military, President Clinton emerges as a rank amateur when compared with President George W. Bush and Vice President Cheney.

It was the Bush administration that sent American soldiers to war in Iraq without adequate supplies of body armor, without an adequate number of armored vehicles to ward off roadside bombs and, most significantly, without an adequate number of troops to secure the peace in Iraq after toppling Saddam Hussein. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld disdained and abused the senior military leadership - and the disdain was largely reciprocated.

But listen to how Rumsfeld responded in Kuwait, in December 2004, when Spec. Thomas Wilson (a mechanic with the Tennessee Army National Guard) asserted, "our vehicles are not armored." Rumsfeld callously replied: "As you know, you go to war with the Army you have…They're not the Army you might want or wish to have at a later time." [Thomas E. Ricks, Fiasco, p. 411]

Had Rumsfeld been either an honest, honorable or forthright man, he might have said: "Son, we never planned to be in Iraq this long. I was too obsessed with demonstrating the wisdom of my policy of military transformation, which emphasizes technological superiority as a force multiplier, rather than adequately equipping a large army. Others, such as Vice President Cheney, believed we would be greeted as liberators. None of us in the Bush administration expected a long war, which we might well lose. I'm sorry, we were dead wrong." (That is, due to our mistakes, some of your buddies already are dead and some of you soon will be.)

To readers of Thomas E. Ricks' book, Fiasco, none of this is news. Ricks is the Washington Post's senior Pentagon correspondent who interviewed "an extraordinary number of American military personnel, including more than one hundred senior officers" and had access to more than thirty thousand pages of documents. He's written a sympathetic, but factual, account of the military's "tragic" undertaking in Iraq.

Readers of Fiasco will feel the passion with which many of America's senior military leaders (both active and retired) opposed both the very reasons for invading Iraq as well as the now demonstrably crackpot strategy to be employed there. They've been vindicated on both counts. In fact, after reading Fiasco, I was forced to ponder how close America came to a military coup d'etat.

The case of retired Marine Corps General Anthony Zinni is especially instructive. Shot three times in Vietnam, Zinni went on to become the chief of Central Command in 1997 and, thus, was the military man responsible for Iraq. And, as he told Ricks, "We contained Saddam…We watched his military shrink to less than half its size from the beginning of the Gulf War until the time I left command, not only shrinking in size, but dealing with obsolete equipment, ill-trained troops, dissatisfaction in the ranks, a lot of absenteeism. We didn't see the Iraqis as a formidable force. We saw them as a decaying force." [Ricks, p. 13]

Yet, while in charge of Centcom, Zinni completed plans for a possible war with Iraq. His war plans required approximately 350,000 troops. Why so many? Because, as Zinni told a group of Marine commanders in November 2002: "If you guys don't go through the enemy in six weeks, we'll disown you…But then the hard part begins….We have lit a fuse, and we don't know what's at the other end - a nuke, a hand grenade, or a dud?" [Ricks, p. 71]

As he told Ricks: "I was worried that we didn't understand the importance of maintaining order, that we had come in with sufficient forces to freeze the situation, to understand that when we're ripping the guts out of an authoritarian regime, you've got responsibility for security services, everything else. You have to be prepared to handle all that." [Ibid]

Zinni also was one of the first Americans to suspect that the Bush administration was lying to the American public about Saddam's so-called weapons of mass destruction. In fact, Zinni was sitting on the stage at the VFW national convention in Nashville, Tennessee on 26 August 2002 - sitting on the stage behind Cheney as the vice president told the audience: "the Iraqi regime has in fact been very busy enhancing its capabilities in the field of chemical and biological agents, and they continue to pursue the nuclear program they began so many years ago….Many of us are convinced that Saddam Hussein will acquire nuclear weapons fairly soon." [Ricks, p. 49]

Zinni subsequently asserted that he nearly fell off his chair: "In my time at Centcom, I watched the intelligence and never - not once - did it say 'He has WMD.'" As Ricks adds: "Since retiring he [Zinni] had retained all his top-secret clearances, he was still consulting the CIA on Iraq, he had reviewed all the current intelligence - and he had seen nothing to support Cheney's certitude." [Ibid, p. 50]

By the fall of 2003, Zinni "began speaking out…bitterly denouncing Rumsfeld, criticizing the Iraq occupation and saying it lacked a coherent strategy, a serious plan, and sufficient resources." In the fall of 2003 - and thus months before May 12, 2004, the date that Gen. Richard Myers, Bush's chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told a Senate committee that "there is no way to militarily win in Iraq" - Zinni told a gathering of the U.S. Naval Institute and the Marine Corps Association that "We're in danger of failing."

He also said, "We can't go on breaking our military and doing things like we're doing now." Then, invoking parallels with Vietnam, Zinni asserted: "My contemporaries, our feelings and sensitivities were forged on the battlefields of Vietnam, where we heard the garbage and the lies, and we saw the sacrifice…We swore never again would we allow that to happen. I ask you, is it happening again?" As Ricks notes: "There were hundreds of Marine and Navy officers present, and many of them arose to give his denunciation of their civilian leaders a standing ovation." [Ricks, pp. 241-42]

Matters have worsened significantly since then. Last year, retired General Colin Powell observed that the U.S. Army is "about broken." Lt. Gen. Clyde A. Vaughn, chief of the Army National Guard, complained, "we have absolutely piecemealed our force to death."

Retired U.S. Army Colonel and scholar Andrew J. Bacevich has provided some of the details that would support Powell's conclusion: "One third of the regular Army's brigades qualify as combat-ready. In the reserve components, none meet that standard." The Army "is currently short 3,000 commissioned officers…young West Pointers are bailing out of the Army at a rate not seen in three decades….The stress of repeated tours is sapping the Army's lifeblood." [Bacevich, "Bushed Army," The American Conservative, June 4, 2007]

But, rather than respond to this dire situation, Republican smacked-asses, like Senator Saxby Chambliss, place party loyalty to Bush's lost war over country and soldiers. Thus, when Senator Jim Webb, a combat veteran of the Vietnam war, attempted to introduce legislation (S. 2012) that would provide some relief to U.S. troops, chicken hawk Chambliss felt the need to chastise Webb for not knowing America's military history.

Next Page  1  |  2

(Note: You can view every article as one long page if you sign up as an Advocate Member, or higher).

Rate It | View Ratings

Walter Uhler Social Media Pages: Facebook page url on login Profile not filled in       Twitter page url on login Profile not filled in       Linkedin page url on login Profile not filled in       Instagram page url on login Profile not filled in

Walter C. Uhler is an independent scholar and freelance writer whose work has been published in numerous publications, including The Nation, the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, the Journal of Military History, the Moscow Times and the San (more...)
 
Go To Commenting
The views expressed herein are the sole responsibility of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of this website or its editors.
Writers Guidelines

 
Contact AuthorContact Author Contact EditorContact Editor Author PageView Authors' Articles
Support OpEdNews

OpEdNews depends upon can't survive without your help.

If you value this article and the work of OpEdNews, please either Donate or Purchase a premium membership.

STAY IN THE KNOW
If you've enjoyed this, sign up for our daily or weekly newsletter to get lots of great progressive content.
Daily Weekly     OpEd News Newsletter
Name
Email
   (Opens new browser window)
 

Most Popular Articles by this Author:     (View All Most Popular Articles by this Author)

The Grand Jury Report: Part two of "What did Joe Paterno know and when did he know it?"

Three False Assertions by the Grand Jury turned the Press and Public against Joe Paterno and Penn State

New, Previously Suppressed Grand Jury Testimony and Joe Paterno: Part four of "What did Joe Paterno know and when...

What did Joe Paterno know and when did he know it? Part One

Incompetent Journalists at the Philadelphia Inquirer Slandered Joe Paterno

Hitting Penn State's Board of Trustees Where it Hurts

To View Comments or Join the Conversation:

Tell A Friend