FLAT EARTHER AND MCCAIN
Thomas Friedman is the new (well, actually, he's kinda/sorta an old variant of) David Brooks. Once again, the NYTimes op ed page has a well known sorta-liberal suggesting that the surge worked. This is driving me nuts. On the one hand, correlation is not causation... sure, there was a surge and it correlated with a decline in the rate of death for US soldiers in Iraq and a much smaller decline in the rate of death for Iraqis. On the other hand, as has been repeatedly pointed out, the surge also coincided with the utterly not surge-related development where a whole raft of our "enemies" decided that "Al Queda in Iraq" was more of a danger than the US military and to our utter shock - if not awe - decided to drive them out of their neighborhoods and even collaborate with us to do it. Second, as was also repeatedly pointed out, the surge also coincided with the point in time when pretty much all Sunni dominated neighborhoods had cleansed themselves of Shiite residents and vice versa... In other words, Iraqi-on-Iraqi violence declined in very significant part for reasons that had not a thing to do with the surge.
Also, it is only if you stress the decline in violence that you can make any of these points because the Iraqi government still hasn't made any real progress on any of the political or economic benchmarks necessary to generate the conditions for a stable government in a world of post-surge military exodus (which, by the way, has to happen to a certain extent because we have too many over-extended soldiers who's tours necessarily must end soon and effectively no one who would have qualified under the pre-Iraq recruitment conditions is volunteering for the military these days). So when Friedman says that McCain got it right w/r/t the surge, his being as historically blind and simplistic as David Brooks... I just showed Gallipoli in my class... and the kid who wouldn't watch it because of the religious beliefs of Mad Max, I sent to Breaker Morant... all because Johnny Got His Gun isn't on DVD.
REACTIONSAscending | Descending
who has given us freedom of the press.
It is the soldier, not the poet,
who has given us freedom of speech.
It is the soldier, not the campus organizer,
who has given us the freedom to demonstrate.
It is the soldier, not the lawyer,
who has given us the right to a fair trial.
It is the soldier,
who salutes the flag,
who serves under the flag,
and whose coffin is draped by the flag,
who allows the protester to burn the flag.
By Father Dennis Edward O'Brien, USMC
On a related, but different, note - depending on how one defines the term and position 'soldier' - the idea that soldiers gave "us" freedom of the press, speech, freedom of assembly, and fair trials does not tell the whole story of the role of many soldiers - both domestically (think everything from the use of the National Guard to put down legal strikes and protests) and internationally (think Chile, Nicaragua, Iran, El Salvador, Guatemala, Haiti, the Dominican Republic, Indonesia and any number of other once and present client states) - in selectively both enabling and suppressing those very freedoms. Furthermore, and again a great deal depends on how you operationalize soldiers (and assign responsibility for their actions), the idea that soldiers participated in the winning and defense of these - and other - freedoms independent of the actions and demands of the public, the press, poets, campus organizers and lawyers, much less the executive, judicial and legislative branches of our civilian government is to elevate soldiers above their constitutional status and to ignore the power of the people.
I have nothing against soldiers in general - at least not anything more than I have against reporters, poets, organizers, lawyers, doctors, plumbers, etc. in general - my dad, grandfather and many relatives far and wide have been in the military, though I do have both empirical and political problems with some soldiers and representative of those other professions particular... my concern, in this case, was clearly much more with the claims of one editorialist writing about the dynamics of two men (one who was once a soldier) to be the civilian leader of the nation.
The world is a complex place, my sense is that it is time we started looking at it that way.
1. Hunt you down and kill you right along with your Wahibi pals.
or
2. Pay you good money for helping to kill your Wahibi pals who you always thought were a pain in the ass anyways.
though my sense is that Goldenberg takes this further than he needs to...
Certainly the surge helped make the Anbar Awakening even more successful. And the Awakening made the Surge more successfull. But that is the way counter-insurgency is supposed to work. The big hurdle is convincing the locals you're the winning horse.
"...war is not violence and killing, pure and simple; war is controlled violence, for a purpose. The purpose of war is to support your government's decisions by force. The purpose is never to kill the enemy just to be killing him...but to make him do what you want to do. Not killing...but controlled and purposeful violence.
But it's not your business or mine to decide the purpose of the control. It's never a soldier's business to decide when or where or how -- or why -- he fights; that belongs to the statesmen and the generals. The statesmen decide why and how much; the generals take it from there and tell us where and when and how. We supply the violence; other people -- 'older and wiser heads,' as they say -- supply the control. Which is as it should be."
Sgt. Charles Zim
In many ways, my feeling is that we have too few genuine statesmen and women in the world today.










Digg.com
Mr. Wong
Delicious
Magnolia
Reddit
Blinklist



