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Writer’s view is personal, must not be
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America has just lost two more wars
Sender: MARJORIE GIBSON
By: John Chuckman
For a country which takes excessive pride in flags,
uniforms, and marching bands and spends more than the rest of
the planet combined on its military, the record of America's
forces since World War II is depressing. In dozens of quickie
invasions against weak opponents, Americans indeed have
prevailed, but when faced with tough and determined enemies,
they have remarkably often been defeated or stalemated.
The failure of America's military could be explained by the
notion that failure is only what happens when you seek the
wrong success. A poorly-governed people, as Americans
certainly are, keeps being sent to wars in which they have no
vital interest or commitment. Whatever the reason, the record
is unmistakable.
It includes Korea after MacArthur's insane march to the
Chinese border.
It includes Vietnam, where, despite the slaughter of millions,
the US left in shame, abandoning desperate associates clinging
to helicopter undercarriages.
It includes America's smaller-scale but long and vicious war
on Cuba. The US was embarrassed by failure time and again,
shamefully resorted to the terror tactics it now claims to
despise, and wasted immense resources supporting thousands of
hangers-on. Fidel Castro outlived two generations of American
presidents and over six hundred assassination plots.
The record of failures includes the American military's
confusing its humanitarian-assistance role in Somalia with
Gary Cooper facing down the bad guys in High Noon, an error
which gave it an ugly surprise and saw America turn and go
home.
The record includes Reagan's poorly-considered landing of
Marines in Lebanon. A base blown up by resisting guerrilla
forces, the Marines left with a battleship hurling
sixteen-inch shells into the hills, killing who knows how many
innocent civilians and having achieved nothing.
Of course, in battles or war generally, victory is not always
easy to determine. There were many battles in history where
victory was claimed or loss assumed in error.
Higher casualties don't always mean losing a battle or even a
war. The sacrifice of great numbers sometimes improves a
strategic or tactical position, as General Grant in America's
Civil War well understood. Vietnam's General Giap understood
this also, for despite a horrific slaughter of his people,
America suffered defeat.
It was an early sign of the coming defeat when body counts
began to dominate American news. It is easy to kill large
numbers of people, especially when you have complete air
superiority and high-tech weapons, but constant killing may
mean little progress against a serious opponent. Often, as in
the Blitz, bombing people is completely counter-productive.
In recent weeks, body counts re-appeared in Afghanistan, much
the same way opium poppies re-appeared after America's claim
to victory over the Taleban (who had suppressed opium). The
bodies are supposed to be Taleban, but who can tell whether a
dead villager is Taleban?
Even when the body is Taleban, how do we regard that as a
victory? The Taleban is a loosely-knit organization, a kind of
political party and anti-invader guerilla force, bound to
conservative traditions in a hardscrabble land of tough
mountain people. Death does not intimidate where people
typically live to forty-seven.
Except in the bizarre mind of George Bush, the Taleban is not
a terrorist organization,. So when one of them is killed, does
it really represent a victory? Or is it viewed by many in
Afghanistan as murder by unwelcome foreigners? Clearly, this
is the view of many because the Taleban is becoming stronger,
surprisingly so according to expert observers.
The recent refusal of NATO countries to commit more troops and
resources to Afghanistan was telling. Pressure from the US
must have been immense, but the response was virtual silence.
Of course, most NATO countries are simply looking after their
own best interests. Many of them understand terrorism far
better than does the US, having lived with it for decades, and
none of them are exhibiting death-wishes or dementia.
They know Al Qaeda has been scattered to the four winds -
anything but an achievement from a security point of view -
and they see little point in trying to occupy Afghanistan for
years. They understand the impossibility of significantly
changing so ancient and poor a land. They are not taken in by
American Potemkin village projects for bettering life there,
after having bombed the hell out of the place. NATO countries
in general do not accept Bush's tale about everyone's security
depending upon success in Afghanistan for the very good reason
that it is false.
On the other hand, those supporting the US in Afghanistan are
following Bush's interests, whatever those are, for I'm not
sure Bush ever has had a clear grasp of what he is doing
himself.
The other lost war is, of course, Iraq. American efforts there
have done little but kill civilians and destroy the economy
and now threaten to destroy the country itself. Even in
Washington, the reality of civil war is dawning. America's
real goals in the war are not going to be achieved, the major
one of which was to establish a regime friendly to American
policy, especially as that policy pertains to Israel. Instead,
years of bloody chaos lie ahead. The outcome, who knows? Three
separate warring rump states, each willing to do almost
anything to gain an advantage, including taking assistance
from those most hostile to American policy?
But the American loss in Iraq is far greater than this. The
illegal and unjustified invasion has muddied America's
reputation, aroused suspicions of its intentions, and put new
geopolitical forces into play only dimly perceived at this
time.
When are we going to learn how stupidly unproductive war is?
And when is the US going to learn how bad it is at war despite
its monstrous expenditures preparing for it?
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"Knowledge is
better than wealth because it protects you while you have to
guard wealth. it decreases if you keep on spending it but the
more you make use of knowledge ,the more it increases . what you
get through wealth disappears as soon as wealth disappears but
what you achieve through knowledge will remain even after you."MORE
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