Please forgive the self-sensorship, above.  At least one server blocked
delivery of emails for a while for pasting in similarly mild expletives
where, I suppose, your tender children or ears will be offended.  I think 
I'll send Norman Solomon's related article on the media, this afternoon.
Who needs the Patriot Act?
Ed

Subject: [NYTr] Fallon, Chief of CENTCOM: Petraeus  "an ass-kissing
little chickenshit"
To: NYTr <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

IPS News - Sep 12, 2007
http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=39235

IRAQ: Fallon Derided Petraeus, Opposed the Surge

by Gareth Porter

WASHINGTON, Sep 12 (IPS) - In sharp contrast to the lionisation of Gen.
David Petraeus by members of the U.S. Congress during his testimony
this week, Petraeus's superior, Admiral William Fallon, chief of the
Central Command (CENTCOM), derided Petraeus as a sycophant during their
first meeting in Baghdad last March, according to Pentagon sources
familiar with reports of the meeting. Fallon told Petraeus that he
considered him to be "an ass-kissing little chickenshit" and added, "I
hate people like that", the sources say. That remark reportedly came
after Petraeus began the meeting by making remarks that Fallon
interpreted as trying to ingratiate himself with a superior.

That extraordinarily contentious start of Fallon's mission to Baghdad
led to more meetings marked by acute tension between the two
commanders. Fallon went on develop his own alternative to Petraeus's
recommendation for continued high levels of U.S. troops in Iraq during
the summer.

The enmity between the two commanders became public knowledge when the
Washington Post reported Sep. 9 on intense conflict within the
administration over Iraq. The story quoted a senior official as saying
that referring to "bad relations" between them is "the understatement
of the century".

Fallon's derision toward Petraeus reflected both the CENTCOM
commander's personal distaste for Petraeus's style of operating and
their fundamental policy differences over Iraq, according to the
sources.

The policy context of Fallon's extraordinarily abrasive treatment of
his subordinate was Petraeus's agreement in February to serve as front
man for the George W. Bush administration's effort to sell its policy
of increasing U.S. troop strength in Iraq to Congress.

In a highly unusual political role for an officer who had not yet taken
command of a war, Petraeus was installed in the office of Minority
Leader Mitch McConnell, a Republican from Kentucky, in early February
just before the Senate debated Bush's troop increase. According to a
report in The Washington Post Feb. 7, senators were then approached on
the floor and invited to go McConnell's office to hear Petraeus make
the case for the surge policy.

Fallon was strongly opposed to Petraeus's role as pitch man for the
surge policy in Iraq adopted by Bush in December as putting his own
interests ahead of a sound military posture in the Middle East and
Southwest Asia -- the area for which Fallon's CENTCOM is responsible.

The CENTCOM commander believed the United States should be withdrawing
troops from Iraq urgently, largely because he saw greater dangers
elsewhere in the region. "He is very focused on Pakistan," said a
source familiar with Fallon's thinking, "and trying to maintain a
difficult status quo with Iran."

By the time Fallon took command of CENTCOM in March, Pakistan had
become the main safe haven for Osama bin Laden's al Qaeda to plan and
carry out its worldwide operations, as well as being an extremely
unstable state with both nuclear weapons and the world's largest
population of Islamic extremists.

Plans for continued high troop levels in Iraq would leave no troops
available for other contingencies in the region.

Fallon was reported by the New York Times to have been determined to
achieve results "as soon as possible". The notion of a long war, in
contrast, seemed to connote an extended conflict in which Iraq was but
a chapter.

Fallon also expressed great scepticism about the basic assumption
underlying the surge strategy, which was that it could pave the way for
political reconciliation in Iraq. In the lead story Sep. 9, The
Washington Post quoted a "senior administration official" as saying
that Fallon had been "saying from Day One, 'This isn't working.' "

One of Fallon's first moves upon taking command of CENTCOM was to order
his subordinates to avoid the term "long war" -- a phrase Bush and
Secretary of Defence Robert M. Gates had used to describe the fight
against terrorism.

Fallon was signaling his unhappiness with the policy of U.S. occupation
of Iraq for an indeterminate period. Military sources explained that
Fallon was concerned that the concept of a long war would alienate
Middle East publics by suggesting that U.S. troops would remain in the
region indefinitely.

During the summer, according to the Post Sep. 9 report, Fallon began to
develop his own plans for redefine the U.S. mission in Iraq, including
a plan for withdrawal of three-quarters of the U.S. troop strength by
the end of 2009.

The conflict between Fallon and Petraeus over Iraq came to a head in
early September. According to the Post story, Fallon expressed views on
Iraq that were sharply at odds with those of Petraeus in a three-way
conversation with Bush on Iraq the previous weekend. Petraeus argued
for keeping as many troops in Iraq for as long as possible to cement
any security progress, but Fallon argued that a strategic withdrawal
from Iraq was necessary to have sufficient forces to deal with other
potential threats in the region.

Fallon's presentation to Bush of the case against Petraeus's
recommendation for keeping troop levels in Iraq at the highest possible
level just before Petraeus was to go public with his recommendations
was another sign that Petraeus's role as chief spokesperson for the
surge policy has created a deep rift between him and the nation's
highest military leaders. Bush presumably would not have chosen to
invite an opponent of the surge policy to make such a presentation
without lobbying by the top brass.

Fallon had a "visceral distaste" for what he regarded as Petraeus's
sycophantic behaviour in general, which had deeper institutional roots,
according to a military source familiar with his thinking.

Fallon is a veteran of 35 years in the Navy, operating in an
institutional culture in which an officer is expected to make enemies
in the process of advancement. "If you are Navy captain and don't have
two or three enemies, you're not doing your job," says the source.

Fallon acquired a reputation for a willingness to stand up to powerful
figures during his tenure as commander in chief of the Pacific Command
from February 2005 to March 2007. He pushed hard for a conciliatory
line toward and China, which put him in conflict with senior military
and civilian officials with a vested interest in pointing to China as a
future rival and threat.

He demonstrated his independence from the White House when he refused
in February to go along with a proposal to send a third naval carrier
task force to the Persian Gulf, as reported by IPS in May. Fallon
questioned the military necessity for the move, which would have
signaled to Iran a readiness to go to war. Fallon also privately vowed
that there would be no war against Iran on his watch, implying that he
would quit rather than accept such a policy.

A crucial element of Petraeus's path of advancement in the Army, on the
other hand, was through serving as an aide to senior generals. He was
assistant executive officer to the Army Chief of Staff, Gen. Carl
Vuono, and later executive assistant to the chairman of the Joint
Chiefs, Gen. Henry Shelton. His experience taught him that cultivating
senior officers is the key to success.

The contrasting styles of the two men converged with their conflict
over Iraq to produce one of the most intense clashes between U.S.
military leaders in recent history.


[Gareth Porter is an historian and national security policy analyst.
His latest book, "Perils of Dominance: Imbalance of Power and the Road
to War in Vietnam", was published in June 2005.]

***

Re: Time to Take a Stand

Anyone with a sense of history will have to chortle at
the latest claims, and for that matter the previous
year's set of claims, and the year before that's, about
how the Iraqi government and military are doing better
than ever.  If you were around during Vietnam, you will
recall the stories, that came out every year, about how
the ARVN (Army of the Republic of Vietnam, aka the
puppet troops), how 80 battalions were being trained,
about how the army is taking over more missions
previously assigned to US forces, and usually there was
a favorite province where every year the gullible media
would be taken on tour to see all the progress (the
fact that the province in question had never had much
Viet Minh or NLF organization, being ruled by one of
the weird religious sects, was never mentioned as it
would ruin the Happy Days! message).  There were
several years running when I recall the figure of 80
battalions in training being mentioned, and by gosh,
the same number (maybe the same battalions?) has been
cited for Iraq several years running.  The small print,
as usual, what generally never makes the story, is that
6 of these battalions are rated as combat worthy, and
by that they mean that 3 of the battalions are believed
to be good enough to be trusted with live ammunition,
and relied upon not to run away when shooting starts.

And every time, some serious military intellectual will
scratch his head and not be able to understand why
these guys aren't all that eager to die for "their"
government that we have given them.  And why the guys
on the other side still seem willing to brave the
insane amount of firepower the US military can
generate.  "Just doesn't make sense, must be outside
agitators, Chinese Communists, uh, Iranian fanatics,
Mooslim extremists, devils from hell, crazy people.
They just don't act right."

Do you think there is extant somewhere in the British
archives a report from some general claiming 80
battalions of Loyalists training in North America,
ready to take over the duties of His Majestie's forces
soon?  Wanna bet?

Jack Radey

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