-Caveat Lector-

http://www.suntimes.com/output/greeley/cst-edt-greel04.html
Lessons unlearned haunt U.S.

April 4, 2003

BY ANDREW GREELEY
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During the Vietnam War, there was a morose song that claimed that
Lyndon Johnson had mired the United States in the ''Big Muddy,'' a dark
swamp from which there was no escape. Because the U.S. military never
seems to learn from its mistakes, it would appear that we are once again
deep in the Big Muddy.

The strength of American military might exists in its technology, firepower
and air power--none of which is much good against guerrilla warriors who
are ready to die. The war in Vietnam was lost finally because our military
leadership was never able to cope with the Viet Cong. Is there any reason
to think that the leadership of today is better able to cope with the
Fedayeen Saddam?

The much-abused CIA warned about the Fedayeen. The geniuses at
Defense dismissed the CIA long ago when it refused to report that Iraq was
involved in the World Trade Center attack.

I do not blame the troops for getting themselves into the Big Muddy, nor
even their officers. I blame the civilian leadership (just as in the time of
the Vietnam War) for putting American fighting men and women in what
seems to be an impossible position. I blame especially the civilian ''defense
intellectuals'' who thought this whole crazy war up. I blame the
''chickenhawks'': Wolfowitz, Perle, Cheney, Kristol and especially Donald
Rumsfeld, who is emerging as the Robert McNamara of the early 21st
century. McNamara, some readers will remember, was the brilliant
corporate executive who as secretary of Defense led the American military
into the Big Muddy. A published story now claims that at the start of the
planning for his foolish, dangerous war, Rumsfeld thought it could be won
in three days with 30,000 troops. Now the generals (like Barry McCaffrey)
who fought in the first Iraq war are saying that the 90,000 troops inside
Iraq are dangerously few compared with what is needed.

Rumsfeld is telling the world that we will not engage in street war in
Baghdad, but rather surround the city and lay siege to it until there's an
internal revolution--a cockeyed notion if there ever was one. In both
cases, many Americans would die and thousands and thousands of Iraqis.
The Brookings Institution has suggested that 5,000 Americans might die and
20,000 might be wounded. They estimate that Iraqi military casualties might
exceed 100,000, and civilian casualties might be much higher.

What happens when you want to liberate a country that does not want to
be liberated? What happens when the ''only superpower'' is humiliated by a
handful of fanatics in flowing desert robes?

Even in details, the venture into the Big Muddy is like the last one.
Reporters from the front lines describe serious problems. Central
Command headquarters is optimistic in its daily briefings. The Pentagon
blames journalists for exaggerating the problems. The president, who now
apparently thinks he's Abraham Lincoln (as did Lyndon Johnson), solemnly
warns that we will stay the course in a war that will be long and difficult.
One wonders why he didn't warn about pro-Saddam Hussein guerrillas
before the war. Or even if he knew about them.

So one hears responsible people in nice restaurants returning to the
theme of their predecessors 35 years ago: ''Let's kill them all!'' Yeah, and
then let's go after the French, too.

The American plan was to ''decapitate'' Iraq in the first air attack, then to
''shock and awe'' them with the biggest air strike in history, then to
destroy Saddam's command and control systems, then to accept the
surrender of the Iraqi army and deal with those in the leadership who
wanted to break away from the Baathist Party's dominance, then finally to
accept the acclaim of the liberated Iraqi people.

Don't look now, but none of those things has happened. Who thought they
would? The chickenhawks, obviously.

The United States will doubtless win the war eventually (unlike the
Vietnam conflict).

The question is at what price in lost influence, credibility and human lives.




















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the authority of teachers, elders or wise men.  Believe only after
careful observation and analysis, when you find that it agrees with
reason and is conducive to the good and benefit of one and all.
Then accept it and live up to it." The Buddha on Belief,
from the Kalama Sutra

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