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http://www.military.com/forums/0,152...ESRC=navy-a.nl
Bill Kambic Haras Lucero, Kingston, TN Mangalarga Marchador: Uma Raça, Uma Paixão |
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A significant fraction of a TRILLION bucks wasted on an optional war with no
clear objective (other than regime change), no post-war plan, no clue. Meanwhile, real threats fester. Just finished reading "Dying to Win." Pretty good analysis of the terrorist agenda and methodology. If its author is correct (and I suspect he is closer to the truth than anyone in the administration) we're going about this all wrong. R / John wrote in message ... http://www.military.com/forums/0,152...ESRC=navy-a.nl Bill Kambic Haras Lucero, Kingston, TN Mangalarga Marchador: Uma Raça, Uma Paixão |
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In article ,
(John Carrier) wrote: Just finished reading "Dying to Win." Pretty good analysis of the terrorist agenda and methodology. If its author is correct (and I suspect he is closer to the truth than anyone in the administration) we're going about this all wrong. Yup. Notably, its thesis implies that significant numbers of Iraqis (and Afghans) believe that the western powers are planning to occupy their countries indefinitely and will have to be forced out. Or why else would they be doing suicide attacks? -- John Dallman, , HTML mail is treated as probable spam. |
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![]() "John Dallman" wrote in message ... In article , (John Carrier) wrote: Just finished reading "Dying to Win." Pretty good analysis of the terrorist agenda and methodology. If its author is correct (and I suspect he is closer to the truth than anyone in the administration) we're going about this all wrong. Yup. Notably, its thesis implies that significant numbers of Iraqis (and Afghans) believe that the western powers are planning to occupy their countries indefinitely and will have to be forced out. Or why else would they be doing suicide attacks? Define "significant numbers"... All indication is that it's a few thousand, strengthened by Iranians, Jordanians, and Syrians mainly, doing the damage. It has been known for centuries that a small dedicated guerilla force can do damage way out of proportion to its size, the current situation in Iraq is no exception to that. The problem in Iraq is that due to the political situation it is deemed unacceptable to effectively wipe out the guerilleros by employing overwhelming power in large scale operations. Effectively the process of routing them out has been turned into a civilian police style operation rather than a military style seize and occupy operation. The same happened in Vietnam and failed miserably there. Israel under international pressure tried the same agains the PLO and failed miserably as well. The Germans in WW2 tried the same against the French resistance and failed miserably. |
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In article , jwenting at hornet dot
demon dot nl (Jeroen Wenting) wrote: Yup. Notably, its thesis implies that significant numbers of Iraqis (and Afghans) believe that the western powers are planning to occupy their countries indefinitely and will have to be forced out. Or why else would they be doing suicide attacks? Define "significant numbers"... Enough to make it impractical to govern the countries conventionally, develop the economy and generally reap the benefits of a free society. They would seem to have such numbers. It has been known for centuries that a small dedicated guerilla force can do damage way out of proportion to its size, the current situation in Iraq is no exception to that. Yes. You also need to consider what fraction of the population is backing them in ways that don't involve firing guns or building IEDs. This ranges from keeping lookout and making 'phone calls when interesting things come along the road to feeding them, providing safe houses, etc, etc. And that's a much larger fraction of the population. Then you want to consider what fraction of the population is positively on the US side and willing and able to help. And that's quite small, because when they speak up, or get spotted helping, someone shoots them, and the US can't do much about it. The problem in Iraq is that due to the political situation it is deemed unacceptable to effectively wipe out the guerilleros by employing overwhelming power in large scale operations. Yes. Because when you do it, you create more of them, because of the people who have been pushed too far in assorted ways, some of which aren't significant at all to Americans or other westerners, but make an Arab feel that he must take revenge or die trying. The US Army and Marine Corps are finally getting to grips with this idea, as expounded in the new field manual. But they've done an awful lot of damage in the mean time. One of the simplest examples: a squad comes into an Iraqi's house, either by busting in or knocking and letting the door be answered. Once inside, they push the head of the family to the floor in front of his wife and/or children. To a westerner this is a minor, if real, humiliation. Unfortunately, to an Arab, it is a killing insult. He does not have the freedom to be an inferior position in his home in front of his family: he has been unmanned by this. It's at least as embarrassing as it would be for a US marine NCO to be found in the back room of a leather bar, wearing a dress and make-up, by the Air Force Security Police. You may feel that's a crazy way for the Arabs to feel. It seems that way to me. Unfortunately, it's also a fact that that's the way they do feel, and if you want to change it, you will have to occupy their country, imposing a different culture by main force, for about three generations. Effectively the process of routing them out has been turned into a civilian police style operation rather than a military style seize and occupy operation. Yes. The reasons that isn't going to work, in its current form, are rather more subtle. The population do not recognise the cause of the occupation as being just - "you got rid of Sadam, if that was all you wanted, why are you still here?" All the things that tended to tear Iraq apart, and were only restrained by Sadam's repression are still there, with decades of pent-up pressure. And Syria's and Iran's prices for helping - which might well not work anyway - are going to be too high for the USA to pay. The same happened in Vietnam and failed miserably there. Israel under international pressure tried the same agains the PLO and failed miserably as well. The Germans in WW2 tried the same against the French resistance and failed miserably. For all three of those, neither military-style occupation nor civilian- style policing worked. The "blame the Iraqis" spin is already well underway. That's probably what's going to be used to cover a withdrawal. Bush talked today about increasing the size of the US Army & Marine Corps. He isn't going to get enough volunteers to increase them to the needed size - enough to sustain about half a million troops in-country - and if he institutes conscription, the Republicans will lose the 2008 elections thoroughly. Since US domestic politics ultimately matter more to the US government than overseas entanglements, a pull-out is the only obvious answer. I'm not saying that some clever plan couldn't be hatched to settle this all acceptably all round. But it's going to have to be damn clever. -- John Dallman, , HTML mail is treated as probable spam. |
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