Posted on 01/25/2014 7:28:50 PM PST by Noremac
A soldier returning home from one of our 'dirty little wars'.
I've been chewing on that speech that former Admiral Mike Mullen (you know him one of the main cheerleaders for the repeal of DADT), now retired, gave at a breakfast attended by Gold Star families and members of Concerned Veterans for America, earlier this week. Here, for point of reference, are some of his comments:
Our culture is a culture of if youre here, we love you, and if you are not, please carry on [with] whatever it is, And the best and worst example of that were Gold Star families.This was not a prepared speech, but in this instance, a reaction to a question from a Gold Star widow, Jane Horton, regarding the cultural chasm between servicemen and their families and the rest of civilian society in general.When you get to these wars, I worry that America has paid us very well, the compensations good, [so the culture says] please go off and fight our dirty little wars and let us get on with our lives. We need to figure a way to get America to buy into those, into them.
The people in the Northeast dont know us anymore, for example, Mullen said, given that the Base Realignment and Closure process has led to the closure of so many military installations in the region.
Mullen recommended the development of a universal national service program (although not a draft), two years of service for all people between the age of 18 and 24, to bridge the gap between the military and the civilian communities. The military becoming more and more isolated from the American people is a disaster for America,
May I begin by saying that I empathize with the grief and loss of the surviving family members of those killed in duty to our country. And I think it is arguably true that too many Americans go through their daily lives not reflecting on the price, sacrifice and commitment born not only by the soldier, but by his family and loved ones. I agree as well, on his take of the pulse of our culture, which has extended the sentiment of abandonment and disposability - to not only the fallen men and women in uniform, but the families left behind. So, regarding that aspect of his response, he and I are of like mind. That may be about all.
I take issue, among other things, with Mullen's unwarranted assumption that America has paid us very well, the compensations good.. Huh? Paid who well, Admiral? You, of course, I know. The guys out there in the field of battle that are putting their lives on the line? On what planet? Certainly not this one. $225.00 a month??? People on government assistance make a hell of a lot more money relying on the taxpayer, than this. How clueless is this man? And how unjust is this arrangement?
Next comes the part of the statement that has people speculating as to its precise meaning - please go off and fight our dirty little wars and let us get on with our lives. We need to figure a way to get America to buy into those, into them. I've heard a few varying interpretations of the 'dirty little wars' expression. Some explain that Mullen meant that the wars we've been involved with since WWII and Korea, are thought of by many as 'dirty little wars'. The sense here is that ordinary citizens think of these conflicts we get involved with in the abstract . They are something that we don't properly comprehend the necessity for, and consequentially are a side show that is ugly that we don't want to contemplate. That could likely be what he meant.
Another reading of them takes his comments to mean that the government needs to do a better job of promoting the benefits of the military actions we engage in, to the general public. In other words, the President, Congress and the Defense Department should commence an 'awareness campaign' designed to convince Joe Citizen that intervening in places like Iraq, Afghanistan, Libya, Syria, Somalia, Egypt, Yemen and elsewhere, are vitally important to their lives and safety.
Then there is the largely unspoken but palpable sense that Mullen, having retired from his post, is having an Eisenhower moment along the lines of Ike's 'Military Industrial Complex' speech. That the expression 'Dirty Little Wars' implies that much of our involvement in these conflicts is use of the armed forces for private interests. The subtext here being that the United States' global forward deployment and power projection serves the interests of industry and the investment class, but that beyond the purpose of protecting the business assets of multi-nationals, there is little generally perceived value to the everyday American. So, with this dissection, the reading is that Mullen gave voice to a kind of Freudian slip or unintended public admission.
No matter what implication you draw from Admiral Mullen's comment in reference to America's 'Dirty Little Wars', can it not be concluded that with the full emergence of the Imperial Presidency, there is a clear motive - a moral hazard if you will, to commit troops in situations where the national interest is at best ill-defined and at worst, non-existent? Doesn't it seem obvious based on the results we are seeing, that our foreign policy, has failure written all over it with the exception that more debt and more wasteful military spending, benefits certain segments of the economy corporations and central banks?
I see a similar truth in Mullen's quote, The military becoming more and more isolated from the American people is a disaster for America. Ostensibly, this relates to the narrative from some progressives that because most of the recruits for the volunteer army are coming from the South and the Mid-West, perhaps there should be a return to the draft. While I disagree with re-instituting the draft, putting American lives in jeopardy for nothing more than protecting the investments of companies that offshore American jobs and industry, is a disaster for America. Rather than a buy-in on our part, a re-assessment of what embodies a proper and constitutionally authorized role in National defense by our military is the urgent priority.
No doubt there will be some who will counter that we're involved in a worldwide 'War On Terror'. Not according to the Pentagon. A directive went out in 2009, instructing personnel to strike that phrase from the lexicon as being insensitive and inflammatory and not properly descriptive of our purposes in deploying forces. The authorized replacement term? 'Overseas Contingency Operations'. Words signify intentions or lack of them. An overseas contingency operation can just as equally mean providing relief supplies to victims of typhoons in the Philippines as launching attacks against AlQueda forces. It - 'Overseas Contingency Operations' is an amorphous term. What does it tell you about the difference between what you've been sold on as a rationale for non-declared wars and what may be other undisclosed motives?
Even Former CIA Director and Secretary of Defense, Robert Gates admits in hindsight or delayed candor,
I think that the hurdle for the use of military force, particularly in the absence of an immediate threat to the United States, imposed by requiring a congressional act, would not necessarily be a bad thing. This is a place where I think the Congress ought to assert itself. The irony is, I believe in recent yearsand, coming from me, this is a strange thing to saybut one of the things that I lament is that, because of the changes in the Congress, I think theyve become less important in the governance of the nationtheyve weakened themselves in the decision-making process. You were asking me if the Congress should have declared warshould have been asked to declare waron Iraq, as I say, I hadnt thought about it beforebut my initial instinct in response is probably yes.
A liberal stooge, if there ever was one. I despise him.
Mullins is the poster boy for what’s wrong with the military. Liberal minded stooges running the show.
The military becoming more and more isolated from the American people is a disaster for America,
I disagree with the premise. I think our current Government is becoming more isolated from the American Military. Being a far left progressive Government not many people brought in will be former military. Within the military itself, the hard chargers have been marginalized and or weeded out by various means. The current Commander in Chief has no military background and lacks any sort of leadership ability. So the disconnect between him and the troops will be great. The President acts and speaks of Afghanistan as if this is something the military is doing and not the “United States”.
I think that the hurdle for the use of military force, particularly in the absence of an immediate threat to the United States, imposed by requiring a congressional act, would not necessarily be a bad thing. This is a place where I think the Congress ought to assert itself. The irony is, I believe in recent yearsand, coming from me, this is a strange thing to saybut one of the things that I lament is that, because of the changes in the Congress, I think theyve become less important in the governance of the nationtheyve weakened themselves in the decision-making process. You were asking me if the Congress should have declared warshould have been asked to declare waron Iraq, as I say, I hadnt thought about it beforebut my initial instinct in response is probably yes.
One must never forget that any action taken by the military are actions that are defined and ordered by the Executive Branch of government. In this case it is unfortunately Barrak Hussein Obama.
The executive branch of government has become a partner with the legislative branch of government. This is the road to tyranny. The judiciary is well on the way of being an active and willing partner in this tyranny and The Republic is in grave danger.
One must be reminded of the response of Benjamin Franklin when asked what form of government we will have during the Constitutional Convention. His reply was "A Republic if you can keep it." We have almost lost the Republic! Only brave patriots that are willing to risk all can capture and return our great nation to a Republic.
That is one flag officer who managed to make me ashamed of admitting I served in the USN.
Yep. Exactly.
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