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The Pipe Dream of Easy War
NY Times ^ | July 20, 2013 | H. R. McMASTER

Posted on 07/21/2013 11:39:05 PM PDT by neverdem

“A GREAT deal of intelligence can be invested in ignorance when the need for illusion is deep,” the novelist Saul Bellow once wrote. We should keep that in mind when we consider the lessons from the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan — lessons of supreme importance as we plan the military of the future.

Our record of learning from previous experience is poor; one reason is that we apply history simplistically, or ignore it altogether, as a result of wishful thinking that makes the future appear easier and fundamentally different from the past.

We engaged in such thinking in the years before the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001; many accepted the conceit that lightning victories could be achieved by small numbers of technologically sophisticated American forces capable of launching precision strikes against enemy targets from safe distances.

These defense theories, associated with the belief that new technology had ushered in a whole new era of war, were then applied to the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq; in both, they clouded our understanding of the conflicts and delayed the development of effective strategies.

Today, budget pressures and the desire to avoid new conflicts have resurrected arguments that emerging technologies — or geopolitical shifts — have ushered in a new era of warfare. Some defense theorists dismiss the difficulties we ran into in Afghanistan and Iraq as aberrations. But they were not aberrations. The best way to guard against a new version of wishful thinking is to understand three age-old truths about war and how our experiences in Afghanistan and Iraq validated their importance.

First, war is political. As the 19th-century Prussian philosopher of war Carl von Clausewitz said, “war should never be thought of as something autonomous, but always as an instrument of policy.”

In the years leading up to the...

(Excerpt) Read more at nytimes.com ...


TOPICS: Editorial; Foreign Affairs; Politics/Elections; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: afghanistan; hrmcmaster; iraq; mcmaster
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McMaster at Fort Benning was a pleasant surprise indeed. All of the Army's infantrymen have trained there after Vietnam. Benning also has the Airborne, Ranger and Officer Candidate Schools.

OpEds like this is why I still check the NY Times.

1 posted on 07/21/2013 11:39:06 PM PDT by neverdem
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To: wardaddy; Joe Brower; Cannoneer No. 4; Criminal Number 18F; Dan from Michigan; Eaker; Jeff Head; ...
The Rise of the Warrior Cop If there is a strategy, how is it Constitutional?

President Obama now aligned with Rev. Al Sharpton on race issues

Adapt to What?

The ‘New School’ on CNN - If Rachel Jeantel is the future of America, we’re completely doomed.

Some noteworthy articles about politics, foreign or military affairs, IMHO, FReepmail me if you want on or off my list.

2 posted on 07/22/2013 12:19:43 AM PDT by neverdem (Register pressure cookers! /s)
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To: neverdem
The object of war used to be victory over an opponent. They gave up the fight because there was no alternative. How many wars have been fought by the U.S. since Korea (1950-1953) where there was a clear cut victory? None that I remember. The politicians will not allow it and best efforts of our military are sacrificed on the altar of political expediency.
3 posted on 07/22/2013 1:51:03 AM PDT by MasterGunner01
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To: MasterGunner01

Wars are supposed to be publicly debated. The purpose of this is to avoid wars which the public doesn’t understand and focus on critical fights, not Presidential whim.

When was the last declared war?


4 posted on 07/22/2013 2:11:08 AM PDT by 1010RD (First, Do No Harm)
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To: 1010RD

Another good question. We haven’t had that question of declaring war debated since the Korean War began on 25 June 1950. Korea was sold to Americans as a “police action” under the UN when it was a real war. There was no declaration of war as happened in WW2 — and there haven’t been any since 8 and 11 December 1941. [America declared war on Japan only on 8 December; it declared war on Germany and Italy on 11 December after those two countries had declared war on America.]


5 posted on 07/22/2013 3:05:21 AM PDT by MasterGunner01
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To: 1010RD
When was the last declared war?
The last one we won.
6 posted on 07/22/2013 3:27:40 AM PDT by Bratch
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To: AdmSmith; AnonymousConservative; Berosus; bigheadfred; Bockscar; ColdOne; Convert from ECUSA; ...

Thanks neverdem.

It’s a bit of a straw man headline.

US wars in the main combat phase are one thing — but occupation of a country with an insurgency will always turn into a war of attrition, and is best left to the locals.


7 posted on 07/22/2013 3:50:13 AM PDT by SunkenCiv (McCain or Romney would have been worse, if you're a dumb ass.)
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To: neverdem

I remember the diplomatic struggle with Turkey to bring the heavy 3rd (?) Army into Iraq before hostilities commenced in March 2003. Colin Powell could never get it done, so they launched without what would seem to be a major part of the pre-campaign strategy. I don’t know why he discounts that fact in his critique.


8 posted on 07/22/2013 4:09:51 AM PDT by gusopol3
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To: MasterGunner01
The post-WW2 era is easier to understand once you realize that the U.S. military is really a tool of corporate interests, not an instrument of national defense for this country.

Every war the U.S. has fought since World War II was basically a "colonial" war. This means there's no way to effectively defeat the enemy from a traditional standpoint when the sole purpose of the military campaign is to turn the enemy into suppliers and customers of global industries. There's no reason to lay waste to entire nations when the whole purpose of engaging them militarily is to transform them into trading partners.

9 posted on 07/22/2013 4:15:33 AM PDT by Alberta's Child ("I've never seen such a conclave of minstrels in my life.")
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To: MasterGunner01
How many wars have been fought by the U.S. since Korea (1950-1953) where there was a clear cut victory?

We have had ZERO wars fought by us since WW2. Congress has not declared war on anybody since WW2, for the simple reason that Article 2 section 4 of the UN Charter forbids us to do so without UN approval. It has all been "police actions" or "authorization for the use of force".

We have not had victory, because we have not waged war. War involves the destruction of the enemy's capabilities to the point where they are forced to surrender or face extermination -- which were the choices given to Germany and Japan in 1945.

10 posted on 07/22/2013 4:41:47 AM PDT by PapaBear3625 (You don't notice it's a police state until the police come for you.)
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To: PapaBear3625
We may not have had any “real” declared wars since 1945, but there certainly have been lots of people who have been killed, wounded, and maimed during this “no wars” period of UN “peace”.

BTW, I am a firm believer that the UN is a total joke and the U.S. ought to throw these bums out of their NYC digs to go to their other headquarters in Brussels, Belgium; Geneva, Switzerland; or Nairobi, Kenya. We then implode the UN building and let NYC develop the property. America withdraws from the UN and severs all ties with it.

11 posted on 07/22/2013 7:57:42 AM PDT by MasterGunner01
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To: MasterGunner01
Korea was sold to Americans as a “police action” under the UN when it was a real war. There was no declaration of war as happened in WW2 —

Nor was there a treaty of peace, only a cease-fire agreement.

This is one more Constitutional duty Congress has abdicated.

12 posted on 07/22/2013 8:16:03 AM PDT by Smokin' Joe (How often God must weep at humans' folly. Stand fast. God knows what He is doing)
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To: SunkenCiv; MasterGunner01; 1010RD; Bratch; gusopol3; PapaBear3625; Smokin' Joe; lentulusgracchus
It’s a bit of a straw man headline.

I don't think so. I don't know who wrote it, McMaster or the NY Times, but war is man's most complex undertaking, IMHO. There's a reason that Sherman said "war is hell." If you don't make it so, you're unlikely to win.

US wars in the main combat phase are one thing — but occupation of a country with an insurgency will always turn into a war of attrition, and is best left to the locals.

Despite technological and tactical superiority, people get maimed and killed for nothing without the twin strategies of attrition and long term occupation. Witness Germany, Japan and South Korea, as imperfect as South Korea remains. That's the only way to really win, at least in American history. That's why World War I, Vietnam and Iraq were utter wastes. It's why Afghanistan will likely be another waste.

I write this while attempting to be a serious student of history. I graduated basic training on my 18th birthday. I went to Vietnam twice as an Army infantryman when I could have gone to the City College of New York while it was still tuition free in 1969.

I saw the World Trade Center burning from the Bronx on September 11, 2001. As a general rule, we no longer have what it takes to do anything beyond punitive expeditions because the left will undermine it, unless it's Clinton in the Balkans, or Obama in Libya. Witness Vietnam, Iraq and Afghanistan. I'm tired of my fellow citizens getting killed and maimed for nothing!

P.S. We got a stalemate in Korea because of geography and superior firepower. Korea's DMZ was defensible because Korea was a peninsula. LBJ's failure to appreciate the nature of that stalemate led to our follies in Southeast Asia where the commies got havens for their ground forces in North Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia.

P.P.S. I recently heard, I forgot where it was, maybe on a Charlie Rose show or C-Span, that the Chicoms would not commit ground forces to Southeast Asia because our artillery units chewed them up so badly in Korea. It's what could be expected when you put your troops in mass formations, but has any one else heard that?

13 posted on 07/22/2013 1:15:21 PM PDT by neverdem (Register pressure cookers! /s)
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To: neverdem
There's one reason why WW2 was the last “good war” — the Soviet Union was fighting for its life against Nazi Germany. When Germany invaded Poland it divided the country between Germany and Russia as part of the Von Ribbentrop-Molotov Non Aggression Pact. That pact lasted until Germany invaded the Soviet Union on 22 June 1941.

During the time between the German-Russian Non Aggression Pact and 22 June 1941, the American Left and CPUSA did everything they could to sabotage war supplies being shipped to the UK to fight Germany. After the German invasion the Left did a 180 degree turn and became one of the strongest backers of war supplies — especially to the Soviet Union. The Left also clamored for a second front to ease the German pressure on the Soviet Union.

Victory in Europe left Russia with a lot of Eastern Europe that Stalin did not want to give back and so the Russian troops stayed on and these Eastern European countries became communist states will allegiance to Moscow.

The American Left followed the Soviet party line: Western allies bad, Soviet Union and its captive Eastern states as good.

The American Left sees this country is the aggressor in everything we do. It undermines American interests every chance it gets. The Soviet Union is gone, so the American Left has made common cause with the Muslim Islamofascists. The enemy of my enemy is my friend.

Until there's a way to counter the American Left, America can never successfully win a war. The problem is that the U.S. State Department also undermines American interests because it is heavily penetrated by the Left. Neither SecState John F’ing Kerry or SecDef Chuck Hagel are the sharpest knives in the drawer. Neither has American interests in mind; they are surrender monkeys. Ditto for their bosses, Barry Obongo and Vallerie Jarrett.

14 posted on 07/22/2013 2:05:36 PM PDT by MasterGunner01
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To: MasterGunner01
The Soviet Union is gone....
You think?

Lately, I'm not so sure.

15 posted on 07/22/2013 2:52:52 PM PDT by Bratch
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To: neverdem

Spot on analysis.


16 posted on 07/22/2013 3:37:55 PM PDT by 1010RD (First, Do No Harm)
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To: 1010RD
In Afghanistan we're sending off our conservative country boys to battle terrorists for the benefit of our commie city slickers. Terrorists do not blow up farms, they blow up high density targets full of Democrats. Let the city slickers send their metrosexuals to Afghanistan and leave conservative America out of it.
17 posted on 07/22/2013 5:30:51 PM PDT by Reeses
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To: neverdem

The Chinese wouldn’t commit troops to Indochina because the Vietnamese didn’t want ‘em there, historically they are enemies. Also in Korea, the 2 million Chinese volunteers had dropped something like 500K casualties and there wasn’t much of an infrastructure for battlefield medics. The amphibious landing behind their lines, added to much better training on the UN side (firepower wasn’t too different, not least because of Chinese numerical superiority), caused a pretty rapid collapse of the apparent commie success. The Korean DMZ should have been established along the border with China, and I’d be surprised if that isn’t accomplished sometime in the next twenty years.

The reason the headline is a straw man is, there is no Easy War Pipe Dream — main combat really results in rapid success, but our armed forces shouldn’t be used as the local gendarmes. It has to be followed by effective local recruitment. After Saddam was found, he should have been given a televised drumhead trial and shot. All trace of his sorry ass should have been bulldozed or burned, and that televised. Iraq should have been partitioned to create independent Kurdistan (our Turkish “allies” and Syrian and Iranian enemies would have complained of course) and the rest left to a nice civil war. To reprise, the best part of a Muzzie civil war is, everyone wins.


18 posted on 07/22/2013 6:28:45 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (McCain or Romney would have been worse, if you're a dumb ass.)
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To: neverdem
The Chicoms would not commit ground forces to Southeast Asia because our artillery units chewed them up so badly in Korea. It's what could be expected when you put your troops in mass formations, but has any one else heard that?

That's not how they write the history of their Korean tactics, whatever it's worth. They see themselves as successful in deploying huge numbers of light infantry that overwhelmed American forces by their decenhttp://bevinalexander.com/excerpts/korean-war/tactics-chinese-communists-korean-war.htmtralized control.

19 posted on 07/22/2013 6:54:41 PM PDT by gusopol3
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To: gusopol3; neverdem

Mao wanted to surpass the Soviets, and cooked up the volunteer invasion scheme; the Russian advisors unexpectedly supported the idea. Oddly enough, the North Koreans had some top generals who opposed the idea, on the basis that the US had very deep experience with large amphibious invasions (from WWII) and a peninsula was an ideal geography for a decisive result from such an invasion. They were overruled, and during that terrible UN retreat to the Pusan perimeter, they looked dead wrong. It didn’t last. Attempts to crush the perimeter failed time after time, and a breakout started as a diversion just ahead of the Inchon landings.


20 posted on 07/22/2013 7:32:09 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (It's no coincidence that some "conservatives" echo the hard left.)
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