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Knives Come Out For Rumsfeld As The Generals Fight Back
The Guardian (UK) ^ | 3-31-2003 | Julian Borger

Posted on 03/30/2003 8:37:29 PM PST by blam

Knives come out for Rumsfeld as the generals fight back

Julian Borger in Washington
Monday March 31, 2003
The Guardian

The uniformed officers who inhabit the Pentagon's five concentric rings of corridors generally do not appreciate civilians interfering with their plans. Military logistics may look boring, one said, but when the shooting starts, it saves lives. The last time there was this level of civilian micromanagement was 40 years ago when Robert McNamara and his Kennedy-era whizz kids were not content to lay down general policy. They decided they knew better than the generals what forces would be needed to take on the Vietcong. More than any other single politician, arguably including Lyndon Johnson, McNamara took the blame for the Vietnam disaster.

Donald Rumsfeld has become the Iraq conflict's McNamara. His second-guessing of the deployment orders in the months before the fighting started is being blamed by retired and serving officers alike for the thinly protected 300-mile supply lines on which US troops are now depending.

Their message is clear. Whatever happens now, this has become "Rumsfeld's war". If Saddam Hussein's regime suddenly collapses, his superstar status from the Afghan war, when he proved the doubters wrong, will only be enhanced. If it slides into a gruelling slog, as coalition casualties climb into the hundreds, there is no doubt he will take the blame.

Fiercely worded criticisms of the 70-year-old defence secretary have been seeping to the surface with increasing frequency through the press in the past week as the uniforms vent their frustration.

The latest broadside comes in today's New Yorker, in which unnamed former and acting officers are quoted complaining about Mr Rumsfeld's interfering ways.

They accuse him of fiddling with the "tip-fiddle", the time-phased forces deployment list (TPFDL), a thick directory-sized computer printout which determines which military unit goes where, how it gets there, and when. It is the "software" that ensures the military machine rolls along smoothly.

In normal circumstances, the tip-fiddle is put together by military planners in the Pentagon and in General Tommy Franks' central command, who have spent their whole lives working on logistics. But this time Mr Rumsfeld went through Operation Plan 1003, the blueprint for invading Iraq, page by page. The result, according to the critics, was equivalent to having enthusiastic amateurs tinker with your car - it did not fix the problem but made it worse.

"He thought he knew better," one senior planner told the New Yorker. "He was the decision-maker at every turn."

Because there are not enough troops to guard the lines of supply properly, the frontline units are being slowed down and even halted by Iraqi guerrilla attacks on their routes back to Kuwait. They are also facing exhaustion and the next available reinforcements will not arrive until late April.

The Pentagon let it be known late last week that more than 100,000 troops were on the way. But these troops had been given their deployment orders weeks earlier. The point was not that they were coming, the military critics say, but that they were coming so late.

Yesteray, under the most intense media pressure since the war began, Mr Rumsfeld denied the accusations of meddling and micromanagement.

"The planners are in the central command," he insisted. "They come up with their proposals and I think you'll find that if you ask anyone who's been involved in the process from the central command that every single thing they've requested has in fact happened."

But the Guardian has learned that the defence secretary was instrumental in holding up deployment orders for about 36,000 troops in the Texas-based 1st Cavalry Division and the German-based 1st Armoured Division, insistent that such heavy units were unnecessary for the more agile warfare of the 21st century.

Blamed "There's nobody there who wouldn't rather have an armoured cavalry regiment with them," a senior Pentagon official conceded on Friday.

The delay in the arrival of another division, the 4th Infantry, was caused principally by Turkey's refusal to allow them to drive across its territory on the way into battle. But Mr Rumsfeld and the White House are being blamed for wasting valuable weeks when the division's tanks floated in ships in the eastern Mediterranean, in the belief Ankara would change its mind. Then when Gen Franks wanted to halt the offensive until the 4th Infantry could be diverted to Kuwait, Mr Rumsfeld reportedly overruled him.

Furthermore, there are signs that the Pentagon's political leadership is still trying to orchestrate the tempo of operations, putting pressure on field commanders to keep up the pace of the advance on Iraq, rather than wait for the 4th Infantry to arrive. The generals are fighting back.

"Why be in a hurry to make a mistake," a senior defence official told the Guardian.

Back in January, when such attention to detail still looked like a virtue, Time magazine published a largely admiring cover story entitled "Rumsfeld's Blueprint for War" which begins with a description of him standing at his lectern-like desk, reviewing one of the troop deployment orders, No 177.

"Pentagon officials say orders such as No 177 are normally reviewed thoroughly in advance and fly across a defence chief's desk. But with every step America takes toward war with Iraq, which could be as little as a month off, Rumsfeld is doing things his own meticulous way," Time reported.

"Over the past few weeks, he has been holding up deployment papers at the last minute, demanding answers and explanations about which units are going where, why."

The defence secretary may come to regret providing that particular insight into his working day, particularly now that he is insisting the war plans do not bear his fingerprints.

Yet the allegations against him go much further than holding up troop deployments. He is also charged with putting too much faith in the potency of air power, and its much-vaunted "shock and awe".

"While I think it might have worked very well against Belgium, they forgot to take into account the enemy, which is something no military plan should do," argued Colonel Ralph Peters, a retired army intelligence officer who is now a prominent Rumsfeld critic.

"Saddam Hussein, his sons and their key paladins, the people who make that regime run, are never going to surrender - I mean, the hardcore people - because they know if they surrender they're not going to exile in the south of France."

The wily and thoughtful defence secretary is also charged with ignoring one of Machiavelli's warnings - "How dangerous it is to believe exiles". While US intelligence was apprehensive about the strength of President Saddam's army and his willingness to resort to unconventional methods, Mr Rumsfeld and his aides, Paul Wolfowitz and Douglas Feith, put more weight on the assessments of the opposition Iraqi National Congress and its exiled leader, Ahmed Chalabi, who insisted that even the Republican Guard divisions were rotten to the core and were ripe for defection. So far, those predictions have not been borne out.

The top Pentagon leadership also seemed to have ignored the worrying signs produced by its own wargames. In the exercise known as Millennium Challenge last year, a retired marine general, Paul Van Riper, acting the part of a rogue Middle Eastern military leader, inflicted huge losses on a US force by using guerrilla and suicide tactics very much like those being witnessed now in Iraq. He was so successful the wargame had to be stopped, and the old general was instructed to play "by the rules". He pulled out of the exercise in protest.

The actual plan for the invasion of Iraq assumed that President Saddam would have learned from the last Gulf war, but it assumed he would have drawn different conclusions. It was thought he would draw all his best men back to Baghdad, not send them out on suicide missions to the provinces, using tactics last seen in Somalia in 1993, the site of the US military's last major disaster.

A Pentagon official close to Mr Rumsfeld's inner circle bristled at the comparison. "In Somalia, we changed the mission halfway through. Here, we went in with a mission, to get WMD [weapons of mass destruction] and take down the regime," he said.

Mr Rumsfeld is the only US defence secretary to have served in the office twice - the first time as the youngest in Pentagon history, the second time as the oldest. This is more than a historical curiosity. It is also a key to his attitude and his management style.

When he was Gerald Ford's defence secretary, at the age of 43, he felt his authority and his plans to reform the department were ignored by generals and admirals, who knew they would be in their jobs long after he was gone. They were right, he was swept out of the Pentagon when Jimmy Carter won power in 1976.

It is clear he is determined that this time, things will be different, but his first attempts at reform did not go well. He brought a veteran radical reformer, Andrew Marshall, out of obscurity and gave him full authority to remake the armed services, pursuing what was once called the "revolution in military affairs" and is now more concisely known as "transformation".

The armed services would be transformed from their ponderous cold war formations into lighter, faster integrated units that would use overwhelming technological superiority to bring victory without a big "footprint", the sheer numbers of troops and armour on the ground.

The admirals would have to give up their belief in the primacy of aircraft carriers, the air force would have to rethink its vast fleet of heavy bombers, and the army would have to give up its faith in the power of the heavy mechanised divisions.

Gen Franks' first version of Plan 1003, delivered to the Pentagon more than a year ago, called for four of these divisions to play a central role - the 3rd and 4th Infantry, the 1st Cavalry and the 1st Armoured. Mr Rumsfeld sent the plan back to the central command HQ in Florida, ordering the ground forces to be cut.

The defence secretary and his advisers originally argued that only 70,000-80,000 soldiers would be needed, including just a couple of army brigades. Gen Franks protested and the final plan was a compromise, using two heavy divisions, the 3rd and 4th Infantry. The Turkish refusal to play host halved that force again.

"No secretary of defence at least since Robert McNamara has made himself so hated by the people in uniform, because he treats them absolutely arrogantly, and General Franks begged for more troops," Col Peters said.

Mr Rumsfeld's defenders point out that the ability to go to war even when a major element of the strategy, the northern front, collapsed, showed that a new flexibility in military thinking was beginning to take hold. Transformation was being forced on the forces by circumstance.

Rubbish, said a senior Pentagon official who talked to the Guardian.

"I don't see anything transformational about it. This is mid-intensity, high-tempo combat," he said. In other words, the army and marines are fighting the way they did in the second world war and Vietnam, and taking losses. If the army has its way, when this war is over, Mr Rumsfeld's career will join the casualty list.


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: back; fight; generals; iraqifreedom; knives; rumsfeld
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Don't forget this is The Guardian, very leftist UK newspaper.
1 posted on 03/30/2003 8:37:29 PM PST by blam
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To: blam

2 posted on 03/30/2003 8:39:14 PM PST by annyokie (provacative yet educational reading alert)
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To: blam
Actually, not surprising since this weekend seems to be an all out attack on Rummy.

Seem more like an orchestrated VAST LEFT WING CONSPIRACY.
3 posted on 03/30/2003 8:40:28 PM PST by Just mythoughts
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To: blam
I just can't take all of this. It has only been 11 days. You'd think a good month, at the least, would be an appropiate time period in which everyone should keep their traps shut and give our boys in uniform a chance.
4 posted on 03/30/2003 8:40:44 PM PST by Rodney King (No, we can't all just get along.)
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To: blam
Do we perhaps have too many left over Clinton appointees in the government or what? Or is this just a bunch of garbage? I am getting sick of one story after another like this. Very demoralizing to our troops, and dangerous to our security.
5 posted on 03/30/2003 8:41:12 PM PST by ladyinred
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To: blam
I haven't had time to follow up on this rummy vs. pentagon rumor, mainly because I don't think it's anything more than the press looking for a villian in the administration, and I still trust rummy.

Can a freeper or three give me the one line synopsis of this? Is it anything to be really concerned about? or is it as I guessed above?
6 posted on 03/30/2003 8:43:07 PM PST by Snerdley (Pacifists are the parasites of freedom.)
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To: blam
Don't forget this is The Guardian, very leftist UK newspaper.

TG(uk)=NYT(usa)=Paravda(old ussr)=CRA*P

7 posted on 03/30/2003 8:43:20 PM PST by skinkinthegrass (Just because your paranoid,doesn't mean they aren't out to get you. :)
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To: blam
In normal circumstances, the tip-fiddle is put together by military planners in the Pentagon and in General Tommy Franks' central command, who have spent their whole lives working on logistics.

No one at the Pentagon should be messing with a Unified Commander's TPFDL.

8 posted on 03/30/2003 8:43:38 PM PST by TankerKC
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To: blam
"Rubbish, said a senior Pentagon official who talked to the Guardian. "

LOL! Silly liberal...
9 posted on 03/30/2003 8:44:27 PM PST by max_rpf
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To: Rodney King
It has only been 11 days. You'd think a good month, at the least, would be an appropiate time period in which everyone should keep their traps shut and give our boys in uniform a chance.

Don't you kinow there is a war going on? The leftwing press is in full battle mode against Bush, Cheney and Rumsfeld, and they have two of Clinton's top generals on their payroll and leading the fight, MaCaffrey and Clark.

The left wing press thinks that Bush is a bigger enemy than saddam, IMO.

10 posted on 03/30/2003 8:46:18 PM PST by Dane
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To: blam
We need to ignore this crap. Let's find something better to post.
11 posted on 03/30/2003 8:46:42 PM PST by Cold Heat (Negotiate!! Blam! "Now who else wants to negotiate?")
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To: blam
Blah, blah, blah. All of the sudden Donald Rumsfeld's turned into some incompetent nincompoop.
12 posted on 03/30/2003 8:46:45 PM PST by Lijahsbubbe
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To: blam
TOTAL B.S.
13 posted on 03/30/2003 8:46:51 PM PST by JOE6PAK (24 hours in a day ... 24 beers in a case ... coincidence?)
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To: ladyinred
On the contrary - this only shows that we are winning. The vast numbers of OMIGODWEARELOSING stories are intended to blow smoke in our faces. We have already won. Of course the Clinton appointees are back-stabbing. Clinton tolerated no dissent while he was president, least of all from the military. Time to pay them back.

Imagine this. New York City is surrounded by enemy tanks vastly superior to ours. All day long bombs and missile rain down on the key installations in the city. We have no planes in the sky. At what point in this scenario would you say that we had lost?
14 posted on 03/30/2003 8:49:25 PM PST by sine_nomine (Protect the weakest of the weak - the unborn.)
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To: Snerdley
Nothing to worry about-- another Seymour Hersch piece in the New Yorker this weekend, I think, spearheaded this political attack. It's very reminiscent of the Hersch hit piece on Rumsfield back during the Afghanistan war-- seems like it was just a week or two after that that the cities in Afghanistan started falling like a row of dominos.

SOS. On the other hand, some of these people are so reliably wrong that their dire predictions become good omens. ;)
15 posted on 03/30/2003 8:51:19 PM PST by walden
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To: annyokie
As I was scaning this blather I was attempting to formulated my reply, but you have said it all. Your post speaks louder than all of the words above! Go Rummy!!
16 posted on 03/30/2003 8:52:15 PM PST by Mister Baredog ((They wanted to kill 50,000 of us on 9/11, we will never forget!))
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To: ladyinred; Dog Gone
"Very demoralizing to our troops, and dangerous to our security."

It's only going to get worse! Our Commander in Chief is pulling the rug out from under the media's dream of UN whirled government and "Peace at any price!"

They don't care what happens to our nation as they think it needs the arrogance whipped out of it with another Vietnam failue.

They see our President as the epitome of American arrogance. It's eminating from both the european and American media that's upset that "W" won't sit and watch their war coverage like stupid LBJ did till he got discouraged and quit!!!

The demonstrations have been generated for the same reason. They're hoping both Presidents from Texas are quitters and they're just not going to stop trying!!!

17 posted on 03/30/2003 8:54:02 PM PST by SierraWasp (Media Advisory: Don't believe anything you hear and only half of what you see!!!)
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To: wirestripper
"We need to ignore this crap. Let's find something better to post."

I don't like it either. But, we need to know what the enemy is thinking, saying and doing.

18 posted on 03/30/2003 8:55:37 PM PST by blam
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To: Mister Baredog
I'm loving that pic! You all are going to get sick of it before all this is over with, I'm sure!
19 posted on 03/30/2003 8:57:16 PM PST by annyokie (provacative yet educational reading alert)
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To: blam; SLB
The defence secretary may come to regret providing that particular insight into his working day, particularly now that he is insisting the war plans do not bear his fingerprints.

I heard Rumsfeld in a film clip refer to the OPLAN as General Franks' war plan. That made me bristle.

I think this article is too thick on the criticisms of Rumsfeld. Having said that, Rummy's way of war is about 30-50% short on the foxhole numbers.

Fortunately, the military is flexible and adaptable, therefore the errors are correctable in fairly short order. This assumes that the ChiComs don't give North Korea some serious marching orders anytime soon.

20 posted on 03/30/2003 8:58:48 PM PST by Fred Mertz
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