Posted on 09/02/2021 4:48:20 AM PDT by Kaslin
Washington -- Donald Rumsfeld, the two-time secretary of Defense, adviser to presidents and three-term member of Congress, was buried at Arlington National Cemetery on Aug. 23 after a stately ceremony in the cemetery's large chapel. His friends and associates filled the chapel, and I wish I could report on what luminaries were present, but I cannot. Everyone was wearing a mask. The media reported that Defense Secretary Lloyd J. Austin III was there and the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen. Mark A. Milley, but I did not see them. Possibly, they were seated next to me, but with everyone masked, it was impossible to identify who was who.
I do know that former Vice President Dick Cheney was present because he spoke and delivered a very eloquent and moving speech without wearing a mask. It was a humorous speech because Don was a humorous man, and it was a serious speech because Don was -- first and foremost -- a serious man. Yet, I shall remember the speech for its personal touch. Don and the vice president were particularly close for decades. The vice president claimed he owed his career to Don. Toward the end of his oration he said, "Until we meet again, goodbye, old friend," and there his voice wavered. Dick Cheney is not given to public displays of emotion. He is no Joe Biden. Yet he came close at Arlington National Cemetery on this occasion. He proceeded by saying, "I had responsibilities and experiences far beyond anything I could have ever known" thanks to Don Rumsfeld. And the former vice president concluded, "He decided he could trust me, and it changed my life." Yes, Rumsfeld lived and worked in Washington, yet he was famous for trusting his friends. He was a man of loyalty.
He never let The American Spectator down when we were under government investigation. He stood by us. He often showed up at our public affairs. If we were considered controversial, it did not matter to Don. He stood by us.
I remember one fine night when he came to my house to dine. With me that evening was my dear friend Martin Gilbert, the authorized biographer of Winston Churchill. I thought they would hit it off, and I was not disappointed. Don and Martin of course had many mutual friends. They also had many common interests. Martin knew everything about Winston and pretty much everything about world politics. If my memory has not failed me, he had just written in The American Spectator a defense of Pope Pius XII against charges that the pope had not done enough to protect the Jews from Hitler. Possibly, he had yet to write it. At any rate, World War II was one of the evening's topics, but there was more.
Don was a fan of board games, and so was Winston. Don played a game that he had heard Winston favored. Martin assured him that the prime minster did indeed play the game, and so did Martin. Both then proceeded to talk about the intricacies of an obscure game whose name I am afraid I never mastered, though I showed my guests rapt attention. All I can tell you is that the game was not checkers and certainly not chess. We proceeded to discuss the war in Iraq.
Don had recently resigned as secretary of defense, and Martin had been named to a panel whose mission was to investigate whether Saddam Hussein possessed weapons of mass destruction. Martin assured us that he did, and as I recall, Don agreed. Later, the Iraqi high command assured the world that they had such weapons, including chemical weapons, for instance: VX, sarin and mustard gas. Saddam had dispersed them all over the countryside. I never doubted this, but the debate went on for years between the hawks and the doves. At some point in the evening, Don expressed his opposition to nation building. I remember him saying, "Get in and get out." I believe Martin held to the same view. Now, Don is accused of being "one of the architects" of our Afghan involvement. He certainly was not that evening with Martin and me. I have no doubt that he would be for "getting in," but he would also be for "getting out" pronto.
Perhaps it was during that evening with Don Rumsfeld and Martin Gilbert that I came up with the formulation of Tyrrell's Law. According to that law, we should enter ungovernable and hostile countries and "bust the place up." Then leave. You cannot conceivably export our culture to such places. Our culture is too complicated. So why bother? Instead, send in the B-52s or better yet drones. In fact, it appears that Joe Biden may have learned Tyrrell's Law a little late, but better late than never. Let us hope he does not forget this lesson.
I never heard Rumsfeld say “get in and get out”, at least not publicly.
I heard plenty about how Afghanistan and Iraq were just like Pottery Barn, though.
L
He was a card carrying member of the Uniparty but if we ever got involved in a shooting war with the Soviets/Russians or the CCP he was certainly one of the guys I would’ve wanted calling the shots.
Say what you will about Rummy, he looks like a mountain of a man compared to what we have currently. There is something very attractive about an intelligent man with a sense of humor.
Glad I missed it.
“I heard plenty about how Afghanistan and Iraq were just like Pottery Barn, though.”
I spent four years in Iraq and 12 years supporting Afghanistan deployments yet I have never heard the term “Pottery Barn” used wrt either.
Perhaps I do not patronize the same MSM/fantasy-world-view resources as you.
I respectfully request you refrain from trivializing the efforts, achievements and sacrifices of Americans in Iraq and Afghanistan with demeaning and pedantic references. We did something. You did nothing.
Literally everyone wanted us out of Afghanistan.
Why were we there for 20 years?
“In fact, it appears that Joe Biden may have learned Tyrrell’s Law a little late, but better late than never. Let us hope he does not forget this lesson.”
Now that is a very strange remark from a man who thinks he is intelligent. Trump was the one who first invoked “Tyrrell’s Law” but did not get the chance to fully implement it. What Joe Biden invoked was blatant surrender, folly, and treason.
I once met Rumsfeld briefly. For a mountain of a man, he was remarkably short.
Yet, he truly was a mountain of a man.
“Pottery Barn Rule” is a foreign affairs expression. You could look it up.
“ yet I have never heard the term “Pottery Barn” used wrt either.”
That idiot Colin Powell said it.
L
“I respectfully request you refrain from trivializing the efforts, achievements and sacrifices of Americans in Iraq and Afghanistan with demeaning and pedantic references.”
I respectfully request you kiss my ass and go do some research.
“We did something. You did nothing.”
I wore the uniform before you were a gleam in your old man’s eye. Now go hump someone else’s leg.
L
Thank you for your service to our great country. Please know millions of Americans, like me, are GRATEFUL to you and all of our military and your families for the sacrifices you make on behalf of the rest of us. God bless you.
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