What does history tell us? Nearly twenty-three years ago, President Ronald Reagan???s Secretary of Defense, Caspar Weinberger, outlined, in a speech entitled, ???The Uses of Military Power,??? six tests that should be applied whenever the United States considers the use of combat forces abroad. In summary:
President Bush's policies have failed every one of Secretary Weinberger's tests.
- Never commit forces unless the particular situation is vital to our national interest and that of our allies;
- If we're unwilling to commit the force or resources necessary to win, we should not commit them at all;
- We should have clearly defined political and military objectives;
- The relationship between objectives and forces - size, composition and disposition - must be continually reassessed and adjusted;
- We must have the support of the American people and their representatives in Congress; and
- The commitment of U.S. troops to combat should be the last resort.
What are the consequences? Make no mistake; we are now engaged in a war of choice, a catastrophe conceived in ideological zeal, cloaked in misinformation and administered with breathtaking incompetence. It is an outrage that we have not had a single policy in Iraq worthy of our men and women in uniform. This "surge" is yet another misstep in this tragic journey to disaster. We need to end it - and end it now.
We are sending these "surge" troops into Iraq without the proper equipment they are going to have to borrow and shares with other units already involved in the conflict. And how many times have our objectives in Iraq flip-flopped? We don't even know why we are there except to make Bush look like he knows what he is doing. The other day I watched a video of Saddam that showed that he was arming civilian militias in the month's leading up to the invasion, we aren't up against a defined enemy there, we are fighting civilians who blend in with the rest of the population and set traps and ambushes much like the Vietnamese did. We can not win in this type of fight, it's like fighting crime in the US no matter how many criminals we put behind bars more keep popping up especially in the ghettos. And that is exactly what Iraq is a huge ghetto and all that our troops are doing is policing the area barely making a dent in the problem...