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"Sympathy for
the Devil"
Author: Samuel Metz
Date: 12/20/04
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We ought to give Donald Rumsfeld a
little sympathy for his handling of a surprise question from a common
soldier.
But not much.
He deserves some sympathy because he
fielded an extremely difficult question from an unexpected direction at
an unexpected time. And the press seized on his improvised answers as if
they were White Paper policy statements. Give this 70 year old man a
break: from out of the blue comes the most important question about a
war for which he takes full responsibility, and he manages to keep his
head to produce, with only a few seconds of thought, reasonable answers
that did not look too foolish.
Furthermore, this powerful question,
"Why are we soldiers fighting without the armor we need?"
turns out to have been planted by a member of the press who probably
knew if he had asked the question himself, the Secretary of Defense
would have destroyed him.
But our sympathy ends there.
Because this was indeed the most
important question about this war, Mr. Rumsfeld needed a well prepared,
well crafted answer tucked in his hip pocket. Then, having not left home
without it, his response to this inevitable query would have begun,
"I am glad you asked me that question…"
His actual answer, "You fight with
the army you’ve got, not the army you want," would have been
perfect after the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor. But this administration
was set on invading Iraq from the moment it hung its collective hat in
the White House. After 9/11, the President set his military preparing
for nearly 12 months before crossing the Kuwaiti border. And no one
compelled the Secretary to invade when he did – he would have
jeopardized no strategic advantage by delaying until he was confident
all preparations were complete.
Thus the unhappy result of a brief
exchange between a soldier and a Secretary is that somewhere, somehow,
Mr. Rumsfeld needs to own up to a mistake. He can choose one of
three.
First mistake: The administration was
blindsided when a rapid military victory over uniformed troops morphed
into an insurrection quagmire against urban guerillas. Although our new
improved Rumsfeld-designed army is better prepared than ever to fight
Russian tanks on the plains of central Europe, or Iraqi tanks in the
barren deserts of the Arabian peninsula, it is woefully unprepared to
stage a prolonged police action against improvised explosive
devices.
Or Mr. Rumsfeld might prefer a second
mistake: The administration was not surprised when Battle turned into
Insurrection. The Secretary of Defense knew from the inception that our
troops would be fighting house to house against paramilitary fanatics.
Nonetheless he invaded in spite of this shortfall knowing our
inadequately armored military would be bled white by international
terrorists flocking to Iraq for the unique opportunity to launch rocket
propelled grenades at American tanks.
Ah, but perhaps Mr. Rumsfeld will choose
Mistake Number Three: No mistakes were made. The war is going perfectly.
The daily deaths of American soldiers are all part of his grand plan,
ultimately vindicated by the creation of democratic, all–inclusive
government in Iraq that will never dare to organize a terrorist attack
against the United States or create weapons of mass destruction to use
against us. Not, mind you, that Iraq did either before the invasion, but
you can never be too careful, can you?
So in this remarkable and unprecedented
exchange, Mr. Rumsfeld is finally held accountable for a war of his own
creation, fought with an army of his own design, at a time of his own
choosing. Now he must face the consequences. If he accepts credit for
the initial military victory, he must accept responsibility for the
morass that followed. His unsavory alternative is to contend his war is
going perfectly, and that these annoying complaints from a few
malcontented soldiers are the result of dangerous exposure to delusional
liberal propaganda, allowing their minds to be twisted by traitorous
journalists daring to question their government during wartime.
Why is it important to acknowledge a
mistake of this magnitude? Mr. Rumsfeld is not the first presidential
advisor making a sincere judgment call on the best information available
(to give the Secretary credit he may not deserve) which turned awry. But
if the mistake is not appreciated, we can be sure that the same mistake
will be repeated again. And again. Mr. Rumsfeld would have benefited
greatly from the reflections of a former holder of his position, Robert
McNamara, who learned bitter lessons from his mistakes. Or from a former
Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff whose carefully articulated Powell
doctrine would possibly have avoided the entire disgraceful
enterprise.
So Mr. Rumsfeld, no more sympathy for
you until you demonstrate the respect due to soldiers who fight in your
name, to a President who depends upon you to chose wars carefully, and
to your fellow citizens whose sons, fathers, brothers and sisters will
be put in harm’s way when you choose your next war.
Which mistake will you own up to?
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