US Military Finds Itself in Twilight Zone
by
Jim Lobe
On
the day that U.S. citizens honored the nation's war dead, the U.S.
armed forces found themselves in a twilight zone somewhere between
glory and hell.
On
the one hand, the U.S. soldier has rarely ridden as high in terms
of public image; no politician of stature – neither Democrat nor
Republican, neither conservative nor liberal – dares to say anything
negative about the conduct or integrity of those in uniform.
Even
antiwar forces affirm their admiration for the professional military,
blaming scandals such as torture and detainee abuse at Abu Ghraib
prison and elsewhere on civilian bosses.
The
military has become "the apotheosis of all that is great and good
about contemporary America," writes Boston University professor
Andrew Bacevich, a retired Army colonel, in his new book, The
New American Militarism: How Americans Are Seduced by War.
On
the other hand, the Army and Marines find themselves in the middle
of by far their worst recruitment crisis since the military draft
was ended in the waning days of the Vietnam War – so bad, in fact,
that recruiters who have been told to lower basic eligibility requirements
and offer unprecedented financial and other inducements for young
men and women to join are still unable to fill their quotas.
"Army
recruiting is in a death spiral," retired Army Lt. Col. Charles
Krohn, who was forced out of the service for publicly noting the
severity of the problem as an Army spokesman, recently told right-wing
Chicago Sun-Times columnist Robert
Novak, while his former boss, the top Army recruitment officer,
told the New York Times that no relief was in sight.
On
the one hand, Pentagon chief Donald Rumsfeld and his chief "transformation"
advisers could not be more excited about the new opportunities for
Washington to sustain its full-spectrum military dominance through
space-warfare inventions, such as lasers and "rods from gods" that
will hurl death-dealing metal from the heavens at more than 100,000
kilometers per hour onto precisely geo-orbitally located targets
far below.
On
the other hand, more than two years after conquering Iraq, an occupation
force of 140,000 U.S. soldiers and Marines still are unable to secure
the highway that runs between the Green Zone, the center of the
Iraqi government in Baghdad, and the city's airport just 10 kilometers
away against guerrilla attacks and their increasingly sophisticated
improvised explosive devices.
Thirty
years after its ignominious withdrawal from Vietnam, senior military
officers find themselves at a kind of midpoint between their dreams
of glory – achieved with stunning speed in their lightning-like,
two-week dash to Baghdad in 2003 – and nagging nightmares of ultimate
defeat, be it in the form of the war of attrition that kills 15
or 20 of their troops each week, or in the outbreak of a full-scale
civil war in Iraq that would make their continued presence untenable.
The
war of attrition is damaging enough, according to the latest polls
which show a steady drop, since a brief resurgence four months ago
in the wake of the Jan. 30 Iraq elections, in public approval both
for the original decision to go to war and in President George W.
Bush's handling of the war. The latter has now fallen to an all-time
low of just 37 percent.
That
was translated into a little-noticed
vote on Capitol Hill last week that must have given the historically
sensitive military officers an unhappy sense of déjà vu: With just
a couple of hours' notice, supporters of a resolution that called
for Bush to submit a plan as soon as practicable to withdraw all
U.S. troops from Iraq gathered 128 votes.
The
resolution was voted down 300-128, as expected. But a solid majority
of Democratic lawmakers and five Republicans, including one of the
party's most highly respected foreign-affairs experts, Iowa Representative
James Leach, showed unexpected support for what Bush administration
stalwarts would call a "cut-and-run" strategy. Four months ago,
a letter calling for such a plan gathered the support of only 24
Democrats.
Most
senior officers recognize that Bush's adventure in Iraq has put
the military in a precarious state. Not only have retired officers,
such as the former commander of the U.S. Central Command, Maj. Gen.
Anthony Zinni, been the most outspoken critics of the war, but even
serving officers have voiced subtle and sometimes not-so-subtle
warnings about both the prospects for success in Iraq and the implications
of being tied down there indefinitely.
The
chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Air Force Gen. Richard Myers,
warned a year ago that "there is no way to militarily lose in Iraq"
and coupled that assertion with the observation that there is also
no way to win militarily in Iraq. That synopsis evoked painful memories
from Vietnam veterans who note bitterly that the U.S. lost the war
despite the fact that its troops never lost a single battle.
It
was also Myers, long criticized by his colleagues for not standing
up to Pentagon chief Donald Rumsfeld, who told Congress last month
in a classified report leaked to media that the current concentration
of U.S. troops and equipment in Iraq and Afghanistan limits the
ability of his forces to deal with other conflicts speedily and
effectively.
That
also was the message a year ago from Gen. John Riggs, a highly decorated
Vietnam veteran who was in charge of the Army's modernization program
until he was forced to resign shortly after he voiced his concerns
to the Baltimore Sun. His previous boss, Army Chief of Staff
Gen. Eric Shinseki, also was unceremoniously retired early after
he warned Congress that several hundred thousand U.S. troops would
be needed to occupy Iraq.
Both
men clashed publicly with Rumsfeld's notions of military "transformation"
in which the speed and lethality of the U.S. armed forces have been
given a much higher priority than more mundane and labor-intensive
matters like the skills and equipment needed to maintain law and
order or fight insurgencies. The former may be good for conventional
wars, but for unconventional conflicts, such as Vietnam 30 years
ago or Iraq today, technology has its limits.
The
fact that they were punished for their views has sent a strong message
to the top brass who, like Myers and his successor-designate, Marine
Gen. Peter Pace, have accordingly avoided challenging the civilian
leadership on military questions, just as their predecessors did
during the Vietnam years.
To
the great frustration of the middle ranks, repeated assertions by
Bush and Rumsfeld that the military leadership has told them they
have enough troops in Iraq are probably true. "The military part
of [the defense secretary's office] has been politicized," Gen.
Jay Garner, the Pentagon's original choice to run Iraq, told the
Sun. "If [officers] disagree, they are ostracized and their
reputations are ruined."
Thus,
a cowed and politicized military establishment, hailed as invincible
just two years ago, marches steadily on a demoralizing but all-too-familiar
path.
June
3, 2005
Jim
Lobe is Inter Press Service's correspondent in Washington, DC.
Copyright
© 2005 Inter Press Service
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