Is
McChrystal Reading LewRockwell.com?
by Karen
Kwiatkowski
by Karen Kwiatkowski
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Not likely.
But I was heartened
to see that when we abandoned the military outpost in Kamdesh, Afghanistan,
we
destroyed the base, lighting afterburners, the smoldering waste
of one more failed experiment in colonialism in our rear-view mirrors.
We departed
this small base days after one of the deadliest Taliban strikes
against our occupation forces there. Officially, our departure had
been planned for months. Any bets that the leadership will take
a hit for that bit of poor planning?
Not likely.
Six months
ago, I discussed how
we could and should leave another of our ill-fated occupations.
Here’s the paragraph McChrystal might have read:
Lastly, it
will NOT cost more to leave Iraq than to stay. It’s all in the
attitude. Ship the people home, auction off the facilities, have
a big bonfire. It could even be fun. Abandoning the Iraqi outpost,
destroying the military bases we constructed and outfitted
(as we must do), …
McChrystal,
of course, has had plenty of time to think about Iraq. Before he
moved into his present position, Iraq was his playground. Quoted
in a
psalm-slash-news story published by the Washington Post
in May, close subordinate Lt. Gen. Dennis Hejlik, commander of the
2nd Marine Expeditionary Force, said "[McChrystal] understands
the value of high-value targets" as well as "having the small
unit on the ground" to provide better security for Afghans…. [He]
really does understand that you're not going to win the war by killing
all the enemy," he said, adding, "He did that in Iraq
for five years."
He did what
in Iraq for five years? Not win the war? Or kill all the enemy?
And what is the "Value of high-value targets?" High? We
have come to conflate the fogginess of our war leaders logical capacities
and public statements with the fog of war. And it isn’t at all clear
what McChrystal actually did in Iraq. One does suspect that the
black ops and other
strategies he oversaw at Special Operations Command may foster
the next big blowback.
McChrystal
brings that same lack of clarity to whatever it is that he thinks
he is doing in Afghanistan (and Pakistan). I have to phrase it that
way because, and I think I speak for the President here, we really
don’t know.
McChrystal
and his political supporters stand united in having made careers
of advocating killing, base-building, defense spending, and what
was that? Oh, of course. Increasing the security of all the women
and children living in the war zone. Tragically, these public servants
are forced to leak documents demanding troop increases as
if that is the real question, because the young American commander
in chief cannot be completely trusted to do the right thing.
But Obama
can be trusted to kill, and has
done so quite enthusiastically. McChrystal’s leak of plans appears
to be a real Gladiator-style "Are you not entertained?"
moment. That Obama failed to immediately fire him should have warmed
the hearts of war lovers everywhere. Sure, that Nobel peace prize
is a bit Orwellian, but we the people have seen The Enemy switched
from the Taliban and al Qaeda in 2001, to Iraq and al Qaeda in 2003,
and now, back to the Taliban and al Qaeda again in 2009 and we never
blinked a collective eye. What year is it again?
A guy on the
way to town has a "Win the War in Iraq" yard sign. It’s
been up for several years. He’s not taking it down. That’s one smart
reactionary in my book.
But
back to my fantasy. LewRockwell.com – blocked at some military bases,
but available globally – read by the hundreds of thousands of men
and women in uniform, and by their commanders.
The politicians
and state media can’t and won’t end the wars even as the people
overwhelmingly wish them ended. National bankruptcy can’t do it,
even as everyone else is cutting out unnecessary spending. Can the
military itself end them? It wouldn’t take a coup or even violence.
The wars overseas can – and will eventually – be ended the way most
bad relationships end. Empires fall the same way. People stop participating,
cease doing what is expected, avoid the worst of it, badmouth the
rest of it. People envision something different, and walk towards
it.
To end the
wars – because peace prizewinners and their generals will
not – we must change the understanding of people on the pointy end
of the sword about the real nature of the state. Let’s commit to
sharing the best anti-state reporting on the web with a solder,
sailor, airmen or Marine, every day, and every way. If we can’t
bring them home now, let’s do what we can to ensure when they do
come home, it’s pro-market, anti-war and anti-state.
October
12, 2009
LRC
columnist Karen Kwiatkowski, Ph.D. [send
her mail], a retired USAF lieutenant colonel, has written on
defense issues with a libertarian perspective for MilitaryWeek.com,
hosts the call-in radio show American
Forum, and blogs occasionally for Huffingtonpost.com
and Liberty and Power.
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Copyright ©
2009 Karen Kwiatkowski
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