Awaiting the Rebellion
by
Fred Reed
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101st at Tuy
Hoa, 1966 (Photo: Jim Coyne)
When, one wonders,
will mutiny begin among the troops in Iraq?
Recently I
talked by email about the war with Jim Coyne, an airborne-infantry
friend who served two tours as a gunship door-gunner in Viet Nam
and then made a career in journalism. I asked, Do they [I
meant the officer corps, the official military] actually believe
the optimistic twaddle this time around? Do they really not know
what is happening?
Jims
response: In my opinion, they really don't know; they may
not even want to know on some level. You know as well as I, these
are mission-oriented folks; can do folks; failure and its introspective
handmaidens are not options to them. And in a tactical mission-oriented
world our military doesn't really fail very often; in a strategic
military/political world such as the Mideast and Iraq, however,
we simply cannot win.
Again,
as in Viet Nam, the career officer corps salutes and marches toward
the sound of battle. Eventually however (and it won't be long now)
it's the grunts who will begin to revolt, first in small ways (as
in the 101st in late 1968, 'No sir. We are not going up that hill
again.') and then, quickly thereafter (As in 1973, "F___ you,
asshole.") By that time the media may get wind of things and
spin it exponentially out of control. Thats what I think.
So do I.
We have two
sharply differing versions of Iraq. One comes from the professional
officers. It holds that the military is making progress and the
insurgents losing ground. The Iraqi people love us and want the
benefits that we will bring them. The increasing attacks by insurgents
are signs of desperation. Things seem bad only because the media
emphasize the negative. The officers see light at the end of the
tunnel. The body counts are great; the bad guys cant much
longer take the pounding we are giving them. Onward and upward.
The other view
comes from enlisted men (and from a lot of reporters before being
edited to say whatever the publisher believes). These assert that
the Iraqis hate us and we, them; that the insurgency is growing
in strength, that we are not making progress but going backward,
that our tactics dont work and we cant win.
The pattern
is so common in recent wars as to be routine. The enlisted men know
that the US is losing. The officers do not know it, or refuse to
know it. This will eventually have consequences.
When men die
pointlessly in a war they know cannot be won and that means nothing
to them, when they realize that they are dying for the egos of draft-dodging
politicians safe in Washingtonthey will revolt. It happened
before. It will happen again. But when? Next year, I'd guess.
It is important
to understand that officers and enlisted men are very different
animals. For example, enlisted men do things (drive the tank, repair
the helicopter) whereas officers are chiefly administrators. But
the important difference is psychological. Enlisted men are blue-collar
guys or technicians. They carry little ideological overburden. They
want to fix the tank or finish the field exercise and then go drink
beer and get laid.
Above all,
they are realists. If the new radio doesnt work, or Baghdad
turns out to be a tactically irresolvable nightmare, the enlisted
guys feel very little urge to pretend otherwise. This is why officers
do not like reporters to be alone with the troops. And they seriously
dont.
The standard
response of the officer corps is that the troops cannot see the
Big Picture. (Unless of course the enlisteds say what the officers
want to hear, in which case their experience on the ground lends
irresistible authority). But the Big Picture rests on the Little
Picture. If a soldier sees slow disaster where he is, and hears
the same thing from guys he meets from everywhere else in the country,
his conclusions will not be without weight. Sooner or later, on
his third tour with a pregnant wife at home and seven friends killed
by bombs, he will say, in the crude but expressive language of soldiers,
f___ this shit.
By contrast,
officers cant conclude anything but the positive. There are
several reasons. Career officers, first, are politicians. You dont
get promoted by saying that the higher-ups are otherworldly incompetents.
An officers loyalty is to his career, and to the officer corps,
not to the country or to his troops. If this sounds harsh, note
how seldom an active-duty officer will criticize policy, yet when
he retires he may suddenly discover that said policy resulted in
unnecessary deaths among the troops. Oh? Then why didnt he
say so when it would have saved lives?
There is a
curious moral cowardice among officers. They will fly dangerous
missions over Baghdad, but they wont say that things arent
going well. They dont go against their herd.
Further, and
I want to say this carefully, officers often are not quite adults.
They can be (and usually are) smart, competent, dedicated, and physically
brave, and some are exceedingly hard men. But there is a simple-mindedness
about them, an aversion to the handmaidens of introspection, a certain
boyishness as in kids playing soldier. A lot of make-believe goes
into an officers world. Enlisted men, grown up, see things
as they are. Officers are issued a world by the command and then
live in it.
Note the heavy
emphasis of the military, meaning the officer corps, on ritual and
pageantry. It is adult kid-stuff. Three thousand men building a
skyscraper just show up, do their jobs, and go home. The military
wants its men standing in squares, precisely at attention, thumbs
along the seams, with brass perfectly polished. It wants stirring
music, snappy salutes, and the haunting tones of taps, Yes
sir, yes sir, three bags full, sir. This is justified as necessary
for discipline. It isnt. A gunny sergeant has no difficulty
maintaining his authority without the hoop-la
Officers
remind me of armed Moonies. There is the same earnestness, the same
deliberate optimism-by-policy. Things are going well because doctrine
says they are. An officer is as ideologically upbeat as Readers
Digest, and as unreflective. This is the why they dont learn,
why the US is again flailing about, trying to fight hornets with
elephant guns. Yessir, can do, sir. Well, sometimes,
and sometimes not. It is not arrogance, more like a belief in gravitation.
And
so we hear phrases that embody the eternal precedence of oo-rah!
over realism: There is no substitute for victory, or
The difficult we do immediately; the impossible takes a little
longer, or Defeat is not an option. But sometimes
it is an inevitability.
I think Jim
is right. Sooner or later, a unit wont go up the hill again.
Then it will be over.
October
2, 2006
Fred
Reed is author of Nekkid
in Austin: Drop Your Inner Child Down a Well and the just-published
A
Brass Pole in Bangkok: A Thing I Aspire to Be.
Copyright
© 2006 Fred Reed
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