Goodbye, Rummy
by
Charley
Reese
by Charley Reese
DIGG THIS
A glance at
Donald Rumsfeld's biography will tell you that he is: (1) ambitious;
(2) bright; (3) competent; and (4) incredibly experienced in both
the private sector and the public sector.
So how did
the 74-year-old secretary of defense become the bad guy of the Bush
administration? The answer is probably that by his 70s, his ambition
and drive had degenerated into stubbornness and arrogance. Richard
Nixon described him as a "ruthless little bastard" when
he served that administration. Some military people have said meetings
with him were pointless, because he had already decided everything
before he got there. And his mouth got him into a lot of trouble.
He was, according
to some military people, obsessed with the idea of transforming
the defense forces into a lighter, more mobile outfit. He forced
this on the Iraqi war planners, and what happened proved what his
critics had been saying all along. The lighter, mobile force, carefully
coordinated with air power, could whip the conventional army, especially
one as broken-down and demoralized as Saddam Hussein's forces, but
then it had no staying power.
It was way
too short-handed to stop the looting, which all observers agree
was the beginning of the downhill slide in Iraq. I'm sure what his
generals had been trying to tell him was that you haven't won the
war until you have men standing on the ground with a rifle and saying,
"This is my turf." To do what we did in Iraq was to invite
exactly the kind of insurrection we have. We went in, as Rumsfeld
wanted, with too few men to occupy a country of that size.
Rumsfeld's
lighter, more mobile force will only work if you can zip in, fight
a quick war and leave. I don't know any place on Earth where we
can reasonably expect to do that. If you intend to stay, you'd better
not be too light or too mobile, because occupation requires a lot
of manpower. Look at our present situation. We are fighting guerrilla
wars in two Third World countries, and our forces are stretched
thin and the equipment is wearing out. Heaven help us if we had
to fight North Korea with its million-man army, much less China
or Russia.
What we need
is a strategic plan designed to avoid fighting wars. That plan should
contain a realistic assessment, based on capabilities, of what countries
we might have to fight, and then a force structure can be designed
to meet that threat. You don't have to go to West Point to know
that your threat is what determines your force structure.
Rumsfeld and
the civilians he brought into the Defense Department played a key
role in selling the American people on a war based on falsehoods.
There were no weapons of mass destruction. There was no connection
between Saddam Hussein and al-Qaida. There was no connection between
the attacks on 9/11 and Iraq. The whole sales pitch from start to
finish was false, and nearly all of it was manufactured in Rumsfeld's
Defense Department.
That's why
he should leave, and why he should have left a long time ago. The
bright, young go-getter has become a stubborn, arrogant old man
with a closed mind. If he ever felt any regret or sadness over the
young lives lost in a war based on lies, he has certainly hidden
any sign of it.
We
need a civilian head of the Defense Department, but we need a person
with an open mind who will listen to his professionals. What is
the point of having all those men with military experience if you're
not going to pay attention to anything they have to say?
November
13, 2006
Charley
Reese [send
him mail] has been a journalist for 49 years.
©
2006 by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
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