Colonel Douglas Macgregor on Two Failed Wars and Why He Supports
Ron Paul for President
by Anthony Wile
The Daily Bell
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Introduction:
Colonel (ret) Douglas Macgregor is a decorated combat veteran, the
author of four books. He is also Executive Vice President of Burke-Macgregor
Group LLC, a consulting and intellectual capital brokerage firm
based in Reston, Virginia. Macgregor was commissioned in the US
Army in 1976 after one year at the Virginia Military Institute and
four years at West Point. Macgregor has testified as an expert witness
on national security issues before the House Armed Services Committee
and the House Foreign Relations Committee. He is a supporter of
Ron Paul (R-Tex) and a spokesperson for veterans' groups that are
organizing marches and demonstrations on behalf of Republican candidate
for president, Ron Paul.
Daily Bell:
Give us some background on yourself and the US military-industrial
complex.
Colonel Douglas Macgregor: Let's be clear. I think we are spending far more on defense
than we need to and that's been true for a very long time. It's
become a self-perpetuating industry, sometimes referred to as a
self-licking ice cream cone. I think it's a good way to depict the
American defense establishment at this point, though. I am by no
means anti-defense or anti-defense industry but I think we can extract
more for our money and we can do business much better than we are
or what we have been doing for a very long time. One of the reasons
that I wrote the books on military reform and reorganization is
because until you go after the defense system and reorganize it
and change it, the defense industry is not going to be changed.
The defense industry has organized itself to support the client
and it mirrors a very Byzantine, bloated defense establishment that
we maintain in the United States.
Unlike many
people, I walked away in 1991 from Desert Storm with the view that
we had failed strategically to achieve our objective. The generals
were, as usual, very timid and reluctant to fight. We assembled
this monumental military force designed to take on and defeat the
Soviet Armed Forces in Europe and we didn't use it effectively.
We didn't use it effectively for a whole range of reasons
because we were organized to refight WWII, which was a mistake,
but also because the people at the top were very much bureaucrats
who had risen through the ranks in peace time and they failed.
The political
leadership chose to ignore that failure because they could, and
I'm talking about George Bush Sr. and others, who thought they could
capitalize on this great strategic achievement, which was not a
great strategic achievement politically in the next election. As
we know, that did not work. The American people, as usual, were
not terribly engaged. They were happy to lead cheers, happy to receive
the usual glowing reports regardless of whether or not they were
accurate.
And so I walked
away from the desert and that experience and we should have taken
it more seriously than we did and made fundamental changes in reforms.
Again we did not because there was no interest in the senior ranks
to do so and no one in Congress was either sufficiently well informed
or interested to make any changes. So the result is you have this
trillion-dollar defense establishment that is still designed for
the most part to maintain large numbers of generals and admirals
and headquarters and to feed politicians' re-election campaign coffers
and sustain this bloated defense industry. Again, it's all linked
together but it all begins fundamentally with the nature of this
military establishment.
Daily Bell:
What was key to your realization that the US military was not what
you thought it was?
Colonel Douglas Macgregor: The key to realizing that was seeing the various people
in the chain of command operate, the various senior officers. I
describe it in great detail in my book, Warrior's Rage, which describes
the largest tank battle the US Army fought since the end of the
Second World War. It describes the enemy and it describes the generals
and their failure to come to terms with the weakness of the Iraqi
enemy, and the opportunities that were presented, because they really
weren't interested in fighting at all. To sum it up briefly, they
were much more worried about losing the fight than they were about
winning it. So their objective was to emerge without having lost
as opposed to having won anything. And that's the mentality that
continues to this day. We've seen it again and again in Afghanistan
and Iraq and the consequences have been destructive and disastrous
for the American people and the American taxpayer.
Daily Bell:
What is it?
Colonel Douglas Macgregor: I think it's a self-licking ice cream cone. The generals
are not oriented on waging war; they're pre-occupied with maintaining
the bureaucratic status quo. Remember, depending on at what level
you retire, the higher obviously the better, you can make a great
deal of money in the defense industry. The defense industry hires
you not because you know anything or you are a particular expert;
they hire you because you can call your friends on active duty and
tell them to buy things or do things in return for which when they
retire, they too will be rewarded with handsome retirements inside
the defense industry. This extends to Congress; it's kind of a form
of what I would call legalized corruption.
So the last
thing anyone is concerned about is the quality of the fighting formations,
the people in them, what happens to them and their readiness to
deploy and fight against anyone who can fight back. I think that's
the most important feature that your readers should keep in mind,
that certainly since 1991, we have not fought anyone who has armies,
air forces, navies or air defenses. In fact, we haven't fought anyone
who is capable of presenting real resistance or fighting back so
we haven't had real wars, in that sense. What we've had are colonial
expeditions reminiscent of what the British and the French conducted
in the late 19th century.
Daily Bell:
Is it a danger to the US republic?
Colonel Douglas Macgregor: Very much so but there are a couple of things to keep
in mind. I think your readers will appreciate this. We are on the
threshold of budgetary Armageddon. There are people, of course,
in Washington in fact, the majority at this point
who don't seem to think that matters. They seem to think we can
borrow money in perpetuity at 2% interest, that the world is so
dependant on this enormous American consumption machine that people
will lend us money regardless of the circumstances.
I don't happen
to share that view. My view is quite the opposite. Debt matters.
It's always mattered and it's going to crush us. The United States
within the next two to three years is going to be in a position
very similar to Greece, Italy and Spain. And long before that occurs,
of course, we are going to watch the Eurozone collapse along with
London, I suspect, and the British economy and then it will reach
us and Japan. The Chinese, who are already in the throws of a downturn,
if you will, is going to have an effect on them and on us, in ways
that today no one really appreciates.
So in the final
analysis, budgetary Armageddon is going to provide us with an opportunity
to make fundamental changes, not just in the defense establishment
but also in the organization of our government. Because it's not
a question right now of simply tinkering on the margins and making
modest reforms. The whole structure is in serious trouble because
it doesn't work very well and it no longer performs the tasks for
which it was designed. To understand why this budgetary Armageddon
will make a difference, just keep in mind that the British ultimately
left India not when they should have left India that was
probably immediately after WWI, because certainly from the beginning
of the 20th century onward, the British were investing more in their
empire than they were taking out of it. So the empire was mortgaged
to British vanity and you can make the argument that our bloated
military establishment, the way we do business, is mortgaged to
American vanity.
There are lots
of Americans who equate bombing people in remote places who can't
fight back with the demonstration of American greatness. There are
lots of them on the Hill but there are lots of citizens who simply
don't understand that war has consequences because, again, we have
been faced with adversaries who couldn't fight back. So again, the
whole idea of war is no longer understood. Its consequences and
impacts are not appreciated because it doesn't hit home.
Well, we are
going to go through something very similar. We are going to make
profound change in this country not because we should but because
we will have no choice. There will simply be no more money to finance
the kind of insanity that we're engaged in right now, both overseas
and at home. We're not going to be able to finance social security,
Medicare, Medicaid or the defense establishment in the scale we
have in the past. This is going to be a very difficult time for
the United States - a true catharsis for the English-speaking public.
Daily Bell:
Is there a US republic?
Colonel Douglas Macgregor: Well, there certainly are the outlines of one. I have
great confidence and faith in the people who I call Americans. Not
everybody in the United States today is an American, unfortunately.
We have a country that is Balkanized and divided. Multiculturalism
ultimately equates to multinationalism and a multilingual state.
We've been on this road now since the late '60s and early '70s and
I think the proverbial chickens have come home to roost. We have
large numbers of people who are divided along racial as well as
economic lines, and unfortunately, much of the economic divide overlaps
with the racial divide.
Again, these
issues of prosperity have effectively submerged and no one really
wants to deal with them. But the collapse in prosperity, the downturn
in living standards that will come as a consequence of this crisis
that looms on the horizon, which Ron Paul has talked about for decades,
as you know. This is going to throw all of these divisions into
very sharp relief. And at that point we are going to discover, first
of all, the answer to your question, which is, is this republic
real? Does it still exist? I think it does but I think it's going
to be a very serious crisis. And then we are going to discover who
is an American and that's going to be another catharsis. We are
going to define ourselves. What are we who are we
that is something we have not had to do for a very long time, certainly
not since the Second World War.
Daily Bell:
Were the Founders in favor of a standing army?
Colonel Douglas Macgregor: Well, I think the Founders were concerned about the experience
with Cromwell and the English civil wars even though Cromwell frankly
had a huge impact on the development of the United States. If you
want to understand the American Constitution and you want to understand
the development of the American people, you have to go back to the
Protestants from Great Britain who came to the United States in
the 17th century, their experiences and backgrounds. They really
defined us. What we thought of our religious freedom and the American
Constitution, contrary to what people think today, they were not
talking about all religions at all. We were talking about religious
freedoms for Christians and those Christians at the time, as I am
sure your readers know, where Protestants, and largely Baptists,
Presbyterians, a few Lutherans thrown in, these people had been
oppressed and suppressed by the Anglican Church and before that
the Roman Catholic Church. So they were very concerned about religious
freedom for those sects.
At the time,
no one considered the possibility that we would have large numbers
of Muslims come to the United States and I doubt seriously if that
had occurred to anyone at the time that they would have wanted it.
These are divisive issues. We now have more Muslims in the United
States than we have Jews. Again, where do they fit in? Do they assimilate?
Do they become Americans, particularly in an environment where we
have renounced assimilation? In fact, the Obama administration is
encouraging all these people from the Third World to set up and
establish their own independent states inside the United States
for all intents and purposes. The lessons of history are that great
nations that go through this don't survive. Austria/Hungary is gone.
Czarist Russia and the success of the Soviet Union are gone. Yugoslavia
is gone. Czechoslovakia is gone. Nations that tolerate that kind
of division and Balkanization inside their countries do not last.
Again, this
is a catharsis. We are going to have go through it and deal with
it and answer to it and all of it overlaps with the economic problem.
We know from our study in history that it is the economic crisis,
the downturn in economic prosperity, the collapse of economic strength
that inevitably brings on these developments. So when you ask about
a standing army, the same thing is true for the English-speaking
people, that they are uncomfortable with large standing professional
military establishments because historically the English people
haven't needed them. Britain is an island; it has no need for a
large standing professional military establishment. It needed a
professional military organization, which it had, which was a small
but effective professional army and a confident navy that was designed
to protect access to markets. We in the United States were very
similar but in the last 50 or 60 years we have become quite confused.
We have become effectively an imperial power, something the Founders
never thought would happen and would object to, and that I object
to, I don't think we need to be an imperial power. I don't think
we need to be but we now have inside the United States, interests,
single-issue interest groups, with agendas that are frankly divorced
from the American people.
Daily Bell:
Give us some specifics on the Iraq war. Afghanistan. Success or
failure?
Colonel Douglas Macgregor: Iraq and Afghanistan are disasters and anyone who asserts
otherwise is misinformed. I recently met with someone who is an
advocate for Mitt Romney and he was unhappy with me because I pointed
out that the differences between Governor Romney and President Obama
are marginal at best. He was trying to demonstrate how profoundly
different they were. He was unsuccessful but one of the things he
insisted on was that Obama had somehow or another sacrificed our
great gains in Iraq. I looked at him and said, "You can't be
serious." He said, "What do you mean?" He seemed
to be completely unaware, as many Americans are, that Iraq is effectively
a satellite for Iran. That the United States Army and it's generals
did a brilliant job of consolidating the power and influence of
Iran inside Iraq, by backing Mr. Maliki who is always Tehran's chosen
candidate and utterly destroying the Sunni Arab population's influence
and power. He was stunned and he said, "I don't understand
what you are talking about." I said, "Of course you don't
but consider this. If you think we were successful in any way in
Iraq, then why did our columns of troops leave at 2:00 in the morning
in the dead of night, along a road that was more secured than any
penitentiary in the United States? And why, once we arrived in Kuwait,
did we celebrate the fact that no one had been killed during the
withdrawal in the middle of the night?" I said, "If that
is evidence for victory then you certainly define victory very differently
from me." I think Afghanistan will be perhaps even worse.
Daily Bell:
You are a supporter of Ron Paul. Why ... and how?
Colonel Douglas Macgregor: What appeals to me about Ron Paul can be summed up by
one of his performances during the debates. He was asked a question
by someone, after they had criticized Romney, Gingrich and Santorum
for lobbying activities that characterized them to a greater or
lesser extent as having behaved or acted like lobbyists. When they
got to Ron Paul they asked him about lobbyists and he said, "You
know, I don't know any lobbyists. I won't meet with them."
Now, for your
readers who may not be Americans it is important that they understand
that lobbying is an enormously important and influential industry
inside Washington. Hundreds of millions of dollars are spent by
both foreign powers as well as corporate entities inside the United
States and various private organizations to shape and influence
legislation. The fact that Ron Paul knew no lobbyists and wouldn't
meet with them is a measure of the man's integrity. And frankly,
a demonstration to the extent that he is not corrupt. He is there
not only to represent his district but as Edmund Burke suggested,
to also think clearly about what is in the interest of the American
people and try and act in accordance with that larger national interest
as well as the interest of his constituents. So I think that is
more than anything else what appeals to me about Ron Paul.
Daily Bell:
How have your politics changed?
Colonel Douglas Macgregor: I like to think of myself as a politically conservative
person not in the sense that I am interested in using big government
to shove my views down other people's throats. Again, that is something
that appeals to me about Ron Paul. He sees government as something
that needs to shrink because it's too intrusive, and so do I. Again,
I see the traditional English-speaking paradigm in the United States
where the best decisions are made at the local level, inside people's
families, in their communities, towns, cities and states - not in
Washington. So I have great confidence in the ability of the majority
of Americans to make good decisions if they are allowed to do so.
I am not interested in legislation on the federal level. It is designed
to re-engineer how people think, how they live, where they go to
school, what they eat and so forth in the United States.
Daily Bell:
What about areas such as globalization and the so-called new world
order?
Colonel Douglas Macgregor: These terms you just used are really Trojan Horses for
the socialist elite that dominates both western Europe and North
America, to essentially re-engineer society to suit themselves.
And as you can imagine, like all ruling elite they are corrupt.
This also goes to the issue of the central bank and the origins
of not only the Federal Reserve System but the central banking system
in Europe. These things have turned out to be destructive because
not only do they seek to socialize losses by shifting the burden
by compensating the losses to the taxpayers in both Europe and North
America, but it also allows them to manipulate countries and states
into conflicts with each other that otherwise would probably not
occur. That, again, is another reason I have been very supportive
of Ron Paul because I think central banking has turned out to be
a disaster.
But again,
the socialist is very beguiling in his approach promising vast numbers
of people in countries if only they will surrender their influence,
surrender their rights for all intents and purposes to the socialist
ruling elite, that somehow the ruling socialist elite will postpone
or eliminate entirely the business cycle, that no one need ever
suffer again. I think this is the thing that appeals to me about
Ron Paul. Ron Paul wants to live in a world where we are not sedated
consumers ready to make ourselves dependent on the whims of the
ruling elite that masquerade as democrats - and I am using democrats
with a small d. In fact, the ruling elite is like the ruling elite
in any society. It's about itself. It's about abridging itself,
maintaining and controlling everyone that it can in order to stay
in power.
I don't want
to live in that world, Ron Paul doesn't want to live in it and I
don't think most Americans really want to live in that world. But
again, the catharsis is coming, the fight is coming and we are going
to have to sort this out and decide just what do we want, just where
we want to live, what kind of America do we want? And this economic
crisis is going to compel us to answer those questions.
Daily Bell:
Are you helping to organize veterans' marches for Ron Paul?
Colonel Douglas Macgregor: No, I haven't organized any of that. That's being done
by an entirely different group of people. They asked me to be a
spokesperson for them. I have to tell you I grew so angry over time.
Going to the funerals for young people, soldiers, sergeants, lieutenants
and captains. People I knew in active duty. People I taught at West
Point. I was very, very willing to speak on their behalf because
these are veterans and they're an enormous number, well over 100,000.
These are people who've actually served and done something. They
not only showed up and did their duty as Americans as they were
asked to; they have done more than that. They've seen action, they've
been under fire as I have, and they understand what combat means
and what warfare means. And they understand what devastating impact
these colonial expeditions that we call Iraq and Afghanistan have
had on the Americans in uniform and on the people in these countries
who are caught in the middle. They know that we have killed, wounded
or incarcerated hundreds of thousands of Arabs and Afghans and we
have done so unnecessarily and pointlessly, in pursuit of this Utopian
notion that we can transform millions of Muslims and Afghans into
Anglo-Saxon democrats. It's absurd nonsense. It needs to die once
and for all but in the meantime the damage we have done to ourselves,
between the 4 trillion dollars at least that we have lost indirectly
and trillions more that we'll lose as a consequence of trying to
help the damaged human beings that are trying to emerge from these
conflicts, then you have the human toll, which we occasionally read
about and we pay lip service to but really people don't understand.
This sort of thing is why I was drawn to the veterans' thing for
Ron Paul and that is why I am happy to speak for them.
Daily Bell:
What happens if he drops out?
Colonel Douglas Macgregor: First of all, those of us who support the man never thought
that Ron Paul was the sort of candidate in the current environment
that would win the nomination. We always understood that his campaign
was about a great deal more than this particular electoral contest
and a great deal more than just this nomination. Ron Paul has been
making these arguments about the criticality of reform and reorganization
of our government, the way we do business, restoring the free market
or Austrian economics for a very long time. He has also warned against
the damage that these interventions are causing here at home and
he's pointed to the link between the large intrusive government
domestically and the large intrusive government that leads us to
intervene in other people's countries overseas. Those are the things
that he has been talking about.
We are now
at that point where these things are going to be thrown into very
short release. In the next two to three years everything that Ron
Paul has warned against will come to fruition. I think that Ron
Paul's great contribution at that point will be to act as a beacon
of light in this very dark period of our nation's history. Ultimately
he will illuminate the way out of this by espousing the principals
that he has. So I think that's what we're all about, that's why
we support him and that's why we don't regard the failure of the
Republican Party, which has strayed very, very far from it's underlying
principals and ideas. I don't think we're too worried about the
failure of the Party at this point because this party has strayed
very far from its ideals, and it's going to be compelled to regain
its old position inside our American society or it will be replaced.
Daily Bell:
Will you support another GOP candidate perhaps Mitt Romney?
Colonel Douglas Macgregor: I think there are many people running for office in the
Republican Party, in the House and the Senate, who agree with Ron
Paul. What I think is very interesting in this current electoral
contest is both Gingrich and Santorum, who continue to espouse silliness
overseas, in a domestic sense, largely adopted the Ron Paul economic
agenda. They adopted his view of the business world, the private
sector and the kinds of things that can be done in terms of legislation
and change to reinvigorate prosperity in the United States. I think
that's a glimpse of where we're headed. They might not want to admit
that publicly, although I think Newt Gingrich objectively has and
so did Santorum. The problem for us, of course, is the status quo
individuals like Mitt Romney and the people that surround him who
aren't very different than the people surrounding Obama and none
of this will last. At this point, they are nearing the end of their
tenure. The coming economic catharsis is going to sweep them away.
I think there are lots of people who know Ron Paul is right, most
of them Republicans, and I will certainly support them for office
in the United States.
Daily Bell:
On your website you speak about the Japanese striking Pearl Harbor.
Did Roosevelt know about the strike in advance? Did he help facilitate
it?
Colonel Douglas Macgregor: Well, what I will tell you is this. As with most things
in history, the truth really begins to emerge 40 or 50 years after
the event. That's not because no one told the truth at the time
but because it simply becomes very difficult to break through the
status quo. One of the things that I say about Ron Paul is one of
the things that George Orwell said: When deceit is universal, speaking
the truth is a revolutionary act. Ron Paul has been speaking the
truth for years and that in itself is a revolutionary act. The things
that I am saying are viewed by the status quo in the mainstream
media and in the government as revolutionary, but really aren't.
So when you
talk about the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor and you point to
the obvious decisions that were made in the lead-up to that unfortunate
tragedy that involved the embargo, that left the Japanese very little
choice and made it abundantly clear that we were their enemies,
then you begin to reach the conclusion that perhaps, in fact, this
was something the FDR administration wanted to bring on, because
they saw it as a means to extricating us from the economic depression,
which I am sure as many of your readers know was very bad in 1939
and 1940. It made matters worse than it had been previously. One
of the reasons that FDR implemented the draft in 1939 was to reduce
unemployment. The universal draft meant that you took large numbers
of people off the street that otherwise had no employment. So you
see in retrospect there is a systematic approach that leads to an
inevitable conclusion.
But yes, war
was a means to an end, and having said that, it would be a mistake
to argue that FDR necessarily wanted to go to war in Europe. Some
people will assert that but the truth of the matter is that in 1941,
if Adolf Hitler had renounced his treaty with the Japanese on the
grounds that he would not go to war with the United States, we would
not have gone to war with Nazi Germany because there was very little
support in the United States for war with Germany. Our experience
in WWI was still very fresh in everybody's minds and everyone concluded
that we had no business going to war in 1917, that we rescued British
and French imperialism, that the Germans, the Austrians and the
Hungarians were never our enemies and we should never have involved
ourselves. Remember, we suffered 310,000 casualties in about five
months of fighting. That's worse than any other conflict that we
have ever been involved with. That had a huge impact. I can tell
you from my own family and from others whose relatives were in the
First World War, everybody came back and made the decision to vote
Republican and that never again will American forces be used on
behalf of another nation's interests, which in 1917 was the British
Empire.
Daily Bell:
You write, "Today, the same voices that advocated war with
Iraq on specious grounds are urging an attack on Iran." Who
are these voices? Why do they want a war?
Colonel Douglas Macgregor: This is a different set of circumstances. Iraq was the
unfinished war. As I point out in my book, our failure in 1991 to
accomplish our mission, which was to destroy or capture the Republican
Guard thus making it impossible for Saddam Hussein and his regime
to survive in power, was the reason we went back in 2003. All this
business about weapons of mass destruction was subterfuge and utter
nonsense. Lots of people lied to do that. The real reason was to
finish the war, remove Saddam and restore Iraq's oil to the world
market.
All of that
could have been done very easily, with relatively few forces and
very little damage to Iraq, had we stuck to the original plan, which
was not to dismantle the army, the state, effectively try to make
Iraqi society into something it could never be. But the neocons,
Wolfowitz, Feith, Libby, Cheney and others, managed to prevail upon
George Bush to do something that we shouldn't have done, which was
adopt this position that we could turn Iraq into the Middle East's
first liberal democracy and make this Arab liberal democracy in
Iraq friendly to Israel. Once we adopted that particular goal in
the aftermath of Bagdad's fall, then we started down this road to
disaster. The lesson in history in the Middle East is very simple.
Muslims will not tolerate government and administration from Christians
European Christians, any Christians. We knew that and we
did it anyway, supposedly for Utopian reasons. Serious mistake and
we paid a terrible price for it.
Afghanistan
was a little different. We initially went in there with a white
footprint, which made sense. We tried to work with the locals. We
capitalized on brilliant intelligence provided to us by Iran and
Russia and we were successful until we were unsuccessful in Tora
Bora and we allowed Osama bin Laden to escape. Having allowed them
to escape we had to maintain a presence in the country and then,
of course, this same group of people, the same kinds of mentality
that admired us in Iraq, pursued us to do something similarly stupid
in Afghanistan.
So you have
this influence of over 100,000 conventional combat forces as we
embark upon a nation-building mission and, of course, we declare
the Taliban and a host of others to be our enemies when, in fact,
they were irrelevant to us. We were only interested in Al-Qaeda.
Al-Qaeda is not and was not in the country yet. Al-Qaeda is extremely
unpopular with the Taliban and I dare say once the Taliban reasserts
it's control over the country, anyone who shows up who is a foreigner
from Al-Qaeda won't likely be welcomed.
Again, we are
saddled with ideology and the same ideology in the foreign policy
arm that thinks that we can transform the world into a replica of
the United States and can export English speaking liberal democracy
and its underlying values to peoples where the conditions to these
things don't exist for reasons of culture and economics. They are
also responsible for the Utopian dream that we can simply print
or borrow money in perpetuity, the Keynesian illusion. That illusion
is going to die very hard with very terrible consequences for all
of us and it's unfortunate but this is usually the case with Utopian
ideologies. They have to be destroyed before people will abandon
them.
Daily Bell:
Where does Israel fit into all this?
Colonel Douglas Macgregor: I think the Israeli thing has to be understood in the
following sense. It is a mistake to insist, as I increasingly hear
from people, that "all Jews are somehow or another unconditional
supporters of whatever the Israeli state wants to do regardless
of what is in American interest." That's simply not true. What
you have are numbers of people who call themselves neocons. They
operate in a variety of settings in the government and in the media,
and they support or advocate, for all intents and purposes, unconditional
support for whatever the Israeli government wants to do. They are
no means the majority and they are by no means representative of
what I would call Americans who happen to be Jewish.
I say that
because I fear anti-Semitism. I fear it because I think there is
growing discontent with this sense that we have people making decisions
in Washington that in their minds are beneficial to a foreign power
and are not necessarily good for the American people or the United
States. That's a bad thing and I don't think it's unique because
we have been down this road before. What will happen in the future?
I don't know. What will happen with Iran? I don't know. They are
a nation of 78 million people that spends less on defense than Greece,
a nation of 11 million. The Iranians cannot project any military
power beyond their border. They are very weak. Currently they are
very fragmented as a society. There is great discontent. The economy
is in serious trouble. The living standards are poor and there is
a growing awareness inside that country that things could be very
different and much better.
At the same
time, Iran's trump card is subversion, it's ability to operate through
Shia populations in adjoining or neighboring countries. That's what's
happening in Iraq, that's what goes on in Bahrain and eastern Saudi
Arabia. In that sense, the Iranians do present a real security challenge
to those countries except in Iraq where Shia's are a majority and
they have now established themselves so that's why effectively Iraq
is an Iranian satellite. But other than that, Iran's ability to
take material like enriched uranium and turn it into a warhead and
make it work or subsequently integrate to a missile or an aircraft
to deliver it, those are much more challenging things that more
people are aware of, as we have seen recently with North Korea,
which is more confident technically than the Iranians. This is the
second attempt to launch an intercontinental ballistic missile,
which has been a dismal failure. Iranians are looking at inter-ballistic
missiles, for use inside their own region, because they feel threatened.
We continue
to quote them out of context and often quote them inaccurately.
We've got this bandwagon that's trying to drag us into yet another
conflict with them on the assumption that doing so will be good
for us and Israel. I don't think either is the case. I think it's
a very short-term view and a very misleading one. Iran is evolving.
It's going to continue to do that over the decade. We could wake
up to discover that we are dealing with a very different state of
the future than the one we see today. There are lots of reasons
to look forward to the time when we can work with as opposed to
work against Iran.
On the other
hand, the evolution in the Sunni Muslim world is very different.
The Turks have retreated dramatically from the secular state that
he created and you now have an Islamist Turkish government with
a perfectly nationalistic population and that also, in contrast
to Iran, has a very proper military establishment and a very strong
martial tradition. Turkey is in a position over the next ten years
to become the leading Muslim power that not only dominates on the
basis of its military power but is recognized as the de facto leader
of the Sunni Muslim world in the Middle East and North Africa. You
could see over the next several years an alliance emerge in the
region, a Sunni Muslim alliance that is anti-western, anti-European
and anti-Israel. That, I think, is more prominently our concerns
for the future than anything in Iran. But then again, I am a minority
on that point right now in the United States.
Daily Bell:
Is a military dictatorship in the cards for the US?
Colonel Douglas Macgregor: A military dictatorship in the United States is not going
to happen. There's no danger of that and there never has been. Most
of the people in the military are like myself; the last thing they
want to be involved with after what they have been dragged into
for the last 20 years is civil administration. That destroys military
establishments. It's one of the reasons that the US Army and Marines,
in my judgment, are in very serious trouble right now because they
have been involved in everything other than war fighting. There
is no appetite for it at all and I think that is the least of everyone's
concerns.
Daily Bell:
What kind of military would you like to see in the US?
Colonel Douglas Macgregor: What we need is a military establishment with a unified
military command structure. That is, a joint integrated command
structure. We have too many single-service headquarters, massively
bloated bureaucratic overhead that we don't need and we need to
change that. Then we need to go into the services and reduce the
rank structures, reduce the echelons of commanding control, consolidate
many of the activities much as the British have done and the United
Kingdom where they have created joint integrated acquisition and
procurement and so forth. All of these things will allow us to preserve
critical military capabilities that we need to defend the United
States and its interests while at the same doing so much more inexpensively
and economically.
But again,
that's not a popular approach. Reducing overhead, bloat and the
way you do business, ensuring that there are no proprietary systems,
and systems that are all compelled to talk to each other, work with
each other and collaborate with each other. These things threaten
interests and they threaten people who make a great deal of money
from proprietary systems. Through acquisition they threaten huge
bureaucracy employing large numbers of flag officers. And all of
this will have to go away but, again, I think we have the opportunity
for all this because of the economic downturn that will come as
a result of the fiscal meltdown.
Daily Bell:
Any final thoughts?
Colonel Douglas Macgregor: I would like to say to your readers, don't be misled.
There are lots of men in uniform who feel the way I do. I am just
willing to speak publicly and I have written books and so forth
and that's not something most people do. I think you would be surprised
at the attitudes of people in uniform. Again, remember that many
of them are worried. If you are on active duty you can't say anything
about these things or you risk everything. If you are retired and
you are dependant for income on what you referred to earlier, the
military-industrial complex, those jobs and access to them are controlled
by retired flag officers who will quickly move to remove you if
you say things that, in their view, undermine the income stream,
the revenue stream. Bottom line is, there are lots of people who
share these views but, for the reasons I have outlined, are not
going to go public with it.
Daily Bell:
Any other points you want to make? Any websites you want to mention
for readers to look at?
Colonel Douglas Macgregor: Just thank you for talking to me and your efforts to
inform the public. We need every alternative we can find to the
mainstream media, which is simply not interested in information.
As we discussed, they are in the business of preserving the status
quo and they support the self-appointed ruling elite that we have
been discussing. That's the problem.
Readers might
have a look at www.warriorsrage.com,
www.douglasmacgregor.com,
and our YOUTUBE
channel.
Daily Bell:
Thanks for sitting down with us.
Colonel
Douglas Macgregor: Thank you.
Daily Bell
After Thoughts
Colonel Douglas
Macgregor is one of a few military men willing to speak out at what
is surely a dark time for America's military. If you read between
the lines, he is intimating, in our view, a good deal more than
he is saying. We are, in fact, sensitive to that because of our
views on the subject.
The wars in
which the US is now engaged are, in our opinion, part of a power
elite drive toward global government; they are not wars of "American
defense" but offensive efforts designed to create certain globalist
outcomes supervised by interests that promote internationalism.
The American
government, from a military perspective, has been engaged in the
support of this elite element for at least a century. Macgregor
himself makes the point that World War I was a war fought by Americans
to support British interests. However, British interests in this
case were synonymous with international ones.
A significant
result of World War I was the League of Nations. When the League
foundered, it seems to us that World War II was launched in part
to continue the globalist impetus. Germany's military buildup was
funded partially by Western interests and the post World War II
structure implemented the current globalist paradigm that includes
the UN, IMF, World Bank, etc.
The dual function
of the American military, whereby it supposedly serves the interest
of an American nation but actually supports the interests of globalism,
continues to this day. Macgregor obviously recognizes it, as does
Ron Paul. So do 100,000 veteran soldiers who are willing to march
in support of Ron Paul and his views on limiting American military
involvement to engagements that actually affect US interests and
the people who are citizens of what once was a US republic.
We are sure
the elites are worried about the discontent in the US military but
ongoing, endless wars have certainly been responsible for growing
anti-war sentiment among many who have served in these wars and
have grown tired of them. The wars have caused untold overseas suffering
for both US soldiers and civilian populations caught up in the violence.
They have supposedly come about as a result of 9/11, but this too
is a questionable matter, with some on the 9/11 committee itself
distancing themselves from the current narrative of the attacks.
Macgregor has
now decided to speak up. Readers may believe he has not gone far
enough, or made his sentiments clear enough, but from our point
of view there is no doubt Colonel Macgregor is sending a message,
just as the vets supporting Ron Paul are sending a message ... that
wars without cause and without end are simply not tolerable. We
hope this message gathers force and resonates.
Reprinted
with permission from The
Daily Bell.
April
17, 2012
Anthony
Wile is an author, columnist, media commentator and entrepreneur
focused on developing projects that promote the general advancement
of free-market thinking concepts. He is the chief editor of the
popular free-market oriented news site, TheDailyBell.com.
Mr. Wile is the Executive Director of The Foundation for the Advancement
of Free-Market Thinking – a non-profit Liechtenstein-based foundation.
His most popular book, High
Alert, is now in its third edition and available in several
languages. Other notable books written by Mr. Wile include The
Liberation of Flockhead (2002) and The Value of Gold (2002).
Copyright
© 2012 The
Daily Bell
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