New military leaders question Bush's phony "mission".



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Topic: Politics > Politics-USA
User: "Harry Hope"
Date: 05 Oct 2007 06:14:16 PM
Object: New military leaders question Bush's phony "mission".
http://www.mcclatchydc.com/227/story/20227.html
Thursday, October 4, 2007
New military leaders question Iraq mission
By Nancy A. Youssef and Renee Schoof | McClatchy Newspapers
WASHINGTON —
Four and a half years after the nation's top military leaders saluted
and fell in behind President Bush's pre-emptive invasion of Iraq,
their replacements are beginning to question the mission and sound
alarms about the toll the war is taking on the Army and the Marine
Corps.
The change at the Pentagon is striking but little-noticed, in part
because Defense Secretary Robert Gates, a longtime veteran of the CIA,
is quiet where his predecessor Donald H. Rumsfeld was not.
"It's part of a sea change," said Loren Thompson, a military analyst
at the Lexington Institute, a national-security research center in
Washington.
"The ideologues have been replaced by managers who view Iraq not as a
cause, but a problem to be solved."
Gates, Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Michael Mullen, Deputy Defense
Secretary Gordon England, Undersecretary for Intelligence Gen. James
Clapper and other top officials also are concerned that the war may be
crippling the military's ability to respond to other crises.
They have allies in the congressional Democratic leadership —
particularly House Armed Services Committee Chairman Rep. Ike Skelton
of Missouri — who've been speaking out about that for months.
"I'm convinced we are in serious trouble readiness-wise," Skelton said
this week in an interview with McClatchy Newspapers.
"Am I worried? I'm worried to death."
Although Democrats in Congress have been powerless to halt or even
slow the war, six developments have combined to produce growing
resistance, even within some parts of Bush's own administration, to
the president's unrelenting emphasis on staying the course in Iraq:
1. The Democratic takeover of the Senate and the House of
Representatives last January.
2. Bush's choice of Gates to replace Rumsfeld, one of the main
architects of the war. Gates was a member of the independent
bipartisan Iraq Study Group, which called for the United States to
reach out to Syria and Iran and "strongly urged" a drawdown in Iraq.
3. A shift, completed this week, in the military's top uniformed
leadership from administration loyalists to officers who are more
concerned about the growing strains on the military.
4. Mounting evidence, in a variety of official reports in recent
weeks, that Iraqi forces won't be prepared to take over from American
troops in significant numbers until late next year at the earliest,
and that Iraqis have made little progress toward political
reconciliation.
"Barring that, no amount of troops and no amount of time will make
much of a difference," Joint Chiefs Chairman Mullen told the Senate
Armed Services Committee.
5. Mounting evidence, most recently in a United Nations report, that
the war against al Qaida and the Taliban in Afghanistan is faltering,
in part because Iraq is tying down so many U.S. troops.
More forces are needed in Afghanistan, and "we can't send them because
we're bogged down" in an "intractable civil war" in Iraq, Sen. Russ
Feingold, D-Wis., said Wednesday.
6. Bush's low approval ratings and popular discontent with the Iraq
war, which have prompted some legislators to reconsider their support
for the president's policy as next year's elections approach.
It remains to be seen, however, whether Gates and like-minded allies
can curtail the U.S. commitment to Iraq, avoid a military
confrontation with Iran and direct more resources to Afghanistan and
to rebuilding and reequipping the Army and the Marines.
Still, the change in outlook among many senior officials is
unmistakable.
The outgoing chairman of the joint chiefs, Marine Gen. Peter Pace, a
loyal advocate for administration policies, used the word "freedom"
eight times in his final remarks as chairman.
Mullen didn't use it once in his first speech Monday as the new
chairman.
After Mullen was sworn in, he sent a letter to the military that
spelled out a vision of the Middle East markedly different from the
one the administration has hailed.
Mullen didn't talk about how the two wars could spread democracy and
freedom in the region, as Pace did until the final minutes of his
two-year tenure as chairman.
Instead, while Mullen called the wars vital, he cautioned that they
might not make the Middle East safer.
He also told the troops that his job is to prepare the military for
what comes next.
"To the degree the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan contribute to or
detract from a stable, secure Middle East, they bear a direct effect
on the security of the United States," he wrote.
"The demands of current operations, however great, should not dominate
our training exercises, education, curricula and readiness programs."
Such equivocation is a different tune for Defense Department leaders:
Rumsfeld and his civilian aides championed the war in Iraq and brooked
no dissent.
Skelton, the House Armed Services Committee chairman, said that in the
past he felt as if no one was listening when he warned the
administration about the strain on the military.
Now, he noted, former Army Chief of Staff Gen. Peter Schoomaker in
January and the current chief, Gen. George Casey, testifying last
week, have expressed concerns about the Army's readiness.
"The parallels are alarming," Skelton said.
"We cannot risk breaking the Army again. My real worry is that we have
a choice between two losses or one loss. We're not putting enough
effort into Afghanistan, and I'm deeply concerned about that."
Mullen's letter to the U.S. military earlier this week is at
http://www.defenselink.mil/pdf/letter-to-troops.pdf
______________________________________________
It's past time for a regime change.
Harry
.

User: "Gar DLoo"

Title: Re: New military leaders question Bush's phony "mission". 05 Oct 2007 09:09:41 PM
In article <u9hdg39gcmhba7rhr28g88ruu4uor156a1@4ax.com>, Harry Hope
<rivrvu@ix.netcom.com> wrote:

http://www.mcclatchydc.com/227/story/20227.html

Thursday, October 4, 2007

New military leaders question Iraq mission

By Nancy A. Youssef and Renee Schoof | McClatchy Newspapers


WASHINGTON ÷

Four and a half years after the nation's top military leaders saluted
and fell in behind President Bush's pre-emptive invasion of Iraq,
their replacements are beginning to question the mission and sound
alarms about the toll the war is taking on the Army and the Marine
Corps.

The change at the Pentagon is striking but little-noticed, in part
because Defense Secretary Robert Gates, a longtime veteran of the CIA,
is quiet where his predecessor Donald H. Rumsfeld was not.

"It's part of a sea change," said Loren Thompson, a military analyst
at the Lexington Institute, a national-security research center in
Washington.

"The ideologues have been replaced by managers who view Iraq not as a
cause, but a problem to be solved."

Gates, Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Michael Mullen, Deputy Defense
Secretary Gordon England, Undersecretary for Intelligence Gen. James
Clapper and other top officials also are concerned that the war may be
crippling the military's ability to respond to other crises.

They have allies in the congressional Democratic leadership ÷
particularly House Armed Services Committee Chairman Rep. Ike Skelton
of Missouri ÷ who've been speaking out about that for months.

"I'm convinced we are in serious trouble readiness-wise," Skelton said
this week in an interview with McClatchy Newspapers.

"Am I worried? I'm worried to death."

Although Democrats in Congress have been powerless to halt or even
slow the war, six developments have combined to produce growing
resistance, even within some parts of Bush's own administration, to
the president's unrelenting emphasis on staying the course in Iraq:

1. The Democratic takeover of the Senate and the House of
Representatives last January.

2. Bush's choice of Gates to replace Rumsfeld, one of the main
architects of the war. Gates was a member of the independent
bipartisan Iraq Study Group, which called for the United States to
reach out to Syria and Iran and "strongly urged" a drawdown in Iraq.

3. A shift, completed this week, in the military's top uniformed
leadership from administration loyalists to officers who are more
concerned about the growing strains on the military.

4. Mounting evidence, in a variety of official reports in recent
weeks, that Iraqi forces won't be prepared to take over from American
troops in significant numbers until late next year at the earliest,
and that Iraqis have made little progress toward political
reconciliation.

"Barring that, no amount of troops and no amount of time will make
much of a difference," Joint Chiefs Chairman Mullen told the Senate
Armed Services Committee.

5. Mounting evidence, most recently in a United Nations report, that
the war against al Qaida and the Taliban in Afghanistan is faltering,
in part because Iraq is tying down so many U.S. troops.

More forces are needed in Afghanistan, and "we can't send them because
we're bogged down" in an "intractable civil war" in Iraq, Sen. Russ
Feingold, D-Wis., said Wednesday.

6. Bush's low approval ratings and popular discontent with the Iraq
war, which have prompted some legislators to reconsider their support
for the president's policy as next year's elections approach.

It remains to be seen, however, whether Gates and like-minded allies
can curtail the U.S. commitment to Iraq, avoid a military
confrontation with Iran and direct more resources to Afghanistan and
to rebuilding and reequipping the Army and the Marines.

Still, the change in outlook among many senior officials is
unmistakable.

The outgoing chairman of the joint chiefs, Marine Gen. Peter Pace, a
loyal advocate for administration policies, used the word "freedom"
eight times in his final remarks as chairman.

Mullen didn't use it once in his first speech Monday as the new
chairman.

After Mullen was sworn in, he sent a letter to the military that
spelled out a vision of the Middle East markedly different from the
one the administration has hailed.

Mullen didn't talk about how the two wars could spread democracy and
freedom in the region, as Pace did until the final minutes of his
two-year tenure as chairman.

Instead, while Mullen called the wars vital, he cautioned that they
might not make the Middle East safer.

He also told the troops that his job is to prepare the military for
what comes next.

"To the degree the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan contribute to or
detract from a stable, secure Middle East, they bear a direct effect
on the security of the United States," he wrote.

"The demands of current operations, however great, should not dominate
our training exercises, education, curricula and readiness programs."

Such equivocation is a different tune for Defense Department leaders:
Rumsfeld and his civilian aides championed the war in Iraq and brooked
no dissent.

Skelton, the House Armed Services Committee chairman, said that in the
past he felt as if no one was listening when he warned the
administration about the strain on the military.

Now, he noted, former Army Chief of Staff Gen. Peter Schoomaker in
January and the current chief, Gen. George Casey, testifying last
week, have expressed concerns about the Army's readiness.

"The parallels are alarming," Skelton said.

"We cannot risk breaking the Army again. My real worry is that we have
a choice between two losses or one loss. We're not putting enough
effort into Afghanistan, and I'm deeply concerned about that."

Mullen's letter to the U.S. military earlier this week is at
http://www.defenselink.mil/pdf/letter-to-troops.pdf

______________________________________________

It's past time for a regime change.

Harry

-----------------------------------------------------------------
Tecumseh's Curse:
Every president between William Henry Harrison and John F. Kennedy who
has been elected in a year ending with a zero has been assassinated or
died while in office.
--------------------------------------------------------------------
americanhistory.about.com/od/uspresidents/a/tecumseh.htm - 27k -
.
User: "Mamamia"

Title: Re: New military leaders question Bush's phony "mission". 07 Oct 2007 07:50:21 AM
In article <051020071909416719%netpost@pochta.ru>,
Gar D'Loo <netpost@pochta.ru> wrote:

Tecumseh's Curse:
Every president between William Henry Harrison and John F. Kennedy who
has been elected in a year ending with a zero has been assassinated or
died while in office.

We can only hope.
--
"You can't fix stupid." -- Ron White
.



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