Category Archives: Iraq

War about war

In a way, when you read the AP piece which Crittenden has posted, it merely reflects what Herbert Meyer calls the growing ascendency of "Perception Two: We’re Reaping What We Sowed," in regards to 9/11. I have to admit that President Bush, despite admirable attacks to dispose of the Taliban and Saddam, has failed to do the obvious: put the US on a war footing, impose some sort of draft, decapitate Iran and Syria and help the Israelis dismantle Hezbollah and Hamas. How Bush expects Gen. Petraeus to succeed in Iraq, without either closing their borders or hitting the insurgents’ suppliers in Iran and Syria, is beyond me. As for Petraeus, he admits, in the Army Field Manual 3-24 Counterinsurgency which he authored (excerpts available here in PDF), that insurgencies are rarely beaten and the only time the US has done it was in the Phillipines a hundred years ago. Moreover, he says wars against insurgencies take nine or ten years to win. Meyer sees little chance of that sort of committment, after more than four years in Iraq. Even Victor Davis Hanson, who has written that democracies rarely support wars of more than a few years, has come around to the view that we’ll retreat from Iraq. Then what? Meyer says we’ll need a bigger repeat of 9/11 to finally go all out. Sure looks that way.

Picking up the garbage

Rudy’s broken-windows approach to NYC law enforcement has an Iraq corollary. Badger Six explains.

Fisking the AP

Somebody certainly should, as they have strayed so far afield from their old, just-the-facts days.

"All of which means, so far, the Democratic-controlled Congress is not only wasting everyone’s time, but again undermining U.S. troops in the field and aiding the enemy with pointless gestures, while the AP distorts the picture through skewed presentation."

You can’t make this stuff up. Jules Crittenden doesn’t have to. He just takes it off the wire.

Via Instapundit

Knowing your enemy

Michael Yon, reporting on the latest US discoveries in Baqubah, where troops are bringing security to the populace:

"The official reported that on a couple of occasions in Baqubah, al Qaeda invited to lunch families they wanted to convert to their way of thinking. In each instance, the family had a boy, he said, who was about eleven years old. As Lt. David Wallach interpreted the man’s words, I saw Wallach go blank and silent. He stopped interpreting for a moment. I asked Wallach, ‘What did he say?’ Wallach said that at these luncheons, the families were sat down to eat. And then their boy was brought in with his mouth stuffed. The boy had been baked. Al Qaeda served the boy to his family."

I wonder why the retreaters in Congress think this sort of thing will stop if we withdraw. How can they not care? David Kilcullen, in the Small Wars Journal, reports on what we’re up to in the surge.

UPDATE  Some of Wretchard’s commenters think the official was telling an old lie, but W. brings out family stories of Japanese atrocities in the Phillipines in WW2. Meanwhile, the BBC finds Petraeus’s moves hopeful, if possibly too late. If so, I think we can blame the Pentagon.

The starship

The Big E, that is, which left Norfolk on Friday bound for the Med and Persian Gulf region:

"This is Enterprise’s second deployment within the past 14 months.  Big E returned from its most recent  deployment Nov. 18."

Finally, Debka can truthfully say the Enterprise’s Carrier Strike Group 12 is speeding towards the Middle East. What exactly they will do there, along with two other carrier strike groups already there, is anybody’s guess. Hit Iran? Remains to be seen. 

The peasant’s gun

The AK-47 assualt rifle celebrated its 60th birthday Friday, and Lt Col P at Op-For notes the fact, while dissing the technology. Reliable? Check. Simple? The same. Accurate? Not hardly. But, then, on full auto, hosing the opposition, who could tell? And that’s what peasants do. They ain’t target shooters.

Someone you should know

Badger Six presents an Army Commendation Medal, with V for valor, to a young medic, SGT Jesse Kelsch. I didn’t know you could get a V with an ARCOM. Shows how much I know, I guess.