Category Archives: Obsessions

A true war story

J.D. over at Mouth of the Brazos has a semi-book review that reminded me of a war story, a true one, as we say, to distinguish it from the stretchers some of us have been known to tell a time or two.

J.D., a onetime Marine who shared my year (1969) and approximate terrain in fun-loving Southeast Asia, was so irritated at the 2010 book An America Amnesia: How the US Congress Forced the Surrenders of South Vietnam and Cambodia that he stopped reading: “It was making me sick to my stomach. The entire viewpoint is asinine beyond description.”

His point is that we were losing the war practically the whole way along, even if the (highly suspect) official statistics seem to support the notion that we were winning. Thus when Congress cut off military aid to SVN (which did, indeed, force their surrender) they were only ratifying what practically everyone, except the Pentagon and the military careerists with their vested interests, seemed to finally understand. It is all debatable of course. Isn’t everything?

My true war story contains a clue to why we were losing the war long before the Congress acted: A Popular Forces squad my light-infantry Army advisory team set up in the summer of 1969 (about the time Neil Armstrong was taking his giant leap for mankind) in a sand and bamboo outpost on the edge of what we laughingly called our Controlled Fire Zone—it was such only for the American units which had to clear indirect fires with us. The enemy did what they pleased, mainly at night. They owned the night. “Charlie’s Dark,” I called it.

The PF’s were the lowest of the low in the SVN military, ill-equipped, ill-led, ill-clad and ill-fed. Ill everything. Mostly because the SVN command structure and their supply system were just totally corrupt. Everything got stolen or sold long before it filtered down to our lowly PFs. Which is a big reason the war was a loser.

These poor guys, some very young, a few old enough to be the grandfathers of the very young ones, had M-16s, of which they were very proud, but little else. They needed a 60mm mortar for their defense but we couldn’t get one through their crooked supply. So we stole one. We stole it from the 7th Marine Regiment which was the nearest and largest American unit in our AO (area of operations). We stole everything essential from the Marines: our food, our ammunition, the gasoline for our jeeps and our generators. If I remember correctly we stole a generator. But that might be a stretcher.

The true part is the poor PFs were overrun the first night they heroically agreed to stay in their pathetic little outpost. About half were killed, the other half sensibly ran away. The enemy (mainly Main Force VC and NVA in our neck of the woods) did leave the mortar behind. We passed it on to another PF squad. But we could never get them to stay in the outpost. They weren’t cowards. They just weren’t stupid. Unlike some of the guys still pushing the “congress lost the war” line. Any line doggie with any sense knows better whether he’s willing to admit it to himself or not. It can be a hard admission, even after all these years.

Of slow blogging and Lord Shiva

Mr. Goon complained the other day in a private email that I seem to be slow blogging lately. True.

Reason being I’m formatting, proofreading and indexing my next book, for the second time (don’t ask), a 336-page history of my great grandfather’s 13th Mississippi Volunteer Infantry Regiment—mostly taken from my blog about it but with some new material. Trying to get it done and for sale at Amazon before Halloween.

Meanwhile, I’ll mention a recent post I read at Althouse, a favorite blog, on the American Indians complaining about the Cleveland Indians name and logo, not to mention the Washington Redskins. Commenters there (so many of them, whew) caught my interest, as usual.

One: The “Redskins should keep their nickname…but change their logo to a [new] potato.” Ha. No offense to Redskins QB RGIII, a fav of Baylor fans and other Texans who watch football.

Another: “I accept the Fighting Irish and the drunken Leprechaun logo, so I am free to tell (the Indians) to piss off.”

Best: “Truly, it seems like half the people in this country spend all day looking for some way to be a victim.”

My own take: Given all the immigrant Indians from India (and the relative paucity of American Indians) the Cleveland Indians ought to keep their name but change their logo to Lord Shiva, the Destroyer. Much more relevant nowadays.

Is that racist? Tough.

Via Althouse.

Principles vs ideology

Democrat and Republican party bosses used to pick the candidates for the White House and Congress who, George Friedman says, governed on principles. Then the reforms of the 1970s happened, Jimmy Carter was the first “beneficary” and ideology has carried the day ever since.

“There is a vast difference between principle and ideology. Principles are core values that do not dictate every action on every subject, but guide you in some way. Ideology as an explanation of how the world works is comprehensive and compelling. Most presidents find that governing requires principles, but won’t allow ideology. But it is the senators and particularly the congressmen — who run in districts where perhaps 20 percent of eligible voters vote in primaries, most of them ideologues — who are forced away from principle and toward ideology.”

That’s a interesting take by the boss of Stratfor, Austin’s open intelligence agency. It only leaves out the obvious truth that President Obutthead is a Socialist ideologue who “governs” as one.

Thus the federal slimdown or semi-shutdown or whatever you choose to call it when the feds close national parks and veteran monuments but keep most federal agencies and their Democrat house organ NPR running full-tilt—instead of negotiating with the budget-setting conservative House for a reduction in entitlement spending.

Can you say Mexican standoff? Sure you can.

Police frenzy

Did it really require twenty police cars to chase down the driver of a black Nissan sedan which allegedly tried to ram a barrier at the White House, ran into a Secret Service agent and then sped away to the Capitol?

And did these trigger-happy police really have to shoot and kill the driver when she got out of the car and fled on foot? Turns out the 34-year-old dental technician and mother of a toddler wasn’t even armed. Not that the cops seemed to care. Anymore than they cared about who they might have run over in their frenzy to be part of the chase.

Never mind Islamic terrorism. Officer Friendly is the real menace these days.

Via Instapundit.

UPDATE:  Her family, of course, also wonder why she had to die. She shouldn’t have, and if we had responsible law enforcement, she wouldn’t have.

Playing it for laughs at the dictators club

Israel’s UN ambassador could be pardoned for weeping at the way the dominant nondemocratic membership singles out his democratic country for abuse. Instead, Ron Proser chooses to mock the slimy bastards.

“…when Syrian Ambassador Bashar Jaafari claimed last year that his government was not responsible for the massacres taking place in his country, Prosor took him to task. ‘If lying was an Olympic event, I have no doubt that the Syrian regime and its representatives could easily win a gold medal,’ he told the General Assembly in August 2012.”

That year the dictators club’s 193 countries passed 22 resolutions condemning Israel, but only four against any other countries. Must be hard to smile while standing in such a stinking cesspool of lies and corruption, but Proser has found a way.

The warmist cult rides on

As always the lazy news media—which includes the Wall Street Journal’s reporting—only read the summaries of big reports like the latest one by the dictators club reaffirming that global warming is  still, wait for it, a crisis.

“BTW, there are a lot of good scientists who work behind the scenes who produce the chapters. The Summaries however are written by the state[s]men, environmentalists and high profile scientists whose reputation and wealth is based on the propagation of the faith.”

So the summaries are models of misinformation.

Nevertheless, the latest cult propanganda will continue to be the spur for the EPA’s War on Coal, hiking electricity prices and stifling the economy and, sooner or later, adding a whopping carbon tax. Unless the dimwits who voted for OButthead in 2012 finally get a clue and turn the Congress over to the Republicans next year. They can’t be any worse.

Rule 5: Pink Bikini

Nevermind the Godzilla gag, this fetching creature is reason enough to post the photo. Pity there’s no name attached, but we can still dream.

Via Simply Jews.