| Gattigap |
12-28-2004 05:56 PM |
Too much choice
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Originally posted by bilmore
I agree with you to a certain extent - the projections that allowed for the skipping of the occupancy phase were way too rosy, and represented a huge mistake of prediction (in that no one seemed to think that the SH Iraqi army might just take a powder and then pop up as guerillas) but I don't remember any war that ever stuck to plan, evenin the broad strokes.
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Nor do I. Fortunately, we're not discussing that point, but instead that the official historian of the campaign concluded that the Administration was so convinced that the barrels would contain only flowers that no one sat down and put pen to paper to cover the possibility that they did not.
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I wish they had gotten that part right.
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As do we all.
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So, obviously, do the generals who are now quite eager to say "I told him to listen to MEEEE".
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Yes. The tough part, of course, is to read carefully the content of such criticisms and determine whether they arise merely from the same temptation that draws a moth to the light, or perhaps they possess the minimum credibility to conclude that something was profoundly wrong in the Administration's war planning.
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And, I think you willingly mischaracterize his armor answer.
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Well, let's go to the tape. (emphasis added)
- SEC. RUMSFELD: I talked to the General coming out here about the pace at which the vehicles are being armored. They have been brought from all over the world, wherever they’re not needed, to a place here where they are needed. I’m told that they are being – the Army is – I think it’s something like 400 a month are being done. And it’s essentially a matter of physics. It isn’t a matter of money. It isn’t a matter on the part of the Army of desire. It’s a matter of production and capability of doing it.*
As you know, you go to war with the Army you have. They’re not the Army you might want or wish to have at a later time. Since the Iraq conflict began, the Army has been pressing ahead to produce the armor necessary at a rate that they believe – it’s a greatly expanded rate from what existed previously, but a rate that they believe is the rate that is all that can be accomplished at this moment.
I can assure you that General Schoomaker and the leadership in the Army and certainly General Whitcomb are sensitive to the fact that not every vehicle has the degree of armor that would be desirable for it to have, but that they’re working at it at a good clip. It’s interesting, I’ve talked a great deal about this with a team of people who’ve been working on it hard at the Pentagon. And if you think about it, you can have all the armor in the world on a tank and a tank can be blown up. And you can have an up-armored humvee and it can be blown up. And you can go down and, the vehicle, the goal we have is to have as many of those vehicles as is humanly possible with the appropriate level of armor available for the troops. And that is what the Army has been working on.
I'll grant you, he did not say "back to the landfill, sonny!" That part was indeed an embellishment. The rest, the man actually said. Even if literally true, were such words to be said in a Kerry or Clinton or any other Democratic Administration, the howls from the right would be such that the SecDef would not have lasted the evening, and that's my point.
Gattigap
* You've also seen, I am sure, the subsequent stories about the vendors being able to increase production, and having offered to. To be clear, I do not accuse DoD of malfeasance here, but for heaven's sake, if it is so readily possible to increase production, don't say in front of your troops, God and everyone that doing so is an impossibility.
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