[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Sign-in]  [Mail]  [Setup]  [Help] 

Status: Not Logged In; Sign In

A 1,600-year-old church in the Holy Land has been torched. But not by ISIS.

More civilians have been killed while seeking aid in Gaza than were killed on 7 October.

MORE TRANS VIOLENCE

WAYNE ROOT: Here’s How Trump Turns the Epstein List Fiasco into Home Run

Maxwell Says Epstein Client List Implicates Top Democrats

Medical Record Review Of the Twins Who Died After Vaccination

New federal secrets exposed as Republican unravels Lee Harvey Oswald's hidden ties to CIA

Protest outside migrant hotel in Essex erupts into violence

Congressman Faces Eviction Over $85k Back-Rent For Luxury DC Penthouse

This Is Not Normal! We Just Had Four “1-In-1,000-Year Storms” In A Single Week!

Dr. Fauci referred to top prosecutor for criminal charges after bombshell Biden autopen pardon revelation

Panama hit by 6.2 magnitude earthquake

Why Labour REALLY Supports Genocide

Police Name Brigitte Macron as 'Suspect' in Murder of Doctor Who Exposed Transgender Past

The Treasury General Account Refill will Force the Fed to Cut Rates and Restart QE

Silver surges above $39 for the first time since the first US downgrade in Aug 2011.

Breaking Ukraine’s Backbone: Russia’s Offensive Severing Strategic Supply Routes

Tucker Carlson: Hunting with Dogs is Transcendent

Earthquake Swarms Increasing ! Islands Pulled 4 INCHES APART -Unprecedented

Project Veritas: Text Messages Show Secret Service Agent Disclosing Operational Details to Stranger,

Chinese Drug Cartels Taking Oer Maine Due to lax Immigration Rules

Bitcoin Bitcoin hits new high above $120,000 as U.S. lawmakers begin ‘Crypto Week’

How I Reversed an "Irreversible" Condition With Stem Cell Therapy

Trump's Missile Deal $$$$

Christmas Bells - A Christmas Carol's Civil War Origin

"Use Him, Pick His Pockets"

Ghislaine Maxwell is willing to give over the Epstein Client List in exchange for a plea deal per—Daily Mail

5 American Cities Set to Collapse By 2026 (Tucker- Immigration turned California into a Latino Slum)

AI Just Decoded the Dead Sea Scrolls… And It’s Worse Than We Thought

The Good Guys (Israel and US)


Editorial
See other Editorial Articles

Title: Buchanan: Fresh Troops – Or Fresh Thinking?
Source: Worldnetdaily
URL Source: http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=54512
Published: Mar 2, 2007
Author: Pat Buchanan
Post Date: 2007-03-02 11:09:37 by Brian S
Keywords: None
Views: 90
Comments: 2

Posted: March 2, 2007

Six years after Donald Rumsfeld agreed to a second tour of duty as secretary of defense, to rebuild the military, Chief of Staff Peter Schoomaker told Congress his Army "will break" if not relieved of the present burdens. Colin Powell says the Army is "almost broken." This week, Gen. Peter Pace, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said there is a significant risk that the United States today may be unable to respond quickly and fully to another crisis should it arise.

Howls erupted across the spectrum for more billions for more men for the Army and Marine Corps. What these revelations ought to trigger, however, are hard questions of our leaders and fresh thinking among our elites about the limits of American power and the extent of American commitments.

For, by any measure, Iraq and Afghanistan are not major wars. The United States had twice as many troops in Korea, resisting a million-man Chinese army, and took 10 times the casualties we have taken in Iran and Afghanistan, and America was not overstretched.

We put three times as many troops in Vietnam, fought longer and took nearly 20 times the casualties we have taken in these two insurgencies, while maintaining 300,000 troops in Europe and 40,000 in Korea. Yet, though we are spending today as much on defense as the next 10 nations combined, the U.S. Army is "almost broken."

In a National Review essay, "The Crying Need for a Bigger U.S. Military," ex-Sen. James Talent details what happened to the armed forces that were Ronald Reagan's great legacy to the nation.

"The active-duty Army was cut from 18 divisions during Desert Storm to 10 by 1994 – its size today. The Navy, which counted 569 ships in the late 1980s, struggles today to sustain a fleet of only 276. And the number of tactical air wings in the Air Force was reduced from 37 at the time of Desert Storm to 20 by the mid-1990s."

Inheriting Reagan's estate, Bill Clinton sold off much of it for the big party of the 1990s. But bemoaning what Clinton did yesterday does not address today's crisis.

What Desert Storm and the Iraq war should teach us is a simple lesson: The U.S. Army and Marines are capable of winning a small war in weeks against a middle-sized power. They are not large enough to wage a long war against a middle-sized power on the Asian continent. While they can defeat an enemy army and seize a capital, they cannot rebuild a nation. Nor are the marginal increases in the U.S. Army now being proposed going to create such a capacity.

Gen. Eric Shinseki said that to defeat and occupy Iraq would have required two to three times the force we sent in. Yet even that would not have prevented or defeated the insurgency we face.

Most Americans realize that our mistake was not just in how the occupation was botched by Paul Bremer – failure to stop the looting, disbanding the Iraqi army. The blunder was in attacking a nation that did not attack or threaten us, or any U.S. ally.

Before Congress decides on the enhanced size and new weaponry of the U.S. Army, Navy, Air Force and Marine Corps, we need a bottom-up review of U.S. commitments and to begin shedding them rather than adding to them, as we have done, willy-nilly, since the end of the Cold War.

Why, for example, when Congress is demanding that Iraqis take responsibility for defending their own democracy, are we not also demanding that South Korea take responsibility for defending its own democracy? Cannot the South, with twice the North's population and an economy 40 times as large, defend itself?

And as we are not going to fight yet another land war in Asia, why not move all our forces offshore, as Gen. MacArthur urged in 1951?

And as Europe is richer and more populous than we, why not shift responsibility for Europe's defense to the Europeans, and bring the U.S. troops home? This is what Eisenhower urged Kennedy to do – in 1960.

In the War Party, many wish to confront Russia and extend NATO to Ukraine and Georgia. Are Americans really going to fight Russia in the Black Sea over the Crimea, or to prevent secession of Abkhazia or South Ossetia from Georgia? What concern is that of ours?

Americans welcomed as a godsend the liberation of Eastern Europe. Yet, no president – not Truman, Ike, JFK, LBJ, Reagan – ever broke relations with Moscow when Soviets blockaded Berlin, effected the 1948 coup in Prague, crushed the Hungarian Revolution, built the Berlin Wall, snuffed out the Prague Spring or crushed Solidarity.

Now, we are willing to go to war with a Russia with thousands of atomic weapons – over Estonia. Have we lost our minds?

Before we decide how many ships, planes, guns or troops we need, let us first decide what is so vital to us that we are willing to continue having the planes come in to Dover, and the ambulances rolling in from Andrews to Walter Reed to defend it.

There are not many things that can justify that.

Post Comment   Private Reply   Ignore Thread  


TopPage UpFull ThreadPage DownBottom/Latest

#1. To: Brian S (#0)

Most Americans realize that our mistake was not just in how the occupation was botched...The blunder was in attacking a nation that did not attack or threaten us, or any U.S. ally.

Buchanan hits it out of the park.

scrapper2  posted on  2007-03-02   11:19:50 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#2. To: Brian S (#0)

Before we decide how many ships, planes, guns or troops we need, let us first decide what is so vital to us that we are willing to continue having the planes come in to Dover, and the ambulances rolling in from Andrews to Walter Reed to defend it.

Excellent post by Pat Buchanan, a classical conservative.

...do not be too eager to deal out death in judgment. For even the very wise cannot see all ends.

bluedogtxn  posted on  2007-03-02   11:23:46 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


TopPage UpFull ThreadPage DownBottom/Latest


[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Sign-in]  [Mail]  [Setup]  [Help]