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Wednesday, January 17, 2007
Austin Bay :: Townhall.com Columnist
"Unified Action" in the 21st Century's War for Modernity
by Austin Bay
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The War on Terror does not have a Winston Churchill, a bulldog poet defending civilization with both visceral determination and energizing eloquence. It does have George Bush's spine and Tony Blair's oratory, however.

As a tandem, President Bush's "Iraq War" speech of Jan. 10 and Prime Minister Blair's "British defense" speech of Jan. 12 aren't the poetic equivalents of Churchill's "Iron Curtain" address or his best wartime declarations, but for anyone who cares about liberty, justice and the consequences of capitulation to terror and tyranny, Bush's and Blair's one-two deliveries state the case.

Bush's address received far more coverage and critique. The media focused on the president's "troop surge" component -- adding 20,000 U.S. troops to the coalition forces deployed in Iraq.

Reinforcements and withdrawals have always been an option in Iraq -- they are what U.S. commanders have called operational adjustments based on "current requirements and conditions."

That's why I have believed and continue to believe a troop surge alone is of minimal value, despite the case Bush makes that immediate conditions in Baghdad require more military presence.

The rest of the speech demonstrated the Bush administration has reached the same conclusion -- a conclusion Blair's subsequent speech reinforced.

Consider two specific policies Bush discussed. The "hydrocarbon law" he advocated is a version of the "oil trust" concept many economists and Iraqis have advocated for several years. The state of Alaska has a similar program. Iraq considered instituting an oil trust in the 1950s, prior to the demise of its monarchy. The oil trust would put several hundred dollars a year into the pockets of every adult Iraqi. It immediately invests everyone in the economic success of Iraq's new democratic government.

Bush also said provincial reconstruction teams will be revamped. Economic development officers will embed with security forces. He called for "ways to mobilize talented American civilians to deploy overseas -- where they can help build democratic institutions in communities and nations recovering from war and tyranny."

In Department of Defense lingo, these are examples of "Unified Action." Unified Action means coordinating and synchronizing every "tool of power" America possesses to achieve a political end -- in this case, winning a global war for national survival against terrorists who hijack economically and politically fragile nations.

Have we failed to do this since 9-11? Yes. Up to this point, the military has improvised the economic and political components, yet they are the determinative elements in the Great 21st Century War for Modernity. Continued...

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About The Author

Austin Bay Austin Bay is author of three novels. His third novel, The Wrong Side of Brightness, was published by Putnam/Jove in June 2003. He has also co-authored four non-fiction books, to include A Quick and Dirty Guide to War: Third Edition (with James Dunnigan, Morrow, 1996).
 
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©Creators Syndicate
Povishez
"What if liberal democracies have now evolved to a point where they can no longer wage war effectively because they have achieved a level of humanitarian concern for others that dwarfs any really cold-eyed pursuit of their own national interests?" - John Podhoretz

I think you have a point here. We are "evolving" (devolving?) right out of democracy into socialism because we (and I use that term loosely) have achieved a level of humanitarian concern that dwarfs any sense of realistic self-preservation. At least, our liberal citizens have and the power they and their institutions possess may yet destroy this country from within.

Self-preservation is a good thing. Southern Baptists honor a missionary by the name of Lottie Moon for our CHristmas offering for foreign missions. Whenever I teach the lesson, I always reiterate to the children that Lottie Moon's heart was bent to God, but she destroyed herself in the process, thereby denying God the use of her very real talents. She starved herself to death because she could not stand that Chinese children were going hungry while she had food to eat. God used it in the end -- Southern Baptists give a lot of money to the Lottie Moon Christmas offering and 98 percent of it goes to the foreign mission field in the form of direct aid to recipients (not missionaries whose salaries and living expenses are paid from other funds), but Lottie Moon (had she lived) might have been able to train other missionaries to walk among the Chinese people and spread the gospel. There are some who suggest that had Lottie's brand of missionary style prevailed (rather than the austere, stand-offish style of other more prominent missionaries to China of the same era) China might have become a more Christianized nation and not fallen to communism. We'll never know because it didn't happen, but it is an example of where self-preservation would have been a better thing in the long run.

If you give away all you have and then starve to death, you've helped some people for a short period of time. If you give of your surplus and continue producing a surplus that you can give from, you've helped more people for a longer time. Basic good sense that is totally lost on my "enlightened" liberal friends.

Unified Action?
"War is hell” … “We are not fighting armies but a hostile people, and must make young and old, rich and poor, feel the hard hand of war." - Gen. William Tecumseh Sherman
Austin,

Great article, yet I wonder if instituting economic reform has a place prior to the destruction of that ideology which aids, comforts and sustains the “Islamic Radicals”. The Marshall Plan seems to have worked because the “enemy” was militarily defeated (a clear, concise defeat) and the institutions that supported National Socialism were ostracized by the world community, ideologues of National Socialism brought to trial before a court of law and those found guilty held accountable. We’ve seen the beginning of such action and remedy…but financial incentives?

"What if liberal democracies have now evolved to a point where they can no longer wage war effectively because they have achieved a level of humanitarian concern for others that dwarfs any really cold-eyed pursuit of their own national interests?" - John Podhoretz

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