Townhall.com, Where Your Opinion Counts
Talk Radio:   Bill Bennett   Mike Gallagher   Dennis Prager   Michael Medved   Hugh Hewitt   
BREAKING NEWS  LeftArrow - Townhall.com : Conservative, Political, Republican   RightArrow - Townhall.com : Conservative, Political, Republican  
Columns, funnies & more in your inbox!
  • Check the boxes and send us your email address to receveive your free newsletter
  • Your daily must-read of conservative columns, cartoons and news. Coulter, Sowell, Krauthammer and more.
  • Townhall.com’s weekly inside scoop on what’s happening behind the scenes in the world of politics. When news breaks, we report.
  • Signup to receive the latest daily Townhall cartoons
Monday, May 26, 2008
Bill Steigerwald :: Townhall.com Columnist
Words of War
by Bill Steigerwald
Vote on It:
Average Vote:
[+] Text [-]
 
Poll
Will the Dems' health care Christmas Present to America be an improvement or detriment to our health care system?


Victor Davis Hanson, a former classics professor, is a renowned conservative scholar of ancient history and military affairs who's recently become a nationally syndicated columnist and blogger. The author of 17 books with titles like "A War Like No Other: How the Athenians and Spartans Fought the Peloponnesian War," "An Autumn of War" and "Mexifornia: A State of Becoming," he is the senior fellow in residence in classics and military history at the Hoover Institution on the Stanford University campus. Hanson, whose scholarship and interest in individual freedom recently earned him a 2008 Bradley Prize worth $250,000 from the Bradley Foundation, was on his farm near the central California town of Selma when I called to ask him about his favorite war books.

Q: What's the greatest book on war ever written?

A: I think Thucydides' "Peloponnesian War" is the most astute. It's the second-earliest history of war and it's not only a testament to the use of source material and the ability to provide a coherent narrative, but it's analytical and it becomes almost philosophical in its dissection of human nature.

Q: Has everyone else been trying to rise to those standards ever since?

A: Yes, I think so. The adjective "Thucydidean" is pretty much a standard brand now that people understand that ideally a historian would have three components in a successful history: One would be that they would use source materials in an analytic rather than prejudicial manner; and two, they would be able to draw together a lot of sources and provide an engaging narrative; and then three, that their history would speak to readers in terms of philosophy beyond just the particular history or period or era they are narrating.

Q: What was the best book about World War II?

A: I think Gerhard Weinberg's "A World at Arms" (1994: Cambridge University Press). It's a single-volume (1,208-page) history of World War II. What's so good about it is, he looks at it in a holistic fashion, so we understand for the first time how the Balkan uprising affected German war plans. Or what was going on in the Japanese empire in places like Korea or Taiwan or Mainland China and how that affected the war with the British. Or what were people in the Nazi Party talking to Hitler about in terms of alternate plans rather than what actually happened. He understands source material very well and he has an eye for trying to give us a world at war other than just Britain, Germany and the United States. It shows how their ideas filtered out into so many different theaters and how the ultimate result of that is how lucky we were to win.

Q: What's the best anti-war book?

A: There was a whole genre of anti-war books that followed the First World War. There are novels such as "All Quiet on the Western Front" or memoirs like Robert Graves' "Good-bye to All That," or poetry by people like Siegfried Sassoon that came out of the World War I experience in Europe. Europe had never experienced anything like that before. There are other things that have been written, like "The Red Badge of Courage," and plays going back to the Greeks, like "The Trojan Women" or Aristophanes' comedy "Lysistrata," that were anti-war in nature. But it seems to me that World War I and the advent of industrial war created entire new genres of novels, poetry and memoirs that started with the premise that there was nothing at all possibly glorious about war.

Q: Would you agree with that last phrase you uttered?

A: To an extent. I am not one of these people that is common now who see World War I as a tragedy in the sense that there was no moral or ethical difference between Germany of 1914 and France and England. If one were to look at the nature of German aggression in Europe, the nature of German colonies overseas, or what the German agenda was, it seems to me that it was very different than the liberal tradition in France and England that prevailed. It's a tragedy that it had to end in a war like that, but given the superiority of the German Wehrmacht in 1914, I don't know any other way how anybody would have stopped it. In terms of artillery, in terms of personal arms, in terms of general staff, railroads, communications, esprit de corps, it was so far superior to the colonial armies of France and England. The ambitions of the German Kaiser were so ambitious, I don't know how anybody could have done anything other than what they did. They would have either had to appease them or capitulate. It was a tragedy. But I do think there was a qualitative difference in the fact that the Allies won. It had a profound effect on Europe. The tragedy of World War I, it seems to me, is how the Versailles Treaty ended and the Allies were not willing to remain vigilant, because given their enormous losses in the war there was sort of a utopian pacifism that followed.

Q: You've been reading books about the war in Iraq by various participants. They're all sort of pointing fingers of blame at each other for various reasons. Which book so far do you find to be the most informative and the most credible?

A: I think the most recent that I read, (former undersecretary of defense) Douglas Feith's "War and Decision," is the most informative. And I think it's the most credible for one reason - that it's the best documented. More importantly, he has deliberately avoided or promised not to use a technique that has been very common in other books like Tom Rick's "Fiasco" or Trainor and Gordon's "Cobra II." By that I mean he has not had anonymous sources in the footnotes. So we don't see "senior Pentagon official" or "junior American diplomat" cited after a direct quotation. Nor do we see, as we see in Bob Woodward's books, conversations repeated verbatim inside a room with three people and we don't know who gave him that information. That means the information can never be checked.

Whereas in the case of Feith, he not only cited things, he put it on his Web site and a person can go to the Web site and click on the footnote and see whether the footnote reflects accurately what it is supposed to. And I don't think he was trying to get even. Part of the problem with that genre is that, a), it's right in the middle of a war; and b), when Paul Bremer writes he's going to blame Feith and he's going to blame Gen. Sanchez. When Gen. Sanchez is going to write, he's going to blame Bremer and Feith. Gen. Tommy Franks is going to say I did a great job and I left and everything was right. Gen. Sanchez is now going to blame Bremer . once you get into that cycle it's unending.

I think if you read carefully what Feith wrote, a), he didn't do that, and b), he takes some of the blame himself. It's an apology in a sense for the idea that the Pentagon had a war plan, had people listened to then rather than the State Department, things would be better than they are now. It's not "My brilliant war was ruined by somebody else's lousy occupation." That's pretty much the subtext of every other (book).

Q: How many years after a war does a historian need to get a proper perspective?

A: I think it takes a half century.... It takes the death of people, and that's usually 50 years. In the case of World War II, we had a radical change of heart once Eisenhower passed away and once Gen. Omar Bradley passed away, because they were icons of the American military. If we were to say Bradley was not as good a general as George Patton, that would have been heresy. Patton died right after the war and was caricatured as an uncouth bigmouth. But after Bradley died and there was not the Bradley core of scholars - clients, so to speak - in the military and also in the civilian world, then people began to look at World War II with a fresh start. So you can see that the last two or three biographies of Patton have been very sympathetic. They have started to say that it was Bradley who was responsible for the Falaise Gap (in Normandy); it was Bradley who didn't have a good plan to restore the Bulge; it was Eisenhower who was naïve about Czechoslovakia and Berlin. These questions were not even raised before, because of the enormous stature they held while they were alive. That's true of every war; you really can't question in a disinterested fashion because the principals who are still alive have their various spheres of influence. I don't think we'll know about Iraq until all the major players are gone.

Q: Some people have said Iraq is the worst blunder in the history of American foreign policy. What do you say when you hear that statement?

A: Two things come to mind: One, people must not know things that we've done in the past. I'm not saying it was a blunder, but you could easily have used that terminology when we armed the Soviet Union and it killed 30 million of its own people to stop Hitler; we went to war to ensure that Eastern Europe was liberated from Nazi totalitarianism and we ended up assuring that Eastern Europe was subjected to Soviet totalitarianism and we empowered an empire that was every bit as bad as Hitler. But that was something that a prior generation accepted.. On a tactical level, Iraq is not even close to World War II. Putting pilots in Devastator torpedo bombers; or trying to sell the idea that the Sherman tank, for all of its strengths about maintenance, was going to be anywhere near comparable to a German tank; and the thousands of people who found out with the cost of their lives that wasn't true . I could go down the line.

Whether it's the Civil War, or the First World War, or the Second World War, or the status of American armed forces in August of 1950, we've made so many more blunders and we reacted so much more slowly to correct them than anything we have seen in Iraq. So I just don't think anybody has any historical comparison.

That being said, is Iraq a fiasco or a blunder? If we were to get out and were to lose, I would concede that it would be. But if we stay and we are successful in creating a constitutional government, then you can see that that would be an amazing achievement. It would not only make Saddam Hussein's Iraq an ally rather than an enemy that attacked its neighbors, but it would have a very deleterious effect on Iran. We can talk in terms of Iran undermining Iraq - that's true. But if Iraq was to win that struggle, then it would be -- by its very presence as a constitutional state -- undermining Iran as well as putting pressure on other countries who don't have our interests at heart. All we did by going into Iraq was raise the ante; great good can come of it or great evil depending upon how we prevail. As far as the losses, I don't quite understand it. I don't like to be heartless, but in six years we've lost about the same amount of soldiers we lost in two or three days in a major campaign in World War II. During an eight-year period of the Clinton administration, when the military was two or three times larger and not nearly as adept in its training, I think we lost almost twice as many as we've lost in Iraq in peacetime accidents. I think in the eight years of the Clinton administration we lost over 7,000 dead in accidents. So if you look at the rate of casualties this month, for example, we're averaging about less than one a day. It was always pretty much a standard figure that we would lose three soldiers a day in the military in the 1980s and 1990s - it was well over a thousand a year. It's not happening in the military in general and it's not happening in Iraq. It doesn't mean it's not tragic we are losing people, but given the stakes, I'm always amazed at how well the military does.

Q: If you were to write a book about the war in Iraq now, after six years -- and I know you'd probably say it's too early to write one -- what would it focus on?

A: I think I would concentrate on two issues: One is how victory or defeat would affect the position of the United States in a geopolitical sense. That would touch on everything from the price of oil to the nuclear arming of Iran or to the weapons of mass destruction programs that we know took place under Saddam but more importantly in places like Pakistan, Libya and Syria. I'd make the argument that a victory would discourage proliferation of all these weapons and encourage reform and a defeat would make things much worse than they were before.

The second thing, I would be concentrating on how the military evolved; an artillery-armor-rapid-moving column that won the war and then in a bureaucratic sense was static in the occupation had to adjust and the degree to which it adjusted faster than the insurgents did. I think we're going to see in the next round of Army promotions a whole new cadre of colonels who are more versed in counterinsurgency than they are in armor, artillery or air support.

Q: What lessons has the war in Iraq taught future historians?

A: It's a reminder that there are new lessons in war. No war turns out as one predicts. So those who were arguing after the three-week victory that we'd have a constitutional government up and running in six months given the euphoria of the pretty brilliant victory were wrong, just as people have been wrong about the Civil War lasting one summer or World War I being over in September. And then those who thought that the insurgency had won and it was hopeless; the United States could never go into the heart of the Caliphate and know what they were doing; the idea that Arabs could ever vote in a peaceful or orderly fashion among themselves was impossible - they're wrong, as well. I think it reiterates that the strengths of the United States' system - civilian control of the military, reliance on high technology, logistics and most importantly consensuality among the ranks so that people who have different ideas or different strategies are allowed to be heard - for all the problems we've had in Iraq, if we have enough patience, will finally come into play. We get somebody like Gen. Petraeus and he turns around the theater and the unheard of and the impossible starts to happen -- that being that suddenly a Shia-dominated government is attacking Shia radicals that are surrogates of Iran while appealing to Sunnis to join them and to do their part in routing al-Qaida and Wahhabi insurgents. Nobody in their right mind would have believed that was possible just a year and half ago. But with patience, we get the right kind of people in such a system that can change things around. I think that's happened.

Share:
Vote on It:
Average Vote:
 
About The Author
Bill Steigerwald, born and raised in Pittsburgh, is a former L.A. Times copy editor and free-lancer who also worked as a docudrama researcher for CBS-TV in Hollywood before becoming a reporter for the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette and a columnist Pittsburgh Tribune-Review. Bill Steigerwald recently retired from daily newspaper journalism..
 
TOWNHALL DAILY: Sign up today and receive Townhall.com daily lineup delivered each morning to your inbox.
Great Insights!
I'm also a great Thucydides fan.

war books
best thing about war, maybe the only good thing aboiut most of them is the writing that comes out of them i really have a difficult time trying to understand how you could have omitted "johnny Got His Gun" a book about a soldier in WW1 that ws banned as being too grapic in many countries. i notice you didnt comment on the accuracy of Thucydided" book, and a goos =d thing too. it may be all yoiu said it is, but has many factual errors and flights of fancy .

the ever evolving "justifications"
Steigerwald heaps praise upon VDH, and VDH heaps praise upon Douglas Feith.

No surprise there.

There is an interesting piece today at opinionjournal.com by Feith.

Feith thinks Bush made a blunder by redefining the mission in Iraq without the requisite "education" of of the American people.

Originally, the mission was remove a growing and gathering threat, personified by the wmd issue. One can argue if the mission was worthwhile, but that was how it was portrayed by the administration.

But in 2004, Bush changed the rationale for the war by minimizing the wmd issue(can't imagine WHY), and minimizing the Saddam threat to the United States.

Instead, Bush began this incessant obsession over the necessity for a "democratic" Iraq.

Feith thinks Bush made a strategic mistake here by not "educating" the American people on the "advantages" of a democratic Iraq, assuming democracy and a fundamentalist Shia state are compatible in the first place.

At any rate, the folks who have their snouts immersed deep within the neocon trough, swigging on the toxic brew, will not easily swear off the slop.

Feith will only go so far as to admit the administration blundered in how it presented the rationale for the war.




Wow!
Great military analysis. Just look at a map. An Iraqi democracy will benefit the West in numerous ways, and no, not in terms of oil, but in terms of strategy.

Now, let us mass produce the BMW's hydroelectric car.

Boutte is batty.....again
Still has head in a dark place....

Iraq, DOES have a constitutional government and will have elections again this October. Now that most Iraqis understand that the US has been fighting to allow them more freedom to choose, they will do just that. They will have more and better choices to choice from than in the last elections and more of them will make those coices than in the last election.

Where did you come up with the $3 trillion figure? Please make an accounting because it certainly isn't any where close!

"...in the eight years of the Clinton administration we lost over 7,000 dead in accidents..." so it seems that being a soldier in Iraq is safer than being a soldier when Boy Clinton was Prez!

Who gives a sh*t about the rest of the screwed up planet? Do you really toss and turn at night worring about what Jacque Chirac or Joshka Fischer think about America? God help you if you do! Living here in Central Europe I know what people really think and you can find it in the Magyar Heros Square in Budapest, their newest Magyar Hero Ronaldus Magnus, thats right Ronald Wilson Reagan. In the future who will be the Iraqi Pantheon of Heros? Jacque Chirac or George W. Bush?

Why arent you upset that we still have a military presence in Japan and Germany 63 years after the war ended???

Maliki government is doing what they feel best for Iraq, if Iragi's think the same they will vote him in again in October, but I doubt it.

Petraeus is showing proof if you would bother to look! But NO, that would be againt your anti-Bush agenda!


More Than Patience

“But with patience, we get the right kind of people in such a system that can change things around. I think that's happened.”

Prophetic ending to a solid read.

However, it’s not a question of patience. The men and women actually doing the fighting have plenty of that. However, the anti-win crowd has none. Furthermore, America has to lose this war to prove their ideological liberal point. They have too much invested in failure and cannot allow an Iraqi success...which equals fallibility and ultimately their political lives. How insane is that?

If we can just keep the domestic enemy at bay we might have a chance.

We need more than patience...we need a congressional anti-win enema.

Sorry, corrected version
Boutte is batty.....again
Still has head in a dark place....

Iraq, DOES have a constitutional government and will have elections again this October. Now that most Iraqis understand that the US has been fighting to allow them more freedom to choose, they will do just that. They will have more and better choices to choose from than in the last elections and more of them will make those choices than in the last election.

Where did you come up with the $3 trillion figure? Please make an accounting because it certainly isn't anywhere close!

"...in the eight years of the Clinton administration we lost over 7,000 dead in accidents..." so it seems that being a soldier in Iraq is safer than being a soldier when Boy Clinton was Prez!

Who gives a sh*t about the rest of the screwed up planet? Do you really toss and turn at night worring about what Jacques Chirac or Joshka Fischer think about America? God help you if you do! Living here in Central Europe I know what some people outside the US really think and you can find it in the Magyar Heros Square in Budapest, their newest Magyar Hero Ronaldus Magnus, thats right Ronald Wilson Reagan. In the future who will be in the Iraqi Pantheon of Heros? Jacques Chirac or George W. Bush?

Why arent you upset that we still have a military presence in Japan and Germany 63 years after the war ended???

The Maliki government is doing what they feel best for Iraq, if Iragi's think the same, they will vote him in again in October, but I doubt it.

Petraeus is showing proof if you would bother to look! But NO, that would be againt your anti-Bush agenda!

Bill
I must say,you and Mr.Hanson went a long way,just to discredit Tom Rick's "Fiasco".Everyone knows, that Iraq is a "Fiasco".It would be more honorable to admit that and move on.The Viet Nam government, tried to adopt our form of government and President Truman said they were not ready.Is there some magic formula,that countries must have in order for them to be perceived as ready for Independence?The world is tired of people "Stealing" the resources of others and calling it war.It maybe time for a "Change"!!!

America, keep insulting the Founders
One more idiot praising war? Who will pay for all that, may I ask this idiot? Thomas Jefferson explains: "The principle of spending money to be paid by posterity, under the name fo funding, is but swindling futurity on a large scale".

So, Mr. Steigerwald what about this swindling? Any child born today comes with a bill attached of around $30,000.00! Yes, much owed to Communist China, the nation America feeds dollars like crazy and remains a Christian persecuting nation? Yes, this same Nation has America on its knees begging for mercy while is decimates the American economy?

Yes, George Washington left these words: "Overgrown military establishments under any form of government is inauspicious to liberty, and are to be regarded as particularly hostile to Republican liberty"

Yes, he also said this: "No pecuniary consideration is more urgent, than the regular redemption and discaharge of the public debt: on noen can delay be more injurious, or an economy of time more valuable".

So, Mr Steigerwald what is you answer, other than insulting the Founding Fathers? Imperialism never worked! Yes, America now claims otherwise, no different really than what all Empires claimed, while happily on the road of self-destruction!

Another thing...
...we shouldn't do is pressure the Iraqi government to make decisions simply for the sake of having an end to debate.
For all their inexperience in democratic government, I believe they're doing well. Theirs is not an easy road.
Audax, great post. I agree that with each Iraqi election they'll get better. The October turnout may be even bigger than their other elections with the electorate being able to trust more in this unfamiliar government style.
It IS hard to understand why folks in this country CARE about the opinions of some other countries, especially when it comes to our self defense. They aren't first line targets as are both the US and Israel. Particularly since if we fail, they are next.


Hmm
I see Hal Donohue is back under a pseudonym; must mean he was banned. Now that's honesty.

One of the best and most honest books I have read about warfare is the "alternate history" The Guns Of The South by Harry Turtledove. The history in it is meticulous and detailed in an appendix to this story of the War of Northern Aggression in which some Afrikkaners travel back in time and give Robert E. Lee a stash of AK-47s. That is the only change he makes, and I for one was surprised to discover that the trench warfare of World War I began with the methodology derived in the War of Northern Aggression. I was also surprised at how many of what I considered modern inventions were available to both sides during the aforementioned Late Unpleasantness, as my Granny used to call it.

Current generations who believe that everything has been invented since they were born (and who profoundly irritate Formula One fans by starting threads asking if Michael Schumacher is the greatest driver who ever lived, then look completely blank when someone brings up Fangio) would be well served by reading this book and getting a grasp of not only what happened, but when it happened, and what was going on at the time.

There is also a book called The Twelve Year Reich that gives a good insight into what was happening in Germany during World War II, not only militarily but day to day.

H.D., not so fast...
.....quoting Jefferson....

Here is a link to a good quick read on Jefferson and war with the Barbary Pirates:

http://lcweb2.loc.gov/ammem/collections/jefferson_papers/mt jprece.html

To quote Jefferson "To this state of general peace with which we have been blessed, one only exception exists. Tripoli, the least considerable of the Barbary States, had come forward with demands unfounded either in right or in compact, and had permitted itself to denounce war, on our failure to comply before a given day. The style of the demand admitted but one answer. I sent a small squadron of frigates into the Mediterranean. . . ."

Jefferson undersood that sometimes governments had to spend money and make war far from our shores to keep the peace and protect American lives. Though as Secretary of State and Vice-President he fought this tooth and nail.

Another great read is Micheal B. Oren's, "Power Faith and Fantasy: America in the Middle East 1776 To Present".


The Maliki Government?
>Maliki government is doing what they feel best for Iraq<

There's really no such thing as the Maliki government. You might remeber that it was support from the Sadrists that elevated Maliki to the PM position in the first place. That support evaporated long ago. Maliki now threatens to marginalize the Sadrists by sidelining them in the upcoming election if they don't lay down their arms. Of course, no such conditions exist for the Kurds and their Peshmerga militia. And the Kurdish contingency in the "Maliki government" is concerned primarily with Kurdistan, not Iraq. Any Maliki opposition to the annexation of Kirkuk into Kurdistan will see Kurdish support for Maliki dry up faster than Colorado River water rights.

The Sunnis, like the Kurds, might capitulate to Shiite control of the central government in Baghdad, but will insist on regional control of their western and northwestern provinces.

That leaves support for the Maliki government with Shiite political parties aligned under the Iranian-friendly Badr militia leader Al-Hakim and religious leader Ayatollah Al-Sistani, who it was discovered recently approves of armed opposition to US occupation. And that support is only viable since Maliki decided to abandon his Sadrist allies.

Seems apparent to me
that no war was ever waged where all the puzzle pieces fit exactly, we had a perfect understanding of what the enemy would do, and had a clear objective for how to achieve 'victory.'

I am always amazed that everybody sitting at home thinks they have the definitive answer to what is going on, as long as it bolsters their pre-conceived notions of the merits pro or con to the war.

The most vocal are the anti-war crowd. To them I say PYHOOYA.

I have said this before and I will say it again. The time to debate on whether or not to go into Iraq is past. We are there. Failure is not an option.

My take away message from the article is we have to make it right, we cannot just abandon the Iraqis to Iran and make things worse for everyone. How to achieve that is what we need to discuss, all the other crap is just that...crap.

If we could pull together as a nation in the 60s and set a ten year goal (JFK) to putting a man on the moon, and achieve that, I think we could achieve a satisfactory conclusion to the war in Iraq. The key is PULLING TOGETHER...

I don't hold out much hope for that with our American Idol/Paris Hilton obsessed society, but that is what it is going to take.

Heck, we can't even elect a candidate for POTUS that agrees with 70+% of the population to secure our own borders!

TARFU

AudiR10 writes:
There is also a book called The Twelve Year Reich that gives a good insight into what was happening in Germany during World War II, not only militarily but day to day.

I have read parts of Weinbeg's book on WW II. It is not an easy read, but it is worth it. Right now, I am beginning to read Martin Gilbert's history of WW II.

Audax: Another great book on the early history of the U.S. Navy is "Six Frigates" by Ian W. Toll.

Praising Feith's Book
Praising Feith's Book insures Hansen is nothing more than a political hack and a stooge for the Bush administration.

Iraq will go down as one of the greatest war blunders precisely for one reason: it was America's first pre-emptive war.

Funny how Hansen failed to mention that. Shifting this country to a pre-emptive stance is philosphically one of the biggest changes made and therefore makes Iraq the biggest blunder.

Then you have the firing of General Senzeki. He called for 500,000 troops to occupy Iraq. We knew from our experiences with Germany and Japan how to rebuild an occupied country.

Senzeki was immediately fired, oops, resigned. Yeah right.

What should have happened in Iraq is what happened in Japan. The draft reinstated, 500,000 troops deployed and all weapons confiscated and thrown in the sea of Japan. We should have written their constitution.

Iraq is one of the biggest war blunders this country has ever seen precisely because America turned its back on the history of "never again" after Vietnam in just 40 short years. Exit strategy? What exit strategy? We turned our backs on the successful history of occupation in WWII.

And why? Because of arrogance, hubris and partisan politics. The Bush administration thought it was above it all, above failure and above questioning and fired any and all in their presence who challenged them or their version of events.

The arrogance of Republicans is just so mind twisting that they believe that 50 years from now the liberal academia will somehow cast Bush in a different light.

Right. Hey Hansen, historians all across this country are calling Bush the worst President ever. He's got the highest disapproval ratings of any President in History and has had them for YEARS.

Finally, Hansen fails to mention the upwards of 600,000 Iraqi's dead as a consequence of our actions when throwing around body counts. Funny how Republicans don't consider dead Iraqi's worth counting.

Lumberjack...
Yes, "Six Frigates" was a good book, read it when it first came out. If I remeber correctly Toll does a good job of describing Jefferson and Albert Gallitin's love affair with a fleet of "cheap" coastal gunships rather than a more expensive Blue Water Fleet.

Believe the Founding Fathers starting with George Washington established a Cabinet of only four departments (Limited Government anyone?), Thomas Jefferson was Secretary of State, Alexander Hamilton was Secretary of Treasury, Henry Knox was Secretary of War, and Edmund Randolph was the Attorney General.
Thomas Jefferson added Secretary of the Navy Benjamin Stoddert in 1801.

Looking back to the Jefferson as a Founding Father could it possibly be that he fealt those five departments were the enterprises were government should spend its limited resources?


athiest provocateur
The biggest blunder we made was not marching on to Baghdad in Gulf War I. I'm no military expert, but even I saw that as a blunder of monumental proportions. I knew we'd be back.

Unfortunately, Bush Sr. didn't have the 'approval' of the UN to go beyond ejecting Iraq from Kuwait.

You can call the Iraq war a preemptive war if you want; I have never seen it that way. We just went back to finish the job we left incomplete.

audax writes:
If it had not been for those six ships, the US would have been in a world of hurt in the Med in 1800 and in the War of 1812. I particularly enjoyed Toll's description of those frigates as being not quite a ship of the line, but much more powerful than the standard British frigate of the period. Jeffeson's view of a Navy would have been disastrous for the US had it prevailed.

A soldier
Through the din of chaos

Through fear and apprehension

Only reflex duty and brotherhood remain

A soldier lives and struggles on

Once the bloodshed is done

Once some brothers are gone

Only memories and feelings remain

A soldier lives and wonders why

Why not I instead of my brothers

Why not I along with my brothers

A soldier lives and still wonders why

For his brothers the soldier carries on

Bush, Freedom, and central Europe, CON'T
Sorry about that slipped and hit the submit button, hope there were no typos!

Anyway....an Orange Revolution in The Ukraine (very lusty cheers), Soon will they have revolutions in the Moldave? in the Belarus? What will they call those? (Croud goes nuts, Putin gets slap in face).

My point is you will NEVER understand what we have done in Iraq unless you UNDERSTAND the price we pay for FREEDOM and LIBERTY.

Atheist Provocateur
says "...Iraq is one of the biggest war blunders this country has ever seen precisely because America turned its back on the history of "never again" after Vietnam in just 40 short years."

Dear AP. "Never Again" is really a Jewish Holocaust adage, BUT "NEVER AGAIN" re Vietnam isn't about NOT ever having to fight another Vietnam but NEVER AGAIN should we fight to lose!

AP says "Exit strategy? What exit strategy?"

Bush does have an exit strategy in Iraq: Let us paraphrase Ronaldo Magnus "WE WIN, THEY LOSE"!!!

AP says: "We turned our backs on the successful history of occupation in WWII. " Obviously you have your head in a dark place too. Please read the history of the early years of the occupation of Germany where over 9,000 US soldiers were killed, many by the "Werewolves" and other Nazi bitter enders in the first 10 years of occupation!

The rest of your blog was full of sh!t too but this one paragraph allows one to see where your head is: A dark place....

Everyone
Got a couple of essays about Memorial Day up at the Abbey for y'all to read. Stop by when you get a chance.

Y'all have a great day, and God bless each of you.

Lumberjack..
....We think alike, I almost wrote the SAME as your reply #20 but left it out in the interest of brevity, hopefully having made my point!

Anyway, yes, US would have been in a world o' hurt without the "Six Frigates"

Guess I didn't hit the submit button...
..after all...was responding to Pancho response regarding The Maliki Government.

My point exactly: "The Maliki government is doing what THEY feel best for Iraq".

Great points about the factions, fractures and frictions in todays Iraq, or should I say lasts centuries Iraq, after all a creation of the British and European Powers after WWI.

Then went on to talk about FREEDOM in todays Iraq and its parallel here in Central Europe.

Atheist Provocateur
Atheist Provocateur Location: CA
Reply # 17
Date: May 27, 2008 - 11:04 AM EST
Subject: Praising Feith's Book
Praising Feith's Book insures Hansen is nothing more than a political hack and a stooge for the Bush administration.
---------------
Thank you. by stating so plainly in your opening sentence how you think, you saved me the time and pain of reading your post any further. All leftie nitwits should openly proclaim their affliction with BDS in the opening sentence of any post. I would give you five stars if I could.

Hitchhiker...
....AMEN!!!!

PS Does BDS stand for Bush Derangement Syndrom?

Greg

Killer from GA shows us that...
....he doesn't know sh!t about history and thus is condemned to repeat it.....

Being an "old" person who remembers the Vietnam War and served in the Air Force and Air Force Reserve during the last few years of said conflict but in Italy and Germany, this "dipstick" KNOWS we DID win the war and the Dimoshits in Congress cut off funding for the South Vietnamese insuring their demise. All to spite Richard Nixon for attempting to finish the Democrat war. Yes Democrats under Kennedy sent the first U.S. troops to Vietnam!

Now lets look at some of Killer's other inanities:

Killer says: "We didn't realize, that the Japanese would come and bring the Chinese and all of Asia"

What the h*ll are you talking about????? I wont even deign to respond to this stupidity.

Killer says ".Also,I know of no one who cared about the 9,000 Nazi dead."

Killer it wasn't 9,000 Nazi dead it was 9,000 G.I.'s DEAD between wars end the 8th of May, 1945 and 1955. many of these 9,000 dead American G.I.'s killed in this 10 YEAR period, were killed by a NAZI bitter ender group called the "Werewolves".

Killer says: "However,I do know of people who care about the 1 million innocent Iraqis, that have managed to "DIE" since "US" invasion."

Killer shows his total lack of sanity and objectivity here as he must be refering to the million+ killed under Saddam Hussein who's skeletons have been found in mass graves all over Iraq and also during the Iran/Irag war. Many of those killed in Iraq since this war begain were killed not by Americans and our allies but by the Islamic fascists trying to gain control of the government there through terror of the Iraqi citizenry, but certainly NOT even close to 1,000,000.

Reply to Killer continued...

Killer says: "I still don't know who called 911?"

This is what I get for being an "old" guy. I remember who called 911!!! It was the Kuwaitis! (May I use your word )"dipstick"! I am not paid to be your history teacher but whoever is is doing a very poor job! I wont go into how the Iraqi's under Saddam invaded this country, how Bush '41 went to UN and built an alliance to drive them out, how Saddam in the peace treaty negotiation promised to be a good boy but wasn't and we had to continue the war 10 years later after going back to the UN and begging them to remain "relevent" blah blah blah before going back in to give Saddam his whooping.....

Killer, you must be very YOUNG (and certainly are VERY UNINFORMED), you should listen to some "old" guys before opening your mouth and proving your stupidity

Killer, One other thing....
....you say: "According to the intelligence I've read" Your not reading "intelligence. Your reading PROPAGANDA!

killer
If ignorance was gold you'd be a freaking millionaire.


audax
Re: killer. Great job of refuting his nonsense, but don't expect to change his(?) mind. It's concrete, all mixed up and permanently set. Anyway, to amplify your post, the actual basis for the invasion of Iraq was to enforce the numerous conditions of the cease fire agreement Saddam signed off on to conclude hostilities from Desert Storm. The distinction may be too subtle for victims of BDS, but technicnically the first conflict had not been officially concluded. Also, the parties to that agreement were Iraq and the UN.

Moonbat
Thanks! It's good to be retired and have the time to do so. A total history and refutation on Vietnam and this Iraqi war (since 1990-91 to present) would have taken another 4,000 characters and as you know they only allow 2,000 on TH.

I was born in Flint and grew up in a small town nearby. Where are you from in Michigan?

Living in Slovakia now, but my mail box is in TX which I got to as fast as I could (LOL) after being a Reagan Delegate from Michigan at GOP National Convention in 1976.

Mrs. Paddy..
....Good One!

"If ignorance was gold you'd be a freaking millionaire"

May I use it? Will delete 3 letters in "f-rea-king" and add two others......

audax
The sincerest form of flattery. LOL. Borrow away.

audax
I am fighting the good fight against Political Correctness. Drop by my blog for some humor (political parodies). I am an equal opportunity parodist....Obama, McCain, GOP, Liberals, Politicians, Global Warming....I take no prisoners.

audax & Mrs.Paddy
America went back into Iraq because Richard Perle and his group convinced President G.W.Bush, that Mr.Saddam was going to reap advoc onto the American economy.In 1996,when Mr.Hussein decided, that he would cease the taking of Dollars,he revealed his hand and sealed his fate.Today,President Chavez is in the process of following his example.What Mr.Hussein started in 1996, is still having an effect today."You all are "Dumb As" doorknobs and you can't even turn.That is, turn away from your ignorance.Support the "TRUTH",expose all LIES...

Mrs Paddy...
....I tried earlier, before my "flattery", and it wouldn't let me go to your Memorial Day posting, just a blank screen with the little Microsoft 3 symbols in a little box do-hickey in the top left hand corner...

I gave up the fight after they came for my cigarettes.....then they came for my cigars....and when they came for my pipe I said f*@k it and moved to Slovakia where I am at last free to smoke in public!

Greg

killer scrawls:
Subject: audax & Mrs.Paddy
America went back into Iraq because Richard Perle and his group convinced President G.W.Bush, that Mr.Saddam was going to reap advoc onto the American economy

And you know this, how?

You all are "Dumb As" doorknobs and you can't even turn.That is, turn away from your ignorance.Support the "TRUTH",expose all LIES...

And this is exposed as bullsh!t.

Hey Moonbat Exterminator....
You are right "Re: killer. Great job of refuting his nonsense, but don't expect to change his(?) mind. It's concrete, all mixed up and permanently set."

Did you see this latest bit of asininity? (Are there 2 s'es on assininity???)

Killer says: "America went back into Iraq because Richard Perle and his group convinced President G.W.Bush, that Mr.Saddam was going to reap advoc" (sic) whatever that is....

"onto the American economy.In 1996,when Mr.Hussein decided, that he would cease the taking of Dollars,he revealed his hand and sealed his fate.Today,President Chavez is in the process of following his example.What Mr.Hussein started in 1996, is still having an effect today."

Where does Killer come up with this stuff? Are they teaching this cr*p in US schools? I got out just in time if they are dumbing down the US educational system this bad!!

A Lumberjack in TX?
Must be east Texas with all them piney woods???

audax
Subject: A Lumberjack in TX?
Must be east Texas with all them piney woods???

Try Nacogdoches, Stephen F. Austin State University. My screen name is the university mascot and the years I got my degrees. I currently live in Garland.

Lumberjack...
Finally made the move out of pinko Houston last November. Had a home here in Slovakia last 5 years and got tired of commuting. Plus I can smoke my pipe in public over here and St. Lukes can check my pacemaker over the phone!!

killer writes:
'Mr.Saddam was going to reap advoc onto the American economy' And then follows up this brilliant opine with "You all are "Dumb As" doorknobs"

====

Perhaps if you could speak in a coherent thought, someone might take you seriously. 'advoc' doesn't show up in my dictionary...tsk tsk...

audax
Sorry you couldn't see the images from my blog....hope you didn't give up and read some of my other posts. They don't have any images, just great parodies.

Slovakia sounds fun. I miss Europe sometimes. Seems a 'fur' piece to go to smoke in piece, but I certainly see your point.

It almost makes me want to take up smoking just to agitate the smoking Nazis here in the US.
;-p

Mrs. Paddy...
...may I suggest a pipe?

Thanks.
A good interview. Mr Hanson is always worth listening to.

Bush is no Jefferson.
Jefferson had alot more judgment than to try to democratize the Barbary pirates.

National interest dictates that we employ our military to remove a threat to our commerce and shipping(in the case of Jefferson).

But that is a far cry from spilling our blood, looting our treasury and childrens' future, on naive, half-baked schemes to reorder Muslim societies to more nearly comport with our notions of what constitutes proper governance.

Insofar as a reader's questioning the cost of the Iraq war as eventually being in the trillions of dollars, read Joseph Stiglitz "The Three Trillion Dollar War".

He is a respected economist, and yes, he does oppose the war.

But that does not mean he is wrong.

He received a Nobel prize in economics.

Given the outlandish distortions, misinformation and lies from the administration regarding the costs of this war, I think Stiglitz is probably far more correct than the administration.
Sign Up to Post Your CommentsSign Up to Post Your Comments
If you are already registered, click here to login. Otherwise, please take a few seconds to register with Townhall.com. Once you sign up, you’ll be able to post your comments immediately, use the action center, get podcasts, and more!
Note: Fields marked with a red asterisk (*) are required.
Salutation:
First Name:
*
Last Name:
*
Email:
*
Nickname:
*
Note: Nick name will be shown when you post comments.
Address 1:
*
Address 2:
City:
*
State:
*
Zip:
*
Phone:
      
Your daily must-read of conservative columns, cartoons and news. Coulter, Sowell, Krauthammer and more.
(Bi-Weekly) We highlight the best opportunities from our partners for surveys, action items and more.