|
|
Subject: Vietnam All Over Again
From: Imperialist Watch
Date: 1/17/2007 12:43:47 PM
Vietnam All Over Again
By Bobby Muller, AlterNet
Posted on January 11, 2007,
Printed on January 15, 2007
http://www.alternet.org/story/46549/
As a soldier who fought in the Vietnam War -- the
United States' only lost war -- President Bush's
imminent decision to increase the U.S. force in Iraq by
thousands of troops brings to mind events more than
thirty years old.
In 1968, shortly after Clark Clifford succeeded Robert
McNamara as Secretary of Defense, Secretary Clifford
met with the Joint Chiefs of Staff to discuss the war
in Vietnam. He quickly learned that America's top
military leaders did not know how many troops were
needed nor did they know what constituted victory.
During March 1968, despite this discovery, President
Johnson agreed to send 24,500 more troops to Vietnam on
an emergency basis. President Johnson and Secretary
Clifford thought that this increase in U.S. troops
would lead to U.S. victory there. And in an address to
the nation on March 31 President Johnson stated: "We
have no intention of widening this war."
At that time, approximately 24,000 U.S. service members
had died in Vietnam. By the end of that war, more than
58,000 U.S. troops had been killed. More U.S. soldiers
died winding down the war than had in starting it. In
addition, by the end of the war, the United States had
greatly expanded the war into Cambodia and Laos.
But, little more than a year later, after he left
office, Clifford wrote: "Nothing we might do could be
so beneficial ... as to begin to withdraw our combat
troops. Moreover ... we cannot realistically expect to
achieve anything more through our military force, and
the time has come to begin to disengage."
By recommending to President Bush that U.S. troops in
Iraq should be increased, with no clear plan for
achieving victory there, Secretary of Defense Robert
Gates risks following in the footsteps of Clark
Clifford. As with Secretary Clifford, Secretary Gates
has succeeded the architect of a U.S. military failure.
Like Clifford, Gates has proven incapable of calling
for a dramatic change in course.
Iraq is in the midst of a civil war. In addition, some
in the U.S. government blame neighbors such as Iran and
Syria for exacerbating sectarian tensions in Iraq.
Increasing the number of U.S. troops in Iraq increases
the likelihood that the United States will be pulled
further into an intra-Iraqi struggle and deploying a
second aircraft carrier to the Persian Gulf --
apparently in an effort to warn Syria and Iran and to
increase the flexibility for commanders in the region
-- reminds me of the decision by U.S. military and
civilian leadership to expand the war in Vietnam beyond
the borders of that country.
Today, the U.S. military is, in the words of the
Pentagon, stretched "to the breaking point." Almost 30
percent of the 1.5 million U.S. service members who
have been deployed since September 11, 2001 have been
deployed more than once. Thousands of members of
Individual Ready Reserve (IRR) have been called up in
what many term a "backdoor draft." Military recruiters
are struggling to meet their goals; the Pentagon is
considering greatly increasing the number of
noncitizens in the U.S. military; more than 16,000
single mothers who are in the U.S. military have been
deployed. And, most importantly, more than 3,000
service members have been killed in Iraq and tens of
thousands wounded. Finally, more than $350 billion has
been spent on the Iraq war.
It is time for the U.S. Congress to ensure that the
voice of the American people -- including the voices of
those who have served in Iraq and before -- are heard.
Clearly, President Bush missed the central lesson of
the November elections and the Iraq Study Group: that
Americans want a dramatic change in course in Iraq, one
that does not include deepening the U.S. involvement
there.
Fortunately, not only Democrats have come out opposing
the surge. Most prominently, Republican Senators Chuck
Hagel, Gordon Smith, Susan Collins, and Norm Coleman
have made clear their opposition to the president's
plan.
Hard questions must be asked regarding the possibility
of increasing the number of U.S. troops in Iraq; the
effect that such a choice will have on those who have
volunteered to serve their country in the military must
be carefully considered.
With such a small percentage of the U.S. population
bearing the vast majority of the burden of the war in
Iraq, the sense of shared sacrifice has been lost. The
social contract between service members and their
government and society must be repaired. It is time for
members of Congress -- Democrats and Republicans alike
-- to come together to make it clear to President Bush
the folly of the surge.
Otherwise, the United States risks repeating the
failures of Vietnam.
Bobby Muller is President of Veterans for America
(formerly the Vietnam Veterans of America Foundation),
and a co-recipient of the 1997 Nobel Peace Prize. (c)
2007 Independent Media Institute. All rights reserved.
View this story online at:
http://www.alternet.org/story/46549/
--
"We are creating enemies faster than we can kill them"
- bumper sticker in Washington DC
|