Mistakes of Vietnam
repeated with Iraq
by Max Cleland, September 18, 2003
"Welcome to Vietnam, Mr. President.
Sorry you didn't go when you had the chance."
The president of the United States decides to go
to war against a nation led by a brutal dictator supported by
one-party rule. That dictator has made war on his neighbors. The
president decides this is a threat to the United States.
In his campaign for president he gives no indication
of wanting to go to war. In fact, he decries the overextension
of American military might and says other nations must do more.
However, unbeknownst to the American public, the president's own
Pentagon advisers have already cooked up a plan to go to war.
All they are looking for is an excuse.
Based on faulty intelligence, cherry-picked information
is fed to Congress and the American people. The president goes
on national television to make the case for war, using as part
of the rationale an incident that never happened. Congress buys
the bait -- hook, line and sinker -- and passes a resolution giving
the president the authority to use "all necessary means"
to prosecute the war.
The war is started with an air and ground attack.
Initially there is optimism. The president says we are winning.
The cocky, self-assured secretary of defense says we are winning.
As a matter of fact, the secretary of defense promises the troops
will be home soon.
However, the truth on the ground that the soldiers
face in the war is different than the political policy that sent
them there. They face increased opposition from a determined enemy.
They are surprised by terrorist attacks, village assassinations,
increasing casualties and growing anti-American sentiment. They
find themselves bogged down in a guerrilla land war, unable to
move forward and unable to disengage because there are no allies
to turn the war over to.
There is no plan B. There is no exit strategy.
Military morale declines. The president's popularity sinks and
the American people are increasingly frustrated by the cost of
blood and treasure poured into a never-ending war.
Sound familiar? It does to me.
The president was Lyndon Johnson. The cocky, self-assured
secretary of defense was Robert McNamara. The congressional resolution
was the Gulf of Tonkin resolution. The war was the war that I,
U.S. Sens. John Kerry, Chuck Hagel and John McCain and 3 1/2 million
other Americans of our generation were caught up in. It was the
scene of America's longest war. It was also the locale of the
most frustrating outcome of any war this nation has ever fought.
Unfortunately, the people who drove the engine
to get into the war in Iraq never served in Vietnam. Not the president.
Not the vice president. Not the secretary of defense. Not the
deputy secretary of defense. Too bad. They could have learned
some lessons:
Don't underestimate the enemy. The enemy always
has one option you cannot control. He always has the option to
die. This is especially true if you are dealing with true believers
and guerillas fighting for their version of reality, whether political
or religious. They are what Tom Friedman of The New York Times
calls the "non-deterrables." If those non-deterrables
are already in their country, they will be able to wait you out
until you go home.
If the enemy adopts a "hit-and-run"
strategy designed to inflict maximum casualties on you, you may
win every battle, but (as Walter Lippman once said about Vietnam)
you can't win the war.
If you adopt a strategy of not just pre-emptive
strike but also pre-emptive war, you own the aftermath. You better
plan for it. You better have an exit strategy because you cannot
stay there indefinitely unless you make it the 51st state.
If you do stay an extended period of time, you
then become an occupier, not a liberator. That feeds the enemy
against you.
. If you adopt the strategy of pre-emptive war,
your intelligence must be not just "darn good," as the
president has said; it must be "bulletproof," as Defense
Secretary Donald Rumsfeld claimed the administration's was against
Saddam Hussein. Anything short of that saps credibility.
If you want to know what is really going on in
the war, ask the troops on the ground, not the policy-makers in
Washington.
In a democracy, instead of truth being the first
casualty in war, it should be the first cause of war. It is the
only way the Congress and the American people can cope with getting
through it. As credibility is strained, support for the war and
support for the troops go downhill. Continued loss of credibility
drains troop morale, the media become more suspicious, the public
becomes more incredulous and Congress is reduced to hearings and
investigations.
Instead of learning the lessons of Vietnam, where
all of the above happened, the president, the vice president,
the secretary of defense and the deputy secretary of defense have
gotten this country into a disaster in the desert.
They attacked a country that had not attacked
us. They did so on intelligence that was faulty, misrepresented
and highly questionable.
A key piece of that intelligence was an outright
lie that the White House put into the president's State of the
Union speech. These officials have overextended the American military,
including the National Guard and the Reserve, and have expanded
the U.S. Army to the breaking point.
A quarter of a million troops are committed to
the Iraq war theater, most of them bogged down in Baghdad. Morale
is declining and casualties continue to increase. In addition
to the human cost, the war in dollars costs $1 billion a week,
adding to the additional burden of an already depressed economy.
The president has declared "major combat
over" and sent a message to every terrorist, "Bring
them on." As a result, he has lost more people in his war
than his father did in his and there is no end in sight.
Military commanders are left with extended tours
of duty for servicemen and women who were told long ago they were
going home. We are keeping American forces on the ground, where
they have become sitting ducks in a shooting gallery for every
terrorist in the Middle East.
--Max Cleland, former U.S. senator,
was head of the Veterans Administration in the Carter administration.
He teaches at American University in Washington.
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