So are you agreeing that coalition forces are operating in Pakistan or not?
I don't think you understand, at all, what I wrote.
Are you claiming the air campaigns in Kosovo/Serbia, Iraq 1991, Afghanistan 2001 and the opening period of Iraq 2003 didn't accomplish what they set out to do in record time? All I can do is laugh at such denial of reality.
No, I do not claim that, but you attempt, once again, to put words in my mouth. My patience with this bullspit of yours is finite, and besides, if you laugh at that, you are laughing at your own creation.
That's beside the point. I'm not proposing an occupation in Iran. How many times do I have to repeat that before you understand?
I understand, completely, that you operate under the assumption that air
alone is politically decisive. You and I will never agree on that, and you are quite simply wrong, particularly as the 1991, 2001, and 2003 air campaigns were integral parts of Joint Campaigns and Joint Operations.
True, but he was also on the run most of the time.
Yes, and each day he was free was a day that critical American political objective was not achieved.
Comprende?
Of course, I gather you served in Clinton's military so you might have a desire to defend whatever actions it took.
Another marker of why you are a contemptible person. That idiotic sound byte, "Clinton's Military." We in the military did not get to pick the President, the American people do, and did. I served under
Carter
Reagan
Bush
Clinton
Bush
President is Commander in Chief.
If you might recall, WJC was not particuarly popular among the uniformed, or maybe you selectively ignore, or forget that, in your desire to create an empty
ad homenim attack.
You again show your profound dishonesty.
When you use the words of a Neocon Shill, Bac, you can expect to be recognized as one, or mistaken for one, whichever is the actual case. As it is, you are obviously sold on Silver Bullet rhetoric.
I don't try to hide my dislike of the current democRAT party or the Clintons.
Funny, I vote Republican more often than not, and I sent money to James Webb's campaign. You got a problem with Webb?
I don't ignore improper or foolish behavior by either party. Do you? It would seem so.
More attempts to construct, for me, a position that has no basis in fact, nor my opinion of a wide variety of politicians, suits, and charlatans.
How about you stick to your positions, of whatever merit, and don't try to manufacture out of your fantasies a position for me?
Did you vote for Clinton in 96?
No. Why would I have done that? He was mid way through trying to gut the world's best military out of an ideological need. I took that rather personally. He also cut the force in Somalia by a third, then asked them to do what 20,000+ were doing. I took that personally as well.
Then you learned the wrong lesson in Vietnam.
I think I looked a little deeper into that, since I didn't and don't use partisan blinders in my studies. It isn't important that Johnson was from the Democratic party, it was important that he, and some of his cabinet officers, and for that matter some of his generals, completely missed the point on the nature of the war they were engaged in. (Two well discussed commentaries on that include Harry Somers,
On Strategy, and HR McMasters,
Dereliction of Duty. If you)
Tell me everything you think you know about that VIP transport mission. I have read a couple of conspiracy theories on that mishap that stagger the imagination.
Don't you believe our military leaders?
I am not sure why you ask that question, I've found that what the generals tend to say, when they speak freely, often contradicts the rhetoric out of the suits.
Tell me, do you believe General John Batiste, or not? He led the First ID in Iraq, he led 2d Brigade of the 1st AD into Bosnia in 95, he was on the fast track, was a close aide to the assistant Sec Def, when Wolfowitz had that job, and after a successful deployment to Iraq, and a hard damned fight thre, he turned down three stars, and Third Corps command.
Why do you think a rising star in the US Army did that? Why do you think he resigned? Having met the man -- a finer officer and gentleman you won't meet -- I was shocked at the personal attacks he was subject to from the usual suspects when he spoke freely.
It's an appeal to authority rather than debating the facts.
It is not an appeal to authority when I actually have some expertise in Joint and Combined Operations, Joint and Combined Air Operations, and am formally schooled and trained in Joint Doctrione and Operations. I have had to both study it and apply it. It's hard to get right.
You?
He's not running for reelection.
True. He also, if he is to be as loyal to his party as he has generallly been, has to consider his party's long term interests, which includes winning the 2008 election.
And he's also the Commander In Chief. He doesn't really need political capital to make it happen. Just the will to do the right thing.
How does he get Congressional support/agreement to attack Iran without political support? Did you miss the part in October - December 2002 where he went to Congress for authorization to start a war, or if you will, use force, and got it? Did you miss what his father did in 1990? Did you miss the part where Clinton, to get Congress to agree with him to go into Bosnia, asserted (and we all knew it was a complete load of bollocks) that the mission was only for a year, to get the OK to deploy into Bosnia? (Last US left Bosnia in 2006. One year my butt.)
That hardly fits the facts in Saudi Arabia.
Then answer me this:
Why is PSAB no longer the US' main Air Base in the Middle East?
Why was Saudi soil not available to stage attacks into Iraq? You want to talk about a lightining campaign, what was going on there?
And it is Iran's government that is funding and helping terrorists bound for Iraq, not Pakistan's government. When is that little fact going to seep through your skull?
Since Pakistan's area of interest is, at the moment, terrorists in Afghanistan and of course importing some into the UK (recall the bombers last year?) and not so much Iraq, I am not sure what you are going on about here.
So you think their motives are as pure as President Monroe's?
No, I am pointing out to you that any nation state, whether we like them or not, is going to have a proprietary interest in matters within their region. Their interests include an Islamic, or Islamist, republic next door, ours does not. A regime friendly to the US is, for them, sorta like 1980's all over again, when Saddam (whatever the actual level of support he may have gotten from us, be it small or more) was absolutely not a friendly neighbor.
Like I said, you sure are going out of your way to put Ahmadinejad's rhetoric and objectives in the best light possible. ROTFLOL!
More of your wit noted. No, it is Iran's, whether Mahmoud the Mouth is saying it, a mullah is, Khatami is, Rafsinjani, or whomever.
So you believe we must always have international support for everything we do in our own national interest?
That's part of the US national security strategy, to fight with partners and coalitions. We went into Iraq with a coalition. We brough NATO allies with us. Remember? It is common sense to seek and build a bundle of international support in any international action, be it truly multilateral or only partly so.
That's smart politics.
Attempt at poisoning the well noted. I am trying to figure out how Howard Dean got into this conversation. Check you meds, eh?
Remember ... there are signs they are already trying to harden their nuclear facilities. Give them enough time and they will succeed and then you really have a problem.
True.
And what would your attack solve vis a vis the underlying topic of our discussion; namely, their behavior with regards to Iraq?
You want to go back to the concept of weighting the main effort? The key goal is to get to the point where we can leave. Then, they get to deal with Iran.

This year? In three years? Five years?
Don't know.
Rules of Engagement can be changed. Afterall, necessity is the mother of invention.
This is true. I'd be surprised to see American RoE get much looser, but it might. Depends on how much risk, and stomach, the suits in DC have for criticism. My experience that the most willing to use force suits, that would be Bush's team, were, once Saddam was captured, incredibly sensitive to collateral damage, and remarkably
unwilling to loosen RoE. It cost us at least three chances to hit Zarqawi, from the air, in 2004. That's right, newsflash: Rummy was timid, or at least, the implementation of the rules and policies that came from his office made it end up that way. ( I have no doubt he wanted Z's head as badly as anyone did.)
In this missile age, he who shoots first may win. That's a reality of war.
That is the battle of the first salvo, and in a general sense, I agree. Does that mean that tomorrow morning, Vice Admiral Walsh should attack the Iranian subs in harbor, and destroy them, to ensure they don't go to sea to lay mines or lurk about with their torpedoes?
Why isn't that done, tomorrow? The answer lies in the political sphere, not in the military sphere.
Therefore, our warships cannot be expected to wait till attacked to respond. Indeed, don't the rules of engagement say that each commander's first responsibility is to the safety of his ship and crew?
Yes, but legally, the Captain has to have a good indication of 'hostile intent' in order to use fires to ensure same safety of ship and crew. Captain Rogers was, after all, exonerated. So too the Marine 2d Lt at Cape Haiten, 1994.
That's why Iranian fishermen better heed the warnings we issue at the start and not venture out into what will be a very dangerous environment given the planned swarming tactic announced by Iran.
I see, a free fire zone in Iranian waters: if it moves, we sink it. Combatant or not. Back to the VID issue. And back to the simple Laws of Armed Conflict, where you don't deliberately strike non combatants. No matter what the press tells you, our people generally don't, and generally use incredible restraint. That's how we do it. Again, unless you have a VID on a combatant, you don't engage it. Some of that is fire discipline, but some of it is the reality of politics and image, which is a hard fact of war in the 21st century. You don't get left alone to have your war and report out later, you have to fight it under a microscope. That's reality.
Hated by everyone in Iran? Of course not. But I think it's safe to say that the majority of Iranians would be just as happy to see the dictatorship end as the Iraqis were happy to see Saddam go.
Could be.
Yeah, but that was a war where Iraq invaded Iran and tried to occupy it's territory. That's not what I've proposed. (Why do I have to keep telling you this?)
Because attacking them changes our relationship with "the Iranian people" and opens the very real option for a loss in the information campaign, and politically within Iran. That is not within American interests.
Or, it makes them all throw confetti with glee. I am not convinced of the latter, see eight years of being bombed on and off by Iraq, Scuds hitting their cities, and don't understand why you think more of the latter is likely. Their soldiers were dying from gas attacks. They didn't quit.
But I'm not proposing changing anything we are currently doing inside Iraq or at Iraq's borders. The goal is not to stop infiltration at the border but at the source. The goal is to convince Iran's leaders that THEY should stop terrorists from entering Iraq via Iran. If necessary THEY can put 100,000 on the border to do it.
Yes, they could, but what is their incentive for doing so? Part of politics is making a deal. They are harder to work with than most, no question, but impossible? I don't buy it.
But back to your point, first step in doing that, as I see it, was taken July 11th. In the Senate. It might be a bluff, it might not, the guys in Teheran may or may not know. The apparent divide between Bush and the Senate takes a different turn by a public condemnation of Iran.
Shilling for who? I think Lieberman made some very good points and noted some facts that hadn't yet been mentioned. Labeling me (or him) a shill does not address those points or facts.
Your shilling was reinforced by your "Clinton military" crap (I recall that epithet being thrown at Zinni, as though Anthony Zinni hadn't served for thirty plus years for a number of presidents). As noted above, if you use their rhetoric, don't be surprised to be recognized as, or mistaken for, a shill.
Thanks for pointing that out. I may have indeed violated that rule. I'm new here and I'll try to be more careful.
I would not know if someone else hadn't gotten a warning and I saw a red mod tag, so I re looked at that rule. Admin stuff.
I get hammered for rule 8 violations now and again for calling a c[rule8] a c[rule8]. Even got suspended for calling one of the twoofers on the CT forum the names he richly deserved.
DR