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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Kevin Rose who wrote (385418)4/4/2003 9:45:26 AM
From: Thomas A Watson  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769667
 
kevie I wonder, have you ever thought????

stupid one gave nukes to North Korea.
bombed milo to whatever end.
And did not get binnie when he could. Yes the ratarded have a hero to worship.

kevie what case did mr. bill make that that milo was going to come to America or attack any American interests anywhere in the world.

Threat to America is a quantum jump in justification. And the milo war about about throwing bombs around mostly and not about troops engaged in a full scale War.

As I said I see consistent opinion expressed about an idiot in the white house.

3000 dead Americans means nothing in the thinking of those who never think.

by Dick Morris

President Bush's diplomacy may not have swayed France
and Russia, but it appears he succeeded brilliantly at
diplomacy when it came to the Iraqi generals.

Even by Tom Daschle's exacting standards, Bush's
ability to coax surrender and defection out of the
enemy military must go down in history as one of the
proudest moments in American diplomacy. He has turned
Clausewitz's famous dictum - that war is diplomacy by
other means - on its head: Diplomacy has become war by
other means, deploying talk as a precision-guided
munition.

What, after all, is "psy-ops" but military diplomacy?
Convincing the other side that there is no chance of
victory, that surrender is the best option, was
apparently a lot easier than persuading France of the
exact opposite - that there was a good chance of
winning and that giving up was the wrong way to go.
(The French love surrender so!)

As this is written (and anything can change in war) the
only organized resistance to the United States armed
forces is to be found in peace marches.

In a broader sense (and from the perspective of a life
spent in politics), the military's use of psy-ops to
dissuade Iraqi generals from fighting is the third step
in a remarkable accommodation by our fighting men and
women to political realities.

In the past, changing military strategy was driven by
technology - the introduction of the machine gun, the
tank, the airplane. But now it is adapting rapidly to
political considerations.

In a democracy, the American military has learned that
it must not just destroy enemy soldiers (or talk them
into surrender) but has to maintain cohesive domestic
support for our objectives. Mindful that we lost the
war in Vietnam not through any defeat on the
battlefield, but by losing the national consensus that
impelled our involvement in the first place, the
military has taken a series of steps to build and keep
public support for its efforts.

More than any other factor, it was the massive American
death toll - 58,000 U.S. troops - that drove opposition
to the Vietnam War. Then, when even the politicians
realized we must disentangle ourselves from the jungle
war, the hundreds of prisoners of war our bombing
campaign had left in North Vietnamese prisons made
withdrawal hard to achieve.

So our politically conscious military came to a
conclusion after Vietnam: Don't incur large American
casualties and don't let our soldiers become POWs.
Stand-off bombing, remotely piloted drone aircraft,
cruise missiles and a host of other military
innovations made it possible to wage war that cost more
in dollars but less in American lives - and which
minimized the chances of our men and women being
captured.

From the first Gulf War came the next political
imperative: Don't cause large civilian casualties. As
our political standards became more ecumenical and the
lives of enemy civilians a focus of global concern, the
far-sighted leaders of the Pentagon developed better
precision-guided munitions, designed to kill the
unformed opposition with pinpoint accuracy, avoiding
the death of innocents.

As part of this effort, our military also developed
"smart" land mines which can be turned off once the war
ends, no longer threatening the lives of those, often
children, who step on them.

Now, it appears, the defense establishment has made yet
another adaptation to the political environment -
learning to wage war without many deaths on either
side, military or civilian.

* By refining psy-ops and bringing to it the intimacy
of contact and diplomacy through e-mail and cell
phones, the military has figured out how to induce
surrender by a combination of threats, persuasion and
temptation.

* By giving reporters easy access to the front lines of
the battle, the military assures that news of allied
success will quickly reach the enemy's generals.

* By using intelligence to generate decapitation
strikes, we guarantee that they will know that war
means they are about to meet the 70 virgins waiting for
them in the great beyond.

So in Iraq, we give a war and nobody came.