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Pastimes : Kosovo -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: dumbmoney who wrote (6288)5/1/1999 8:49:00 PM
From: George Papadopoulos  Respond to of 17770
 
Turn off the war junkies

diaspora-net.org

Col. David Hackworth

Turn off the war junkies

From his column "Defending America" in worldnet.daily, April 30, 1999

On the first day bombs dropped on ex-Yugoslavia, Mrs. Albright said, "I
don't see this as a long-term operation."

Pardon me, Madeleine, it's already been a 30-day-plus nightmare, and unless
the fumbling NATO bureaucracy manages to drop a bomb directly on Slobodan
Milosevic and his inner circle of criminals, we can expect a much longer
siege.

The superior firepower and skill of NATO -- read U.S.A. because we're
already carrying 80 percent of the load -- will eventually take out the
second-rate Serbian conventional army. But when there's nothing left to bomb
but rubble, NATO ground troops will be stuck into the mud of Albright's
not-exactly blitzkrieg war.

And it won't be Desert Storm-easy, nor as bloodless. The absence of a decent
launching pad, the rugged Kosovo terrain, the lousy weather and the Serb
fighting spirit and skill are sure to take their toll and slow down our
high-tech punch.

The destruction of the Serbian conventional army will not usher in an end to
the fighting, either. The Serbs invented the word "hardcore" and aren't big
into white flags. The next phase will be a guerrilla effort that could last
for years. Hit and run. Much like the tactics Tito's soldiers employed
against the Nazis, and the Vietnamese used against the French and then us.

The Serb insurgents will have nothing to lose. And they'll be fighting for
sacred ground against an opponent they'll now hate as much as they did the
Nazis.

Sun Tzu wrote 2,500 years ago, "In all history, there is no instance of a
country having benefited from prolonged warfare. Only one who knows the
disastrous effects of a long war can realize the supreme importance of
rapidity in bringing it to a close."

Clinton, Albright, Cohen and their NATO counterparts know nothing of war or
they wouldn't have erred so badly when they called so quickly for the
military solution.

This is the second time in my lifetime that a war has made me deeply ashamed
of my country's policies. The war in Southeast Asia, where we were
ultimately responsible for killing more than three million Vietnamese, one
million Cambodians and a half-million Laotians, was the first. And now this.
The Serbian and Kosovar people are not our enemies. Milosevic and his thugs
and the KLA terrorists are the bad guys. Both evil camps could have been
removed without the death and destruction so far wrought at less than was
spent on the first day of the bombing campaign.

Of course, not using the military solution would have taken wisdom,
statesmanship and patience -- traits never easily found among world leaders
during the 20th Century, where over 160 million human beings have been
killed in conflicts because shooting is so much more profitable for the
weapon makers than talking.

What surprises me most about this latest mayhem is how little public protest
there's been. The nation rightfully weeps and builds yellow-ribboned
memorials when buildings are blown up by homegrown terrorists or when kids
imitate Hollywood in Colorado. But we seem big into denial when confronted
with the mass murder, destruction and chaos being perpetuated by our tax
dollars and wreaked on our behalf by our sons and daughters and politicians
upon a land that's endured strife for hundreds of years.

While the American people shut their eyes or allow themselves to be
brainwashed by a superficial TV news apparatus, driven by ratings and
sensationalism, the U.S. Congress is spurred on by the likes of war
cheerleader Senator John McCain, who, like Albright, has seen few wars that
didn't push his buttons.

Both are driven by early experiences of war. As a child, Albright saw her
native Czechoslovakia invaded by the Nazis and again by the Soviets. McCain
was shot down on his 23rd mission over North Vietnam and spent the next five
years as a prisoner of war -- during which, by his own admission, he
violated the soldier's sacred Code Of Conduct by providing military
information to the enemy (U.S. News and World Report, May 14, 1973).

Both Albright and McCain might find therapy more helpful than playing out
earlier traumas at the world's expense. For that matter, maybe the whole
country should shut off the tube and get shrunk.

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Last modified: April 30, 1999