rmsharpe said:I'm not talking about hindsight; I'm talking about the present situation in Iraq and how the Iraq war is and not was being fought.
No one invited Saddam either?CurtSibling said:No-one invited us.
Then why was there a massive display of American flags hanging on Iraqi homes when we first invaded?CurtSibling said:They always hated us.
CurtSibling said:We are wasting good men.
Indeed we are, but then you're talking about a government that pork barrels to no end.CurtSibling said:We are wasting good cash.
CurtSibling said:We should be preparing for the challenges of Chinese power.
Instead we are frittering Western potency in this imbecile war.
blackheart said:No one invited Saddam either?
GoodSarmatian said:Can you ever win against guerillias ?
It didn't work in WW2 (Yugoslavia), Vietnam, Afghanistan (soviet invasion), Chechnya...
leonel said:But boy did it work in post-war Malaysia!
Winner said:My advice: get the hell out of there before you become so demoralized, that you'll be unable to wage war when you'll have to.
Winner said:My advice: get the hell out of there before you become so demoralized, that you'll be unable to wage war when you'll have to.
Exactly like that.SupremeC said:Like the Iranian one where you actually know they have nuclear capabilities instead of sexed up reports?
warmonger said:I'll try to answer Sharpes original question.
The war is being fought the wrong way - the tactics are totally wrong. The British were masters at doing this correctly in their colonial days.
It takes large numbers of troops and even larger numbers of police. You start from one or two central points; drive out insurgents, bring in police; fix inferstructure and gradually expand from these centres.
You win over the locals by providing what they want; security, food, water and shelter. This takes away the support for the insurgents.
You let parts of the country rot until you can get to them in force. You do not clear a city and then leave no one to hold it. This just lets the bad guys back again and you have to do it over and over again. (Sound familiar?)
I firmly believe it was wrong to invade Iraq and I was vocally against it at the time. But now that it has happened it would be an even greater mistake to get out and leave it to anarchy. Here's hoping someone within the US administration (current or future) will have the balls to stand up, admit mistakes and do it properly.
CurtSibling said:No-one invited us.
They always hated us.
Lotus49 said:The other day I was browsing around on Google maps, I went over NYC, and after checking out Wall Street, etc., I found my way over to the WTC 'hole' in the ground (didn't intend to go there, just wound up doing so). I sat there, and stared at it. Took only about 2 seconds for all my 'second thoughts about the war' to fade away into nothing.
I say bomb 'em, and shoot 'em up. Like Curt said, they've always hated us, and some come over here periodically to tell us, in person. So, fire back. And keep firing. That's the only thing they understand.
Sympathy, and seconds thoughts - are far more dangerous than the alternative.
Bronx Warlord said:I think we went in with a lightwieght force, too much tail and not enough teeth. I also think there are too many large scale operations, not enough of a " small wars " mentality wich is vital in a conflict like this. See Stingray patrols in Vietnam.
If the military was a force onto itself, that didnt have oversight from civilians who are elected by the people, then we'd be living somewhere else, it wouldnt be America.rmsharpe said:I'm sure many of us are familiar with the phrase "armchair general", but is it possible that we're all being armchair generals, with no real first-hand knowledge of the Iraq situation?
I don't know how accurate this can be, but are our opinions on the military or political situation in Iraq all that intelligent? There are others out there, within the military and civilian worlds, who have studied for years on the Middle East, desert combat tactics, etc., so how really right can our opinions be?
I'm not questioning the validity of our opinions, because they're all valid; but are our opinons all that right?