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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsThe Misuse of American Might, and the Price It Pays
http://www.commondreams.org/view/2014/01/13-1"These days the United States absolves itself of any responsibility to finish wars that it starts," writes Andrew J. Bacevich. (Edel Rodriguez / For The Times / January 11, 2014)
The U.S. military is like the highly skilled, gadget-toting contractor who promises to give your kitchen a nifty makeover in no time whatsoever. Here's the guy you can count on to get the job done. Just look at those references! Yet by the time he drives off months later, the kitchen's a shambles and you're stuck with a bill several times larger than the initial estimate. Turns out the job was more complicated than it seemed. But what say we take a crack at remodeling the master bath?
That pretty much summarizes the American experience with war since the end of the Cold War. By common consent, when it comes to skills and gadgets, U.S. forces are in a league of their own. Yet when it comes to finishing the job on schedule and on budget, their performance has been woeful.
Indeed, these days the United States absolves itself of any responsibility to finish wars that it starts. When we've had enough, we simply leave, pretending that when U.S. forces exit the scene, the conflict is officially over. In 2011, when the last American troops crossed from Iraq into Kuwait, President Obama proudly declared that he had made good on his campaign promise to end the Iraq war. Sometime late this year, when the U.S. terminates its combat role in Afghanistan, he will waste no time consigning that war to the past as well.
Yet the Iraq war did not end when the United States withdrew. Even with Washington striving mightily to ignore the fact, the violent ethno-sectarian struggle for Iraq triggered by the 2003 U.S.-led invasion continues. In recent days, events such as Al Qaeda's ferocious welcome-to-the-new-year assault on the cities of Fallouja and Ramadi roughly the equivalent of a Confederate army laying siege to Gettysburg sometime during the presidency of Ulysses S. Grant have made it impossible to pretend otherwise.
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The Misuse of American Might, and the Price It Pays (Original Post)
xchrom
Jan 2014
OP
LisaLynne
(14,554 posts)1. Good article.
We do as a nation still act like war solves problems, but you know, it may be time to rethink that.
iemitsu
(3,888 posts)2. Some common sense in this article.