I am also proud to say that George Wilson, the dean of defense reporting and friend, has written the very insightful piece below that explains how American exceplionalism has gotten us into committments that are bankrupting. The only ones who don’t think so are inside the beltway.
Don
War without End? Monday, June 15, 2009 CongressDailyAM www.congressdaily.com
By George C. Wilson
Is this Global War on Terror going to last forever? Has it already changed our nation from an historically defensive Athens to an offensive Sparta whose military looks everywhere for trouble and finds it? Who is calculating the cost-to-benefit ratio of sending Green Berets and other Special Operations troopers into remote corners of the world to assassinate suspected terrorists?
Ever since the Vietnam War, our presidents have ushered members of Congress into the grandstand where they can boo or cheer military decisions but not make them, despite what the Constitution says right there in Article 1, Section 8: The Congress shall have power to provide for the common defense.
While the lawmakers sit in the grandstand and watch his game plan unfold, President Obama is betting on Iraq pacifying itself rather than fighting a civil war; on Gen. Stanley McChrystal, the new field commander for Afghanistan, and State Department specialists winning Afghan hearts and minds while our troopers and bombers neutralize the Taliban; on Pakistans shaky government keeping its nukes out of terrorists hands, and on Russia, China, North Korea and Iran not stirring up the kind of trouble our overextended military would have to deal with. Can any politician, any president, be lucky enough to win all those bets?
I doubt it.
Even if Obama should be lucky enough to win all those bets, how much is it going to cost the taxpayers to finance the ongoing wars? Replace the military gear worn out in Iraq? Keep buying those overpriced super weapons the admirals and generals insist they need to fight Russia or China or both? Care for those hundreds of thousands of mentally and physically wounded troopers who fought in this open-ended Global War on Terror?
The short answer is to print more money.
Besides adding to the giant deficit, such a step would fuel inflation and perhaps prompt China and other creditor nations to demand that the United States redeem the IOUs they are holding.
Unlike Congress, William Greider, a brilliant writer and analyst, has looked these and other dangers in the eye and told us what he sees around the corner in his new book, Come Home, America. He dares to write in the book that America has indeed transformed itself from Athens to Sparta to the point that our unchecked militarism endangers us all. What follows is an excerpt from his chapter entitled The Next War:
The U. S. military, despite its massive firepower and technological brilliance, has itself become the gravest threat to our peace and security. Our risks and vulnerabilities around the world are magnified and multiplied because the American military has shifted from providing national defense to taking the offensive worldwide, from being a vigilant defender to being an adventurous aggressor in search of enemies.”
The predicament this muscle-bound approach puts our country in is dangerous and new, Greider warns. Go looking for trouble around the world and you are likely to find it. The next war may be a fight that is provoked not by them but by us. The next war may already have started somewhere in the world, perhaps in a small, obscure country that weve never considered threatening.
I agree with Greider that there is a new attack elephant in the American living room. The old watchdog that would bark if some stranger knocked at the door but only bite if he broke into the house has been retired.
Obama and Defense Secretary Gates seem to have fallen in love with Army Green Berets, Navy SEALs and Marine special operators who do their deadly work in the shadows. The top of our government was similarly infatuated with special operations during the Vietnam War until some of the operators got out of control and had to be reined in to discourage what was called cowboyism back then.
Senators and representatives have put their hands on only part of this new strategy. For example, Senate Armed Services ranking member John McCain asked McChrystal at his confirmation hearing this important question: How long do you expect the counter-insurgency effort in Afghanistan to last? McChrystal replied: Sir, I cant put a hard date on it. I believe that counter-insurgency takes time. I believe that we need to start making progress within about the next 18 to 24 months.
Thats a far cry from World War IIs bracing Berlin by Christmas or unconditional surrender. Progress will be in the eye of the beholder, as it was during the Vietnam War. What Congress owes its stockholders, the American people, it seems to me are detailed, annual reports on this Global War on Terror. How inclusive is it? What cost-to-benefit ratios are being applied to proposed operations? Who in Congress would oversee them? Are we creating more problems for ourselves than were solving? Who is killing whom in the dark and why? Are we in a war without end? Congress leaped into former President George W. Bushs Global War on Terror before it really looked.
But as a nation we have not yet reached the point of no return. There is still time for Congress to get out of the grandstand and dig into this seemingly open-ended war and tell the American people, in public hearings and through commissioned studies, where we are going, why and how much this trip into the unknown is going to cost. Congress Daily forward observer War Without End?
Forward Observer, an insiders look at defense and military topics, appears every other Monday in CongressDailyAM. Special Correspondent George C. Wilson can be reached at gcwilson1@comcast.net _____________________________




They have no clue about Sparta.
Sparta was a fragile state that needed its rather small army to keep slaves and semi-slaves under control.
It was avoiding to send strong army detachments away for more than a few days as much as possible.
It wasn’t involved in long-range expeditions (that’s what the Athenians did – and it ended in disaster at Syracuse).
It was a land-bound power with no navy to speak of.
Sparta was not warmongering – it was afraid that wars could decimate the thin ranks of its citizens too much and often reluctant to enter a war.
Sven called it. Sparta had its hands full keeping down the helots and its own unruly allies. While arguably, the Spartans provoked war with Athens, it was the Athenians who transformed themselves from a local and defensive city state to a maritme, expansionist empire. Sparta eventually having a useful navy was a direct adaptation to being repeatedly being beaten by the Athenians. The Spartans learned and became better sailors and appointed more talented Navarchs.
THank you for both of your insights. And, I agree, though I attest, I am no expert on ancient warfare (though interested in any kind of Military History). My specialty is Industrial and modern warfare, leader, doctrine and force structure/personnel management. I learned a lot from your two posts. I guess the authors metaphor was not well thought out, but I understood his thesis.
Again, thanks for your contributions to this blog.
Don
Don, you are hugely, accurately correct. This has been and is the problem with the military. But Obama didn’t let this genie out of the bottle, and the rationale and impetus for use of troops is strong and well established among the American Electorate. Obama, like any other politician, isn’t going to anger the voters. This mess didn’t happen since November ‘08, and for 8 years before that we had an administration that treated the American Military as the implementors of every hare-brained idea they had. And we let them.
As long as oil remains so important as a fuel and raw material
for nearly everything we make there will be sufficient reason
to wage war and to disguise it as a war on terror.
As soon as we admit that the current wars are not about
“killing terrorists before they come here” or other such nonsense, but instead about maintaining our current lifestyle
and its reliance on fossil fuels, we might be able to do
something about the causes instead of the symptoms.
But who wants to publicly admit that we’re waging war so we
can get somebody else’s resources?
Lars,
I could not agree more. Some have said that, Ron Paul running for office in the Republican primary said all the same, but of course was pushed off to the side by the corporate controlled media.
Don