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[personal profile] fitfool
To all who have donned the uniform of our country,
Thank you for your service and sacrifice. I wish you could be at home with the ones you love.

Date: 2005-11-17 12:40 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] fitfool.livejournal.com
I agree that now that we're in there, we're stuck there for the long haul (another reason I wish we'd cultivated more allies to share the occupation/rebuilding burden). I'm glad a lot of the soldiers there understand it's not going to be some lightning operation. I'm not sure if the same could be said of the folks back home. I feel like we're still being told that any day now we'll be able to hand things over to the Iraqis to sort out. I wish they would just give a more realistic timeline. Then again, if they were to say up front that it'll take 10+ years at the current spending levels, I wonder if popular support for the war would decrease or if people would hunker down and adjust expectations accordingly.

Date: 2005-11-17 01:23 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] snarkactual.livejournal.com
I recall at least two speeches by the President both prior to the interim government's elections where he told the American public that we'd be there for several years and has usually talked about "staying the course" and the "long haul". I think no one pays attention and if they do it's considered a "bad thing" to have to commit forces to a multi-year mission. This has resulted in a rush to turn over the security mission to hastily formed, poorly vetted, and less than thoroughly trained Iraqi forces. And while they're certainly taking a heavy load, I worry that too little time for training in not just tactics but in dealing with the civilian populace especially among the non-Kurdish Sunnis in the country which may lead to abuses that could result in something similar to the "Vietnamization" of that war where the local forces collapsed before a highly trained and experienced enemy. One of the things about an insurgency, is that it is very fluid. Right now, we're way on top of them and forcing them to be defensive and to have to resort to terrorizing the local populace in order to maintain even a subsistence level of support. But that could change tomorrow should something come up that increases popular support for the enemy. So timelines are meaningless and there is no linear or geometric progression. This is why this kind of warfare is often referred to as being "asymetric" by tacticians.

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