----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Warren Ockrassa" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Killer Bs Discussion" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Sunday, December 12, 2004 12:02 AM
Subject: Re: "God Is With Us" L3


> On Dec 11, 2004, at 10:33 PM, Dan Minette wrote:
>
> > From: "Warren Ockrassa" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>
> >> Let's see. For starters, don't let old hawks like Rummy and Cheney
> >> grab
> >> the reins. Um, don't assume that US forces will be welcomed by the
> >> natives. Never assume you've got a situation in hand before you've
> >> completely controlled a territory. Don't EVER assume the entire world
> >> wants to be just like the US. Never try to mix conquest with
> >> parsimony.
> >> That's a start, I think. I find it surprising you've overlooked the
> >> above; to me it's glaringly obvious.
> >
> > But, the question is why it is glaringly obvious to you and not the
> > professionals who are working in the fields of political science and
> > history.
>
> Wow, when you remove the arrogance, belligerence, fatuousness and
> pomposity, the question suddenly becomes reasonable.
>
> I honestly don't know why the lessons of history manage to go
> unlearned, Dan. I only know that they do.

That wasn't the question.  When a foreign policy graduate student at MIT,
who received a degree in government from Harvard states that your point
differs from historians and political scientists who are studying the
period, then it is highly likely that you hold such an opinion.  I'd lay
odds that he is reasonable familiar with the general scholarship in these
fields.  So, the question is  how do you know that they are all wrong and
you are right?

What is arrogant and belligerant about this?  Personally, a sweeping
statement that those bright folks who work in the field have missed the
obvious which you clearly know, sounds arrogant and pompous to me. But,
YMMV.

> Given that I don't know any of Gautam's academic background, I'm not
> sure what degree he might hold nor what significance it carries in this
> discussion.

Well, if you read his posts, you would have some familiarity.  Are you
arguing that there is no such thing as scholarship in history, foreign
affairs, and political science? I know, for example, that he had Stanley
Hoffmann as his senior thesis advisor and has Dr. Hoffmann's professional
respect.  Given Dr. Hoffmann's and Gautam's political leanings, that should
indicate something. (a quick google of Stanley Hoffmann should document
this...e.g. http://www.nybooks.com/articles/17470). At the very least, it
should indicate that he has at least a passing acquaintance with the field.


> > And going through your points, I'm not sure how many of them could
> > possibly
> > be lessons from Viet Nam.  For example, how could one call Robert
> > McNamara
> > an old war dog?
>
> I didn't, and wasn't referring to him anyway. I referred specifically
> to Rummy and Cheney.

Then what in the world was the lesson that should have been learned from
Viet Nam.  We had a young member of "The Best and the Brightest" mismanage
the Viet Nam war.  How does that teach us that we shouldn't let old hawks
run the war?

> > He was  44 when he took the job of secretary of Defense,
> > having spent his working life as a professional manager.  The context
> > of
> > Viet Nam must be the proxy war with the Soviet Union, and the view that
> > they were trying to win through the sponsorship of "wars of national
> > liberation."  So, I cannot see why you seem to assume that it was about
> > conquest.
>
> Both Nam and Iraq are about nothing but conquest. 30 years ago it was
> about overthrowing Communism; now it's about a "war on terror"; but the
> subtests of BOTH conflicts were "liberating the people" of those
> nations, whether they wanted to be liberated or not.

What Communist government was overthrown in South Viet Nam?  We were not
fighting to overthrow Ho Chi Min in the North.  With all due respect, your
comment is just plain fase.


> In both cases the US was the occupying force, in both cases the US met
> much heavier resistance than anticipated, and in both cases the US was
> caught off guard. I don't know why holders of advanced degrees can't
> see the parallels. They seem pretty plain to me.

Becaue they know that the Viet Nam war was not one of liberation?  That
they realized that we were there at the invitation of the South Vietnamese
government, first as advisors and then as fighters?  That the war was
between the US and N. Vietnamese troops, not Viet Cong, after Tet?



> But Dan, for every expert you can mention who was caught flatfooted by
> Iraq, I'm pretty sure I can find another in the same field who was
> predicting disaster from the beginning. For instance, we had US armed
> forces commanders predicting *precisely* the series of events we're
> seeing now, and these men were ostensibly students of military history
> to a depth at least as great as anyone you can cite.

Right, but they didn't say what you are saying.  The one's I saw were
quoting the Powell Doctrine, which I fully agree with.  If you were to
argue that the Powell Doctrine contained military lessons learned from the
Viet Nam war and that Rumsfeld ignored it, then in that limited sense some
lessons learned from Viet Nam were not accepted.  I think everyone on this
list agrees that Bush et. al. made some very serious mistakes.  What's
being argued here is whether the lessons from Viet Nam are obvious.

> > It's not that I always believe the consensus is
> > right.  There are times when I've gone another way, and then had people
> > following me a few years later.  But, as a scientist about 30 years
> > older
> > than me told me "the people who came before you weren't stupid."  If
> > you
> > solution assumes they are idiots, you, not they, are probably missing
> > something.
>
> I don't assume anyone's an idiot without some evidence to support the
> determination. I'm aware that others who came before me were not
> stupid. That's why it's utterly baffling to me that we are getting some
> serious national deja vu out of Iraq now.

Because there is a general tendency to see any war in terms of the war of
one's formative year and see parallels that do not bear up under
scholarship.

> I don't know why I have to perennially cite evidence for OPINION in the
> Court of Gautam the Almighty. But if he's incapable of looking at
> nightly news reports and drawing conclusions based on them,
> particularly if he's got a background in history, it seems that his
> view, not mine, is the indefensible one.

No, that's not it.  But, with all due respect, you tend to make strong
statements without considering facts first. A couple examples of this was
quoting a well know liberal ecconomist and member of this list, as well as
former member of the Clinton administration, as a clear supporter of Bush.
Or calling the Viet Nam war a war to overthrow a communist government.

> Now if Gautam wishes to address this issue further he's welcome to do
> so, but I won't carry on a discussion by proxy.

OK, you won't answer my posts, that's your business.  But, this mailing
list has always tended to be a general discussion where everyone is welcome
to jump in.

Dan M.


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