27 Jul 2006

 
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Fiasco

Two excerpts from Thomas Ricks' Fiasco: The American Military Adventure in Iraq, published in the Washington Post.

1) In Iraq, Military Forgot the Lessons of Vietnam

On May 16, 2003, L. Paul Bremer III, the chief of the Coalition Provisional Authority, the U.S.-run occupation agency, had issued his first order, "De-Baathification of Iraq Society." The CIA station chief in Baghdad had argued vehemently against the radical move, contending that, "By nightfall, you'll have driven 30,000 to 50,000 Baathists underground. And in six months, you'll really regret this."
He was proved correct, as Bremer's order, along with a second that dissolved the Iraqi military and national police, created a new class of disenfranchised, threatened leaders.

2) It Looked Weird and Felt Wrong

Lt. Col. David Poirier, who commanded a military police battalion attached to the 4th Infantry Division and was based in Tikrit from June 2003 to March 2004, said the division's approach was indiscriminate. "With the brigade and battalion commanders, it became a philosophy: 'Round up all the military-age males, because we don't know who's good or bad.' " Col. Alan King, a civil affairs officer working at the Coalition Provisional Authority, had a similar impression of the 4th Infantry's approach. "Every male from 16 to 60" that the 4th Infantry could catch was detained, he said. "And when they got out, they were supporters of the insurgency."

[via dack]


 
 

Comments

 

I heard some excerpts of this on the radio. I'm buying a copy for reactionary, neo-con parents.

jpeg 27 Jul 2006

This is the war you get when 4 chickenhawks w/o humility or conscience take over.

Jpeg 27 Jul 2006

 
 
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