The Phoenix Network:
 
 
 
About  |  Advertise
Adult  |  Moonsigns  |  Band Guide  |  Blogs  |  In Pictures
 

Robert McNamara, RIP

Memories of Vietnam should speed Obama's exit plans for Iraq and Afghanistan
By EDITORIAL  |  July 8, 2009

090710_editorial_main

As secretary of defense under President Lyndon B. Johnson, Robert McNamara prosecuted the Vietnam War on a day-to-day basis, just as Donald Rumsfeld orchestrated the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq for George W. Bush. The details may appear strikingly different — a Communist threat in the jungle as opposed to an Islamist menace in the desert — but the rotten policy core has a painful consistency: miscalculation fortified by rampant arrogance.

McNamara's death on Monday at age 93 should serve as a prompt, a trigger, for President Barack Obama and his foreign-policy team. It presents an unspoken invitation to consider the common denominators of Iraq, Afghanistan, and Vietnam.

Analogizing people is tricky business, as is drawing parallels between unpopular wars. But in terms of serving their respective presidents, Rumsfeld was an instigator; McNamara an enabler.

This sort of distinction matters to historians and journalists and government officials; it is of little use to the public, and is of no matter to the soldiers, sailors, aviators, and Marines who died under the commands of W. and LBJ.

McNamara famously developed doubts about Vietnam by 1967, but failed to act on them. This failure imbued McNamara's post-Vietnam regret with a tinge of Shakespearean angst: Caliban playing the warlord, muttering to an imaginary council as the tempest raged.

Team Obama take note.

Even a flamboyant imagination would strain to concoct circumstances under which Rumsfeld might express second thoughts about anything — let alone Iraq and Afghanistan. Still, Mac and Rummy suffered a similar fate: both were cashiered by their masters when the military magic failed to work.

Today's wars in Afghanistan and Iraq are being fought inside a bubble — unlike Vietnam, which had the immediacy of an open wound. Our all-volunteer military insulates society from the pain and anxiety that a force of draftees distributes with seemingly random cruelty.

Taxpayers have gotten an even more carefree ride. For the first time in national history, the United States is waging war entirely on borrowed money. No tax increases to pay for the military adventures of the thankfully departed Bush.

This serially overlooked fact has yet to register with the public, afflicted as it is with attention deficit disorder and preoccupied with consuming its way out of the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression.

Iraq and Afghanistan, however, are now President Obama's wars. Bush (like LBJ before him) may have gotten the nation into the mess, but Obama (like President Richard Nixon) was elected to get us out.

From the introduction of military advisers by President John F. Kennedy in 1961 until the fall of Saigon in 1975, Vietnam escalated and raged for 14 years before its ignominious end. An estimated 58,000 Americans died in the process, with more than 303,000 suffering wounds.

What Obama needs to realize is that more than 21,000 of those deaths — nearly 38 percent — took place after the nation more or less concluded that Vietnam was a quagmire and tapped Nixon to fix the problem.

Although the pain suffered by military families today is no less intense, the carnage in Afghanistan and Iraq is considerably smaller: 5000-plus dead to date, 34,000-plus wounded.

Each death, every wound, is now recorded in Obama's ledger.

1  |  2  |   next >
Related: 20 reasons the Earth will be glad to see Bush go, Hoover? Damn!, Has Obama peaked? No, he hasn't, More more >
  Topics: The Editorial Page , Barack Obama, Barack Obama, Politics,  More more >
| More

ARTICLES BY EDITORIAL
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   WHY THE UPCOMING AIDS WALK IS MORE IMPORTANT THAN EVER  |  May 30, 2012
    The ongoing international economic crisis intensifies fate's cruelest judgments.
  •   TRUMP FOR VICE-PRESIDENT  |  May 30, 2012
    "I've been known as being a very smart guy for a long time."
  •   WALL STREET REFORM THAT WILL WORK  |  May 23, 2012
    It is, in the immortal words of Yogi Berra, déjà vu all over again.
  •   WHY ELIZABETH WARREN IS RIGHT — AND WHY ROMNEY WON’T CHANGE  |  May 16, 2012
    Like an alcoholic downing nips on the drive home from court-ordered rehabilitation, JPMorgan Chase and its CEO, Jamie Dimon, could hardly wait to once again start wildly tossing depositors' money into derivative hedge bets — the very type of irresponsible behavior that nearly brought down all of Wall Street less than four years ago.
  •   BROWN BAGS IT  |  May 09, 2012
    Republican Senator Scott Brown's vote to allow the interest on college loans to double illustrates perfectly why Brown is a clever politician, but a rotten senator.

 See all articles by: EDITORIAL



  |  Sign In  |  Register
 
thePhoenix.com:
Phoenix Media/Communications Group:
TODAY'S FEATURED ADVERTISERS
Copyright © 2012 The Phoenix Media/Communications Group