I'll admit, needlessly as I'm sure many of you remember, to being supportive of Bush early on. My first year or two posting in P&N reflects that position.
It was later in 2006 where, for some damn reason, we were STILL in Iraq and Afghanistan that I began to conclude that our leaders were full of !@#$. Leaving our soldiers on the ground camped out behind enemy lines to be butchered by flash mobs, snipers, and IEDs is a crime against our men.
Our military leadership excels at costing the United States coin and blood, with no intention of engaging in a true military conflict. They leave the soldiers on the ground with suicidal orders to play police in a foreign and hostile surrounding. It's sheer lunacy! It angers me.
Our military is misused. They are a killing force, not a police force. The nations we are in can fight for their own safety and security – and if they ever lose that fight we’ll know who to kill upon our return.
The Democrats and Libertarians made excellent arguments that I took to heart. We are not the world’s police force and should not act as such. The Iraq war was a gigantic mistake of horrific consequences. The sort of disaster that makes you stop and think before accepting another middle east adventure.
It was a conservative blog in 2006 that convinced me just how bad our involvement in Iraq was. Then Democrats were fighting tooth and nail to stop the surge and wanted us to immediately withdraw our soldiers. They lost, the surge occurred, and was somewhat successful. Yet my position was changed. Surge or not, enter entering Iraq was a mistake. No matter how we leave that country later, I believe it’ll become a more religious and hostile regime. Iraq is a greater threat to us now than before the war.
In essence, I think the sum of all our efforts has been to dig a deeper hole. To create new enemies and to bolster old ones. We eliminated Iran’s only rival power in the region and now they are an unstoppable nuclear kingpin of Islamic terrorism. That is no great accomplishment, it’s a freaking disaster.
While this is no proper litmus test for engaging in military conflict, I’d like to remind you that we ourselves, in our wars, have gotten more of our men killed than died on September 11th. Over twice as many, and the number continues to climb. The wounded is much higher.
It goes to show you the price we pay, and for what? Our mission should have been accomplished, our soldiers returned home, and our costs much less. Yet our leaders continue to ‘nation build’ with our supply of coin and blood. They have mangled the purpose of our military to extol this additional cost on us all. For a purpose I never believed in. If we’re attacked, go in and kill our attacker. Then leave. It should be that simple.
With our leaders having a different plan, a far more costly plan, I will not and cannot endorse their electable wars. If there is a time of need when we need to use our military we’ll know it, but until that time comes our soldiers belong home with us. Safe from the damage our own leaders inflict upon them with bad choices.