Ladyrebecca’s Musings and Ramblings

The Thoughts of Rebecca (Becky) Walker

Guns and the lies we’ve been fed April 30, 2007

Filed under: Anecdotal — ladyrebecca @ 7:06 am

Defending Yourself. The e-book Gun Facts summarizes the findings of an article in the Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology: “Every year people in the United States use a gun to defend themselves against criminals an estimated 2,500,000 times—more than 6,500 people a day, or once every 13 seconds.”1

Rape. Of these 2.5 million incidents, approximately 192,500 are women defending themselves against rape. In fact, the Department of Justice found that while rape against unarmed women was successful one-third of the time, it was only successful 3 percent of the time when the woman was armed with a gun or knife.2

Guns and crime in Washington, DC. Based on the FBI Uniform Crime Statistics: “In 1976, Washington D.C., enacted one of the most restrictive gun control laws in the nation. Since then, the city’s murder rate has risen 134 percent while the national murder rate has dropped 2 percent.”3

Guns and crime in Australia. What would a total gun ban accomplish? Fortunately, the Second Amendment has so far prevented the US from finding out, but Australia provides our answer. Jim Marrs writes: “In the nearly two years following the complete banning of firearms, Australian homicides increased 29 percent with gun deaths in the state of Victoria up more than 300 percent. Assaults increased 17 percent and armed robberies increased more than 100 percent despite having continually dropped in the 25 years preceding the weapons ban. Property crimes, assaults, and muggings are now more than twice as high as in America.”4

Concealed carry. A national survey performed in 1996 at the University of Chicago found that rates of violent crime drop when states allow citizens to carry guns outside their homes. “States which passed concealed carry laws reduced their murder rate by 8.5 percent, rapes by 5 percent, aggravated assaults by 7 percent and robbery by 3 percent. If those states not having concealed carry law had adopted such laws in 1992, then approximately 1,570 murders, 4,177 rapes, 60,000 aggravated assaults, and over 11,000 robberies would have been avoided yearly.”5 The reason is obvious: if criminals-who have guns regardless of whether of not they’re allowed to-aren’t sure if a potential victim also has a gun, they’re less likely to attack.

“Assault rifles.” To be an “assault rifle,” a gun must be capable of firing in automatic mode (meaning that keeping the trigger pulled results in a stream of bullets being fired). The “assault rifles” that the media wring their hands about are not capable of auto fire. These so-called assault rifles, or assault weapons, are functionally no different than hunting rifles; they just look more “military.” On top of that, “Over 100,000 police officers delivered a message to Congress in 1990 stating that only 2 to 3 percent of crimes are committed using a so-called ‘assault weapon’”6 And that was four years before Congress banned “assault weapons.”

What about the children? “In espousing their agenda, the Million Mom March web site cites the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the National Center for Health Statistics on gun deaths from children 0-19. Although they correctly observe that ‘4,223 young people aged 0-19 were killed by gunfire in 1997,’ they fail to divulge that 70 percent of these deaths occur among ‘children’ between the ages of 17-19, most of whom die as a result of gang violence…. While 110 children aged 1-14 died from gun accidents in 1998, 200 suffocated from ingested objects, 570 died from burns, 850 drowned, and 2,600 died in car accidents.”7

Media bias. Brian Patrick of the University of Michigan studied the news media’s treatment of the National Rifle Association for a year and found that there was an undeniable bias against them. “The ACLU [American Civil Liberties Union] will typically be labeled a ‘civil liberties group,’ ‘abortion rights group,’ or ‘leading liberal champion.’ Handgun Control Inc. is usually identified as a ‘citizens’ lobby,’ ‘nonprofit organization,’ or ‘public interest group.’ The NAACP [National Association for the Advancement of Colored People] is referred to as a ‘national civil rights group,’ ‘venerable civil rights organization,’ or ‘the nation’s oldest and largest civil rights organization.’

“But when the NRA is in the news, the tone and terminology are often very different.

“‘Semi-automatic caucus.’ ‘Lobbying juggernaut.’ ‘Powerful gun lobby.’ ‘Gun organization.’ ‘Radical gun lobby.’ ‘The classic Washington superlobby.’ ‘Arrogant lobby.’ ‘The gun lobby consisting of everything from neo-Nazis to nature-loving hunters.’ ‘Most feared lobby.’ ‘The Beltway’s loudest lobby.’ ‘A rich and paranoid organization.’…

“When information comes from the AARP [American Association of Retired Persons], the papers use verbs like ‘reported,’ ‘indicated,’ ‘concludes,’ ‘documents.’ When the NAACP is quoted, the stories note that it ’spoke out,’ ‘vowed,’ ‘declared,’ ‘announced.’ But when the NRA speaks, the papers often choose verbs that imply doubt: ‘claims,’ ‘asserts,’ ‘likes to portray,’ ‘contended,’ ‘alleging.’”8

Furthermore, another media study showed that on network news broadcasts over the coarse of two years, 91 percent of stories on gun policy pushed an anti-gun view.9

The Second Amendment’s “militia.” “Report by the US Senate Subcommittee on the Constitution (1982): ‘In the Militia Act of 1792, the second Congress defined “militia of the United States” to include almost every free adult male in the United States. These persons were obligated by law to possess a [military style] firearm and a minimum supply of ammunition and military equipment…. There can be little doubt from this that when the Congress and the people spoke of the “militia,” they had reference to the traditional concept of the entire populace capable of bearing arms, and not to any formal group such as what is today called the National Guard.’”10

1. Smith, Guy. (2000). Gun Facts, version 2.1 Self-published, p.26. Available at
2. Ibid., p. 27
3. Ibid., p. 18
4. Marrs, Jim. (2000). “A tale of three countries: A glimpse into our future?” AlienZoo Website, Aug 31. .
5. Gun Owners of America. (1999). “Firearms fact-sheet, 1999.” .
6. Ibid.
7. Sneider, Jaime. (2000). “Calling shots for the march.” Washington Times, May 10.
8. Jacoby, Jeff. (2000). “The media’s anti-gun bias.” Boston Globe, Jan. 17.
9. Ibid.
10. Op cit., Gun Owners of America.

An excerpt from “You Are Being Lied To: The Disinformation Guide to Media Distortion, Historical Whitewashes and Cultural Myths.” Edited by Russ Kick, The Disinformation Company LTD. 2001. p. 366

 

Prophecy April 27, 2007

Filed under: Anecdotal — ladyrebecca @ 2:16 pm
A failure in generalship
By Lt. Col. Paul Yingling

“You officers amuse yourselves with God knows what buffooneries and never dream in the least of serious service. This is a source of stupidity which would become most dangerous in case of a serious conflict.”
- Frederick the Great

For the second time in a generation, the United States faces the prospect of defeat at the hands of an insurgency. In April 1975, the U.S. fled the Republic of Vietnam, abandoning our allies to their fate at the hands of North Vietnamese communists. In 2007, Iraq’s grave and deteriorating condition offers diminishing hope for an American victory and portends risk of an even wider and more destructive regional war.

These debacles are not attributable to individual failures, but rather to a crisis in an entire institution: America’s general officer corps. America’s generals have failed to prepare our armed forces for war and advise civilian authorities on the application of force to achieve the aims of policy. The argument that follows consists of three elements. First, generals have a responsibility to society to provide policymakers with a correct estimate of strategic probabilities. Second, America’s generals in Vietnam and Iraq failed to perform this responsibility. Third, remedying the crisis in American generalship requires the intervention of Congress.

The Responsibilities of Generalship

Armies do not fight wars; nations fight wars. War is not a military activity conducted by soldiers, but rather a social activity that involves entire nations. Prussian military theorist Carl von Clausewitz noted that passion, probability and policy each play their role in war. Any understanding of war that ignores one of these elements is fundamentally flawed.

The passion of the people is necessary to endure the sacrifices inherent in war. Regardless of the system of government, the people supply the blood and treasure required to prosecute war. The statesman must stir these passions to a level commensurate with the popular sacrifices required. When the ends of policy are small, the statesman can prosecute a conflict without asking the public for great sacrifice. Global conflicts such as World War II require the full mobilization of entire societies to provide the men and materiel necessary for the successful prosecution of war. The greatest error the statesman can make is to commit his nation to a great conflict without mobilizing popular passions to a level commensurate with the stakes of the conflict.

Popular passions are necessary for the successful prosecution of war, but cannot be sufficient. To prevail, generals must provide policymakers and the public with a correct estimation of strategic probabilities. The general is responsible for estimating the likelihood of success in applying force to achieve the aims of policy. The general describes both the means necessary for the successful prosecution of war and the ways in which the nation will employ those means. If the policymaker desires ends for which the means he provides are insufficient, the general is responsible for advising the statesman of this incongruence. The statesman must then scale back the ends of policy or mobilize popular passions to provide greater means. If the general remains silent while the statesman commits a nation to war with insufficient means, he shares culpability for the results.

However much it is influenced by passion and probability, war is ultimately an instrument of policy and its conduct is the responsibility of policymakers. War is a social activity undertaken on behalf of the nation; Augustine counsels us that the only purpose of war is to achieve a better peace. The choice of making war to achieve a better peace is inherently a value judgment in which the statesman must decide those interests and beliefs worth killing and dying for. The military man is no better qualified than the common citizen to make such judgments. He must therefore confine his input to his area of expertise ��� the estimation of strategic probabilities.

The correct estimation of strategic possibilities can be further subdivided into the preparation for war and the conduct of war. Preparation for war consists in the raising, arming, equipping and training of forces. The conduct of war consists of both planning for the use of those forces and directing those forces in operations.

To prepare forces for war, the general must visualize the conditions of future combat. To raise military forces properly, the general must visualize the quality and quantity of forces needed in the next war. To arm and equip military forces properly, the general must visualize the materiel requirements of future engagements. To train military forces properly, the general must visualize the human demands on future battlefields, and replicate those conditions in peacetime exercises. Of course, not even the most skilled general can visualize precisely how future wars will be fought. According to British military historian and soldier Sir Michael Howard, “In structuring and preparing an army for war, you can be clear that you will not get it precisely right, but the important thing is not to be too far wrong, so that you can put it right quickly.”

The most tragic error a general can make is to assume without much reflection that wars of the future will look much like wars of the past. Following World War I, French generals committed this error, assuming that the next war would involve static battles dominated by firepower and fixed fortifications. Throughout the interwar years, French generals raised, equipped, armed and trained the French military to fight the last war. In stark contrast, German generals spent the interwar years attempting to break the stalemate created by firepower and fortifications. They developed a new form of war ��� the blitzkrieg ��� that integrated mobility, firepower and decentralized tactics. The German Army did not get this new form of warfare precisely right. After the 1939 conquest of Poland, the German Army undertook a critical self-examination of its operations. However, German generals did not get it too far wrong either, and in less than a year had adapted their tactics for the invasion of France.

After visualizing the conditions of future combat, the general is responsible for explaining to civilian policymakers the demands of future combat and the risks entailed in failing to meet those demands. Civilian policymakers have neither the expertise nor the inclination to think deeply about strategic probabilities in the distant future. Policymakers, especially elected representatives, face powerful incentives to focus on near-term challenges that are of immediate concern to the public. Generating military capability is the labor of decades. If the general waits until the public and its elected representatives are immediately concerned with national security threats before finding his voice, he has waited too long. The general who speaks too loudly of preparing for war while the nation is at peace places at risk his position and status. However, the general who speaks too softly places at risk the security of his country.

Failing to visualize future battlefields represents a lapse in professional competence, but seeing those fields clearly and saying nothing is an even more serious lapse in professional character. Moral courage is often inversely proportional to popularity and this observation in nowhere more true than in the profession of arms. The history of military innovation is littered with the truncated careers of reformers who saw gathering threats clearly and advocated change boldly. A military professional must possess both the physical courage to face the hazards of battle and the moral courage to withstand the barbs of public scorn. On and
off the battlefield, courage is the first characteristic of generalship.

Failures of Generalship in Vietnam

America’s defeat in Vietnam is the most egregious failure in the history of American arms. America’s general officer corps refused to prepare the Army to fight unconventional wars, despite ample indications that such preparations were in order. Having failed to prepare for such wars, America’s generals sent our forces into battle without a coherent plan for victory. Unprepared for war and lacking a coherent strategy, America lost the war and the lives of more than 58,000 service members.

Following World War II, there were ample indicators that America’s enemies would turn to insurgency to negate our advantages in firepower and mobility. The French experiences in Indochina and Algeria offered object lessons to Western armies facing unconventional foes. These lessons were not lost on the more astute members of America’s political class. In 1961, President Kennedy warned of “another type of war, new in its intensity, ancient in its origin ��� war by guerrillas, subversives, insurgents, assassins, war by ambush instead of by combat, by infiltration instead of aggression, seeking victory by evading and exhausting the enemy instead of engaging him.” In response to these threats, Kennedy undertook a comprehensive program to prepare America’s armed forces for counterinsurgency.

Despite the experience of their allies and the urging of their president, America’s generals failed to prepare their forces for counterinsurgency. Army Chief of Staff Gen. George Decker assured his young president, “Any good soldier can handle guerrillas.” Despite Kennedy’s guidance to the contrary, the Army viewed the conflict in Vietnam in conventional terms. As late as 1964, Gen. Earle Wheeler, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, stated flatly that “the essence of the problem in Vietnam is military.” While the Army made minor organizational adjustments at the urging of the president, the generals clung to what Andrew Krepinevich has called “the Army concept,” a vision of warfare focused on the destruction of the enemy’s forces.

Having failed to visualize accurately the conditions of combat in Vietnam, America’s generals prosecuted the war in conventional terms. The U.S. military embarked on a graduated attrition strategy intended to compel North Vietnam to accept a negotiated peace. The U.S. undertook modest efforts at innovation in Vietnam. Civil Operations and Revolutionary Development Support (CORDS), spearheaded by the State Department’s “Blowtorch” Bob Kromer, was a serious effort to address the political and economic causes of the insurgency. The Marine Corps’ Combined Action Program (CAP) was an innovative approach to population security. However, these efforts are best described as too little, too late. Innovations such as CORDS and CAP never received the resources necessary to make a large-scale difference. The U.S. military grudgingly accepted these innovations late in the war, after the American public’s commitment to the conflict began to wane.

America’s generals not only failed to develop a strategy for victory in Vietnam, but also remained largely silent while the strategy developed by civilian politicians led to defeat. As H.R. McMaster noted in “Dereliction of Duty,” the Joint Chiefs of Staff were divided by service parochialism and failed to develop a unified and coherent recommendation to the president for prosecuting the war to a successful conclusion. Army Chief of Staff Harold K. Johnson estimated in 1965 that victory would require as many as 700,000 troops for up to five years. Commandant of the Marine Corps Wallace Greene made a similar estimate on troop levels. As President Johnson incrementally escalated the war, neither man made his views known to the president or Congress. President Johnson made a concerted effort to conceal the costs and consequences of Vietnam from the public, but such duplicity required the passive consent of America’s generals.

Having participated in the deception of the American people during the war, the Army chose after the war to deceive itself. In “Learning to Eat Soup With a Knife,” John Nagl argued that instead of learning from defeat, the Army after Vietnam focused its energies on the kind of wars it knew how to win ��� high-technology conventional wars. An essential contribution to this strategy of denial was the publication of “On Strategy: A Critical Analysis of the Vietnam War,” by Col. Harry Summers. Summers, a faculty member of the U.S. Army War College, argued that the Army had erred by not focusing enough on conventional warfare in Vietnam, a lesson the Army was happy to hear. Despite having been recently defeated by an insurgency, the Army slashed training and resources devoted to counterinsurgency.

By the early 1990s, the Army’s focus on conventional war-fighting appeared to have been vindicated. During the 1980s, the U.S. military benefited from the largest peacetime military buildup in the nation’s history. High-technology equipment dramatically increased the mobility and lethality of our ground forces. The Army’s National Training Center honed the Army’s conventional war-fighting skills to a razor’s edge. The fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989 signaled the demise of the Soviet Union and the futility of direct confrontation with the U.S. Despite the fact the U.S. supported insurgencies in Afghanistan, Nicaragua and Angola to hasten the Soviet Union’s demise, the U.S. military gave little thought to counterinsurgency throughout the 1990s. America’s generals assumed without much reflection that the wars of the future would look much like the wars of the past ��� state-on-state conflicts against conventional forces. America’s swift defeat of the Iraqi Army, the world’s fourth-largest, in 1991 seemed to confirm the wisdom of the U.S. military’s post-Vietnam reforms. But the military learned the wrong lessons from Operation Desert Storm. It continued to prepare for the last war, while its future enemies prepared for a new kind of war.

Failures of Generalship in Iraq

America’s generals have repeated the mistakes of Vietnam in Iraq. First, throughout the 1990s our generals failed to envision the conditions of future combat and prepare their forces accordingly. Second, America’s generals failed to estimate correctly both the means and the ways necessary to achieve the aims of policy prior to beginning the war in Iraq. Finally, America’s generals did not provide Congress and the public with an accurate assessment of the conflict in Iraq.

Despite paying lip service to “transformation” throughout the 1990s, America’s armed forces failed to change in significant ways after the end of the 1991 Persian Gulf War. In “The Sling and the Stone,” T.X. Hammes argues that the Defense Department’s transformation strategy focuses almost exclusively on high-technology conventional wars. The doctrine, organizations, equipment and training of the U.S. military confirm this observation. The armed forces fought the global war on terrorism for the first five years with a counterinsurgency doctrine last revised in the Reagan administration. Despite engaging in numerous stability operations throughout the 1990s, the armed forces did little to bolster their capabilities for civic reconstruction and security force development. Procurement priorities during the 1990s followed the Cold War model, with significant funding devoted to new fighter aircraft and artillery systems. The most commonly used tactical scenarios in both schools and training centers replicated high-intensity interstate conflict. At the dawn of the 21st century, the U.S. is fighting brutal, adaptive insurgencies in Afghanistan and Iraq, while our armed forces have spent the preceding decade having done little to prepare for such conflicts.

Having spent a decade preparing to fight the wrong war, America’s generals then miscalculated both the means and ways necessary to succeed in Iraq. The
most fundamental military miscalculation in Iraq has been the failure to commit sufficient forces to provide security to Iraq’s population. U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM) estimated in its 1998 war plan that 380,000 troops would be necessary for an invasion of Iraq. Using operations in Bosnia and Kosovo as a model for predicting troop requirements, one Army study estimated a need for 470,000 troops. Alone among America’s generals, Army Chief of Staff General Eric Shinseki publicly stated that “several hundred thousand soldiers” would be necessary to stabilize post-Saddam Iraq. Prior to the war, President Bush promised to give field commanders everything necessary for victory. Privately, many senior general officers both active and retired expressed serious misgivings about the insufficiency of forces for Iraq. These leaders would later express their concerns in tell-all books such as “Fiasco” and “Cobra II.” However, when the U.S. went to war in Iraq with less than half the strength required to win, these leaders did not make their objections public.

Given the lack of troop strength, not even the most brilliant general could have devised the ways necessary to stabilize post-Saddam Iraq. However, inept planning for postwar Iraq took the crisis caused by a lack of troops and quickly transformed it into a debacle. In 1997, the U.S. Central Command exercise “Desert Crossing” demonstrated that many postwar stabilization tasks would fall to the military. The other branches of the U.S. government lacked sufficient capability to do such work on the scale required in Iraq. Despite these results, CENTCOM accepted the assumption that the State Department would administer postwar Iraq. The military never explained to the president the magnitude of the challenges inherent in stabilizing postwar Iraq.

After failing to visualize the conditions of combat in Iraq, America’s generals failed to adapt to the demands of counterinsurgency. Counterinsurgency theory prescribes providing continuous security to the population. However, for most of the war American forces in Iraq have been concentrated on large forward-operating bases, isolated from the Iraqi people and focused on capturing or killing insurgents. Counterinsurgency theory requires strengthening the capability of host-nation institutions to provide security and other essential services to the population. America’s generals treated efforts to create transition teams to develop local security forces and provincial reconstruction teams to improve essential services as afterthoughts, never providing the quantity or quality of personnel necessary for success.

After going into Iraq with too few troops and no coherent plan for postwar stabilization, America’s general officer corps did not accurately portray the intensity of the insurgency to the American public. The Iraq Study Group concluded that “there is significant underreporting of the violence in Iraq.” The ISG noted that “on one day in July 2006 there were 93 attacks or significant acts of violence reported. Yet a careful review of the reports for that single day brought to light 1,100 acts of violence. Good policy is difficult to make when information is systematically collected in a way that minimizes its discrepancy with policy goals.” Population security is the most important measure of effectiveness in counterinsurgency. For more than three years, America’s generals continued to insist that the U.S. was making progress in Iraq. However, for Iraqi civilians, each year from 2003 onward was more deadly than the one preceding it. For reasons that are not yet clear, America’s general officer corps underestimated the strength of the enemy, overestimated the capabilities of Iraq’s government and security forces and failed to provide Congress with an accurate assessment of security conditions in Iraq. Moreover, America’s generals have not explained clearly the larger strategic risks of committing so large a portion of the nation’s deployable land power to a single theater of operations.

The intellectual and moral failures common to America’s general officer corps in Vietnam and Iraq constitute a crisis in American generalship. Any explanation that fixes culpability on individuals is insufficient. No one leader, civilian or military, caused failure in Vietnam or Iraq. Different military and civilian leaders in the two conflicts produced similar results. In both conflicts, the general officer corps designed to advise policymakers, prepare forces and conduct operations failed to perform its intended functions. To understand how the U.S. could face defeat at the hands of a weaker insurgent enemy for the second time in a generation, we must look at the structural influences that produce our general officer corps.

The Generals We Need

The most insightful examination of failed generalship comes from J.F.C. Fuller’s “Generalship: Its Diseases and Their Cure.” Fuller was a British major general who saw action in the first attempts at armored warfare in World War I. He found three common characteristics in great generals ��� courage, creative intelligence and physical fitness.

The need for intelligent, creative and courageous general officers is self-evident. An understanding of the larger aspects of war is essential to great generalship. However, a survey of Army three- and four-star generals shows that only 25 percent hold advanced degrees from civilian institutions in the social sciences or humanities. Counterinsurgency theory holds that proficiency in foreign languages is essential to success, yet only one in four of the Army’s senior generals speaks another language. While the physical courage of America’s generals is not in doubt, there is less certainty regarding their moral courage. In almost surreal language, professional military men blame their recent lack of candor on the intimidating management style of their civilian masters. Now that the public is immediately concerned with the crisis in Iraq, some of our generals are finding their voices. They may have waited too long.

Neither the executive branch nor the services themselves are likely to remedy the shortcomings in America’s general officer corps. Indeed, the tendency of the executive branch to seek out mild-mannered team players to serve as senior generals is part of the problem. The services themselves are equally to blame. The system that produces our generals does little to reward creativity and moral courage. Officers rise to flag rank by following remarkably similar career patterns. Senior generals, both active and retired, are the most important figures in determining an officer’s potential for flag rank. The views of subordinates and peers play no role in an officer’s advancement; to move up he must only please his superiors. In a system in which senior officers select for promotion those like themselves, there are powerful incentives for conformity. It is unreasonable to expect that an officer who spends 25 years conforming to institutional expectations will emerge as an innovator in his late forties.

If America desires creative intelligence and moral courage in its general officer corps, it must create a system that rewards these qualities. Congress can create such incentives by exercising its proper oversight function in three areas. First, Congress must change the system for selecting general officers. Second, oversight committees must apply increased scrutiny over generating the necessary means and pursuing appropriate ways for applying America’s military power. Third, the Senate must hold accountable through its confirmation powers those officers who fail to achieve the aims of policy at an acceptable cost in blood and treasure.

To improve the creative intelligence of our generals, Congress must change the officer promotion system in ways that reward adaptation and intellectual achievement. Congress should require the armed services to implement 360-degree evaluations for field-grade and flag officers. Junior officers and noncommissioned officers are often the first
to adapt because they bear the brunt of failed tactics most directly. They are also less wed to organizational norms and less influenced by organizational taboos. Junior leaders have valuable insights regarding the effectiveness of their leaders, but the current promotion system excludes these judgments. Incorporating subordinate and peer reviews into promotion decisions for senior leaders would produce officers more willing to adapt to changing circumstances, and less likely to conform to outmoded practices.

Congress should also modify the officer promotion system in ways that reward intellectual achievement. The Senate should examine the education and professional writing of nominees for three- and four-star billets as part of the confirmation process. The Senate would never confirm to the Supreme Court a nominee who had neither been to law school nor written legal opinions. However, it routinely confirms four-star generals who possess neither graduate education in the social sciences or humanities nor the capability to speak a foreign language. Senior general officers must have a vision of what future conflicts will look like and what capabilities the U.S. requires to prevail in those conflicts. They must possess the capability to understand and interact with foreign cultures. A solid record of intellectual achievement and fluency in foreign languages are effective indicators of an officer’s potential for senior leadership.

To reward moral courage in our general officers, Congress must ask hard questions about the means and ways for war as part of its oversight responsibility. Some of the answers will be shocking, which is perhaps why Congress has not asked and the generals have not told. Congress must ask for a candid assessment of the money and manpower required over the next generation to prevail in the Long War. The money required to prevail may place fiscal constraints on popular domestic priorities. The quantity and quality of manpower required may call into question the viability of the all-volunteer military. Congress must re-examine the allocation of existing resources, and demand that procurement priorities reflect the most likely threats we will face. Congress must be equally rigorous in ensuring that the ways of war contribute to conflict termination consistent with the aims of national policy. If our operations produce more enemies than they defeat, no amount of force is sufficient to prevail. Current oversight efforts have proved inadequate, allowing the executive branch, the services and lobbyists to present information that is sometimes incomplete, inaccurate or self-serving. Exercising adequate oversight will require members of Congress to develop the expertise necessary to ask the right questions and display the courage to follow the truth wherever it leads them.

Finally, Congress must enhance accountability by exercising its little-used authority to confirm the retired rank of general officers. By law, Congress must confirm an officer who retires at three- or four-star rank. In the past this requirement has been pro forma in all but a few cases. A general who presides over a massive human rights scandal or a substantial deterioration in security ought to be retired at a lower rank than one who serves with distinction. A general who fails to provide Congress with an accurate and candid assessment of strategic probabilities ought to suffer the same penalty. As matters stand now, a private who loses a rifle suffers far greater consequences than a general who loses a war. By exercising its powers to confirm the retired ranks of general officers, Congress can restore accountability among senior military leaders.

Mortal Danger

This article began with Frederick the Great’s admonition to his officers to focus their energies on the larger aspects of war. The Prussian monarch’s innovations had made his army the terror of Europe, but he knew that his adversaries were learning and adapting. Frederick feared that his generals would master his system of war without thinking deeply about the ever-changing nature of war, and in doing so would place Prussia’s security at risk. These fears would prove prophetic. At the Battle of Valmy in 1792, Frederick’s successors were checked by France’s ragtag citizen army. In the fourteen years that followed, Prussia’s generals assumed without much reflection that the wars of the future would look much like those of the past. In 1806, the Prussian Army marched lockstep into defeat and disaster at the hands of Napoleon at Jena. Frederick’s prophecy had come to pass; Prussia became a French vassal.

Iraq is America’s Valmy. America’s generals have been checked by a form of war that they did not prepare for and do not understand. They spent the years following the 1991 Gulf War mastering a system of war without thinking deeply about the ever changing nature of war. They marched into Iraq having assumed without much reflection that the wars of the future would look much like the wars of the past. Those few who saw clearly our vulnerability to insurgent tactics said and did little to prepare for these dangers. As at Valmy, this one debacle, however humiliating, will not in itself signal national disaster. The hour is late, but not too late to prepare for the challenges of the Long War. We still have time to select as our generals those who possess the intelligence to visualize future conflicts and the moral courage to advise civilian policymakers on the preparations needed for our security. The power and the responsibility to identify such generals lie with the U.S. Congress. If Congress does not act, our Jena awaits us.

 

I suggest checking this out April 25, 2007

Filed under: Anecdotal — ladyrebecca @ 5:13 am

Dove has decided that women have been feed a steady diet of fake, airbrushed, unhealthy ideals of womanly beauty long enough and they are fighting back. Good for them. This is a commercial they say they couldn’t show on TV but I don’t really understand. I mean, the woman are naked but they don’t show anything and it’s done very tastefully and artistically. Not anything like a Victoria Secrets commercial or an Axe body spray ad. Anyway, it’s awesome.

GO PRO-AGE!!! Beauty has no age limit.

http://www.campaignforrealbeauty.com

And then, for the flip side…take a look at this. Think models are prettier than you? Think again and watch the video.

http://www.campaignforrealbeauty.com

There is a huge amount of debate. What do you all think?

 

T-shirt folding is really, really cool April 20, 2007

Filed under: Anecdotal — ladyrebecca @ 7:54 pm

http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=4776825453418327083&q=japanese+t-shirt+folding&hl=en

The Japanese are magic and they send their magic to us over the internet. I made my husband take of his shirt so I could try it right then and it works!! It’s totally fun. Just had to share.

 

Um…uh…I…well…let’s see here… April 12, 2007

Filed under: Anecdotal — ladyrebecca @ 6:12 am

Well, I don’t really have anything to say….I always say that and then I ramble for twenty minutes. Well, let me just say, I am not writing this with a specific goal in mind. How’s that?

My daughter is almost waking up and I really need to go get ready for the day so maybe I really don’t have anything to say. I can’t even think of anything to ramble about.

No really, after I said that about always rambling for twenty minutes, no I really can’t think of anything to say. I could continue to ramble about not having anything to ramble about but that just seems silly. So instead I am going to leave you with this…

Rush Limbaugh is a pompous windbag.

I’ll tell the rest of that story tomorrow…or later today. Depends on when I get bored.

 

Funny, Funny Stuff April 10, 2007

Filed under: Anecdotal — ladyrebecca @ 1:50 pm

–Okay.

–Go to Google.com

–Click on Maps.

–Click on get Directions.

–From New York,New York

–To Paris,France.

–And read line # 23.

If u laugh pass it on; we all need more laughter.

If you don’t laugh, go to the hospital because you’re dead.

 

A Day at the Farm (part two): Some Freewriting Exercises April 4, 2007

Filed under: Anecdotal — ladyrebecca @ 8:53 pm

If you haven’t read the blog before this, do so now.

This is the next free writing exercise. I was to put my adult self into the “natural” scene I had remembered from my childhood. So, again, this has no editing. This is what comes out of my mind when I just keep writing for twenty minutes. Oh, and it’s also not historically accurat.

A Day at the Farm (part two)…

I stand on the hill, my hair tickling round my face as the breeze blows across the hill top. I am wearing a black velvet dress, the only black dress I own. I feel odd, standing here in mourning clothes; here in this place of so much childhood happiness.

I think of Grandma’s pies and Grandpa’s folded paper towel that he always had beside his plate to wipe his eyes. I think of the farmhouse, empty and barren and I think of the twin graves beside the old garden bed.

My mouth curls down as I think of Christmases past when we all opened presents beside the hot wood stove. I remember the rattle of the upstairs’ door. I remember the smell of the farm, a smell I will never forget. Tears begin to run down my cheeks. I am going to miss Grandpa and Grandma.

My tears taste salty. I take a deep breath and smell cows. The sun beats down on me in my black dress. My hair begins to stick to my face and I can feel sweat trickling down my back and between my breasts.

I kneel down and pick up a couple of rocks. I turn them over in my hands, brushing dirt from them. I discard most of them but keep one. It is a flat gray stone with a dark blue stripe across the center. The blue is the color of a summer day’s sky, straight up where the blue is darkest.

I feel a loneliness in my heart. My parents leaned on each other today. Angie and Neil leaned on each other. My brothers seem to young to be much upset and/or they have each other. I have no one. I don’t miss Isaac much but sometimes, like today, I miss the office he filled.

I sigh and start down the hill carefully as high heeled sandals aren’t the best footwear for scampering over the hills like a ten year old.

I step over the broken down fence, still managing to snag my pantyhose on a barb. I wince, feeling the scrape more than I would have when I was ten.

I feel old for a moment. I wish I could go back to the carefree summer days of childhood instead of the unseasonably warm fall afternoon I had today.

A day playing, eating pie or a day of funerals, burials, and quiet, ghost filled houses.

I hurry down the hill to the waiting family. Waiting to leave this place of memories forever.

 

A Day at the Farm (part one): Some freewriting exercises April 4, 2007

Filed under: Anecdotal — ladyrebecca @ 8:38 pm

This was a free writing exercise I did. It has had no editing whatsoever. There are parts that don’t line up-I guess my mind doesn’t line up. Anyway…here you are…A Day at the Farm (part one)…

We leave the farm house, being careful to not let Goldie out. I pat her on her curly head before following my sister out.

The sun is bright, the air hot as we run down the porch steps. Grass whips our bare legs and we swat at real or imagined pests.

When we get to the fence my sister goes through first while I hold the barbed wires apart. Then she holds them apart for me. I scratch my leg on a barb but pay it no mind.

We climb to the top of the hill. Here the dirt has worn away to reveal the rock beneath. It feels like an archaeological dig or some such thing.

I dig around, looking for interesting rocks to add to the rock collection. The rocks here have a tinge of blue to them, often running in strips. i find one and brush the coarse dirt from it. I study it and slip it in my pocket when it passes inspection.

The wind picks up, blowing my hair into my eyes. I whip my ponytail behind me but the fly aways continue to blow around my face.

I breath deeply and smell far away cattle. I smell grasses and my own sweat. I smell remnants of woodsmoke from my clothes. Even during the summer, the farm smells of woodsmoke and all that resides here picks up the fragrant aroma.

I hear the dogs bark and then the crunch of gravel. I look down and see my grandpa’s red pickup coming down the lane. I holler to Angie but she ignores me. I holler again, reminding her that we aren’t supposed to be past the fence. She sticks out her tongue. I slip past the crest of the hill and lay in the grass. It tickles my legs and arms.

The grass smells much stronger here. I scratch absentmindedly as I listen to the rumble of male voices and the cheery sound of my grandmother.

The slap of the screen door and the muffling of the voices announces the all-clear signal.

I continue to lay in the grass, ignoring the insect bites, sure to swell up later. I turn onto my back and look up at the blue sky. I allow my eyes to unfocus and begin to see the dust in the air. It sparkles and shimmers and I imagine it’s fairies or fairy dust.

My imagination drifts and my eyes drift shut. They snap open again when I hear my mother shout my name and my sister’s name, calling us in.

Angie and I sneak down the hill, through the fence and back into the yard. I pass the old water pump wondering as I do every time I see it, if wasps would really pour out of it if I pumped it. I’m not sure if it really happened or if I’ve simply been warned so often I think it happened.

We hurry inside, again keeping the cocker spaniel out, and wash our hands in the bathroom. Angie needs to go so on my way out I fight the accordion door closed.

I sit down at the table to a big slice of grandma’s cherry pie. The whole house smells of baking. Cherry and apple pies cover the table. A lemon meringue pie cools on the counter, its crusty browned top beggin to be sliced.

The crust is flaky and sweet, the filling is still warm. It’s rich, sweet and thick. The apples are still a bit firm, not mushy. I eat the whole piece, except the last of the crust which I give to my mom.