"A military composed of warrior-professionals suits the agenda of hawkish conservatives at least as well as hawkish liberals. For those who dream of liberating the oppressed abroad and reversing the corrupting tide of liberalism at home here is an instrument ideally suited to making those dreams come true. Not persuaded? Consider the views of the noted conservative commentator and New York Times columnist David Brooks." Bacevich
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Colonel Bacevich has a profound and steady view of people like Brooks. pl
http://www.salon.com/2013/09/15/david_brooks_was_wrong_on_iraq_and_afghanistan/singleton/
"The U.S. troops who burned Korans, defiled Taliban corpses, and gunned down innocent civilians in shooting sprees made it difficult for Afghans to appreciate the Jane Addams side of the American soldier. As for John Wayne, Hollywood had thought better than to film him urinating on dead enemy fighters."
As horribly right as that is, the Jane Addams reference made me laugh out loud. How stupid, how criminal, the Brookses of this world.
Posted by: jr786 | 16 September 2013 at 05:34 PM
Bacevich's piece is an eloquent take down of those who never learn from their mistakes and are driven to repeat them. Sad thing is that their publishers never seem to notice.
Posted by: JohnH | 16 September 2013 at 06:04 PM
The problems of the Brookses of this world stem in my opinion from the myths we like to believe about ourselves. If we fail to appreciate their falsity we can fall into error like David Brooks.
Perhaps the most important part of this appreciation is the necessity, as the late novelist W.G. Sebald pointed out, to understand our respective national fears.
The Australian national fear is a national inferiority complex that, for example, still sees Australian artists need to validate themselves in London and New York before other Australians will take them seriously and, on a more serious note, still sees us join in fighting geographically remote wars that have nothing to do with us.
What is the American national fear that Brooks is trying to assuage? That America is not "the indispensable nation"? I wouldn't know.
Posted by: walrus | 16 September 2013 at 06:06 PM
There is something in history that the attitude of international liberationists of both right and left that always reminded me of: the Japanese imperialists. Japanese imperialists were always a schizophrenic lot: on the one hand, they were quite sincere in wanting to "liberate" and "uplift" other Asian peoples; on the other hand, they were eager to exploit, often brutally, neighboring Asian lands and populations. Often, these seemingly incompatible fantasies merged into something fantastical: that other Asians, out of gratitude for their "liberation" and "uplifting" at the hands of the Japanese, would willingly offer themselves to be exploited. When this did not take place, Japanese imperialists became vengefully cruel at the "ungrateful" peoples of Asia. Too many narratives about "imperialism" focuses on the latter. But, when messianism merges with mammonism, the result is truly ugly.
Posted by: kao_hsien_chih | 16 September 2013 at 06:09 PM
Jane Addams won a Nobel Prize and not sure how many won one while in Uniform of Armed Forces of the USA.
Brooks like many pundits is relatively glib and hoping that no one really keeps track of his utterings over any length of time. Unfortunately of course that is exactly what Dr. Bachevich, PhD does.
It does make one wonder what makes the last of the Thinkers senior field grades while the Flag Ranks and Pundits seem lobotomized.
CP Snow wrote of the two cultures, specifically science and those who govern. Never the twain shall meet in his opinion. But those who lead military efforts are not really involved in governing but something else, perhaps closer to organizing violence against enemies. Perhaps Dr. Bachevich is one of our more expert in trying to make each of those cultures, the military and the governors, understand better the other.
Posted by: William R. Cumming | 16 September 2013 at 06:21 PM
Ahhh the Canadian fear!
Posted by: Charles I | 16 September 2013 at 08:19 PM
Never has a truer entrance been penned: "Brooks’s proclamation of victory turned out to be a case of premature journalistic ejaculation."
Posted by: Tigershark | 16 September 2013 at 11:46 PM
Brooks never cared about the Iraqi people, providing them with democracy, saving them from a tyrant. All any of the Neocons care about is Israel. The corporatists like Cheney, Bush just care about defense contracts and oil contracts. None of them ever gave a shit about democracy or peace or love or anything good for the Iraqi people.
Posted by: walter | 17 September 2013 at 01:51 AM
Bacevich being interviewed on Book-TV, C-Span, was quite clear on what he sees as America's fear, "Since WWII, we can't win a war."
Posted by: optimax | 17 September 2013 at 02:20 AM
I think Zbig B hit the mark with this comment:
" But it [America] is also a country with an extremely simplistic understanding of world affairs, and with still a high confidence in America’s capacity to prevail, by force if necessary.:
- See more at: http://www.novinite.com/view_news.php?id=153234#sthash.gGuEHsuA.dpuf
Aided by attention defect disorder on a mass scale....and very little memory of even recent history.
Posted by: jonst | 17 September 2013 at 07:31 AM
I see it as a call for accountability.
The really remarkable thing about the Brookses of the world is that they can hardly remember what they said yesterday, let alone truly ancient history, like what they said a year back.
While consistency is not a value in itself, it is an indicator.
Many people change their mind with new information, that's only prudent. Then there are those who are consistently wrong. Why listen to such people? And yet, in DC they persist as 'experts'.
Brooke is one of those people. Bacewich wonderfully takes him to task over that.
Tom Friedman is another great example for somebody who still hasn't been run out of town, despite his contribution to perpetuating the Iraq war with his 'Friedman Unit'.
But that's elites for you.
Unless Brooks is caught cheating on his taxes, shagging an intern or a lamp post he is unlikely to be dropped just for trivial things like being persistently wrong.
Being a pundit is probably the only job where you can make a living that way. Brooks is probably just too well networked to be held accountable.
Jon Stewart had it about right when he reported the Idiot Parade (Bremer et al) back in town, telling everybody why bombing Syria is a splendid idea. He was talking about the 'experts who have been wrong about everything' on Iraq, have plunged the US into that war, have not been held accountable for screwing up, and Stewart then kindly asked them to shut the fuck up already.
If only they would.
Posted by: confusedponderer | 17 September 2013 at 07:38 AM
Bacevich is a true historian and a gentleman. We are fortunate every tie he is given a platform.
Posted by: Laura Wilson | 17 September 2013 at 11:13 AM
CP
In re Brooks - This fellow told the world on the Newshour that he had gone through old transcripts of their show and discovered that I had told them all repeatedly that there would be a massive insurgency in Iraq if we occupied the country, This statement by him was a couple of years into the disaster. Right after this statement he stopped talking to me. Sob! pl
Posted by: turcopolier | 17 September 2013 at 12:09 PM
You may sob upon rejection - the 1st time you booted me here, oh, the trauma! - but as kao_hsien_chih observes these types don't get over it, they get even more even.
Posted by: Charles I | 17 September 2013 at 01:11 PM
Our own analog of the Australian fear plus the fear that we'll be culturally assimilated by our southern neighbor.
Posted by: Medicine Man | 17 September 2013 at 01:11 PM
I read that article on Salon yesterday and have to say it was quite pleasant to watch Col. Bacevich metaphorically drive a lance into Brook's chest. The only thing that ruins the experience is the sure knowledge that Brook's career will remain impervious to damage.
Posted by: Medicine Man | 17 September 2013 at 01:20 PM
What proof exists that ethnic and religious insurgencies was not the end game of USA policy in MENA all along?
After all were not the British during days of Empire skilled at divide and keep conquered?
Would Israel exist if the Arabs were united in their policies?
Posted by: William R. Cumming | 17 September 2013 at 01:45 PM
Well said!
Regards,
Posted by: Charles | 17 September 2013 at 02:11 PM
Charles I
What can I say? I am a heartless bastard. pl
Posted by: turcopolier | 17 September 2013 at 03:01 PM
MM
You mean you think you are culturally different? pl
Posted by: turcopolier | 17 September 2013 at 03:02 PM
Col. Lang, being right is a terrible crime in the eyes of the current elite.
Posted by: walrus | 17 September 2013 at 06:15 PM
Not really. The fear is real amongst my countrymen though.
Posted by: Medicine Man | 17 September 2013 at 06:47 PM
Bacevich was on Colbert last night. Here's a link to the interview:
http://www.colbertnation.com/the-colbert-report-videos/429086/september-16-2013/andrew-bacevich
Posted by: Publius Valerius | 17 September 2013 at 07:27 PM
ok I'll bite.
I do, we're young, no war of independence, strong federal government, weaker provinces, mostly missed slavery and the racial divide n/w/s the whole nation of two solitudes thing, no civil war, no global dominance tho we used to have the 4th largest navy in the world!, not nearly so crazy for God and Israel and Ignorance and Abstinence - we don't even have an abortion law - worse yet, you're exceptional world savers, we're complete slackers, & no one surfs the web or smokes as much dope per capita as a Canadian.
We live beside you and admire you. We are not antipathetic to national health care & gun control by birth, experience and heritage We are not the same culturally. Vive le difference. How do I say that in Spanish?
Posted by: Charles I | 17 September 2013 at 07:30 PM
Charles I, MM et al
I know you are culturally different. I know that every time I cross the border. That's a foreign country up there, somewhere. But, we love you, those of us who know you are there. I suppose I must since my ancestors founded what became your country. pl
Posted by: turcopolier | 17 September 2013 at 08:04 PM