Gen.
William Odom (former director of the NSA) wrote the following on what
“supporting our troops” would actually
be.
Supporting the Troops Means
Withdrawing Them
COMMENTARY | July
05, 2007 By William E. Odom
Every step
the Democrats in Congress have taken to force the withdrawal of U.S. forces from
Iraq has failed. Time and again, President Bush beats them into submission with
charges of failing to "support the
troops."
Why do the Democrats allow
this to happen? Because they let the president define what "supporting the
troops" means. His definition is brutally misleading. Consider what his policies
are doing to the troops.
No U.S. forces
have ever been compelled to stay in sustained combat conditions for as long as
the Army units have in Iraq. In World War II, soldiers were considered
combat-exhausted after about 180 days in the line. They were withdrawn for rest
periods. Moreover, for weeks at a time, large sectors of the front were quiet,
giving them time for both physical and psychological rehabilitation. During some
periods of the Korean War, units had to fight steadily for fairly long periods
but not for a year at a time. In Vietnam, tours were one year in length, and
combat was intermittent with significant break
periods.
In Iraq, combat units take
over an area of operations and patrol it daily, making soldiers face the
prospect of death from an IED or small arms fire or mortar fire several hours
each day. Day in and day out for a full year, with only a single two-week break,
they confront the prospect of death, losing limbs or eyes, or suffering other
serious wounds. Although total losses in Iraq have been relatively small
compared to most previous conflicts, the individual soldier is risking death or
serious injury day after day for a year. The impact on the psyche accumulates,
eventually producing what is now called "post-traumatic stress disorders." In
other words, they are combat-exhausted to the point of losing effectiveness. The
occasional willful killing of civilians in a few cases is probably indicative of
such loss of effectiveness. These incidents don't seem to occur during the first
half of a unit's deployment in
Iraq.
After the first year, following a
few months back home, these same soldiers are sent back for a second year, then
a third year, and now, many are facing a fourth deployment! Little wonder more
and more soldiers and veterans are psychologically
disabled.
And the damage is not just to
enlisted soldiers. Many officers are suffering serious post-traumatic stress
disorders but are hesitant to report it – with good reason. An officer who
needs psychiatric care and lets it appear on his medical records has most
probably ended his career. He will be considered not sufficiently stable to lead
troops. Thus officers are strongly inclined to avoid treatment and to hide their
problems.
… [Bush’s] recent
"surge" tactic has compelled the secretary of defense to extend Army tours to 15
months! (The Marines have been allowed to retain their six-month deployment
policy and, not surprisingly, have fewer cases of post-traumatic stress
syndrome.) …
If the Democrats
truly want to succeed in forcing President Bush to begin withdrawing from Iraq,
the first step is to redefine "supporting the troops" as withdrawing them,
citing the mass of accumulating evidence of the psychological as well as the
physical damage that the president is forcing them to endure because he did not
raise adequate forces. Both Democrats and Republicans in Congress could confirm
this evidence and lay the blame for "not supporting the troops" where it really
belongs – on the president. And they could rightly claim to the public
that they are supporting the troops by cutting off the funds that he uses to
keep U.S. forces in Iraq. …
The
president is strongly motivated to string out the war until he leaves office, in
order to avoid taking responsibility for the defeat he has caused and persisted
in making greater each year for more than three
years.
To force him to begin a
withdrawal before then, the first step should be to rally the public by
providing an honest and candid definition of what "supporting the troops" really
means and pointing out who is and who is not supporting our troops at
war.
T. H. Lain is the house name
I used to write Oath of Nerull.
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