What the left does not know about warfare

Ralph Peters:

WORKING out last Monday, I heard a campaign flunky on TV insist that progress in Iraq is an illusion. "The war isn't over until all of the troops come home!" she grumped.

Guess we're still at war with Germany. And Japan. Even Italy. Oh, and let's not forget all of our military bases occupying the Confederacy.

The poor woman knew nothing about warfare, history - or Iraq. She just wanted to see her candidate win in November and wasn't going to let reality get in the way.

And one look told you she didn't even know any "troops."

But after my initial shrug (back to the bench for more crunches), it struck me how wrong I'd been on a point I'd argued for two decades: I claimed that Western societies have an advantage because of their insistence on factual data.

Yet, since 9/11, I've seen and heard no end of my fellow citizens' arguing from blind passion and utterly refusing to ingest facts that didn't match their prejudices (left or right). Since the turnabout in Iraq began a year and a half ago, the rejection of reality has become an outright pathology for the quit-Iraq-and-free-the-terrorists set.

I've watched millions of my countrymen and countrywomen insist that fantasies are real. In a classic through-the-looking-glass reversal last year, Sen. Hillary Clinton told Gen. David Petraeus, the man who turned Iraq around, that his reports of progress were fairy tales. It was the world turned upside down.

Since that woman on TV "explained" victory last Monday, I've thought about the different kinds of people who refuse either to accept that the situation in Iraq has improved remarkably or that quitting now would have serious consequences.

When I break down the "fairy tales can come true" crowd, the first division is into vendors and consumers. Determined to elect the president of its choice, the "mainstream" media has collapsed into outright lies and whopping distortions. And, of course, political hacks will do anything to get their candidate elected.

It's the consumers of fairy tales - those desperate to believe - who are more interesting. They come in several basic flavors, two of which we can quickly set aside:

Protesting university students. Don't worry about them. Once they graduate and get a dose of reality, most of the kids will do fine. The need for liberal-arts undergrads to prance to the left is virtually hormonal.

Hollywood stars and other celebrities. No worries there, either. Just check out the box-office receipts for the dozen or so self-righteous anti-war (anti-military) films. These folks are so far removed from reality that they believe the roles they play give them genuine expertise. Don't get irate - just laugh. (Coming soon: Susan Sarandon on quantum physics!)

But there's another sad bunch:

My generation. Those of us from our mid-50s into early 60s. The florid youth of yesteryear who declared they were going to change the world, made a mess others had to clean up - and the high point of whose lives came in a protest march down University Boulevard, chanting, "Ho-ho-ho Chi Minh! NLF is gonna win!"

The key to understanding the aging activists' bitterness toward the military (disguised as concern for the common soldier) and their obsession with the rights of terrorists is that this cobbled-together cause gives them one last chance to rise above their disappointing lives and to recapture, for one Viagra-assisted moment, their glory days of raised little fists and bell-bottoms.

...

In the fever swamps of the anti war left there is a willful ignorance about warfare and what it can and cannot do. One of the first things you notice is that war opponents overstate what war cannot accomplish. They do this because they oppose the use of force by our side in almost all circumstances. The fact is that most are not really anti war, they are just against our side in a war.

That is why they engage in magical thinking to delegitimize the war effort. The "truthers" who come up with bogus conspiracy theories about 9-11 do so because they want to avoid the consequences that the facts require. They are looking for an excuse to not respond to the violence visited upon us. It is why they convinced themselves that we were "lied" into the war in Iraq.

By delegitimizing the reasons for the conflict they hope to stop our use of force and not the enemy's. In Vietnam they had similar obsessions about the Tonkin Gulf resolutions completely ignoring the communist violations of the Geneva Accords and other acts of war against our ally South Vietnam.

It is always easy to find and excuse for failure. That is why there are so many failures in this world. The success that we have achieved in Iraq is something the US military should take great pride in. Hopefully there are enough people like Peters who are around to appreciate it.

Comments

  1. In the fever swamps of the anti war left there is a willful ignorance about warfare and what it can and cannot do

    they have the same ignorance when it comes to the state as well... taxes... science...

    its not just wilful ignorance as to war, but wilful ignorance towards anything that might say they are wrong. in this way they carve an unoccupied place in politics, then proceed to work from their.

    which is why their politics is to unseat merit, et al.

    everyone else is occupied and has some residence in some form of truth, and socialism, and sociopathic lying works the mass from the lie side.

    it takes lincolns you can fool some of the people saying to a much higher understanding that encompases not just an ongoing free country, but the outcome if you fool all of the people just once.

    yes, lincoln didnt concieve of the concept that upon fooling the people once, they lose all options to some of the times and other options.

    so you can fool some of the people all of the time, and that gets you pretty far.

    and if you can fool all of the people once, then you dont need to fool all of them all of the time, you can just shoot the ones that dont comply.

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