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| Let's Share a Bipartisan Peace Pipe, Then Go Out and Win This Damn War! |
| Sunday, September 26, 2004 |
Let's Share a Bipartisan Peace Pipe, Then Go Out and Win This Damn War!
The United States military was unprepared to enter an unconventional war when it began providing military advisory support to South Vietnam in 1962. In preparation to counter the insurgency from North Vietnam, the United States military rapidly began to revise its tactics and strategies, emphasizing special forces, psychological operations, and civil affairs. It soon became apparent that winning the war required winning the hearts and minds of the all the people of South Vietnam. Firepower and maneuver, while important, were not as prominently influential as in conventional warfare. Troop levels increased and so did casualties as the war progressed through the sixties.
The 1968 TET Offensive was deemed the turning point of the Vietnam War and not because we lost the battle. The attackers were repelled and the North Vietnamese were soundly defeated. But the event was considered an American defeat, simply because it was not anticipated and would likely mean that the war could be protracted beyond the predicted troop withdrawal dates. After six years, the light at the end of the tunnel was not getting much brighter and America was growing tired of this war. Americans were following the lead of cynicism directed their way during the evening news, each and every evening.
Even before the TET Offensive, trouble was brewing in our homeland. A demographic anomaly emerged from among some of the 76 million baby boomers and a vitriolic protest of the Vietnam War was initiated by a radical counterculture of people dubbed.....hippies and flower children. The protest was perpetuated in part by a draft that took young men half way around the world to fight, and perhaps die, in a war that some saw as unnecessary. This sentiment was largely influenced by the media which brought the war into the living rooms of every American home where casualties and negative aspects of American involvement were constantly emphasized. And "the most trusted man in America" led the way on CBS.
While trying to win the hearts and minds of the people in South Vietnam, America's fighting men were rapidly losing the hearts and minds of Americans back home. A will to win that existed in the mid-sixties was fading fast.
An insurgent is defined as someone who fights against the government in his or her own country. It correctly defines the conduct of the radical activists who began protesting and rioting in America during the late sixties and early seventies. Burning draft cards and the American flag, parading with the North Vietnamese flag, and fleeing to Canada to avoid being drafted were commonplace events.
Upon return from military duty in Vietnam, John Kerry, himself a war veteran, but still a Reservist, became a leader of an organization called the Vietnam Veterans Against the War. He too was an insurgent. He falsely testified before Congress that American fighting men in Vietnam routinely committed atrocities and he also went to Paris, France, where he attempted to negotiate a peace treaty with the enemy.
The fighting men, deployed in Vietnam, began to realize that they were fighting a war on two fronts. Ultimately, the war was lost. Not because of a failing military campaign, but because of a failing will to win by Americans. The media and the radical counterculture had successfully undermined our military mission, and the politicians eventually opted to cut and run. It was a defeat that was chronicled around the world, a defeat that would have a profound negative impact on America for a long, long time.
The boomers have grown up now, cut their hair, trimmed their beards, and chucked their war-surplus fatigues, but their liberal leftist thinking has not changed and their vitriolic behavior still persists. Many now occupy positions of power in both the government and the media and they remain active insurgents just as they were over three decades ago.
We are once again involved in an unconventional war and again we hear and see the anti-war activists emerge primarily from the Democratic party base along with its obvious ally, the liberal mainstream media. This does not mean that the right-wing conservatives, are pro-war. Nobody wants war, but sometimes war is necessary and certainly our war against terrorism is justified.
We already have a precedence as to what negative and positive effects radical activism has on our own fighting forces and our enemies respectively. Today, the weak-willed and appeasers, combined with some partisan politicians and the elite national media are again collectively decaying Americans' confidence in our ability to win, just as they did in Vietnam.
Our enemies do not respect our culture nor our liberty that we so cherish. They respect our power and nothing else. But they know that our power can be diminished better by our own bickering and partisanship than by their suicide bombers. They know that the best chance that they have in our defeat is our own self-defeat.
That's why polarization is so counter-productive in our war against terrorism. It is the only way we can lose. Divided we cannot and ultimately will not win. United we cannot lose and will ultimately win. Our current administration and our military possess the resolve and the will to win. And win we will if all people of the United States will become united in a bipartisan resolve to win. Hopefully, after the election, our commander-in-chief will be able to fulfill the promise he made during his first inaugural address.....to bring the parties together and unite our people. President Bush has been relentlessly pummeled by Bush-Haters throughout his term. Not once has he retaliated or renounced his attackers. To me, he sounds like a man who says what he means and does what he says. Let's smoke the pipe.....then, let's smoke the terrorists. By Lt.Col.Bob Lanzotti rlanzotti@mindspring.com
===== Listen to J.R. on Talk Show America, a political conservative talk show that webcasts Mon-Fri 4-6 PM EST live on the IBC Radio Network www.ibcrn.com or 24/7 @ www.talkshowamerica.com (Recorded)
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posted by J.R. @ 12:15:00 PM   |
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