January 27, 2006
Nathaniel Fick on Iraq
Here is an interesting perspective on the Iraq War, among other
subjects, by a former high level Marine. Wouldn't it be
compelling if he, by some genie's magic, became Secretary of Defense?
Now
that would be 'MUST SEE' television in his appearances before Congress
and such.
I do have a question though: why not give this guy an entire "Meet The
Press" show or a full "60 Minutes" episode? This country would learn so
much, especially those who could somehow pull themselves away from
"Entertainment Tonight" and other such life-sapping dreck.
Ex-Marine leader poses hard questions about war
BY ADAM PARKER
The Charleston Post and Courier
12-11-2005
Within the first days of the
invasion in 2003, the U.S. military dropped leaflets in Iraq:
"Surrender and be part of the new Iraq."
"It was a brilliant success," said Nathaniel Fick, a former Marine commander who participated in that first campaign.
Then, as the operation began to
heat up, the military dropped "humanitarian rations," which did not
include pork or chemical heater packs, which some in Afghanistan had
ingested to their great peril. The rations came in bright yellow boxes
so they could be seen easily.
This won the hearts of many, Fick said.
Then the military began dropping
cluster bombs, some of which failed to explode upon impact. They came
in bright yellow packages, too.
"Wires get crossed, with unintended consequences," Fick said.
Those consequences - the erosion
and eventual loss of trust in American forces and American policy -
were the subject of a recent lecture Fick offered College of Charleston
students and faculty when he stopped here as part of a book tour. He is
the author of "One Bullet Away," a memoir of his experience as a
commander in the Marines' elite 1st Reconnaissance Unit.
Fick was one of the first to
respond to the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, as part of the invasion force
into Afghanistan, and he helped lead the charge into Iraq about two
years later. His book recounts his prewar training and experience in
two conflicts as a captain of an infantry platoon.
His perspective is said to be
unique because he was a Marine who straddled the historical line
between pre-9/11 and post-9/11 America. His Dartmouth University
education and degree in classics make his an especially articulate
first-person account of battle.
But Fick is no yes-man.
He has harsh words for the Bush
administration and its policies in the Mideast as well as for the
yellow-ribbon crowd that refuses to question U.S. leadership.
"Occupation breeds resentment," he said. "When you have a boot on someone's neck, they don't appreciate it."
Fick bemoaned missed opportunities,
such as the chance in December 2001 to go after Osama bin Laden in the
mountains of Tora Bora after reliable intelligence showed the al-Qaida
leader likely was holed up there. But senior brass called off the
operation to seal the valleys - the only way out - instead leaving
matters in the hands of the Afghan Northern Alliance.
Fick said he suspects some improvised negotiating resulted in bin Laden's escape.
"Kick the anthill and everyone would scatter," he said. "And they'll never be in one place again."
While Fick disparages some of the
politics that determine the United States' Iraq policy, he is quick to
point out that the Marines fundamentally are apolitical. The military
is merely a tool politicians use to get what they want. And in the case
of Iraq, it can only set the stage for the Iraqis themselves to rebuild
their nation.
"Marines set preconditions for political change," Fick said. "The military, however, cannot affect that change."
Just because the Armed Forces are
apolitical - they follow the orders of the commander in chief
regardless of his party affiliation - that doesn't mean they have no
politics, Fick said.
The military is made up of
individuals who are overwhelmingly conservative and predominantly
Republican, he notes. "And that's a problem."
When most people in an organization share the same view, the world is seen in terms that are too absolute, he said.
Fick, who worked with Canadian,
British, Australian and German forces, said he had the sense that they
were more diverse politically and economically than the U.S. military.
This diversity encourages a nuanced interpretation of world events, he said.
Read on here because Fick also has some interesting things to say about the American public. One brief tidbit to entice you to continue:
"...Blue-state people seem to be
relieved that an ex-Marine, of all people, would speak out against
current policy, while red-state folks seem to be less willing to think
through the issues, he (Fick) said..."
Hmmmmm.
top
RSS feed
|