Saturday, October 01, 2005
Direct From the Horse's Mouth
...to the horses’ asses
Marine Col. Jeff Vold:
..."Support the troops,” the lawn signs say, “bring them home.”But it doesn’t work that way, says Vold. “I try not to take it personally. The reason I’m a Marine is to ensure this is a free country. But I don’t think the protesters know the effect they’re having on the soldiers. You’re always tired, cold or hot, homesick. The last thing you need is a sense that people back home say your mission is doomed, when you see good things happening all the time.”
Vold adds that antiwar rhetoric sometimes implicitly portrays soldiers as dupes on a fool’s errand. “We volunteered to go to Iraq. The guys over there, who know the situation best, are re-enlisting in great numbers. Most of the guys I served with think this is the best thing America has done in our careers.”
How did the Sheehan protest play in Iraq? Yesterday, I asked Vold’s friend, Lt. Col. James MacVarish, an adviser to Iraqi troops in Fallujah. He told me in an e-mail that the Iraqis he works with believe such protests and the press they generate “play directly to the strengths of our mutual enemy.” Iraqis “are absolutely astounded,” he adds, “that we ‘allow’ that to continue.” A few days ago, he had to give his Iraqi colleagues an hourlong civics lesson on freedom of the press.
..."The battle with the terrorists left Fallujah in rubble,” says Vold. “But every day, people thanked us. ‘We might have to rebuild our house,’ they said, ‘but you gave us back our city.’ “...
MacVarish says that the terrorists can’t win militarily. So their strategy is to make the U.S. and Iraqi people “bleed a little every day.” They hope that the resulting media attention will turn the tide of American opinion against the war, and make the political cost of sustaining it too high. “The more play the press gives Cindy Sheehan,” MacVarish concludes, “the better the terrorists’ chances are of ultimately succeeding here.”
What would a terrorist victory mean? “If we leave before the new government is established and the Iraqi Army is ready,” says Vold, “the people will be at the mercy of the bad guys”—beheaders and torturers, who blow up children. MacVarish minces no words: “If the terrorists win over here, stand by. There will be no stopping them anywhere in the world."
.
Vold knows the painful cost of aborting a mission midstream. He was in Somalia in early 1994 when America turned tail. “We abandoned the Somali people because we took 18 casualties in October 1993,” he said. “It was a shameful act.” That same year, he sat in frustration on a troop ship off Kenya as hundreds of thousands of people were hacked to death in Rwanda. After the first Gulf War, he says, we left the Shiites to a bloody fate. “In Iraq, we’re going to stay the course against the terrorists and give the people a chance at freedom and a representative government."
Statistics
This page has been viewed 18345293 times
Total Entries: 5718
Total Comments: 4193
Total Trackbacks: 714
Most Recent Entry: 06/14/2011 06:44 am
Most Recent Comment on: 11/27/2011 05:18 pm
{/if}



















