Army Times: ‘Time for Rumsfeld to go’

03 November 2006 10:21 pm by Taylor Marsh

Army Times: “Time for Rumsfeld to go”

UPDATE (1:11 p.m. – 11.4.06): The Army Times is now up.


Bush and the Republican Congress have ignored pleas from retired generals for
years. Now, in an unprecedented act, the Military Times Media Group is demanding
Rumsfeld step down. It is unprecedented. They are offering this editorial on
the eve of the election for one reason only. Our military establishment wants a change, is demanding that it happen now. Things are dire in Iraq, and the people currently in charge are not up to the task at hand. It is a rebuke of the most serious sort.

Underlying the editorial below is something else, an awakening. After years of refusing, Republicans have illustrated they cannot
do the job. Bush is not capable of doing what any competent commander in chief would do. The U.S. military establishment is asking for the people to step
in, regardless of their pronouncements to the contrary. Nothing could be any plainer, because it comes after Bush's stubborn stance that Rummy will stay until the end of his presidency.

Enough. Vote for change. The U.S. military has led the way.


An editorial scheduled to appear on Monday in Army
Times
, Air Force Times, Navy
Times
and Marine Corps Times,
calls for the resignation of Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld.

The papers are sold to American servicemen and women. They are published
by the Military Times Media Group,
which is a subsidiary of Gannett Co., Inc.

Here is the text of the editorial, an advance copy of which we received
this afternoon.

Time for Rumsfeld to go

“So long as our government requires the backing of an aroused and informed
public opinion … it is necessary to tell the hard bruising truth.”

That statement was written by Pulitzer Prize-winning war correspondent Marguerite
Higgins more than a half-century ago during the Korean War.

But until recently, the “hard bruising” truth about the Iraq war
has been difficult to come by from leaders in Washington. One rosy reassurance
after another has been handed down by President Bush, Vice President Cheney
and Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld: “mission accomplished,” the
insurgency is “in its last throes,” and “back off,” we
know what we're doing, are a few choice examples.

Military leaders generally toed the line, although a few retired generals
eventually spoke out from the safety of the sidelines, inciting criticism
equally from anti-war types, who thought they should have spoken out while
still in uniform, and pro-war foes, who thought the generals should have kept
their critiques behind closed doors.

Now, however, a new chorus of criticism is beginning to resonate. Active-duty
military leaders are starting to voice misgivings about the war's planning,
execution and dimming prospects for success.

Army Gen. John Abizaid, chief of U.S. Central Command, told a Senate Armed
Services Committee in September: “I believe that the sectarian violence
is probably as bad as I've seen it … and that if not stopped, it is possible
that Iraq could move towards civil war.”

Last week, someone leaked to The New York Times a Central Command briefing
slide showing an assessment that the civil conflict in Iraq now borders on
“critical” and has been sliding toward “chaos” for most
of the past year. The strategy in Iraq has been to train an Iraqi army and
police force that could gradually take over for U.S. troops in providing for
the security of their new government and their nation.

But despite the best efforts of American trainers, the problem of molding
a viciously sectarian population into anything resembling a force for national
unity has become a losing proposition.

For two years, American sergeants, captains and majors training the Iraqis
have told their bosses that Iraqi troops have no sense of national identity,
are only in it for the money, don't show up for duty and cannot sustain themselves.

Meanwhile, colonels and generals have asked their bosses for more troops.
Service chiefs have asked for more money.

And all along, Rumsfeld has assured us that things are well in hand.

Now, the president says he'll stick with Rumsfeld for the balance of his
term in the White House.

This is a mistake.

It is one thing for the majority of Americans to think Rumsfeld has failed.
But when the nation's current military leaders start to break publicly with
their defense secretary, then it is clear that he is losing control of the
institution he ostensibly leads.

These officers have been loyal public promoters of a war policy many privately
feared would fail. They have kept their counsel private, adhering to more
than two centuries of American tradition of subordination of the military
to civilian authority.

And although that tradition, and the officers' deep sense of honor, prevent
them from saying this publicly, more and more of them believe it.

Rumsfeld has lost credibility with the uniformed leadership, with the troops,
with Congress and with the public at large. His strategy has failed, and his
ability to lead is compromised. And although the blame for our failures in
Iraq rests with the secretary, it will be the troops who bear its brunt.

This is not about the midterm elections. Regardless of which party wins Nov.
7, the time has come, Mr. President, to face the hard bruising truth:

Donald Rumsfeld must go.

 
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