The Madness of Our Politicians: Excerpt from Bacevich’s Washington Rules
P. Schultz
November 23, 2014
Read the following and recognize
that those waging war in Vietnam knew, early on, that we could not “win” and
yet they went ahead anyway:
“One point
deserves particular attention here. For
Bundy and others in the administration, the urge to act grew out of
considerations unrelated to the crisis of the moment or even to Vietnam as such. The formal report rendered by the Bundy
mission let the cat out of the bag: ‘We cannot assert that a policy of
sustained reprisal will succeed in changing the course of events in Vietnam,’
that report acknowledged. ‘What we can
say is that even if it fails, the policy will be worth it.’ The very act of
bombing the North would demonstrate American will, ‘damp[ing] down the charge
that we did not do all that we could have done.’ Pain inflicted on the North
Vietnamese would ‘set a higher price for the future upon all adventures of
guerilla warfare,’ thereby increasing ‘our ability to deter such adventures.’
In effect, the United States needed to bomb North Vietnam to affirm claims to
global primacy and quash any doubts about American will. Somehow, in faraway
Southeast Asia, the continued tenability of the Washington consensus was at
stake.” [p. 98, first emphasis added to Bacevich]
You must remember that the same
logic applied to the sending of troops to Nam and to whatever death toll this
involved. In fact, given this logic, the
higher the death toll to American troopers, the better – because it would
illustrate that the US was serious! Now if this is not madness, then I
don’t know the meaning of the word.
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