[Vision2020] 10-19-04 LA Times OP/ED: U.S. Troops' Other Struggle

Art Deco aka W. Fox deco at moscow.com
Tue Oct 19 08:55:59 PDT 2004


http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/editorials/la-ed-iraq19oct19.story
EDITORIAL
U.S. Troops' Other Struggle

October 19, 2004

With metronomic regularity, President Bush declares that he has given and will 
give the U.S. military everything it needs to fight Iraqi insurgents. But the 
evidence is mounting that the administration, to borrow a famous Bush word, not 
only misunderestimated the number of troops required but is even now failing to 
properly equip the ones that are in Iraq.

A Times report today details continued nagging shortages of such critical items 
as helicopter parts and vehicle armor. And Army Lt. Gen. Ricardo S. Sanchez, the 
top commander in Iraq from mid-2003 until this summer, warned the Pentagon in a 
brutally frank Dec. 4, 2003, letter that a lack of spare parts was crippling his 
ability to fight the insurgents: "I cannot continue to support sustained combat 
operations with rates [of parts] this low," he said in excerpts published Monday 
in the Washington Post. The general declines to comment, and the Pentagon says 
that, almost a year later, all is well.

No, it's not, particularly among National Guard and Reserve units. As an 
apparent insubordination by 18 men and women from the 343rd Quartermaster 
Company based in South Carolina revealed, the administration is demanding that 
the former "weekend warriors" perform the duties of regular troops but isn't 
providing the means to execute them. That, if the soldiers' complaints are 
correct, includes armored and mechanically sound trucks as well as sufficient 
combat infantry escorts for supply convoys.

Although the military has improved in equipping soldiers with body armor, it 
still struggles to stay even with an insurgency that has become increasingly 
sophisticated and lethal.

In the presidential campaign, Bush regularly excoriates Sen. John F. Kerry for 
voting against an $87-billion supplemental war appropriation last year, a vote 
that Kerry has struggled to defend. But the measure passed, and the shoddiness 
and lack of backup that drove the Guard members to refuse their supply mission - 
knowing that they risked their careers and freedom in doing so - are not Kerry's 
fault.

Even the military, whose very structure is threatened by any insubordination in 
a war zone, is implicitly acknowledging the accuracy of the complaints and is 
treating the Guard members with kid gloves.

The level of refusal is far from what it was at the height of the Vietnam War. 
As Col. Robert D. Heinl Jr. wrote in the Armed Forces Journal in 1971 in a 
widely reprinted article, "Our army that now remains in Vietnam is in a state 
approaching collapse, with individual units avoiding or having refused combat, 
murdering their officers and noncommissioned officers, drug-ridden and 
dispirited where not near mutinous."

The South Carolina Guard members' refusal to man a fuel convoy seems downright 
polite compared with that. But the complaints are representative of what other 
troops face, and reports from the field underscore their validity.
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