You don’t need to read
yet another person’s opinion on what to do about ISIS.
Instead, let’s talk history,
specifically Vietnam’s.
I didn’t fight in
Vietnam, so I have no first-hand knowledge to share with you. I only got so far
as an Army physical in the Cadillac Tower in downtown Detroit when I was 18. My
draft number was never called.
And it’s a good thing my
number wasn’t called, too. I’d burned my draft card as soon as it arrived in
the mail. With so many people burning their draft cards, a rumor began that the
newer cards were printed on asbestos. I had to try it.
But even though I didn’t
fight in Vietnam, I could read. I read a lot about the war. There are strong
parallels between Vietnam and the war we’re getting drawn into in the Middle
East.
Carpet
bombing doesn’t work.
For those who weren’t around, the United States tried to turn Vietnam into an
air war by unloading tons and tons of explosives. It didn’t work, in part,
because the foliage was so deep that pilots couldn’t see what, if anything,
they were bombing.
Lack of visibility led
us to defoliate Vietnam by dusting the countryside with Agent Orange, a highly
toxic chemical agent that took out plants and, supposedly, would allow us to
see what we were bombing. That didn’t work either, but it made thousands of
American troops sick. All told, during the 20 years (1955-75) of the Vietnam
War, just over 211,000 American troops were killed.
There isn’t anything to
defoliate in the Middle East, so ISIS has taken to hiding in plain sight, just
as the Vietnamese did. Our Middle Eastern enemy hides in hospitals, homes and
neighborhoods – places we dare not bomb for fear of wiping out civilians.
We
are bombing everything we can in the Middle East. Now we have a coalition working
alongside us, bombing everything they can, trying to keep the fighting in the
air. That’s a problem, because we’ve already proved it doesn’t work.
Why are we pushing the air
war? Because no one wants to be the guy who sends troops in, that’s why. We
learned, or I thought we learned, the dangers of sending in ground troops.
During a lucid moment,
Sen. John McCann said, not too long ago, that we can fight ISIS over there, or
here. It just so happens that he’s right.
ISIS has already brought
the war here. If we’re learning anything about ISIS, it is that they are a very
patient enemy, willing to plot for more than a year to execute one of their
terrorist plots, such as San Bernardino. From what I’ve read, the Vietnamese
were the same way: Wait ‘em out.
We know who won in
Vietnam.
We have two choices:
commit to ground troops in the Middle East or get out now and shore up our defenses
at home. Ask a United States’ Vietnam veteran if he thinks another prolonged
ground war thousands of miles from home, a war of inches, would be a bright
thing to do.
P.S. Whether you like
him or not, Barack Obama is still our president. GOP candidates for the office
Obama holds should stop criticizing everything the president says. It shows
everyone who is watching disunity and a splintering of those who would lead the
country. Before they can lead, they need to learn to follow.
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