|
Maybe from some of the generals and not others. I've heard some of the wing-nuts try to paint this as a Democratic-led conspiracy, but I've seen nothing to indicate the generals' words are in any way coordinated. As if our Party ever coordinated anything. :rofl:
Be that as it may... None of these men are stupid. They had to know that speaking out against Rumsfeld would reflect back on Bush. Unless they naively thought Bush would take some action against Rumsfeld and thus have the opportunity to show some leadership and bolster his approval ratings. Or even if they weren't naive, maybe they thought they had a duty to make their case and hope for the best.
Ya know, when it was just Zinni against the war itself and the way it's been run (and he's been at it a long while now), I was always peeved that he laid all the blame at Rumsfeld's door, seeming to forget the military maxim that a commander (-in-chief) is "responsible for everything his unit does or fails to do."
But now all these other retired generals seem to be doing the same thing (except Clark, of course--he has always known where the real fault lay). It actually sort of baffles me. They should know better.
I know it's hard for many military officers to overcome the mind-set that you just don't criticize the commander-in-chief. I mean, that technically goes for the SecDef too, but it's not so deeply engrained. It may be as simple as the psychology of the difference.
Or it may be that they (or some of 'em) really just don't like Rumsfeld's authoritarian leadership style, and truly believe it's that style that has kept the ground-commander expertise from being heeded and thus has led to all the failures.
Or they may well be Republicans who think Bush is great and so refuse to believe it's Bush's fault. Batiste said he voted for Bush twice, and he has to have seen things going south before Nov 04. Altho I should add that the fact that Faluja was attacked just 2 days after the Nov election opened a lot of eyes. The military had practically begged to take out the insurgency there in March, before it got too entrenched. They know good men and women died who shouldn't have, and all for politics.
As I've mentioned before, I have a wing-nut brother who a retired major and now works as a DoD contractor in the DC area. He LOVES Bush, most for religious reasons, but has always despised Rumsfeld and thinks it's just one of Bush's little "failings" that he's just too loyal. I don't think his attitude is uncommon.
|