juliaoceania
Posts: 21383
Joined: 4/19/2006 From: Somewhere Over the Rainbow Status: offline
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quote:
ORIGINAL: Archer As with any job there are levels at which the various bucks stop. In a Command it stops at the top of the command for things like troop requests. Runsfeld and Bush ask Casey "Do you need any more troops or can you do the job with what you got?" Casey says I got it handled with what we have, Now Casey's opinion may not agree with the Division commander's but since Casey outranks him Casey tells the General "Sorry I think you have enough troops to get the job done." If Casey was being denied troops he wass requesting we'd hear about it. loud and long. But we're not hearing that we're hearing subordinate generals after retirement saying They wanted more troops for their division, but they were denied. And media and political operatives will try to make hay out of those denials without telling us that the denial came from their supervisor based on the fact that the supervisor thought they had enough troops to do the job. If a war is going bad and has been for a long time, where does the buck stop? All these rationalizations, projections of blame on everyone else, never taking responsibility, never apologizing or admiting mistakes.. who ultimately takes the blame for a lost war? All the pieces come together when a war is lost, some battles are decisive, but it takes the big picture to fight a war... why aren't those at the top finding out what happens at the bottom? If they are not getting the information they need to win their war, whose fault is that? These are valid questions, I expect no answer because if it were an honest answer then there would be blame at the top, and there seems no willingness to put the blame there. The reason only retired generals are speaking out is that active ones can't... Pass the buck... nothing new there... some people never take responsibility for the little pieces that lead to failure
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Once you label me, you negate me ~ Soren Kierkegaard Reality has a well known Liberal Bias ~ Stephen Colbert Great minds discuss ideas; Average minds discuss events; Small minds discuss people. Eleanor Roosevelt
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