The president calls the fight against the novel coronavirus a « war. » True, it is a war we neither started nor wanted. But like Vietnam and Iraq II, it is « war » we are losing for surprisingly similar reasons.
July 29 (UPI) — In Anatomy of Failure: Why America Loses Every War It Starts, the title was my book’s argument. Since the end of World War II, despite claiming it had the greatest military in the world, America’s record in using force was far from distinguished.
Korea was at best a draw. Vietnam was an ignominious defeat. America is still embroiled in Afghanistan. And the second Iraq War was the single worst strategic disaster for America since the Civil War.
Fortunately, America « won » the Cold War, a conflict we did not start. While the 1990-91 Iraq war was brilliantly waged, Saddam Hussein started it and the George H. W. Bush administration was wise enough not to expand the war once Iraq was ejected from Kuwait.
Today, the president calls the fight against the novel coronavirus a « war. » True, it is a war we neither started nor wanted. But like Vietnam and Iraq II, it is « war » we are losing for surprisingly similar reasons.
The fundamental factors that ensured failure in using military power were consistent regardless of the party in power. In the first instance, presidents and their administrations lacked sufficient knowledge and understanding of the conditions in which force was to be used. Second, the reasons for going to war were manufactured and proved to be wrong. Third, presidents lacked the experience and judgment that led to flawed assumptions and decisions. Fourth, « group think » too often dominated decisions. And finally, « expert » advice was ignored or rejected.
Vietnam was the classic case of failure and how these factors produced it.