Why the Generals Lie....

Cypress

Well-known member
I always heard my 'bro, and other military officers, say that anyone at the rank of Colonel or above, can't generally be trusted to be straight, and tell the truth.

Not that this is universally true, but colonel and generals are professionally vested in the institution of the Pentagon and the Government, to a large degree. They don't want to rock to boat, or make too many enemies. They have hugely successful careers to look after.

My 'bro always said it's the junior officers who will more likely, give you the straight poop, on a war, on the Pentagon, or on a military deployment:



Active duty Lt. Colonel blasts Bush & generals over Iraq

From Armed Forces Journal
By Lt. Col. Paul Yingling

THE GENERALS REFUSED TO STAND UP TO BUSH

If the policymaker desires ends for which the means he provides are insufficient, the general is responsible for advising the statesman of this incongruence. The statesman must then scale back the ends of policy or mobilize popular passions to provide greater means. If the general remains silent while the statesman commits a nation to war with insufficient means, he shares culpability for the results....

THE GENERALS LIED TO THE THE PUBLIC

America's generals have repeated the mistakes of Vietnam in Iraq.... America's generals did not provide Congress and the public with an accurate assessment of the conflict in Iraq....

After going into Iraq with too few troops and no coherent plan for postwar stabilization, America's general officer corps did not accurately portray the intensity of the insurgency to the American public. The Iraq Study Group concluded that "there is significant underreporting of the violence in Iraq." The ISG noted that "on one day in July 2006 there were 93 attacks or significant acts of violence reported. Yet a careful review of the reports for that single day brought to light 1,100 acts of violence. Good policy is difficult to make when information is systematically collected in a way that minimizes its discrepancy with policy goals."

BUSH AND THE GENERALS DIDN'T SEND ENOUGH TROOPS TO IRAQ, AND THEY KNEW IT

The most fundamental military miscalculation in Iraq has been the failure to commit sufficient forces to provide security to Iraq's population. U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM) estimated in its 1998 war plan that 380,000 troops would be necessary for an invasion of Iraq. Using operations in Bosnia and Kosovo as a model for predicting troop requirements, one Army study estimated a need for 470,000 troops. Alone among America's generals, Army Chief of Staff General Eric Shinseki publicly stated that "several hundred thousand soldiers" would be necessary to stabilize post-Saddam Iraq. Prior to the war, President Bush promised to give field commanders everything necessary for victory. Privately, many senior general officers both active and retired expressed serious misgivings about the insufficiency of forces for Iraq. These leaders would later express their concerns in tell-all books such as "Fiasco" and "Cobra II." However, when the U.S. went to war in Iraq with less than half the strength required to win, these leaders did not make their objections public.

Given the lack of troop strength, not even the most brilliant general could have devised the ways necessary to stabilize post-Saddam Iraq. However, inept planning for postwar Iraq took the crisis caused by a lack of troops and quickly transformed it into a debacle.

TYING UP SO MUCH OF OUR MILITARY IN IRAQ PUTS AMERICA AT RISK

Moreover, America's generals have not explained clearly the larger strategic risks of committing so large a portion of the nation's deployable land power to a single theater of operations.

CONGRESS IS THE ONLY ONE WHO CAN SAVE US (I.E., NOT BUSH)

We still have time to select as our generals those who possess the intelligence to visualize future conflicts and the moral courage to advise civilian policymakers on the preparations needed for our security. The power and the responsibility to identify such generals lie with the U.S. Congress.


americablog
and

http://www.armedforcesjournal.com/2007/05/2635198
 
Bush is their boss....It is the military which is Authoritarian not Democratic.

"WE" hired the dummy to be the head of the military....
 
Bush is their boss....It is the military which is Authoritarian not Democratic.

"WE" hired the dummy to be the head of the military....

A lot of generals helped LBJ lie his ass off during vietnam.

I understand it's hard for any human, to put their career at risk. But, the lying generals, and the enablers, have blood on their hands too.
 
Yes same thing with LBJ. He was their boss.
And I won't deny the blood on the hands issue at all. Especially for Generals and such, that again is their job.
 
Back
Top