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Past Mistakes Must Not Be Repeated, Gates Says
By Donna Miles American Forces Press Service
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WASHINGTON, April 22, 2008 – Succeeding in Iraq is critical to prevent
a repeat of the strategic mistake in post-Soviet Afghanistan that
ultimately led up to the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, Defense Secretary
Robert M. Gates told cadets at the U.S. Military Academy at West Point,
N.Y., yesterday evening.
 Defense
Secretary Robert M. Gates speaks to a group of 84 senior cadets
majoring in Advanced National Security Studies at the United States
Military Academy at West Point, N.Y., April 21, 2008. Defense Dept.
photo by Cherie Cullen (Click photo for screen-resolution image);high-resolution image available. |
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And although a war with Iran would be “disastrous” to the United
States, there’s no choice but to keep the military option on the table
in light of Iran’s nuclear ambitions, he said.
The
way U.S. civilian and military leaders confront these and other
pressing challenges will affect “how, where and when you may be sent
into battle in the years ahead,” Gates told the cadets.
He
noted the very different public perceptions about two conflicts in
which the cadets are likely to serve. The war in Afghanistan is viewed
largely as “a war of necessity -- striking back at the staging ground
of the perpetrators of Sept. 11,” he said. “The Iraq campaign, while
justified in my view, is seen differently by many people.”
Gates
said he recently told Congress that the United States was attacked on
Sept. 11 and is at war today in Afghanistan “in no small measure
because we mistakenly turned our backs on Afghanistan after the Soviet
troops left in the late 1980s.”
“We made a strategic mistake
in the end game of that war,” he said. “If we get the end game wrong in
Iraq, I told the Congress, the consequences will be far worse.”
Gates
conceded that sustaining the fight in Iraq “is a hard sell,”
particularly in light of its high financial and human costs, but is
necessary to avoid “an even uglier fight or even greater danger to our
country in the future.”
Afghanistan looms as a reminder that those risks aren’t just hypothetical, he said.
Meanwhile,
rogue nations like Iran that support terrorism destabilize the Middle
East and Southwest Asia, Gates said. He said he believes Iran is
“hell-bent on acquiring nuclear weapons.”
“Another war in the
Middle East is the last thing we need and, in fact, I believe it would
be disastrous on a number of levels,” Gates said. “But the military
option must be kept on the table given the destabilizing policies of
the regime and the risks inherent in a future Iranian nuclear threat --
either directly or through proliferation.”
These, as well as
the threat posed by violent jihadist networks, bring new perspective to
the doctrine of preemption that’s been criticized in many corners, he
said.
He posed questions with which the United States and its military leaders must grapple:
--
“With the possibility of the proliferation of nuclear, biological and
chemical weapons, and the willingness of terrorists to use them without
warning, can we wait to respond until after a catastrophic attack is
either imminent or has already occurred?
-- “Given the
importance of public opinion and public support, how does one justify
military action to prevent something that might happen tomorrow or
several years down the road?
-- “While ‘never fight unless you
have to’ does not preclude preemption, after our experience with flawed
information regarding Iraqi weapons of mass destruction, how high must
the threshold of confidence in our intelligence have to be to justify
-- at home and abroad -- a preemptive or preventive war?”
Other
seemingly clear-cut axioms extolled by military giants like Gens. Gen.
George C. Marshall and Dwight D. Eisenhower aren’t quite so clear-cut
in light of the challenges the United States faces, Gates said.
How,
for example, does the country grapple with the principle, “never fight
alone,” when its allies aren’t willing to step up as required? Gates
asked the cadets.
“What do you do when, as is the case today
with NATO in Afghanistan, some of your allies don’t want to fight? Or
they impose caveats on where, when and how their forces may be used? Or
their defense budgets are too small as a share of national wealth to
provide a substantial contribution?”
Gates expressed
frustration that NATO has more than 2 million men and women in arms,
yet struggles to sustain fewer than 30,000 non-U.S. troops in
Afghanistan. Meanwhile, the United States is “forced to scrounge, hat
in hand, for a handful of helicopters” from NATO.
Gates pointed to one more Marshall-Eisenhower axiom the United States and its military must confront: “Never fight for long.”
Six-and-a-half
years since the Sept. 11 attacks and five years into the Iraq war, the
United States is involved in the second-longest war since the
Revolution, Gates noted.
“The current campaign has gone on
longer, has been more difficult, than anyone expected or prepared for
at the start,” he said. “And so we’ve had to scramble to position
ourselves for success over the long haul, which I believe we are
doing.”
Gates called a troop drawdown in Iraq “inevitable over time,” calling the ongoing debate in Washington “largely about pacing.”
But
ultimately, he said, the kind of enemies the United States faces today
won’t allow it to remain at peace. The so-called “Long War” is likely
to be “many years of persistent, engaged combat all around the world in
differing degrees of size and intensity,” he said.
This challenge “cannot be wished away or put on a timetable,” Gates said. “There are no exit strategies.”
But
how American leaders, both military and civilian, grapple with these
issues and dilemmas will have far-reaching consequences, including the
kinds of wars the military will be called to fight, Gates told the
cadets.
He urged them to draw on lessons learned at West Point
and to demonstrate the agility, resourcefulness, imagination and
integrity the country needs of its military officers as they confront
these challenges.
All, Gates noted, enrolled at the academy
knowing they were likely to be called into combat. All had the
credentials to choose something easier or safer or better paying than
military service. Instead, he said, they chose the mantle of duty,
honor and country.
Gates expressed thanks for that decision, from the American people and from himself personally.
“It
is undoubtedly politically incorrect for me to say that I feel
personally responsible for each and every one of you, as if you were my
own sons and daughters,” he said. “And so my only prayer is that you
service with honor and return home safely.” |
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