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Assessing the Iraq War

I don't have time to add much to this op-ed because I have to run and I'd rather get it posted now rather than later.  There is much more to assessing Iraq than just WMD's and Bush lied / thousands died.  Regardless of what went wrong (seriously wrong) at times, we have an opportunity to achieve something considered unthinkable by the rest of the world and we absolutely cannot let Obama and the left-wing Democrats completely drown out what Iraq could be about if things continue to progress.  We are still going to have headaches and heartaches going forward, but we are in position to actually win in Iraq and we cannot let political shortsightedness get in the way of what we can achieve after 5 years of hard fighting.  Victor Davis Hanson is exactly right on and his points are very important to understand.  I will try to add to this later on...

Iraq in Review

 
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Tim Russert -- R.I.P.

Tim Russert passed away today from a heart attack.  The country is going to miss him.  He was a great newsman and a very good person and my condolences to his family.  The political and news environment will not seem the same without him.

Tags: News  
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Out of Control Pensions

Politicians from both parties are guilty of this and will have a big hand in bankrupting our country if state, local, and federal spending is not brought under control.  
 
Is it right that an officer put 20 years in on the job and then get a full pension for the rest of his life based on approximately 70% of the value of his last yearly salary (if his last yearly salary were $100,000 he would make $70,000 per year for the rest of his life)?  If someone were to become an officer at the age of 25, retired at the age of 45, and died at the age of 85 he would have worked for 20 years and then received a full pension at tax payer expense for the last 40 years of his life.  Senator Obama -- is this what we're supposed to tax the rich for?  Not that I do not want police officers to be taken care of upon retirement, but something entirely different must be worked out.
 
And I don't mean to just pick on police officers at all -- this goes for ALL government employees.
 
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Good Message / Poor Messenger

Yep, the Republican argument usually wins out with even Democrats or Liberals when they are not getting their information exclusively from their own echo chamber.  Not surprising that the tag team of Krauthammer and Ferguson destroyed the Democratic team of Samantha Power (former foreign policy adviser to Obama) and Richard Holbrooke (former U.N. ambassador and Assistant Secretary of State under Pres. Clinton) on the issue of what party would keep America and Canada safer -- the Republicans or Democrats.  The debate was held in Toronto, Canada in front of a "mostly liberal and deeply anti-Bush crowd ".  Before the debate, 21% of the crowd agreed that a Republican in office would keep us safer.  After a 2-hour debate, that number had gone up to 43%.
 
The lesson here is that when you have good messengers who can articulate the Republican point of view (unlike Bush I, Bush II, and probably McCain -- but we'll see about that), then the message usually wins out.  I can't even tell you how many times I've discussed issues with Democrats who have had at least some change of heart once I've explained things from the Republican point of view...
 
 
Some audio on the debate is here:
 
 
hat tip: The New York Daily News
 
 
Tags: Iraq  
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What's Up With Barak On Iraq?

As Obama's surrogates and the Democrats are attempting to portray McCain as "confused" and "out of touch" (euphemisms for "senile"), could they please explain Obama's "confusion" with the current state of Iraq's situation?  Well, my favorite opinionist, Charles "The Hammer" Krauthammer, hammers away at Obama's Iraq position with his usual precision and clarity.  With there being a good chance that Obama could be our next president, I really wish that he would move on from whether or not he supported the war in the beginning or at all, and rather (as the Dems have always accussed Bush of not doing) actually look at the current reality on the ground in Iraq...
 
 
Tags: obama  
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Baghdad Artist (female)

I recently came across this blog of a female Iraqi artist.  I don't know if she actually lives in Iraq (well, the site is called "Baghdad Artist" or is an ex-patriot / refuge, but her art (in my humble opinion) is beautiful.  I'm not even sure if this is her art or not, but I'm assuming it is.  Whosever it is -- I think that it's rather nice.  Kind of reminds me of a more feminine Gustav Klimt (possibly the use of a lot of yellow / gold).  So nice in fact, that I'll have to add her site to my "Blog Roll" here at Joe Clark - Townhall...
 
 
Tags: Art (Iraqi)  
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Iraqi Gov. Checking Out Experience

My favorite Iraqi bloggers, Omar and Mohammed blogging from "Iraq the Model", discuss the possibility of a long-term security agreement between Iraq and the U.S.  According to Mohammed, the Iraqi government is being judicious in its decision to possibly seek long term American bases in their country -- "I am pleased to see that our government is dealing pragmatically with the issue and is seeking the opinion of countries that have experience with long-term U.S. military presence. The government sent delegations to Germany, Japan, and South Korea to listen to what they, not the mullahs, have to say about it" (italics added).
 
A chance to p*ss off the Mullahs of Iran??!!??  Sounds like fun to me (pass the popcorn -- no butter or salt please)!!
 
Tags: Iraq  
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If I Could Only Have Spoken to Hillary Sooner...

No, I never would have voted for Hillary Clinton anyway, but there are some things that I wish that she had said while campaigning in regards to the Iraq War and her vote to authorize it. I wouldn't agree with every point that Hillary would have made in my debate-speech that I’m writing for her, but this is how I would have deflected (instead of running from) the issue of her vote. It might possibly have placated, or at least somewhat silenced the far-left base of the Democratic Party, and probably would have made much sense to moderates and even many Republicans. She could have had her cake and eaten too, while sounding pretty damn presidential:

“Knowing what I know now, no, I would not have voted to authorize the use of military force against Saddam Hussein. If I knew then that Saddam Hussein did not in fact possess WMD’s at that time and if I knew that President Bush would so badly bungle the ensuing occupation, then I would have been content in continuing the use of international sanctions to keep Saddam in his “box”. And while I feel that we are all misled by the Bush administration, and in some cases out-right lied to, there are issues that my opponent, Senator Obama refuses to consider when arguing this point.”

“President Clinton’s administration, and most of Congress throughout the ‘90s, thought for sure that Saddam Hussein did in fact possess WMD’s. That was what the intelligence throughout that decade pointed to, as well as the fact that Saddam Hussein not only played cat-and-mouse with the UN inspectors for about 7 years and acted as a guilty party, but he had actually used WMDs against both Iran and his own people – the Kurds of northern Iraq. This was hard evidence that required no intelligence gathering. Not only do we now know that Saddam did not possess actual WMDs in 2003, but we also now know that he kept up this subterfuge so as to keep his arch-enemy, Iran, guessing as to his actual strength so well that even most of Saddam’s own generals did not whether or not Iraq actually possessed WMD’s or not. We also now know that Saddam had the means, technical know-how, and intentions to reconstitute his WMD program within weeks of international sanctions ever being lifted and that he had every intention of restarting his nuclear weapon program as well.”

“Knowing now the cost in lives, treasure, and American prestige that my vote helped to authorize the Bush administration’s bungling invasion of Iraq {pause}…no, in hindsight it would have been better to keep sanctions against Saddam. However, there are aspects of this vote that I do not apologize for nor do I regret. Those are: That we now know for certain that a Saddam WMD will no longer be used against the people of Iraq like they were used to kill thousands of Iraqi Kurds in the late ‘80s. That the majority Shia population of Iraq will no longer live in fear of their dictatorial tormentor. That the American public will no longer have to read or hear about how Saddam Hussein’s military was constantly firing at American aircraft patrolling the “No-Fly Zones” on almost a weekly basis at times; or hearing the serial liar Saddam Hussein playing political games with the UN and the international body politic while doing a fine job of corrupting sanctions and keeping the majority of his own people in abject poverty because he refused to come absolutely clean on his WMD programs. And last of all, as a decent human being respectful of human and civil rights and especially as a woman, I am damn proud that because of my vote that the “rape rooms” of Saddam Hussein’s intelligence apparatus have been put out of action for good.”

“So while the fairly new senator from Illinois, my opponent Barack Obama, tries to claim that he was “right” all along on the issue of authorizing the bumbling Bush administration’s invasion of Iraq, those of us who had to vote at the time faced some very serious issues and facts that had been staring America in the face for a long time. While I ultimately regret standing behind this current administration’s insistence to go to war and while the issue could have been handled better by a smarter presidency, let’s not pretend as if there are no redeeming features that came of my affirmative vote to remove Saddam Hussein from power. Those of us who disagree with the Bush administration’s handling of this war and for those of us who felt misled, lied-to, and shouted down, there are also many good things that have come from it and to totally ignore any of the positives gives absolutely no credibility to the fact the Middle East will no longer have to fear an aggressive Saddam Hussein-led Iraq; that the Kurds can probably live in peace; that the majority Shia will probably not have to look down the barrel of a gun anymore while their religious leaders are being assassinated; and women will not be taken from their homes in the middle of the night to hidden rooms where they would be raped while their families were forced to watch.”       

Tags: clinton  
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Should We CUT Domestic Oil Production?

Please read this first:
 
 
Since the new running argument from the Democratic Congress (specifically Senator Schumer and Speaker Pelosi) is that drilling in Anwar would reduce the cost of filling up one's gas tank by only "one penny per gallon", then lets examine this point philosophically (not that I'm a professional philosopher, but hey -- I did sleep at a Holiday Inn Express last night).  Lets assume that these two leading Democrats didn't pull the 1-red cent estimate out of either thin air or worse, from where the sun doesn't shine on either of them.  It's been estimated that drilling in Anwar could eventually lead to anywhere from 800,000 to 1,000,000 barrels of oil a day coming online.  Now, if the argument is that 800,000 to 1,000,000 barrels of oil per day would only decrease the price of oil by 1 cent per gallon, then wouldn't it stand to reason that if we cut domestic oil production by 800,000 to 1,000,000 barrels of oil per day that the cost to consumers would only go up 1 cent, or at most a few cents, per gallon?  So, basically we could cut domestic oil production by about 10,000,000 barrels per day at the cost of only around an extra dime per gallon?  
   It makes perfect sense to me and a it would be winning argument for the Democratic Party (and unfortunately John McCain as well) this year.  In fact, I propose that they use it as a rallying cry for the entire party and eventually the nation.  "My fellow greedy, polluting Americans.  For the price of an extra dime per gallon, we could reduce domestic oil production by 10,000,000 barrels per day and in the process help to keep our air, forests, oceans, mountains, and frozen tundra in northern Alaska pristine and free from pollution and really stick it to Big Oil and Big Speculators." 
Tags: Energy  
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Hiroshima: The Most Rational Decision

Well, it is well over a month since December 7th passed and I was busy with school work, but 12/7 (Pearl Harbor) and WWII in general have always been some of my favorite topics to study and discuss, so I wanted to take the time to make an argument here concerning President Truman's decision to drop the atomic bomb, which I believe was ultimately not necessarily the "right" or "wrong" thing to do, but the most "rational" decision to be made at that time for various reasons.  This was actually a paper of mine from one of my classes last semester, but without footnotes and references: 

Starting with the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor on December 7th, 1941, the Pacific War between Japan and the United States raged on for almost four years until Japan’s surrender aboard the American battleship U.S.S. Missouri in Tokyo Bay on September 2, 1945.  It was a most brutal and racist war fought over thousands of miles of open sea and hundreds of tiny islands by two adversaries that had been anticipating just such a conflict with each other and war-gaming for over at least a quarter-century before.  It was a war of incredible inhumanity in which quarter was rarely asked and rarely given.  Although hundreds of thousands of lives total on both sides had been lost over the almost the four year duration of this conflict, what finally brought such a war to a conclusion was the use of two bombs, each with a destructive capacity that had been previously unknown.  Although first used on August 6th, 1945, over sixty years later the dropping of the atomic bombs is still one of the most intensely argued decisions both emotionally and strategically. 

The destruction that was wrought on the civilians of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, as well as the bombs aftermath, was devastating, but the Japanese government did capitulate soon after.  The question since then has been, were the use of atomic bombs necessary or unnecessary, or “right” or “wrong”, to bring about the unconditional surrender of Japan?  Based on the American and Allied importance assigned to the policy of unconditional surrender and the numerous factors that President Truman had to take into consideration at that time, the decision to drop “the bomb” was the most rational one to make.  “Necessary” and “unnecessary” seem to imply that there were limited or unlimited alternatives that could have brought about an unconditional surrender.  While there were such possible alternatives, the consequences of such options were in no way, or any way, clearly visible to an administration that was trying to force an unconditional surrender, nor could the ultimate consequences of those alternative histories be accurately guessed at in hindsight because even the most subtle and unpredictable occurrences can have incredible consequences that would have been impossible to guess at or factor in.  “Right” and “wrong” imply moral or emotional arguments which are apt at times, but are difficult to apply to one decision in a war that saw the Bataan Death March, the Rape of Nanking, scientific experiments on human beings, large scale massacres, and the intentional bombing of cities.  Was it “right” to drop atomic weapons on the civilian population of a government whom that, even if they had no knowledge of, at least their military was responsible for incredibly “wrong” atrocities?  Was it “right” to end a war that had seen so many “wrongs” from all of the major belligerents in such a fashion?  It would be incorrect to argue that “necessary / unnecessary” and “right / wrong” hold no place in this debate at all because they certainly do, but in attempting to sidestep the unknown consequences of the alternative options in a “necessary / unnecessary” debate, as well as the various nuances of a “right / wrong” moral argument, as viewed from the historical prism of the summer of 1945 the most rational decision was for the atomic bomb to be used and that rationale was based on many factors, both known and unknown, at that given time. 

To see the dropping of the bomb as the most rational decision at that particular moment requires more than just judging the world situation at that particular moment in August of 1945, but must be judged from the context of the whole, and that is the entire war and its consequences up to that moment.  World War II was unlike any other war that had ever been fought, both in size and scope.  True, some previous wars had been fought by some powers across the globe such as the Eighteenth Century French and Indian War between France and Britain, but while it was fought out at different locations across the world it was limited in the amount of adversaries as well as destruction.  It can be argued that The Great War was not even a “World War” because while its participants came from all over the globe, the majority of the fighting took place on the one continent of Europe. 

World War II, however, was truly global in the amount of participants and the multiple theaters of war.  “World War” aptly describes what was at stake here in terms of the long term direction that world politics would take based on the outcome.  This perfectly described all-encompassing “World War” was not just fought on battlefields, but came to cities and induced not only the deaths of millions of citizens, but saw atrocities such as holocaust camps, scientific experiments, mistreatment of prisoners of war, rape on a large scale, and other horrific atrocities that could not, according to the morals of the time, just be written off as “war is hell.”  In other words, contemporaries of the years leading up to WWII did not consider their time to be equal to that of Genghis Khan.  It was a grueling, all-encompassing, total effort, hateful, racist war in which the Allies had long before determined that it would end only with the unconditional surrender of the defeated Axis alliance that Japan was a full-standing member of.  The reasons behind the concept of unconditional surrender were that the victorious Allies would not only be able to dictate and form the postwar realities of the Fascist, militant Axis powers, but also so that the citizens of these defeated powers would under no uncertain terms fully understand who had won and who had lost this war as opposed to many Germans, such as Hitler and his cohorts, who had made excuses for Germany’s losing The Great War.  It had been determined by the Allies that this uniquely terrible war was going to be ended in a fashion that would make the chances of another World War in the near future less likely.

Starting with Japan’s surprise attack against the vital American base of Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941, the war raged across the Pacific for the next three and a half years.  Virtually simultaneously to the Pearl Harbor attack, Japanese forces invaded and overtook the American held Philippines, British held Singapore and Malaya, and Dutch held Indonesia.  Along with the surprise attacks, their incredibly ill treatment of the captured western forces as well as the native populations added to the hatred and fear of Japan by these so far defeated Allied nations.  Reports of The Bataan Death March and the beheadings and near starvation conditions that Allied POWs were kept in filtered out to the Allied public.  After these initial successes, over the next six months Japanese forces soon overran Burma as well as sweeping into the islands of the South Pacific and threatening Australia. 

Starting with Midway, New Guinea, and Guadalcanal, the Allies started reversing Japan’s seemingly overwhelming tide of victory in the second half of 1942.  None of these came easy, but what made it particularly haring in the eyes of the Allies was how Japan’s army fought.  Instilled with the Bushido code, Japanese soldiers were expected to, and did, fight to the death.  It was either Sun Tzu or Clausewitz who stated something to the effect that the ideal objective when fighting a war was to get your enemy to surrender without even fighting.  Whoever did say it never fought Japan.  The fighting in all wars is dreadful, but the fight-to-the-death code that Japanese soldiers more often then not fought by made it a kill-or-be-killed war for Allied soldiers as well.  Allied soldiers knew the harsh treatment that awaited them in Japanese POW camps, so they gave little quarter to Japanese soldiers who did attempt to surrender anyway.  Due to Japanese actions and their Bushido code, as well as western racism towards Japan and some Japanese racism towards non-Japanese, the war in the Pacific became the fight-to-the death that the code demanded regardless if both sides wanted to fight by it or not.

Above is not a simple history lesson on the nature of fighting in the Pacific for the sake of it, but rather to impress the severity and seriousness of the fighting mentality of the Japanese military that President Truman would have to take into consideration when deciding whether or not to use his new atomic weapons.  For those who suggest that Japan was a defeated nation by August, 1945, she certainly did not act like one.  On the western front in Europe, western Allied forces, mostly American, British, Canadian, and French, made relative quick progress through western Germany after Hitler’s last gasp at the Battle of the Bulge in the winter of 1944.  Not that the Germany military simply capitulated in the west, but they did not fight as hard against the western Allies because much of Germany’s military realized that the war was lost and the focus was on fighting their arch enemy, the Soviets.  Fighting between Germany and the western Allies had gone pretty much according to the Geneva Conventions in regards to POWs in which they were treated humanly and properly for the most part.  German soldiers and western Allied soldiers knew that surrender was an option with each other.  By the end of the war tens of thousands of western Allied military personnel had been taken captive by the Germans and hundreds of thousands of Germans had been taken prisoner by the western Allies.

This is in direct contrast to the miniscule amount of Japanese POWs that had been taken in the Pacific and the miniscule amount of Allied POWs that had been taken by the Japanese after the treatment of the initial large scale Allied POWs at the surrender of the Philippines and Singapore.  The war in the Pacific was what the war on Europe’s eastern front was – a fight to the death with no quarter expected or given.  Soviet forces suffered one hundred thousand dead from the taking of Berlin alone.  If the fighting in the Pacific could be compared to the severity of the fighting on the eastern front, what kind of casualties could American forces expect to sustain in the taking of just Tokyo?  After their hard won reversals in the second half of 1942 and into 1943, Allied forces, the vast majority of whom were American, came up against tougher and tougher Japanese resistance the further west that Allied forces pushed across the Pacific towards the home islands of Japan.  At the Battle of Leyte Gulf, the kamikaze appeared on the scene for the first time and their suicidal dedication symbolized not only the desperate measures that Japan was willing to take in order to forestall an unconditional surrender, but the ferocity that awaited American and Allied forces the closer that they got to Japan.

The Battles of Iwo Jima and Okinawa, both Japanese home islands, were strategically important for the Allies, but the fighting that had occurred on those two islands is what is relevant here.  At Iwo, 21,000 Japanese soldiers were stationed there and fought from the miles of tunnels that had been dug in preparation to repulse an invasion.  Over 20,000 Japanese soldiers died defending the small island of Iwo Jima and for the first time since taking the offensive in the Pacific, American casualties outnumbered that of the Japanese with over 27,000 casualties, although less than 7,000 were deaths.  An even far bloodier battle followed at the Battle of Okinawa when 100,000 Japanese combatants were killed along with 150,000 civilians.  American casualties were over 70,000 with more than 12,000 of those being deaths.  Between these first two battles on Japanese home territory, over 120,000 Japanese combatants and over 150,000 civilians were killed, along with almost 100,000 American soldiers who were casualties with at least 19,000 of those being fatalities.  This does not include the more than 5,000 Allied sailors who were killed and hundreds of mostly damaged, but also sunken, allied ships due to kamikaze attacks.  All of these casualties on both sides for two relatively small islands that, while part of Japanese home territory, were not even part of the main body of islands that constituted Japan.

It was a dire situation that Japan faced by the spring of 1945.  Her defensive perimeter in the Pacific had been pushed back to the home islands which were under constant American bombardment as well as strangulation by the American submarine campaign.  On top of that, Germany had surrendered unconditionally in the first week of May of that year and now Japan had to face the concentrated efforts of all of the Allied powers when up to this point she had been consistently defeated in the Pacific during a three year period with only a fraction of total Allied power against her.  With so much going against her, why did Japan not surrender in the summer of 1945?  At issue was the acceptability of unconditional surrender which most Japanese leaders at the time did not find acceptable at least in regards to the unsure status of the emperor.  A Japanese emissary did try to negotiate with the Soviets into persuading America into accepting a conditional surrender, but the Soviets refused.  What had been decided by Japan’s highest leaders was to continue to fight on in spite of the fact that their navy and airpower were virtually destroyed, their cities were being bombed and fire-bombed virtually on a daily basis, they were now without allies, and Japan itself was estimated to be months away from a winter of starvation. 

For all intense and purposes, Japan was already defeated so what did they hope to get out of a protracted war?  The answer was a conditional surrender or truce that would not only leave the emperor in place, but also leave postwar Japan occupied-free.  They believed that the only way to achieve this was to make an invasion of the home islands too costly for the Allies so as to force a conditional end to the conflict.  The plan that they came up with was Ketsu-Go and was meant to be the answer against the upcoming American and Allied planned invasion of Japan codenamed Downfall.  Operation Downfall consisted of two separate operations.  Olympic, whose goal was to capture the southern half of Kyushu, was to begin on November 1, 1945.  The follow up operation, Coronet, was slated for March 1, 1946 and would be an invasion of the main home island of Honshu with the aim of capturing Tokyo and its local productive farm area, the Kanto plain.

A general argument that is used against Truman’s decision to use the bomb is the quarrel over the estimates of American casualties that could be expected to be incurred over the course of Downfall.  Estimates at that time, and subsequently, have been for anywhere from 40,000 to 1,000,000 Allied fatalities or all-inclusive casualties.  Critics of Truman’s decision seem to act as if the mere discrepancy between the various estimates, or that his advisors disagreed as to what to expect, is somehow an argument against the dropping of the bomb.  The issue of casualties should not even be an issue at all in regards to judging Truman’s decision even though the President himself undoubtedly incorporated the uncertainty of casualties while formulating his decision.  Historians, writers, and critics who try to make a point concerning the debate over casualties never seem to be able or willing themselves to state an acceptable number of casualties that the American President and public should have been willing to accept during the course of the proposed invasion.  Just because Truman had been given various estimates over such a wide spectrum, critics of his decision never seem to state that the “low” estimate of 40,000 deaths should have been acceptable because they know that no leader of a modern democracy would ever find such a number “acceptable” if preventable.  The disparity in casualty estimates is given too much unjustified importance in this historical debate to begin with.

Intelligence is another important factor when judging “the decision”, but in more ways than one.  American intelligence learned that Japanese representatives had been trying to use the Soviets to mediate a truce or conditional surrender, but it appeared that nothing serious was going to come of it at least in terms of an unconditional surrender.  Leading up to the proposed invasion, American intelligence learned that Japan had dramatically increased the number of troops in the proposed landing areas to the point that the ratio of attacking American troops to Japanese defenders would be close to 1:1. 

American intelligence had learned some key information here, but rarely does one know exactly how accurate that intelligence is at that given moment.  The Battle of Midway was an American intelligence victory, but there were plenty who disagreed with Admiral Nimitz right up until the battle that the attack was indeed destined for Midway.  Intelligence seemed to indicate that a Japanese attack was going to occur sometime in early December of 1941, but it did not outright say Pearl Harbor and intelligence officers did not, could not, and would not, interpret it to say Hawaii because it seemed so impossible to believe.  German intelligence had failed to anticipate Russia’s recuperative abilities and Stalin failed to pay heed to his own intelligence warnings concerning an imminent German attack in June of 1941.  In more recent times, American intelligence conflicted as to whether or not Saddam Hussein still possessed WMDs in 2003 and was eventually interpreted that he did which turned out to not be the case.  The recently released NIE report stated with “high certainty” that Iran had suspended their nuclear weapons program in 2003, which contradicts the NIE report of 2005 stating the exact opposite.  Only time will tell whether it is either the 2005 or the 2007 NIE report that is correct. 

The point is that not only can intelligence be right or wrong but how it is interpreted is equally as important.  President Truman could not compare intelligence contemporary to that particular moment with any absolute certainty as to any possible outcome.  This is not at all to suggest that intelligence is useless because this not true at all.  However, when dealing with the running up to the greatest invasion of all time and uncertainties of monumental magnitude that can mean the difference between success or failure and the lives of hundreds of thousands if not millions of people, including your own and that of your enemy, hinge on your decisions, when an option is available that might bring such a war to a certain end, it was rational and justifiable to use that option.

What would the alternatives have been if the atomic bomb had not been used?  It is impossible to say with certainty, but based on the battles of Iwo Jima and Okinawa, there is no reason to believe that both operations Olympic and Coronet would have been anything short of a blood bath in the face of Japan’s counter-invasion operation Ketsu-Go.  Japanese military planners had not only correctly guessed the American invasion areas for both operations, but their timing as well.  On top of that, kamikazes were to be used against troop transports this time instead of carriers, and Japanese civilians, including women and children, were expected to fight to the death as well using any weapons available, including spears.  Even if American and Allied casualties were at the low end of the spectrum, Japanese military and civilian casualties would almost certainly have been horrific and much greater than the combined destruction of both Hiroshima and Nagasaki. 

Other alternatives were to continue the bombing and incendiary bombing against Japan as well as keeping the successful submarine campaign against Japanese merchant shipping in place until Japan was starved into submission.  Nobody can tell how long that would have taken even though the winter of ’45 – ’46 would have been horrible for Japan and maybe Japan’s leaders would have accepted defeat by the following spring.  Considering how strong-willed Japan as a nation had been and the demands and sacrifices that their leaders had not only asked for but people responded to up to that point, surrender due to bombings and starvation in the spring of ’46 was no certainty as well.  Japan’s leaders still could have refused unconditional surrender in the hopes of American home front support eroding for a war that seemed all but over. 

In terms of “right” versus “wrong”, how “right” would it have been to fire bomb and starve a nation into submission over a period of a few months?  The shock value of the atomic bomb, the fact that one bomb could immediately kill so many as well as have long term consequences for many more, seems to outweigh, in the minds of many, the slower death by incendiaries and starvation that could have been an alternative, but might have wound up killing more.  When the issue of American casualties comes up and the idea that there was an “acceptable” level as opposed to dropping two atomic bombs, it would be fair to ask, “How many Japanese were their leaders willing to sacrifice in the face of an invasion or bombings and starvation?”  In the minds of Japan’s leaders, what were their acceptable casualty numbers and ratios and how could they justify them?

In the face of all of this, a perfectly rational question would be, “How necessary was an unconditional surrender?”  That would be hard to quantify because the right type of conditional surrender could have been very close to an unconditional surrender.  However, unconditional surrender would virtually guarantee that America would have a say in the future development of Japan, as it did with Germany and Italy as well, so as to make the chances of a future war much less likely.  Considering that the future of the world was at stake in WWII, the ferocity of the fighting that raged for years around the globe including the Pacific, and the national and total mobilization efforts that were required to fight that war, the United States and her allies had every right to demand nothing less than an unconditional surrender that would help ensure that the world would develop more in line with their own interests.

Another argument that some make when passing judgment on Truman’s decision is to categorize it as a “entering the postwar message to the Soviets”.  That could reasonably be described as one of Truman’s motives for using the bomb and could very well be correct.  Well, President Truman did have to worry about the Soviet’s postwar intentions as the Cold War eventually proved his own misgivings about that situation correct.  A protracted war with Japan that would allow the Soviets to quickly expand their influence in Asia, and possibly Japan itself, would not have been in America’s postwar interests.  To say that this was Truman’s main reason if not only reason to drop the bomb is not intellectually honest at all when judging the situation in the Pacific as it had developed over a three year span and what both the United States and Japan faced in August of 1945. 

It feels more “right” to argue that the use of the atomic bombs were “unnecessary” because frankly it feels immoral and “wrong” to argue otherwise.  To defend the incineration of almost 200,000 civilians is not easy and alternatives always arise as to what more humane action could or should have been taken.  What if President Truman had demonstrated the power of the bomb to Japanese observers instead?  It is a fair question, but one that does not answer definitively whether or not Japan’s leaders, some of whom saw it as Japan’s obligation to die for their emperor, would have been convinced by reports from a proving ground.  Japan’s supreme leadership was tied three to three as to whether or not to surrender unconditionally even after the dropping of the second atomic bomb.  It took the Emperor to cast the tie-breaking vote in favor of surrender and even then his government had to face down a coup by younger officers over the next couple of days.  Another fair question is, “Why didn’t Japan’s leaders just surrender when faced with utter defeat, bombardment, starvation, and were without allies?”  The fact is that regardless of who the leaders are of any nation they face multiple options and choices that they must weigh.  To bring the world’s bloodiest and costliest war to an end the quickest and bloodless way foreseeable, while taking everything else into consideration at that moment as well as the accumulated experience of the preceding years, President Truman made the most rational decision available.     

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11.17.07: This Date In History

1558: Elizabeth ascended to the English throne upon the death of Queen Mary.

1800: Congress held its first session in Washington, D.C., in the partially completed Capitol building.

1869: The Suez Canal opened in Egypt, linking the Mediterranean and the Red Seas.

1973: President Richard M. Nixon told an Associated Press managing editors meeting in Orlando, Florida, "I'm not a crook." (NY Times.com)

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Thanks America

Damn straight!  Thank God for America and nobody explains better than Mark Steyn...

America's Gift to the World
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11.15.07: This Date in History

November 15, 1777: The Continental Congress approved the Articles of Confederation, precursor to the U.S. Constituion. (courtesy of NY Times.com)
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Review: Amazing Grace

FYI, any review I ever do for either a movie or a book will never be long, but rather straight to the point.  In this case, I just watched, "Amazing Grace", just out on video.  It's the true story about late 18th Century / early 19th Century British parlimentarian William Wilberforce who successfully led his approximately twenty year long campaign to end the slave trade throughout the British empire.  And there's a little for everyone in this movie.  It's an inspirational movie about perservering to do what is right, and both human & civil rights crusaders will be happy as will people who are religious (not that the two are mutually exclusive) because William Wilberforce was both of those wrapped up in one -- a deeply religious human & civil rights crusader.  A truly heroic individual. 
 
Plus, you'll get to find out who wrote the song, "Amazing Grace"...

Amazing Grace 
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Why Do People Hate Us? (Boo-Hoo)

I was recently having dinner with two friends when politics happened to come up (and no, I wasn't the one to get us started on politics).  Concerning the war at least one friend, if not both, stated the obvious that amongst other things the war has cost us much in terms of world opinion.  It wasn't a particularly long conversation, but in regards to world opinion I basically stated that one should be wary about exactly how those opinions are formed.  Not that someone, or in this case a great many people, cannot have a different opinion, but what if it's a misinformed opinion (not to mention people who don't follow the news themselves but just regurgitate what their peers say)?  What if the opinions of the many are not very well informed or have been misled in so many different ways?  In that case, how much emphasis can one put on that large body of opinion?

My example is the link below and concerns much of western opinion concerning Israel and the Middle East.  It appears that yet again another mainstream media outlet (this one in France this time) has been caught basically fabricating a pro-Palestinian story to fit the template that they have been pushing on the west for decades now and that is one of a brutal Israel that does not have a care in the world towards Palestinians.  This time it was France 2 that was caught in the act.  This is not the only story like this -- they are put out there by "respectable" news organizations every single day in order to push the political agenda that many in the newsrooms support.  And sometimes instead of it being a scripted story, it could just be that the reporter doesn't even understand what he or she has just witnessed because, yes, reporters are human and do make mistakes as well.  Mistakes, however, that can have dire consequences because of the number of people that they reach who won't even know that a particular story has been corrected or redacted.

Now, when reading the linked article, think about this...just how, and how much, has "world opinion" been formed based on news stories like this one?  This video was not just carried by France 2 and seen only in France, but was seen all over the world, and once again, these types of false stories are put out there at least weekly if not daily by "reputable" news agencies (i.e. Newsweek and their false story about Korans being flushed down the toilet in Guantanamo Bay which lead to massive riots across the Muslim world as well as many deaths).  So, while I do not give much credence to a "world opinion" knowing that many are forming some of their opinions based on scripted news, misinformed opinions do worry me.

Al Durah Blood Libel
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