From
Post 12:
Again I admit there's some valid points from one perspective, but IMO they are negated by the necessity of a military.
anotheratheisthere wrote:
Just for the sake of the debate, and not as an attack to you or the military as a whole, I'm going to go ahead and fundamentally disagree with you on something:
You said "the military is a tool of the politicians, but this tool is necessary".
I disagree.
I'm having difficulty understanding your post if you say its not an attack on the military
as a whole. IMO, the tone of your post is an attack (in the sense of debate, not vitriol).
anotheratheisthere wrote:
I submit to you that for us to go out and kill millions of people is NOT necessary to keep us safe. Quite the contrary.
As I said, we shouldn't condemn the military for its misuse by politicians. I would agree we've fought some questionable wars, including the current Iraq war, but this doesn't negate the need for a military. Our military is also a deterrent for those that would attack us.
anotheratheisthere wrote:
I submit to you that having killed half a million in Iraq does the very opposite of the military's goal of keeping us safe. More orphans, widows and son-less fathers hate us and want to do us harm.
Agreed. However, it was the politicians that sent the military. There was no overt declaration of war by the Pentagon until they were told to wage the war.
anotheratheisthere wrote:
I submit to you that Jesus would agree with me on this.
I was unaware Jesus was in the Chain of Command.
anotheratheisthere wrote:
In principle, as a tool of national self defense, the military may be necessary. But the US has abused that tool to the degree that it can no longer make that claim.
Again, I don't dispute the politicians have abused their powers. What I do dispute is the notion that the military is useless or a force for bad on its own.
anotheratheisthere wrote:
As an analogy: you and I have the right to bear arms. But if we went on a shooting spree in a mall and killed 30 people, we'd lose the right to bear arms, right?
Just as a General would lose his command for starting a non-sanctioned action.
anotheratheisthere wrote:
In Vietnam we went on a shooting spree. In Iraq GOD KNOWS we went on a shooting spree.
War is a "shooting spree", I don't know how this can be avoided, given current technology.
It was the politicians that instigated this spree, not the military.
I challenge anyone who claims to know the mind of God to show they speak truth.
anotheratheisthere wrote:
You ask: Are we to have a military that second guesses those in command?
Yes! For crying out loud, f**king yes! Of course members of the military should hold its leaders accountable!
As I mentioned, the realities of war more often than not preclude second guessing. Especially so the lower down the ladder one is placed.
anotheratheisthere wrote:
Look at the last 10 times that US soldiers were asked to fly to the other side of the world and kill civilians. Of the last 10 times, how many times would it have been better if the soldiers had refused?
None. If soldiers refuse to soldier, we no longer have a military.
anotheratheisthere wrote:
Vietnam? Panama? Graneda? Iraq the first time? Iraq the 2nd time? Afghanistan? Korea?
Vietnam - fight the spread of communism
Panama - fight a narcotics trafficker.
Iraq 1 - remove occupying forces from Kuwait
Iraq 2 - I agree was a misuse of forces, but it was politicians that declared that war, not the military.
Afghanistan - fight folks committed to the destruction of the US
Korea - fight the spread of communism
Of your six (though you mentioned 10) I see one illegitimate use of the military, and note the military did not instigate that action.
anotheratheisthere wrote:
Millions died in those wars. How many American lives did we save by invading Iraq and killing hundreds of thousands of children? How many American lives did we save by invading Graneda and killing thousands of children?
I challenge you to support the Grenada assertion.
I accept the Iraq assertion, but remind all that war is a messy business, and with current technology civilian casualties are nigh on impossible. We rely on the military to do its job, and we should not be surprised when we tell it to do that job, and it does that job.
anotheratheisthere wrote:
As a soldier, you have to realize that you are part of an apparatus that has gone to war for the wrong reasons the overwhelming majority of the time.
Disclaimer: I single-handedly fought off the Russians in the Cold War (my efforts were hushed up at the highest levels - why are you laffin' at me). I have no real combat experience.
I look to your "last 10 times", notice you only point to six of them, and note that of those six the majority were legitimate, even UN sanctioned.
anotheratheisthere wrote:
When you have that brown-skinned person in the sights of your M-16, realize that chances are good that that person doesn't deserve to die.
I make no racial distinctions when I'm ordered to kill the enemy. If I feel my life or the life of my team is in jeopardy, I kill.
anotheratheisthere wrote:
Chances are good that when you look back to that moment on your deathbed, history will have already determined that killing her was a mistake.
Soldiers don't have time to think of their legacy, except to wanna leave one.
anotheratheisthere wrote:
When is a soldier going to say to himself "Wait a minute, here I am in some third world country killing somebody else's daughter, mother or wife, while back home insurance companies kill 46,000 Americans/year by denying healthcare coverage. I am being scammed".
A soldier works to "insure" the life of every citizen they are tasked to represent, regardless of the actions of civilian insurance agencies. Let the military talk to these civilian agencies and see how quick they're persuaded to change their policies.
anotheratheisthere wrote:
When is a soldier going to say to himself "You know what, next time some gray haired martini wielding politician wants to go exterminate some brown people, he can send the sons of the rich lobbyists who put him in office. I'm staying home, protecting my family and reading my Bible".
The soldier has these concerns, only they have committed themselves to the protection of some of the very folks they dislike.
I, and I'm sure others, would ask when are these "gray haired martini wielding politicians" gonna do right by our military?