Beginning in the early afternoon, a cadre of military and civilian soldiers loyal to Gen. Stanley McChrystal began to spread rumors throughout the capital city: that ground commanders in Afghanistan were threatening to resign ... that the CIA's chief of station in Kabul had stepped down ... that the commander of the Joint Special Operations Command (JSOC), William McRaven, was irate and wanted to step down ... that commanders of the "special mission units" like McRaven's former subordinates at DevGru (SEAL Team Six) would refuse taskings from the National Command Authority ... that buried secrets were about to be exposed, like who actually leaked the McChrystal Afghanistan review to Bob Woodward.Really? All of Stan's buddies were going to jump ship and throw down with Obama too? All of these big, bad ass operators were going to go all Ed Harris in The Rock? Really? Why the hell isn't Sec. Gates cleaning some house then? Cause it certainly seems like there's a friggin mutiny on our hands here, and that's just unacceptable all the way around.
First, though a lot of officers who hitched their careers to McChrystal are indeed quite angry, no one has resigned, the CIA's station chief remains in place (though he's quite close to McChrystal) and McRaven isn't going anywhere. Second, it is meaningful and endearing that so many people are loyal to McChrystal. They revere the man. Third, such behavior, while in one context explicable, is precisely an argument in favor of President Obama's decision to remove McChrystal. The war is about more than one man. No deviations from the mission are acceptable. There is politics in war, and there are now numerous ways to complain; there is no question that after eight years doing God knows what in service to the country, frustrations had built up. But for those who talked to Rolling Stone, no matter how well-intentioned they were, no matter what they've done, their decision to open up to the magazine suggests that they had not learned, or had forgotten, the cardinal rule: your power is a trust that has been established by civilian politicians accountable to voters, and it is maintained by these politicians. No matter how well you've done, you will, at the end of the day, be held accountable to those who are held accountable to the republic itself.
A lot more people than McChrystal need to get checked up from the neck up or given the boot altogether. This banana republic crap has to go. There is no place for this in a civilian government like the US.
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ReplyDeleteDamn just missed the comments
ReplyDeleteWhat happened to freedom of speech?
Censorship :-(
Deleting the comments doesn't make you any less of a scumbag.
ReplyDeleteYou of all people, have ZERO basis to judge any of the men and women who serve our country.
You're not even fit to serve me a fucking order of french fries.
It's ok, I know you're having an internal monologue on if you should delete it or not.
ReplyDeleteDo it.
Not like it won't show back up.
The truth shines bright.
And yet you have the time to anonymously threaten me.
ReplyDeleteThat takes real courage there. You know, if you did server in the military, I would hope you would have learned more discipline then that.
As it is, you're nothing more a petulant child throwing a tantrum, stalking somebody else through the internet.
Coward.
And you're posting on the internet instead of doing your job.
ReplyDeleteLazy cunt.
Ignoring TheDouchebag, for a moment...
ReplyDeleteFreedom of Speech is a bad thing to call upon on the internet. Just saying, Waffles.
If you were joking, sorry, but it's a personal pet peeve of mine.
More so because I missed the removed comments :-(
ReplyDelete