Last week, Rep. John Murtha ignited a firestorm by denouncing the Bush
Administration’s failed Iraq policy, and calling on the United States to adopt a
“change in direction” to better serve coalition forces, the Iraqi people, and
our foreign policy as a whole.
Right wing reactionaries quickly denounced Murtha, a decorated Vietnam Veteran
with unflappable national security credentials, as calling for a “cut and run”
from Iraq.
As a fellow Marine who spent much of his career doing “contingency planning” in
places like South Korea, Kosovo, and Somalia, I would argue that Congressman
Murtha is simply advocating for a victory strategy that reallocates military
resources in light of the ever-changing realities on the ground, by:
Some are calling for more troops. More troops along the borders might have
prevented the insurgency’s growth 2 ½ years ago, but would be counter-productive
today. In November 2005 Iraq, we have achieved our military objective of regime
change, and are viewed as an unwelcome foreign “occupier” by more than 80% of
Iraqis. More troops means more targets in an increasingly anti-occupation
environment.
Perhaps most important, Murtha has brought the murky problem of failed
leadership into plain view---noting that a lack of constructive debate about the
administration’s policy and an absence of shared sacrifice for this war have
forced U.S. service personnel and their families to bear its costs, and failed
strategy, almost entirely alone.
Interestingly, the concept of “shared sacrifice” has not only failed to
consistently make news, but it has failed to illicit a response from officials
at all levels of government. As a veteran, I believe patriotism means sharing
the burdens that national security requires—exemplified not only through our
conduct of military operations, but through our long-term responsibility to
veterans and their families. Therefore, we must ask:
In closing, Rep. Murtha is NOT trying lay blame, or re-hash the bungling of
prewar intelligence. He’s leading a constructive re-evaluation of America’s
military strategy in Iraq, and our country’s obligation to share the sacrifice
of war with veterans and their families. There is nothing unpatriotic about
elected representatives questioning the merits of public policy when thousands
of lives and America’s credibility around the world hangs in the balance.
Semper Fidelis,
Jim Cook
Candidate for the California Assembly, 10th District
9542 Laguna Lake Way
Elk Grove, CA 95758