Feature: D.C. Water Cooler

Mission Accomplished—Now Come Home

Author: Jimmy Zuma
Published: May 05, 2011 at 8:19 am
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The killing of Osama Bin Laden is a defining moment in American life. In the coming days we will make a critical decision: Are we a nation at permanent war, or will our wars end when we achieve our goals. In other words, will we ever return to peace?

Almost nine in ten Americans supported the invasion of Afghanistan in late 2001, after the ruling government refused to turn over Bin Laden. We had a practical and moral imperative to bring him to justice. The Taliban’s obstinacy left us no choice but to go get him ourselves. (Lest you think I’m being an opportunist here, I continuously supported the war until May 1st.) Prior to their refusal to cooperate with us, the Taliban were a group of young, crazy-eyed fundamentalists that were most known for ill treatment of women and for blasting thousand year old relics into oblivion. “They will hand over the terrorists, or they will share in their fate,” then President Bush said. They were not, however, our enemies. They never attacked us. They never intended to. They were simply idiots.

A lot has changed in the last ten years. We have the largest career military in history and our intelligence services have grown maybe tenfold in size and budget. Over 850,000 people work in intelligence activities at 10,000 locations, according to the Washington Post. Over the last decade, no military leader has ever said, “Well maybe we ought to scale back. Enough is enough.” It’s simply not in the nature of the war fighter to stop until every last enemy is dead. That’s how we teach them to be. Wars in Iraq and Afghanistan have taught us that these career warfighters are not at all like the reluctant warriors of World War II. In that war, “amateur” volunteers and draftees were fighting to get back to their regular jobs. For today’s soldier, war is his or her job. And our career soldiers are almost universally high-achievers.

The other thing that always happens in during wartime is that grudges get made. Most of us are too old to remember “The Heinies.” Maybe you’re even too old to remember “The Gooks.” But I bet you remember “The Ragheads” don’t you. And most everybody who ever fought those guys still holds some sort of grudge; it’s normal. But it is also a near guarantee of mission creep. And mission creep leads to permanent war. We attacked the Taliban on their home turf. They had it coming, sure. But it made us their enemy. They fought back—and it made them our enemy. The guy who is rotating back for the fourth time is going to kill some Taliban. When he went for the first time it was to kill Bin Laden.

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Article Author: Jimmy Zuma

What is your political office talking about around the DC Water Cooler? Email Jimmy at jimmyzuma@smartvstupid.com or call 202.681.4091. America's Favorite Liberal™, Jimmy Zuma, writes Technorati's DC Water Cooler, a weekly feature of what the politicians and pundits are talking about. …

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