Over the past couple months, we have tried to make the point that cuts in the military, although fashionable, will come back to kick us in the backside. In the following article, Admiral James Lyons does a great job of communicating the issue we are facing.
We do not want to face another Pearl Harbor, but the drastic cuts being proposed and required under the Debt Limit crisis, will create a similar environment as was the mood in the country prior to WWII. At that time we were, as a country, very isolationist. We did not want to intervene in the European or Asian War. We had no dog in those fights.
However, Pearl Harbor changed all that. We now had been attacked and within days were in full wartime mode. Cars, appliances and most manufacturing were turned into war production. Consumer goods were put on hold so the plants could turn out goods to support the war effort.
We must learn from the past, it is a good teacher, if we listen! Will we learn the lessons or repeat them? We think there is a good chance of repeating them.
David, who is a faithful commentator on this blog is indicative of the prevailing attitude expressed very well by him. It is their beliefs (and Ron Paul's) that should pull back our troops, cut back spending, and reduce or eliminate new programs. He is entitled to his opinions, however, we disagree.
America is the only Superpower, at this moment. With that role comes some responsibility to the world to maintain some sort of order. We have troops in (way to many countries, in our opinion) over 90 countries which definitely could be reduced. However, by having troops in countries like South Korea, we are the stabilizing force. If we pulled out, the North would attack within months but they will not if we are there.
Reducing military levels, equipment and readiness is a poor decision and we hope those in Washington will come to agree with us.
What do you think? Do you agree with me or is David right?
Conservative Tom
Today’s defense cuts are recreating conditions that led to Pearl Harbor
By Adm. James A. Lyons
The Washington Times
December 12, 2011
As we mark the 70th anniversary of Imperial Japan’s attack on Pearl Harbor of Dec. 7, 1941, America is on the verge of committing the same mistakes that helped plunge our nation into its most grievous war. The first mistake then was to impose the strategic restraints of “political correctness” on our Hawaiian military commanders. Adm. Husband E. Kimmel, commander in chief of the U.S. Pacific Fleet, was ordered by Chief of Naval Operations Adm. Harold R. Stark to prepare the fleet for deployment but not do anything provocative that might offend the super-sensibilities of the Japanese. Lt. Gen. Walter G. Short, commanding general of the U.S. Army Force in Hawaii, who was responsible for the air defense of the Hawaiian Island including Pearl Harbor, was ordered not to take any offensive action until the Japanese had committed an “act of war.”
Does it sound familiar? The political correctness imposed on our commanders leading up to the attack on Pearl Harbor, regretfully, resonates in today’s military, including the war on terrorism and our efforts to defend ourselves from China.
A second mistake then – about to be committed again – is the gutting of our military readiness, which, at the time of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, was a national disgrace. It was so bad that Gen. George C. Marshall, chief of staff of the Army, and Adm. Stark wrote a joint letter to President Franklin D. Roosevelt, asking him not to issue any “ultimatum” to the Japanese because they knew the U.S. Pacific Fleet was numerically inferior to the Imperial Japanese Navy. Compounding the problem, Gen. Short was not provided with basic resources, including adequate surveillance and fighter aircraft. He was given only three mobile radar stations with coverage out to 120 miles that could only be operated between 4 a.m. and 7 a.m. each day due to lack of personnel and power.
Fortunately, over the years we have learned the hard lesson that unpreparedness invites aggression. President Reagan’s “Peace through Strength” is as valid today as it was 30 years ago. The Cold War was won based on that strategy. Today, however, with fighting two wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, our military as well as our resources have been severely strained. While we still have the resources to protect our national security and achieve our objectives, political correctness has imposed restricted “rules of engagement” on our warfighters, resulting in many unnecessary fatalities.
No enemy has been able to defeat our military. Our forces represent the best of America and guarantee not only our national security but provide the recognized military underpinnings to support our friends and allies against aggression.
The threats we face today cannot be ignored. We are being challenged by China not only in the western Pacific but globally. Their spread of nuclear weapons technology to North Korea, Pakistan and Iran has been destabilizing. Nor can their transfer of weapons and missiles to Iran be swept under the rug. A resurgent Russia, plus an unstable Middle East with a nuclear-equipped Iran, must be factored into any threat equation. Since we have not displayed political will when directly confronted by Iran, a nuclear Islamic Republic will be uncontrollable in the Middle East and possibly elsewhere.
While our military has always had the conventional resources to eliminate Iran’s nuclear weapon infrastructure, that capability will be severely constrained in the future as a result of the supercommittee’s budget stalemate. Panetta has stated that such severe cuts will “gut the military.” With the threats we now know exist, our national security will be in danger.
There are some members of Congress who have suggested that the mandatory cuts to defense should be modified. In a recent Politico-Battleground poll, the American people by an overwhelming 82 percent reject further cuts to our national defense. However, that sentiment does not appear to resonate with President Obama, who has categorically stated that he will veto any change to the mandated defense cuts. Clearly, such draconian cuts place our national security in jeopardy. One of the president’s key duties under our Constitution is “to provide for the common defense.” A presidential veto would raise the question: What is the real objective? What lesson do we have to learn over again?
Retired Adm. James A. Lyons was commander in chief of the U.S. Pacific Fleet and senior U.S. military representative to the United Nations.
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