The Army Six Years after 9/11
Sep. 11th, 2007 02:48 pmAt my Rotary meeting today, Lt. Colonel Fredric Kaehler came and gave a nice speech about his experiences in the Army. He is an Army Engineer officer, West Point grad, and was at Fort Polk, LA, when 9/11 happened. Since then, he's made three visits there, including a year combat tour.
I did get to ask two questions, which I will reproduce here with his answers. Please note - these are LCOL Kaehler's opinions, not reflective of the Army or US Government.
Question: Pakistan and Saudi Arabia are both highly unstable countries. Saudi Arabia is ruled by a group of 80-year-old men, and Pakistan is a military dictatorship. If we have to go in and "rebuild" these countries, is the Army big enough?
Answer: Probably not. We cut back too much in the 1990s.
Question: You've mentioned in your talk the large number of contractors used in our logistics efforts in Iraq. Are we over-dependent on contractors?
Answer: The number of contractors is enormous. Our amount of contractor-related work is probably why this war is so very expensive.
I did get to ask two questions, which I will reproduce here with his answers. Please note - these are LCOL Kaehler's opinions, not reflective of the Army or US Government.
Question: Pakistan and Saudi Arabia are both highly unstable countries. Saudi Arabia is ruled by a group of 80-year-old men, and Pakistan is a military dictatorship. If we have to go in and "rebuild" these countries, is the Army big enough?
Answer: Probably not. We cut back too much in the 1990s.
Question: You've mentioned in your talk the large number of contractors used in our logistics efforts in Iraq. Are we over-dependent on contractors?
Answer: The number of contractors is enormous. Our amount of contractor-related work is probably why this war is so very expensive.
no subject
Date: 2007-09-12 03:18 am (UTC)Even with a more muscularly funded military, the American involvement in Vietnam was largely a failure. However the comparison is not entirely fair, unlike what many commentators (especially lefter ones (Vietraq? Pfft.)) seem to think.
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Date: 2007-09-12 01:32 pm (UTC)Re Saudi: Yeah, it's an easier nut to crack. My concern about its stability is that it's ruled by people who are the sons of Ibin Saud, the country's founder. After the last sons of Ibin Saud die, there's no clear line of succession and thousands of candidates.