First, I am pretty annoyed by the media, who seem to think that bombing is a miracle cure that should have led to reversals in ISIS's fortunes. So, I have been tweeting stuff like this:
Doolittle raid surprises Japan, hitting 13 targets Japan has not yet surrended #IfTwitterExistedInHistory pic.twitter.com/B0BUIz6mwB
— Stephen Saideman (@smsaideman) October 8, 2014
NATO started bombing Serbia last night. Milosevic has not yet surrerended Kosovo. Bombing campaign a failure? #IfTwitterExistedInHistory
— Stephen Saideman (@smsaideman) October 8, 2014
Allied armies land in France. Germans continue to fight on. D-day may be dud-day. #IfTwitterExistedInHistorySecond, I read a really good piece by Peter Feaver on whether generals should resign in protest. I culled a few key quotes
— Stephen Saideman (@smsaideman) October 8, 2014
"the military is not always correct, and so it is not wise policy for the commander-in-chief to simply do whatever the generals say"
— Stephen Saideman (@smsaideman) October 8, 2014
"challenge of command is not deciding whether to listen to generals but deciding which generals best understand the strategic situation"
— Stephen Saideman (@smsaideman) October 8, 2014
"The constitutional fix for bad military policy by the executive branch is better oversight from the congressional branch" #CivMIlWisdomand then my response to the classic quote by Clemenceau:
— Stephen Saideman (@smsaideman) October 8, 2014
and Civ-mil is too important to be left to just executive branch RT @KTBrushett: War is too important to leave to the generals. Clemenceau
— Stephen Saideman (@smsaideman) October 8, 2014
I guess my timing is good--I submitted yesterday a grant application to study the role of legislatures in the civil-military relations of 21st century democracies. Now back to an earlier book project that is getting a second life thanks to Putin's irredentism.
2 comments:
And let's not forget how all those airstrikes finally made Libya into a kinder, gentler place in the long run, right?
Air strikes are good for breaking stuff, not building. Our aim in Iraq is not to build an Iraqi govt but to break ISIS. We will need help, but this is something we have done before.
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