Wars That Never Should Have Been Fought Cannot Be Won

Perpetual War Abroad Is the Most Insidious Enemy to Liberty and Freedom at Home

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Reprinted from Bracing Views with the author’s permission.

I wrote my first article for TomDispatch in 2007, two years after I’d retired from the military. That article was highly critical of the U.S. military and its disastrous war in Iraq. I wrote that we, the citizens of America, had to save the military from itself and its worst excesses. Sadly, we the people have been demobilized; we have no say about “our” military and its wars.

In fact, while the Iraq and Afghan Wars are now officially over, both lost at enormous cost, we the people are still issuing blank checks to a Pentagon that is wildly if not fatally deluded and delusional.

Much like a black hole, the Pentagon keeps sucking in everything around it, especially taxpayer dollars

Back in 2018, Tom Engelhardt, the creator, editor, and prime mover of TomDispatch, asked me to write a new introduction to my article from 2007. Here’s that intro as I wrote it back then:

Retiring from the U.S. military liberated my tongue, but I quickly learned few people were interested in what I had to say. In 2007, I was outraged by the way the Bush administration hid behind the richly bemedaled chest of General David Petraeus, using his testimony before a spineless Congress to evade responsibility for the catastrophic war in Iraq. I wrote an op-ed about how ‘my’ military was deluding itself not only into believing that it was the ‘greatest’ but that it could somehow find a formula to win an unwinnable war. I sent it to the usual suspects, newspapers like the New York Times and Boston Globe, with no response. A friend then mentioned a website I’d never heard of, TomDispatch.com, and I found a man there who would listen: today’s equivalent of I.F. Stone, Tom Engelhardt. What started as a one-off article led to 55 more ‘Tomgrams’ over the last decade.

In that very first post, I asked, ‘How can you win someone else’s civil war?’ It’s a question the U.S. military still avoids asking, let alone answering. Indeed, a state of what I then called ‘ongoing self-delusion’ about war persists in that military and American society as a whole. More than a decade later, its commanders continue to mislead themselves and the rest of us by speaking about ‘new’ approaches that promise ‘progress’ in places like Afghanistan.

Who will teach the Pentagon that wars that never should have been fought cannot be won? Who will remind the American people that perpetual war abroad is the most insidious enemy to liberty and freedom at home? Members of the military, active duty and retired, need to speak up. Our oath to the Constitution was never about saluting smartly and following blindly, but about allegiance to the noble ideals expressed in that document. William J. Astore, May 2018

Since 2018, I’ve written another fifty or so articles for TomDispatch, nearly all of them focusing on U.S. military folly and fallacies. It hasn’t mattered. Both parties, Republicans and Democrats, profess their unconditional love of “our” troops, even as they’ve shoved and shoveled trillions of dollars to the military-industrial-congressional complex, the all-powerful MICIMATT* that increasingly infects our lives and infests our society and culture.

This November provides us another opportunity to go to the polls and allegedly vote for what we want. Most people want peace. The Republicans and Democrats offer us more war. Might I suggest that we vote for a person or party that actually seeks peace?

It’s highly unlikely we’re going to vote ourselves out of the mess we’re in. Look at the mainstream candidates! But at least we shouldn’t vote for yet more insanity.

*MICIMATT: military industrial congressional intelligence media academe think tank complex. To that you can now add Hollywood and the world of sports as well. Hercules had a much easier time vanquishing the hydra. It only had seven heads.

William J. Astore is a retired lieutenant colonel (USAF). He taught history for fifteen years at military and civilian schools. He writes at Bracing Views.

8 thoughts on “Wars That Never Should Have Been Fought Cannot Be Won”

    1. Never say never….All things are possible through the love of father, mother and son. :-)
      We need to have hope for all of humanity! And that is the way to Peace!

  1. ”Let there be Peace on Earth and let it begin with me!…”
    There are no blank checks!
    Human life ain’t cheap!

  2. A bit of cynicism is healthy and perhaps even necessary.
    This excellent and a must see!
    Thanks for sharing this!!!

  3. You ain't seen nothing yet… The US will stop fomenting wars when it finally loses the last one – and that's coming real quick now. And when I say "lose", I don't mean "pack up our gear (or leave it behind) and leave" – I mean lose a major amount of actual military assets and human lives. And that's coming real quick now, too.

    Read my lips – the US CAN NOT "win" – or even survive – against Russia and/or China. Further, the US can't "win" against Iran – and shouldn't try as it's likely to bring a conflict with Russia and/or China.

    1. The military leadership doesn't really want to go into Iran at all. A country with three times the area and twice the population, with more difficult terrain, an intact infrastructure, a moderately well equipped and trained military, and a mostly homogeneous population who is well aware of who has been making them suffer for the last century. They want to go into Venezuela even less, with jungle, even worse terrain, small armories scattered about the country and local militias trained to use those weapons.

      Either country would be a career-killer, no general wants to be forced to retire because their campaign is a bloodbath for their troops. Makes getting cushy MIC board positions after retirement very difficult to acquire.

  4. I agree, "we shouldn't vote for yet more insanity"! Vote outside of the Rep/Dem Party.

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