An Internet hub for moderates, centrists, and independents, with domestic and international news, analysis, original reporting, and popular features from the left, center, and right

General Confusion: McChrystal, Petraeus

When Dwight David Eisenhower came back from World War II, no one knew whether he was a Republican or Democrat until he ran for president. He had spent his years as a commanding general steering clear of politics.

Not so today. Starting three years ago when Iraq was in shambles, George W. Bush took political cover behind Gen. David Petraeus, who successfully redirected a misbegotten war into a counter-insurgency that worked well enough to open the way for American troop withdrawal under the next president.

Now, in Afghanistan, this breach of traditional military-political separation is haunting the effort to devise a new strategy for another failing war.

Suddenly, Barack Obama’s choice, Gen. Stanley McChrystal, is embarrassing his Commander-in-Chief by making preemptive speeches about decisions still in the making, leading to the kind of possible confrontation unseen since Harry Truman fired Gen. Douglas MacArthur in 1951 for politicking to widen the Korean War.

McChrystal is no MacArthur, and his going public prematurely is much more likely the result of inexperience rather than arrogance, but the Petraeus precedent is complicating a painful debate in a time of political polarization.

As he showed clearly on 60 Minutes last month, McChrystal is a conscientious, forceful commander with no illusions about Afghanistan, but going public with what should be his confidential advice to the President before final decisions are made is a disservice to both his Commander-in-Chief and Pentagon superiors.

Meanwhile, Gen. Petraeus, who may or may not be thinking about running for president in 2012, is reported to have “largely muzzled himself from the fierce public debate about the war to avoid antagonizing the White House, which does not want pressure from military superstars and is wary of the general’s ambitions in particular.”

Read the rest of this entry.

  • JeffersonDavis
    Great article!

    I'd failed to stop and look at McChrystal in that light. I must be getting old.

    Petraeus is a great general. McChrystal? Not so much.
    May be time for the President to pick a better (non-political) General. Of course, he should have done that in the first place.
  • Davebo
    Again, it seems to be a media fabrication.

    And you can read his actual speech for yourself rather than the Telegraph's interpretation of it from " sources close to the administration" or an "adviser to the administration".

    He told the Institute of International and Strategic Studies that the formula, which is favoured by Vice-President Joe Biden, would lead to "Chaos-istan".


    Actually that's a formula suggested by a nut named Richard Marbury who has zero foreign policy or COIN experience.
  • I think it was "speech" not "speeches." McChrystal either unknowingly stepped in a minefield or had a lapse of judgment. People do such things. I don't think comparisons to MacArthur are apt at all unless McChrystal repeats his mistake.
  • DLS
    "May be time for the President to pick a better (non-political) General. Of course, he should have done that in the first place."

    The President probably did the best thing at the time of his election (and before that, when he was truly confident he would be elected), which was to not make the mistake of so many libs 'n' Dems and wreck Defense (by robbing it, mainly). Note that he left Gates in charge, who could be the "ax man" when the coming reductions in Defense were to materialize. We've seen one blunder after another this year that has involved silly rushing; there's no need for him to rush with Afghanistan, or to truly gut Defense (as, for example, Barney Frank wants to do, a prompt 25% reduction, with which funds would be spent on who knows what other vote-buying measures instead).
blog comments powered by Disqus
© 2005-2009 The Moderate Voice | Site design by Elegant Themes | Site customization, hosting, and security by Enxit Group, LLC