For once, I wholeheartedly agree with Bill Kristol: Donald Rumsfeld is a national embarrassment and his (mooted) departure can't come too soon. I am hoping that, as suggested, he is just hanging around long enough not to muck with the Iraq election (such as it is), and that he will then gracefully bow out. However, it is only a faint hope. After all, he's been loyal to Bush, and as it's painfully obvious that loyalty counts far more than competence in this administration, who's to say if Rummy will ever be held to account for his gross negligence?
"Since the Iraq conflict began, the Army has been
pressing ahead to produce the armor necessary at a rate that they
believe -- it's a greatly expanded rate from what existed previously,
but a rate that they believe is the rate that is all that can be
accomplished at this moment. I can assure you that General Schoomaker
and the leadership in the Army and certainly General Whitcomb are
sensitive to the fact that not every vehicle has the degree of armor
that would be desirable for it to have, but that they're working at it
at a good clip."
So the Army is in charge. "They" are working at it.
Rumsfeld? He happens to hang out in the same building: "I've talked a
great deal about this with a team of people who've been working on it
hard at the Pentagon. . . . And that is what the Army has been working
on." Not "that is what we have been working on." Rather, "that is what
the Army has been working on." The buck stops with the Army.
At least the topic of those conversations in the
Pentagon isn't boring. Indeed, Rumsfeld assured the troops who have
been cobbling together their own armor, "It's interesting." In fact,
"if you think about it, you can have all the armor in the world on a
tank and a tank can be blown up. And you can have an up-armored humvee
and it can be blown up." Good point. Why have armor at all?
Incidentally, can you imagine if John Kerry had made such a statement a
couple of months ago? It would have been (rightly) a topic of scorn and
derision among my fellow conservatives, and not just among
conservatives.
Kristol's not the only one angry at Rummy. In fact, someone who was once rather heavily involved in Iraq has weighed in. Stormin' Norman is not a happy man:
“I was very, very disappointed — no, let me put it stronger — I was
angry by the words of the secretary of defense when he laid it all on
the Army, as if he, as the secretary of defense, didn’t have anything
to do with the Army and the Army was over there doing it themselves,
screwing up,” Schwarzkopf said.
John McCain also has the knives out for him:
Asked
about his confidence in the secretary’s leadership, McCain recalled
fielding a similar question a couple weeks ago. “I said no. My answer
is still no. No confidence,” McCain said.
He estimated that 80,000 more Army personnel and 20,000 to 30,000 more Marines would be needed to secure Iraq.
“I
have strenuously argued for larger troop numbers in Iraq, including the
right kind of troops — linguists, special forces, civil affairs, etc.,”
McCain said. “There are very strong differences of opinion between
myself and Secretary Rumsfeld on that issue.”
By the way, If you want an on-the-ground perspective on the soldiers' view of armor on Humvees, check out this shouldn't-be-funny-but-is home video from Baghdad.
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