November 17, 2003

Victor Davis Hanson

Another of his excellent spot-on essays in the National Review bq. Critics now fault an American military that ripped apart Saddam Hussein's army from Kuwait to Kurdistan in three weeks for its apparent inability to restore civilization in the sixth months after the demise of Saddam Hussein's 30-year nightmare. It seems to mean little that fewer combatants have been killed in two years of fighting than were lost in an average week in Vietnam, that deposed enemies like the Taliban and Saddam Hussein were right out of the Dark Ages, that our efforts were incomprehensible without September 11, that we are promoting democracies, not installing tyrannical yes men, and that reconstructing Iraq 7,000 miles away seems to be going more quickly than the rebuilding on the crater in Manhattan. bq. Why? Because we are in a war that is not quite a war, but has an array of baffling rules all its own that we are only slowly grasping. Posted by DaveH at November 17, 2003 1:54 PM