Monday, February 09, 2009

When Shock'n'Awe failed and diplomacy began



Via Steve Clemons of the Washington Note:
I agree with Ricks that Captain Samuel Cook and his Crazyhorse Troop showed remarkable sense in changing what were failing heavy-handed counterinsurgency methods into something far more effective. The opposite of this strategy can easily be seen in two award-winning films that benchmark what was going on before officers like Captain Cook and another favorite of mine, Captain Jon Powers (who recently ran and lost in a Democratic primary for a New York House seat), began changing the game on the front line of contact with Iraq's civilians. One of these was Michael Tucker's Gunner Palace and the other Alex Gibney's Taxi to the Dark Side.

The Surge is still controversial, and I look forward to reading Tom Ricks' assessment of it -- and why the surge, per se, mattered so much. One of the questions I look forward to exploring is why a "change in tactics" (i.e., using any of the sensible tactics Captain Samuel Cook used in the video above) required a greater deployment of troops.

4 comments:

Distributorcap said...

does anyone want to talk about how we are still paying $12 billion a month for that rat hole and this country is fast becoming one

Steve Bates said...

There's a problem with the size of the video player. Only the upper left corner of the video appears, and once you start playing, you cannot see the controls. I tested this in both Firefox 3.x and IE7.

ellroon said...

Dcap... there are no more words.

Steve, thanks. I will fix when I've figured out wtf I did....

ellroon said...

I'll just leave the video in the larger mode, looks like they didn't modify it properly for the smaller size....