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Saturday, March 15, 2008
Michael Barone :: Townhall.com Columnist
The Importance of Fallon's Fall
by Michael Barone
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The abrupt resignation of Adm. William Fallon as the head of Central Command almost got lost amid the breaking news of Barack Obama's victory in the Mississippi primary and Eliot Spitzer's resignation as governor of New York. But it's a much more consequential development -- in the foreign and military policy of the Bush administration in its final year in office and in the relations between civilian commanders and military officers in the long run of American history.

Though everyone involved denies it, Fallon was kicked out for insubordination, or something very close to it. His conduct became impossible to overlook after the publication of a jauntily written article in Esquire by Thomas P.M. Barnett, author of "The Pentagon's New Map."

Barnett paints Fallon as a seasoned officer who coolly and wisely has been frustrating George W. Bush's desire to invade Iran. He points out that Fallon opposed the surge in Iraq ordered by Bush in January 2007 and that he has tried to rein in Gen. David Petraeus, whose leadership of the surge has produced such impressive results. He seems to take it for granted that readers will applaud Fallon for opposing a move that converted likely defeat to a high chance of success.

Fallon also made it plain that he wants to withdraw troops from Iraq, as soon as possible -- even though Defense Secretary Robert Gates has approved Petraeus' request for a pause after currently scheduled troop withdrawals end in July.

Fallon is not the first subordinate to work openly to undercut the commander in chief. The authors of the National Intelligence Estimate headlined a conclusion that Iran had abandoned part of its nuclear program, while underplaying the more important news that the mullahs were continuing the critical parts of the nuclear program and retained the capacity to rev up the rest quickly at any time. Leaks from the State Department and CIA have been clearly designed to frustrate administration policy.

Civilian and military, those who have been undercutting administration policy do so in the belief that their views are more in the nation's interests than the conclusion of the Texas cowboy whom the voters somehow elected president. State and CIA are filled with professionals educated in elite universities dominated by the left and, while not as wacky as their professors, have come away with the default assumption that liberals are always right. Many military officers, who increasingly have graduate degrees from such universities, seem to have imbibed similar habits of mind.

In addition, officers assigned to regional commands seem, like diplomats assigned to one area, inclined to go native. As head of Pacific Command, Fallon (at least as Barnett paints him) seemed transfixed on cooperating with China; at Central Command, he came to believe that pressuring Israel toward a settlement with Palestinians was the way to solve every problem in the region. After all, those are the things the Chinese and Arab military officers he's been interfacing with have told him. Continued...

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About The Author
Michael Barone is a senior writer with U.S. News & World Report and the principal co-author of The Almanac of American Politics, published by National Journal every two years. He is also author of Our Country: The Shaping of America from Roosevelt to Reagan, The New Americans: How the Melting Pot Can Work Again, the just-released Hard America, Soft America: Competition vs. Coddling and the Competition for the Nation's Future.
 
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©Creators Syndicate
Subject: Meyac
Meyac writes: Monday, March, 17, 2008 6:00 AM
"Final thought. There was once a great Republic and it was a true leader in the world not only militarily but also in engineering, commerce, politics, medicine and liberal arts...Finally this great Republic was destroyed from within and from its massive beuracracy. Can you tell me what great Republic this was?"

Answer: Ancient Rome,but by that time it had become an empire, not a Republic. CZ

Final thought.
There was once a great Republic and it was a true leader in the world not only militarily but also in engineering, commerce, politics, medicine and liberal arts. People from all over the none world flocked to this Republic to be a part of it and share in its wealth and freedom. But then an awful evil took hold of its sociaty from its great halls of government to its private shops and homes. That evil, the same evil that confronts us today was called greed and sloth. The government of this great Republic started to feel that the people that it served would love and want them to rule them if they only would provide grain and games. This same government felt that they could outsource their industry and hire mercinarys for their Republics protection so that the citizens would not have to fight for the country. Soon the people became lazy and weak and the politicians became more and more greedy and blind to the errosion that was slowly growing. Finally this great Republic was destroyed from within and from its massive beuracracy. Can you tell me what great Republic this was?
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