General David H. Petraeus will soon become the senior U.S. military commander in Iraq. Last Sunday’s Washington Post published excerpts from his 1987 PhD thesis for Princeton’s Woodrow Wilson School titled “The American Military and the Lessons of Vietnam: A Study of Military Influence and the Use of Force in the Post-Vietnam Era.” The following are my selections from the Post’s excerpts:
On war and public opinion
Vietnam was an extremely painful reminder that when it comes to intervention, time and patience are not American virtues in abundant supply. . . .The military want to avoid what former Army Chief of Staff E.C. Meyer termed the Vietnam mistake of “putting soldiers out at the end of a string” without the full support of the American people. Since time is crucial, furthermore, sufficient force must be used at the outset to ensure that the conflict can be resolved before the American people withdraw their support for it. Nothing succeeds with the American public like success, the military realize; the sooner the mission is accomplished, the better.
On fighting insurgencies
Vietnam planted in the minds of many in the military doubts about the ability of U.S. forces to conduct successful large-scale counterinsurgencies. These misgivings do not in all cases spring from doubts about the capabilities of American troops and units per se. . . .Rather, the doubts that are part of the Vietnam legacy spring from a number of interrelated factors: the previously noted worries about a lack of popular support for what the public might perceive as ambiguous conflicts; suspicions about the willingness of civilian policy-makers—not just those in the executive branch—to stay the course; and lurking fears that the respective services have yet to come to grips with the difficult tasks of developing the doctrine, equipment, and forces suitable for nasty “little” wars. . . .
Others, who believe that the U.S. could develop suitable American forces for counterinsurgency operations, have doubts about the existing capabilities of U.S. units in this area. As one U.S. officer put it, “I submit that the U.S. Army does not have the mind-set for combat operations where the key terrain is the mind, not the high ground. We do not take the time to understand the nature of the society in which we are fighting, the government we are supporting, or the enemy we are fighting.”
On civilian officials
Very importantly, many in the military believe that the United States armed forces can win small wars if allowed to do so. Those who hold this view tend to believe that Vietnam was less an illustration of the limitations of American military power than an example of what happens if that power is limited and not used to best advantage. This feeling springs from conviction that the U.S. military in Vietnam were so hemmed in by restrictions that they could not accomplish their mission. The lesson for those of this persuasion, therefore, is that the military must be given a freer hand in future military operations. Even among the most fervent believers in this logic, however, there is a new recognition that the world is more intractable, and intervention with U.S. troops more problematic. . . .The military also took from Vietnam (and the concomitant activities in the Pentagon) a heightened awareness that civilian officials are responsive to influences other than the objective conditions on the battlefield. A consequence has been an increase in the traditional military distrust of civilian political leaders. . . . While the military still accept emphatically the constitutional provision for civilian control of the armed forces, there remain from the Vietnam era nagging doubts about the abilities and motivations of politicians and those they appoint to key positions. Vietnam was a painful reminder for the military that they, not the transient occupants of high office, generally bear the heaviest burden during armed conflict.
H/T: Military Quotes
What do we know about Gen Petraeus? ...
You can glean a bit from past writings. The American Future blog found a Washington Post article that quotes from a report the General wrote about Vietnam.On fighting insurgencies
Vietnam
planted in the minds of many in the military doubts…...
Worst of all, forgotten is the fact that we WON the war against the insurgency in South Vietnam. The final blow was delivered during the Tet Offensive, in which Vietcong forces essentially ceased to exist. Over a decade later surviving members of the Vietcong leadership stated that they had come to realize that one object of Tet was to get the US to destroy the Vietcong and leave no insurgency that the North Vietnamese would have to contend with when they took over the South.
South Vietnam ultimately fell to a wholly conventional invasion from the North that was larger in size – and involved more military vehicles – than was the 1940 German invasion of France. It was a conventional invasion which the U.S. stood by and allowed to happen – not only by refusing to intervene, but by refusing to take the required steps to prevent the North Vietnamese from attaining the required capability – a capability which they clearly had and had even deployed along the border even before the Paris Peace Talks concluded.
It is if we defeated the insurgency in Iraq and then stood by as Iranian tanks rolled into Baghdad. And then said “Gee, the insurgents defeated us.”
A superb Michael Yon interview, in two parts, very informative.