LtCol Oliver L. North
is a nationally syndicated columnist and the
honorary chairman of Freedom Alliance. An
educational and charitable foundation, the
Alliance was founded in 1990 by LtCol North,
who now serves as the organization's honorary
chairman. The committee works to promote freedom
and liberty, support the American military
and educate American youth on the military.
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September 16, 2004
Washington, D.C. - Last week, our nation mourned the one-thousandth
U.S. death in Iraq.
The Kerry
campaign and the so-called mainstream media pounced on the report
with partisan furor, using the "milestone" as "proof" that the war
in Mesopotamia is going wrong - and that it's the fault of George
W. Bush.
On the campaign trail, Senator Kerry complains that President Bush
has failed to "take the target off American troops." His campaign
operatives talk anonymously on background about "equipment deficiencies,"
a "lack of body armor" and "deeply diminished morale" among our
troops. Meanwhile, the New York Times, gloomily reports that, "In
the past five months, the Americans have relinquished control over
much of Anbar and Salahaddin, provinces that include cities like
Ramadi and Falluja, where the guerrilla insurgency churns on with
unabated intensity." What's going on here? Are we really losing
the war in the bloody, scorched streets of Iraq?
Those are just some of the issues I went to investigate with a
FOX News "War Stories" team. On this, my fourth trip to Iraq in
the last 18 months, we were embedded with the 2nd
Battalion, 4th Marine Regiment, assigned to the 1st Brigade
of the U.S. Army's 1st Infantry Division. These units are part of
the 1st Marine Expeditionary Force - posted in Al Ramadi - the capitol
of Al Anbar Province - the largest in Iraq and in the heart of the
so-called "Sunni Triangle." Here's what we found wrong with the
Kerry-Media spin:
- "...Americans have relinquished control..."Notwithstanding
press accounts to the contrary, no U.S. commander has "relinquished
control" over the capital or the Province - which stretches from
the western suburbs of Baghdad all the way to the Saudi, Jordanian
and Syrian borders. As our cameras documented, U.S. soldiers,
Marines
- and increasing numbers of Iraqi National Guardsmen - are very
much engaged in countering those who would prevent Iraq from ever
becoming a democratic country. And despite terrorist efforts to
disrupt reconstruction efforts and attack Iraqi civil infrastructure,
U.S. Army, Navy "Sea Bee" and Marine civil affairs officers continue
to open new schools, electrical facilities, water plants, hospitals
and police stations.
- "... the guerilla insurgency churns on..." There is no doubt
that the level of combat has increased since I was last in Iraq
in April and May. Bombings, ambushes and indirect fire attacks
against coalition and Iraqi government forces have multiplied
because the militant sheikhs and imams who foment the fighting
know their day is done if the Iraqis successfully hold a democratic
election next year. Their only hope is to cause enough casualties
that we withdraw before the ballots are cast, so the closer we
get to that election - the greater the violence. But this is no
"guerilla insurgency." By definition, "guerillas" or "insurgents"
represent an organized political alternative to an established
regime. Radical Sunni and Shi'ite clerics like Muqtada Al-Sadr,
who tortured and killed 200 men, women, and children, and buried
them in a mass grave in Najaf, don't promise to make things better
for the Iraqi people. Nor do the remaining Baath Party warlords
or foreign extremists like Abu Musab Al Zarqawi. These men inciting
gunfights in Iraq aren't "insurgents" - they are anarchists. They
offer no unified "platform" other than "jihad!" When they aren't
shooting at coalition or Iraqi security forces they are trying
to kill each other. Dangerous? - yes. A "guerilla army"? - no.
- President Bush has failed to "...take the target off American
troops..." Mr. Kerry should take a few minutes on Sunday evening
to listen to some of the scores of "American troops" I interviewed
in Iraq just a few weeks ago. They tell a much better story than
Dan Rather - and it would give the Massachusetts senator an idea
of what combat is really like. Not one of them complains about
being a "target." Instead, they all believe that the terrorists
are the "targets" - and explain that they would rather fight them
in Iraq than here.
- "...equipment deficiencies," a "lack of body armor..." What
are these people talking about? Watch "War Stories" this Sunday
and see if Marine Capt. Mark Carlton, wounded by an enemy RPG
- and alive because of his body armor - would agree. The same
goes for the troops. All those I was with certainly seemed to
be well enough equipped to survive terrorist I.E.D.s and fight
back - using some of the best technology and equipment in the
world - weapons, UAVs, helicopters, communications - and guts.
- "...deeply diminished morale..." Where? In the Kerry camp, maybe.
But not in Ramadi, Iraq. The best barometer of troop morale is
the re-enlistment rate. It's been that way since Valley Forge
in 1777-78. When things are going badly and morale is down - so
are extensions and re-enlistments. But in the 2nd Battalion, 4th
Marines that we documented in Iraq, so many Marines have asked
to stay in the service that the Battalion commander, LtCol P.J.
Kennedy, has had to request a waiver from established limits.


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Unfortunately, the pessimists in the press - "reporting" from hotel
balconies in Baghdad using videotape bought from Arab cameramen
traveling with the enemy - rarely get out in the field to see any
"good news." Candidate Kerry ought to know better, but he retains
the same "blame America first" mentality that has governed his thinking
since Vietnam. From what I've seen firsthand, the Kerry-Media spin
of a bloody disaster for the U.S. in Iraq is as phony as Dan Rather's
documents.
[Have an opinion on this column? Sound
off here.]
© 2004 Oliver North. All opinions expressed
in this article are the author's and do not necessarily reflect those
of Military.com.
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