Saturday, November 17, 2007

Rejecting the Politics of Fear

One can be excused for wondering what is happening when a
democracy has to rely on military leaders for cautious, professional,
unemotional judgment about foreign policy…I don’t think these remarks require
any interpretation.


General William Fallon, Centcom commander, referring to Iran:

  • "I expect that there will be no war and that is what we ought to be working for….We ought to try and to do our utmost to create different conditions." source
  • "We have to figure out a way to come to an arrangement with them…" source
  • “There has got to be some combination of strength and willingness to engage. How to come up with the right combination of that is the real trick.”
  • “Getting Iranian behaviour to change and finding ways to get them to come to their senses and do that is the real objective. Attacking them as a means to get to that spot strikes me as being not the first choice in my book.” source



General George Casey, Army Chief of Staff:

  • "We are consumed with meeting the demands of the current fight and are unable to provide ready forces as rapidly as necessary for other potential contingencies." source

Defense Secretary Robert Gates:

  • "The challenges we face in Iraq, Afghanistan and elsewhere are fundamentally political, economic and cultural in nature, and are not going to be overcome by military means alone." source

No comments: