![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#11
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
In article ,
Ed Rasimus wrote: Do you suppose the fact that Iraq didn't have the advantage of real-time super-power support (from the Soviets) in the form of arms, training, and "advisors" has anything to do with it? You might want to check out the equippage, advising, training and doctrine in place at the start of Desert Storm What part of "real-time" support, arming, training, and advisors do you not understand? What part of "in place" doesn't equate with "real-time"? "In place at the start" is static. It means at point A, this, this, and that were there. Real-time means that not only were this, this, and that there at point A, but they were sustained and augmented throughout the conflict. So to answer your question of "What part of "in place" doesn't equate with 'real-time'"?: none of it equates to real-time. ... before repeating that bit of revisionism. The only revisionism here are people trying to imply that battlefield opposition in Iraq was even a fraction of what existed in Vietnam (or Korea, for that matter) At the start of Desert Storm, the military of Iraq was ranked as fifth largest in the world. Great, and I hear Spiderbreath, Kansas has the 3rd largest ball of yarn in the world. A gazillion trained bodies with a dirty AK's in one hand and white flags in the other does not constitute a major force. Battlefield opposition at the start of Vietnam was strictly small-arms, guerilla forces. Ia Drang was an enlightenment. But, there was no armor, little artillery, zero modern logistics possessed by the VC at the start in '64-'65. The Air Order of Battle possessed by NVN was never more than 120 aircraft and usually closer to 75 throughout the war. So we have established that Iraq was better prepared at the onset of battle than was Vietnam. I imagine a decade of high-intensity fighting with Iran probably had something to do with that. In any case, I didn't refer to what may or may not have existed at a single static moment; I'm referring to outside help from a major super-power throughout the entire conflict. Did Iraq have that for even a day of Operation Re-elect Bush or the latest war? Some analysts even contend that the failure of Soviet militarysupport so clearly displayed contributed to the collapse of the SU. Some analysts also claim Elvis was hiding in the same rat hole with Saddam...but escaped. Gorbachev's glasnost/perestroika policies are the main reason the East Bloc collapsed. Gorbachev's policies can also be attributed to the generational shift from the leadership of the Stalinist cronies to the thirty year younger generation that he represented. His glasnost (what a concept--free exchange of information with the non-communist world) and perestroika (participating in a free-trade global economy rather than continuing the failures of central planning) were little more than acknowledgement of the shortcomings recognized by George F. Kennan in 1947. They were also 99% of the reason why the East Bloc fell. --Mike |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Juan Jiminez is a liar and a fraud (was: Zoom fables on ANN | ChuckSlusarczyk | Home Built | 105 | October 8th 04 12:38 AM |
Bush's guard record | JDKAHN | Home Built | 13 | October 3rd 04 09:38 PM |
"W" is JFK's son and Bush revenge killed Kennedy in 1963 | Ross C. Bubba Nicholson | Aerobatics | 0 | August 28th 04 11:28 AM |
bush rules! | Be Kind | Military Aviation | 53 | February 14th 04 04:26 PM |