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April 2008

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Michael Ledeen

General Kelly, USMC

This speech was given last September to the San Diego Military Advisory Council at breakfast, by Major General John Kelly (USMC). He’s now the Commander, Multinational Force-West, in Iraq. At the time, he was the deputy to Lt. General James Mattis, a legend among our warrior class, and a great phrasemaker. General Kelly turns out to be every bit as eloquent as his boss, for whom he was substituting that morning in San Diego.

I read it every now and then, good for the spirit.

…we are winning, we are really winning. No one told me to say that, I saw it for myself. The higher command in Baghdad told us four years ago when we first took responsibility for the Al Anbar not to worry about victory, as no one—military or civilian—thought it possible. That thirty years from now when the rest of Iraq was a functioning democracy, Al Anbar would still be a festering cancer within.

…by relentless pursuit by a bunch of 19 years olds with guns who never flinched or gave an inch, while at the same time holding out the carrot of economic development (the sheikhs in Anbar) have seen the light and know AQ can’t win against such men. By staying in the fight, and remaining true to our word, and our honor, AQ today can’t spend more than a few hours in…al Anbar…without being IDed by the locals and killed by the increasingly competent Iraqi Army, or by Marines. That’s the way it is today in this war, but it is also the way it has been since the birth of our nation…

…a few years ago…we were just south of Iraq along the Iraqi-Kuwait border, and poised to launch an attack that would take us over the next three weeks 650 miles into the guts of Iraq, far beyond Baghdad and indeed to Saddam’s hometown palace in Tikrit. When the artillery fires commenced just as the sun went down, and the evening sky above us was one endless formation of Marine, Navy and Air Force fighter aircraft speeding north to smash targets deep in Saddam’s vitals, I was sitting taking it all in with my driver Cpl Dave Hardin from Dallas, and with a reporter from the Los Angeles Times. The reporter asked me a question that I’d never considered in my entire 36 years in the Marine Corps as both enlisted man and officer before the asking, but one I took up in my mind when he did. He pointed out the size and capability of the Iraqi forces in front of us that was many, many times bigger than we were in men, tanks, and artillery. He emphasized much to my discomfort the massive supplies of chemical weapons Saddam was thought to have, and the multiple means he had to rain their terrible kind of death upon us. He asked if I’d ever contemplated defeat. If it was even possible? My thoughts immediately took me back to trips I’d made to Guadalcanal, Iwo Jima, Inchon Korea, and Vietnam, and the conversations I’d had with veterans of those battles, mostly old men now. They tell of friends who made it, and many who didn’t. About the good times, and the bad, but mostly about the good as is typical of our veterans. My response to the reporter was something like: “hell these are Marines. Men like them held Guadalcanal and took Iwo Jima, Baghdad ain’t shit.”

That last line is on a bogus Marine poster that runs around the net every now and then, along with another one that shows half a dozen really mean looking Marines, and a quotation from General Mattis to Iraqi sheikhs, which I can paraphrase: “I come in peace. I did not bring artillery. But I say to you, with tears in my eyes: If you (mess) with me, we’ll kill you all.”

That Kelly could see clearly last September that we were winning in Anbar is significant, it seems to me. He recognized the great, oft ignored fact of this war: that once the Iraqis realized that the Americans couldn’t be beaten, and weren’t going to leave, the whole balance of power shifted. I’ve said that before, but it can’t be repeated often enough. And as the balance of power shifts in Iraq, there is a ripple effect throughout the whole region.

Just ask Khamenei, who is scrambling to buy time, regroup, and find some way to end the humiliation of his failing jihad.

Exciting times indeed.

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Comments (6)

Kourosh :

I just noticed today that IHT, the sister-in-law of NYT, and B-I-L of Guardian, Economist, FT, and BBC has declared the efforts to sanction Khomeinist, a failure. It mentioned that the efforts have not been welcomed by Europe at the beginning (it means Oily Europe) and have not fruited so far, and will be left to the next Prez. The Oily press and their related entities, directly and indirectly have provided seeds money to various foundations including some to Harvard to sponsor former Islamists and always backwards as scholar, and provide constantly venue to the kind of NIAC an entity which is not supported by most Iranian to conduct seminars in high places like congress and similar and to educate American to make deals with IRI against Iranian nation, and to keep Khomeinists in place as long as possible. With today's appearances of King of Stupid, and God-father of the mafia and main sponsor of the faction to bring Prince of Darkness Khomeinie to power, in Syria to meet with Mashaal, and thus spreading Islamists agenda throughout the world, I wonder if The Green under-Belt Doctrine ever dies. May be not until it causes 200-300 Million killed and many many generations forced to inhuman treatment, just like its counter ideology Marxism, or the one before Fascism. In a way Hitler, Stalin, Khomeinie are actual Axis of Evil which Democracy Loving People are not allowed to hear about these days even as a slogan. People are becoming increasingly impatient, and concluding the promotion of democracy is / was a hoax for economic gains, and Bush and alike never will be allowed to forward a humanistic agenda and to promote democracy in the ME. People are losing hope, so yes Faster Please, if you know what I mean.

Apr 14, 2008 11:23 PM

j green :

If we lose this, or any, war, its because we wanted to. This country has been blessed with people who value our rights and liberties enough to defend it with their blood, just as it has been been since this country's inception.

At the time General Kelly said this, the liberals probably said that he had a gun put to his head. Now the liberals are wishing for us to lose this war even more badly than ever. They are disappointed they could not destroy the American spirit with their endless rants, endless propaganda messages on the news. I'm thrilled we are seeing these bright spots more and more often.

Apr 15, 2008 12:49 PM

Nick Guariglia :

I loved that last line. By the way, I hear Fallon's replacement at CentCom, Gen. Dempsey, is just a temporary commander. I know Joint Command's important, but shouldn't Gen. Mattis be in charge of CentCom or something? Hell, give him Afghanistan.

ML:

I think he's a candidate for Centcom, in fact. You can't "give him Afghanistan," that's a NATO mission.

Apr 15, 2008 07:11 PM

11B40 :

Greetings:

Many years ago, my favorite infantry platoon sergeant told me the following:

"There's a statue, in the Infantry Training center at Fort Dix, of a rifleman with his backpack and bayoneted weapon. The name of that statue is the "Ultimate Weapon." Remember, in this business, you don't have nuthin til a 20 year old with a long gun tells you you have it.

Apr 15, 2008 09:01 PM

Nick Guariglia :

Is he really? That's great news. He'd be perfect for the job, given that he and Petraeus co-wrote the field manual. I know Afghanistan's NATO-led, but didn't we have McNeill in charge of the ISAF? We rotate leadership with the Canadians and Europeans in and out of Afghanistan way too frequently, it seems. I remember Giuliani (when he was still in the race) was talking about changing Afghanistan's order of battle and having our own surge over there.

Apr 15, 2008 09:56 PM

winston :

Gotta love the Marines

Apr 17, 2008 03:05 PM

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