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ranney's avatar

This is an important essay about our military offensiveness. I suppose it strikes home to me especially because it reminds me of my uncle Ken who was a major pilot in WWII, and I know he would agree with everything Bill says here. All Ken wanted to do when he was a boy was to fly, he was born just as planes were being invented. When WWII started, Ken was that rare thing at the time - an airline pilot! Weren't many airlines then. When WWII broke out he immediately volunteered for the Army air force and became a trainer of one of the first bomber squads. He knew how to fly and, as an engineer, he knew how to fix them. Ken went to Europe with the squadron he trained and stayed there throughout the war leading squadrons in bombing runs all over Europe and Africa. When the war was over the Army wanted him to stay ( he was now a full col. and had been for a while) and they wanted to make him a general. Ken said "no thanks" and went home to his wife and three kids. After that he really didn't want to get on planes any more. I thought it was because he was so used to being pilot he didn't fully trust anyone else to do it, but I think it was more than that. He had fulfilled his dream of flying and had found the terror and destruction it could bring and it brought back memories he'd rather not recall. I gave him a copy of "Catch22" as a stocking gift one xmas, and then worried that he might not like it (Ken was a staunch republican), but it turned out to be one of his favorite books.

Thank you Bill for reprinting this essay. We really do need to be reminded of our arrogance!

jg moebus's avatar

The thing that struck me the most about Your article, Bill, was the statement regarding “high ground”: “the Air Force’s most basic precept, that MASTERY OF THE AIR MEANS MASTERY OF THE GROUND.” [Emphasis added.]

Correct me if i am wrong, but History tells us that ~ with the exception of the early days of Vietnam when Hanoi still had its own Air Force, such as it was ~ in every War that America has waged since the end of World War II, the US has enjoyed virtually total and complete domination and control of “the Air” by virtue of its unchallenged tactical [from A-10s to the latest jet fighters] and strategic [from B-29s to B-52s to B-1s, etc] superiority in support of ground operations.

And yet, the United States has lost every War that it has fought everywhere in all of those 78 years.

So the Air Force’s basic precept about “mastery of the Air” is complete and total Bullshit. At least when it comes to that being the secret to winning a [or, in the case of the US, any] War on the Ground.

But if there is one thing that America’s MICC is totally dependent upon, it is the American People’s total ignorance of ~ or willfully ignoring ~ exactly how all of America Wars over these past 78 years have turned out.

And that ignorance or willful ignoring is one of the major keys that keep the Cash Cow giving milk to that MICC, regardless of the results in the Real World. All the result of another fine job by this government's two-part propaganda machine, its public education system and its media.

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