Clinton Legacy Watch #2: The Re-Emergence of a Hollow US Military
(Washington, D.C.): President Clinton
reportedly has become obsessed with his
“place in history.” If so, he
would do well to begin rethinking his
Administration’s policies, budgets and
programmatic decisions that have caused
immense harm to the combat capabilities
of the U.S. military. After all, if past
experience proves once again a guide to
the future, the vacuums of power
being thus created will once again invite
aggression for which the United States
will be grievously unprepared.
History tends to look uncharitably upon
leaders whose judgment exposed the
Nation, its people and treasure
unnecessarily to grievous harm.
Evidence continues to mount that such
might well be the Clinton presidency’s
most notable legacy. Even Mr. Clinton’s
own Pentagon is now finding this evidence
so pervasive that its internal memoranda
offer powerful indictments of the
hollowing-out of the American military
that has occurred on his Administration’s
watch.
In the Pentagon’s Own Words
For example, the front page of today’s
Washington Times discloses the
contents of one of these memorandum
documenting the current, sorry state of
key elements of the U.S. Air
Force, based on field visits to
“warplane squadrons, repair depots,
the Air Force entry-level pilot school
and an air-refueling unit.” The
following are among the serious
deficiencies identified in this 24 July
1997 memo prepared for the Deputy Under
Secretary of Defense for Readiness, Louis
Finch:
- A general distrust of
senior leadership:
“The pilots liked the
quality of the mid-level
leadership, but totally disliked
their senior leadership. They
stated that they did not trust
senior leadership and that things
are getting worse. In general,
they felt they were lied to,
betrayed and treated very
poorly.” - Serious deficiencies in
maintenance work from at least
two major depots:
According to the Times,
“the memo states that nearly
two-thirds (65%) of engines for
the giant C-5 cargo jet are
returning from repair shops still
malfunctioning.” This
apparently reflects, at least in
part, instability arising from
President Clinton’s decision to
inject politics into last year’s
Base Realignment and Closure
(BRAC) Commission’s
recommendation to close two major
air logistics centers in the
politically sensitive states of
California and Texas, agreeing to
their closure as military
installations but announcing that
they would remain in business as
“privatized”
facilities.
The DoD memo observed: “Due
to the ongoing political contest
regarding privatization [at these
installations], there is little
quality or quantity of work being
produced. Both workers and plants
are underutilized. Further, the
operational units are not
satisfied with the products
received from the depots.”
- Serious morale problems: The
memo reported that,
“Discussions with fighter
pilots reveal a great deal of
dissatisfaction with the ongoing
deployments. There is no
training, they are not doing what
they are trained to do, they are
simply ‘boring holes in the sky.’
Combining this lack of mission
satisfaction with increased
airline hiring makes civilian
life much more attractive.” - ‘Particularly negative’
situation at the ‘training ground
for future pilots’: The
memorandum suggests that its
authors were particularly
troubled by what they found at
the facility responsible for
preparing the next generation of
Air Force combat pilots, an
installation traditionally
staffed by the service’s most
skilled aviators. “The
instructor pilots at [the Air
Education and Training Command at
Randolph Air Force Base in Texas]
are sick of high Operational
Tempos. Most said they came to
Randolph as a three-year break
from being gone from home too
much on deployment. Most also
said they will be getting out of
the Air Force as soon as their
commitment is over.” One can
only imagine, if matters are this
bad in the Air Force how serious
is the morale condition
afflicting Navy, Marine and Army
units that are experiencing even
longer, and far more onerous,
overseas deployments. - The wrong sort of
training: Especially
alarming were the complaints of
officers at the 940th
Air Refueling Squadron
“everyone [of whom]
complained that the number of
days of mandatory training per
year be capped and purged of
everything that is not mission
essential or job critical. All
of the politically correct,
brainwashing, propaganda and
white laboratory mouse training
should be purged from the
curriculum.”
(Emphasis added.)
The Bottom Line
The Congress, the media and the
American people have a responsibility to
insist on changes in the quality and
character of attention the military
receives from the Clinton Administration.
The problems outlined in the Defense
Department memo suggest an Air Force that
is rapidly losing its ability to fight
and prevail in the Nation’s wars.
Unfortunately, the Air Force’s experience
is being replicated, or worse,
by that of the other armed services.
It should come as no surprise that the
sustained, draconian cuts in military
spending on today’s readiness and
tomorrow’s — combined with the
social experimentation in the armed
forces enforced by periodic purges
carried out in the name of political
correctness — have been taking their
toll. If the United States fails to take
corrective action, chances are that
President Clinton will find his place in
the history books written in the
needlessly wasted blood of American
soldiers, sailors and airmen.
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