White-Tailed Deer on the front forty this morning as viewed from the studio porch at Goomp's
General Tommy Franks' autobiography "has not made as much of a media splash as some other accounts of the administration, because it is not hostile to George W. Bush," writes Max Boot in the Washington Post:
To the contrary, American Soldier rebuts some criticisms directed against the president. Bush has been accused, for instance, of taking his eye off Afghanistan by ordering the plan for a possible war with Iraq in the fall of 2001. Franks writes that, given the threat posed by Saddam Hussein, this was a sensible request, and that "our mission in Afghanistan never suffered" as a result.
Scores of pundits have accused the administration of lying, or at least distorting the evidence, about Iraq's weapons of mass destruction. But Franks reveals that the leaders of Egypt and Jordan told him that Saddam Hussein had chemical and biological weapons. Though no weapon of mass destruction was ever found, he writes, "I do not regret my role in disarming Iraq and removing its Baathist regime."
Another charge made against the administration is that political appointees failed to give the generals enough troops in either Afghanistan or Iraq. In fact, Franks writes, it was his own choice to employ limited forces in order to avoid getting bogged down. Instead of relying on sheer size, he thought surprise and speed were the keys to victory -- a judgment largely vindicated by events.
We happened to catch General Franks in a FOXNews interview a few nights back, and guess what? That "Mission Accomplished" moment that got the liberals' panties in a bunch, when the Leader of the Free World did a triumphant tailhook landing on that aircraft carrier, was the General's idea, a way of saying "Job well done" to the troops.
[via InstaPundit]
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