November14, 2006:
The departure of Donald Rumsfeld as Secretary of Defense ends one of
the longest periods anyone has held the position. Rumsfeld's service attracted
a lot of criticism, but was marked with some undeniable accomplishments. It is
hard to imagine a middle ground existing - people will either love the job he
did, or they will hate it.
Rumsfeld
had a unique perspective, having been the youngest Secretary of Defense
(1975-77), and one of the few recent ones with military experience (he served
as a naval aviator in the 1950s.) When Rumsfeld returned to become the oldest
Secretary of Defense in 2001, he pushed the process of transforming the
military into high gear. The U.S. military was still looking for an alternative
to decades of Cold War thinking when Rumsfeld showed up. Two of his more
controversial decisions on this matter involved the cancellation of the
Crusader self-propelled artillery system in 2002 and the Comanche scout/attack
helicopter in 2004. It was considered impossible to cancel such large projects,
so late in their development. He also pushed the the Army to reorganize, from
48 deployable brigades to 70, via massive changes in doctrine and unit
organization.
Initially
expecting to face massive beltway battles over transforming the military,
Rumsfeld found himself on the site of one of the locations hit during the sneak
attacks carried out on September 11, 2001. Initially rushing to the scene to
aid survivors, Rumsfeld eventually began to fight a global war against
terrorism. Rumsfeld still pushed transformation in how to carry out operations.
In Afghanistan, air power and special forces helped local allies drive the
Taliban out of that country in record time.
Rumsfeld
then carried out the liberation of Iraq. The initial invasion, and collapse of
Saddam's regime in three weeks will be seen as a brilliant takedown of a regime
that had supported terrorism and was pursuing the development of weapons of
mass destruction. The rapid takedowns of regimes of the Taliban and Saddam
Hussein were arguably one of the major reasons that Libyan dictator Muammar
Qaddafi ceased his support of terrorism and his pursuit of weapons of mass
destruction.
Rumsfeld's
tenure led to numerous controversies, including the handling of captured al
Qaeda terrorists at Guantanamo Bay, and the difficulties during the rebuilding
of Iraq. In some cases, much of this was fomented by those who were angered by
his decisions, or simply didn't know what they were talking about. For example,
those who criticized the disbanding of the Iraqi army in 2003, ignored the fact
that this organization was dominated by Sunni Arab officers, many of whom still
supported Saddam Hussein. Same thing with criticizing Rumsfeld for not putting
more troops into Iraq ("400,000" is the number most often mentioned.) The
troops were simply not available. Most of the divisions that participated in
the 1991 Gulf War had since been disbanded and the U.S. was barely able to
maintain a force of 150,000. The cancellation of big-ticket items nearing mass
production, angered many in Congress and in the military. A Secretary of
Defense who threatens major weapons projects, quickly picks up a lot of
enemies, and these enemies never forget. Rumsfeld also expected the generals
and admirals who worked for him to know what they were doing, and be able to
get things done. We chewed out those who didn't measure up, which made him more
enemies. But the troops loved this, and the fact that Rumsfeld got behind
reforms which made it possible for new equipment to get to the combat zones in
record time. This offended the traditional contractors and procurement
bureaucrats. More enemies.
Despite
the controversies, Rumsfeld has accomplished much as Secretary of Defense. In a
very real sense, he was able to focus the Department of Defense on a global
war, During his tenure as Secretary of Defense, the United States also took
three state sponsors of terror off the board. These real accomplishments will
be ignored by many in the media as they pile on for investigations by the new
Congressional majority. History will be the final judge, but many believe that
Rumsfeld will be remembered as a guy who got things done, and didn't worry
about whose toes got stepped on along the way. - Harold C. Hutchison
([email protected])