This is a few days old but still worth noting. Andrew Bacevich laments the bipartisan consensus among all the leading presidential candidates for expanding the size of the military. The problem, Bacevich says, is that “[a]ny politician who thinks that the chief lesson to be drawn from the last five years is that we need more Americans toting rifles and carrying rucksacks has learned nothing.”
The underlying problem is that the basic orientation of U.S. policy since 9/11 has been flat wrong. Bush’s conception of waging an open-ended global “war” to eliminate terrorism has failed, disastrously and irredeemably. Simply trying harder — no matter how many more soldiers we recruit and no matter how many more Muslim countries we invade and “liberate” — will not reverse that failure. More meddling will evoke more hatred.
Instead Bacevich advocates a policy of “containment” toward the virulent strain of Islamic radicalism that gives rise to terrorism: “The alternative to transformation is not surrender but quarantine.”
I think the point here is that a bigger military will create a nearly irresistible urge to use it. If it’s not used to invade the Middle East in a wrong-headed attempt to install Jeffersonian democracy, it will be used for the various “peacekeeping” and “humanitarian” wars dreamed up by progressives. After all, as Madeline Albright put it to Colin Powell, “What’s the point of having this superb military you’re always talking about if we can’t use it?”

Leave a reply to gaius sempronius gracchus Cancel reply