Larry’s Blog for June 22,
2015
AN EVER-GROWING ISIS
THREAT
I want to go
on record saying that the “strategy”(which is really non-existent) in fighting
ISIS is a failure and, so long as we have a panty-waist Congress backing up a
Muslim-in-chief, it’s going to stay that way.
Any plan, including the mission creep that is going on now, that calls
for US troops on foreign soil, should be stopped immediately.
General
Curtis Lemay is credited with designing
and implementing an effective, but also controversial, systematic strategic
bombing campaign in the Pacific theater of World War II. During the war, he was
known for planning and executing a massive bombing campaign against cities in Japan and a crippling minelaying campaign in Japan's internal waterways. After the war, he initiated
the Berlin airlift, then reorganized the
Strategic Air Command (SAC) into an effective instrument of nuclear war. He
served as Chief of Staff of the U.S. Air Force from 1961 until his retirement
in 1965. He is also known as having
said, that he would “bomb them back to the Stone Age” in referring to the North
Vietnamese.
News broadcasts on TV show large
concentrations of ISIS personnel in various
places, and that would be the time to initially start bombing them. A continuous bombing attack, 24/7 for about
three months, destroying them, their materials and equipment, should either
make them give up, or at least have them listen to reason.
Innocent
people will be killed…that’s a given in a war.
ISIS does it for some of the most
stupid reasons ever, and does it on world-wide television. We should carpet-bomb ISIS
wherever and whenever we find them, and although it sounds cruel and uncaring,
the collateral damage, the military’s term for civilian deaths, would most
likely allow the rest of the population to live, and live freely. We would not have to put a single trooper’s
boot on foreign soil.
JFK said, in his inaugural address,
“Let the word go forth…let every nation know, whether it wishes us well or ill,
that we shall pay any price, bear any burden, meet any hardship, support any
friend, oppose any foe to assure the survival and the success of liberty.” We will not, we cannot shirk that
responsibility, but we don’t have to lose trooper’s lives doing it. Technology already in our arsenal allows us
to hit targets half a world away from a ready-room here in this country. Even mass bombing runs can be done by
remotely-controlled aircraft, and we have hundreds of them sitting in the
desert, ready to serve us again. The
old, reliable WW2-vintage aircraft are there at Davis-Monthan Air Force Base,
in Arizona, waiting to be scrapped or used, as
the case may be. It represents, so I’m
told, one of the largest air forces in the world. In addition to the B-29 Super Fortresses,
there are B-47’s and B-52’s, all of which are capable of carrying tactical
nuclear weapons and, probably, remotely-controlled.
At the end of WW2 the invasion of Japan was going to take place and it was estimated that
about three-quarters of a million US and Allied troops would be lost. The dropping of two atomic bombs put that
plan on the back burner and President Truman said that it probably saved the
lives of all those who might have been sent to invade Japan, and of course, it
would have cost the Japanese casualties as well. It was a tough decision to make…but in
wartime you have to make those kinds of decisions, and you weigh the outcomes
carefully. Presently we have an administration
that doesn’t seem to have the ability to choose between red and green
jellybeans, much less to make a strong show of force against an ever-growing ISIS threat.
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