As you may have heard, an [tag]eighth[/tag] [tag]retired[/tag] [tag]general[/tag] announced yesterday that Defense Secretary Donald [tag]Rumsfeld[/tag] should [tag]resign[/tag]. This one, though, has an even more compelling back-story than some of his colleagues.
Fox News is reporting an eighth general has called for Rumsfeld’s resignation. Ret. Marine General [tag]Paul Van Riper[/tag] said he constantly talks with many active duty and retired senior officers who share his feelings that Secretary Rumsfeld has not fought the Iraq war competently. He told Fox that Rumsfeld has run the Pentagon through intimidation and that a change in leadership is needed:
“If this leader is not capable of doing it, now going in excess of five years, has not demonstrated he is, then perhaps it is time to find a new one. If I was the president, I would have relieved him three years ago.”
And who is Gen. Paul Van Riper? Reader AYM reminded me that Malcolm Gladwell devoted most of a chapter in “Blink” to the retired Marine. Apparently, in 2002, Van Riper was responsible for playing an enemy commander (i.e., Saddam) in a war game against U.S. forces in the Persian Gulf. In fact, it’s an interesting story.
The Pentagon had anticipated that the United States, with its superior intelligence-gathering capabilities, its total informational superiority, and its carefully delineated leadership structures, would crush the enemy forces. But van Riper outfoxed them. Using surprise and low-tech solutions, he devastated the U.S. forces. […]
[W]hen van Riper talks about what he did — including a cruise-missile launch against the U.S. fleet — he says, “We’d done all the calculations on how many cruise missiles their ships could handle, so we simply launched more than that. …” Similarly, about his decision to communicate using lighting systems after his side’s electronics technologies were knocked out, he says, “Any moderately informed person would know enough to not count on those technologies.”
Pentagon leaders apparently didn’t pay too much attention to Van Riper at the time. With any luck, his suggestions will be taken a little more seriously now.