Thinking about Vietnam, and then about a fellow Apolyton posters comments about the War on Terror, it suddenly hit me.
Vietnam was a war (almost all the enemy came from the North) and the USA treated it as a police action. Failure especially when a operation by the enemy was militarily defeated, but produced war-level casualties (TET).
Iraq I was a war, was conducted as a war, terminated as war, and sold as a war. Success
Iraq II is part of the "War on Terror". It's more of a police action, in that the majority of casualties come from things like IED's and platoon sized or smaller operations. It was sold as a war. Failing, at least in public perceptions in the US and in weakening the insurgency.
Maybe, just maybe, how you sell a war, and the language you use, is critical in it's overall success domestically.
Vietnam was a war (almost all the enemy came from the North) and the USA treated it as a police action. Failure especially when a operation by the enemy was militarily defeated, but produced war-level casualties (TET).
Iraq I was a war, was conducted as a war, terminated as war, and sold as a war. Success
Iraq II is part of the "War on Terror". It's more of a police action, in that the majority of casualties come from things like IED's and platoon sized or smaller operations. It was sold as a war. Failing, at least in public perceptions in the US and in weakening the insurgency.
Maybe, just maybe, how you sell a war, and the language you use, is critical in it's overall success domestically.
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