The basic point this guy was making is that the military should stand up and say the goal is impossible if they think it's impossible. Few did in this case.
I don't think to many thought nation building impossible at the time, just very difficult. Has anyone tried something like this on this scale before? No.
And even if they did object, well, there is this thing called the chain of command. We don't have the final say, and just because someone is asking you to do something difficult doesn't mean you can not do it. Even if they ask you to do something impossible, but legal, you still have to do it when over ruled.
AND, alot of these general officers we are talking about are not responsible for big picture stuff. "Go clear out Fulujah!" Good to go. "Go secure grid squares Fox 2 and Golf 3!" Good to go. One of the hard lessons of this war is that just because you are succeeding operationally doesn't mean you are strategically (Jutland), or policy wise. There are few operational objectives the military has failed to meet. However, that doesn't mean those were the right objectives to pursue or they are relevant to the larger puzzle of which the military only holds a few pieces.
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