houndawg wrote:native wrote:
The troops of today are not as weak minded, drugged out and irresponsible as you were in the day, sad sack. If you were either sober or honest you might be able to recognize and acknowledge that there exist substantive differences in ROE from one war to another, from one theater to another, and even from one operation to another. In particular, Obama and McChrystal are using ROE in Afghanistan that are different from, and in my opinion weaker than, previous ROE. This is neither a truth nor a lie, but my opinion and a point for discussion.
ROE are not an either/or proposition. There are as many variations of ROE as there are engagements. Whether or not a particular set of ROE are successful depends on a variety of factors, like local conditions, order of battle, staying power and strategic objectives.
If you read my post honestly and carefully, I am not saying that the Obama/McChrystal ROE could not work in the long run, only that they are reminiscent (not identical) to weak ROE associated with losing efforts in other wars. I am not arguing for adoption of the Russian ROE, only suggesting that the Obama/McChrystal approach may not be effective, especially considering Obama's time and resource constraints, and are probably regarded by the troops themselves as weak and unreasonable restrictions.

You're a blowhard, nate, but you're response when owned is always predictable: first go ad hominem then blow smoke and divert.
Todays troops may or may not be as weak-minded, drugged out, and irresponsible as they were back in the day. You wouldn't know, it was back before the best part of you ran down your mommy's leg.
You're little spiel about ROE is a cute, but irrelevant, diversion. One more time, navel: ROE have nothing to do with why we're losing in Afghanistan.
Now, if you have something relevant to say on-topic, for a change, please feel free to share, but nobody buys your faux-intellectual windbag act.
Of course I get ad hominem
with you, dawg, just to return the favor! However, I prefer a civilized, reasoned discussion with you dawg, and I look for evidence of such in your posts.
You have your military generations wrong. My generation inherited the drug problems your generation left behind. To be fair, unworkable ROE contributed to some of the problems manifested in your generation. That is one of my motivations for caring about ROE. We helped some of your brothers get well, but we also had to get rid of the sad sacks. The current generation has moved beyond both of us and is the best there has ever been.
Besides the human considerations for the troops themselves, I also care about ROE as both a tactical and a strategic consideration. ROE is not a diversion, but as you suggest, it may not be the primary reason for our struggles in Afghanistan. I agree, as already posted, that numeros considerations besides ROE come into play.
But just so you know: ROE are relevant to this thread because ROE are reported to have been discussed in the Rolling Stone article as a source of friction among McChrystal's troops.
But back to your points: One of the things I'd like to see, and I suspect you would like to see, is a realistic and credible definition of "success." What say you?