here is a serving of reality for you flag waving patriotic 'we're never wrong' fellows;
4,000,000,029,057. Remember that number. It’s going to come up again later.
But let’s begin with another number entirely: 145,000 -- as in, 145,000 uniformed soldiers striding down Washington’s Pennsylvania Avenue.
That’s the number of troops who marched down that very street in May
1865 after the United States defeated the Confederate States of America.
Similar legions of rifle-toting troops did the same after World War I ended with the defeat of Germany and its allies in 1918. And Sherman tanks rolling through the urban canyons of midtown Manhattan?
That followed the triumph over the Axis in 1945. That’s what winning
used to look like in America -- star-spangled, soldier-clogged streets
and victory parades.
Enthralled by a martial Bastille Day celebration while visiting
French President Emmanuel Macron in Paris in July 2017, President Trump
called for just such a parade in Washington. After its estimated cost
reportedly ballooned from $10 million to as much as $92 million, the American Legion weighed in. That veterans association, which boasts 2.4 million members,
issued an August statement suggesting that the planned parade should be
put on hold “until such time as we can celebrate victory in the War on
Terrorism and bring our military home.” Soon after, the president announced that
he had canceled the parade and blamed local Washington officials for
driving up the costs (even though he was evidently never briefed by the Pentagon on what its price tag might be).
The American Legion focused on
the fiscal irresponsibility of Trump’s proposed march, but its
postponement should have raised an even more significant question: What
would “victory” in the war on terror even look like? What, in fact,
constitutes an American military victory in the world today? Would it in
any way resemble the end of the Civil War, or of the war to end all
wars, or of the war that made that moniker obsolete? And here’s another
question: Is victory a necessary prerequisite for a military parade?
The easiest of those questions to resolve is the last one and the
American Legion should already know the answer. Members of that veterans
group played key roles in a mammoth “We Support Our Boys in Vietnam” parade in New York City in 1967 and in a 1973 parade in that same city honoringveterans of that war. Then, 10 years after the last U.S. troops snuck out of South Vietnam -- abandoning their allies and
scrambling aboard helicopters as Saigon fell -- the Big Apple would
host yet another parade honoring Vietnam veterans, reportedly the largest such celebration in the city’s history. So, quite obviously, winning a war isn’t a prerequisite for a winning parade.......https://www.zerohedge.com/news/2019-01-19/us-military-winning-no-really-it
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