JTF-Bravo wrote:
We don't make much of the "Greatest Generation" taking watches off of live prisoners and dead corpses. Or using their bayonets to remove the gold fillings off of dead (and sometimes dying) enemy soldiers.
However, three generations later, we have youth who feel it is more important to be famous (or infamous) than good and videotape and photograph themselves behaving badly, and then "share" them with their "friends", even if their friends are just people at the other end of a computer connection that they have never really met.
On the other hand, grandpa didn't have to worry about winning the "hearts and minds" of the Germans, or the Japanese, or the Italians. He had no doubts about the validity of his cause.
Good points - I would submit that we are highly unlikely to change the hearts and minds of the Iraqis, Afgans, Iranians, as well as the Middle East as a whole.
I would also submit that we make the mistake of believing that the rest of the world acts and processes information as we do in the USA - not the case.
(One small example - we are over in Saudi Arabia, defending them, Kuait, et al in the 1st Desert War - our troops were told to:
Really downplay any [Christian] religous services (and I'm pretty close to being an agnostic)
Show no Christian medals, cross', etc
Because the above actions might "offend" the muslim population - of the countries we are sending our money and letting our troops die to defend

)