By John R. Guardiano on 2.11.05 @ 1:07AM
What the media, both left and right, don't understand about General Mattis and the Marine Corps.
To his liberal blogger critics, he is a dangerous, cold-blooded
"psychopath" who derives pleasure from sterile acts of killing. As
such, he should be fired or demoted and stripped of his command. To
the conservative talk radio crowd, he is the reincarnation of the
late, great Gen. George S. Patton Jr., a ruthless "fighting
machine" determined to wreak havoc and destruction on that thorn in
our side called Iraq. As such, the United States should put him in
charge and finally end this war once and for all.
But both the left and the right are wrong about Marine Corps Lt.
Gen. James N. Mattis. He is neither the Jack Nicholson caricature
of a Marine depicted in the 1992 movie A Few Good Men nor
the callous and mad eccentric depicted by George C. Scott in the
1970 movie Patton.
Instead, Gen. Mattis is a remarkably learned and thoughtful man
who adheres to the old-fashioned Christian, chivalric warrior code.
As such, he confounds modern-day screamers on both the left and the
right for whom the warrior code is unintelligible. I know because I
had the privilege of serving under Gen. Mattis as a Marine in
Iraq.
Moreover, while we were both in-country the General graciously
took the time to engage me in an exclusive half-hour conversation.
At the time, I was trying to secure a commission as an officer. The
General learned that my relatively advanced age (then 35) was
posing a problem and offered to help. That a three-star general
with a war on his hands would take the time to assist a lowly Lance
Corporal speaks volumes about the heart and character of Gen.
Mattis.
I SHOULDN'T HAVE BEEN surprised. I had spent the spring and summer
of 2003 with the First Battalion, Fourth Marine Regiment, at an
abandoned pistol factory in Al Hillah, about 60 miles south of
Baghdad. Gen. Mattis regularly showed up to speak with us. He would
tell us colorful stories, offer tough-minded advice and counsel,
and eagerly solicit our thoughts and questions. We loved him
because we knew he loved us.
And Gen. Mattis didn't just talk the talk; he walked the walk.
He led from the front. Indeed, on at least one occasion that I know
of, the General was bloodied from a firefight or improvised
explosive device while out on patrol with junior, enlisted Marines
one-third his age. That's what makes Gen. Mattis such a great
warrior: He truly respects and cares for his Marines.
"Guardiano," he told me, "I don't give a damn about the
officers. If they don't like what they're doing, they can get on a
plane and leave the Corps -- go back where they came from. But I do
care deeply about those 18- and 19-year-old Lance Corporals out on
the frontlines." The General was telling me that, as an officer, I
better be concerned with helping younger, junior Marines, not
advancing my own career.
That's why all the liberal talk about Mattis being some sort of
"psychopathic killer" is so ludicrous. Nor is he, as the
conservative talk-show set would have it, an inhumane "fighting
machine." Psychopathic killers don't care for their men; and
machines don't exhibit compassion for a liberated but frightened
people.
Yet, I am absolutely convinced that whenever a Marine died or
bled, a part of Gen. Mattis died and bled, too. And whenever an
innocent Iraqi was intimidated, beaten or shot, Gen. Mattis was
incensed and outraged. But because of our modern-day cultural
depravity, we lack the basic vocabulary necessary to identify and
understand, let alone appreciate and celebrate, warriors like Gen.
Mattis.
HOW, THEN, TO EXPLAIN the General's comment that it is "fun to
shoot some people"? Is not such a sentiment "indicative of an
apparent indifference to the value of human life," as the Council
on American Islamic Relations (CAIR) argues?
Unfortunately for the council and other professional grievance
lobbies, context is everything, especially when it come to war and
killing. Gen. Mattis clearly did not say he likes killing for
killing's sake. Instead, like most Marines, he enjoys fighting for
a righteous cause. He enjoys a good "brawl," especially when it
involve shooting vermin who subjugate, beat, and abuse women.
Moreover, if the critics bothered actually to listen to
Gen. Mattis's remarks -- which you can do online at NBC's San Diego
affiliate website -- they would realize that he was calling for
an investment in so-called soft-power resources that would help to
avert combat. He was saying, in effect: "Look, I love a good fight
and would enjoy shooting and killing these bastards; but we need to
do the things that will make that unnecessary."
The General was speaking at a professional conference on
military transformation; and he was urging the Pentagon to invest
in efforts that would "diminish the conditions that drive people to
sign up for these kinds of insurgencies."
None of the widely touted new technologies and weapons systems,
he noted, "would have helped me in the last three years [in Iraq
and Afghanistan]. But I could have used cultural training [and]
language training. I could have used more products from American
universities [who] understood the world does not revolve around
America and [who] embrace coalitions and allies for all of the
strengths that they bring us."
That sure doesn't sound like the fanatical Col. Kurtz of
Apocalypse Now.
GEN. MATTIS ALSO IMPLICITLY took exception to conservative defense
analysts like Weekly Standard contributor Thomas Donnelly,
who seem to think that increasing the size of the Army and Marine
Corps will solve most of our military challenges. But a larger --
and thus more bureaucratic -- force structure may be exactly what
is not needed to win the war against Islamic fascism.
As the General explained, "We're seeing a re-criminalization of
war. And that means we need to get small units, not big armies...
Small units so capable that, as we close with the enemy, they're
transformed into something that is as capable as our air units and
sea units have been in shutting down the threats to this country
over the last 30 years."
Some critics have alleged that Gen. Mattis's' comments reflect a
dangerous military mindset that gave rise to the Abu Ghraib prison
scandal. However, for any of the Marines who served under him, it
is impossible to imagine a scandal like Abu Ghraib happening on the
General's watch.
That's because Gen. Mattis always made it his business to know
what was happening in his command; and he did not tolerate
stupidity and abuse by his Marines. We all understood this because
he communicated well and often his expectations. Those expectations
included his demand to "keep your honor clean" and to treat the
Iraqis "as you would your own family, with dignity and
respect."
Let's hope this reality is included in the movie, destined to
come, about Gen. Mattis, the Marine Corps, and Iraq. This would be
a refreshing change from Hollywood's recent depictions of the U.S.
military. And it would rightly honor a man and a warrior who is
truly an American hero.
topics:
Business, Islam, Hollywood, Military, Iraq, Fascism