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- LETTERS, Page 6
-
-
- LIBERATION OF KUWAIT
-
- We should move quickly to alleviate the suffering of Iraq
- and Kuwait [THE GULF WAR, March 11]. The U.S. as a nation must
- address its responsibility. Seventeen million Iraqis --
- civilians and soldiers -- had absolutely no role in Saddam
- Hussein's decision to attack and brutalize the people of
- another nation, yet they are the blameless victims of President
- George Bush's actions to liberate Kuwait.
-
- Doug Thompson Sacramento
-
- Sadly, sanctions do not always work. Then someone has to
- have the courage to tell a tyrant "Enough!" or we will find
- ourselves with nothing to live for. Congratulations to Bush for
- telling Saddam "Enough!" and in the process braving public
- censure. I hope Bush continues to display the same courage when
- executing the (now) global responsibilities that come with
- being President of the "senior partner" of the U.N.
-
- Jose Antonio M. Lanuza Djakarta
-
- The justification for the loss of tens of thousands of lives
- and billions of dollars in destroyed property was that the U.S.
- needed to demonstrate to the world that aggression is not a
- successful strategy. Unfortunately, the real message was that
- force gets you what you want. Our military "victory'' is a
- setback in the long-term struggle to lessen belligerency in our
- world.
-
- David Rath Hood River, Ore.
-
- To those who advocate peace at any price: it's easy to
- appease the tiger -- just let him devour you.
-
- Marie Ottiker Lima
-
- Now that the adrenaline level has peaked and those gnawing
- doubts are back, let's hope the U.S. can stand proud without
- getting cocky. It would be easy to slip into the role of world
- bully in the name of morality. We should remind ourselves that
- this time luck was on our side.
-
- Anne Carter Brandywine, Md.
-
- I wonder if some small part of Desert Storm's overwhelming
- triumph wasn't a result of our soldiers' clear heads, thanks
- to the absence of alcohol and drugs.
-
- Jeanne Hewitt Harker Heights, Texas
-
- Oil's well that ends well.
-
- Bill Heath Boise
-
- General H. Norman Schwarzkopf is a genuine hero. He meets
- every requirement for an American patriot. I pray that he will
- remain outside the political arena.
-
- Anne B. Johnson Stockton, Ill.
-
- Bush's 1988 campaign alienated me totally. But if Bush can
- become one-tenth the leader in domestic affairs that he has
- proved to be in the gulf crisis, I'll put the animosity aside
- and vote for him in '92.
-
- Bill Sanders Tustin, Calif.
-
- I am not proud that Americans were sent to the other side
- of the world and had to kill others. But I am proud that they
- were brave enough to go, and thankful that these men and women
- are coming home.
-
- Ric Berrong Portland, Ore.
-
- Israel didn't lose the war; Iraq did. Give the P.L.O. and
- its "dispossessed" a home in Iraq, for heaven's sake.
-
- Ginni Brown Fort Myers Beach, Fla.
-
-
- It Was Just Like . . .
-
-
- Military buffs among our readers reached back in history to
- find parallels to the battle for the liberation of Kuwait.
- William Phillis of Northville, Mich., commented that "the
- concealed flank movement used so effectively by General Norman
- Schwarzkopf was employed 128 years ago by another great
- American general, Robert E. Lee, who commanded the Confederate
- troops at Chancellorsville, Va. Lee divided his army in the
- face of a numerically superior force, marched around the Union
- right flank and attacked with stunning success. One eyewitness
- described how the Union army `fled in the wildest confusion,
- leaving the field strewn with arms, accoutrements, clothing,
- caissons and field pieces.'" A precedent for the low number of
- deaths among the attacking forces was noted by Edmond Francis
- McGill of San Rafael, Calif., in the battle of Marathon in 490
- B.C. McGill recalled, "The Athenian army of 11,000 utterly
- defeated the larger Persian army, inflicting thousands of
- casualties upon the Persians and losing only 192 of its own."
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