• Rich Barlow

    Senior Writer

    Photo: Headshot of Rich Barlow, an older white man with dark grey hair and wearing a grey shirt and grey-blue blazer, smiles and poses in front of a dark grey backdrop.

    Rich Barlow is a senior writer at BU Today and Bostonia magazine. Perhaps the only native of Trenton, N.J., who will volunteer his birthplace without police interrogation, he graduated from Dartmouth College, spent 20 years as a small-town newspaper reporter, and is a former Boston Globe religion columnist, book reviewer, and occasional op-ed contributor. Profile

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There are 6 comments on A Military Man Calls for Cutting the Military

  1. I hope he sends a copy of his book to President Obama, with the hopes that Obama will take him on as an advisor. Our strategy in Afghanistan is even stupider than our strategy was/is for Iraq. counter insurgency is a joke, and we are going to lose many more lives there. In the end, we’ll lose and leave.

  2. I suppose you could try to encourage our Europeans partners in NATO to spend more on security capabilities, but it seems that they are too busy surrendering what little personal freedom they have left to the islamofascists that already reside within their borders. Like it or not, the US is the one and only country that still values liberty enough to make the sacrifices necessary to preserve it. Of course, it would be nice if we could just retreat into Fortress America and turn a blind eye to the rest of the world. Unfortunately, that would mean ceding control of the world’s commerce and natural resources to assorted madmen, tyrants and kleptocrats. At some point – probably when oil hits $500 a barrel, Iran and North Korea build a nuclear missile base in Venezuela, and Al Qaeda sets up an embassy in Canada – we might want to reconsider the notion that our national interests end neatly at the water’s edge. It is very telling that Professor Bacevich is willing to concede that we had an obligation to intervene in Rwanda, a country of absolutely no strategic importance to our national interests, and yet considers it illegitimate and stupid to overthrow an outlaw Iraqi regime that had already demonstrated its willingness to invade its neighbors and disrupt the world’s supply of oil. No one likes war, but we aren’t going to make it go away by disengaging from the rest of the world. As Osama Bin Laden famously said, when given a choice between a strong horse and a weak horse, people will always choose the strong one. If we relinquish our position of military dominance, we will make ourselves more vulnerable and, ironically, more dependent on preemptive action.

  3. Professor Bacevich was one of my favorite professors. It has been said that the United States is an empire that does not recognize itself as one. By our natural aversion to foreign entanglements we are averse to many of the elements of empire employed by our British antecedents in the last century. The United States is the most benevolent superpower in world history and I would rather our nation overcompensate for our security, which is the most basic of human desires. True, we should pull back from certain bases in Europe and Afghanistan, but this does not mean that the next generation of missile and weaponization technologies should be scrapped. The world is not a pretty place. Would you rather have America or China run the global stage? In sum, while I agree with all of Professor Bacevich’s points int his article, I firmly believe that the United States Armed Forces to be the one institution in this country we should be unquestionably financing and staffing with the most brilliant of men.

  4. I have never had a more insightful professor than Bacevich. He is spot on, and always has been. We are a military family – my husband returned from Iraq and we are pending a deployment to A-stan. When he asks for a book recommendation, Bacevich’s books are the first in mind. Our strategy leaders all need to take a page or 100 from his books.

  5. @I disagree –

    You said: “..too busy surrendering what little personal freedom they have left to the islamofascists that already reside within their borders.”

    This sounds exactly like the U.S. right now.

    You said: “If we relinquish our position of military dominance, we will make ourselves more vulnerable and, ironically, more dependent on preemptive action.”

    Spreading our troops thin makes us very vulnerable. The U.S. has troops in at least 135 countries. We have got to stop somewhere and think about the troops and their human capabilities.

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