A week has passed since the bogeyman of the anti-terrorism war, shot down like the villain he was, and what was a success, a combined effort of civilian and military intelligence and special forces operations efforts, is now lying on the road, muddied and roughed up like yesterday’s front page of the times in NYC. The narrative has gone from a dashing tale of the finest sailors and marines the US can muster flying into hostile territory with a “pretty good” chance of finding what they’re looking for, touching down, losing a helicopter to reasons now unexplained, and then marching on the bad guy in his base. It reeks of Hollywood bravado, and, as ashamed as I am to admit this, I enjoy every second of that tale. It’s our narrative, the one our nation has crafted from the beginning. The halls of military buildings are replete with plaques of soldiers, sailors, airmen, and marines that went above and beyond the call of duty and performed tasks that most of us can’t even imagine performing. This is the legacy of our armed forces, the litanies and hymns of those that march off to defend the land of the free, and nothing, I repeat, nothing can foul that legacy faster than putting a mangy lot of self-serving politicians in charge of it.
The narrative went from a firefight to a guy getting shot in his PJs. Our special forces with years of rigorous training and highly honed physical and mental capabilities painted with the brush of savages and brutes that gunned down an unarmed men instead of one of the most vicious, violent, and vindictive individuals in the world. We, in a matter of hours, became the villains rather than the victors. Our cheers of victory over our demon from afar washed out by the world chiming in that it was comparable to the Muslim response to 9/11. I wish to digress a moment and point out that if those who say the unwarranted murder of 3,000 people is equitable to killing the director of said mission, then I would highly recommend evaluating not only their moral compass, but their math skills.
Truth is good, don’t get me wrong, but there is a narrative here. Read a military officer’s foreword or listen to speech from a military leader. Short, straight to the point, and, if they’re old enough or high enough in rank, filled with enough steely determination to build a small battleship out of. That is why the failed handling of this momentous even is so tragic. Here is an unquestionable victory in the war on terror. A mastermind, nay, THE mastermind rotting at the bottom of the ocean. We raided a house filled with intelligence that can lead us further down the rabbit hole than we’ve ever been, and our elected body is waffling on the details? Rather than get this right as soon as they were out of the locks, they chose to come out half-assed, intelligence not completed, and put a PC cherry on top, which they manged to screw up, and left the world feeling like we dropped our gun and the bullet just happened to hit the right guy in the room.
If the best the military has can operate with precision, efficiency, and willpower that will not yield to extraneous nonsense, then should we not expect the same from the ‘best’ the political world has to offer. The moment the White House got their hands on the information, it became PR. It was a victory; it was a photo opportunity. I doubt most of the leadership can even admit to even concede to the notion that they haven’t the foggiest idea what comes next, let alone what happened in that moment. To them, it was “Bin Laden”, “Dead”, and “poll numbers”. Never was it about victory, resolution, or progressing the mission; only how they could glean something off of it for themselves. If there is any tragedy to be pulled from this event it is not what happened in Pakistan, but how utter a failure the response was in Washington D.C.