WASHINGTON — For people old enough to remember Vietnam, the transformation of the U.S. military has been momentous, one of the largest changes to ever affect a major American institution.
One can question the long-term impact of a powerful, costly military on a republic's character and budget. Since the Declaration of Independence, civilians have been given strong say in national defense to forestall the military governments that often have wreaked havoc on the world.
But few can argue that the modern U.S. military has transformed itself ahead of most institutions in the application of management strategies, social progress, technology, morale and ultimately, results. While institutions like the Catholic Church or big business have undergone crises over the past two years, the military has remained one of the most respected American institutions.
It was not that long ago that Vietnam veterans were spat upon when they returned home, when movies like "The Deer Hunter" explored the tortured psyches of a generation of young veterans. Only 23 years ago, U.S. soldiers failed to rescue Iranian hostages, leaving shattered helicopter hulls in the desert as metaphors for Jimmy Carter's days of malaise.
The turnaround began with a huge price, in the shadows of Vietnam. Ronald Reagan's military buildup of the 1980s helped drive federal budget deficits to record levels but also helped bankrupt Cold War foes and produced the early outlines of the "smart bomb" military that helped win Operation Desert Storm in 1991. The military, one of the first institutions to segregate races, has been a model of progress in recruiting and promoting minorities.
Iraq may have been the final piece of the transformation. Afghanistan, with the failures to destroy cornered terrorists at Tora Bora, had cast some doubts upon U.S. strategy. Despite second guessing early in the Iraq war, a quarter-million U.S. men and women and a strong British force routed a not-insignificant army in less than a month, with fewer coalition soldiers killed so far than those died in the Persian Gulf War 12 years ago. More young Americans died in the beginning hours of D-Day than died in both wars against Iraq.
And despite the deaths of innocents, the collateral carnage was not on the scale of previous wars, when Dresden-like hell descended upon cities and thousands of civilians died in a single night.
The swagger that Army Gen. Tommy Franks, the architect of the winning strategy, showed while convening a meeting in one of Saddam Hussein's golden-gilded palaces was in stark relief to the discredited military of Vietnam.
Religious references to war speak of a terrible swift sword. This is the U.S. military in 2003. And the generation of young Americans from which it is drawn is, unlike its baby boomer parents, among the most pro-military of any in American history.
A new book, "The Generation of Trust," by Harvard public policy professor David King and Harvard-educated economist Zachary Karabell, traces the transformation of the military to the infamous Tet offensive during Vietnam 35 years ago.
King and Karabell cite three broad strategies by the Pentagon to rebuild trust in the military:
— Improving battlefield performance.
— Making the military more professional.
— Constructing what King and Karabell called "a sustained Hollywood-focused campaign of persuasion, which was mainly gauged to attract a long line of new recruits."
The latter goal, the authors claim, was successful because the military played to generational differences in attitudes toward the military.
"Baby boomers, with the effects of Vietnam lingering, remain largely skeptical of the military," King and Karabell write. "Yet the children of the baby boomers, with the effects of the first gulf war coloring their view, are stronger supporters of the military than even their own Depression-era and World War II-era grandparents ever were."
There are many enduring images from this war. The Iraqi boy, Ali, with both arms blown off in a bombing raid that killed his family. The long lines of U.S. armor cruising across the desert. The statue of Saddam Hussein falling in a Baghdad square. Looting. Iraqis kissing American soldiers.
But as the nation-building phase begins, another dominant image will be of the cool professionalism of individual U.S. soldiers. It may have been the biggest byproduct of the Pentagon's decision to embed journalists with fighting units.
General: Iraqi troops improve The top U.S. general in Iraq said Wednesday that once Iraqi government forces take the lead in the war, the insurgency can be defeated and the American troop level reduced.
| USA TODAY | Wednesday, January 26, 2005 | 11:40 pm
Parties waging a polite battle to control Najaf In this city, the holiest in Iraq to the country's Shiite Muslim majority, political rhetoric is heating up. But unlike in some places in Iraq, the debate here isn't focused on religion or historic ethnic divisions, and there's little violence.
| USA TODAY | Tuesday, January 25, 2005 | 11:34 pm
In Iraq, the question is: To vote or not to vote A recent survey by the International Republican Institute found that 80% of Iraqis say they will probably vote this weekend. But unrelenting insurgent violence, the specter of post-election sectarian strife and confusion over complex ballots threaten to snuff out democracy before it can take hold.
| USA TODAY | Tuesday, January 25, 2005 | 11:17 pm
| USATODAY.com | Tuesday, January 18, 2005 | 11:46 pm
Female Iraqi candidates risk lives Members of Congress who traveled to the Middle East over the weekend got a harrowing lesson on the high price of democracy.
| USATODAY.com | Wednesday, January 12, 2005 | 10:57 pm
U.S.: Elections will be credible The Bush administration will consider the results of Iraq's elections credible even if most Sunni Muslims minority don't vote on Jan. 30.
| USATODAY.com | Wednesday, January 12, 2005 | 10:57 pm
| USATODAY.com | Monday, January 10, 2005 | 11:03 pm
Court-martial begins for Abu Ghraib figure The court-martial of Army reservist Spc. Charles Graner, the man portrayed as the ringleader in the Abu Ghraib prisoner-abuse scandal in Iraq, is set to begin Friday at Fort Hood in Texas.
| USATODAY.com | Thursday, January 6, 2005 | 11:47 pm
Iraqi expatriates fear being left out of elections Iraqi-American groups say disorganization and overly stringent requirements are plaguing an ambitious effort to allow expatriates worldwide to vote in Iraq's Jan. 30 elections.
| USATODAY.com | Thursday, January 6, 2005 | 10:48 pm
Allawi: Elections will go on Iraqi interim Prime Minister Ayad Allawi on Wednesday rejected growing calls for postponement of the national elections set for Jan. 30.
| USATODAY.com | Wednesday, January 5, 2005 | 11:15 pm
Fallujans reluctant to return So far, Fallujans are not lining up to return to what's left of their devastated city.
| USATODAY.com | Wednesday, January 5, 2005 | 11:13 pm
Congress expects $100 billion war request Congress expects the White House to request as much as $100 billion this year for war and related costs in Iraq and Afghanistan, congressional officials say.
| USA TODAY | Monday, January 3, 2005 | 11:30 pm
More contracts steered to Iraqi firms The U.S. government is shifting more reconstruction contracts toward Iraqi companies as violence makes it harder for American contractors to work.
| USATODAY.com | Monday, January 3, 2005 | 11:00 pm
| USATODAY.com | Sunday, January 2, 2005 | 10:57 pm
Gas shortage fuels resentment in Iraq Buying gasoline in Iraq is a serious undertaking. Determined motorists get up before their dawn prayers to join 2-mile-long lines. Sometimes they don't get to fill their tanks until evening. A black market is thriving.
| USA TODAY | Wednesday, December 29, 2004 | 11:47 pm
Soldiers saw giant tent as inviting target for insurgents Soldiers at the Forward Operating Base Marez near Mosul, Iraq base had long complained of feeling defenseless in the fabric-covered hall, which lately has been the target of mortar and rocket attacks almost daily.
| USA TODAY | Wednesday, December 22, 2004 | 11:42 pm
U.S. contractor pulls out of Iraq rebuilding project A Virginia company this week became the first large contractor to withdraw from the multibillion-dollar Iraq reconstruction drive, saying work there was too dangerous and costly.
| USA TODAY | Wednesday, December 22, 2004 | 11:35 pm
Mosul attack showcases insurgents' intelligence The implications of the audacious suicide attack in the center of a heavily guarded U.S. military base in Mosul go beyond a failure of base security.
| USATODAY.com | Wednesday, December 22, 2004 | 11:11 pm
Mosul blast hits U.S. hard A massive lunchtime explosion struck a flimsy mess tent filled with soldiers Tuesday at a military base near Mosul. It was one of the deadliest attacks yet against Americans in Iraq. Mlitary spokesmen in Baghdad and at the Pentagon said 19 U.S. soldiers were killed.
| USA TODAY | Tuesday, December 21, 2004 | 11:45 pm
Soldiers who led invasion must return Continuing insurgent attacks have forced the United States to boost its force in Iraq toward 150,000, its highest level yet.
| USATODAY.com | Sunday, December 19, 2004 | 11:08 pm
| Gordon Trowbridge | Marine Corps Times | Sunday, December 19, 2004 | 6:41 pm
Troops can't beat deals at PX Flush with hazardous-duty pay and tax-free earnings, U.S. troops in combat zones often have more money to spend than things to buy. That's where the PX, or post exchange, comes in, providing a taste of home if only for the time it takes to eat a bag of Doritos.
| C. Mark Brinkley | Army Times | Thursday, December 16, 2004 | 11:22 pm
| USATODAY.com | Tuesday, December 14, 2004 | 11:32 pm
Army Guard now says its Iraq troops figure was inaccurate The Army National Guard said Monday it had given USA TODAY an inaccurate count of the total number of Guard troops in Iraq since the beginning of the war in March 2003, but still could not provide a precise count.
| Dave Moniz | USA TODAY | Tuesday, December 14, 2004 | 10:29 am
The U.S. military believes Iraq's rebellious Anbar province can be brought into national elections scheduled for January.
| Gordon Trowbridge | Army Times | Sunday, December 12, 2004 | 11:05 pm
U.S. military preparing restive Iraqi province for elections The top U.S. officer in Iraq's rebellious Anbar province believes the region can be settled and brought into national elections scheduled for Jan. 30. Anbar, a hotbed of insurgent unrest, stretches from west of Baghdad to the Syrian border and poses perhaps the toughest challenge to the U.S. mission in Iraq.
| Gordon Trowbridge | Army Times | Friday, December 10, 2004 | 9:09 pm