Tuesday, May 16, 2006

Jimmy Carter - Beanbag Warrior

I'm old enough to remember the Iranian hostage rescue fiasco so this doesn't surprise me. It still angers me, though.
Another presidential directive concerned the use of nonlethal riot-control agents. Given that the shah's occasionally violent riot control during the revolution was now Exhibit A in Iran's human-rights case against the former regime and America, Carter wanted to avoid killing Iranians, so he had insisted that if a hostile crowd formed during the raid, Delta should attempt to control it without shooting people. Burruss considered this ridiculous. He and his men were going to assault a guarded compound in the middle of a city of more than 5 million people, most of them presumed to be aggressively hostile. It was unbelievably risky; everyone on the mission knew there was a very good chance they would not get home alive. Wade Ishmoto, a Delta captain who worked with the unit's intelligence division, had joked, "The only difference between this and the Alamo is that Davy Crockett didn't have to fight his way in." And Carter had the idea that this vastly outnumbered force was first going to try holding off the city with nonviolent crowd control? Burruss understood the president's thinking on this, but with their hides so nakedly on the line, shouldn't they be free to decide how best to defend themselves? He had complained about the directive to General Jones, who had said he would look into it, but the answer had come back "No, the president insists." So Burruss had made his own peace with it. He had with him one tear-gas grenade--one--which he intended to throw as soon as necessary; he would then use its smoke as a marker to call in devastatingly lethal 40 mm AC-130 gunship fire."
In my opinion, Carter will forever rank as one of the worst leaders America ever elected. The American electorate judged his performance accordingly when he tried for a second term during the 1980 Presidential Election. Ronald Reagan won by a landslide with Carter conceding before the polls closed in the West.

In a way, there was an enduring, silver lining to Carter's ineptitude in office. It provided for a rebirth of conservatism in American politics, the Reagan Revolution. Nevertheless, even though Carter inadvertently helped the stature of conservatism, my opinion of him is not elevated. (H/T In The Bullpen)

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