Robert McNamara
"I want Americans to understand why we made the mistakes we did and to learn from them; that is the only way our nation can ever hope to leave the past behind" (McNamara, 1996)
Robert McNamara was the Secretary of Defense for the United States under presidents John Kennedy and Lyndon Johnson, but he is best known in history for his role as one of the fiercest advocates of the U.S. involvement in the Vietnam war. This paper is in response to the video, "The Fog of War," in which McNamara discusses a number of issues that he faced during his tenure, and in hindsight he explains very candidly the errors in judgment and in strategy that were made in World War II and in the Vietnam war. This paper critiques his video and uses supplementary resources in the sense of providing perspective on the war the U.S. waged in Iraq.
Lesson Four -- Maximize Efficiency / Lesson Five -- Proportionality Guidelines
McNamara seems clearly disturbed in the video when he discusses the firebombing attacks on cities in Japan during the Pacific Theatre of World War II. He says the words, "One hundred thousand people burned to death" several times. He mentions that fifty square miles of Tokyo were torched in March, 1945. He goes on admit that he was "…part of the mechanism that… recommended [the firebombing]." He lays the ultimate responsibility on General Curtis LeMay, whose obsession was "target destruction." Men, women, and children were burned to death not just in Tokyo, but also -- as mentioned in Lesson Five -- there were 67 Japanese cities that were firebombed.
Was it maximizing efficiency to kill between half and ninety percent of the civilians in 67 Japanese cities, and then totally destroy Nagasaki and Hiroshima with atomic bombs? That is overkill, not...
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