07 December, 2008

Obama, another great judgment

President-elect Barack Obama has chosen retired Gen. Eric K. Shinseki to be the next Veterans Affairs secretary, turning to a former Army chief of staff once vilified by the republican Bush administration for questioning its Iraq war strategy.

In 2003 when Shinseki testified to Congress that it might take several hundred thousand U.S. troops to control Iraq after the invasion. Republicans Rumsfeld and his deputy, Paul Wolfowitz, belittled the estimate as "wildly off the mark" and the general was marginalized and later retired from the Army. He was right, those republicans were wrong.

Again, the republican Bush administration was wrong in underestimating the amount of funding needed to treat thousands of injured veterans returning from Iraq and Afghanistan.

General Shinseki has a record of courage and honesty, and is a bold choice to lead the VA into the future. "You must love those you lead before you can be an effective leader," he said. "You can certainly command without that sense of commitment, but you cannot lead without it. And without leadership, command is a hollow experience, a vacuum often filled with mistrust and arrogance."

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