The wrong war at the wrong place at the wrong time and with the wrong enemy"The wrong war, at the wrong place, at the wrong time, and with the wrong enemy" is General Omar Bradley's famous rebuke in May 15, 1951 Congressional testimony as the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff to the idea of extending the Korean War into China, as proposed by General Douglas MacArthur, the commander of the U.N. forces in Korea before being relieved of command by President Harry Truman on April 11, 1951. A more complete passage of Bradley's testimony is:
Vietnam War usagePresidential candidate John F. Kennedy criticized the Vietnam War in a speech given October 13, 1960 with a version of Bradley's saying.
Iraq War usageThe quotation has since been used to criticize the planning and execution of the U.S. invasion of Iraq and the subsequent occupation. Senator John Kerry, General Anthony Zinni, historian Arthur Schlesinger, Jr., and Governor Howard Dean have all used variations of the phrase in criticism of the Bush administration's handling of the Iraq war. Notably, Schlesinger also reported contemporaneously on Bradley's original statement back in 1951, and JFK was a signature hero of John Kerry. On September 6, 2004, at a Racine, West Virginia rally, Kerry said,
Speaking on 60 Minutes, May 23, 2004, Zinni said, "The plan was wrong, it was the wrong war, the wrong place and the wrong time—with little or no planning." He stated that serious "derelictions of duty," "criminal negligence," and poor planning put U.S. forces in harm's way and left Iraq in chaos after the invasion. He also said that Paul Bremer had made "mistake after mistake after mistake." In The Independent, April 15, 2004, Arthur Schlesinger wrote:
On December 15, 2003 at the Pacific Council on International Policy in Los Angeles, Howard Dean said Bush "launched the wrong war, at the wrong time, with inadequate planning, insufficient help and at extraordinary cost." In a May 3, 2003 primary debate in South Carolina, Dean said:
2004 Presidential debateDuring the first Presidential debate of 2004, George W. Bush repeatedly rebuked John Kerry for using Bradley's saying, asking, "what kind of message does it say" to U.S. troops and allies. Speaking of other world leaders, Bush said "They're not going to follow somebody who says, 'This is the wrong war at the wrong place at the wrong time.'" Bush recited versions of the quotation seven times, three times in one response. Although the saying was prominent in media coverage of the presidential race, practically no story made note of its source, a lapse repeated with the Republican saying "I am not questioning his patriotism, I'm questioning his judgment."
Categories: Political slogans | Korean War | 2003 Iraq conflict | Politics of the U.S. |
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