Paul Revere by Cyrus Dallin, North End, Boston

Monday, May 18, 2026

GUEST POST BY DAVE MILLER

 


Why America Keeps Winning Wars and Losing Countries

1979 — Iranian Hostage Rescue — Failure — Carter
1983 — Grenada Invasion — Success — Reagan
1986 — Libya Bombing — Mixed — Reagan
1989 — Panama Invasion — Success — Bush I
1990–91 — First Gulf War — Success — Bush I
1993 — Somalia / U.N. Intervention — Failure — Clinton
1995–99 — Bosnia / Kosovo Intervention — Success — Clinton
2001 — Afghanistan War — Failure — Bush II
2003 — Iraq War — Failure — Bush II
2011 — Libya Intervention — Failure — Obama

Current / Still Developing Operations:

2026 — Venezuela Intervention — Too Early to Judge — Trump
2026 — Iran Conflict — Mixed / Still Unfolding — Trump

If we analyze ten major U.S. military operations from 1979 through 2011, several patterns begin to emerge.

Four are generally viewed as clear failures.
Four are widely seen as successful.
One produced mixed results.
And one, depending on perspective, still remains debated.

For the sake of clarity, I’ve separated the current Venezuela and Iran conflicts from the historical list because both are still unfolding and their long-term outcomes remain uncertain.

Now let’s break the earlier operations down further.

Of the four clearest failures, three came under Democratic presidents. Notably, those failures were largely tactical, peacekeeping, or humanitarian-style interventions rather than conventional wars in the traditional sense. By contrast, the two large-scale modern war failures most Americans think of — Iraq and Afghanistan — were initiated under Republican leadership.

Looking at the broader list, several trends appear.

  1. Democratic presidents have more often struggled in limited military or humanitarian interventions.
  2. Republican presidents have overseen America’s most significant modern conventional war failures.
  3. President George H. W. Bush stands out as a clear outlier.

Perhaps there is a reason Bush I avoided a major military failure during his presidency.

Some might call it luck. But perhaps it was experience.

Bush was the only elected president since 1980 with direct combat experience. He was the only president of that era to have lived overseas in an official U.S. government role. He served diplomatically as ambassador to the United Nations and later as envoy to China. He also led the CIA.

That combination mattered.

Bush’s experience inside both the military and diplomatic worlds, including service as a decorated WWII naval aviator, gave him a strong understanding of both the reach and the limits of American power. He understood that while the United States could win militarily almost anywhere on earth, lasting victory required diplomacy, coalition-building, and political clarity.

President Trump and many of his supporters have sharply criticized America’s allies for failing to fully support the current Iran conflict. But did Trump do the difficult diplomatic work necessary to bring those allies onboard before military action began, as Bush did before the First Gulf War?

The answer appears to be no.

In 1975, before the fall of Saigon, U.S. Colonel Harry "Champ" Summers reportedly told North Vietnamese Colonel Nguyễn Đôn Tu, “You know, you never defeated us on the battlefield.”

The Vietnamese officer is said to have replied, “That may be so, but it is also irrelevant.”

That exchange still haunts American foreign policy.

When the United States commits fully to a military operation — Iraq, Afghanistan, Panama, or Venezuela — it does so with overwhelming firepower. Tactical defeat on the battlefield is rare. Yes, soldiers die, mistakes happen, and disasters occasionally occur, as they did during the failed Iranian hostage rescue mission in the desert.

But generally speaking, America wins the war.

The greater challenge comes afterward.

As in Vietnam and much of the Middle East, America often struggles not with winning wars, but with winning the peace.

Venezuela and Iran may eventually fit this historical pattern, but it is still too early to classify either with confidence. Venezuela may ultimately look like a tactical success, but the deeper question is whether the aftermath can be stabilized politically and economically. Iran is even harder to judge because the stated objectives and strategic endgame continue to evolve.

Perhaps what America needs are more leaders shaped by military service, diplomacy, and strategic restraint... and fewer leaders shaped primarily by celebrity and media culture.

49 comments:

Joe Conservative said...

You missed a whole bunch (like Ukraine)

from Google AI: The CIA (founded in 1949) has been involved in numerous foreign regime changes, with studies citing at least 72 covert and overt attempts during the Cold War alone (1947-1989), achieving success in roughly 40% of cases. Other analysts suggest 14 successful coups or instances of intervention, with over 100 regime-change operations total throughout US history.

Old Italian proverb - "Alexander never did what he said. Caesar never said what he did."

They don't call the media "fake news" for no reasons.

It's not a Left-Right thing. It's a Uni-Party thing. Gaining access to global resources for US (and International) corporations is Job #1 of the CIA's COVERT mission.

Joe Conservative said...

No... what America doesn't need is more experienced military leaders. You "win the peace" by occupying and integrating the pacified territories (ala Germany & Japan), NOT "liberating and leaving". You win the peace by establishing US Military bases in occupied countries that serve as "citadels" from which troops can sally if needed to quell unrest. Ideally, US nationals would emigrate and marry and permanently embed in pacified regions. They would open a 7-11 on every street corner in Kabul, much as Indians have a Dunkin Donuts on every street corner in America.

Joe Conservative said...

America's current military strategy is to "eat, scoot, and leave"...

"Eat, scoot, and leave"

from Google AI: "Eat, scoot, and leave" is a phrase that describes a common behavior in dogs where they drag their rear ends across the floor. This action is almost always a sign of discomfort, often related to anal gland issues, allergies, or parasites, and should not be ignored"

-FJ the Dangerous and Extreme MAGA Jew said...

...but wait, isn't the policy I advocate for called "Colonialism". What a horror for the post-colonial anti-colonialists!

All that De-colonizing for nothing!

Les Carpenter said...

As we continue to view success and failure through the lense of the systems approved and reified naratives. Rather than view success and failure through lenses that focuses on universal well being of all sentient beings.

The Military Industrial Complex will, ultimately, be a major factor in this nation's decline and eventual collapse.

Joe Conservative said...

ps - I actually am totally against colonialism. I'm a Paulite/ Massie isolationist who believes in foreign non-intervention. An Admirer of Federalist #5 (Jay) and #7 (Hamilton).

It why I totally agree with dismantling our foreign influence organizations that the CIA and private NED/ USAID NGOs (ala Soros Open Society Institute) meant to stir up trouble and cause unrest (woke colour revolutions) whenever the foreign power's policies aren't amenable for spreading global Ameerican dominated corporatism.

Joe Conservative said...

...I know. That definitely proves me lacking in toxic empathy and the impetus to "spread democracy" (ala NED) to all those poor oppressed foreign nations.

"Bailiff, whack his pee-pee!"

Dave Miller said...

Wow... I amazed. We finally got a pretty firm POV from Joe C or -FJ.

I'm not a fan of colonialism, but it is a viewpoint. And yes, gaining access to resources, as it is in the strategic interests of the US, just like in Settlers of Cataan.

I'd just rather do it through diplomacy, bargaining and without killing people.

To that end, actually, even to your end, that does not negate my "perhaps" point that it might be better to have someone who knows what the H-E double toothpicks they are doing in office.

Instead of someone chasing fame or fortune.

Les Carpenter said...

Frankly, Joe, it is not mine, yours, or this nation's concern what political or economic system other nations embrace and practice. Or at least it shouldn't be.

This nation's primary overriding concern should be the welfare and happiness of its people. All people, without regard to race, wealth, social status, gender identity, or any other aspect of their person.

Having said that, the planet is an interconnected web of relationships, positive as well as negative. We have become and interdependent world society, the result of ever evolving technologies and realities of modern life. It only seems sensible to strive for cooperation with our world neighbors with the goal of making life better for everyone on the planet.

The amount or wealth spent on the 750 military bases the USA operates around the globe is not just stupid it is insane. The billions, soon to be a trillion and a half spent on maintaining the MIC behemoth, the billions given the Zionist State of Israel to commit genocide, the ridiculous threats to take Greenland, Cuba, and bomb Iran back to the stone age are all things I adamantly oppose. For that money should be spent on improving our infrastructures and supporting our people through a National Healthcare system that all access, increased and improved support for our educational system, establishing a living wage minimum so no one exists in poverty or subsistence living.

It is no longer 1776 or 1787. While in principle I might agree that we should refrain from foreign entanglements that train left the station almost before the ink was dry on our founding documents. Therefore, there really is no plausible course to a path leading to isolationism.

The isolationist path you prefer Joe will not, in this day and age, lead to MAGA. It will in fact do the opposite. We cannot and should not be the policeman of the world. Nor should we be the candy store for other nations at the expense of our own people.

But there is a Middle Way, one grounded in wisdom and compassion. One that could, if people and nations would turn away from their ego desires and aversions that would solve many, if not most of the world's problems.

On a side note, dismantling the highly exploitive system of capitalism would be a good start. I recommend the book Escape from Capitalism for those with an open mind and eyes to see.

-FJ the Dangerous and Extreme MAGA Jew said...

I don't need convincing, Les. I'm meden again against the excesses of capitalism. The commodification of land, labour, capital, and now INFORMATION can go too far (ie destroying culture and personal privacy). And without the expenditure of excessive stores of wealth, the social order is diminished and begins to break down. The presence of "billionaires" and the social resentment against their accumulated wealth grows stronger every day (CA billionaires tax).

But putting that wealth to some "productive use" isn't that helpful, either. It needs to be something that glorifies these people, not demonizes them. Something that inspires others to make generous gestures as well.

In Athens, the rich were required to pay for triremes used in wars. They were often honoured by making them polemarcs and shown special honours at festivals (ie- the Dionysia). Those with talents, offered plays, tragedies and comedies (Satyr plays). Their 'excellence" was offered in the form of palms or laurel wreaths.

Dave Miller said...

As to US AID NGO's... they ran a series of workshops for teachers in Oaxaca, about conflict resolution. The teachers union there is the largest union, at 98K members in all of Latin America. Everyone I heard, both from my Marxist and Capitalist friends there was off the charts positive. Everyone said the "group" put on the best set of workshops they'd ever been to.

When I asked who led the workshops, they said USAID.

They're not all bad, just as all conservative/MAGA/progressives are not all bad.

Grey One talks sass said...

I have an issue with the first item "1979 — Iranian Hostage Rescue — Failure — Carter"

Thing is, Carters methods were working but Reagan couldn't have that so he sent some his guys behind the scenes to bolox the works. To my shame I voted for Reagan, thought he'd be on my side as an actor. Didn't realize the truth of the matter until it was way too late. For the future I'd like to see more accountability for such dishonorable actions.

Officially though, yes, Carter was an honorable person and the better public servant and took the loss in his name. Sort of related my distaste of Carter stemmed from his refusal to approve universal health care for veterans. At the time there needed to be an official declaration of some military sort but the Military Industrial Complex was up to all kinds of "officially unofficial" shenanigans in South America meaning no official declaration could be issued therefore service critters couldn't access services. Might have affected the late husband so there is that.

What this tells me is our current system is filled with deals and counter deals which reminds me more of a pile of greedy old men clambering over each other to reach some imaginary ring only they can see. It's no way to run the world even if historically that's how it's been for a very long time. Time for a change.

Been watching the kids a lot. They have some revolutionary ideas and it's not just the local kids but global. To be fair there seems to be a balance between the productive kids and the nihilists whose message distills down to their expectation of as much sex as they desire, but hey, no way are they perverts who would be satisfied with a sex doll. Nope, it's full time servitude of others or nothing. Oh, and they are the norm, not the rest of us folks outside their male only bubble. OK Jan.

OT a bit, I'm laughing at how the kids are responding to the blatant gerrymandering happening all over - they don't care because their generation outnumbers the rest of us by a lot and they are finally waking up to the fact. Their plan is to show up everywhere. Every race, every county, district, and state. So many young new folks running for just about everything. I'm so happy for them and wish each and every earnest young person all the success.

Another interesting fact being passed around by many of the ladies I follow is their absolute refusal to tolerate the spoiled brat antics by patriarchy fans as they don't need a multitude of dudes because it only takes one (as the saying goes). Facts are stubborn things and do not care if anyone believes them or not meaning "It's not all men, but it's usually a man" (SA of child perp numbers 90% male, 10% female / SA of adult 99% male, 1% female per AI).

Les Carpenter said...

My only disagreement FJ is that government should "work for the people they have control over" rather than legislate tax policies that favor the "capital order" at the expense of "labor" that in fact is the backbone of production and its resultant wealth creation.

I admire and value the creative genius of the entrepreneurial spirit. And these people deserve to prosper for their creative efforts and the risks they took that resulted in improvements to society.

However, there is such a thing as obscene profits and wealth. By which I mean when the few (3% of the population) controls 80% of the wealth while millions can barely make ends meet there is something wrong with the way we view what constitutes ethical economics and government.

We will not prosper by continuing to repeat the mistakes of the past or by doubling down on them.

And THAT FJ is where we will likely continue to disagree. Again, I recommend a reading of Escape from Capitalism.

-FJ the Dangerous and Extreme MAGA Jew said...

You misunderstand the purpose of USAID. It exists to foster dissent to the Mexican government on command from DC's CIA through the Mexican teacher's unions. They've "purchased" control through "entryism". It's called 'Soros Realism'. You "censor" they're activities NOT by prohibition, but by FUNDING/ FINANCE. They "buy off" the teacher union leadership with grant money that enables them to be paid a surplus salary.

That's why the US government be so "woke". It allows them to "capacity build" opposition groups to governments around the world. Don't do what DC wants? You get a "colour revolution" from USAID funded NGOs.

-FJ the Dangerous and Extreme MAGA Jew said...

ps - If they're funding the "woke" causes, you can bet they're funding the skinheads too (ala -SPLC scandal).

-FJ the Dangerous and Extreme MAGA Jew said...

The billionaire glorification was once called "philanthropy". But that "philanthropy" is now affiliated through and controlled largely by CIA, et al. And the original purposes of philanthropy coopted and largely replaced through "cultural capitalism" (charging consumers directly for the means to offset the evils of their consumption). This is how the capitalism were able to defuse rising class-based Marxism in the 60's and replace it with Individualist centered group Identity politics ie - feminism, black power, and subvert the "Rainbow colaition" (separate the New Left).

-FJ the Dangerous and Extreme MAGA Jew said...

Putin - Trump... same political strategy.

Dave Miller said...

Admittedly off topic, but I found this gem from Mothership First Mate Mustang on an earlier blogpost slamming then President Obama.

"A personality cult appears whenever an individual uses mass media propaganda to create idealized, quasi-heroic public personae arising from unquestioned flattery and praise. Personality cults aim to make the leader and the state synonymous, so that it is nearly impossible to make a distinction between them."

I wonder if anyone can think of a politician today who fits this description? And then if you can, maybe you can find where everyone who agreed with First Mate Mustang's post back in the day, can apply it now to anyone associated with the MAGA movement.

I'll wait.

BTW... here's his conclusion... ."..the cult of personality stands in direct contravention to the cult of individuality; we see this expressed in the writings of Karl Marx, Nikita Khrushchev, and in the behavior of Joseph Stalin, Adolph Hitler, Mao Zedong, and now, Barack Obama."

Joe Conservative said...

Carters methods were working...

Les Carpenter said...

Our system has been corrupt for awhile to some degree. Now, under the criminal trump and his sycophants, it is scrapping the very bottom of corruption.

Les Carpenter said...

To bad the individuals that frequent the Mothership fail to understood just how correct Marx was with respect to the exploitation of labor in capitalism.

Capitalism exploits labor exactly the same way slave owners exploited their slave laborers. The only real difference is the capitalist doesn physically own the people they employ.

If one isn't a capitalist they are essentially wage slaves.

Les Carpenter said...

This one for you -FJ. A perspective and truth you probably understand.

skudrunner said...

Dave, All your statistics prove that we should not get involved in trying to control other countries especially in the middle East. We don't understand their culture and even though we think human rights is important they prove they don't care.

Grey One talks sass said...

JoeCon, If you had anything factual to share you would have done that instead of sharing a link that made all my security alerts light up like it's Pride week. Carter's methods didn't provide the instant gratification your lot desires but they were working. I guess we'll never know how effective they could have been now, will we?

Les Carpenter said...

Actually skud, it's the capitalist class in the that does not care about universal human rights more than any others..

You've drank way too much of the fascist rights kool-aid skud.

Grey One talks sass said...

Who is this we you speak uf skud? The USA? Really? Because as I've been witnessing in front of my very own eyes our country firmly believes in and practices the mantra of "All people are created equal but some are more equal than others". It slots in nicely with the corollary of "Conservatism consists of exactly one proposition, to wit: There must be in-groups whom the law protects but does not bind, alongside out-groups whom the law binds but does not protect."

Your MAGA ID is showing again. Oops.

Dave Miller said...

Probably not the only thing they show Skud, but there is some truth in what you said.

Les Carpenter said...

Capitalism, worldwide, has no concern for the universal rights of ALL people. The 3% or so that are actually capitalist are only concerned with the continued accumulation of capital in their class. And it is through the exploration labor and maintaining a surplus workforce (the unemployed) that capitalist drive wealth to the top of the economic ladder.

Trickle Down economics is, and ALWAYS has been a myth. A myth even the lower economic class has internalized as truth. The neoclassical economists were very successful in convincing the populace of their self serving narrative.

Western Capitalism will, unless reformed, eventually collapse.

-FJ the Dangerous and Extreme MAGA Jew said...

What is slavery but the total commodification of labour, devoid of culture and any possibility of exercising sovereignty.

-FJ the Dangerous and Extreme MAGA Jew said...

We gave him over a year to show some results. then we got them. Choppers blown up in the desert. THAT is how "effective" they were.

Grey One talks sass said...

I know you, the many named troll, will lie when the bare facts aren't as salacious enough to paint your opponent as evil as you'd like.

444 days those hostages were held. Why do I remember? Because my sister was in school at Boulder where one of her friends father was a hostage. The issue is close to my families history so I remember.

Yes, Operation Eagle Claw failed but ultimately Carter's diplomacy worked. Only Reagan was stirring the pot so the hostages weren't released until minutes after Reagan was inaugurated. Minutes people. The message was clear to everyone only most forgot because Reagan had that voice which could melt butter.

But hey, your hero got what he wanted. You get to say Carter didn't "get things done" and Americans had to be held that much longer because Reagan just had to stick his fingers into those lucrative weapons contacts which has affected our political realm since.

Your agenda, you many faced troll, is to portray your side as a Dudley Do-right when in fact your real business is polishing turds until they gleam, a task proved to be doable by the MythBusters duo of Jamie and Adam. As both gents said at the end of the experiment - it's doable but very stinky.

And so are you many faced troll (stinky in case you miss my point).

-FJ the Dangerous and Extreme MAGA Jew said...

lol! I admit that my side is evil. Your problem is that you can't admit that your side is my sides "spitting image". Republicans didn't regime change 100 countries since WWII. THAT was done by the "Uni-Party". The Iranians, much like you, believed that there was a difference between the parties. And THAT is what allows them to get away with it.

-FJ the Dangerous and Extreme MAGA Jew said...

Fortunately for Democrats, some wage slaves earn surplus salaries. Especially the ones who work in Academia and the media (Democratic Party dominated professions) and who buy the privilege of earning those surpluses via college debt. But such are the trials and tribulation of the "surplus elites" known as the Professional Managerial Class" (PMC) aka, the "Vilicus"

-FJ the Dangerous and Extreme MAGA Jew said...

lol! Trump is the proof that it HAS collapsed, you're just too distracted to notice.

-FJ the Dangerous and Extreme MAGA Jew said...

It has mutated into a new form. Technofeudalism.

-FJ the Dangerous and Extreme MAGA Jew said...

The Bronze Age Collapse of "Capital" has already occurred. And the replacement "Cloud Capital" has already been subdivided into its' new classes. Cloud Lords (Cloud platform owners), Cloud Vassals (the old Capitalists who provide goods & services), and Cloud Serfs (You and me).

-FJ the Dangerous and Extreme MAGA Jew said...

President's (like Trump and Xi) are simply the "new" surplus-salaried Professional Managerial Class (PMC). Didn't you take note of the "Cloud formation" that accompanied Trump to Bejing some weeks back for a "Summit"?

Joe Conservative said...

That "Free Market" much vaunted by bankers, financiers, Reagan Republicans and Libertarians in the 1980's has been "conquered" by "Cloud Capital" and its' algorithmic Search Engines to direct the market (and its profits) into the the pockets of the Cloud Lords (Jeff Bezos Amazon.com, et al). All sellers in the marketplace (Cloud Vassals) must pay tribute to the Lords who control their "sales" in the Cloud.... and us serfs must labour to gain status as "influencers" for droppings from the tables of the Cloud Lords for providing "content" and self-segregated segments of the market for ideological exploitation of every individual's preferred/ branded "system of objects" (GARAP)

-FJ the Dangerous and Extreme MAGA Jew said...

The Ubermensch is not of the Earth, the soil, the humus (HUMan). He is of the Sky. Of the Clouds. Producing "Goods". He's "digital" (not handed). He produces "words" and "information". A Cloud Serf working for his Cloud Lords, and Cloud Vassals. This is what "The Information Age" really means. At least at this, the Technofeudal Stage. :(

Les Carpenter said...

Let's Assume for the moment I agree -FJ, and I accept your points have validity, what's your suggested potential solution? The game and tokens have changed but the results economically, at least with respect to the labor (wage class), remains pretty much the same as it was during the days of the Robber Barons.

Extraction, explotation, and coercion are three hallmarks of capitalism. And today those hallmarks are in high gear and working well for the oligarchs and their political support entourage in congress and the senate.

-FJ the Dangerous and Extreme MAGA Jew said...

It's simple Les. Stop rigging the regulatory and tax systems in favour of big corporations and private capital S&P 500 firm investors and start rigging it in favour of small cap firms. Also, stop protecting investors from liability. If Ford offers a bad product, bankrupt their investors, too! Small is anti-fragile. Too big to fail is NOT!

-FJ the Dangerous and Extreme MAGA Jew said...

The next Bronze Age Collapse is already queud up. The global supply chains will fail, and the populations of all nations reliant upon them will suffer the fate of the Palace cultures in 1200 BCE... starvation and a 90% population decline. If the Straits of Hormuz don't let the fertilizer through, that collapse will begin the Fall.

-FJ the Dangerous and Extreme MAGA Jew said...

90% of the "value" in tech firms is in IP as categorized as "Intangible Assetts". Stop protecting IP. Let the world go full Shanzhai, tomorrow. Why do you think all the chip innovation today is STILL in Taiwan? Shanzhai, THAT's why!

Les Carpenter said...

At the heart of all of the above, which I don't disagree on much, lies the engine of capitalism that runs on extratraction, exploitation, and coercion. All designed to support and increase the accumulation of capital in the capital class at the expense of labor. IE: The shrinking middle class and the working poor. As austerity, supported by the political class, causes untold suffering among the disadvantaged.

Les Carpenter said...

In other words the capital class moves production capacity offshore in search of cheap labor that increases their PROFITS at the expense of Americsn labor and through coercion of the foreign labor force.

Marx's economic models which scared the hell out of the capital class and continue to do so to this day, we're and remain a model to improve the human condition.

Joe Conservative said...

So put a cap on allowable capital accumulation. Place it at the high-middle.

Joe Conservative said...

Hence the need to remove the capital liability protections for corporate stock shareholders and tax capital gains at higher rates.

Les Carpenter said...

Or, simply the adjust tax bracket on the captal class and the high end earners. Ending regressive taxation policy.

Where would you say the cap you propose be set?

Les Carpenter said...

Indeed.