Generals, Wars & Lying: It Never Stops / Lt Col Daniel Davis

4 months ago
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Apr 13, 2025
Daniel Davis / Deep Dive
The speaker criticizes American military leadership for consistently misrepresenting the reality of wars, comparing the Vietnam War, the war in Afghanistan, and the ongoing conflict in Ukraine. They argue that U.S. generals, past and present (e.g., Westmoreland, Petraeus, and Cavoli), have often knowingly presented overly optimistic or false assessments to align with political goals rather than ground realities.

Key points:

In Vietnam, it was evident early on that military victory was unattainable despite superior firepower, but leadership told the president what he wanted to hear.

The same pattern repeated in Afghanistan, where generals publicly claimed success while the situation on the ground was deteriorating, which was later exposed by the Afghanistan Papers.

The speaker says this trend continues in Ukraine, where they argue the Ukrainian military lacks the capability to reclaim all lost territory, and Russia holds the upper hand in a war of attrition.

They criticize General Cavoli’s recent testimony for being overly hopeful and disconnected from battlefield realities.

The core argument is that leaders must confront and acknowledge “ground truth,” or else false narratives lead to costly, prolonged conflicts.

The speaker suggests that Trump may be more realistic about the situation and open to negotiating a resolution that ends U.S. support if Ukraine doesn’t accept the terms.

Overall, the speaker believes truth is being sacrificed for political convenience, and urges a return to honesty in military assessments to prevent unnecessary losses.
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