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Politics & Power Quote by Jack Reed

"We're in danger of breaking our army and preventing our national leaders from having the flexibility to confront not just Iraq and Afghanistan, but crises around the globe"

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"Breaking our army" is a deliberately physical phrase from a politician who knows the audience is tired of abstractions. Jack Reed isn’t talking about strategy in the war-room sense; he’s talking about wear and tear as a moral and managerial failure. The verb "breaking" drags the costs of prolonged deployment out of PowerPoint and into the body: exhausted troops, strained families, reset cycles blown, equipment run into the ground. It’s a warning framed as common sense, the kind that tries to make readiness feel as urgent as casualty counts.

The second half of the line pivots from empathy to institutional self-preservation: "preventing our national leaders from having the flexibility" is Beltway code for constraint. Reed is invoking a core anxiety of the post-9/11 era: that large, grinding occupations don’t just drain resources, they shrink the menu of choices. Flexibility here means surge capacity, rapid response, deterrence credibility, and political bandwidth. It’s also a subtle rebuke to the idea that you can treat Iraq and Afghanistan as discrete problems; they are presented as commitments that metastasize into a global posture problem.

Context matters: this kind of statement sits in the long shadow of repeated deployments, recruitment and retention pressure, and the dawning realization that America’s military supremacy has limits when it’s asked to do everything, everywhere, for years. Reed’s intent is to shift the debate from whether any given war is "winnable" to whether the force can survive the way leaders are choosing to use it - and whether voters will tolerate the bill.

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TopicMilitary & Soldier
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Jack Reed on breaking our army and national flexibility
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Jack Reed (born November 12, 1949) is a Politician from USA.

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