President Barack Obama has notified Congress that he will send up to 275 troops to Iraq to provide support and security for U.S. personnel and the American Embassy in Baghdad.
Meanwhile, the insurgent army known as the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) is clearly on the military ascendency. Its blitzkreig has thrown the American-trained Iraqi Army into a panic, with soldiers dropping their rifles and running for their lives.
And it has steamrolled virtually unopposed from northern Iraq to towns only about 50 miles from Baghdad.
As a result, this situation recalls two scenes from the 2004 Disney remake of The Alamo.
The first scene comes with the arrival of the Mexican army–about 2,000 strong–in San Antonio de Bexar.
There are about 200 men in the Alamo, and they are awestruck at the seemingly endless columns of men who threaten to overwhelm them. One of the defenders is David Crockett (played by Billy Bob Thornton).
Suddenly, the full weight of his decision to enter the doomed old mission strikes him. He turns to William B. Travis (Patrick Wilson) the fort’s commander, and says: “We’re gonna need a lot more men.”
It’s the understatement of the movie.
David Crockett (Billy Bob Thornton) and William B. Travis (Patrick Wilson)
The second relevant scene from The Alamo takes place in the headquarters of Mexican dictator, Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna.
He’s beseiged the Alamo for almost two weeks, and he’s impatient. Not to attack–but for the arrival of large numbers of Texan reinforcements.
Santa Anna knows the Alamo is a death-trap. He hopes to lure Sam Houston–the commander of the Texan army–to “come and be a big American hero” by reinforcing the garrison.
That way, Santa Anna has to fight only one battle–one that will become a massacre of his enemies.
But Houston also knows the Alamo is a death-trap. And as much as we, the movie viewers, want him to ride to the rescue of the trapped garrison, we know that he won’t.
He will save his army to fight another day, on ground of his–not Santa Anna’s–choosing.
Finally, Santa Anna launches an all-out assault on the Alamo in the pre-dawn hours of March 6, 1836. All of its defenders are slaughtered.
Poster for The Alamo (2004)
But the movie isn’t over. Instead, it quickly lays out the military strategy Sam Houston used to win Texas its freedom as a republic.
He orders a retreat before Santa Anna, burning abandoned towns in his wake. He’s waiting for his enemy to make a mistake.
And, in time, Santa Anna makes it. He sets up camp in a densely-wooded area, knowing Houston’s army is close by. And then he and most of his army settle down for a siesta!
Screaming “Remember the Alamo!” the Texans charge into the camp. In 18 minutes, they kill about 650 Mexicans and capture the rest.
The next day, Santa Anna, who had tried to escape in the uniform of a private, is captured. Threatened with death, he is forced to sign a treaty guaranteeing Texan independence from Mexico.
Now, fast forward to present-day Iraq.
The Islamic State of Iraq and Syria’s army, like Santa Anna’s, is clearly on the offensive. And just as Texas seemed about to be overrun by his army, Iraq appears on the brink of becoming an Islamic terror-state.
And just as a handful of stubborn Texans decided to stand, at the Alamo, against a far larger force, President Obama appears ready to order such a last-ditch stand at the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad.
But there the similarities end.
First, the Texans had to defeat only one Mexican dictator.
In Iraq, countless numbers of Jihadists are constantly scheming and murdering to become the Islamic version of Numero Uno.
Second, American settlers in Texas passionately embraced the republican form of government for which their fathers and grandfathers had fought.
That was, in fact, a principle gripe of the Mexican government: “They all go about with their [U.S.] Constitution in their pocket, demanding their rights.”
There is no tradition of individual freedom in Iraq–or in any other part of the Islamic world Thus, there is no incentive for Iraqis to retain it.
Third, Texas won its independence from Mexico in one battle–at San jacinto.
Iraq is filled with religious fanatics who are determined to enforce their version of Islam on others in a never-ending jihad.
* * * * *
The United States tried, for 10 years, to impose democracy–or at least order–on Iraq.
That experiment has failed dismally. Democracy can’t be forced onto people whose lives have been warped by centuries of repression.
And a modern state cannot be forged out of a pseudo-nation that’s essentially three feuding tribes–Sunni Arabs, Shia Arabs and Kurds.
Stationing 187,900 American soldiers in Iraq in 2008 failed to create a stable country. So sending 275 soldiers to defend the American Embassy will prove equally futile.
If the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad becomes a second Alamo, it will prove a heroic sacrifice to a worthless cause.

ALAMO, BILLY BOB THORNTON, DAVID CROCKETT, FACEBOOK, FESS PARKER, JAMES BOWIE, JOHN WAYNE, MEXICO, SAM HOUSTON, SLAVERY, STEPHEN F. AUSTIN, STERLING HAYDEN, TEXAS, TEXAS REVOLUTION, TWITTER, WILLIAM B. TRAVIS
REMEMBERING THE ALAMO: PART THREE (END)
In History, Military, Social commentary on March 9, 2014 at 4:00 pmOn the night before the final Mexican assault, one man escaped the Alamo to testify to the defenders’ courage.
Or so goes the most famous story of the 13-day siege.
He was Louis Rose, a veteran of the Napoleonic wars and the dreadful 1812 retreat from Moscow. Unwilling to die in a hopeless battle, he slipped over a wall and sneaked through Mexican siege lines.
At Grimes County, he found shelter at the homestead of Abraham and Mary Ann Zuber.
Their son, William, later claimed that his parents told him of Rose’s visit–and his story of Travis’ “line in the sand” speech. In 1873, he published the tale in the Texas Almanac.
But many historians believe it is a fabrication. The story comes to us third-hand–from Rose to the Zubers to their son. And it was published 37 years after the Alamo fell.
After a 12-day siege, Santa Anna decided to overwhelm the Alamo.
Some of his officers objected. They wanted to wait for bigger siege cannon to arrive–to knock down the Alamo’s three-feet-thick adobe walls. Without shelter, the defenders would be forced to surrender.
But Santa Anna insisted on an all-out assault: “Without blood and tears, there is no glory.”
The first assault came at about 5 a.m. on March 6, 1836.
The fort’s riflemen–aided by 14 cannons–repulsed it. And the second assault as well.
But the third assault proved unstoppable.
The Alamo covered three acres, and held at most 250 defenders–against 2,000 Mexican soldiers. When the Mexicans reached the fort, they mounted scaling ladders and poured over the walls.
Travis was one of the first defenders to fall–shot through the forehead after firing a shotgun into the Mexican soldiery below.
Death of William Barrett Travis (waving sword)
Mexicans broke into the room where the ailing Bowie lay. In Three Roads to the Alamo, historian William C. Davis writes that Bowie may have been unconscious or delirious. Mistaking him for a coward, the soldiers bayoneted him and blew out his brains.
But some accounts claim that Bowie died fighting–shooting two Mexicans with pistols, then plunging his famous knife into a third before being bayoneted. Nearly every Alamo movie depicts Bowie’s death this way.
Jim Bowie’s death
As the Mexicans poured into the fort, at least 60 Texans tried to escape over the walls into the surrounding prairie. But they were quickly dispatched by lance-bearing Mexican calvary.
The death of David Crockett remains highly controversial.
Baby boomers usually opt for the Walt Disney version: Davy swinging Old Betsey as Mexicans surround him. Almost every Alamo movie depicts him fighting to the death.
David Crockett’s death
But Mexican Colonel Jose Enrique de la Pena claimed Crockett was one of seven Texans who surrendered or were captured and brought before Santa Anna after the battle. Santa Anna ordered their immediate execution, and they were hacked to death with sabers.
Only the 2004 remake of The Alamo has dared to depict this version.
Although this version is now accepted by most historians, some still believe the de la Pena diary from which it comes is a forgery.
An hour after the battle erupted, it was over.
That afternoon, Santa Anna ordered the bodies of the slain defenders stacked and burned in three pyres.
Contrary to popular belief, some of the garrison survived:
Also contrary to legend, the bravery of the Alamo defenders did not buy time for Texas to raise an army against Santa Anna. This didn’t happen until after the battle.
But their sacrifice proved crucial in securing Texas’ independence:
On April 21, 1836, Santa Anna made a crucial mistake: During his army’s afternoon siesta, he failed to post sentries around his camp. That afternoon, Sam Houston’s 900-man army struck the 1,400-man Mexican force at San Jacinto.
In 18 minutes, the Texans–shouting “Remember the Alamo!”–killed about 700 Mexican soldiers and wounded 200 others. The next day, a Texas patrol captured Santa Anna.
Resisting angry demands to hang the Mexican dictator, Houston forced Santa Anna to surrender control of Texas in return for his life.
The victory at San Jacinto won the independence of Texas. But the 13-day siege and fall of the Alamo remains the most famous and celebrated part of that conflict.
Like Thermopylae, the battle of the Alamo proved both a defeat–and a victory.
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