These days, we’re mostly Confederates: Antebellum strategy/policy ethos in 21st century America
Dave Maxwell
Sun, 10/27/2024 - 10:16pm
Despite the recent Orwellian attempts to “unperson” him, Robert E. Lee remains an iconic figure in American military history. He was a great field commander who probably got more out of his outnumbered and ill-supplied tatterdemalion army than any other general of his time could have by sheer professional acumen and force of personality. However, with him (and every other senior Southern commander) that’s as far as it goes. He failed utterly in his responsibility to convince his political superiors of their folly in the strategic prosecution of the war. He also dissipated combat power he could not afford to lose in two futile invasions of the North. Worst of all, he allowed Jefferson Davis to tie the Army of Northern Virginia to the defense of Richmond and Petersburg like a staked goat for the implacable Grant to ultimately devour. By June 1864 he could see the writing on the wall. If he stayed in Grant’s gory embrace the Army of Northern Virginia would perish and with it the Confederacy. But he could not bring himself to forcefully challenge his civilian leadership who were willfully blind to the facts – or walk away from them. Instead, he soldiered on as nemesis approached.