A bear toying with a cocker spaniel
by G. Murphy Donovan
“Domestic policy can only defeat us; foreign policy can kill us.” - JFK
War is a messy
business. Serial wars get even more untidy over time. Often, it’s hard to know
where one begins and another ends. Such is the case today as the Arab spring
looks like another Muslim winter. America and Europe stumble from one conflict
venue to another wondering what happened to all those rosy assertions about
jasmine, justice, moderation, and modernity. The Islamic world is a mess and no
one has a clue as to where or how the sequential mayhem ends. In Syria, the
nanny states of the West are again perched on the brink of another sectarian
and/or tribal abyss.
Nonetheless, the
optimism of intervention still prevails. Today you hear argument after argument
about the responsibilities of power and success – or preaching about very
selective humanitarian concerns. If you read enough foreign policy analysis you
might come to believe that someone has the answer, or that somehow Europe and
America have the “responsibility” to make the Third World well. Never mind that
the very words “developing” and “emerging” have become geo-political oxymorons,
triumphs of hope over experience.
Ironically, the
grand strategy, if there is one, when you strip away the boilerplate, can be
summarized with a single word - that word is “more.” More is the mantra of
imprudent expectations; bailouts at home and flailouts abroad. If one
“investment” doesn’t work, surely the original sacrifice wasn’t big enough. No
thought seems to be given to developing a new game plan. More aid, more
pandering, more troops, more drones, or more missile strikes; but never more
common sense. It’s always more, and more is never enough.
And now
"more" is accompanied by “red line” moralizing, the color coded
version of chicken. Alas, the no-fault/default cultures of Europe and America
are unlikely enforcers of any kind of norms and standards in the less civilized
world. The West insists, ironically, on measures of accountability and
restraint that have been abandoned in Europe and America. Political decay,
especially in the First World, has consequences.
All the rhetoric
about global responsibility is a rehash of the “white man’s burden” trope. Worse still, the hand-wringing and preaching
seems to validate “orientalism,” guilt driven theories that excuse and forgive
Muslim pathology because the chaos is thought to be the results of European
racism, colonialism, or exploitation.
Ironically, much
of the confused strategic rhetoric originates with senior military officers and
the Intelligence Community.
Since Vietnam, the
Pentagon has sought to redefine most wars as either guerilla, insurgent, or
conventional conflicts. Conventional conflict is a distant third in most
deliberations. Real wars might have to be declared and put to a vote.
Unfortunately, the accepted taxonomy ignores ground truth and the worldview of
likely opponents.
Most wars in the
troublesome Muslim world are in fact religious wars, conflicts where the nexus
is a clash between religious and secular values. The most obvious evidence of
religious war, external to the Muslim world, occurs at the tectonic plates of
religion, those borders where Muslim and non-Muslim polities meet. South Asia,
North Africa, the Balkans, the Caucasus region, Thailand, and the Philippines
are obvious examples. Even China has pockets of Muslim irredentism.
When ayatollahs
and imams rant about “jihad,” or holy war, they have few illusions about
the nature of contemporary conflict. Indeed, most Muslim clerics seem to grasp
global strategic reality better than American generals who insist on parsing
various Muslim wars into local insurgencies with local motives. Religion has
become the invisible camel in the infidel tent.
The most
celebrated version of the official US military view in these matters is
contained in Army Field Manual 3-24; Counterinsurgency, the doctrinal
bible that David Patraeus helped write and subsequently rode to four star
notoriety. Unfortunately, like too many of his over-schooled peers, General
Patraeus is more likely to be remembered for his social life than his military
insights or battlefield achievements. Equally misguided was the US Marine Corps
decision to adopt the Army manual in the interests of tactical ecumenism.
Religious war is
now a global phenomenon, thanks in part to the failure of flag officers to
acknowledge that threat. The Pentagon doesn’t have any official guidance for
religious war beyond political correctness.
Within the Ummah, modern
wars are of two types; civil and proxy. Contemporary revolutions in Iran,
Algeria, Tunisia, Libya, the Sudan, Somalia, Mali, and Egypt are religious
civil wars. These in turn are of two classes; sectarian (i.e. Shia vs Sunni) or
secular/sectarian. Secular military dictatorships, Egypt today for example,
have been in the clerical crosshairs since Mohammed’s time. Libya and Syria are
examples of secular oligarchies where tribal rivalries created opportunities
for Islamists.
Syria is a
prominent example of modern proxy war, where principals (Russia and the US or
Iran and Israel), once removed, are attempting to settle old scores or exploit
a regional opportunity. Any notion of moral “red lines” or WMD thresholds in
Syria is just another flight from reality, a veil for political egos and hidden
agendas.
The American Ranch Hand campaign
(1962-71), which poisoned Southeast Asia for nearly a decade, was the most
egregious, sustained modern use of chemical warfare. Granted, the putative aim
of the Agent Orange campaign was defoliation; still, the net effect was to
poison civilians and water sources under the canopy. No American administration
is well-positioned to point fingers at Syria when the US Air Force, the
Pentagon, and the White House have yet to acknowledge or accept responsibility
for the mutilation of a generation of American GIs and several generations of
Vietnamese children.
We might also
recall those gassed Kurds and Persians (1988) of
recent memory who perished from indifference if not complicity. Or we could
mention the million or so Rwandans (1994) who
fell to tribal clubs and cutlery. Such events barely make the evening news in
the West. With these and Vietnam, ‘moral’ superiority about chemical warfare or
genocide, if it ever existed, is a void not a high ground.
The recent gas
attack in Syria is not an exception, nor is it a rule. Identifying culprits is
probably irrelevant. Nations adhere to international conventions or “norms”
as it suits their interests. Credible force is the only reliable sheriff or
deterrent. And a false flag prologue is
often the pretense for the use of force.
Clearly there is
more than a little overlap in any conflict taxonomy. Nonetheless, the need for
a new vocabulary for the age of intervention is underwritten by two
indisputable facts: religion underwrites much of the typology and too many
conflicts are misrepresented as insurgencies when they are in fact civil wars.
If Libya or Syria were true insurgencies, America should have sent guns to
Gaddafi and Assad.
The ‘insurgent’
paradigm suits the politics, not the reality, of modern war. Terms like
Islamic, religious, or “civil” war are avoided because the US military has no
charter, doctrine, or legal authority for intervention in overseas internal
disputes; and surely no moral authority for taking sides in religious
rivalries. The Sunni tilt in American foreign policy since 1979 speaks for
itself, a grim litany of blowback and failure.
At a minimum, you
could argue that American intervention has made Shia fanatics, Hezb’allah,
the Taliban, and now a global al Qaedapossible. Recall
that America helped create a vacuum in southern Lebanon for Hezb’allah to
fill. Recall also that clandestine support to theMujahedeen in
Afghanistan in the Soviet era made the Taliban possible.
Imprudent signals to Islamists made the recent Muslim Brotherhood electoral
success possible in Egypt too. In the geo-political arena, unqualified support
for Saudi and Emirate oil oligarchs makes Salifism and related
religious fascism possible worldwide.
The incompetence
of intervention has more than a little to do with the caliber of American
generals since Korea. Surely, David Patraeus was no guerilla fighter like Joe
Stillwell and Martin Dempsey is no cavalry officer the equal of George Patton.
At Benghazi, American military honor was compromised by timidity, if not
bureaucratic cowardice. General Dempsey claims that he did not act because Mrs.
Clinton didn’t give him a green light. Under Dempsey, the military ethos
changed from “no man left behind” to “cover your behind.” Victory is no longer
a staple of any flag officer’s resume or vocabulary.
The Intelligence
Community is also part of the rhetorical decay. While at the White House, John
Brennan literally scrubbed any reference to Islam, Islamists, jihad, or
holy war from public and administration conversations about national security.
He actually convinced most government departments, contractors, and
the Press to delete any language
that might suggest linkage between terror, religious war, and Islam. The
Director of National Intelligence now refers to Islamic terrorists as
“nefarious characters.” At CIA, Brennan is now well placed to police the
language and analysis of National Intelligence Estimates.
And the chickens
of strategic decline are home to roost as America again sides with the Sunni in
Syria. Dithering in the West for two years has allowed Bashar al-Assad to
regain the tactical advantage on the battlefield. And strategically, the Alawite regime now
has a clear victory. American gun sights have been lowered from regime change
to “let’s make a deal.” Never mind that time is as good a gift to Assad as any
aid from the Persians and Russians.
And the proxy war
is a disaster. Vladimir Putin throws a ‘Hail Mary’ in Syria, and Foggy Bottom
and the White House morph into cheer leaders. Worse still, the American
administration embarrasses itself by trying to take credit for the Russian
initiative. Say what you will about Putin, he is a better friend to Syria than
Obama is to Israel. When the next “red line” is in the works, it might have to
be drawn around Israel
The Russian
strategy may look a little like a deus ex machina, but compared to
the Obama amateurs, Putin plays the great game like Winston Churchill. And
putting John Kerry in a diplomatic cage match with Sergei Lavrov is like watching a
bear toy with a cocker spaniel!
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