The Politics Of War
by
William S. Lind
by William S. Lind
The
wars in Iraq and Afghanistan are already lost. Nothing the United
States can do can yield an American victory in either place.
In
all probability, both wars were lost before the first bomb was dropped
or the first shot fired. They were lost because, in an era when
the state is in decline, our wars on the Afghan and Iraqi states
were doomed to be too successful. We fought to destroy two regimes,
but what we ended up doing was destroying two states. Neither in
Afghanistan nor in Iraq are we able to recreate the state, which
means that Fourth Generation, non-state forces will come to dominate
both places. And neither we nor any other state knows how to defeat
Fourth Generation enemies.
To
the degree America had a chance of real victory in either war, we
lost that chance through early mistakes. In Afghanistan, we failed
to bring the Pashtun into the new government, which means we remain
allied with the Uzbeks and Tajiks against the Pashtun. Unfortunately,
in the end the Pashtun always win Afghan wars.
In
Iraq, the two fatal early errors were outlawing the Baath Party
and disbanding the Iraqi army. Outlawing the Baath deprived the
Sunni community of its only political vehicle, which meant it had
no choice but to fight us. Disbanding the Iraqi army left us with
no native force that could maintain order, and also provided the
resistance with a large pool of armed and trained fighters. Washington
is now making noises about reversing both of those early decisions,
but it is simply too late. As von Moltke said, a mistake in initial
dispositions can seldom be put right.
What
is interesting is that the most powerful man in Washington, Karl
Rove, who is President George W. Bush’s political advisor, has apparently
figured out that the Iraq war is lost (Afghanistan is not on his
political radar screen). Further, he has discerned that if Mr. Bush
goes into the 2004 election with the war in Iraq still going on,
and still going badly, Mr. Bush is toast. The result was the recent
decision to turn the government back to the Iraqi’s sometime next
summer.
Will
it work? Probably not. Mr. Rove still faces two big fights, and
neither will be easy. The first will be a nasty political brawl
with the so-called neo-cons, more accurately neo-Jacobins, who gave
us the Iraq War in the first place. Their political future is at
stake in Iraq, and if we are defeated, they go straight into history’s
wastebasket. They are determined to fight down to the last American
paratrooper, and once they figure out that Mr. Rove wants out, they
will go after him with everything they have.
The
other fight will be in Iraq itself, where we will see a race between
American efforts to create at least the fig leaf of a functioning
Iraqi state so we can get out with some tail feathers intact and
a resistance movement that is rapidly gaining strength. My bet is
that, unfortunately, we will lose. Again, the root problem is that
in a Fourth Generation world, once you have destroyed a state recreating
it is very difficult. More, as is typical of a power facing defeat,
our moves are too little and too late. By next summer, when we hope
to transfer sovereignty to a new Iraqi government, it is likely
to represent a frustration of the Shiites’ hope to use their majority
status to create a Shiite Islamic Republic. That may deprive us,
and the new Iraqi government, of the one prop we still have, a relatively
quiescent Shiite population.
The
upshot of all of this is that despite Mr. Rove’s belated wakening
to political reality, Mr. Bush will go into the 2004 election with
one of two albatrosses around his neck: a continuing, losing guerilla
war, with ever-increasing American casualties, or an out-and-out
American defeat, where we have left Iraq very much the way the Soviets
left Afghanistan. Which is, by the way, the way we will also leave
Afghanistan itself.
The
neo-cons’ parting gift to real American conservatives will be President
Hillary Clinton. Thanks a lot, guys.
November
26, 2003
William
Lind is Director of the Center for Cultural Conservatism at the
Free Congress Foundation.
Copyright
© 2003 William S. Lind
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