The
Sanctuary Delusion
by
William S. Lind
by William S. Lind
DIGG THIS
At America’s
behest, Pakistan sent its army into the tribal territories along
its northwest frontier. Predictably, its army got beaten. The Pakistani
government has now signed a truce with the tribes in North Waziristan,
a wise move given that government’s fragility. (On Sunday, when
the power went out all over Pakistan, everyone assumed there had
been a coup.)
Washington
and its gentlemanly Afghan puppet, Mr. Karzai, are howling that
this will give the Taliban a sanctuary, which is true. Every military
force, including those of the Fourth Generation, needs some sort
of secure rear area where its fighters can relax, its wounded can
receive treatment, and its new recruits can be trained. Such sanctuaries
are vital for the Taliban, al Qaeda, Hamas, Hezbollah and all the
rest.
Unfortunately,
this need for sanctuaries is leading the "silver bullet"
crowd, those who seek some magical single answer to the Fourth Generation
threat, off on another detour to nowhere. They say that if we only
put enough pressure on states such as Pakistan not to permit sanctuaries,
and overthrow state governments that openly provide sanctuary such
as Syria’s, then the Fourth Generation will disappear. Sorry, but
it won’t.
The error
is that, as usual, the silver bulleteers are thinking in terms of
states. They argue not only that Fourth Generation entities need
sanctuaries, which is true, but that those sanctuaries have to be
in states, which is not true. On the contrary, stateless regions
provide the best sanctuary Fourth Generation forces can hope to
find.
The best
example is the stateless region of Mesopotamia, formerly the state
of Iraq (minus Kurdistan). Despite the presence of 140,000 American
troops, 20,000 mercenaries and the dwindling remains of the coalition
of the shilling, Mesopotamia is now a happy hunting ground for more
4GW entities than Osama can count. In that stateless void, they
have rich recruiting grounds, the best training available anywhere,
ample funds, plenty of weapons and enough quiet places where tired
or wounded mujaheddin can get their R&R. The former Iraq has
become a Fourth Generation theme park. Six Hundred Flags, perhaps?
Or maybe Bushworld.
Much of
Afghanistan is rapidly going the same route. Far from needing friendly
states for sanctuary, most 4GW forces can find it locally, often
right under the occupiers’ noses. While Pakistan’s northwest territories
do give the Taliban welcome sanctuary, I’d bet at least one goat
that most Afghan Taliban find their sanctuary in Afghanistan, among
their families, friends and fellow tribesmen. If some hapless NATO
troops stumble into their village while they’re on R&R, they
can just smile and wave. Why travel for what you have at home?
The sanctuary
delusion has two unfortunate consequences. First, like all silver
bullet answers to 4GW, it leads us astray from the slow, painful
and difficult task of understanding the Fourth Generation in all
its evolving complexity. Second, as with Pakistan, it leads the
American government to push friendly governments in weak states
over the edge. By demanding they deny sanctuary on their territory
to "terrorists" who have strong popular support, Washington
exacerbates their crises of legitimacy. Washington then acts surprised
and dumbfounded when those governments fall, as it discreetly folds
away the pocket knife that cut their high wire. If their fall creates
another stateless region, the Fourth Generation gets another ideal
sanctuary.
As
is so often the case in 4GW, the fact that Fourth Generation forces
need sanctuaries means neither that they must obtain them from states
nor that they can be targeted. Our troops in Afghanistan don’t call
their Taliban opponents "ghosts" for nothing.
September
29, 2006
William
Lind [send him mail]
is an analyst based in Washington, DC.
Copyright
© 2006 William S. Lind
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