America's
Adrianople
by
William S. Lind
by William S. Lind
DIGG THIS
The third and final act in the national tragedy that is the Bush
administration may soon play itself out. The Okhrana reports increasing
indications of "something big" happening between the election
and Christmas. That could be the long-planned attack on Iran.
An attack on Iran will not be an invasion with ground troops.
We don’t have enough of those left to invade Ruritania. It will
be a "package" of air and missile strikes, by U.S. forces
or Israel. If Israel does it, there is a possibility of nuclear
weapons being employed. But Israel would prefer the U.S. to do the
dirty work.
That this would constitute folly piled on top of folly is no
deterrent to the Bush administration. Like the French Bourbons,
it forgets nothing and it learns nothing. It takes pride in not
adapting. Or did you somehow miss George W. Bush’s declaration of
Presidential Infallibility? It followed shortly after the visit
to the aircraft carrier with the "Mission Accomplished"
sign.
The Democrats taking either or both Houses of Congress, if
it happens, will not make any difference. They would rather have
the Republicans start and lose another war than prevent a national
disaster. Politics comes first and the country second.
Many of the consequences of a war with Iran are easy to imagine.
Oil would soar to at least $200 per barrel if we could get it. Gas
shortages would bring back the gas lines of 1973 and 1979. Our European
alliances would be stretched to the breaking point if not beyond
it. Most people outside the Bushbubble can see all this coming.
What I fear no one forsees is a substantial danger that we
could lose the army now deployed in Iraq. I have mentioned this
in previous columns, but I want to go into it here in more detail
because the scenario may soon go live.
Well before the second Iraq war started, I warned in a piece
in The American Conservative that the structure of our position
in Iraq could lead to that greatest of military disasters, encirclement.
That is precisely the danger if we go to war with Iran.
The danger arises because almost all of the vast quantities
of supplies American armies need come into Iraq from one direction,
up from Kuwait and other Gulf ports in the south. If that supply
line is cut, our forces may not have enough stuff, especially fuel,
to get out of Iraq. American armies are incredibly fuel-thirsty,
and though Iraq has vast oil reserves, it is short of refined oil
products. Unlike Guderian’s Panzer army on its way to the Channel
coast in 1940, we could not just fuel up at local gas stations.
There are two ways our supply lines from the south could be
cut if we attack Iran. The first is by Shiite militias including
the Mahdi Army and the Badr Brigades, possibly supported by a general
Shiite uprising and, of course, Iran’s Revolutionary Guards (the
same guys who trained Hezbollah so well).
The second danger is that regular Iranian Army divisions will
roll into Iraq, cut our supply lines and attempt to pocket us in
and around Baghdad. Washington relies on American air power to prevent
this, but bad weather can shut most of that air power down.
Unfortunately, no one in Washington and few people in the U.S.
military will even consider this possibility. Why? Because we have
fallen victim to our own propaganda. Over and over the U.S. military
tells itself, "We’re the greatest! We’re number one! No one
can defeat us. No one can even fight us. We’re the greatest military
in all of history!"
It’s bull. The U.S. armed forces are technically well-trained,
lavishly resourced Second Generation militaries. They are being
fought and defeated by Fourth Generation opponents in both Iraq
and Afghanistan. They can also be defeated by Third Generation enemies
who can observe, orient, decide and act more quickly than can America’s
vast, process-ridden, Powerpoint-enslaved military headquarters.
They can be defeated by strategy, by stratagem, by surprise and
by preemption. Unbeatable militaries are like unsinkable ships.
They are unsinkable until someone or something sinks them.
If the U.S. were to lose the army it has in Iraq, to Iraqi
militias, Iranian regular forces, or a combination of both (the
most likely event), the world would change. It would be our Adrianople,
our Rocroi, our Stalingrad. American power and prestige would never
recover.
One
of the few people who does see this danger is the doyenne of
American foreign policy columnists, Georgie Anne Geyer. In her column
of October 28 in The Washington Times, she wrote,
The worst has not, by any means, yet happened. When I think of
abandoning a battleground, I think of the 1850s, when thousands
of Brits were trying to leave Afghanistan through the Khyber Pass
and all were killed by tribesmen except one man, left to tell
the story.
Our
men and women are in isolated compounds, not easy even to retreat
from, were that decision made. Time is truly running out.
October
31, 2006
William
Lind [send him mail]
is an analyst based in Washington, DC.
Copyright
© 2006 William S. Lind
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Lind Archives
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