Boomerang
Effect
by
William S. Lind
by William S. Lind
DIGG THIS
Last
week, one of my students, a Marine captain, asked whether I had
heard a news report about an "IED-like device" supposedly
found near Cincinnati, and if I thought we would soon start seeing
IEDs here in the U.S. I replied that I had not heard the news story,
but as to whether we would see IEDs here at home, the answer is
yes.
One
of the things U.S. troops are learning in Iraq is how people with
little training and few resources can fight a state. Most American
troops will see this within the framework of counterinsurgency.
But a minority will apply their new-found knowledge in a very different
way. After they return to the U.S. and leave the military, they
will take what they learned in Iraq back to the inner cities, to
the ethnic groups, gangs, and other alternate loyalties they left
when they joined the service. There, they will put their new knowledge
to work, in wars with each other and wars against the American state.
It will not be long before we see police squad cars getting hit
with IEDs and other techniques employed by Iraqi insurgents, right
here in the streets of American cities.
I
know this thought – not to speak of the reality when it happens
– will be shocking to some readers. To anyone who really understands
Fourth Generation war, it should not be. Fourth Generation war does
not merely work on the will of a state’s political leaders, as some
theorists have said. It does something far more powerful. It pulls
an opposing state apart at the moral level.
We
saw this phenomenon in the effect the defeat in Afghanistan had
on the Soviet Union. Just as that defeat led to the disintegration
of the USSR, so defeat in the current Afghan war will bring the
disintegration of NATO. We are seeing 4GW pull Israel apart today,
to the point where a leaden blanket of Kulturpessimismus
now oppresses that country.
We
will see the same thing here, powerfully I think, as a result of
our defeat in Iraq. It will manifest itself in many ways, and one
of those ways will be the progression of inner-city and gang crime
into something close to warfare, including war against the state.
Police
will not be surprised by this prediction. I have talked with cops
about Fourth Generation war, and they "get it" much better
than do American soldiers and Marines. Many have told me that they
already recognize elements of war in what they are encountering,
especially in inner cities. Cops have been killed while just sitting
in their cruisers, because they represent the authority of the state.
How big a step is it for those cruisers to get hit with IEDs instead
of pistol shots?
The
Bush administration, as usual, has it exactly backwards. The danger
is not that the "terrorists" we are fighting in Iraq will
come here if we pull out there. Rather, American involvement in
4GW in Iraq will create "terrorism" here from among the
people we have sent to fight the war there. Well educated in the
ways of successful insurgency, they will come home embittered by
a lost war, by friends dead and crippled for life to no purpose.
Thanks to America’s de-industrialization, they will return to no
jobs, or lousy "service" jobs at minimum wage. Angry,
frustrated and futureless, some of them will find new identities
and loyalties in gangs and criminal enterprises, where they can
put their new talents to work.
It
will, of course, be only a small minority of returning troops who
will go this route. But something else they will have learned from
the Iraqi insurgents, along with how to make and deploy IEDs, is
that it takes very few people to create and sustain an insurgency.
The
boomerang effect is a central element of Fourth Generation war.
When a state involves itself in 4GW over there, it lays a basis
for 4GW at home. That is true even if it wins over there, and all
the more true if it loses, as states usually do. The toxic fallout
from America’s 4GW defeats in Iraq and Afghanistan will be far greater
than most people expect, and it will fall most heavily on America’s
police.
December
6, 2006
William
Lind [send him mail]
is an analyst based in Washington, DC.
Copyright
© 2006 William S. Lind
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