A
Confirming Moment
by
William S. Lind
DIGG THIS
When
Iraqi Prime Minister al-Kerensky sent his "army" to fight
the Mahdi Army in Basra, President Bush called it "a defining moment."
It turned out instead to be a confirming moment. It confirmed that
there is no state in Mesopotamia.
One
of the most common signs that America's leadership is clueless about
4GW is the language they use. Fourth Generation war has few if any
defining moments. Nor does it have "turning points," another
common Bushism. In his testimony on Tuesday, General David Petraeus
revealed the limits on his own grasp of 4GW when he said, "We've
got to continue. We have our teeth into the jugular, and we need
to keep it (sic) there." 4GW opponents have no jugular. 4GW
is war of the capillaries. What we have our teeth into in Iraq is
a jellyfish.
If
we are to see Iraq and other Fourth Generation conflicts as they
are and not through the looking glass, we need to use words more
carefully. Because there is no state in Iraq, there is also no government.
Orders given in Baghdad have no meaning, because there are no state
institutions to carry them out. The governmental positions of Iraqi
leaders have no substance. Their power is a function of their relationship
to various militias, not of their offices. (Mr. al-Maliki has no
militia, which means he is a figurehead.) The Iraqi "army"
and "police" are groupings of Shiite militias, which exist
to fight other militias and which take orders from militia leaders,
not the government. Government revenues are slush funds militia
leaders use to pay their militiamen. All of these phenomena, and
many more, are products of the one basic reality: there is no state.
The
failure of Mr. al-Maliki's "big push" into Basra put Iraq’s
statelessness on display. Ordered to do something it did not want
to do, the Iraqi "army" fell apart, as militias usually
fall apart when given unwelcome directives. Iraqi "soldiers"
and "police" went over or went home, in considerable numbers.
Those who did fight had little fight in them; the affair reportedly
ended with the Mahdi Army controlling more of Basra than it did
at the beginning. Mr. al-Maliki, desperate for a cease-fire, had
to agree in advance to any conditions Muqtada al-Sadr cared to impose.
American
policy proved even more reckless than that of Mr. al-Maliki. To
win in Iraq, we must see a state re-emerge. That means we should
stay out of the way of anyone with the potential to recreate a state.
Muqtada al-Sadr is at or near the head of the list. The al-Maliki
"government" isn't even on it.
So
what did we do? Why, we went to war against al-Sadr on behalf of
al-Maliki, of course. Our leadership cannot grasp one of the most
basic facts about 4GW, namely that the splintering of factions makes
it more difficult to generate a state. Should we have the bad luck
to "win" this latest fight and destroy the Mahdi Army, we will move
not toward but further away from that goal.
In
the end, the Administration's (and the Pentagon's) insistence that
the Iraqi state, government, army and police are real blinds only
themselves. Iraqis know they are not. The American public knows
they are not. The average Hottentot probably knows they are not.
Do the members of the Senate Committees on Armed Services and Foreign
Relations know less that the average Hottentot? So last week's hearings
might suggest, and such is the power of empty words.
April
18, 2008
William
Lind is an analyst based in Washington, DC.
Copyright
© 2008 William S. Lind
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