Confirmation
by
William
S. Lind
by William S. Lind
DIGG THIS
I
have suggested in previous columns that the al Qaeda model of 4GW
may be failing for inherent reasons, i.e. for reasons it cannot
fix. "Tom Rick’s Inbox" in the October 19 Washington
Post offers some confirmation of that assessment. Ricks writes:
Where did
al Qaeda in Iraq go wrong? In a paper prepared for the recent
annual meeting of the American Political Science Association,
the Australian political scientist Andrew Phillips argues persuasively
that, by their nature, al Qaeda affiliates tend to alienate their
hosts….
He
then quotes Phillips at some length:
In successive
conflicts ranging from Bosnia to Chechnya to Kashmir, the jihad
jet-set has rapidly worn out its welcome among local host populations
as a result of its ideological inflexibility and high-handedness,
as well as its readiness to resort to indiscriminate violence
against locals at the first signs of challenge…. That this pattern
has so frequently been repeated suggests that the underlying causes
of al Qaeda’s defeat in Iraq may transcend the specific circumstances
of that conflict. Baldly stated, the causes of al Qaeda’s defeat
in Iraq can be located in its ideological DNA.
In
my view, the "DNA" to which Phillips refers is the type
of people drawn to al Qaeda and other Fourth Generation entities
modeled on al Qaeda. They are mostly religious fanatics of the most
extreme varieties, similar to the Levellers and Diggers of the English
Civil War. Regardless of what their organization’s leadership may
enjoin, they will treat any locals they regard as religiously "lax"
with severity. They cannot do otherwise without becoming "impure"
themselves. It is useful to remind ourselves where the word "Puritan"
comes from.
A
failure of the al Qaeda model, while welcome, does not imply any
weakening of the impulse toward Fourth Generation war. On the contrary,
it represents its evolution. 4GW is something new in the post-Westphalian
world, and it is likely to go through many cycles of innovation,
failure, learning and adaptation as it evolves. I expect that evolution
to play out over the course of the 21st century and beyond.
What
does the prospective failure of the al Qaeda model mean for other
current models? The Taliban model would seem to share al Qaeda’s
DNA. When they were in power in Afghanistan, the Taliban also imposed
a Puritanism that overrode local cultural norms and thereby alienated
much of the population. However, the Taliban also left power with
several assets on its balance sheet, assets it continues to draw
on. It represented Pashtun dominance of Afghanistan, something all
Pashtun regard as natural and necessary (the Karzai regime’s origins
are Uzbek and Tajik). Like a state, it brought order. It reduced
corruption, now out of control, to locally acceptable levels. And
while actually a creation of Pakistan’s ISI, the Taliban successfully
presented themselves as something home-grown, which the Karzai government
will never be able to do. In terms of the all-important quality
of legitimacy, Robespierre always trumps Vichy.
Beyond
Afghanistan, the Fourth Generation future belongs neither to al
Qaeda nor to the Taliban but to two more sophisticated models, Hezbollah
and the Latin American drug gangs. Both can fight, but fighting
is not primarily what they are about. Rather, both are about benefiting
their members with money, services, community, identity, and, strange
as it may sound, what passes locally for good government. Even the
drug gangs’ governance is often less corrupt than that of the local
state.
Both
of these 4GW models can fall into the fatal error of alienating
the local population, but the tendency is not inherent. While Hezbollah
is religiously defined, it seems to appeal well beyond the Puritans,
which means it can give orders Puritans will not obey. The drug
gangs’ principal faith is in making money, and few faiths are more
broadly latitudinarian.
Andrew
Phillips adds to his analysis the prudent warning that "Al
Qaeda may have lost Iraq, but this is no way implies that America
and its allies have won." In Iraq as elsewhere, the fading
of the al Qaeda model is being balanced not by the rise of a new
state but by the adoption of other models of 4GW. So far, as best
I can determine, no foreign intervention in a Fourth Generation
conflict has succeeded in re-creating a real state (you can add
Ethiopia in Somalia to the long list of failures).
Do
intervening foreign forces, like al Qaeda, have DNA that preordains
failure? The answer, while not final, seems to be pointing toward
the affirmative.
October
22, 2008
William
Lind, expressing his own personal opinion, is Director for the
Center
for Cultural Conservatism for the Free
Congress Foundation.
Copyright
© 2008 William S. Lind
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