Retrospective
by
William
S. Lind
by William S. Lind
The 300th
column in this series offers a useful point from which to look back.
Events since On War #1 have, I think, generally validated
the Four Generations framework. Iraq was not a "cakewalk,"
nor did our initial invasion of Afghanistan "eviscerate"
the Taliban. Mullah Omar proved the better prophet; before the first
American bomb fell, he said, "We will lose the government and
lose Kabul, but it doesn’t matter."
What lessons
might we draw from the previous 299 On War columns and their
interplay with the larger world? Three seem to me to be of overriding
importance.
-
So long
as America pursues an offensive grand strategy, Fourth Generation
war will ensure her defeat. The reason is Martin van Creveld’s
concept of the power of weakness and its intimate relationship
with legitimacy. In a Fourth Generation world, legitimacy is
the coin of the realm. At root, Fourth Generation war is a contest
for legitimacy between the state and a wide variety of non-state
primary loyalties. American power lacks legitimacy because,
on the physical level, it is so overwhelming. That is the power
of weakness: anyone who stands up to the American military becomes
a hero. In turn, any state the American military supports loses
its legitimacy. The more places America intervenes militarily,
the more states lose their legitimacy, to the advantage of Fourth
Generation, non-state entities. In effect, we have a reverse
Midas touch. Only a defensive grand strategy, where we mind
our own business and leave other states to mind theirs, can
break us out of this downward spiral.
-
Second
Generation militaries cannot win Fourth Generation wars. Second
Generation armed forces, such as those of the United States,
fight by putting firepower on targets. This wins at the physical
level, but as it does so it brings defeat at the moral level,
which is decisive in 4GW. The best current example is Pakistan,
where the combination of Predator strikes and arm-twisting of
the Pakistani government has undermined the legitimacy of the
Pakistani state. That state now stands on the verge of disintegration,
which would give al Qaeda and other Islamic 4GW forces the greatest
victory they could imagine. The image on Osama’s cave wall should
be a Predator, with the title, "Our best weapon."
-
There
is no chance America will adopt a defensive grand strategy or
reform its military to move from the Second to the Third Generation
– a necessary though not sufficient step in confronting 4GW
– so long as the current Washington Establishment remains in
power. That Establishment is drunk on hubris, cut off from the
world beyond court politics and thoroughly corrupted by Pentagon
"business as usual," which knows how to buy whatever
political support it needs. Like all establishments, it sees
any real change as a threat, to be avoided. So long as it reigns,
nothing will change.
What are the
implications of these three observations? Militarily, they portend
continued failure and defeat. We will fail to get out of Iraq before
the next phase of that war begins, or, worse, an Israeli attack
on Iran costs us the army we have in Iraq. We will be defeated in
Afghanistan, because we will refuse to scale our strategic objectives
to what is possible and we will continue to alienate the population
with our firepower-intensive way of war. We will push Pakistan over
the brink into disintegration, which will be a strategic catastrophe
of the first order. We will ignore the disintegration of the state
in Mexico, while importing Mexico’s disorder through our ineffective
border controls. We will not even be able to stop Somali pirates.
What does it say about us when the whole nation rejoices because
the U.S. Navy, the most powerful navy on earth, defeated four Somali
teenagers?
It
does not end with this. These foreign policy failures and military
defeats – or even more embarrassing "victories" – become
just two of a larger series of crises, including the economic crisis
(depression followed by runaway inflation), foreign exchange crisis
(collapse of the dollar), political crisis (no one in the Establishment
knows what to do, but the Establishment offers the voters no alternative
to itself), energy crisis, etc. Together, these discrete crises
snowball into a systemic crisis, which is what happens when the
outside world demands greater change than the political system permits.
At that point, the political system collapses and is replaced by
something else. In the old days, it meant a change of dynasty. What
might it mean today? My guess is a radical devolution, at the conclusion
of which life is once again local.
That would
be, on the whole, a happy outcome. But I fear this will be a trip
where the journey is not half the fun.
April
21, 2009
William
Lind, expressing his own personal opinion, is Director for the
Center
for Cultural Conservatism for the Free
Congress Foundation.
Copyright
© 2009 William S. Lind
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