Work For The Grossgeneralstab
by
William S. Lind
by William S. Lind
In
1914, Kaiser Wilhelm II, whom history has underrated, told his Chief
of the General Staff, von Moltke the Less, that he wanted to remain
on the defensive in the West and take the offensive in the East,
against Russia. Such a reversal of the Schlieffen Plan would probably
have won the war for Germany. France would have bled to death throwing
bodies against bullets in Elsass and Lothringen, England would have
remained neutral, at least for a while, and Russia would have gone
under in a couple years. Unfortunately for Germany and for history,
von Moltke Jr. collapsed in a fit of nerves and said it couldn’t
be done.
In
fact, the plans for just such a campaign were in the file. They
were there because it was the job of the General Staff to make plans
for every contingency.
The
disastrous course of America’s war in Iraq has created a new task
for the Great General Staff, in the form of more contingency planning.
America needs to make sure it has a plan in the file for a fighting
withdrawal from Iraq.
It
is still possible the end may not come this way. We may still manage
a shaky hand-off to a U.N.-designated Iraqi government, and that
government might last long enough for us to withdraw with some shreds
of dignity. George W. might awake some morning a new man, announce
he was swindled, sack the neo-cons and bring in someone like Marine
Corps General Tony Zinni, who opposed the war all along, to handle
our disengagement. The Archangel Michael might appear over Mecca
and convert all the Mohammedans to Christianity.
But
the growing probability is that we will be driven out of Iraq by
a general uprising, an intifada in which every American will
be the target of every Iraqi and our boys (and, in America’s Neo-Model
Army, girls) will have to fight their way out in a scene like that
which faced Gordon in the Sudan. It is not a pleasant prospect.
It means thousands, perhaps tens of thousands, of American and "coalition"
casualties, many times more Iraqi casualties, and one of history’s
more memorable defeats, right up there with Syracuse, Waterloo and
Stalingrad. The aftershocks will be severe, as regimes tumble from
Pakistan through the Persian Gulf and Egypt to Britain and America
itself. You can look forward to seeing the Dow at 3000, if not 300.
Facing
such a contingency, we can have only one priority: the lives of
our troops. Their chances of making it out alive will be far greater
if we have done some planning beforehand. Our great vulnerability
is that our lines of supply, communication and retreat are long,
and they almost all run through hostile territory. Most lead through
southern Iraq to Kuwait, and that is not likely to be a comfortable
way out. North through the Kurds to Turkey may be the best bet,
although as Xenophon can attest, retreating with a beaten army through
Kurd country is no picnic. West lies Syria, no friend, and Jordan,
which may itself be convulsed.
One
great snare and delusion lies in our path: the notion that we can
always go by air. Already the Air Force is saying that if the southern
supply lines are cut, as they were in the first half of April, air
transport can fill the gap. Right, just as Goering promised the
troops in Stalingrad. Not only does that assume American and coalition
troops can hold the airports, it assumes they can get to the airports,
which at the moment is problematic just between Baghdad and its
airport. Worse, coups in places such as Saudi Arabia could see Islamic-flown
F-15s and F-16s shooting down American C-5s and C-17s.
A
Second Generation military such as America’s does not improvise
well under time pressure, at least at the higher levels, where vast
staffs drilled to Kadavergehorsamkeit in the sacred "staff
planning process" are slaves to procedure. The neo-cons in
the Bush administration and their toadies in the Pentagon will no
doubt howl if the military starts contingency planning for a forced
withdrawal. Listen up, guys: do it anyway. You don’t have to tell
them. Just make sure the plan is in the file.
This
time, the military may have to play the Kaiser when the Bush administration
falls prostrate on the couch.
May
13, 2004
William
Lind [send him mail]
is Director of the Center for Cultural Conservatism at the Free
Congress Foundation.
Copyright
© 2004 William S. Lind
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Lind Archives
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