Destroying the National Guard
by
William S. Lind
by William S. Lind
The
unit knew it would soon be shipped to the front. Some soldiers responded
by deserting. Others got drunk and fought. In response, officers
locked the unit in its barracks, allowing the troops out only to
drill, not even to smoke a cigarette, until it could be put on the
transport that would take it into combat.
It
sounds as if I am describing some third echelon Soviet infantry
regiment in, say, 1942. In fact, I am talking about the 1st
Battalion of the 178th Field Artillery Regiment, South
Carolina National Guard, in September 2004. According to a front-page
story in the September 19 Washington Post, the unit was disintegrating
even before it was deployed to Iraq. One shudders to think what
will happen once it gets there and finds itself under daily attack
from skilled enemies it cannot identify.
One
of the likely effects of the disastrous war in Iraq will be the
destruction of an old American institution, the National Guard.
Desperate for troops as the situation in Iraq deteriorates, Secretary
of Defense Rumsfeld is using the National Guard in a mission for
which it was never intended: carrying on a "war of choice"
halfway around the world. Most Guardsmen enlisted expecting to help
their neighbors in natural disasters, or perhaps maintain order
locally in the event of rioting. They never signed up for Vietnam
II.
Yes,
the Guard was mobilized and deployed overseas in both World Wars,
but those were true national wars, in which the American people
were all involved one way or another. Cabinet wars, as they used
to be called, are something altogether different. As Frederick the
Great said, cabinet wars must be waged in such a manner that the
people do not know they are going on.
But
National Guardsmen are the people. To send them into a cabinet war
is to misuse them in a way that will destroy them. Even in the American
Revolution, militiamen were seldom asked to fight outside their
own state. When they were, they usually responded by deserting.
The
fault does not lie with the soldiers of the National Guard. Even
within their units, they are being horribly misused. One of the
Guard’s strengths is unit cohesion: members of a unit come from
the same place and usually know each other well, both in the unit,
where they serve long-term, and often in the local community as
well. In the case of the 1st Battalion, 178th
Field Artillery, the Post reports that "to fully man
the unit, scores of soldiers were pulled in from different Guard
outfits, some voluntarily, some on orders." Cohesion went out
the window. One soldier in the unit said, "Our moral isn’t
high enough for us to be away for 18 months…I think a lot of guys
will break down in Iraq." That is always what happens when
unit cohesion is destroyed, in every army in history.
For
many Guardsmen, deployment to Iraq means economic ruin. They have
mortgage payments, car payments, credit card debt, all calculated
on their civilian salaries. Suddenly, for a year or more, their
pay drops to that of a private. The families they leave behind face
the loss of everything they have. What militia wouldn’t desert in
that situation?
The
real scope of the damage of Mr. Rumsfeld’s decision to send the
Guard to Iraq – 40% of the American troops in Iraq are now reservists
or Guardsmen – will probably not be revealed until units return.
One of the few already back saw 70% of its members leave the Guard
immediately.
What
the Washington elite that wages cabinet wars does not understand,
or care about, is the vital role the National Guard plays on the
state and local levels. Once the Guard has been destroyed, who will
provide the emergency services communities need when disaster strikes?
One would think that in a so-called "war against terror,"
where the danger to the American homeland is readily acknowledged,
someone in the nation’s capital would care about the local first
line of defense.
The
fact of the matter is that Versailles on the Potomac does not care
about the rest of the country in any respect, so long as the tax
dollars keep coming in.
My
old friend King Louis XVI might be able to tell Rumsfeld & Co.
where that road eventually ends up.
September
25, 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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