The Grand Illusion
by
William S. Lind
by William S. Lind
When
asked for their solution to the mess in Iraq, both of America’s
presidential candidates – Tweedledumb and Tweedlephony – advance
the same line: "train more Iraqi security forces." Once
enough Iraqis have been trained, they suggest, American troops can
be withdrawn and our puppet Iraqi government can stand on its own
six legs.
Unfortunately,
the problem is not training, but loyalty. All the training in the
world is worthless if the people being trained have no reason to
fight for those who are training them. And a paycheck isn’t much
of a reason, especially when the fellow Iraqis they are to battle
are fighting for God.
As
is so often the case in Fourth Generation war, the most useful way
to look at the situation is through the prism of John Boyd’s three
levels of war: the physical, the mental and the moral. On the physical
level, American-trained Iraqi security forces may have advantages
over their Fourth Generation opponents. American training in techniques
is often very good. While we are not giving the Iraqis equipment
as good as our own (a big mistake on the moral level), it may be
better than that of their enemies. With salaries of about $200 per
month, our mercenaries are among the best-paid men in Iraq.
Unfortunately
for us, as soon as we consider the mental and moral levels, which
Boyd argued are more powerful than the physical level, the advantage
shifts. At the mental level, the Fourth Generation elements have
already gotten inside the heads of Iraqi police and National Guardsmen.
How? By killing them in large numbers. More than 700 have died in
the past year, with many more wounded. A story on four recruits
for the Iraqi police in the September 27 Washington Post
quotes one of them as saying, "We’re walking dead men."
That
fear opens the door to the sort of deal that typifies Arab countries:
the police and Guardsmen collect their paychecks, but look the other
way when the resistance is up to something. In some cases, the deal
can go further and create double agents, men inside the security
forces who actually work for one or more of the resistance organizations.
The same day’s Post announced the arrest of a "senior
commander of the Iraqi National Guard" for, as the U.S. military
put it, "having associations with known terrorists, for alleged
ties to insurgents." I suspect that if we arrested all the
Iraqi Guardsmen who fit that description, Abu Ghraib would again
fill to overflowing.
At
the moral level, the position of the Iraqi police and Guardsmen
is almost hopeless. They are being paid to fight their own countrymen
and fellow Mohammedans on behalf of an occupying foreign power that
is also (nominally) Christian. The fig leaf of Mr. Allawi’s "government"
deceives no one, especially after last week’s pictures of Allawi
holding hands with George Bush, the Islamic world’s Voldemort. Is
it any wonder that, all their training notwithstanding, when it
comes to fighting alongside American forces the Iraqis usually change
sides or go home?
The
American authorities in Iraq argue that thousands more Iraqis volunteer
to serve in the security forces than we can train or equip. That
is true, but the motive is not one that leads to much willingness
to fight. As one of the Iraqi police recruits interviewed by the
Post said, "Everyone wants jobs, and there really are
no jobs but the police."
Throughout
history, armies of hirelings have melted at a touch when faced with
people fighting for something they believe in. All the training
in the world will make no difference. The core problem is the deepest
taproot of Fourth Generation war: the "state" Iraqi security
forces are being told to fight for has no legitimacy. When Bush
and Kerry argue that we can avoid defeat in Iraq by training more
Iraqis to do the fighting for us, they are indulging in a grand
illusion.
October
2, 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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