Coming Unglued
by
William S. Lind
by William S. Lind
As
I pondered what theme would be appropriate for this 100th
On War, one of Colonel John Boyd’s favorite phrases popped
into my mind: "coming unglued." As the column’s primary
purpose is to view events through the prism of Fourth Generation
war, and 4GW is both a sign and a further cause of many things "coming
unglued," the phrase seemed apt.
Nowhere
is it more so than with regard to America’s grand folly in Iraq,
where our invasion destroyed a state and created in its place a
vast new breeding ground for Fourth Generation forces. In an interview
with The Associated Press in December, 2004, the European Union’s
counterterrorism coordinator, Gijs de Vries, said, "There are
some who have gone to Iraq (from Europe), as indeed there have been
youngsters from outside Europe, from Arab countries, who have gone
there to receive military training." We invaded Afghanistan
to eliminate terrorist training camps, then created new terrorist
training camps by invading Iraq.
On
the ground in Iraq, America’s war is coming unglued. Most of the
soldiers and Marines I’ve talked to who have recently returned say
the situation is much worse than American newspapers report. Evidence
of that came last December, as the U.S. moved to shift its resupply
efforts from ground to air. Why? Because the Iraqi resistance controls
so many of the roads, including the road from Baghdad’s Green Zone
to the airport. "They have had a growing understanding that
where they can affect us is in the logistics flow," said Central
Command’s Lt. Gen. Lance Smith. "They have gotten more effective
in using IEDs. The enemy is very smart and thinking. It is a thinking
enemy. So he changes his tactics and he becomes more effective."
Do
we do the same? Increasingly, it seems not. An article on another
of my favorite subjects, the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad, noted
that, "In retrospect, the railroad succeeded largely by making
bad decisions and then making corrections." In Iraq, America
has made bad decisions and then not made corrections. That too,
Boyd argued, is a mark of coming unglued: paralysis.
The
Army, especially the Army Reserve and National Guard, are coming
unglued under the stress of deployments that go far beyond what
they were led to expect. The general in charge of the Army Reserve
recently said that the Reserve is "rapidly degenerating into
a ‘broken’ force." Within 48 hours, the Pentagon responded
– by leaking plans to increase the length and frequency of Reserve
deployments. That is another Boydian sign of coming unglued: actions
directly at variance with facts.
Back
in Washington, the neo-con gang of adventurers who pushed us into
this war is starting to come unglued. Leading neo-cons now nip at
Mr. Rumsfeld’s ankles. Conservative ranks abound with rumors, with
more hope than evidence behind them, that once Iraq holds its elections,
the White House will declare victory and pull out. One senses political
careers at risk, with players setting themselves up to say, "Who,
me? I didn’t want this war."
If
we cannot say Afghanistan is coming unglued, that is only because
it was never glued to begin with. Panglossian accounts of "springtime
for Karzai" notwithstanding, American-occupied Afghanistan
is now the world’s premier narco-state. We can, of course, take
on the poppy cultivators and opium traffickers, but if we do we
will find ourselves facing a wider war and losing all the sooner.
Most
significantly, if we look at the larger world, we see ever more
states coming unglued, which is the root phenomenon of Fourth Generation
war. The Saudi regime is in trouble, and its replacement will not
be parliamentary democracy. Pakistan’s General Musharraf is one
bomb away from his destiny, at which point al Qaeda will have nukes
(if it doesn’t already). Russia’s President Putin is acting to strengthen
the Russian state because he knows the state’s existence is on the
line in Russia. In West Africa, the state is almost gone, and it
is going in the rest of Africa. Most interestingly, as the next
few months will likely show, the state is fracturing in Israel,
a modern, Westernized country. That is how Fourth Generation war
works: it pulls the state apart at the moral level. Soon, just as
Arab is fighting Arab, Jew will be fighting Jew.
For
the most part, all these evidences of a world coming unglued fall
in the tragic category; we can only chronicle them, and weep. But
one massive fiasco promises high comedy: that of the so-called "Revolution
in Military Affairs," the vast Pentagon money tit through which
an army of Congressmen, contractors and colonels is sucking the
country dry. Based on hucksters’ promises of video game war, where
General Swami "sees all, knows all" through a vast array
of hyper-priced "systems," the RMA is coming unglued in
Iraq’s gritty streets. To the grunt on the ground, it has proven
as useless as a regiment of lancers.
For
the moment, the same Pentagon that pretends we are winning in Iraq
can also pretend the RMA represents "future war." In fact,
it is war as it never was and never will be. To employ one of Boyd’s
less elegant phrases, reality is about to give the RMA and its military,
Congressional and industry pimps "the whole enchilada right
up the poop chute." Frankly, that is going to be funnier than
fighting Frenchmen or drowning cats.
January
22, 2005
William
Lind [send him mail]
is Director of the Center for Cultural Conservatism at the Free
Congress Foundation. The views expressed in this article are those
of Mr. Lind, writing in his personal capacity.
Copyright
© 2005 William S. Lind
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