More Newspeak
by
William S. Lind
by William S. Lind
One of the classic signs of ideology at work is the redefinition
of words to empty them of their meaning. An article by Greg Jaffe
in the February 16 Wall Street Journal, "New Factor
in Iraq: Irregular Brigades Fill Security Void," describes
the rapid spread of militias in that unhappy place, which is probably
now more accurately called Mesopotamia. The story is based largely
on the work of one U.S. Marine Corps officer, Major Chris Wales,
in tracking the new militias. But it also quotes Major Wales as
saying, "We don’t call them militias. Militias are …. illegal."
Well, that certainly solves the problem. A militia isn’t a
militia if we don’t call it a militia. And we can’t call it a militia,
because we have decreed there shall be no militias in Iraq. King
Canute, call your office.
Let me quickly add that I am not pointing a finger at Major
Wales. In today’s Marine Corps, a major is a minor, and any major
who didn’t use Newspeak (especially when talking to the press) would
quickly find himself the MWR officer in Barstow.
Generals, it seems, can be a bit more frank. The March 2 Washington
Post, reporting on General Abizaid’s testimony to the Senate
Armed Services Committee, had this to say:
Asked by lawmakers about irregular Iraqi militia springing up
around the country, Abizaid said the help of such militia in providing
security for the elections was "in some ways a good thing." In
the long run, however, they should be incorporated with Iraqi
government forces. "Ultimately …. it’s destabilizing," he said.
The proliferation of militias, growing dependence of the Iraqi
government and the U.S. on those militias to fight Sunni insurgents
and our obvious inability to control the militias all point to the
bottom line of the war in Iraq: Iraq is not moving closer to becoming
a state again, and it may be moving further away from doing so.
Local, private armies, often for hire, are a classic sign that the
state is weak or non-existent. If a state does not have a monopoly
on organized violence, it is not a state. It cannot bring order.
Such order as exists is local and is enforced by local military
forces, which are militias whether or not Americans call them that.
The absence of a state breeds militias, and the militias are in
turn both a sign and a cause of the absence of the state.
The proliferation of militias points to another fact about
the war in Iraq: it is increasingly taking on the nature of a civil
war. In the Fourth Generation stew of militias, gangs, groups of
insurgents and so on, some fault lines seem to be emerging. The
new militias are largely Shiite (the Kurds have an old and very
capable militia, the Peshmerga), they are aligned loosely in support
of Iraq’s new Shiite-dominated government (but not controlled by
that government) and their main purpose is to fight the insurgents,
who are Sunnis. It is fairly clear where this script is heading.
Like the American destruction of Fallujah and the recent Iraqi
elections, the rise and spread of Shiite militias devoted to fighting
Sunni insurgents puts ever-greater pressure on Iraq’s Sunnis to
cast their lot with the insurgency. Shiite militias in particular
leave them little choice; who else but the insurgents will protect
them from Shiite militiamen? The situation in Germany during the
Thirty Years’ War may be an analogy: though many tried, few German
princes could avoid casting their lots either with the Protestants
or with the Catholics. Neutrality meant you became the victim of
both.
So what is the U.S. to do, beyond not calling Iraqi militias
"militias?" There is nothing we can do. The Wall Street
Journal quotes Lt. Col. James Bullion, who works for General
Petraeus, as saying, "There is no way we can stop the Iraqis
from doing something they want to do. This is their country and
their army now. We can’t put that genie back in the bottle."
Better still is General Petraeus’s own comment: "I want
to get the hell out of here." Amen.
March
9, 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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