Important Distinctions
by
William S. Lind
by William S. Lind
Georgie
Ann Geyer, who may be America’s most perceptive international affairs
columnist, wrote in the Saturday, September 17 Washington Times
about a recent Washington conference concerning the mess in the
Middle East. That could, of course, have been a conference topic
back as far as the First Triumvirate, when an earlier Crassus lost
his head in the Land Between the Rivers. We can only hope we are
not as close to the loss of the republic itself as Rome was by that
time.
In
her column, Miss Geyer quoted at length the remarks of former Ambassador
Charles W. Freeman, Jr., who represented the United States in Riyadh
during the First Gulf War.
"The
Anglo-American invasion of Iraq cost my country thousands of lives,
eroded the American military and destroyed the Iraqi state . .
. It has generated at least three different insurgencies and,
by some estimates, multiplied our enemies 10 times. Look at the
resurgent Taliban in Afghanistan Iraq is becoming the cause
of the very problems it was supposed to control . . ."
Moreover,
he said, we have gotten mired down in Iraq in "fourth-generation
warfare," simply warfare between wildly asymmetric forces, such
as the formal and structured American military against the footloose
insurgents or guerrillas. "What fourth-generation warfare has
as its dominant character is its objective being to influence
the mind of the leader, i.e. the U.S., and to convince the leader
that his objectives are unattainable by at least reasonable amounts
of force," he continued. "This kind of warfare is one that we've
never won."
Ambassador
Freeman is correct in his description of the consequences of America’s
invasion of Iraq. It is America’s Syracuse Expedition. Just as Sparta
was happy to see Athens waste its strength against a meaningless
opponent, Syracuse, so al Qaeda regards our war in Iraq as a gift
from Allah. Far from wanting to drive us out of Iraq (or Afghanistan),
it prays we stay in both places indefinitely, our military bleeding
from the death of one thousand cuts.
But
in his remarks on Fourth Generation war, the ambassador seems to
have fallen into two common misconceptions. Fourth Generation war
is asymmetrical, but it is asymmetrical on a much broader scale
than simply the pitting of a conventional army against guerillas.
The larger asymmetry is political. Fourth Generation was pits a
state, or alliance of states, against a shifting mass of opponents
of wildly varying motives and goals. Among the problems that presents
is that the state has no one to talk to about making peace. Who
does Mr. Kissinger sit down with in Paris this time?
Nor
does Fourth Generation war have as its objective the mind of the
leader on the other side. Rather, what it does is pull its enemy
apart on the moral level, fracturing his society. We see that clearly
today in Israel, where the fractures may soon reach the point where
the political process cannot bridge them.
That
in turn is a warning for the U.S., and it is one both Ambassador
Freeman and Georgie Anne Geyer pick up on:
Then Ambassador
Freeman . . . came to the core of the problem. The "party adversary
system" in America has broken down. "Patriotism" is confused with
accepting whatever policy the government lays down. There is no
national discussion on the war at all. More telling was the lack
of debate even in Congress over the war: "This is not," he averred
strongly, "just a political problem; it is a systemic breakdown
in America."
That
is just what Fourth Generation opponents strive for, a systemic
breakdown in their state adversary. The danger sign in America is
not a hot national debate over the war in Iraq and its course, but
precisely the absence of such a debate which, as former Senator
Gary Hart has pointed out, is largely due to a lack of courage on
the part of the Democrats. Far from ensuring a united nation, what
such a lack of debate and absence of alternatives makes probable
is a bitter fracturing of the American body politic once the loss
of the war becomes evident to the public. The public will feel itself
betrayed, not merely by one political party, but by the whole political
system.
The
primum mobile of Fourth Generation war is a crisis of legitimacy
of the state. If the absence of a loyal opposition and alternative
courses of action further delegitimizes the American state in the
eye of the public, the forces of the Fourth Generation will have
won a victory of far greater proportions than anything that could
happen on the ground in Iraq. The Soviet Union’s defeat in Afghanistan
played a central role in the collapse of the Soviet state. Could
the American defeat in Iraq have similar consequences here? The
chance is far greater than Washington elites can imagine.
September
24, 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
William
Lind Archives
|