The Long War
by
William S. Lind
by William S. Lind
Every four
years, the Pentagon releases its Quadrennial Defense Review (QDR),
more accurately the Quadrennial Defense Rubberstamp. Usually, it
offers the same, more of the same or less of the same. That is true
of this QDR as well, with one interesting exception. Perhaps uniquely
in the annals of strategic planning, this QDR promises strategic
failure a priori. It puts that promise right up front, in
its first sentence, which reads, "The United States is a nation
engaged in what will be a long war."
Long wars
are usually strategic disasters for winners as well as losers, because
they leave all parties exhausted. If they work to anyone’s advantage,
it tends to be the weaker party’s, because its alternative is rapid
defeat. The Rumsfeld Pentagon certainly does not see the United
States as the weaker party in its "Global War on Terrorism."
So why has it adopted a long-war strategy, or more accurately lack
of strategy, unless one sees national exhaustion as a plus?
The answer
is a common strategic blunder, but again one that is seldom seen
up front; it normally arises as a war continues longer and proves
more difficult than expected. The blunder is maximalist objectives.
In a speech announcing the QDR, Secretary Rumsfeld said, speaking
of our Fourth Generation opponents,
Compelled
by a militant ideology that celebrates murder and suicide, with
no territory to defend, with little to lose, they will either
succeed in changing our way of life or we will succeed in changing
theirs.
It would be
difficult for war objectives to be stated in more maximalist terms.
Either they will succeed in turning us into Taliban-style Muslims
or we will turn them into happy consumers in globalism’s Brave New
World. Since most Americans would rather be dead than Talibs and
most pious Moslems would rather perish than lose their souls to
Brave New World, Mr. Rumsfeld has proclaimed a war of mutual annihilation.
That will indeed be another Thirty Years’ War, with little chance
of a renewed Westphalian order as the outcome.
It is easy
enough to define alternate, less ambitious objectives that might
avoid the strategic disaster of a long war. We might say that our
objective is to be left alone in our part of the globe, to enjoy
peace, prosperity and an ordered liberty at home, while we left
Islamics alone in their traditional territories. Sadly, from the
Pentagon’s perspective, such a strategy would fail the pork test:
it would not guarantee to keep the money flowing, which is what
QDRs are ultimately about.
Here, the
new QDR reverts to type. After a few ritual bows to non-state opponents,
it calls for more of the same: more Second Generation weapons systems,
of ever-increasing complexity and cost. According to a story in
the February 4 Washington Times, we are even to be blessed
with a new penetrating bomber, which is about as useful for Fourth
Generation war as squadron of pre-dreadnoughts.
But it
seems that in its blatant disconnect between programs and reality,
the Rumsfeld Pentagon may this time have overplayed its hand. The
same Washington Times story reports that the Chairman of
the House Armed Services Committee, Congressman Duncan Hunter, called
it like it is. "It appears that the QDR has become a budget-driven
exercise, which limits its utility to Congress," he said. The
HASC has been holding hearings on genuine alternatives (I testified
at one last fall, on Fourth Generation war), in a process that "will
provide us with a more complete picture of America’s national security
needs." In other words, the Congress, or at least the House,
may refuse to rubber stamp the QDR.
To anyone
familiar with the Hill, this is nothing short of a revolution. The
Pentagon stopped taking the authorizing committees seriously years
ago, and with reason. They had become backwaters, seldom asking
serious questions. The real action shifted to the appropriations
committees, where the money gets doled out.
But
the House and Senate Armed Services Committees have serious powers,
if they once again choose to exercise them. Chairman Hunter’s response
to the QDR suggests that the HASC may do just that. If it happens,
not only might the relevance of many weapons programs come into
question, so might Mr. Rumsfeld’s demand for maximalist objectives
in a permanent war for permanent peace.
February
10, 2006
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
© 2006 William S. Lind
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