Neither Shall the Sword
by
William S. Lind
by William S. Lind
Chet
Richards is the spider of the d-n-i.net
web site, which is the best source for material on Fourth Generation
war. He is also the only person authorized to give Col. John Boyd’s
famous "Patterns of Conflict" briefing. Given that background,
it is not surprising that he has produced a useful and important
discussion of Fourth Generation strategy, in the form of a short
book titled Neither
Shall the Sword. If Washington were interested in strategy,
which it is not (its only genuine interest is in court politics),
it would give this small volume large attention.
The
book begins by asking whether Third Generation maneuver warfare
is passé. As the Urvater of maneuver warfare theory
in this country, I must agree with Richards that it is. As glorious
as the Blitzkrieg was, it now belongs to history; wars between
state armed forces, while they may now and then still occur, will
be jousting contests more than real wars. The institutional culture
of Third Generation armed services, with its outward focus, decentralization,
initiative and self-discipline, remains vital to any fighting organization.
But unless they are relieving an inside-out Islamic siege of Brussels,
Panzer divisions will no longer be streaming through the Ardennes.
Rightly,
Richards recognizes that the challenge of the present and the foreseeable
future is Fourth Generation war. America’s most pressing need is
for a grand strategy suitable to a Fourth Generation world. In Neither
Shall the Sword, Richards examines and compares the suggestions
of five strategists: myself, in my cover story "Strategic Defense
Initiative" in the November 22, 2004 issue of The American
Conservative; Martin van Creveld and his book The
Transformation of War; Tom Hammes, The
Sling and the Stone; Michael Scheuer, Imperial
Hubris; and Thomas Barnett in The
Pentagon's New Map and Blueprint
for Action.
Richards
groups these five positions in two major camps, containment and
rollback, terms which go back to the early days of the Cold War.
Van Creveld and I represent containment, which I can accept; Barnett
represents rollback (on steroids); and Hammes and Scheuer are somewhere
in the middle. Richards’s comparison and analysis of all these positions
is thorough and insightful. For those who suspect I may be tooting
my own horn here, let me note that he does not end up where I do.
Beyond
this comparison, Richards makes additional valuable points. One
is that the Bush administration has fundamentally miscast the nature
of the conflict we now face. He argues that
war is terrorism,
so a "war on terrorism" is a war on war. We are not
in a war on "terrorism" or engaged in a "struggle
against violent extremism." Instead, we are faced with an
evolutionary development in armed conflict, a "fourth generation"
of warfare that is different from and much more serious than "terrorism"…
to see the
difference between 4GW and "terrorism," run this simple
thought experiment: suppose bin Laden and al-Qaida were able to
enforce their program on the Middle East, but they succeeded without
the deliberate killing of one more American civilian. The entire
Middle East turns hostile, Israel is destroyed, and gas goes up
to $15 per gallon when it is available. Bin Laden’s 4GW campaign
succeeds, but without terrorism. Do you feel better?
This
applies to situations like Iraq and Afghanistan:
It’s not
a war followed by a blown peace. That is conventional war thinking,
even if the war is waged and quickly won by 3GW. Instead, it will
be an occupation against some degree of resistance, followed by
the real, fourth generation war.
Much
of Neither Shall the Sword is devoted to considering what
kinds of armed forces the U.S. would require for 4GW, which varies
depending on the grand strategy we adopt. He recognizes that the
current Department of Defense, and the bulk of our forces, are untransformable.
Practitioners
of real transformation agree that in such circumstances it is
better not to transform but to start over…The sooner these fossils
are put to rest, the sooner new enterprises can rise to create
innovative business models for satisfying customer desires.
Here
is where Richards and I part company. DOD is, as he recognizes,
Gosplan. But his alternative, at least for a rollback force, includes
privatizing the fighting function. The problem with this is that
as the state privatizes security functions, for foreign wars or
here at home, it strikes at its own reason for being and thus accelerates
its crisis of legitimacy, which lies at the heart of 4GW. Once security
is privatized, why have a state at all?
Conveniently,
private armies have a long history of overthrowing states. There
is good reason why the rising state of the 17th century
abolished private armies and forcefully asserted a monopoly on violence.
Even
here, Neither
Shall the Sword promotes creative thinking on the most important
military question of our time: how can states come to grips with
Fourth Generation war? You might want to send one to your Senator
or Congressman. If you enclose a check for at least $1000, they
might even pay some attention to it.
June
29, 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
William
Lind Archives
|