Victory in Iraq
by
Vedran Vuk and Walter
Block
by Vedran Vuk and Walter Block
DIGG THIS
Without a doubt,
the United States of America possesses the most powerful military
in the world. No armed force on Earth will likely achieve our level
of might today for many a year. Technologies that to us seem to
be yesterday’s innovations such as nuclear bombs, stealth fighters,
and bunker busters are unrealizable dreams for most nations in any
era.
Our soldiers
are amongst the best trained in the world and willing to do anything
required to defend America. Yet, somehow the United States military
faces a daily struggle to maintain control in Iraq. How can we be
so omnipotent and so inept at the same time?
The blame is
not to be laid upon any soldier fighting, or any general conducting
the war. These men follow the orders of the commander-in-chief’s
and congress’s wishes to remain in Iraq. The real issue is the unlikeliness
of final victory in Iraq.
Consider this.
Our overall objective is to build up local Iraqi forces to the point
where they can police and defend their own country. We are constantly
told how well the Iraqi government prepares its forces. Some months,
the Iraqis are on schedule but some months not. The U.S. agenda
sets quotas of troop levels which don’t speak to the quality, loyalty,
or readiness of these forces.
So, here lies
the problem: if our troops who are the most powerful in the world
are having trouble with insurgents, how strong must the Iraqi military
be when coalition forces leave? The Iraqi army would have to be
as gargantuan and as powerful as the U.S. military only to maintain
current levels of stability which can hardly be considered firmly
secure.
The only solution
would be to make the Iraqi army even stronger than our own. Not
only is this strategy not humanly possible, it is outright dangerous
to long term stability in the Middle East. This armament will only
lead to training the next Osama bin Laden.
These logical
inconsistencies lead to an inconvenient question, "Is there
any real pull out strategy…….ever?" No. Not for tomorrow, or
five years from now, not even 20 years hence; there is no real strategy
for departing Iraq at all. And indeed, given present policies, why
should there be? After all, our country now has some 700 military
bases in about 130 countries, some of them (Europe, Japan, Korea)
for almost half a century. Why should Iraq be any different? But
U.S. taxpayers can’t afford to finance our soldiers’ stay in Iraq
forever, and that unhappy country cannot pay the costs of garrisoning
an army the size of the United States’ in its wildest dreams.
This conundrum
leaves the United States between a rock and a hard place since no
one can afford to keep fighting the war. The Canadian dollar is
now worth more than our currency. The U.S. dollar has lost out in
comparison with the Euro, the yen, and many other currencies. This
is just plain embarrassing. Under these unfortunate circumstances,
it would appear we have only two options. Either the U.S. leaves
Iraq right now, risking the temporary chaos that may well ensue,
or withdraw from Iraq in 20 years or so completely bankrupt with
our own economy destroyed watching chaos envelope that country anyway.
Iraq will never have an army like ours no matter how much we build
it up. Nor will anything less suffice.
There is a
third option, however; we stay in Iraq forever. This would lead
to the deaths of countless Americans and the bankrupting of our
entire economy. We assume only patriotic Americans are reading this
article, not Islamo-fascists who would support option three.
If you truly
think that we should stay in Iraq indefinitely, then please report
yourself to the Department of Homeland Security, because you could
only support such a policy if you hated America and were in league
with the Islamo-fascists.
But wait Mr.
Vuk and Dr. Block, aren’t we winning?! Isn’t the troop surge working?
Who can say for sure, but we can tell you the difference between
propagandist rhetoric and logical rationale. First, how do you determine
whether you’re winning in a war like this? There are certainly no
battle fronts or capitals to ransack. Well, many of our presidential
candidates have a measure.
According to
news reports, fewer soldiers than usual have died in the past few
months. And this statistic is supposed proof of the troop surge’s
efficiency. But wait one second, since when do fewer casualties
mean that we’re winning? According to this logic, the Allies lost
the battle of D-Day during WWII. Thousands of men died on Omaha
Beach. Surely this means America lost. Someone should also send
the Russians a memo alerting them to the historical failures of
battles both at Stalingrad and Berlin where hundreds of thousands
of their soldiers fell, many more than the Germans lost.
It is obvious
that the American people are being misled regarding the actual status
of the conflict. The amount of dead has nothing to with whether
a nation is strategically succeeding in warfare. Absolutely nothing!
In fact, victory often comes at the expense of more lives not fewer.
In reality, there is no real way to tell whether you are winning
or not in such conflicts.
Some claim
that "we’re fighting them over there; so that we don’t have
to fight them over here." For a fuller analysis of this fallacious
line of thinking read here.
What can we
do under these dire circumstances? There is only one option: Let’s
get out of Middle East affairs entirely. The United States should
no longer intervene in Middle Eastern countries and only maintain
mutually beneficial trade.
The terrorists
don’t hate us for our freedom. The fundamentalists revile the U.S.
for four reasons: our alliance with Israel; our imperialist presence
in the Middle East in general; our occupation of their Holy Land
in particular, Saudi Arabia; and the fact that we have for over
a decade been bombing and blockading Iraq.
With regard
to this last atrocity, then-Secretary
of State Madeleine Albright was asked if the U.S. sanctions against
Iraq, which were responsible for killing some half a million children,
were "worth it." She replied in the affirmative. See on
this here and
here.
If Hillary,
John, or Obama are elected from the Democratic side, or Rudy, Mitt,
the Huck, John or Fred from the Republican, they will continue all
four hated policies and will continue to make the United States
of America a prime target.
Leaving any
troops will still make the U.S. a target. Both Democrat and "mainstream"
Republican non-withdrawal plans would be a disaster for our soldiers.
If US troops are actually reduced, those remaining in the region
will be weakened with fewer numbers. Both parties have a "helpless
and stranded" evacuation plan.
Only one candidate,
Ron Paul, offers the option of exiting the Middle East entirely
and changing the ultimate target in the eyes of the terrorists.
Another line
of thinking says that the terrorists attack us for our freedom and
prosperity. If you believe this, then our course in the war thus
far is correct. America should remain in Iraq, because staying any
longer will ensure the United States is neither free nor prosperous.
According to this theory, the terrorist should thereafter cease
their aggression, a "brilliant" strategy. One wonders,
then, why the terrorists have not targeted other countries that
are rich and relatively free, and also feature mini-skirts and rock-and-roll
music, such as Norway, or Japan.
The United
States of America is in a tough jam. Our only alternative is to
get out of the Middle East entirely. Not one half the troops out,
not one quarter, all! And not in a decade, nor even a year nor yet
six months. Our exit should be measured in hours, not even
days.
We are the
most powerful military in the world. If the U.S. can’t win a war,
it is good evidence that the war was unwinnable in the first place.
The conflict will not be won, because it simply cannot be won. Our
ultimate choices are between withdrawing our troops now with America
as an intact nation or doing so years from now broken and bankrupt.
January
21, 2008
Vedran
Vuk [send him mail] has a bachelor
degree of economics from Loyola University of New Orleans, and was
a 2006 Summer Fellow at the Mises
Institute. He is currently pursuing a doctorate of economics
at George Mason University. Dr. Block [send
him mail] is a professor of economics at Loyola University New
Orleans, and a senior fellow of the Ludwig von Mises Institute.
He is the author of Defending
the Undefendable.
Copyright
© 2008 LewRockwell.com
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