It has been 10 years since
9/11, and all of us who write about such things for a living are writing about
it. That causes me to be wary. I prefer being the lonely voice, but the fact is
that 9/11 was a defining moment in American history. On Sept. 12, 2001, few
would have anticipated the course the resulting war would take — but then, few
knew what to think. The nation was in shock. In retrospect, many speak with
great wisdom about what should have been thought about 9/11 at the time and
what should have been done in its aftermath. I am always interested in looking
at what people actually said and did at the time.
The country was in shock, and
shock was a reasonable response. The country was afraid, and fear was a
reasonable response. Ten years later, we are all much wiser and sure that our
wisdom was there from the beginning. But the truth is that, in retrospect, we
know we would have done things superbly had we the authority. Few of us are
being honest with ourselves. We were all shocked and frightened. Our wisdom
came much later, when it had little impact. Yes, if we knew then what we know
now we would have all bought Google stock. But we didn’t know things then that
we know now, so it is all rather pointless to lecture those who had decisions
to make in the midst of chaos.
Some wars are carefully
planned, but even those wars rarely take place as expected. Think of the
Germans in World War I, having planned the invasion of France for decades and
with meticulous care. Nothing went as planned for either side, and the war did
not take a course that was anticipated by anyone. Wars occur at unpredictable
times, take unpredictable courses and have unexpected consequences. Who
expected the American Civil War to take the course it did? We have been
second-guessing Lincoln and Davis, Grant and Lee and all the rest for more than
a century.
This particular war — the one
that began on 9/11 and swept into Afghanistan, Iraq and other countries — is
hard to second-guess because there are those who do not think it is a war. Some
people, including President George W. Bush, seem to regard it as a criminal
conspiracy. When Bush started talking about bringing al Qaeda to justice, he
was talking about bringing them before the bar of justice. Imagine trying to
arrest British sailors for burning Washington. War is not about bringing people
to justice. It is about destroying their ability to wage war. The contemporary
confusion between warfare and criminality creates profound confusion about the
rules under which you operate. There are the rules of war as set forth in the
Geneva Conventions, and there are criminal actions. The former are designed to
facilitate the defense of national interests and involve killing people because
of the uniform they wear. The latter is about punishing people for prior
action. I have never sorted through what it was that the Bush administration
thought it was doing.
This entire matter is made
more complex by the fact that al Qaeda doesn’t wear a uniform. Under the Geneva
Conventions, there is no protection for those who do not openly carry weapons
or wear uniforms or at least armbands. They are regarded as violating the rules
of war. If they are not protected by the rules of war then they must fall under
criminal law by default. But criminal law is not really focused on preventing
acts so much as it is on punishing them. And as satisfying as it is to capture
someone who did something, the real point of the U.S. response to 9/11 was to
prevent anyone else from doing something — killing and capturing people who
have not done anything yet but who might.
Coming to Grips
The problem is that
international law has simply failed to address the question of how a
nation-state deals with forces that wage war through terrorism but are not part
of any nation-state. Neither criminal law nor the laws of war apply. One of the
real travesties of 9/11 was the manner in which the international legal
community — the United Nations and its legal structures, the professors of
international law who discuss such matters and the American legal community —
could not come to grips with the tensions underlying the resulting war. There
was an unpleasant and fairly smug view that the United States had violated both
the rules of war and domestic legal processes, but very little attempt was made
to craft a rule of warfare designed to cope with a group like al Qaeda —
organized, covert, effective — that attacked a nation-state.
As U.S. President Barack Obama
has discovered, the failure of the international legal community to rapidly
evolve new rules of war placed him at odds with his erstwhile supporters. The
ease with which the international legal community found U.S. decision makers’
attempts to craft a lawful and effective path “illegal and immoral” (an
oft-repeated cliche of critics of post-9/11 policy) created an insoluble
dilemma for the United States. The mission of the U.S. government was to
prevent further attacks on the homeland. The Geneva Conventions, for the most
part, didn’t apply. Criminal law is not about prevention. The inability of the
law to deal with reality generated an image of American lawlessness.
Of course, one of the most extraordinary
facts of the war that begin on 9/11 was that there have been no more successful
major attacks on the United States. Had I been asked on Sept. 11, 2001, about
the likelihood of that (in fact, I was asked), my answer would have been that
it was part of a series of attacks, and not just the first. This assumption
came from a knowledge of al Qaeda’s stated strategic intent, the fact that the
9/11 team had operated with highly effective covert techniques based on
technical simplicity and organizational effectiveness, and that its command
structure seemed to operate with effective command and control. Put simply, the
9/11 team was good and was prepared to go to its certain death to complete the
mission. Anyone not frightened by this was out of touch with reality.
Yet there have been no further
attacks. This is not, I think, because they did not intend to carry out such
attacks. It is because the United States forced the al Qaeda leadership to flee
Afghanistan during the early days of the U.S. war, disrupting command and
control. It is also because U.S. covert operations on a global scale attacked
and disrupted al Qaeda’s strength on the ground and penetrated its
communications. A significant number of attacks on the United States were
planned and prosecuted. They were all disrupted before they could be launched,
save for the attempted and failed bombing in Times Square, the famed shoe
bomber and, my favorite, the crotch bomber. Al Qaeda has not been capable of
mounting effective attacks against the United States (though it has conducted
successful attacks in Spain and Britain) because the United States surged its
substantial covert capabilities against it.
Obviously, as in all wars,
what is now called “collateral damage” occurred (in a more civilized time it
would have been called “innocent civilians killed, wounded and detained”). How
could it have been otherwise? Just as aircraft dropping bombs don’t easily
discriminate against targets and artillery sometimes kills innocent people,
covert operations can harm the unintended. That is the nature and horror of
war. The choice for the United States was to accept the danger of another al
Qaeda attack — an event that I am certain was intended and would have happened
without a forceful U.S. response — or accept innocent casualties elsewhere. The
foundation of a polity is that it protects its own at the cost of others. This
doctrine might be troubling, but few of us in World War II felt that protecting
Americans by bombing German and Japanese cities was a bad idea. If this
troubles us, the history of warfare should trouble us. And if the history of
warfare troubles us, we should bear in mind that we are all its heirs and
beneficiaries, particularly in the United States.
The first mission of the war
that followed 9/11 was to prevent any further attacks. That mission was
accomplished. That is a fact often forgotten.
Of course, there are those who
believe that 9/11 was a conspiracy carried out by the CIA in order to justify
interference in our liberty. But an organization as capable as they believe the
CIA is would not need a justification to abridge liberty. That was a lot of
work to justify something, and the truly powerful don’t need to justify
anything. Nor do they need to leave people who are revealing the truth alive.
It is striking that the “doubters” believe 9/11 was created in order to crush
American freedoms but that the conspirators are so incompetent they cannot shut
down those who have discovered the conspiracy and are telling the world about
it. Personally, if I were interested in global domination triggered by a covert
act like 9/11, I would silence those revealing my secret. But then I’m not that
good at it, and the doubters all have reasons why they are blogging the truth
and are not dead or languishing in a concentration camp.
I take this detour for four
reasons. First, doubters should not be ignored but answered. Second, unless
they are answered, they will be able to say the CIA (or whomever they think did
it) needed one attack to achieve its goals. Third, the issue the doubters raise
is not the structural integrity of a building but the underlying intent of the
CIA in carrying out the attack. The why is everything to them, and it is
important to point out that it is their explanation of motive that makes no
sense. Finally, I am engaging the doubters here because I enjoy receiving an
abundance of emails containing fascinating accusations and the occasional
threat.
Considering the Failures
But to return to the main
theme, it is important here to consider not only the successes but also the
failures of the war, and here Iraq comes to mind. There is a case to be made
that the Iraq campaign was not irrational, but even more interesting, I think,
is the fact that no war is without its disastrous misjudgments, even successful
wars. In my mind, the U.S. invasion of the Philippines in 1944 was a major
mistake. It did little to contribute to the fall of Japan, cost far more than
the 4,000 American lives lost in Iraq, and it could have actually delayed the
end of the war. It was opposed by senior commanders and was essentially
something Gen. Douglas MacArthur insisted on for political reasons. The Battle
of the Somme in World War I cost 600,000 British and French casualties, with
60,000 in one day. Their total gain during the battle was perhaps six miles.
And in the American Civil War, the federal drive into Virginia turned into a
disaster.
Every successful war is built
around a series of defeats and miscalculations. The perfect war is built around
deeply flawed and unnecessary campaigns. My own personal selections are not as
important as the principle that all successful wars contain massive mistakes.
If we simply write off Iraq as one of these, that in itself does not change the
fact that the American homeland was not attacked again. Did Iraq contribute to
that? This is a question that warrants a long discussion. But conceding that it
had no effect simply makes the post-9/11 war normal and, in that normality,
tragic.
What has not been normal has
been the length of the war. Heavy fighting continues in Afghanistan, Iraq is
not quite done and new theaters for covert operations are constantly opening
and closing. It is the first U.S. campaign — Afghanistan — that actually poses
the most vexing problem, one that is simple to express: When is the war over?
That, of course, depends on the goal. What is the United States trying to
achieve there?
The initial goal of the
invasion was to dislodge al Qaeda, overthrow the government that had supported
it and defeat the Taliban. The first two goals were accomplished quickly. The
third goal has not been accomplished to this day, nor is it likely that the
United States will ever accomplish it. Other powers have tried to subdue
Afghanistan, but few have succeeded. The Taliban are optimized for the
battlefield they fight on, have superior intelligence and have penetrated and
are able to subvert government institutions, including the Afghan military.
They have the implicit support of elements in a neighboring major nation —
Pakistan — that are well beyond American means to intimidate. The United States
has no port from which to supply its forces except the one controlled by
Pakistan and only complex and difficult supply routes through other countries.
On the other hand, the Taliban
cannot defeat the United States, which can stay in Afghanistan indefinitely.
But the major U.S. mission in Afghanistan is concluded. Al Qaeda has not used
Afghanistan as a primary base since 2002. Al Qaeda in Pakistan, according to
the United States, has been crippled. The Taliban, products of Afghanistan for
the most part, have no international ambitions. Al Qaeda has relocated to other
countries like Yemen and Somalia.
Given this, continued combat
in Afghanistan cannot be linked to al Qaeda. It could be said that the reason
to go to war in Afghanistan was to prevent al Qaeda’s return. But the fact is
that it doesn’t need Afghanistan, and if it did return to Afghanistan, it would
be no more dangerous to the United States than it currently is with its bases
elsewhere.
In wars, and especially in
counterinsurgencies, the mission tends to creep upward. In Afghanistan, the
goal is now the transformation of Afghan society into one that is democratic, no
longer corrupt by American standards and able to defend itself against the
Taliban. This goal does not seem attainable given the relative forces and
interests in the country.
Therefore, this war will go on
until the United States decides to end it or there is a political evolution in
Kabul in which the government orders us out. The point is that the goal has
become disengaged from the original intent and is unattainable. Unlike other
wars, counterinsurgencies rarely end in victory. They usually end when the
foreign forces decide to leave.
There is talk of a long war
against radical Islam. It had better not be. The Islamic world is more than a
billion people and radical Islam is embedded in many places. The idea that the
United States has the power to wage an interminable war in the Islamic world is
fantasy. This is not a matter of ideology or willpower or any other measures.
It is a matter of available forces, competing international interests and
American interests.
Ultimately, there are three
lessons of the last decade that I think are important. The first is the
tremendous success the United States has had in achieving its primary goal —
blocking attacks on the homeland. The second is that campaigns of dubious worth
are inevitable in war, and particularly in one as ambiguous as this war has
been. Finally, all wars end, and the idea of an interminable war dominating
American foreign policy and pushing all other considerations to the side is not
what is going to happen. The United States must have a sense of proportion, of
what can be done, what is worth doing and what is too dangerous to do. An
unlimited strategic commitment is the definitive opposite of strategy.
The United States has done as
well as can be expected. Over the coming years there will be other terrorist
attacks. As it wages war in response, the United States will be condemned for
violating international laws that are insensate to reality. At this point, for
all its mistakes and errors — common to all wars — the United States has
achieved its primary mission. There have been no more concerted terrorist
attacks against the United States. Now it is time to resume history.
George Friedman, Stratfor, September
06, 2011, republished with permission of STRATFOR.
Boa Noite!, o meu nome é Ricardo e adorei imenso da tua página! Muito linda muito bem!
ResponderExcluirConcordo exactamente com tudo aquilo que aqui li.Existe sempre há tanto que escrever nos blogs!Nada nada mais gostoso do que deixar a nossa escrita online!E por tudo isso deixei este comentário!
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