George Friedman
The war in Afghanistan has
been under way for more than 10 years. It has not been the only war fought
during this time; for seven of those years another, larger war was waged in
Iraq, and smaller conflicts were under way in a number of other countries as well.
But the Afghanistan War is still the longest large-scale, multi-divisional war
fought in American history. An American soldier's killing of 16 Afghan
civilians, including nine children, on March 11 represents only a moment in
this long war, but it is an important moment.
In the course of the Iraq and
Afghanistan wars, military strategists in the United States developed the
concept of the long war. The theory was presented in many ways, but its core
argument was this: The defeat of Taliban forces and the Iraqi resistance would
take a long time, but success would not end the war because Islamist terrorism
and its supporters would be a constantly shifting threat, both in the places
and in the ways they would operate. Therefore, since it was essential to defeat
terrorism, the United States was now engaging in a long war whose end was
distant and course unknown.
Sometimes explicit but usually
implicit in this argument was that other strategic issues faced by the United
States should be set aside and that the long war ought to be the centerpiece of
U.S. strategic policy until the threat of Islamist terrorism disappears or at
least subsides. As a result, under this theory -- which very much influences
U.S. strategy -- even if the war in Afghanistan ended, the war in the Islamic
world would go on indefinitely. We need to consider the consequences of this
strategy.
Staff Sgt. Robert Bales, who
allegedly perpetrated the appalling slaughter in Afghanistan, was on his fourth
tour of combat duty. He had served three tours in Iraq of nine, 15 and 12
months -- he had been at war for three years. His tour in Afghanistan was going
to be his fourth year. The wars he fought in differed from prior wars. Fallujah
and Tora Bora were not Stalingrad. Still, the hardship, fear and threat of
death are ever-present. The probability of dying may be lower, but it is there,
it is real, and there are comrades you can name whom you saw die.
In Vietnam, only volunteers
served more than a single one-year tour. For Americans in World War II, the war
lasted a little more than three years, and only a handful of U.S. troops were
in combat for that long. U.S. involvement in World War I lasted less than two
years, and most U.S. soldiers were deployed for a year or less. In U.S.
history, only the Civil and Revolutionary wars lasted as long as Bales had
served.
Atrocities occur in all wars.
This is an observation, not an excuse. And they become more likely the longer a
soldier is in combat. War is brutal and it brutalizes the souls of warriors.
Some resist the brutalization better than others, but no one can see death that
often and not be changed. Just as important, the enemy is dehumanized. You
cannot fight and fear him for years and not come to see him as someone alien to
you. Even worse, when the enemy and the population are difficult to
distinguish, as is the case in a counterinsurgency, the fear and rage extends
to everyone. In Bales' case, it extended even to children.
It is no different for the
Taliban save two things. First, they are fighting for their homeland and in
their homeland. Americans fight for the homeland in the sense that they are fighting
terrorism, but that fight becomes abstract after a while. For the Taliban it is
a reality. Americans can go home and may become bitter at those who never
shared the burden. The Taliban are at home, and their bitterness at those who
did not share the burden outstrips the bitterness of the Americans. Second, it
is a fact of war that Taliban atrocities are usually invisible to the Western
media, but they are there, even if reporters are not. It could be said that the
Taliban were brutalized by years of fighting before the Americans came, but in
the end, the fact of brutalization is more important than the genesis.
It is important to remember
that for the United States, the Afghanistan War is the first major war since
the Civil War that did not involve a draft. Opposition to the draft during
Vietnam gave rise to the volunteer army. One thing no one assumed after Vietnam
was that the United States would attempt to fight a counterinsurgency on the
mainland of Asia again, and therefore the conditions for reconstituting the
draft were never considered.
When the war in Afghanistan
began, there was no theory of the long war. It was assumed that the goal was
the dislocation and destruction of al Qaeda, and grandiose notions of
democratizing Afghanistan were not yet part of the policy. In Iraq, the
assumption was that the defeat of Saddam Hussein's conventional forces would
require neither significant cost nor time and that there would be no resistance
to constructing a pro-American democracy there. It took time for the mission in
Afghanistan to creep up to democratization, and it took a while to realize that
not all Iraqis were cheering the American occupation.
But even while it became
apparent that the United States was in a long war, neither the Bush nor the
Obama administration ever grappled with the consequences of a force in which
individuals could be in combat for four years and more. And we might include
here the dangers for noncombatants and headquarters troops, who faced mortar
and rocket fire at their desks. No one escaped the burden.
The result was a war that was
seen on the home front as not requiring a massive effort but that required some
volunteers to remain in combat for longer than many had in World War II. And
while it was true that all of the soldiers had volunteered, the volunteers were
no more ready than the government for the tempo of operations they would face.
Additionally, they were not always free to leave. During the height of the war,
some of those trying to leave service when their time was up were
"stop-lossed." For them, it became less of a volunteer army than a
captive army.
The doctrine of the long war
fought by the present force fails to take into account whether the force can
sustain the war. Former Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld argued that you fight
with the army you have. What he did not address was that while you begin
fighting with the army you have, as the United States did in World War II, you
do not continue fighting with that army, but move to mobilize the country. But
Rumsfeld did not realize how long the war in Afghanistan would last, and in
particular, he did not anticipate the cost that two multi-divisional wars would
have. It is noteworthy that Bales began with three tours in Iraq. The war in
Iraq might be over, but its consequences for the force remain.
What Bales is alleged to have
done is inexcusable. There have been many atrocities, both recorded and not,
both outright and ambiguous, and conducted by both NATO and the Taliban. It is
unrealistic to imagine a war of this length devoid of atrocities. But in a
counterinsurgency, in which the goal is not simply the defeat of an enemy force
but also persuading the population that turning against that force is the
safest course, a massacre like this can have strategic consequences. The
Taliban's psychological warfare operations will focus on the killings as they
did with the February Koran-burning
incident at a U.S. base. In the meantime, American psychological
warfare efforts will focus on U.S. troops, both making sure they remain
restrained and -- after the Feb. 25 shooting of two U.S. officers in a Kabul
ministry by an Afghan colleague -- reassuring them that they must not be afraid
of Afghans, since training Afghans is their mission.
The long war, without a major
readjustment of the American force structure, creates unintended strategic
consequences. One consequence is a force that contains large numbers of troops
at the limits of their endurance. Their potential actions undermine the
strategic purpose of the counterinsurgency: winning over the populace. That
opens the door to increased influence for the Taliban and reduces the Taliban's
inclination to negotiate as the U.S. position deteriorates. Put differently,
troops are not numbers on a table of organization. They wear out.
There are four strategic
assumptions of the long war underlying all of this. The first is that the fight
against Islamist terrorism can be won and that ultimately it is more than just
a threat that has to be accepted. The second is that large-scale operations
like those in Iraq and Afghanistan help achieve that goal. Third, that the
United States is able to wage a long war such as this without massive
adjustments to its domestic life. Fourth, that this should continue to be the
centerpiece of U.S. strategy indefinitely, regardless of other events in the
world -- in other words, that this is the single most important challenge
facing the United States.
The invasion of Afghanistan
was strategically justifiable as a means of disrupting al Qaeda and preventing
follow-on attacks against the United States. The invasion of Iraq was based on
a false assumption that the Iraqis would not resist occupation. As the wars
went further, the military situation became more difficult while the goals
expanded. The ultimate expansion was the idea that the United States was
committed to an indefinitely long war, with available forces, and that this
would involve occupying large and hostile countries.
I argued in my last book, "The
Next Decade", that the danger of empire was that it threatened
the republic. After the fall of the Soviet Union, the United States became the
world's only superpower, combining military, economic and political might on a
global basis. Whether it wanted this power or not, it had it. Within a decade
of the Soviet Union's collapse, 9/11 happened. Whatever its initial intentions,
the United States found itself in a war that has lasted more than 10 years.
That war has strained American resources. It has also strained the fabric of
American life.
The threat to the republic
comes from multiple directions, from creating systems for national defense that
undermine republican principles to overestimating military capability and
committing the republic to a war whose end state is unclear and where the means
are insufficient. War transforms countries, and the long war transforms
domestic life and creates an unbalanced foreign policy. Most of all, it creates
a professional class that fights wars that are considered limitless while the
rest of society, though paying the bills, does not see the war as being part of
everyday life. The alienation between citizen and soldier in a nation
struggling to reconcile global power with republican institutions is
historically dangerous.
This is made all the more
dangerous because the force is reaching its limits. Resisting terrorism is
important. Eliminating it is an illusion. To continue with the long war with the
forces available puts in motion processes that threaten the republic without
securing U.S. interests. Leaving aside the threat to the republic, a force at
its limits and left to fight a war on the margins of national consciousness
will not be effective.
George Friedman, Stratfor, March 20-2012
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