Pyrrhus on the Potomac
How America's post-9/11 wars
have undermined US national security
By Carl Conetta
Project on Defense Alternatives Briefing Report #18
09/08/06 "PDA"
-- -- 05 September 2006 --- America's unique position of
power in the post-Cold War era has often inspired comparisons to
that of Rome during the rule of Augustus. But the security
policy adopted by the United States, especially since the 9/11
attacks, calls to mind a different ancient place and personage:
Pyrrhus (318 - 272 B.C.E.), king of Epirus, a Hellenistic realm
that comprised what is now northwestern Greece and southern
Albania. Plutarch memorializes Pyrrhus as a "great man of war" –
but also a fool. Although he waged successful campaigns against
Macedonia, the Romans, and others, Pyrrhus was unable to
preserve his gains, which came at great cost. In the end, his
martial ambitions won him and his kingdom nothing but ruin and
disapprobation. He is remembered today in the phrase "Pyrrhic
victory"– meaning any victory not worth its cost.
The architects of the "war on terrorism" – now the "long war
against Islamic extremism" – can point to a number of
achievements since 11 September 2001 (outlined below). However,
a comprehensive net assessment of their efforts shows them to be
mostly "pyrrhic" in character. Measured in the coin of long-term
security and stability, post-9/11 policy has cost more than it
has gained.
- As recounted below, the various costs and risks
undertaken as part of America's three post-9/11 wars are
considerable. And many of these costs and risks are deferred
ones. Yet, few of the goals that define current missions
have been achieved or even seem close to realization. With
regard to stemming terrorism: the problem has grown worse,
not better.
- The potentials for new and broader confrontations are
growing as a direct consequence of current missions. This,
because significant portions of the Muslim world have come
to view US efforts as constituting a "war on Islam" – and
also because potential US adversaries outside the Muslim
world (notably China and Russia) have begun to organize
themselves to resist perceived US "hegemonism".
- While the potential for broader confrontation increases,
America's capacities to win or manage these is diminishing.
This is due to a gradual erosion of US military
capabilities, the deleterious economic and fiscal effects of
today's wars, and the alienation of allied states and
publics.
Undaunted and unapologetic, the Bush administration continues
to argue the virtues of staying the present course. But, in
light of our experience so far, this more and more tests the
patience, credulity, fiscal sobriety, and risk tolerance of the
American public.
1. Balance sheet on current missions
Al Qaeda: Still in the game
The operational capacity of the original "Al Qaeda" centered
around Osama bin-Laden has been significantly degraded. Hundreds
of former members have been killed or captured (mostly during
the Afghan war). Nonetheless, the organization continues to
function in a more decentralized form. Bin-Laden and Ayman al-Zawahiri
continue to provide guidance and encouragement to their
followers, having issued 35 video and audio recordings from
their redoubt in Pakistan.
Since 11 September 2001, Al Qaeda has directed, financed, or
played an important role in 30 fatal operations in 12 countries
causing 2500 casualties including 440 deaths. These figures,
from the Rand-MIPT Terrorism Knowledge Base, do not
include the activities of al-Zarqawi in Iraq, nor do they
include the activities of independent groups friendly to
al-Qaeda.
Iraq and Afghanistan: Splendid disasters
US operations successfully toppled the Taliban in Afghanistan
and the Hussein regime in Iraq. In both countries, there are now
elected governments, US influence is entrenched, and the US
military has a virtually free hand. However, security and
stability eludes both countries, economic development has
stalled, and conservative Islamic forces dominate the political
scene.
- The insurgency in Iraq is today conducting attacks at a
higher rate than ever before. In Afghanistan, there has been
a dramatic resurgence of Taliban activity, with the
incidence of attacks up 74 percent from last year and the
fatality rate up 140 percent, according to the Rand-MIPT
terrorism database. There is little evidence of these
problems abating.
- Afghanistan is a "ten block democracy" where the writ of
the central government barely extends beyond the capital
before ceding to warlord rule. The country has become, once
again, the world's leading producer of opium poppy, now
providing approximately 92 percent of the world supply.
Production is higher today than ever before – 59 percent
higher than last year (UNODC, 2006). Eradication efforts
have done little more than stimulate support for insurgency.
- Iraq is characterized by anarchy in governance, national
fragmentation, and civil strife. Insurgency and high-levels
of intercommunal violence affect areas containing 50 percent
of the population (if Basra is included). Death squads
operate inside the security services and the penal system
does not meet minimum human rights standards.
The Iraqi central government (as
such) has little capacity to enforce its writ independently and,
essentially, shares power with the US mission and with
provincial, local, and factional centers. Indeed, the central
government is itself fragmented with little conveyance of
authority among the parliament, prime minister's office, and the
individual ministries. Postwar reconstruction has stalled with
low levels of achievement outside the "green zone". Oil
production, access to potable water, and sewage disposal
services have not yet recovered to prewar levels. Electricity
generation finally surpassed the prewar level in May 2006.
Unemployment stands at between 25 and 40 percent.
- The human cost of war in the two countries has been
substantial. A reasonable estimate is that, at minimum,
70,000 Iraqis and Afghanis have died due to war-related
violence (including excess criminal violence).
Although the Bush administration has viewed Iraq as pivotal
to democratic transition in the region, the experience has
instead associated democratization with foreign occupation,
chaotic violence, and economic stagnation. Polls conducted
during 2004 and 2005 by the University of Maryland and Zogby
International in Jordan, Lebanon, Morocco, Saudi Arabia, Egypt,
and the UAE leave no doubt that Arabs tend to view the Iraq
experience as detrimental to the region's prospects for peace,
stability, and democracy. 2. Broader effects of post-9/11 wars
Increased terrorism
Overall, terrorist activity and violence has grown worse, not
better since 11 September 2001. Average levels of terrorist
violence that would have been considered extreme in the period
prior to 9/11 have become the norm in the years since. And there
is no sign that this trend is abating. This much is evident from
a review of the terrorism incident database maintained by the
Rand Corporation for the National Memorial Institute for the
Prevention of Terrorism (MIPT), which is funded by the US
Department of Homeland Security. Surveying incidents for the
period January 1998 through 11 August 2006 shows that:
- The rate of terrorism fatalities for the 59-month period
following 11 September 2001 is 250 percent that of
the 44.5 month period preceding and including the 9/11
attacks. This figure has been adjusted to account for the
different length of the two periods and it implies an
increase in average monthly fatalities of 150 percent. (Only
in January 1998 did the database begin to include both
national and international terrorism incidents.)
- The rate of terrorist incidents for the post-9/11 period
is 268 percent that of the period prior to and including 11
September 2001. This implies a 167 percent increase in what
might be called the average monthly rate of incidents.
- A fair portion of the increased activity is related to
the war in Iraq – but not all. Removing Iraq from the
picture shows an increase in the average monthly rate of
terrorism fatalities of more than 10 percent for the
post-9/11 period. The increase in the rate of incidents not
counting Iraq is 75 percent.
Finally, it is worth noting, that if we divide the post-9/11
period into two equal halves, the number of terrorism fatalities
is greater in the second half than in the first – even when Iraq
is excluded: ~ 4772 fatalities in the first half versus ~ 5177
in the second. There is no evidence here that the post-9/11
surge in terrorism fatalities is abating.
| Terrorist Attack
Incidents and Fatalities, 01/01/98 – 08/11/2006
|
|
01/01/98 –
09/11/2001
|
09/12/2001 –
08/11/2006 |
| Fatalities per
month
|
176 |
444 |
| (minus 9/11
attacks) |
109 |
|
| (minus Iraq) |
|
195.5 |
| Incidents per
month
|
106 |
284 |
| (minus 9/11
attacks) |
105.9 |
|
| (minus Iraq) |
|
186.5 |
| MIPT Terrorism Knowledge Base
(Oklahoma City, OK: National Memorial Institute for
the Prevention of Terrorism, 2006).
|
Growing anti-American sentimentsAs found in numerous polls, popular support outside the
United States for the US-led "war on terrorism" has fallen
precipitously since 2002 – as have positive sentiments toward
the United States generally. This is true not only in most
Muslim nations polled, but also among many of America's key
allies in Europe. Majorities or pluralities see the Iraq war as
contributing to the problem of terrorism and, in many countries,
now see the United States as having a mostly negative influence
on world affairs. In many Arab and Muslim states, majorities
commonly feel that the United States may actually pose a
military threat to their homelands. Such perceptions might be
expected of populations in Syria and Iran – but it is true as
well for citizens of Indonesia, Pakistan, Turkey, Jordan, and
Lebanon. (See references in the public opinion section of
bibliography.)
Although global public sentiments regarding the United States
do not directly or immediately translate into policy change,
voters in several allied countries – the United Kingdom, Italy,
and Spain – have punished their governments for pro-American
stances. Political effects are more evident in Arab and Muslim
countries.
Political advance of Islamic fundamentalism
Parallel with America's post-9/11 wars and counter-terror
efforts, radical Islamic parties have increased their political
influence substantially in more than a dozen nations, often
campaigning explicitly against what they describe as a "war
against Islam". Winning more votes during the past five than
ever before, such parties have advanced their positions in
Bahrain, Egypt, Kuwait, Indonesia, Jordan, Morocco, the
Palestinian territories, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, and Turkey.
In Turkey and the Palestinian territories they now lead
governments and probably could win power in Egypt, too, should
fully free elections be conducted there. In Iraq, fundamentalist
parties dominate government; in Iran, the conservative former
mayor of Tehran, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, rose to presidential
office in a campaign explicitly challenging US policy. In
Lebanon, the influence and popularity of Hizbullah grew
substantially during the post-9/11 period. Even its
miscalculation in raiding Israel in July 2006 has not dented its
support, with one poll showing more than 80 percent of Lebanese
backing its confrontational stance.
In Bangladesh, Islamic parties have consolidated their
position in the post-9/11 period, after winning a major role in
government in October 2001. And, in Somalia, the Supreme Islamic
Courts Council has become the predominant force in the country,
although not by electoral means. US support for the opposing
Alliance for the Restoration of Peace and Counter-Terrorism and
likely US support for the Ethiopian incursion into Somalia have
only rebounded to the Courts' favor, which is attracting
increasing support from warlord groups on the basis of
nationalist appeals.
Nations balancing against US activism
Nations – including allied ones – also may have state reasons
for "balancing" against the United States or impeding its
policies. Along these lines, Germany, France, and Turkey impeded
Operation Iraqi Freedom during its initial stage. More serious
is the formation and expansion of the Shanghai Cooperation
Organization (SCO) – essentially a counter to perceived US
hegemony – which includes as full members China, Russia,
Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, and Uzbekistan. Observer
status has been afforded to India, Iran, Mongolia, and Pakistan.
Among the policy priorities of the SCO are limitations on US
efforts to secure new, enduring military bases in Central Asia.
Military activism by any great nation will increase the
relevance of military power wherever that activism occurs. Thus,
we should expect that US global activism will spur an increase
in global military expenditure. And, indeed, global spending has
increased in real terms by 28 percent since reaching a post-Cold
War low point in 1997. Much of this is due to the United States,
which now accounts for half of world military expenditures, but
increased spending by Russia, China, India, and Pakistan is also
significant. Indeed, average real expenditures are up in all
regions except Central America and Western Europe.
3. Costs to the United States
Human cost
First among the costs of operations Iraqi Freedom and
Enduring Freedom are the 3,000 dead and 20,000 wounded US
service personnel. Among the wounded we should as well include
the 12 percent of returning veterans who are diagnosed as
suffering from war-related mental health problems, as determined
by the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research. (Hoge, et. al,
March 2006)
Budgetary costs and effect on the economy
The monetary cost of operations Iraqi Freedom and Enduring
Freedom to the end of FY 2006 has exceeded $400 billion
(including reconstruction assistance). Additional cost is
presently accruing at a rate of approximately $10 billion per
month. The broader fiscal context of this expenditure is defined
by US federal budget deficits in the range of $400 billion per
annum (on budget) and a gross national debt of $8.5 trillion –
of which $2.5 trillion accumulated during the past five years.
There is no plausible scenario under which the ultimate
"incremental cost" of current operations will not exceed $600
billion; the final cost probably will be much more. And this
does not include other war-related costs to the federal
government – such as veterans' benefits and increased interest
payments. Nor does it encompass broader economic effects (which
might include increased energy prices, interest rates, and
opportunity costs). Two economists who have attempted such an
analysis, Nobel Prize winner Joseph Stiglitz of Columbia
University and Linda Bilmes of Harvard's Kennedy School,
conclude that the total costs of the Iraq war alone may
accumulate to between $1 trillion and $2.2 trillion – on the
assumption of a gradual troop drawdown between 2006 and 2010. (Bilmes
and Stiglitz, January 2006.)
Effects on the armed services
Today the United States maintains approximately 300,000
active-component military personnel overseas – either stationed
or operationally deployed; in addition, there are more than
60,000 Guard and Reserve personnel abroad. Similar or higher
numbers of troops were overseas for most of the past four years.
Of the total today, more than 200,000 are operationally deployed
in or around Iraq, Afghanistan, and other foreign territories.
Focusing on the active component: about 21 percent are now
overseas. During most of the 1990s (after Desert Storm), the
proportion overseas was approximately 16 percent. More telling:
the average proportion of active-component troops involved in
actual operations today is more than three times larger than in
the mid- to late-1990s. And much of this stress is focused on
the Army, which now routinely has one-third of its active
component stationed or deployed overseas.
Together with other commitments, the war has required Marine
units to deploy at rates more than 25 percent higher than what
the service considers acceptable for long periods. Active Army
units have been exceeding their deployment standards by 60
percent. These rates would have been even higher but that DOD
leaned heavily on National Guard and Reserve units, deploying as
many as 100,000 reserve personnel overseas at one time for tours
averaging 342 days.
Not since the Vietnam era has the United States had such a
large portion of its active-component armed forces at work
overseas or deployed in operations as today. And not since the
Korean war has it asked so much of its National Guard and
Reserve troops.
High rates of operational tempo maintained over long periods
are known to adversely affect training, morale, and discipline –
causing a degradation in capability and problems in personnel
retention and recruitment. The deleterious effects are already
evident in the struggle to meet recruiting goals. In Fiscal Year
2005, five of the nation's 10 military components (counting
active, reserve and National Guard) fell short in recruiting.
The forces also face a growing problem in retaining officers.
Several components have responded to today's stresses in ways
likely to erode the longer-term capabilities of the forces: by
raising age limits on enlistment and lowering the quality bar on
recruitment and promotion. The services are also paying larger
cash bonuses for enlistment and re-enlistment, which tends to
roll costs forward because the bonuses are payable upon the
completion of service terms.
Perhaps most important has been the extensive reliance on
"stop loss" orders, which have compelled 50,000 service
personnel to extend their time in service. This tends to mask
the effects of high optempo, which will only become apparent
when the resort to "stop loss" ends.
The stress on equipment is equally great, with utilization
rates in Iraq exceeding peacetime standards by two- to ten-fold
-- a pace that quickly eats into service life. Effected is 40
percent of Army and Marine Corps ground equipment, as well as
other assets. In order to sustain high equipment availability
rates, the services have tended to defer higher-level
maintenance – again, rolling the costs of war forward. As the
Government Accountability Office reported in March 2006:
The services have made a risk-based decision to keep
equipment in theater, to forego depot repairs, and to rely
almost exclusively on in-theater repair capabilities... As a
result, much of the equipment has not undergone higher level
depot maintenance since the start of operations in March
2003. (GAO, March 2005, p. 8)
This will eventually render some equipment unrecoverable. And
it increases postwar military "reset" costs. The Army alone
estimates postwar recovery will require at least $24 billion to
$36 billion.
4. Recommendations
At the heart of the present imbroglio are several policy
impulses that must be avoided in the future. First, there is the
tendency to see "regime change" operations as essential to
achieving our basic security goals. Second, there is an
overweening faith in the utility of force as a precise
instrument of policy and an insensitivity to its attendant
costs, risks, and collateral effects. Finally, there is a
tendency to expand the scope and objectives of military action,
rather than focus them on discrete ends. With these errors in
mind we can define the basic coordinates of a new course:
- First, the United States should focus its
counter-terrorism efforts on a multi-faceted "campaign
against the Al Qaeda network" as well as on allied
organizations that credibly target the United States or US
citizens and assets abroad. This criteria would not include
every organization, movement, and insurgency that the
Pentagon loosely lists under the acronym, AQAM – meaning "Al
Qaeda and associated movements".
- Second, it is appropriate that we place greater emphasis
on meeting the general challenges posed by terrorism – and
not just the "Islamic" sort. This recognizes the failure of
successive administrations to adequately prepare for and
defend against post-Cold War challenges. Along these lines,
greater investment in homeland security and appropriate
intelligence, military, and law enforcement capabilities is
sensible. Especially important is maintaining cooperative
international security relationships. But this is not the
same as conducting a generalized "war on terrorism" – much
less a "war on Islamic extremism". Dedicated,
counter-offensive military campaigns targeting networks and
organizations should be decided and undertaken on a
case-by-case basis. These need not all be viewed as part of
some single grand "war". Instead, they are all part of
adapting our security priorities, structures, and practices
to the routine challenges of the post-Cold War security
environment.
- Third, US policymakers should exercise greater restraint
when considering involving the nation as a combatant or a
partisan in complex regional conflicts over which we have
little control. The fact that terrorists or terrorism may
play a role in a larger conflict does not by itself warrant
direct US military involvement. Insurgencies, secessionist
movements, and anti-regime movements often involve real and
legitimate grievances. A common danger is implicating
ourselves in conflicts that are partly driven by the actions
or policies of allies over whom we have limited influence.
- Fourth, extraordinary restraint is due when
contemplating "regime change," military occupation, or
operations aiming to suppress insurgencies that enjoy
significant popular support. In all such cases: stable,
predictable outcomes are very difficult to achieve, usually
very costly, and often require protracted engagements. Also,
they often are corrosive to the armed forces that undertake
them. The real challenge for US policymakers is to find ways
to achieve essential security goals without resorting to
large-scale high-risk adventures.
- Fifth, attempts to impose democracy by military means –
that is, by means of war or by threats of military action –
tend to be counter-productive. This, because they typically
arouse strong nationalistic reactions. Under threat,
populations are more likely to rally around their
governments and more willing, not less, to forgo democratic
rights. The wisest course is to demilitarize US support for
democratic transition. From a security policy perspective,
the real challenge for policymakers is to find ways to
defend the nation short of requiring societal transformation
on a global scale.
5. Bibliography
United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime. Afghan Opium
Cultivation Soars 59 Percent in 2006, UNODC Survey Shows.
Vienna: 02 September 2006.
Sources on world opinion
Pew Research Center, Washington, DC:
- America's Image Slips, but Allies Share US Concerns Over
Iran, Hamas. 13 June 2006.
- US Image Up Slightly, But Still Negative. June 2005.
- A Year After Iraq War: Mistrust of America in Europe
Ever Higher, Muslim Anger Persists. March 2004.
Program on International Policy Attitudes (PIPA),
Washington, DC:
- World Public Says Iraq War has Increased Global
Terrorist Threat. February 2006.
- In 20 of 23 Countries Polled Citizens Want Europe to Be
More Influential Than US. April 2005.
Other polls
Beirut Center for Research and Data. Poll finds support for
Hizbullah's retaliation; Opinions diverge on sectarian lines -
but not completely. 29 July 2006.
German Marshall Fund. Transatlantic Trends 2005. Washington,
DC: 2005.
German Marshall Fund and the Chicago Council on Foreign
Relations. World Views 2002. Washington, DC and Chicago, IL:
2002.
Dafna Linzer. Poll Shows Growing Arab Rancor at US.
Washington Post, 23 July 2004, p. 26.
Shibley Telhami and Zogby International. Arab Attitudes
Toward Political and Social Issues, Foreign Policy, and the
Media. College Park, MD: Sadat Chair for Peace and Development,
University of Maryland, October 2005.
James Zogby. Attitudes of Arabs: An In-depth Look at Social
and Political Concerns of Arabs. Washington, DC: Arab American
Institute and Zogby International, 2005.
Sources on costs
Amy Belasco. The Cost of Iraq, Afghanistan, and Other Global
War on Terror Operations Since 9/11. Washington, DC:
Congressional Research Service, 16 June 2006.
Linda Bilmes and Joseph Stiglitz. The Economic Costs of the
Iraq War: An Appraisal Three Years After the Beginning of the
Conflict. Paper prepared for presentation at the ASSA meeting,
Boston: January 2006.
Charles W. Hoge, et. al. Mental Health Problems, Use of
Mental Health Services, and Attrition From Military Service
After Returning From Deployment to Iraq or Afghanistan. Journal
of the American Medical Association (1 March 2006).
Steven Kosiak. The Cost of US Military Operations in Iraq and
Afghanistan Through Fiscal Year 2006 and Beyond. Washington, DC:
Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments, 4 January 2006.
Donald B. Marron. Issues in Estimating the Cost of Operations
in Iraq and the War on Terrorism. Washington, DC: Congressional
Budget Office, 18 July 2006.
Sources on military effects
Army's Readiness Questioned. Associated Press, 27 July 2006.
Tom Bowman. Army reaches low, fills ranks; 12% of recruits in
Oct. had lowest acceptable scores. Baltimore Sun, 8 November
2005.
Congressional Budget Office. The Potential Costs Resulting
from Increased Usage of Military Equipment in Ongoing
Operations. Washington, DC: 18 March 2005.
Will Dunham. Army forces 50,000 troops into extended duty.
Reuters, 29 January 2006.
Dunham. US Army raises maximum age for enlistment. Reuters,
18 January 2006.
Government Accountability Office. Preliminary Observations on
Recruiting and Retention Issues within the US Armed Forces.
Washington, DC: 16 March 2005.
Mark Masotho. Army's Rising Promotion Rate Called Ominous.
Los Angeles Times, 30 January 2006.
Katherine McIntyre Peters. Funding shortfalls jeopardize Army
operations, chief says. Government Executive, 17 July 2006.
See also:
http://www.comw.org/pda/0609br18excerpt.html
http://www.proteusfund.org/spwg/collab/index.html
More to come: In the next few days the Project on Defense
Alternatives will post additional overview articles assessing
post-9/11 US security policy. Check back at
http://www.comw.org/pda/
Citation: Carl Conetta, Pyrrhus on the
Potomac: How America's post-9/11 wars have undermined US
national security, Cambridge, MA: Commonwealth Institute Project
on Defense Alternatives Briefing Report #18, 05 September 2006.
http://www.comw.org/pda/0605br18.html
Click on "comments" below to read or post comments
In
accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is
distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior
interest in receiving the included information for research and
educational purposes. Information Clearing House has no affiliation
whatsoever with the originator of this article nor is Information
ClearingHouse endorsed or sponsored by the originator.) |
Comment Guidelines
Be succinct, constructive and relevant to the story. We encourage engaging, diverse and meaningful commentary. Do not include personal information such as names, addresses, phone numbers and emails. Comments falling outside our guidelines – those including personal attacks and profanity – are not permitted.
See our complete Comment Policy and use this link to notify us if you have concerns about a comment. We’ll promptly review and remove any inappropriate postings.