Beyond ISIS
The Folly of World War IV
By Andrew J. Bacevich
December 05, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" -
Assume that the hawks get their way -- that the
United States does whatever it takes militarily to confront and
destroy ISIS. Then what?
Answering that question requires taking seriously
the outcomes of other recent U.S. interventions in the Greater
Middle East. In 1991, when the first President Bush ejected Saddam
Hussein’s army from Kuwait, Americans rejoiced, believing that they
had won a decisive victory. A decade later, the younger Bush
seemingly outdid his father by toppling the Taliban in Afghanistan
and then making short work of Saddam himself -- a liberation twofer
achieved in less time than it takes Americans to choose a president.
After the passage of another decade, Barack Obama got into the
liberation act, overthrowing the Libyan dictator Muammar Gaddafi in
what appeared to be a tidy air intervention with a clean outcome. As
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton memorably
put it, “We came, we saw, he died.” End of story.
In fact, subsequent events in each case mocked
early claims of success or outright victory. Unanticipated
consequences and complications abounded. “Liberation” turned out to
be a prelude to chronic violence and upheaval.
Indeed, the very existence of the Islamic State
(ISIS) today renders a definitive verdict on the Iraq wars over
which the Presidents Bush presided, each abetted by a Democratic
successor. A de facto collaboration of four successive
administrations succeeded in reducing Iraq to what it is today: a
dysfunctional quasi-state unable to control its borders or territory
while serving as a magnet and inspiration for terrorists.
The United States bears a profound moral
responsibility for having made such a hash of things there. Were it
not for the reckless American decision to invade and occupy a nation
that, whatever its crimes, had nothing to do with 9/11, the Islamic
State would not exist. Per the famous
Pottery Barn Rule attributed to former Secretary of State Colin
Powell, having smashed Iraq to bits a decade ago, we can now hardly
deny owning ISIS.
That the United States possesses sufficient
military power to make short work of that “caliphate” is also the
case. True, in both Syria and Iraq the Islamic State has
demonstrated a disturbing ability to capture and hold large
stretches of desert, along with several population centers. It has,
however, achieved these successes against poorly motivated local
forces of, at best, indifferent quality.
In that regard, the glibly bellicose editor of the
Weekly Standard, William Kristol, is surely correct in
suggesting that a well-armed contingent of
50,000 U.S. troops, supported by ample quantities of air power,
would make mincemeat of ISIS in a toe-to-toe contest. Liberation of
the various ISIS strongholds like Fallujah and Mosul in Iraq and
Palmyra and Raqqa, its “capital,” in Syria would undoubtedly follow
in short order.
In the wake of the recent attacks in Paris, the
American mood is strongly trending in favor of this sort of
escalation. Just about anyone who is anyone -- the current occupant
of the Oval Office partially excepted -- favors intensifying the
U.S. military campaign against ISIS. And why not? What could
possibly go wrong? As Kristol puts it, "I don’t think there’s much
in the way of unanticipated side effects that are going to be bad
there."
It’s an alluring prospect. In the face of a
sustained assault by the greatest military the world has ever seen,
ISIS foolishly (and therefore improbably) chooses to make an
Alamo-like stand. Whammo! We win. They lose.
Mission accomplished.
Of course, that phrase recalls the euphoric early
reactions to Operations Desert Storm in 1991, Enduring Freedom in
2001, Iraqi Freedom in 2003, and Odyssey Dawn, the Libyan
intervention of 2011. Time and again the unanticipated side effects
of U.S. military action turned out to be very bad indeed. In Kabul,
Baghdad, or Tripoli, the Alamo fell, but the enemy dispersed or
reinvented itself and the conflict continued. Assurances offered by
Kristol that this time things will surely be different deserve to be
taken with more than a grain of salt. Pass the whole shaker.
Embracing Generational War
Why this repeated disparity between perceived and
actual outcomes? Why have apparent battlefield successes led so
regularly to more violence and disorder? Before following Kristol’s
counsel, Americans would do well to reflect on these questions.
Cue Professor Eliot A. Cohen. Shortly after 9/11,
Cohen, one of this country’s preeminent military thinkers,
characterized the conflict on which the United States was then
embarking as “World
War IV.” (In this formulation, the Cold War becomes World War
III.) Other than in certain
neoconservative quarters, the depiction did not catch on. Yet
nearly a decade-and-a-half later, the Johns Hopkins professor and
former State Department official is sticking to his guns. In an
essay penned for the American Interest following the recent
Paris attacks, he returns to his theme. “It was World War
IV in 2001,” Cohen
insists. “It is World War IV today.” And to our considerable
benefit he spells out at least some of the implications of casting
the conflict in such expansive and evocative terms.
Now I happen to think that equating our present
predicament in the Islamic world with the immensely destructive
conflicts of the prior century is dead wrong. Yet it’s a proposition
that Americans at this juncture should contemplate with the utmost
seriousness.
In the United States today, confusion about what
war itself signifies is widespread. Through misuse, misapplication,
and above all misremembering, we have distorted the term almost
beyond recognition. As one consequence, talk of war comes too easily
off the tongues of the unknowing.
Not so with Cohen. When it comes to war, he has no
illusions. Addressing that subject, he illuminates it, enabling us
to see what war entails. So in advocating World War IV, he performs
a great service, even if perhaps not the one he intends.
What will distinguish the war that Cohen deems
essential? “Begin with endurance,” he writes. “This war will
probably go on for the rest of my life, and well into my
children’s.” Although American political leaders seem reluctant “to
explain just how high the stakes are,” Cohen lays them out in
direct, unvarnished language. At issue, he insists, is the American
way of life itself, not simply “in the sense of rock concerts and
alcohol in restaurants, but the more fundamental rights of freedom
of speech and religion, the equality of women, and, most
essentially, the freedom from fear and freedom to think.”
With so much on the line, Cohen derides the Obama
administration’s tendency to rely on “therapeutic bombing, which
will temporarily relieve the itch, but leave the wounds
suppurating.” The time for such half-measures has long since passed.
Defeating the Islamic State and “kindred movements” will require the
U.S. to “kill a great many people.” To that end Washington needs “a
long-range plan not to ‘contain’ but to crush” the enemy. Even with
such a plan, victory will be a long way off and will require “a
long, bloody, and costly process.”
Cohen’s candor and specificity, as bracing as they
are rare, should command our respect. If World War IV describes what
we are in for, then eliminating ISIS might figure as a near-term
imperative, but it can hardly define the endgame. Beyond ISIS loom
all those continually evolving “kindred movements” to which the
United States will have to attend before it can declare the war
itself well and truly won.
To send just tens of thousands of U.S. troops to
clean up Syria and Iraq, as William Kristol and others propose,
offers at best a recipe for winning a single campaign. Winning the
larger war would involve far more arduous exertions. This Cohen
understands, accepts, and urges others to acknowledge.
And here we come to the heart of the matter. For
at least the past 35 years -- that is, since well before 9/11 -- the
United States has been “at war” in various quarters of the Islamic
world. At no point has it demonstrated the will or the ability to
finish the job. Washington’s approach has been akin to treating
cancer with a little bit of chemo one year and a one-shot course of
radiation the next. Such gross malpractice aptly describes U.S.
military policy throughout the Greater Middle East across several
decades.
While there may be many reasons why the Iraq War
of 2003 to 2011 and the still longer Afghanistan War yielded such
disappointing results, Washington’s timidity in conducting those
campaigns deserves pride of place. That most Americans might bridle
at the term “timidity” reflects the extent to which they have
deluded themselves regarding the reality of war.
In comparison to Vietnam, for example,
Washington’s approach to waging its two principal post-9/11
campaigns was positively half-hearted. With the nation as a whole
adhering to peacetime routines, Washington neither sent enough
troops nor stayed anywhere near long enough to finish the job. Yes,
we killed many tens of thousands of Iraqis and Afghans, but if
winning World War IV requires, as Cohen writes, that we “break the
back” of the enemy, then we obviously didn’t kill nearly enough.
Nor were Americans sufficiently willing to die for
the cause. In South Vietnam, 58,000 G.I.s died in a futile effort to
enable that country to survive. In Iraq and Afghanistan, where the
stakes were presumably much higher, we pulled the plug after fewer
than 7,000 deaths.
Americans would be foolish to listen to those like
William Kristol who, even today, peddle illusions about war being
neat and easy. They would do well instead to heed Cohen, who knows
that war is hard and ugly.
What Would World War IV Look Like?
Yet when specifying the practical implications of
generational war, Cohen is less forthcoming. From his perspective,
this fourth iteration of existential armed conflict in a single
century is not going well. But apart from greater resolve and
bloody-mindedness, what will it take to get things on the right
track?
As a thought experiment, let’s answer that
question by treating it with the urgency that Cohen believes it
deserves. After 9/11, certain U.S. officials thundered about “taking
the gloves off.” In practice, however, with the notable exception of
policies permitting torture and imprisonment without due process,
the gloves stayed on. Take Cohen’s conception of World War IV at
face value and that will have to change.
For starters, the country would have to move to
something like a war footing, enabling Washington to raise a lot
more troops and spend a lot more money over a very long period of
time. Although long since banished from the nation’s political
lexicon, the M-word -- mobilization -- would make a comeback.
Prosecuting a generational war, after all, is going to require the
commitment of generations.
Furthermore, if winning World War IV means
crushing the enemy, as Cohen emphasizes, then ensuring that the
enemy, once crushed, cannot recover would be hardly less important.
And that requirement would prohibit U.S. forces from simply walking
away from a particular fight even -- or especially -- when it might
appear won.
At the present moment, defeating the Islamic State
ranks as Washington’s number one priority. With the Pentagon already
claiming a body count of
20,000 ISIS fighters without notable effect, this campaign won’t
end anytime soon. But even assuming an eventually positive outcome,
the task of maintaining order and stability in areas that ISIS now
controls will remain. Indeed, that task will persist until the
conditions giving rise to entities like ISIS are eliminated. Don’t
expect French President François Hollande or British Prime Minister
David Cameron to sign up for that thankless job. U.S. forces will
own it. Packing up and leaving the scene won’t be an option.
How long would those forces have to stay?
Extrapolating from recent U.S. occupations in Iraq and Afghanistan,
something on the order of a quarter-century seems like a plausible
approximation. So should our 45th president opt for a
boots-on-the-ground solution to ISIS, as might well be the case, the
privilege of welcoming the troops home could belong to the 48th or
49th occupant of the White House.
In the meantime, U.S. forces would have to deal
with the various and sundry “kindred movements” that are already
cropping up like crabgrass in country after country. Afghanistan
-- still? again? -- would head the list of places requiring U.S.
military attention. But other prospective locales would include such
hotbeds of Islamist activity as Lebanon, Libya, Palestine, Somalia,
and Yemen, along with several West African countries increasingly
beset with insurgencies. Unless Egyptian, Pakistani, and Saudi
security forces demonstrate the ability (not to mention the will) to
suppress the violent radicals in their midst, one or more of those
countries could also become the scene of significant U.S. military
action.
Effective prosecution of World War IV, in other
words, would require the Pentagon to plan for each of these
contingencies, while mustering the assets needed for implementation.
Allies might kick in token assistance -- tokenism is all they have
to offer -- but the United States will necessarily carry most of the
load.
What Would World War IV Cost?
During World War III (aka the Cold War), the
Pentagon maintained a force structure ostensibly adequate to the
simultaneous prosecution of two and a half wars. This meant having
the wherewithal to defend Europe and the Pacific from communist
aggression while still leaving something for the unexpected. World
War IV campaigns are unlikely to entail anything on the scale of the
Warsaw Pact attacking Western Europe or North Korea invading the
South. Still, the range of plausible scenarios will require that
U.S. forces be able to take on militant organizations C and D even
while guarding against the resurgence of organizations A and B in
altogether different geographic locations.
Even though Washington may try whenever possible
to avoid large-scale ground combat, relying on air power (including
drones) and elite Special Operations forces to do the actual
killing, post-conflict pacification promises to be a manpower
intensive activity. Certainly, this ranks as one of the most obvious
lessons to emerge from World War IV’s preliminary phases: when the
initial fight ends, the real work begins.
U.S. forces committed to asserting control over
Iraq after the invasion of 2003 topped out at roughly 180,000. In
Afghanistan, during the Obama presidency, the presence peaked at
110,000. In a historical context, these are not especially large
numbers. At the height of the Vietnam War, for example, U.S. troop
strength in Southeast Asia exceeded 500,000.
In hindsight, the Army general who, before the
invasion of 2003,
publicly suggested that pacifying postwar Iraq would require
“several hundred thousand troops” had it right. A similar estimate
applies to Afghanistan. In other words, those two occupations
together could easily have absorbed 600,000 to 800,000 troops on an
ongoing basis. Given the Pentagon’s standard three-to-one rotation
policy, which assumes that for every unit in-country, a second is
just back, and a third is preparing to deploy, you’re talking about
a minimum requirement of between 1.8 and 2.4 million troops to
sustain just two medium-sized campaigns -- a figure that wouldn’t
include some number of additional troops kept in reserve for the
unexpected.
In other words, waging World War IV would require
at least a five-fold increase in the current size of the U.S. Army
-- and not as an emergency measure but a permanent one. Such numbers
may appear large, but as Cohen would be the first to point out, they
are actually modest when compared to previous world wars. In 1968,
in the middle of World War III, the Army had more than 1.5 million
active duty soldiers on its rolls -- this at a time when the total
American population was less than two-thirds what it is today and
when gender discrimination largely excluded women from military
service. If it chose to do so, the United States today could easily
field an army of two million or more soldiers.
Whether it could also retain the current model of
an all-volunteer force is another matter. Recruiters would certainly
face considerable challenges, even if Congress enhanced the material
inducements for service, which since 9/11 have already included a
succession of
generous increases in military pay. A loosening of immigration
policy, granting a few hundred thousand foreigners citizenship in
return for successfully completing a term of enlistment might help.
In all likelihood, however, as with all three previous world wars,
waging World War IV would oblige the United States to revive the
draft, a prospect as likely to be well-received as a flood of brown
and black immigrant enlistees. In short, going all out to create the
forces needed to win World War IV would confront Americans with
uncomfortable choices.
The budgetary implications of expanding U.S.
forces while conducting a perpetual round of what the Pentagon calls
“overseas contingency operations” would also loom large. Precisely
how much money an essentially global conflict projected to extend
well into the latter half of the century would require is difficult
to gauge. As a starting point, given the increased number of active
duty forces, tripling the present Defense Department budget of
more than $600 billion might serve as a reasonable guess.
At first glance, $1.8 trillion annually is a
stupefyingly large figure. To make it somewhat more palatable, a
proponent of World War IV might put that number in historical
perspective. During the first phases of World War III, for example,
the United States routinely allocated
10% or more of total gross domestic product (GDP) for national
security. With that GDP today exceeding $17 trillion, apportioning
10% to the Pentagon would give those charged with managing World War
IV a nice sum to work with and no doubt to build upon.
Of course, that money would have to come from
somewhere. For several years during the last decade, sustaining wars
in Iraq and Afghanistan pushed the federal deficit above a trillion
dollars. As one consequence, the total national debt now exceeds
annual GDP, having tripled since 9/11. How much additional debt the
United States can accrue without doing permanent damage to the
economy is a question of more than academic interest.
To avoid having World War IV produce an endless
string of unacceptably large deficits, ratcheting up military
spending would undoubtedly require either substantial tax increases
or significant cuts in non-military spending, including big-ticket
programs like Medicare and social security -- precisely those, that
is, which members of the middle class hold most dear.
In other words, funding World War IV while
maintaining a semblance of fiscal responsibility would entail the
kind of trade-offs that political leaders are loathe to make. Today,
neither party appears up to taking on such challenges. That the
demands of waging protracted war will persuade them to rise above
their partisan differences seems unlikely. It sure hasn’t so far.
The Folly of World War IV
In his essay, Cohen writes, “we need to stop the
circumlocutions.” Of those who would bear the direct burden of his
world war, he says, “we must start telling them the truth.” He’s
right, even if he himself is largely silent about what the conduct
of World War IV is likely to exact from the average citizen.
As the United States enters a presidential
election year, plain talk about the prospects of our ongoing
military engagement in the Islamic world should be the order of the
day. The pretense that either dropping a few more bombs or invading
one or two more countries will yield a conclusive outcome amounts to
more than an evasion. It is an outright lie.
As Cohen knows, winning World War IV would require
dropping many, many more bombs and invading, and then occupying for
years to come, many more countries. After all, it’s not just ISIS
that Washington will have to deal with, but also its affiliates,
offshoots, wannabes, and the successors almost surely waiting in the
wings. And don’t forget al-Qaeda.
Cohen believes that we have no alternative. Either
we get serious about fighting World War IV the way it needs to be
fought or darkness will envelop the land. He is undeterred by the
evidence that the more deeply we insert our soldiers into the
Greater Middle East the more concerted the resistance they face;
that the more militants we kill the more we seem to create; that the
inevitable, if unintended, killing of innocents only serves to
strengthen the hand of the extremists. As he sees it, with
everything we believe in riding on the outcome, we have no choice
but to press on.
While listening carefully to Cohen’s call to arms,
Americans should reflect on its implications. Wars change countries
and people. Embracing his prescription for World War IV would change
the United States in fundamental ways. It would radically expand the
scope and reach of the national security state, which, of course,
includes agencies beyond the military itself. It would divert vast
quantities of wealth to nonproductive purposes. It would make the
militarization of the American way of life, a legacy of prior world
wars, irreversible. By sowing fear and fostering impossible
expectations of perfect security, it would also compromise American
freedom in the name of protecting it. The nation that decades from
now might celebrate VT Day -- victory over terrorism -- will have
become a different place, materially, politically, culturally, and
morally.
In my view, Cohen’s World War IV is an invitation
to collective suicide. Arguing that no alternative exists to
open-ended war represents not hard-nosed realism, but the abdication
of statecraft. Yet here’s the ultimate irony: even without the name,
the United States has already embarked upon something akin to a
world war, which now extends into the far reaches of the Islamic
world and spreads further year by year.
Incrementally, bit by bit, this nameless war has
already expanded the scope and reach of the national security
apparatus. It is diverting vast quantities of wealth to
nonproductive purposes even as it normalizes the continuing
militarization of the American way of life. By sowing fear and
fostering impossible expectations of perfect security, it is
undermining American freedom in the name of protecting it, and doing
so right before our eyes.
Cohen rightly decries the rudderless character of
the policies that have guided the (mis)conduct of that war thus far.
For that critique we owe him a considerable debt. But the real
problem is the war itself and the conviction that only through war
can America remain America.
For a rich and powerful nation to conclude that it
has no choice but to engage in quasi-permanent armed conflict in the
far reaches of the planet represents the height of folly. Power
confers choice. As citizens, we must resist with all our might
arguments that deny the existence of choice. Whether advanced
forthrightly by Cohen or fecklessly by the militarily ignorant, such
claims will only perpetuate the folly that has already lasted far
too long.
Andrew J. Bacevich, a
TomDispatch regular, is professor emeritus of
history and international relations at Boston University. He is the
author of
Breach of Trust: How Americans Failed Their Soldiers and Their
Country, among other works. His new book, America’s War
for the Greater Middle East (Random House),
is due out in April 2016.
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Copyright 2015 Andrew J. Bacevich