How to Think About the War
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
|
December 27th, 2006
Whether we are winning or
losing in Iraq is open to debate, but it's clear that our national
conversation about the war has begun to fail. Today our elected leaders,
our most influential commentators, and even ordinary Americans chatting
among themselves at work or at their dinner tables, have begun to repeat
their lines like wind-up dolls. All of them, and all of us, are
saying the same things over and over again; what started as a
conversation has become a shouting match. And when everyone is on
"transmit" - but never on "receive" - we cannot hear
and so we cannot learn. And if we cannot learn, we've stopped
thinking.
We need to start all over
again to think about the war, and we mustn't be afraid. After all,
we do this with our computers all the time. When a program begins
to fail - and they always do because even the simplest program is
comprised of complex files that over time become damaged or corrupted --
and when re-booting once or twice doesn't do the trick, we've learned
that the only thing to do is to un-install and re-install the program to
get a fresh, clean start.
So, let's conduct what
scientists would call a "thought experiment." In your
mind's eye, go to Control Panel, click on "Add/Remove
Programs," scroll down to "The War" and double-click.
A box will pop on-screen asking if you really want to un-install.
Click "Yes" and you will hear the hard drive chunking and see
its green light flashing while the program is removed. Now, let's
"re-install" the program in our minds by thinking through,
from the beginning, what this war is about:
What
"Politics" Really Means
When we talk about politics,
we usually mean Republicans versus Democrats, or liberals against
conservatives, or the looming scramble among Presidential contenders for
their parties' 2008 nominations. But there's another way to talk
about politics that goes deeper, and by doing so illuminates the current
conflict.
Politics is the relationship
between the individual and the State. And for as long as human
beings have walked the Earth, we have been struggling to get this right.
We've tried everything. We've had kingdoms and empires of all
sizes and flavors. We've had military dictatorships, and civilian
dictatorships. We've had totalitarian states like fascism on the
right, and communism on the left. We've had constitutional
monarchies, republics and democracies.
In a sense, each of these is
an operating system. Now, we're all familiar with operating
systems because we all use computers. Today, for instance, we have
Microsoft's Windows operating system, Apple's OS X, Linux, and a few
others. Every so often, these operating systems rub against one
another in the marketplace. The results can be fairly nasty -
technically and legally - but in the end these competing operating
systems usually learn to live with one another. Each has its
strengths and weaknesses, and consumers choose the ones they prefer.
Every so often - in business
and in politics - one operating system sets out to utterly destroy all
the others. In business, this goal is rarely achieved.
Microsoft has a lot of money, but it hasn't got tanks. (If it did,
Apple's corporate headquarters would look like a building in downtown
Beirut.) But in politics, there really are tanks and other
weapons. And when one political operating system sets out to
obliterate all the others, the result is a global war.
If Adolf Hitler had been
content to remain within Germany's borders, the results of the Nazi
operating system would have been ghastly for the German people.
But there would not have been World War II. If Lenin, Stalin and
their heirs had been content to inflict communism solely within the
Soviet Union's borders, life would have been miserable for Soviet
citizens. But there would not have been a Cold War.
Now, when you look at
history through the prism of operating systems, you find that one
operating system has triumphed above all the others: Western
Civilization. Its key features are the separation of church and
state, the primacy of the individual over the State, the encouragement
of artistic expression and intellectual curiosity, free enterprise, and
a never-ending struggle to reach equality among the races and sexes.
Like all operating systems, Western Civilization has its flaws, its
shortcomings and its imperfections - as will any operating system
designed and run by human beings. But by any imaginable measure,
Western Civilization is history's greatest achievement.
Let's Call it
"Radical Islam"
While Western Civilization
developed through the centuries, another operating system also took
root. Scholars argue over just what to call this operating system,
but for convenience's sake let's call it Radical Islam. Its key
features are the combination of church and State, the submission of
individuals to this combination, the discouragement of artistic
expression and intellectual curiosity, the crushing of its people's
entrepreneurial talents, and the treatment of women as though they were
property rather than people. Just like Western Civilization, this
operating system has its flaws, its shortcomings and its imperfections.
But unlike Western Civilization, Radical Islam contains a flaw that may
not be correctible: it is incompatible with the modern world.
What we all learned on 9-11
is that the leaders of Radical Islam are determined to impose their
operating system on us. In other words, their objective is the
destruction of Western Civilization. The current conflict is our
effort to prevent this from happening.
Look back at history's two
most recent attacks on Western Civilization - by fascism in World War
II, and by Soviet communism in the Cold War - and you may be surprised
to see how sharp were the disagreements among our leaders, our
commentators, and our parents and grandparents, over how best to
respond. Anyone who believes that "politics" was
suspended during these wars - in Washington or at the dinner table - is
just plain wrong.
But there was one issue
during each of these struggles upon which virtually everyone agreed:
Western Civilization deserved to win. Despite its flaws, its
shortcomings, and its imperfections, our "operating system"
was better than the one that threatened to obliterate us. So we
would fight hard - to the death, if necessary - for our survival.
Now we can understand why
our conversation about the present conflict has become so fierce, so
bitter, and so partisan. Today, there is a significant contingent
among us who do not believe that Western Civilization is worth
defending, or that our operating system deserves to survive. Those
who subscribe to this perception - and they include quite a few of our
elected officials - are so focused on the flaws, shortcomings and
imperfections of Western Civilization that they are blind to its
achievements. So while some of us are debating how to win the
war, others among us want only to stop the war. This is why we are
not so much talking among ourselves about what to do, but rather talking
- shouting, really - past one another.
Simply put, the first
decision we need to make is this: Do we intend to win this war whatever
the cost? If the answer is "no," then stopping the war
now is the only sensible thing to do. It would mean we have chosen
to surrender Western Civilization to its enemies, and that we or, more
likely, our children and grand-children, will live under the Radical
Islam operating system.
If our answer is
"yes" - that we intend to win this war whatever the cost -
then we had better be prepared to fight with all our strength and power.
To understand why, look back at our strategies for winning World War II
and the Cold War. In each of these conflicts, our objective wasn't
to kill people but rather to crush an operating system. We
understood that most Germans weren't Nazis, and that most Russians
weren't communists. They weren't the problem; it was the operating
system imposed on them by their leaders that threatened us.
How the Cold War
Ended
In the Cold War, we were
able to crush the Soviet communist operating system without a great deal
of violence - a staggering achievement for which, one day, Ronald
Reagan, Margaret Thatcher, and Pope John-Paul II will be celebrated by
history. The Cold War ended in 1991, when the Soviet Union ceased
to exist. But in World War II, we had no choice but to shoot
and bomb our way through Italy, to flatten Germany, and to drop two
nuclear bombs on Japan. It was horrific, but it worked. The
war ended, the fascist operating system ceased to exist, and the people
on whom this operating system had been imposed found their way forward.
Japan joined Western Civilization, and Italy and Germany re-joined it.
Although no one seems to
have noticed, our strategy for winning the current conflict is
strikingly similar to our strategies in the previous conflicts.
Our enemies aren't the people on whom the Radical Islam operating system
has been imposed, but rather the operating system itself. We are
using military power, both in Afghanistan and Iraq, to give moderate
Muslims, who comprise the vast majority, the first chance they have had
to hold power in a long while. Our hope is that, over time, these
moderates will develop an Islamic operating system that is compatible
with the modern world and - more importantly - willing to co-exist
peacefully with our operating system.
What the Bush Administration
has now realized - belatedly - is that to achieve our objective we will
need to use more violence than we had thought, and hoped, we would need.
That is why the President is seriously considering sending more troops
to Iraq. Simply put, we haven't hit the Radical Islam operating
system hard enough to crush it. And this means the real issue
isn't the number of soldiers we send to Iraq, and perhaps to
Afghanistan, but the orders that President Bush gives to our military
commanders.
If the President orders our
commanders to do the best they can with additional troops to get Baghdad
under control, we will merely delay our defeat and suffer more
casualties along the way. But if the President's orders are to
crush the Radical Islam operating system once and for all - get set for
a level of violence we haven't seen since the darkest days of World War
II.
When General William
Tecumseh Sherman said that "War is hell," he wasn't talking
about soldiers fighting soldiers. He meant that to end a war it is
necessary to inflict such pain on the civilian population that it will
no longer tolerate the war's continuation. That's because no army
can keep fighting without at least the tacit support of the civilian
population on whose territory it operates. War isn't laser
surgery, no matter how technically advanced may be the weapons.
War is a miserable, sloppy business in which innocent people suffer
greatly. Sherman hated marching through Georgia and inflicting
pain on decent people who happened to be living there, but he understood
that doing this was the only way to end the war.
Widening the War
The violence we will need to
inflict to win won't be limited to Baghdad, or even to Iraq. Just
as you cannot fill a bucket with water if that bucket has two big holes
in its bottom, we will not end the war in Iraq so long as Iran and Syria
continue to interfere. Thus far, we have done nothing whatever to
stop Iran and Syria from interfering, and unless we do we cannot win.
In other words, to crush the Radical Islam operating system we will need
to widen the war. More precisely, the governments of Iran and
Syria must be taken out of the conflict, either by forcing these
governments to cease fighting, or by removing and replacing these
governments.
Honorable people will
disagree over what specific steps to take, and how and when to take
them. There is nothing wrong with this, and the debate itself is
healthy. Indeed, our tolerance for public debate -- even during
wartime -- is among the greatest strengths of Western Civilization.
But if we cannot resolve the
question of whether or not we intend to win this war whatever the cost,
then we will shortly lose the option of deciding. As President
Lincoln said of slavery in the US, a house divided against itself cannot
stand; we cannot be half-slave and half-free. It took a Civil War
to resolve this issue. Today, our choice is whether to fight for
Western Civilization at whatever cost, or to stop fighting and accept
the gradual erosion of our operating system. And we are so divided
over this question that it is scarcely an exaggeration to describe our
debate as a kind of civil war. Until we resolve this question, we
are stuck with half-measures that delay our defeat while also blocking
the path to victory. And in war, if you aren't winning you're
losing. There is nothing in between. So we must decide
either to give up, or to summon the will to victory.
The trouble is, we have very
little time left in which to decide. Indeed, our time to decide
has just about run out.
|
— Herbert E. Meyer served during the Reagan administration as special assistant to the director of Central Intelligence and vice chairman of the CIA's National Intelligence Council. His new video is The Siege of Western Civilization.
Storm King Press
Publishers of Books that Work
©2004 Storm King Press - all rights reserved