The War About the War
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July 10th, 2007
Perception One: We're at War
For the third time in history Islam - or, more precisely, its most
radical element - has launched a war whose objective is the destruction
of Western civilization. Our survival is at stake, and despite its
imperfections we believe that Western civilization is worth defending to
the death. Moreover, in the modern world - where a small number of
people can so easily kill a large number of people - we cannot just play
defense; sooner or later that strategy would bring another 9-11.
This conflict really is a clash of civilizations whose root cause is
Islam's incompatibility with the modern world. So we must fight
with everything we've got against the terrorist groups and against those
governments on whose support they rely. If the Cold War was
"World War III," this is World War IV. We must win it,
at whatever cost.
Perception Two: We're Reaping What We've Sowed
There are quite a few people in the world who just don't like the
United States and some of our allies because of how we live and, more
precisely, because of the policies we pursue in the Mideast and
elsewhere in the world. Alas, a small percentage of these people
express their opposition through acts of violence. While we
sometimes share their opinion of our values and our policies, we cannot
condone their methods. Our objective must be to bring the level of
political violence down to an acceptable level. The only way to
accomplish this will be to simultaneously adjust our values and our
policies while protecting ourselves from these intermittent acts of
violence; in doing so we must be careful never to allow the need for
security to override our civil liberties.
There is no middle ground between these two perceptions. Of
course, you can change a word here and there, or modify a phrase, but
the result will be the same. Either we're at war, or we've entered
a period of history in which the level of violence has risen to an
unacceptable level. If we're at war, we're in a military conflict
that will end with either our victory or our defeat. If we're in
an era of unacceptable violence stemming from our values and our
policies, we are faced with a difficult but manageable political
problem.
Splitting the Difference
Since the 9-11 attacks, President Bush has been trying to split the
difference. It's obvious that he, personally, subscribes to
Perception One. Just read his formal speeches about the conflict,
such as those he's given to Congress and at venues such as West Point.
They are superb and often brilliant analyses of what he calls the War on
Terror. Yet he hasn't done things that a president who truly
believes that we're at war should have done. For instance, in the
aftermath of 9-11 he didn't ask Congress for a declaration of war,
didn't bring back the draft, and didn't put the US economy on a wartime
footing. A president at war would have taken out Iran's government
after overthrowing the Taliban in Afghanistan -- and then sent 500,000
troops into Iraq, rather than just enough troops to remove Saddam
Hussein but not enough to stabilize that country. And a president
at war would have long since disposed of Syria's murderous regime and
helped the Israelis wipe out Hezbollah.
Study history, and you quickly learn that oftentimes events and the
responses they generate look different a hundred years after they happen
than they look at the time. It may be that history will judge that
President Bush performed heroically, doing the very best that anyone
could do given the two incompatible perceptions about the conflict that
have divided public opinion and raised the level of partisanship in
Washington to such a poisonous level. Or, it may be that history
will judge the President to have been a failure because he responded to
9-11 as a politician rather than as a leader.
Either way, it is the ongoing war about the war that accounts for where
we are today, nearly six years after the 9-11 attacks: We haven't lost,
but we aren't winning; fewer of us have been killed by terrorists than
we had feared would be killed, but we aren't safe.
While experts disagree about how "the war" is going, there
isn't much disagreement over how the war about the war is
going: those who subscribe to Perception Two are pulling ahead.
Here in the US, virtually every poll shows that a majority of Americans
want us "out of Iraq" sooner rather than later, and regardless
of what's actually happening on the ground in that country.
Support for taking on Iran - that is, for separating the Mullahs from
the nukes through either a military strike or by helping Iranians to
overthrow them from within - is too low even to measure. There
isn't one candidate for president in either party who's campaigning on a
theme of "let's fight harder and win this thing whatever it
takes." Indeed, the most hawkish position is merely to stay
the course a while longer to give the current "surge" in Iraq
a fair chance. Moreover, just chat with friends and neighbors - at
barbeques, at the barbershop, over a cup of coffee - and you'll be
hard-pressed to find a solid minority, let alone a majority, in favor of
fighting-to-win.
However it's phrased, just about everyone is looking for a way out short
of victory.
Overseas, public opinion is moving in the same direction. For
example, in Great Britain Tony Blair has stepped aside for Gordon Brown,
who in the midst of the recent terrorist attacks in London and Glasgow
has ordered his government to ban the phrase "war on terror"
and to avoid publicly linking the recent, mercifully failed attacks in
London and Glasgow to any aspect of Islam. The current leaders of
Germany and France are less anti-American than their predecessors, but
no more willing to help us fight. Down under in Australia John
Howard - blessed be his name - is holding firm, but for a combination of
reasons may be approaching the end of his long tenure; none of his
likely replacements are nearly so robust. And the Israelis - who
are facing the triple-threat of Hamas, Hezbollah, and before too long a
nuclear-armed Iran - are going through one of their periodic bouts of
political paralysis.
A Second Attack
It's possible that something horrific will happen in the immediate
future to shift public support here in the US, and throughout the West,
from the second perception to the first. When asked by a young
reporter what he thought would have the greatest impact on his
government's fate, British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan responded
cheerfully: "Events, dear boy, events." One more
9-11-type attack - biological, chemical, or nuclear - that takes out
Houston, Berlin, Vancouver or Paris, and the leader of that country will
be overwhelmed by the furious public's demands to "turn the creeps
who did this, and the countries that helped them, into molten glass and
don't let's worry about collateral damage." (This will sound
even better in French or German.) Should the next big attack come
here in the US, some among us will blame the President but most won't.
The public mood will be not merely ferocious, but ugly; you won't want
to walk down the street wearing an "I gave to the ACLU" pin in
your lapel.
Absent such an event in the near future, it's likely that over the next
few years the war will settle into a phase that proponents of Perception
Two will approve. Simply put, we will shift from offense to
defense. The Department of Homeland Security will become our
government's lead agency, and the Pentagon's role will be diminished.
(Nothing will change at the State Department - but then, nothing ever
does.) Most people in the US, and elsewhere in the West, will be
relieved that "the war" is finally over.
To preserve the peace we will have to be more than willing to make the
occasional accommodation to Moslems. If they ask us to put more
pressure on the Israelis - well, we can easily do that. If Moslem
checkout clerks at our supermarkets don't want to touch pork - by all
means let's have separate checkout counters for customers who've bought
those products. And now that we think about it, "Happy
Winter" will be as good a greeting, if not a better one, than
"Merry Christmas." Won't it?
Of course, there will be the occasional terrorist attack. Some,
like the recent ones in London and Glasgow, will fail. Others will
succeed, but guided by the mainstream media we will view them with the
same detachment as we would view a meteor shower that brought flaming
rocks crashing randomly into the Earth. Most will land harmlessly
in fields, some will land on houses and kill those few residents unlucky
enough to be home at the time. Once in a while, one will crash
into a crowded shopping mall or, sadly, into a school packed with
children. These things happen - alas - and while it's riveting to
watch the latest disaster unfold on television there really isn't much
one can do about it. Life goes on.
In the long run, history always sorts things out.
If it turns out that Perception Two of the threat is valid, then over
time we will become accustomed to the level of casualties caused by the
terrorists. After all, more than 40,000 Americans are killed each
year in traffic accidents and we don't make a big political issue out of
that, do we? Our attitude toward death-by-terrorist-attack will be
the same as our attitude toward deaths on the highway: a tragedy for the
victim and members of the family, but nothing really to fuss over.
And if Perception Two is valid, it's even possible that the terrorist
threat eventually will ease. Can you even remember the last time
anyone got bombed by the IRA?
But if those of us who subscribe to Perception One are correct, then
it's only a matter of time before something ghastly happens that will
swing public opinion throughout the West our way - and hard.
Whether this will happen in two years, or five, or in 15 years, is
impossible to predict. All we can know for certain is that if
Western civilization really is under attack from Islam, or from elements
within Islam, then they will not give up or be appeased. At some point
they're going to go for the knockout punch.
Fighting, Finally, to Win
The pessimists among us will argue that by this time we'll be too far
gone to save; that years of merely playing defense and of making
concessions to the sensitivities of our enemy will have eroded our
military power, and sapped our will, to the point where de facto surrender
will be the only option.
We optimists see things differently: For better or worse, it's
part of the American character to wait until the last possible moment -
even to wait a bit beyond the last possible moment - before kicking into
high gear and getting the job done. It's in our genes; just
think of how many times you've ground enamel off your teeth watching
your own kid waste an entire weekend, only to start writing a book
report at 10:30 Sunday night that, when you find it on the breakfast
table Monday morning is by some miracle a minor masterpiece.
However horrific it may be, the knockout punch won't knock us out.
Instead, it will shift us from playing defense back to offense - and
this time we won't hold back. The president will ask Congress for
a declaration of war and he, or she, will get it. We'll bring back
the draft, send our troops into battle without one hand tied behind
their backs by lawyers, and we won't waste time and energy pussyfooting
with the United Nations. And if we've closed GITMO by this
time - we'll reopen it and even double its size because we're going to
pack it. All of this will take longer to organize, and cost more,
than if we'd done it right in the aftermath of 9-11. That's
unfortunate, but that's the way we Americans tend to do things.
And when we do finally start fighting for real -- we'll win.
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— 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.
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