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'New thinking' needs new direction

The Pentagon could change from Terror Warrior to Human Security agent. It needs the Presidential direction to do so.

Is it possible to suppose that the United States might finally experience its own perestroika after the end of the Cold War? I am not referring to the movement around Barack Obama's call for change, although that could potentially be a critical factor in reinforcing and sustaining the new phenomenon of perestroika. Nor am I referring to the financial crisis although that too could provide an impulse for transformation. Rather I am talking about the far reaching debate and indeed restructuring currently going on inside the Pentagon as a result of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Mary Kaldor is professor of global governance at the London School of Economics (LSE), and convenor of the human-security study group that reports to the European Union's foreign-policy chief Javier Solana

Links relating to this article and Mary Kaldor's other columns are available at diigo here.

The end of the Cold War did not lead to the dismantling of the military-industrial complex, which continues to exercise a powerful and pervasive political, economic and cultural influence on American society. Military spending fell after 1990 and the number of troops were reduced but research spending on advanced military technologiesw remained at its Cold War level, thereby constituting a permanent pressure to develop and produce new weapons systems. Moreover the Cold War narrative (drawn from the experience of World War II) about the role of the United States as a global leader in promoting democracy against its enemies through superior know-how, continued to dominate security thinking. Indeed the narrative was reinforced by the widespread argument that Reagan's decision to deploy cruise missiles was what ended the Cold War and by the experience of the 1991 Gulf War, which seemed to prove the salience of sophisticated technology. Throughout the 1990s, the United States continued to emphasise the importance of airpower and rapid decisive manoeuvre warfare incorporating new advances in information technology as the cornerstone of American strategy. And defence intellectuals continued to draw up scenarios in which these forces would be used to repel a new range of enemies from rogue states to terrorists. Indeed the immediate aftermath of the invasions of Iraq and Afghanistan was characterised by a mood of triumphalism about the American Way of War and the relevance of concepts like the Revolution in Military Affairs, Defence Transformation, or Netcentricwarfare.

Several years and thousands of casualties later, the atmosphere is very different. The worsening violence in Iraq and Afghanistan led to a serious questioning about the effectiveness of the US tactical approach. Moreover, despite the largest ever military budgets, there were shortages of troops and equipment suitable for ground wars because of the expenditure on large sophisticated systems. Many were arguing that success in regime collapse had created a vacuum of lawlessness filled by political insurgents and violent criminals and that efforts to attack insurgents using superior firepower merely increased opposition to occupation. On 10 January, 2007, President Bush announced a new military plan for Iraq, known as the `surge'.

The surge in Iraq was not just about an increase in troops, it was about a profound change in strategy and tactics, based on, to use the jargon, a population-centric approach. General Petraeus's `new thinking' emphasised, above all, the protection of civilians over and above force projection - a radical turn around in the way American forces are used. Instead of technology and firepower, the emphasis has been on bottom-up local security. His latest `Counter-insurgency Guidance' (published 8 July 2008) includes instructions like `Secure and serve the Population', `Live among the People', `Promote Reconciliation', `Walk', `Build Relationships', `Employ money as a weapons system', `Empower subordinates'.

Public Domain: Street Security in Iraq by Mike Pryor US Army, 2007 (DOD 2007_070405) The reduction in violence in Iraq over the past year and a half was mainly due to the fact that Sunni insurgents overwhelmingly switched sides, choosing the US rather than Al Qaeda, which, in turn, was in part but only in part a consequence of the new policy of direct population security by the United States. Instead of remaining behind protected enclaves and using firepower to attack insurgents, which usually involved so-called collateral damage, US forces spread out to population centres, not only providing security, but also helping to provide basic services and humanitarian relief. It then became possible to negotiate ceasefires with Shiite militias as well. (some argue that this was possible because ethnic cleansing had largely been completed in Baghdad). It also became possible to start to build much more effective Iraqi security forces than hitherto, incorporating many of the veterans of Saddam's army who had been dismissed by Bremer immediately after the American invasion. This strategy was, of course, combined with what is known as `kinetic force' to attack Al Qaeda as well as renegade Shiites like the `special groups' who did not respect the cease-fires; improved knowledge of the `human terrain' allowed the US to target these groups much more effectively. 

The change in strategy was the outcome of a broad debate in the Pentagon, especially among the Army and the Marines. My first intimation of change was when in 2005, I received an email from a beltway bandit (a Washington consultancy firm) appropriately named Hawk Systems Inc. They explained that they had received the contract from the Pentagon to `rethink the principles of war' and asked if I would contribute a chapter, relating to my work on `new wars' and human security. The book that came out of the project was circulated to all US staff colleges This year I was invited by the US Army War College to talk about `new wars' -a subject, that to my surprise, is now widely discussed.

Small Wars Manual 2Much of the new thinking derives from a strategic current within the US military that dates back to the US Marines 1940 Manual entitled `Small Wars'. This current of thinking lost the battle for strategy in Vietnam but remained alive in certain military circles. Much of the contemporary debate can be found in an online magazine entitled Small Wars Journal, which includes fascinating blogs from active servicemen about their experiences. One of the discussions, for example, is about the relevance of `fourth generation warfare', which refers to the impact of globalisation on war and the argument that nations have `lost the monopoly on force'. Another is about nation-building and the idea that `progressive stabilisation' capacity needs to be built in to combat units. Stabilisation is defined (in Defence Directive 3000 -05) as the effort to `create a secure and stable environment and to provide for the basic needs of the population to include food, water, sanitation and shelter.'

An article by Condoleeza Rice in the current issue of Foreign Affairs demonstrates how far this debate has gone. She is one of the more conservative members of the Bush Administration and it was she who famously said that it was not the job of American soldiers to accompany little girls to school. `In these pages in 2000' she writes `I decried the role of the United States, in particular the US military, in nation-building. In 2008, it is absolutely clear that we will be involved in nation-building for years to come.' She still insists that it is not the job of the military but nevertheless argues strongly for a capacity to provide `population security' in Afghanistan, which she defines as `addressing basic needs for safety, services, the rule of law, and increased economic opportunity.'

Of course, the `new thinking' is not uniformly shared. On the contrary, most of the US military retain what one `small wars' blogger describes as a `cultural aversion' to nation-building. In particular, the air force and the navy remain wedded to sophisticated systems capable of striking at long distance. In June, Robert Gates, the Secretary of Defense, dismissed the Air Force secretary and the air force chief of staff, ostensibly for `poor performance in securing of sensitive materials' ( it was discovered that four high tech electrical nose cones for nuclear missiles were sent to Taiwan instead of helicopter batteries -a mistake that is difficult to believe especially as it was not revealed for eighteen months!) But according to the New York Times, in a report that reflects the talk in the Pentagon, Gates was `frustrated about Air Force actions on weapons procurement, budgets, and the execution of the mission in Iraq.' It is the fact that there is a struggle going on and not simply a change of direction that underlines the character of what might be described as the new perestroika and offers the possibility of real change. 

So what are the implications of this debate and where will it lead? A first question is whether the reduction in violence in Iraq can be sustained. This depends not on what the US military do but on the politics of Iraq. Can the Iraqi government gain the support and trust of the population, which, in the end, is what makes stability possible? And, if not, and new violence erupts perhaps also involving the Kurds, will the old guard in the Pentagon be able to turn around and claim, as they did after Vietnam, that these military intellectuals messed up and what was needed was even more firepower? While many on the left would like to see the US defeated in Iraq and troops withdrawn in humiliation, this would have catastrophic consequences in Iraq and is likely to have perverse consequences for politics inside the US. On the hand, if stability is sustained, this could also strengthen the `new thinking'.

A second question is will the new population-centric approach be adopted in Afghanistan? This month, General Petraeus becomes commander of Centcom, in charge of both Iraq and Afghanistan. At present, despite brave words about reconstruction, the main thrust of American and British policy seems to be to attack the Taliban at long distance, especially in Pakistan. As the situation worsens and spreads to Pakistan, can the Iraq model offer an alternative? Is it possible to apply the same kind of nuanced approach to the Taliban that could result in the marginalisation or isolation of extremists? And if not, what are the limits of the `new thinking'? Are we `faced' with what the conservatives call the `long war', which will justify the continued acquisition of all kinds of new methods of killing? 

iraq And a third question, which follows from the first two, is whether the new approach can be used for global peace operations in the future or whether it is a more efficient form of American imperialism? Most `new thinkers' still insist that the US needs both a stability capacity and a war-fighting capacity. Indeed, some proponents of `new thinking' are suggesting that a capacity for both decisive military actions and stabilisation could enable the US to invade countries like Iran and Syria and simultaneously clean up the aftermath. At present, of course, US forces are much too over stretched but what if the US leaves Iraq and Gates succeeds in overall restructuring? 

This is why what happens in the forthcoming US elections is so important. The changes within the Pentagon need political direction. Are population security or stability operations viewed as a means to an end - defeating terrorists that might attack the United States, winning the War on Terror? Or is the goal population security globally, which might require the use of military force against those nihilistic terrorists or genocidaires who are not amenable to negotiation and who cannot be arrested? In other words, is the goal to protect the United States unilaterally or can there be a new understanding that American security depends on global security? In the first case, the `new thinking' continues to be viewed as a secondary or marginal activity for US forces. But if the aim is global security, the primary requirement is for a stabilisation capacity to end wars rather than fight them.

The incoming President needs to articulate a new narrative for US security policy based on the notion that population security (or I would say human security) is a world-wide goal rather than the War on Terror and that the US will strengthen multilateral institutions in order to develop the capacity to prevent conflicts as well as reducing violence and contributing to stability and reconstruction. That way, the new President will able to harness the current perestroika to a new post-Cold War political paradigm.

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Bendara said:



Fri, 2008-09-26 02:33

The use of fire power completely neglects the psychology of the victims. For American military strategists to think they could 'shock and awe' and then win ‘hearts and minds’ is as perverse as it is ridiculous. The hearts and minds approach is what Australian troops used in Vietnam with great success and with much less bloodshed.

The use of distance warfare in Pakistan shows that the old mindset is still firmly in place. Regardless of what approach US strategists use, high casualty rates will continue to feature as part of the equation. But without taking into account the long term effects on civilians, any new approach is profoundly flawed.

opendemocracy said:



Fri, 2008-09-26 09:55

Bendara,

MK's suggestion here is precisely that she sees the possibility of the Pentagon, under the right leadership, taking a really serious approach to "hearts and minds" --- including the implications for the type of war and (currently highly asymmetric) casualty rates. Are you saying that you do not believe that this is indeed possible on the part of the Pentagon?

Tony

Rollie (not verified) said:



Sat, 2008-09-27 00:03

It seems obvious to me that Security is the number one need of individuals and groups. First: raw survival. Second: basic needs assurance (shelter, food, water)
It is only after security needs are met that people next consider intangibles like equal rights, self control (democracy & enterprise), self actualization, freedoms, etc.
When we can provide or foster Security and show the possibility of the intangibles, then we win the minds and hearts of the populace under threat and move toward reduction of conflict (peace).
In that paradigm the Military is more like police than like conquerors and require a police (rule of law) mentality.

Bendara said:



Sat, 2008-09-27 04:38

Tony

The Pentagon is an institution with a militiary mindset. For decades it has seen over whelming fire power as the best tactic in dealing with its enemies. Its reasoning is mathematical, not humanist. War is an expression of a belief system that has changed little since the end of the Cold War.

I don't believe the Pentagon would seriously consider a strategic approach like that proposed by Mary Kaldor as this would represent a fundamental shift in its thinking. To embark on such a change would question the foundations of its existence, compromise its relationship with the powerful militiary-industrial economy and even undermine its role in the Middle East. Too many powerful people have too much at stake to want to change the status quo.

Akos Horvath (not verified) said:



Sat, 2008-09-27 11:08

This is a rather disappointing article, dissecting merely the technical aspects of war. If MK wants to be really population-centric how about working on eliminating wars, as opposed to refining its techniques. [... edited ...]

Not logged in Lawrence Efana (not verified) said:



Sun, 2008-09-28 11:35

A clear evidence of what is supposed to take place in a conscientiously active environment! We seem to be paddling towards objective of understanding what it takes to create such an environment less selfishly, now that globalisation and "outright" watered-down imperial feelings are no-other-than the reality of our 21st century.

This is indeed an article that intimates, pending the outcome of the US presidential elections - an article important for internal, foreign and strategic policies cum military interests of the US. It is constructed to hide under the cloak of the Pentagon, but luckily can surely influentially shape the ongoing presidential election debates. In that case it is not just waiting for the outcome but contributing straight to see to it that the "desired" outcome could be spurred.

MK's points and arguments are thus multiple, but also relatively satisfactorily concise. Lessons from the criticisms of failures leading to what appears to be the success in Iraq are important. Application of the lessons on the dilemma in Afghanistan and Pakistan is still being thought through. For the Pentagon, it means such lessons are coupled with greater awareness that 'war-fighting capacity' alone is not enough to win hearts and minds in defined and less-so non-defined] conflicts spots. Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistan belong to such defined spots, whereas the terror/insurgencies proliferating elsewhere constitute challenges of the 'non-defined'.

Principles captioned by "fourth generation warfare" make a lot of sense for US strategic foreign and military policies hence meaningful for new thoughts about values and direction for the institution: Pentagon. The reason is the courage to prioritise realities of globalisation and no-less continuous challenges of nation-building. Here comparison implied by "perestroika": a mark of Cold War ending, might seem 'revengeful' psychologically so unnecessary. I mean to argue that America's path now calling for change of strategies, policies and direction has own unique characteristics.

The Pentagon, an institution of its time, is living to see: that the old world has changed; and that technology is mastered by new nations capped by 'new' powers springing up here and there, parallel to the 'resolve' of men and women of a new 'enlightened', but 'dark age'! In the 'new' age not even unrestrained use of money as weapons system really matters, or is without adverse consequences - e.g., present narratives of the US-economic problems, partly induced by lavished war spending! It is time to be realistic about the limits, moderate more hence tune cords to favour peace. MK's arguments for "stabilization capacity" shaped reasonably by national and global interests invite support on above grounds. It is about managing "human terrain" in most comprehensive sense and humbling war-fighting capacity carefully to the barest minimum.

For the presidential candidates it means doing away with aspects of the old and looking forward to the new - an active stand for a reform policy not aimed at polishing the facade, because doing so might still leave the Pentagon loose, and in the end put America even more in doubt.

Lawrence Efana [Finland]

svetlana djurdjevic (not verified) said:



Mon, 2008-09-29 22:48

MK’s work on human security in the EU CFSP is very important, and it is a relief to read that it is appreciated in the States. I have already thought that in the States even security sector reform is understand only as training and military-to-military cooperation, and that human security is a concept none has ever heard (outside the UN building).

However, there is a long way to go for a population-centric approach, and it seems more as an ad hoc tool to finish the war in Iraq than a profound change in conceptualizing security.

For example, see Afghanistan Index -Tracking Variables of Reconstruction & Security in Post-9/11 Afghanistan, prepared not by the military but by an independent institution (http://www.brookings.edu/afghanistanindex)

Security indicators are the following:
1.1. U.S. Troop Fatalities since October 7, 2001
1.2. Cause of Death for U.S. Troops
1.3. American Military Fatalities by Category, October 7, 2001-Present
1.4. British Military Fatalities in Afghanistan since 2006
1.5. Canadian Military Fatalities in Afghanistan since 2006
….
And so on, and so fort, with Afghan civilians’ security being mentioned only at two final indicators:

1.25 Estimated Number of Afghan Refugees in the Region by Location
1.26 Estimated Number of Internally Displaced Persons (IDP’s)

As long as life of local civilians does not count and nation-building is understood as a military occupation (instead of a supporting network to strengthen weak and failing states in terms of internal legitimacy and public good provision), ‘cultural aversion’ to state-building is not so bad. More efficient form of American imperialism is not needed, but the new understanding of ways to reach global security.

Great contribution!

Svetlana Djurdjevic-Lukic

Steven Rogers said:



Tue, 2008-09-30 09:52

There's useful stuff here, but I think some important points get missed.

The US military as it now stands is designed, equipped, and trained to rapidly and decisively defeat conventional military forces, a function which it performs very effectively.  It is not designed, trained, or equipped to occupy territory or build nations: despite all the talk of "American empire", America lacks any sort of military capacity designed to maintain an empire.

All the high tech weaponry works very well in the role it was designed to play.  It does not work well in roles it was not designed to play.

I don't think it makes sense to dismantle the US military's current structure: it's good at what it does and what it does may well be necessary in the future.  The question is not whether the US needs to replace big war capacity with small war capacity but whether they need to add a small war capacity.  To some extent, I think they do, but this extent is limited.

I don't think it makes sense to ask an army to act as a police force.  You either get a lousy army or a lousy police force, likely both.

I don't think it makes sense to ask an army to be the lead component of a nation-building effort: that's not what armies are for.  At best an army can provide security for a civilian-led nation building effort.

Do we want to retrain an army to perform functions that are really not appropriate to an army?

Ideally, I'd like to see multilateral bodies develop a meaningful joint military/civilian capacity that is designed, trained, and equipped specifically for peacekeeping and nation building work.  Then you could have a scenario where (in a case like Iraq or Afghanistan) an army would do the initial fighting, then back off and assume a support role for peacekeeping forces, and let nation building be handled by people that are prepared for that role.

It won't happen, but it's what I'd like to see...

 

davidicus (not verified) said:



Wed, 2008-10-01 16:36

In response to Steven's comment: [ "...despite all the talk of "American empire", America lacks any sort of military capacity designed to maintain an empire." ], I think some would argue that the post-modern notion of 'empire' is not one maintained by the military through direct rule as such. Instead 'empire' , while always maintaining the threat of the sword, is brought about through aid, trade, financial, cultural, and other forms of direct and indirect hegemony.

As far as MKs' scenario of a US military that embraces human security, it sounds all very nice, however, I think that until the US people and their government and administration choose to embrace multilateralism (via active support and interest in bodies like the UN), I think that the insular hawkishness in the Pentagon will continue to override 'population-centric' strategies and tactics.

I still, however, have not let go of my dream (envisioned around 1989-90 ) that all the world's militaries might---including grandiose strategies and tactics, not to mention budgets, tools and technologies--will one day focus upon tackling human emergencies, disaster relief, eco-restoration and essential peacekeeping duties.

Logged in Lawrence Efana (not verified) said:



Thu, 2008-10-02 16:35

Nation-building particularly rings a bell. In our time it knows no bounds since transformations and transitions of systems are continuous. Again nations integrate regionally and otherwise. That is not empire-making in the old sense.

Trials/errors or successes/failures of experiences of today are a resource and the Pentagon situates well but should not glorify wars in a new century. We saw 'high-tech': a star-war-like - flashy and entertaining war] "Operation Desert Storm". Rightly it lacked ability to deal with 'empire-building' - metaphorically its invasion 'outcome'?

Yet in the real world, wars and peace are subject to perceptions of 'proportions' and 'balance'. Cases for or against establishments, e.g., the Pentagon, wherever they are, would need be agitated in favour of rethinking the United Nations. Perhaps it would strengthen more hitch-free peace-keeping philosophy/missions hence serve world peace.

Do away with all such establishments at the nation-state levels and pass the functions to United Nations!

Lawrence Efana [Finland]

Steven Rogers said:



Fri, 2008-10-03 09:59

<i>some would argue that the post-modern notion of 'empire' is not one
maintained by the military through direct rule as such. Instead
'empire' , while always maintaining the threat of the sword, is brought
about through aid, trade, financial, cultural, and other forms of
direct and indirect hegemony.</i>

Like so many other "post-modern" notions, this doesn't stand up to even mild scrutiny - unless, of course, we completely change the definition of what an "empire" is supposed to be.  We also have yet to establish that aid and trade are in fact a form of "direct and indirect hegemony", or that financial and cultural hegemony actually exist.  All in all, this notion of "empire" is so amorphous and unsupported that it is difficult to see it as even remotely relevant outside the rarefied realms of post-modern intellectual autoeroticism.

Lawrence, when you say this:

<i>Do away with all such establishments at the nation-state levels and pass the functions to United Nations!</i>

I agree that this would be an ideal solution, if the United Nations had the will and the capacity to undertake these functions.  I've seen nothing to suggest that it does.

 

 

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