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Ed Rasimus wrote in message . ..
As for the question of war, the single greatest factor that most commentators are overlooking is that the paradigm of war has changed dramatically. The enemy is not a traditional national actor any more, but rather a far-reaching network of terrorist agencies that don't wear uniforms, muster under a national flag or operate within the constraints of international law or conventional diplomacy. Once that fact is appreciated, then it becomes a bit more difficult to apply the conventional rules of justification for war and definition of combat areas. But it also makes it even harder to justify a pre-emptive war against a nation that is nor harboring or supporting the paramilitary group that attacked the US and especially so considering that the leadership of that group is still at large and not in Iraq. Add to the changed paradigm the incredible potential for destruction of WMD and the removal of the foundation of one of the basic principles of deterrence, that of rational leadership on both sides of the deterrent equation, and you've provided a strong justification for a policy of pre-emption. Yes again, but again you don't pre-empt tem by fighting somebody else. The invasion of Iraq has cost us the support of most of our allies, it has sapped our military strength and budget, has created yet another haven for our worst enemies who previously had been conspicuously absent from Iraq, and has inspired recruitment to the ranks of our enemies. -- FF |
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In a detailed response with some non-sequiturs and remarkable
generalizations on Tue, 31 Aug 2004 16:21:13 +0200, "Emmanuel Gustin" wrote: "Ed Rasimus" wrote in message .. . As for the question of war, the single greatest factor that most commentators are overlooking is that the paradigm of war has changed dramatically. Has it? It is easy to claim a "paradigm shift" and use it as an excuse to throw the rules overboard, but irregular warfare and terrorism are nothing fundamentally new, and even the idea of a network across national boundaries can be traced back at least to the religious wars of the 16th century. Correct, but the magnitude of the change creates the shift. Since the Treaty of Westphalia, the emphasis of late nineteenth and all of twentieth century political interaction has been nation-state actors. With the late '80s, the seminal work of Samuel P. Huntington, "Clash of Civilizations" pinpointed the shift to regional and ideological bases for future conflicts. The current situation seems to support Huntington's conclusions. Besides, there was little about the conflict with Iraq that can be put in such a cadre. This was essentially a traditional conflict between two governments. The Iraqi regime aimed to remain in power; the US government aimed to overthrow the Iraqi regime and convert the country in an US-held stronghold in the oil-rich Middle East. There is nothing about the political aspects of such a conflict that is particularly novel. The novelty of the conflict is the inter-meshing of the Muslim fundamentalist across national boundaries (reflecting in the process a rejection of the artificially impossed "states" created in the post-colonial period. Certainly Iraq as a nation despite the three principal tribal entities demonstrates this as well as the warlords of Afghanistan. And the invasion of Iraq itself amounted to a fairly traditional form of warfare, on both sides. The USA used conventional tactics of mobile warfare with some modern refinements of intelligence gathering and targeting thrown in. And, strangely enough, Iraq also tried to fight a conventional war, avoiding the urban guerilla warfare that had been feared by commentators, and of course failing to use WMD. Despite the buzzword-speak of Pentagon press briefings, this was a conventional war between traditional armies; the biggest question about it is whether it will be the last of its kind. It most assuredly will not be the last of its kind unless the industrialized and developed world capitulates to the jihadist thugs. (Just to take this opportunity for a cheap shot--let's liken it to France/Belgium and the rise of Hitler's Germany.) The post-invasion occupation phase was again traditional enough, and predictable. It may look strange in the eyes of the US public because the nation has little experience in conquering and occupying foreign countries, but there are enough precedents, for example the US occupation of the Philippines. Politicians have been fooling themselves by invoking the misguided and misleading precedent of the occupation of Germany and Japan after WWII, but these were the exceptions, not the rule. Thank you for acknowledging our lack of experience in conquering and occupying. We most certainly did not "conquer" the Phillipines which were simply ceded to the US by Spain after the 1898 unpleasantness. But, we have provided a presence to rebuild, stabilize, industrialize and defend the result in a number of countries around the world, effectively debunking any assertions of colonial intent. (Nuther cheap shot--did so in your country as well. And, didn't leave such disasters as the Congo behind us either.) The enemy is not a traditional national actor any more, but rather a far-reaching network of terrorist agencies that don't wear uniforms, muster under a national flag or operate within the constraints of international law or conventional diplomacy. Once that fact is appreciated, then it becomes a bit more difficult to apply the conventional rules of justification for war and definition of combat areas. As for "far-reaching networks", let us be realistic. In a situation like this people usually imagine one big conspiracy to be their enemy, but the reality is always far more diffuse. This enemy is less a network than a scattering of radical groups, each with their own purposes, methods and presumably theology, who maintain informal contact; they may cooperate but they may also be hostile to one another. Specialists in conventional warfare always tend to think that if they can destroy the enemy's command-and-control structure, the war is half won; but this enemy shows few indications of having such a structure, and even less of actually needing one. The fight against it will require numerous small-scale operations, more on the pattern of a fight against organized crime (which often is organized in parallel to gather funds -- remember that the mafia started out as a resistance organisation, and drugs money from Afghanistan supported this generation of radicals) than of large-scale warfare. It seems that you've bought into the Kerry/Clinton "lib-speak" solution that the terrorist war is a law enforcement issue rather than a military one. That works for small subversive groups like Bader-Meinhoff or Red Army Faction, but not apparently as well for larger, better financed, ideologically/theologically motivated movements like the jihadists. Anyway, giving support to terrorist groups, or using them for your own purposes, is traditionally accepted as a good /casus belli/. (Remember Sarajevo, 1914.) There is no need to invent any new rules. In the case of Afghanistan this was an entirely valid reason. In the case of Iraq it was never more than a transparently flawed excuse. Before the USA invaded the radicals had to remain in parts of the country that Bagdad did not control -- and under US air cover. To use such presence as excuse for an invasion of Iraq is cynical. That's the argument from that side. However, the deep infiltration of the Shi'a by the likes of Al-zawahiri and his thugs, the tight alliance with the Iranian theocracy, the relationship with Syria, and the unifying aspects of anti-Americanism which supercede the more basic Shi'a/Sunni conflicts would give some credence to the other side of the argument. And, you certainly aren't extending your anti-war fervor to a defense of the Sadaam regime for the benefit of the Iraqi people, are you? The reality, even in the Middle East, is that primary goal of the radical islamist groups is to grab power in their own country, and for this reason they are usually being (brutally) suppressed by their own governments. Iraq was no exception. This US government has managed to play in the hands of both Arab dictatorships and islamist radicals by uniting them both against itself --- no mean achievement, but its heavy-handed approach is also succeeding in alienating even those governments that did maintain good relations with the USA. If the purpose was to create an ideal breeding ground for new terrorist organizations, George W. Bush could hardly do any better. "Heavy-handed"????? You know full well, that the heaviness of our hand could be considerably greater. We could easily have leveled Basra, Fallujah, Najaf, Tikrit and any strong-hold of resistance which we chose to. We have suffered unnecessary casualties and worked extremely diligently to rebuild the deteriorated and damaged infrastructure while attempting as rapidly as possible to turn over control to the people themselves. The progress has been several factors faster than it was following WW II in Germany/Japan. The fundamental dishonesty of this US government is in its refusal to discuss means. It identifies itself with the end goal of defeating terrorism; and it implies that this end will justify whatever means it chooses to use, while denying that there are any alternatives. But in fact, so far the methods it has adopted have been counterproductive; even the state department had to admit that terrorist activities are on the increase. Meanwhile the USA is losing its allies and its credibility and running out of the resources it needs to fight this war with. There are only two "allies" making noise and each squeals quite loudly when their economic ox gets gored. We most assuredly have not used ends to justify means. The means have been very tempered and the ends have been clearly established--principally stability in the Middle East. Since most of Europe is dependent (far more so than the US) on ME oil, you should begin to recognize your national self-interest. Terrorist activities are most assuredly not on the increase. There is potential certainly. And, increased awareness. But, the world at large has been quite calm. Exceptions have been extremely unfortunate (as well as unfortunately effective in the case of Spain, the Phillipines, and no Russia), but we haven't had an increase in high casualty attacks. Talking about hating us isn't much more than propaganda. Add to the changed paradigm the incredible potential for destruction of WMD and the removal of the foundation of one of the basic principles of deterrence, that of rational leadership on both sides of the deterrent equation, and you've provided a strong justification for a policy of pre-emption. The potential for destruction of WMD is routinely overrated, especially for biological and chemical weapons, by people who ignore the problem of distributing such agents over the intended victims. Wolfowitz probably did so intentionally, others may have done so out of simple ignorance. The same applies for 'dirty bombs'. Nevertheless, I agree that there is a very serious threat. I spent a lot of years of my life in the business of planned delivery of WMD and prepped for the defense against them. The "overrating" is quite realistic. You don't want to experience them. However, I do not see how a policy of 'pre-emption' by attacking countries that do not actually have WMD, while carefully avoiding a conflict with those that do, will help. To the terrorist groups themselves it makes very little difference: If they want chemical or biological weapons they can make them themselves, and any sensible terrorist group will produce them in the targeted country itself anyway, to avoid the problem of bringing them across the border. Aung San has already demonstrated that this is perfectly feasible. To the governments of "rogue states" the message is that they need to develop WMD urgently if they want to avoid an US invasion, and the two other nominees for the "axis of evil" have already geared up their efforts. The result of the Bushiite policy will be a further proliferation of WMD, in areas with unstable governments. It's a basic principle of international relations. You choose policy based on the efficacy. If diplomacy works, fine. If deterrence works, fine. If trade works, fine. If military force is the answer, then don't be reluctant to choose it. But, don't depend upon unlikely solutions to make your problems go away. Maginot anyone? So, please Messr. Gustin, avoid making broad generalizations regarding the quality of the USA's elected government. I don't remember who it was that, at the time of the US independence, expressed his amazement that the British government of the time had never done anything right -- not even by mistake. That is about how I feel about the elected (well, more or less) US government. How do these people manage to squeeze an inept foreign policy, a foolish economic policy, a dangerous environmental policy, and an immoral judicial policy, to mention the most obvious elements, all in one term and one team? You would expect an elected government to have at least some areas of competence. Here, you don't have a clue. Foolish economic policy is socialist redistribution of wealth from the producers to the non-productive. Environmental policy that protects at the expense of jobs, quality of life, long-term impact is emotional and not practical. (Note the costs of Kyoto and the number of non-signatories that have followed US leadership!) "Immoral" judicial policy? As for the "more or less" comment about elected government, you quite clearly are unfamiliar with our Constitution process for choosing a chief executive. The process took place exactly as described and the disagreements were resolved exactly in accordance with the law. We don't have national popular elections. The participants all know that going into the process. It has worked for 215 years now. Our government has considerable competence. Simply because the leftist Euro press doesn't like it doesn't make it incompetent. Believe me, if it turns out in November that somehow we will have to survive another four years of Bush, I will be deeply depressed and despairing indeed. And, I'll be paying lower taxes, living more securely, not having my property confiscated, and enjoying life. And, I won't have to resort to discussing the pros and cons of Belgium's contributions to the modern world. Last time I checked, Guy Verhofstadt had somewhat less impact on world affairs to George Bush. In fact Guy Verhofstadt probably has less impact on events in Belgium than George Bush, but that's not entirely Bush's fault. Anyway, there is no need to suspect me of excessive sympathy for our PM; he is so full of hot air that you would expect him to fly. So, you begin to express some form of desire for anarchy. Ed Rasimus Fighter Pilot (USAF-Ret) "When Thunder Rolled" "Phantom Flights, Bangkok Nights" Both from Smithsonian Books ***www.thunderchief.org |
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![]() "Emmanuel Gustin" wrote in message ... "Ed Rasimus" wrote in message ... As for the question of war, the single greatest factor that most commentators are overlooking is that the paradigm of war has changed dramatically. Has it? It is easy to claim a "paradigm shift" and use it as an excuse to throw the rules overboard, but irregular warfare and terrorism are nothing fundamentally new, and even the idea of a network across national boundaries can be traced back at least to the religious wars of the 16th century. Scale and scope have changed dramatically. Further, there is no real argument to the fact that for the past few centuries warfare has been dominated by the clash of nations, not sub-national actors. This has changed dramatically over the past few years. Besides, there was little about the conflict with Iraq that can be put in such a cadre. This was essentially a traditional conflict between two governments. The Iraqi regime aimed to remain in power; the US government aimed to overthrow the Iraqi regime and convert the country in an US-held stronghold in the oil-rich Middle East. There is nothing about the political aspects of such a conflict that is particularly novel. "The US government aimed to...convert the country in (sic) an US-held stronghold..."? Please point to any statement by US officials that indicates we have the aim of "holding" onto Iraq. On the contrary, we have repeatedly indicated we'd much rather get our forces out of Iraq as soon as we possibly can--but we also have recognized that we are obligated to remain there long enough to ensure a stable, democratic government is firmly in place. Not a day longer than that, however. Feel free to point to authoritative official sources that indicate otherwise. And the invasion of Iraq itself amounted to a fairly traditional form of warfare, on both sides. The USA used conventional tactics of mobile warfare with some modern refinements of intelligence gathering and targeting thrown in. Did we? In fact, this campaign substituted speed and agility for mass on a scale never before seen in modern warfare, coupled with innovative targeting and a special operations contribution that outweighs that from any previous major conflict. It was "blitzkreig on methamphetamines", so to speak. And, strangely enough, Iraq also tried to fight a conventional war, avoiding the urban guerilla warfare that had been feared by commentators, and of course failing to use WMD. Not so sure about that Iraq trying to avoid urban warfare bit. Franks indicated one of their major fears was that Saddam would redeploy his northern forces into the Baghdad/Sunni Triangle environs in force to acheive that urban nightmare, but our deception plans were successful in keeping those forces fixed until it was too late. So maybe it was more of a case of them not being *able* to implement an urban warfare strategy, as much as it was not their desire to do so. Despite the buzzword-speak of Pentagon press briefings, this was a conventional war between traditional armies; the biggest question about it is whether it will be the last of its kind. We took the old "relative force ratio" guidelines and tossed them out the window for this campaign, and you think it was just "business as usual"? The post-invasion occupation phase was again traditional enough, and predictable. It may look strange in the eyes of the US public because the nation has little experience in conquering and occupying foreign countries, but there are enough precedents, for example the US occupation of the Philippines. Politicians have been fooling themselves by invoking the misguided and misleading precedent of the occupation of Germany and Japan after WWII, but these were the exceptions, not the rule. Has it been so traditional? The use of companies like Blackwater to provide security in the post-major conflict stage is "traditional"? Getting their power grids back up and surpassing the prewar generating capacity within a few months of invasion, and nearly doubling their telecommunications links within a year or so of the invasion is "traditional"? Exactly what "traditions" are you citing? The enemy is not a traditional national actor any more, but rather a far-reaching network of terrorist agencies that don't wear uniforms, muster under a national flag or operate within the constraints of international law or conventional diplomacy. Once that fact is appreciated, then it becomes a bit more difficult to apply the conventional rules of justification for war and definition of combat areas. As for "far-reaching networks", let us be realistic. In a situation like this people usually imagine one big conspiracy to be their enemy, but the reality is always far more diffuse. None of what you present below disproves Ed's assertion of "far-reaching networks" (note the plural). This enemy is less a network than a scattering of radical groups, each with their own purposes, methods and presumably theology, who maintain informal contact; they may cooperate but they may also be hostile to one another. Specialists in conventional warfare always tend to think that if they can destroy the enemy's command-and-control structure, the war is half won; but this enemy shows few indications of having such a structure, and even less of actually needing one. Not so sure about that. The disruption and in some cases dismantling of AQ's command and control capabilities is no doubt largely responsible for the fact that they have not been able to conduct further major attacks against US interests to date. The fight against it will require numerous small-scale operations, more on the pattern of a fight against organized crime (which often is organized in parallel to gather funds -- remember that the mafia started out as a resistance organisation, and drugs money from Afghanistan supported this generation of radicals) than of large-scale warfare. "Large scale warfare" can indeed be made up of "small-scale operations". Anyway, giving support to terrorist groups, or using them for your own purposes, is traditionally accepted as a good /casus belli/. (Remember Sarajevo, 1914.) There is no need to invent any new rules. In the case of Afghanistan this was an entirely valid reason. In the case of Iraq it was never more than a transparently flawed excuse. Before the USA invaded the radicals had to remain in parts of the country that Bagdad did not control -- and under US air cover. To use such presence as excuse for an invasion of Iraq is cynical. How do you think Al Zarqawi got from Baghdad, where he received medical treatment, up to his buddies operating with Anser Al Islam? For that matter, how do you think he came to be in Baghdad receiving that treatment in the first place? The reality, even in the Middle East, is that primary goal of the radical islamist groups is to grab power in their own country, and for this reason they are usually being (brutally) suppressed by their own governments. AQ, while it has conducted attacks inside saudi Arabia and is no friend of the Saudi government, has made its primary focus operations against US targets, so your theory appears to be a bit lacking in terms of completeness. Iraq was no exception. This US government has managed to play in the hands of both Arab dictatorships and islamist radicals by uniting them both against itself --- no mean achievement, but its heavy-handed approach is also succeeding in alienating even those governments that did maintain good relations with the USA. Really? Jordan seems to be sticking with us, as does Kuwait, the UAE, Qatar, etc. Which ones of those that we previously had good relations with have we alienated? If the purpose was to create an ideal breeding ground for new terrorist organizations, George W. Bush could hardly do any better. Please present evidence that our actions in Iraq have yielded any new terrorist organizations? The fundamental dishonesty of this US government is in its refusal to discuss means. It identifies itself with the end goal of defeating terrorism; and it implies that this end will justify whatever means it chooses to use, while denying that there are any alternatives. First you say we won't discuss means, then you say wedeny the existance of alternatives to those means--which way do you want it? You can't really have it both ways, you know. was there ever any real doubt as to the means we would use in Iraq? We plainly stated what we were going to do, and in general how we were going to do it--and then, unlike the UN, we actually *did* it. We did the same in Afghanistan. Meanwhile, we are also doing the same thing, often in concert with other nations (i.e., the Horn of Africa with the French), in other locales, albeit with a lot less fanfare and attention from the media. All in all, your claim that we refuse to discuss "means" just does not hold water. But in fact, so far the methods it has adopted have been counterproductive; even the state department had to admit that terrorist activities are on the increase. Meanwhile the USA is losing its allies and its credibility and running out of the resources it needs to fight this war with. The only allies we have lost, like Spain, are of little value--what value is an ally who cuts and runs when the temperature goes up a few degees in the kitchen? It is the ones that stick with you when times are tough that are true allies. The Italians come to mind in that regard. Add to the changed paradigm the incredible potential for destruction of WMD and the removal of the foundation of one of the basic principles of deterrence, that of rational leadership on both sides of the deterrent equation, and you've provided a strong justification for a policy of pre-emption. The potential for destruction of WMD is routinely overrated, especially for biological and chemical weapons, by people who ignore the problem of distributing such agents over the intended victims. Wolfowitz probably did so intentionally, others may have done so out of simple ignorance. The same applies for 'dirty bombs'. Nevertheless, I agree that there is a very serious threat. While I deplore the rabid "sky is falling" approach many take when WMD is mentioned, it is a fact that used against an unprepared population they pose a tremendous threat. That threat is two-fold; first, the actual physical casualty count, which could indeed be horrendous (imagine the deathtoll from a single crop duster releasing a load of sarin over a football or soccer stadium filled to capacity with maybe 100K people), and even more dangerous, its ability to inspire the terrorists main objective, which is to *terrorize* innocents. However, I do not see how a policy of 'pre-emption' by attacking countries that do not actually have WMD, while carefully avoiding a conflict with those that do, will help. You are making a logic error here. Preemption has been used against one nation that we indeed *did* think had a significant WMD capability, so your hypothesis is already destroyed. But your logic error is in assuming that we have to treat all naions in the exact same manner, using the same by-rote formula to handle the problem. That is not the case; each situation is different and requires differing measures to control it. To the terrorist groups themselves it makes very little difference: If they want chemical or biological weapons they can make them themselves, Luckily for us, you apparently think it is a more trivial task than it actually is. The Japanese subway sarin attack is a case in point. Merely whipping up a batch of something nasty is indeed within the capabilities of many nefarious groups--whipping up a batch that actually works effectively is another matter, and requires some form of weaponization if it is to acheive its goals. and any sensible terrorist group will produce them in the targeted country itself anyway, to avoid the problem of bringing them across the border. Aung San has already demonstrated that this is perfectly feasible. And despite it being as simple as you state, they ultimately failed, creating the chemical equivalent of a "fizzle yield". To the governments of "rogue states" the message is that they need to develop WMD urgently if they want to avoid an US invasion, LOL! We went into Iraq *despite* our fears that we would indeed be subjecting ourselves to battlefield chemical and maybe biological attacks, and you *still* cling to this ridiculous idea? and the two other nominees for the "axis of evil" have already geared up their efforts. The result of the Bushiite policy will be a further proliferation of WMD, in areas with unstable governments. You conveniently left Libya out of your machinations here--wonder why? So, please Messr. Gustin, avoid making broad generalizations regarding the quality of the USA's elected government. I don't remember who it was that, at the time of the US independence, expressed his amazement that the British government of the time had never done anything right -- not even by mistake. That is about how I feel about the elected (well, more or less) US government. How do these people manage to squeeze an inept foreign policy, a foolish economic policy, a dangerous environmental policy, and an immoral judicial policy, to mention the most obvious elements, all in one term and one team? You would expect an elected government to have at least some areas of competence. My, what animus you do bear us! And you wonder why your ilk is not taken seriously by most of us over here? Believe me, if it turns out in November that somehow we will have to survive another four years of Bush, I will be deeply depressed and despairing indeed. Better start stocking up on that Prozac, then. And, I won't have to resort to discussing the pros and cons of Belgium's contributions to the modern world. Last time I checked, Guy Verhofstadt had somewhat less impact on world affairs to George Bush. In fact Guy Verhofstadt probably has less impact on events in Belgium than George Bush, but that's not entirely Bush's fault. Anyway, there is no need to suspect me of excessive sympathy for our PM; he is so full of hot air that you would expect him to fly. I don't believe Ed referred to your PM's contributions--he was referring to your entire *nation's* contributions, or lack thereof. Brooks -- Emmanuel Gustin Emmanuel dot Gustin @t skynet dot be |
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Emmanuel Gustin wrote:
In the case of Afghanistan this was an entirely valid reason. In the case of Iraq it was never more than a transparently flawed excuse I guess Abu Nidal and Abu Abbas were just vactioning in Iraq? Both of these men had proven track records of operations against the U.S. You don't need to have an Al Queda stamp on your forehead to be a threat to U.S. national security. Our big nemesis in Iraq now, al Zarqawi, fought against U.S. forces in Afghanistan, was injured and received treatment where? That's right, Bagdad, Iraq. Before the USA invaded the radicals had to remain in parts of the country that Bagdad did not control Abbas was caught in Baghdad and Abu Nidal was killed there. Are you saying the Iraqi government didn't control Baghdad? BUFDRVR "Stay on the bomb run boys, I'm gonna get those bomb doors open if it harelips everyone on Bear Creek" |
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Ed Rasimus wrote in message . ..
In a detailed response with some non-sequiturs and remarkable generalizations on Tue, 31 Aug 2004 16:21:13 +0200, "Emmanuel Gustin" wrote: "Ed Rasimus" wrote in message .. . As for the question of war, the single greatest factor that most commentators are overlooking is that the paradigm of war has changed dramatically. Has it? It is easy to claim a "paradigm shift" and use it as an excuse to throw the rules overboard, but irregular warfare and terrorism are nothing fundamentally new, and even the idea of a network across national boundaries can be traced back at least to the religious wars of the 16th century. Correct, but the magnitude of the change creates the shift. Since the Treaty of Westphalia, the emphasis of late nineteenth and all of twentieth century political interaction has been nation-state actors. With the late '80s, the seminal work of Samuel P. Huntington, "Clash of Civilizations" pinpointed the shift to regional and ideological bases for future conflicts. The current situation seems to support Huntington's conclusions. Besides, there was little about the conflict with Iraq that can be put in such a cadre. This was essentially a traditional conflict between two governments. The Iraqi regime aimed to remain in power; the US government aimed to overthrow the Iraqi regime and convert the country in an US-held stronghold in the oil-rich Middle East. There is nothing about the political aspects of such a conflict that is particularly novel. The novelty of the conflict is the inter-meshing of the Muslim fundamentalist across national boundaries (reflecting in the process a rejection of the artificially impossed "states" created in the post-colonial period. Certainly Iraq as a nation despite the three principal tribal entities demonstrates this as well as the warlords of Afghanistan. And the invasion of Iraq itself amounted to a fairly traditional form of warfare, on both sides. The USA used conventional tactics of mobile warfare with some modern refinements of intelligence gathering and targeting thrown in. And, strangely enough, Iraq also tried to fight a conventional war, avoiding the urban guerilla warfare that had been feared by commentators, and of course failing to use WMD. Despite the buzzword-speak of Pentagon press briefings, this was a conventional war between traditional armies; the biggest question about it is whether it will be the last of its kind. It most assuredly will not be the last of its kind unless the industrialized and developed world capitulates to the jihadist thugs. (Just to take this opportunity for a cheap shot--let's liken it to France/Belgium and the rise of Hitler's Germany.) The post-invasion occupation phase was again traditional enough, and predictable. It may look strange in the eyes of the US public because the nation has little experience in conquering and occupying foreign countries, but there are enough precedents, for example the US occupation of the Philippines. Politicians have been fooling themselves by invoking the misguided and misleading precedent of the occupation of Germany and Japan after WWII, but these were the exceptions, not the rule. Thank you for acknowledging our lack of experience in conquering and occupying. We most certainly did not "conquer" the Phillipines which were simply ceded to the US by Spain after the 1898 unpleasantness. But, we have provided a presence to rebuild, stabilize, industrialize and defend the result in a number of countries around the world, effectively debunking any assertions of colonial intent. (Nuther cheap shot--did so in your country as well. And, didn't leave such disasters as the Congo behind us either.) The enemy is not a traditional national actor any more, but rather a far-reaching network of terrorist agencies that don't wear uniforms, muster under a national flag or operate within the constraints of international law or conventional diplomacy. Once that fact is appreciated, then it becomes a bit more difficult to apply the conventional rules of justification for war and definition of combat areas. As for "far-reaching networks", let us be realistic. In a situation like this people usually imagine one big conspiracy to be their enemy, but the reality is always far more diffuse. This enemy is less a network than a scattering of radical groups, each with their own purposes, methods and presumably theology, who maintain informal contact; they may cooperate but they may also be hostile to one another. Specialists in conventional warfare always tend to think that if they can destroy the enemy's command-and-control structure, the war is half won; but this enemy shows few indications of having such a structure, and even less of actually needing one. The fight against it will require numerous small-scale operations, more on the pattern of a fight against organized crime (which often is organized in parallel to gather funds -- remember that the mafia started out as a resistance organisation, and drugs money from Afghanistan supported this generation of radicals) than of large-scale warfare. It seems that you've bought into the Kerry/Clinton "lib-speak" solution that the terrorist war is a law enforcement issue rather than a military one. That works for small subversive groups like Bader-Meinhoff or Red Army Faction, but not apparently as well for larger, better financed, ideologically/theologically motivated movements like the jihadists. Anyway, giving support to terrorist groups, or using them for your own purposes, is traditionally accepted as a good /casus belli/. (Remember Sarajevo, 1914.) There is no need to invent any new rules. In the case of Afghanistan this was an entirely valid reason. In the case of Iraq it was never more than a transparently flawed excuse. Before the USA invaded the radicals had to remain in parts of the country that Bagdad did not control -- and under US air cover. To use such presence as excuse for an invasion of Iraq is cynical. That's the argument from that side. However, the deep infiltration of the Shi'a by the likes of Al-zawahiri and his thugs, the tight alliance with the Iranian theocracy, the relationship with Syria, and the unifying aspects of anti-Americanism which supercede the more basic Shi'a/Sunni conflicts would give some credence to the other side of the argument. Only IF such events were real and not merely Neocon spin-doctoring. Both the US State Department and the Iraqi Foreign Ministry have said they don't have any evidence of Iranian support for al-Sadr, and despite all the White House - Pentagon talk about "foreign fighters" precious few have actually turned up "Suspected foreign fighters account for less than 2% of the 5,700 captives being held as security threats in Iraq, a strong indication that Iraqis are largely responsible for the stubborn insurgency." (Foreign detainees are few in Iraq - By Peter Eisler and Tom Squitieri, USA TODAY 7/5/2004) And, you certainly aren't extending your anti-war fervor to a defense of the Sadaam regime for the benefit of the Iraqi people, are you? The reality, even in the Middle East, is that primary goal of the radical islamist groups is to grab power in their own country, and for this reason they are usually being (brutally) suppressed by their own governments. Iraq was no exception. This US government has managed to play in the hands of both Arab dictatorships and islamist radicals by uniting them both against itself --- no mean achievement, but its heavy-handed approach is also succeeding in alienating even those governments that did maintain good relations with the USA. If the purpose was to create an ideal breeding ground for new terrorist organizations, George W. Bush could hardly do any better. "Heavy-handed"????? You know full well, that the heaviness of our hand could be considerably greater. We could easily have leveled Basra, Fallujah, Najaf, Tikrit and any strong-hold of resistance which we chose to. We have suffered unnecessary casualties and worked extremely diligently to rebuild the deteriorated and damaged infrastructure while attempting as rapidly as possible to turn over control to the people themselves. The progress has been several factors faster than it was following WW II in Germany/Japan. The fundamental dishonesty of this US government is in its refusal to discuss means. It identifies itself with the end goal of defeating terrorism; and it implies that this end will justify whatever means it chooses to use, while denying that there are any alternatives. But in fact, so far the methods it has adopted have been counterproductive; even the state department had to admit that terrorist activities are on the increase. Meanwhile the USA is losing its allies and its credibility and running out of the resources it needs to fight this war with. There are only two "allies" making noise and each squeals quite loudly when their economic ox gets gored. We most assuredly have not used ends to justify means. The means have been very tempered and the ends have been clearly established--principally stability in the Middle East. Since most of Europe is dependent (far more so than the US) on ME oil, you should begin to recognize your national self-interest. Terrorist activities are most assuredly not on the increase. There is potential certainly. And, increased awareness. But, the world at large has been quite calm. Exceptions have been extremely unfortunate (as well as unfortunately effective in the case of Spain, the Phillipines, and no Russia), but we haven't had an increase in high casualty attacks. Talking about hating us isn't much more than propaganda. Add to the changed paradigm the incredible potential for destruction of WMD and the removal of the foundation of one of the basic principles of deterrence, that of rational leadership on both sides of the deterrent equation, and you've provided a strong justification for a policy of pre-emption. The potential for destruction of WMD is routinely overrated, especially for biological and chemical weapons, by people who ignore the problem of distributing such agents over the intended victims. Wolfowitz probably did so intentionally, others may have done so out of simple ignorance. The same applies for 'dirty bombs'. Nevertheless, I agree that there is a very serious threat. I spent a lot of years of my life in the business of planned delivery of WMD and prepped for the defense against them. The "overrating" is quite realistic. You don't want to experience them. However, I do not see how a policy of 'pre-emption' by attacking countries that do not actually have WMD, while carefully avoiding a conflict with those that do, will help. To the terrorist groups themselves it makes very little difference: If they want chemical or biological weapons they can make them themselves, and any sensible terrorist group will produce them in the targeted country itself anyway, to avoid the problem of bringing them across the border. Aung San has already demonstrated that this is perfectly feasible. To the governments of "rogue states" the message is that they need to develop WMD urgently if they want to avoid an US invasion, and the two other nominees for the "axis of evil" have already geared up their efforts. The result of the Bushiite policy will be a further proliferation of WMD, in areas with unstable governments. It's a basic principle of international relations. You choose policy based on the efficacy. If diplomacy works, fine. If deterrence works, fine. If trade works, fine. If military force is the answer, then don't be reluctant to choose it. But, don't depend upon unlikely solutions to make your problems go away. Maginot anyone? So, please Messr. Gustin, avoid making broad generalizations regarding the quality of the USA's elected government. I don't remember who it was that, at the time of the US independence, expressed his amazement that the British government of the time had never done anything right -- not even by mistake. That is about how I feel about the elected (well, more or less) US government. How do these people manage to squeeze an inept foreign policy, a foolish economic policy, a dangerous environmental policy, and an immoral judicial policy, to mention the most obvious elements, all in one term and one team? You would expect an elected government to have at least some areas of competence. Here, you don't have a clue. Foolish economic policy is socialist redistribution of wealth from the producers to the non-productive. Environmental policy that protects at the expense of jobs, quality of life, long-term impact is emotional and not practical. (Note the costs of Kyoto and the number of non-signatories that have followed US leadership!) "Immoral" judicial policy? As for the "more or less" comment about elected government, you quite clearly are unfamiliar with our Constitution process for choosing a chief executive. The process took place exactly as described and the disagreements were resolved exactly in accordance with the law. We don't have national popular elections. The participants all know that going into the process. It has worked for 215 years now. Our government has considerable competence. Simply because the leftist Euro press doesn't like it doesn't make it incompetent. Believe me, if it turns out in November that somehow we will have to survive another four years of Bush, I will be deeply depressed and despairing indeed. And, I'll be paying lower taxes, living more securely, not having my property confiscated, and enjoying life. And, I won't have to resort to discussing the pros and cons of Belgium's contributions to the modern world. Last time I checked, Guy Verhofstadt had somewhat less impact on world affairs to George Bush. In fact Guy Verhofstadt probably has less impact on events in Belgium than George Bush, but that's not entirely Bush's fault. Anyway, there is no need to suspect me of excessive sympathy for our PM; he is so full of hot air that you would expect him to fly. So, you begin to express some form of desire for anarchy. Ed Rasimus Fighter Pilot (USAF-Ret) "When Thunder Rolled" "Phantom Flights, Bangkok Nights" Both from Smithsonian Books ***www.thunderchief.org |
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Anyone interested in pre-emptive and preventative war, and its likely role in
American foreign policy, could do no better than read Michael Walzer’s "Just and Unjust Wars: A Moral Argument with Historical Illustrations." First published in 1977, updated versions taking into account more recent events, have appeared. It is studied in Ivy League and armed forces academy poly sci classes, the students of which generally intend to pursue careers in statescraft or the military. It has influenced, among other significant personages, Kenneth Pollack, Director for Persian Gulf Affairs, National Security Council, in the Carter Administration, and author of "The Threatening Storm: The Case for Invading Iraq," as well as Philip Bobbitt, Senior Director for Strategic Planning, National Security Council, in the Clinton Administration, and author of "The Shield of Achilles: War and Peace in the Course of History." It should be pointed out that all the above men are more or less left-of-center politically, and Democrats, but both Pollack and Bobbitt have been influential in shaping the Bush Administration's Iraq policy, using, at least in part Walzer's (an ardent Vietnam War critic) ideas. If nothing else, reading Walzer will provide insight into why Sir Arthur Harris was treated the way he was after WW2 was over. Chris Mark |
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From: xmarx467@
Kenneth Pollack, Director for Persian Gulf Affairs, National Security Council, in the Carter Administration, Meant Clinton Administration. Chris Mark |
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Thelasian wrote:
[huge snippage de crap] Only IF such events were real.... [yet another huge snippage de crap] Thelasian, Your USENET archived posts indicate you are an anti-Israeli pro-Iranian demagogue, or would be if you had a more significant forum than USENET. As it is you are simply another bigot whose contributions to the group are solely for the purpose of propagandizing, and basically lying in a loud voice, in order to obscure the reality of your personal, political, and military circumstances. Those who attempt to counter your arguments here on r.a.m. do so only in the faint hope that they may provide a clear view of reality to the uncertain lurkers here, rather than with the hope that you and your kind might be redeemed. Yours and ours will eventually meet on the battlefield, unfortunately the only place where such differences can ultimately be decided, and you will be utterly destroyed. Bring it on. -- Jack ---- "He whose vision cannot cover History's three thousand years, Must in outer darkness hover, Live within the day's frontiers. -- Goethe |
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