Earthlings. Our link was disrupted yesterday noon by darker forces
which I've just defeated.  Peaceful occupation and joy will ensue.
Tom Cruise

Hope some get the above. Back to biz. Here's a cogent and timely
essay.  -Ed

http://www.tomdispatch.com/post/174996/andrew_bacevich_strategic_vacuum

Strategic Vacuum

By Andrew Bacevich,
Tomgram: Thursday, October 30, 2008 11:04 am

Even as the Bush presidency wears down, the Global War on Terror only
expands. Perhaps the word should be "metastasizes." Just this week, the U.S.
military, using SOFA-less Iraq as its launching pad, sent four helicopters
with U.S. special forces soldiers across the Syrian border in an operation
in which a number of people were killed. (The Syrians claim the assault was
on a farm and that "a father and his three children, the farm's guard and
his wife, and a fisherman" all died; the U.S. claims that its forces took
out a key al-Qaeda in Mesopotamia operative.) After a several day delay,
American officials told the Washington Post that the raid was "intended to
send a warning to the Syrian government. 'You have to clean up the global
threat that is in your backyard, and if you won't do that, we are left with
no choice but to take these matters into our hands,' said a senior U.S.
official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity
of the cross-border strike."

It was also an operation, according to Eric Schmitt and Thom Shanker of the
New York Times, that may have been meant as a warning to Iran. Perhaps the
most important party being signaled, however, was the next administration.
They were undoubtedly being reminded that Bush Rules should rule the future,
that no sovereignty but American sovereignty is ever worth a hill of beans,
and that a newly enunciated Bush Doctrine "principle" -- "you can only claim
sovereignty if you enforce it" -- should not be abandoned. A gaggle of
unnamed "senior American officials," whispering to Schmitt and Shanker,
"expressed hope" that such a doctrine "would be embraced by the next
president as well."

At the very least, they are ensuring that, when that next president enters
the Oval Office, he will be embroiled in a wider war across an inflamed
Middle East. As the ground war in Afghanistan has grown worse, for example,
another border-crossing set of actions, a CIA-operated air war in the
Pakistani borderlands, only increases in intensity. The Times recently
offered the following figures on its front page: "at least 18 Predator
[missile-armed drone] strikes since the beginning of August, some deep
inside Pakistan's tribal areas, compared with 5 strikes during the first
seven months of 2008."

In Afghanistan itself, an increasingly unpopular U.S. air war, with all its
"collateral damage," continues. Only last week, in a "friendly fire"
incident, American planes leveled an Afghan Army checkpoint, killing nine
Afghan soldiers and wounding three. (After its usual initial reluctance, the
Pentagon magnanimously blamed those casualties on "a case of mistaken
identity on both sides.") And southwest of Kabul, reports came in that
another American air strike had killed at least 20 private security guards
for a road construction project.

You can say one thing: To the bitter end the Bush administration clings to a
fundamentalist belief that military power offers the royal path to all
solutions. It's a conclusion that has already left an area from Somalia to
Central Asia unsettled and increasingly aflame, and that seems only to draw
more nations into the President's "global war" with, as Andrew Bacevich
makes vividly clear, ever less of a rationale. You can listen to a podcast
interview with Bacevich, whose bestselling book The Limits of Power: The End
of American Exceptionalism is a must for your post-election bookshelf, by
clicking here. Tom


  Expanding War, Contracting Meaning

The Next President and the Global War on Terror
 By Andrew J. Bacevich

  A week ago, I had a long conversation with a four-star U.S. military
officer who, until his recent retirement, had played a central role in
directing the global war on terror. I asked him: what exactly is the
strategy that guides the Bush administration's conduct of this war? His
dismaying, if not exactly surprising, answer: there is none.

  President Bush will bequeath to his successor the ultimate self-licking
ice cream cone. To defense contractors, lobbyists, think-tankers, ambitious
military officers, the hosts of Sunday morning talk shows, and the Douglas
Feith-like creatures who maneuver to become players in the ultimate power
game, the Global War on Terror is a boon, an enterprise redolent with
opportunity and promising to extend decades into the future.

  Yet, to a considerable extent, that very enterprise has become a fiction,
a gimmicky phrase employed to lend an appearance of cohesion to a panoply of
activities that, in reality, are contradictory, counterproductive, or at the
very least beside the point. In this sense, the global war on terror relates
to terrorism precisely as the war on drugs relates to drug abuse and
dependence: declaring a state of permanent "war" sustains the pretense of
actually dealing with a serious problem, even as policymakers pay
lip-service to the problem's actual sources. The war on drugs is a very
expensive fraud. So, too, is the Global War on Terror.

  Anyone intent on identifying some unifying idea that explains U.S.
actions, military and otherwise, across the Greater Middle East is in for a
disappointment. During World War II, President Franklin D. Roosevelt laid
down "Germany first" and then "unconditional surrender" as core principles.
Early in the Cold War, the Truman administration devised the concept of
containment, which for decades thereafter provided a conceptual framework to
which policymakers adhered. Yet seven years into its Global War on Terror,
the Bush administration is without a compass, wandering in the arid
wilderness. To the extent that any inkling of a strategy once existed -- the
preposterous neoconservative vision of employing American power to
"transform" the Islamic world -- events have long since demolished the
assumptions on which it was based.

  Rather than one single war, the United States is presently engaged in
several

  Ranking first in importance is the war for Bush's legacy, better known as
Iraq. The President himself will never back away from his insistence that
here lies the "central front" of the conflict he initiated after 9/11.
Hunkered down in their bunker, Bush and his few remaining supporters would
have us believe that the "surge" has, at long last, brought victory in sight
and with it some prospect of redeeming this otherwise misbegotten and
mismanaged endeavor. If the President can leave office spouting assurances
that light is finally visible somewhere at the far end of a very long, very
dark Mesopotamian tunnel, he will claim at least partial vindication. And if
actual developments subsequent to January 20 don't turn out well, he can
always blame the outcome on his successor.

  Next comes the orphan war. This is Afghanistan, a conflict now in its
eighth year with no signs of ending anytime soon. Given the attention
lavished on Iraq, developments in Afghanistan have until recently attracted
only intermittent notice. Lately, however, U.S. officials have awakened to
the fact that things are going poorly, both politically and militarily. Al
Qaeda persists. The Taliban is reasserting itself. Expectations that NATO
might ride to the rescue have proven illusory. Apart from enabling
Afghanistan to reclaim its status as the world's number one producer of
opium, U.S. efforts to pacify that nation and nudge it toward modernity have
produced little.

  The Pentagon calls its intervention in Afghanistan Operation Enduring
Freedom. The emphasis was supposed to be on the noun. Unfortunately, the
adjective conveys the campaign's defining characteristic: enduring as in
endless. Barring a radical re-definition of purpose, this is an enterprise
which promises to continue, consuming lives and treasure, for a long, long
time.

  In neighboring Pakistan, meanwhile, there is the
war-hidden-in-plain-sight. Reports of U.S. military action in Pakistan have
now become everyday fare. Air strikes, typically launched from
missile-carrying drones, are commonplace, and U.S. ground forces have also
conducted at least one cross-border raid from inside Afghanistan. Although
the White House doesn't call this a war, it is -- a gradually escalating war
of attrition in which we are killing both terrorists and noncombatants.
Unfortunately, we are killing too few of the former to make a difference and
more than enough of the latter to facilitate the recruitment of new
terrorists to replace those we eliminate.

  Finally -- skipping past the wars-in-waiting, which are Syria and Iran --
there is Condi's war. This clash, which does not directly involve U.S.
forces, may actually be the most important of all. The war that Secretary of
State Condoleezza Rice has made her own is the ongoing conflict between
Israel and the Palestinians. Having for years dismissed the insistence of
Muslims, Arabs and non-Arabs alike, that the plight of the Palestinians
constitutes a problem of paramount importance, Rice now embraces that view.
With the fervor of a convert, she has vowed to broker an end to that
conflict prior to leaving office in January 2009.

  Given that Rice brings little -- perhaps nothing -- to the effort in the
way of fresh ideas, her prospects of making good as a peacemaker appear
slight. Yet, as with Bush and Iraq, so too with Rice and the Palestinian
problem: she has a lot riding on the effort. If she flops, history will
remember her as America's least effective secretary of state since Cordell
Hull spent World War II being ignored, bypassed, and humiliated by Franklin
Roosevelt. She will depart Foggy Bottom having accomplished nothing.

  There's nothing inherently wrong in fighting simultaneously on several
fronts, as long as actions on front A are compatible with those on front B,
and together contribute to overall success. Unfortunately, that is not the
case with the Global War on Terror. We have instead an illustration of what
Winston Churchill once referred to as a pudding without a theme: a war
devoid of strategic purpose.

  This absence of cohesion -- by now a hallmark of the Bush
administration -- is both a disaster and an opportunity. It is a disaster in
the sense that we have, over the past seven years, expended enormous
resources, while gaining precious little in return.

  Bush's supporters beg to differ, of course. They credit the president with
having averted a recurrence of 9/11, doubtless a commendable achievement but
one primarily attributable to the fact that the United States no longer
neglects airport security. To argue that, say, the invasion and occupation
of Iraq have prevented terrorist attacks against the United States is the
equivalent of contending that Israel's occupation of the West Bank since in
1967 has prevented terrorist attacks against the state of Israel.

  Yet the existing strategic vacuum is also an opportunity. When it comes to
national security at least, the agenda of the next administration all but
sets itself. There is no need to waste time arguing about which issues
demand priority action.

  First-order questions are begging for attention. How should we gauge the
threat? What are the principles that should inform our response? What forms
of power are most relevant to implementing that response? Are the means at
hand adequate to the task? If not, how should national priorities be
adjusted to provide the means required? Given the challenges ahead, how
should the government organize itself? Who -- both agencies and
individuals -- will lead?

  To each and every one of these questions, the Bush administration devised
answers that turned out to be dead wrong. The next administration needs to
do better. The place to begin is with the candid recognition that the Global
War on Terror has effectively ceased to exist. When it comes to national
security strategy, we need to start over from scratch.

  Andrew J. Bacevich is professor of history and international relations at
Boston University. His bestselling new book is The Limits of Power: The End
of American Exceptionalism (The American Empire Project, Metropolitan
Books). To listen to a podcast in which he discusses issues relevant to this
article, click here.


  Copyright 2008 Andrew Bacevich


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