http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/la-oe-betts14aug14,0,6767472.story?coll=la-opinion-rightrail
   
   
  How Superpowers Become Impotent   
  In Lebanon and Iraq, guerrilla tactics turn clean, mean fighting machines 
into wimps.
   
  By Richard K. Betts, RICHARD K. BETTS is director of the Saltzman Institute 
of War and Peace Studies at Columbia University.
August 14, 2006 
  
 
  BEING A superpower is handy. No government in the world dares stand up to the 
United States on a regular battlefield. Having more than a quarter of the 
world's GDP and a half-trillion-dollar defense budget gets us that much — and 
it's a lot.

Israel is a superpower in its neighborhood too. And yet these two militarily 
muscular powers find themselves strategically impotent in the face of age-old 
guerrilla tactics married to high-tech capabilities.
   
  The U.S. and Israel are perfectly equipped to knock out Iraqis, the Taliban 
or Hezbollah — as long as they act like good enemies and come at us in tanks, 
planes and ships. 

But as anyone watching the news knows, these enemies are not stupid, so they do 
not cooperate by fighting in the way we are suited to beat. Instead, in 
Afghanistan, the resurgent Taliban pins down NATO forces in hit-and-run 
attacks. In Iraq, opponents stymie U.S. control with roadside bombs, sniping 
and raids. From Lebanon, Hezbollah fires missiles into Israel's heartland. And 
on the Internet, Al Qaeda boasts that it will use radiological weapons.

Along with suicide terrorism and a willingness to incur massive civilian 
casualties on their own side, these guerrilla tactics threaten to transform 
nationalist insurgents and Islamist terrorists from manageable irritants, who 
cause suffering but never severely damage a great power, into formidable 
threats to the basic security of the U.S. and its allies

These frightening developments are a wake-up call for U.S. policy. We need to 
focus not just on polishing our military strategy but on which fights are 
winnable at an acceptable cost. We need to choose our battles more carefully. 
The ones we choose should be fought with overwhelming force, as Colin Powell 
wisely counseled, but also with overwhelming help to conquered populations who 
must be won over if peace is to take hold. 

We have no reason to be surprised by our messes in Iraq and Afghanistan, but 
our military successes since the 1991 Persian Gulf War made many forget what 
previous generations learned painfully about unconventional warfare: Guerrillas 
and terrorists plot in secret, rarely wear uniforms and hide among the civilian 
population. Despite illusions about precision-guided bombs, regular military 
forces cannot rout them without killing lots of the civilians. 

To win with our conventional military, we would have to fight like beasts, 
slaughtering noncombatants. Americans rightly shrink from this in Iraq, but we 
are stuck, with no victory in sight. Israelis, feeling their backs to the wall, 
used military power with less restraint in Lebanon, killing hundreds of 
civilians to maximize the odds of getting Hezbollah soldiers and supplies. But 
this approach is self-defeating, spreading bitterness among victims that 
mobilizes more support for Hezbollah.

Short of barbarism, there are only two ways to reduce guerrilla ranks faster 
than new recruits refill them. One is to rely on special forces such as Green 
Berets, but the few we have are spread thin in hot spots around the world. The 
other is to saturate a country with regular troops standing on every street 
corner. But our Army is too small to do this in more than one country at a time.

Foreign occupiers face high hurdles in overcoming local nationalist opposition. 
The best chance is to try "shock and awe" in occupation as well as in war. 
First: a dense presence of occupation forces. This would have meant half a 
million U.S. soldiers in Iraq to show the locals from the start that we were 
really in charge. We tried to get by with 150,000, which only showed how little 
we could control. Second: a quick and massive infusion of economic aid, 
construction, medical services and training. If civilians in Afghanistan and 
Iraq had jobs, air conditioning, genuine police protection and medical care 
soon after the invasion, the insurgencies might not have gained traction. 

As it was, the U.S. did these things only in dribs and drabs. We had no serious 
plan to co-opt conquered populations. This may sound like bribery, but it is 
better than the daily application of firepower to tamp down chaos. Yes, lots of 
money was pumped into Iraqi and Afghan reconstruction, but it was a small 
proportion of the more than $200 billion spent on the wars so far. Bribery 
might not work, but without it, locals have fewer reasons to prefer foreign 
occupiers to homegrown resisters.

So both great powers are mired in inconclusive attempts to pacify an exploding 
Middle East. With the hopes of peace in tatters, Israelis face narrowing 
options. Americans, however, blessed by geography, have more choice. The Bush 
line that aggressive action in Iraq was the way to counter terrorism got it 
backward; it has embittered more Muslims and energized more terrorists than it 
has eliminated. We need to focus on combating Al Qaeda, not multiplying new 
enemies. Where we do have to invade — as in Afghanistan after Sept. 11 — we 
should do so with overwhelming force and overwhelming help, to tempt the locals 
to buy into our brand of peace so we can leave quickly. 


                
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