Naming
Our Nameless War
How
Many Years Will It Be?
by Andrew
J. Bacevich
For well over a decade now
the United States has been “a nation at war.” Does that
war have a name?
It did at
the outset. After 9/11, George W. Bush's administration wasted
no time in announcing that the U.S. was engaged in a Global
War on Terrorism, or GWOT. With
few dissenters, the media quickly embraced the term. The GWOT
promised to be a gargantuan, transformative enterprise. The conflict
begun on 9/11 would define the age. In neoconservative circles, it
was known as World War IV.
Upon succeeding to the
presidency in 2009, however, Barack Obama without fanfare junked
Bush’s formulation (as he did again in a speech at the National
Defense University last week). Yet if the appellation went
away, the conflict itself, shorn of identifying marks, continued.
Does it matter that ours has
become and remains a nameless war? Very much so.
Names bestow meaning.
When it comes to war, a name attached to a date can shape our
understanding of what the conflict was all about. To specify
when a war began and when it ended is to privilege certain
explanations of its significance while discrediting others. Let me
provide a few illustrations.
With rare
exceptions, Americans today characterize the horrendous fraternal
bloodletting of 1861-1865 as the Civil
War. Yet not many decades ago,
diehard supporters of the Lost Cause insisted on referring to that
conflict as the War Between the States
or the War for Southern Independence
(or even the War of Northern
Aggression). The South may have
gone down in defeat, but the purposes for which Southerners had
fought -- preserving a distinctive way of life and the principle of
states’ rights -- had been worthy, even noble. So at
least they professed to believe, with their preferred names for the
war reflecting that belief.
Schoolbooks
tell us that the Spanish-American War
began in April 1898 and ended in August of that same year. The
name and dates fit nicely with a widespread inclination from
President William McKinley’s day to our own to frame U.S.
intervention in Cuba as an altruistic effort to liberate that island
from Spanish oppression.
Yet the
Cubans were not exactly bystanders in that drama. By 1898, they
had been fighting for years to oust their colonial overlords.
And although hostilities in Cuba itself ended on August 12th, they
dragged on in the Philippines, another Spanish colony that the United
States had seized for reasons only remotely related to liberating
Cubans. Notably, U.S. troops occupying the Philippines waged a
brutal war not against Spaniards but against Filipino nationalists no
more inclined to accept colonial rule by Washington than by Madrid.
So widen the aperture to include this Cuban prelude and the Filipino
postlude and you end up with something like this: The
Spanish-American-Cuban-Philippines War of 1895-1902.
Too clunky? How about the War for
the American Empire? This much
is for sure: rather than illuminating, the commonplace textbook
descriptor serves chiefly to conceal.
Strange as
it may seem, Europeans once referred to the calamitous events of
1914-1918 as the Great War.
When Woodrow Wilson decided in 1917 to send an army of doughboys to
fight alongside the Allies, he went beyond Great. According to
the president, the Great War
was going to be the War To End All
Wars. Alas, things did not pan
out as he expected. Perhaps anticipating the demise of his
vision of permanent peace, War Department General Order 115, issued
on October 7, 1919, formally declared that, at least as far as the
United States was concerned, the recently concluded hostilities would
be known simply as the World War.
In
September 1939 -- presto chango!
-- the World War suddenly
became the First World War, the
Nazi invasion of Poland having inaugurated a Second
World War, also known as World
War II or more cryptically WWII.
To be sure, Soviet dictator Josef
Stalin preferred the Great Patriotic
War. Although this found instant
-- almost unanimous -- favor among Soviet citizens, it did not catch
on elsewhere.
Does World
War II accurately capture the events
it purports to encompass? With the crusade against the Axis now
ranking alongside the crusade against slavery as a myth-enshrouded
chapter in U.S. history to which all must pay homage, Americans are
no more inclined to consider that question than to consider why a
playoff to determine the professional baseball championship of North
America constitutes a “World Series.”
In fact,
however convenient and familiar, World
War II is misleading and not
especially useful. The period in question saw at least two
wars, each only tenuously connected to the other, each having
distinctive origins, each yielding a different outcome. To
separate them is to transform the historical landscape.
On the one
hand, there was the Pacific War,
pitting the United States against Japan. Formally initiated by
the December 7, 1941, attack on Pearl Harbor, it had in fact begun a
decade earlier when Japan embarked upon a policy of armed conquest in
Manchuria. At stake was the question of who would dominate East
Asia. Japan’s crushing defeat at the hands of the United
States, sealed by two atomic bombs in 1945, answered that question
(at least for a time).
Then there
was the European
War, pitting Nazi Germany first
against Great Britain and France, but ultimately against a grand
alliance led by the United States, the Soviet Union, and a fast
fading British Empire. At stake was the question of who would
dominate Europe. Germany’s defeat resolved that issue (at
least for a time): no one would. To prevent any single power
from controlling Europe, two outside powers divided it.
This
division served as the basis for the ensuing Cold
War, which wasn’t actually cold,
but also (thankfully) wasn’t World
War III,
the retrospective insistence of
bellicose neoconservatives notwithstanding.
But when did the Cold War
begin? Was it in early 1947, when President Harry Truman
decided that Stalin’s Russia posed a looming threat and
committed the United States to a strategy of containment? Or
was it in 1919, when Vladimir Lenin decided that Winston Churchill’s
vow to “strangle Bolshevism in its cradle” posed a
looming threat to the Russian Revolution, with an ongoing
Anglo-American military intervention evincing a determination to make
good on that vow?
Separating
the war against Nazi Germany from the war against Imperial Japan
opens up another interpretive possibility. If you incorporate
the European conflict of 1914-1918 and the European conflict of
1939-1945 into a single narrative, you get a Second
Thirty Years War (the first having
occurred from 1618-1648) -- not so much a contest of good against
evil, as a mindless exercise in self-destruction that represented the
ultimate expression of European folly.
So, yes, it matters what we
choose to call the military enterprise we’ve been waging not
only in Iraq and Afghanistan, but also in any number of other
countries scattered hither and yon across the Islamic world.
Although the Obama administration appears no more interested than the
Bush administration in saying when that enterprise will actually end,
the date we choose as its starting point also matters.
Although Washington seems in
no hurry to name its nameless war -- and will no doubt settle on
something self-serving or anodyne if it ever finally addresses the
issue -- perhaps we should jump-start the process. Let’s
consider some possible options, names that might actually explain
what’s going on.
The
Long War: Coined not long after
9/11 by senior officers in the Pentagon, this formulation never
gained traction with either civilian officials or the general public.
Yet the Long War deserves
consideration, even though -- or perhaps because -- it has lost its
luster with the passage of time.
At
the outset, it connoted
grand ambitions buoyed by extreme confidence in the efficacy of
American military might. This was going to be one for the ages,
a multi-generational conflict yielding sweeping results.
The Long
War did begin on a hopeful note.
The initial entry into Afghanistan and then into Iraq seemed to
herald “home by Christmas” triumphal parades. Yet
this soon proved an illusion as victory slipped from Washington’s
grasp. By 2005 at the latest, events in the field had dashed
the neo-Wilsonian expectations nurtured back home.
With the
conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan dragging on, “long”
lost its original connotation. Instead of “really
important," it became a synonym for “interminable.”
Today, the Long War does
succinctly capture the experience of American soldiers who have
endured multiple combat deployments to Iraq and Afghanistan.
For Long
War combatants, the object of the
exercise has become to persist. As for winning, it’s not
in the cards. The Long War just
might conclude by the end of 2014 if President Obama keeps his pledge
to end the U.S. combat role in Afghanistan and if he avoids getting
sucked into Syria’s civil war. So the troops may hope.
The
War Against Al-Qaeda: It began in
August 1996 when Osama bin Laden issued a "Declaration of War
against the Americans Occupying the Land of the Two Holy Places,”
i.e., Saudi Arabia. In February 1998, a second bin Laden
manifesto announced that killing Americans, military and civilian
alike, had become “an individual duty for every Muslim who can
do it in any country in which it is possible to do it.”
Although President Bill
Clinton took notice, the U.S. response to bin Laden’s
provocations was limited and ineffectual. Only after 9/11 did
Washington take this threat seriously. Since then, apart from a
pointless excursion into Iraq (where, in Saddam Hussein’s day,
al-Qaeda did not exist), U.S. attention has been focused on
Afghanistan, where U.S. troops have waged the longest war in American
history, and on Pakistan’s tribal borderlands, where a CIA
drone campaign is ongoing. By the end of President Obama’s
first term, U.S. intelligence agencies were reporting that a combined
CIA/military campaign had largely destroyed bin Laden’s
organization. Bin Laden himself, of course, was dead.
Could the
United States have declared victory in its unnamed war at this
point? Perhaps, but it gave little thought to doing so.
Instead, the national security apparatus had already trained its
sights on various al-Qaeda “franchises” and wannabes,
militant groups claiming the bin Laden brand and waging their own
version of jihad.
These offshoots emerged in the Maghreb, Yemen, Somalia, Nigeria, and
-- wouldn’t you know it -- post-Saddam Iraq, among other
places. The question as to whether they actually posed a danger
to the United States got, at best, passing attention -- the label
“al-Qaeda” eliciting the same sort of Pavlovian response
that the word “communist” once did.
Americans should not expect
this war to end anytime soon. Indeed, the Pentagon’s
impresario of special operations recently speculated -- by no means
unhappily -- that it would continue globally for “at least 10
to 20 years.” Freely translated, his statement
undoubtedly means: “No one really knows, but we’re
planning to keep at it for one helluva long time.”
The
War For/Against/About Israel: It
began in 1948. For many Jews, the founding of the state of
Israel signified an ancient hope fulfilled. For many
Christians, conscious of the sin of anti-Semitism that had culminated
in the Holocaust, it offered a way to ease guilty consciences, albeit
mostly at others’ expense. For many Muslims, especially
Arabs, and most acutely Arabs who had been living in Palestine, the
founding of the Jewish state represented a grave injustice. It
was yet another unwelcome intrusion engineered by the West --
colonialism by another name.
Recounting the ensuing
struggle without appearing to take sides is almost impossible.
Yet one thing seems clear: in terms of military involvement, the
United States attempted in the late 1940s and 1950s to keep its
distance. Over the course of the 1960s, this changed. The
U.S. became Israel’s principal patron, committed to maintaining
(and indeed increasing) its military superiority over its neighbors.
In the decades that followed,
the two countries forged a multifaceted “strategic
relationship.” A compliant Congress provided Israel with
weapons and other assistance worth many billions of dollars,
testifying to what has become an unambiguous and irrevocable U.S.
commitment to the safety and well-being of the Jewish state.
The two countries share technology and intelligence. Meanwhile,
just as Israel had disregarded U.S. concerns when it came to
developing nuclear weapons, it ignored persistent U.S. requests that
it refrain from colonizing territory that it has conquered.
When it
comes to identifying the minimal essential requirements of Israeli
security and the terms that will define any Palestinian-Israeli peace
deal, the United States defers to Israel. That may qualify as
an overstatement, but only slightly. Given the Israeli
perspective on those requirements and those terms -- permanent
military supremacy and a permanently demilitarized Palestine allowed
limited sovereignty -- the War
For/Against/About Israel is unlikely
to end anytime soon either. Whether the United States benefits
from the perpetuation of this war is difficult to say, but we are in
it for the long haul.
The
War for the Greater Middle East: I
confess that this is the name I would choose for Washington’s
unnamed war and is, in fact, the title of a course I teach. (A
tempting alternative is the Second Hundred Years War, the "first"
having begun in 1337 and ended in 1453.)
This war
is about to hit the century mark, its opening chapter coinciding with
the onset of World War I.
Not long after the fighting on
the Western Front in Europe had settled into a stalemate, the British
government, looking for ways to gain the upper hand, set out to
dismantle the Ottoman Empire whose rulers had foolishly thrown in
their lot with the German Reich against the Allies.
By the time the war ended
with Germany and the Turks on the losing side, Great Britain had
already begun to draw up new boundaries, invent states, and install
rulers to suit its predilections, while also issuing mutually
contradictory promises to groups inhabiting these new precincts of
its empire. Toward what end? Simply put, the British were
intent on calling the shots from Egypt to India, whether by governing
through intermediaries or ruling directly. The result was a new
Middle East and a total mess.
London presided over this
mess, albeit with considerable difficulty, until the end of World War
II. At this point, by abandoning efforts to keep Arabs and
Zionists from one another's throats in Palestine and by accepting the
partition of India, they signaled their intention to throw in the
towel. Alas, Washington proved more than willing to assume Britain’s
role. The lure of oil was strong. So too were the fears,
however overwrought, of the Soviets extending their influence into
the region.
Unfortunately, the Americans
enjoyed no more success in promoting long-term, pro-Western stability
than had the British. In some respects, they only made things
worse, with the joint CIA-MI6 overthrow of a democratically elected
government in Iran in 1953 offering a prime example of a “success”
that, to this day, has never stopped breeding disaster.
Only after
1980 did things get really interesting, however. The Carter
Doctrine promulgated that year designated the Persian Gulf a vital
national security interest and opened the door to greatly increased
U.S. military activity not just in the Gulf, but also throughout the
Greater Middle East (GME). Between 1945 and 1980, considerable
numbers of American soldiers lost their lives fighting in Asia and
elsewhere. During that period, virtually none were killed
fighting in the GME. Since 1990, in contrast, virtually none
have been killed fighting anywhere except
in the GME.
What does
the United States hope to achieve in its inherited and unending War
for the Greater Middle East? To
pacify the region? To remake it in our image? To drain
its stocks of petroleum? Or just keeping the lid on?
However you define the war’s aims, things have not gone well,
which once again suggests that, in some form, it will continue for
some time to come. If there’s any good news here, it’s
the prospect of having ever more material for my seminar, which may
soon expand into a two-semester course.
The
War Against Islam: This war began
nearly 1,000 years ago and continued for centuries, a storied
collision between Christendom and the Muslim ummah.
For a couple of hundred years, periodic eruptions of large-scale
violence occurred until the conflict finally petered out with the
last crusade sometime in the fourteenth century.
In those days, many people
had deemed religion something worth fighting for, a proposition to
which the more sophisticated present-day inhabitants of Christendom
no longer subscribe. Yet could that religious war have resumed
in our own day? Professor Samuel Huntington thought so,
although he styled the conflict a “clash of civilizations.”
Some militant radical Islamists agree with Professor Huntington,
citing as evidence the unwelcome meddling of “infidels,”
mostly wearing American uniforms, in various parts of the Muslim
world. Some militant evangelical Christians endorse this
proposition, even if they take a more favorable view of U.S. troops
occupying and drones targeting Muslim countries.
In explaining the position of
the United States government, religious scholars like George W. Bush
and Barack (Hussein!) Obama have consistently expressed a contrary
view. Islam is a religion of peace, they declare, part of the
great Abrahamic triad. That the other elements of that triad
are likewise committed to peace is a proposition that Bush, Obama,
and most Americans take for granted, evidence not required.
There should be no reason why Christians, Jews, and Muslims can’t
live together in harmony.
Still,
remember back in 2001 when, in an unscripted moment, President Bush
described the war barely begun as a “crusade”? That
was just a slip of the tongue, right? If not, we just might end
up calling this one the Eternal War.
Andrew
J. Bacevich is a professor of history and international relations at
Boston University and a TomDispatch
regular. His next book, Breach
of Trust: How Americans Failed Their Soldiers and Their Country,
will appear in September.
Follow
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Changing Face of Empire: Special Ops, Drones, Proxy Fighters, Secret
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Copyright 2013 Andrew J.
Bacevich
Thanks to TomDispatch.com –
where this article originally appearsed, without the God of War image.
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