Thursday Column
Warfighting 101
"A universal peace ... is in the catalogue of events, which will never exist but in the imaginations of visionary philosophers, or in the breasts of benevolent enthusiasts." --James Madison
The Long Road AheadI spent much of the last week participating in a national security forum organized by the Air War College and hosted by the Twelfth Air Force and the 355th Fighter Wing at Davis-Monthan AFB.
Discussing the challenges of Operation Iraqi Freedom (OIF) and the surge for Operation Enduring Freedom (OEF) in Afghanistan with command personnel makes for lively debate, but the best part of these forums is incidental -- the opportunity to meet many enlisted airmen and those flying the planes they make ready.
I have been on military bases across the nation, and without fail I am most impressed by the young uniformed Patriots who are the foundation of our military might. Simply put, their dedication, talent and spirit are second to none.
In a nation where most young people are devoted, first and foremost, to themselves, our young airmen, sailors, soldiers, coast guardsmen and Marines serve a much higher calling, true to their oaths to "support and defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic..." If only their civilian political leaders were true to the same.
Among other operations around the world, these young people, and those in their chain of command, have made enormous progress toward establishing a functional democracy in the heart of the Middle East, Iraq. And despite what Vice President Joe Biden may believe, this remarkable achievement is theirs, not his.
After launching military operations against Iraq in 2003, our enemies were greatly emboldened by traitors on the Left and their Leftmedia minions, especially those running cover stories such as Newsweek's "We're losing..." proclamation.
In a debate some years ago with a professor from MIT who had written many policy papers on why we should not have prosecuted OIF, I asked him how many papers he had written on the consequences had we not prosecuted OIF. That query returned a classic "deer in the headlights" gaze.
My point, of course, was that it's easy to criticize anything past or under way. Hindsight can be 20/20, but military battle plans rarely withstand the first shots fired, which is to say that you start where your boots are, and fight on from there.
All those Leftist talking points notwithstanding, Iraq is now well on the way to restoring its once great Mesopotamian heritage.
To the east of Iraq, on the far side of another Islamic trouble spot, Iran, our military forces now face a daunting task in Afghanistan, a very different battlefront.
I was in the region shortly after the Soviets retreated in 1989, and I can tell you that this vast, desolate moonscape offers little more than a meager subsistence for even the most seasoned tribal people.
Consequently, Afghanistan has two -- and only two -- exports: heroin and terrorism, and not necessarily in that order.
Since we first launched strikes in Afghanistan shortly after 9/11, our objective has been to kill or capture al-Qa'ida terrorists and dislodge their Taliban hosts. That mission was, and remains, quite different from our mission in Iraq, which is a mix of war-fighting, peacekeeping and nation building.
Most recently, U.S. and Afghan warriors, supported by other allies, launched Operation Moshtarak (a Dari word meaning "together") in the center of Afghanistan's southern Helmand province and the town of Marjah.
There is very little chance that a functioning democracy, or much else, can be established in Afghanistan. The internal regional conflicts, with or without the Taliban mixing things up, preclude such establishment.
Our objective is to prevent the Taliban from occupying uncontrolled regions there long enough for us to support and build up the Afghan military to a sustainable level. Once this is accomplished, the Afghan military will endeavor to rid the countryside of Taliban extremists, and keep them out, even if it invites eradication efforts across the southeastern border with Pakistan. (Pakistan is much more concerned with its neighbor, India, than its border with Afghanistan.)
Why prosecute the Taliban?
Because their presence in Afghanistan serves as a launch pad for jihadi attacks around the world.
On 10 September 2001, after eight years of Clinton administration national security malfeasance, and eight months of the newly installed Bush administration's efforts to reorder national security priorities, most Americans were unaware that a deadly enemy had set up shop on our turf.
On 11 September, that enemy attacked us, leaving a hole in a Pennsylvania field and collapsing not only our World Trade Center towers and one fifth of the Pentagon, but also the U.S. economy, which was its ultimate objective. That attack was organized by Sheik Osama bin Laden and his terrorist network, al-Qa'ida, from Taliban-occupied territory in Afghanistan.
Al-Qa'ida was, and remains, part of an increasingly unified and asymmetric Islamist terror network supported by nation states including Iran, Syria and extremist factions in Saudi Arabia, and previously by Iraq.
Unlike symmetric threats emanating from clearly defined nation states such as Russia and China -- those with unambiguous political, economic and geographical interests -- asymmetric enemies defy nation-state status, thus presenting new and daunting national-security challenges for the executive branch and U.S. military planners.
The strategy to-date in Afghanistan has been somewhat modeled after our strategy in Iraq. The operational blueprint has been "shape, clear, hold and build": Shape the conditions to secure population centers; clear insurgents; hold the region so that insurgents can't regain tactical advantage; and build, which includes the provision of humanitarian and reconstruction efforts until such control can be transferred to national authorities.
However, as noted, there remain serious questions about whether any such national authority can be established in Afghanistan, or if the best we can hope for is the development of a military authority, heavily underwritten by the U.S. and NATO, and sufficient to contain the Taliban and its terrorist campaigns against the West.
Afghanistan remains an ideal breeding ground for the active cadres of "Jihadistan," a borderless nation of Islamic extremists comprising al-Qa'ida and other Muslim terrorist groups around the world.
A borderless nation, indeed. The "Islamic World" of the Q'uran recognizes no political borders. Though the "pre-Medina" suras of the Q'uran do not support acts of terrorism or mass murder, the "post-Mecca" suras of the Q'uran and the Hadith (Mohammed's teachings) authorizes jihad, or "holy war," against all "the enemies of God." All orthodox Muslims are bound by the combined "pre-Medina" and "post-Mecca" Q'uran.
For the record, the body of these "enemies" or infidels, consists of all Muslim or non-Muslim heretics, those who refute any teachings of Mohammed.
Do you refute any teachings of Mohammed?
Jihadists, then, are characterized by the toxic Wahhabism of Osama bin Laden and his ilk -- those who would enforce the Q'uran's "holy war" against all "the enemies of God." Osama's is a death-loving cult. In the words of their leader himself: "We love death. The U.S. loves life. That is the big difference between us."
Al-Qa'ida seeks to disable the U.S. economy using any means at their disposal, and thus, undermine our political, military and cultural support for liberty around the world. Bin Laden's plan, "American Hiroshima," outlines an attack on the U.S. with multiple nukes -- the objective of which is to kill those who do not subscribe to their Islamofascist ideology.
Does Barack Hussein Obama get the message?
Given his penchant for appeasement and for ill-advised withdrawal timelines from Iraq and Afghanistan, one would think not.
Moreover, the Obama administration's newly released quadrennial outline for national and homeland defense makes no mention of "Islam," "Islamic" or "Islamist," preferring instead to reference "violent extremism."
Obama's "Assistant to the President and Deputy National Security Advisor for Homeland Security and Counterterrorism," John Brennan (a.k.a. "Terrorist Czar"), has deflected criticism of the quadrennial reports, and of Obama's re-warming of the Clinton model for treating terrorists as "criminals" rather than "enemy combatants."
"Politics should never get in the way of national security," says Brennan, who insists that Obama's detractors are "misrepresenting the facts to score political points, instead of coming together to keep us safe." The thin-skinned Brennan has also charged that "politically motivated criticism and unfounded fear-mongering only serve the goals of al-Qa'ida."
Obama's foreign policy is driven by nothing if not politics, and this includes his Afghanistan strategy. It's a strategy necessitated by his phony bravado during the 2008 presidential campaign -- a strategy with the ultimate aim of an easy political out.
Carnegie Endowment policy analyst Robert Kagan observes, "The new doctrine that seems to enjoy enormous cachet among the smart foreign policy set is: Fight wars until they get hard, then quit."
I prefer John Stuart Mill's assessment: "War is an ugly thing, but not the ugliest of things: the decayed and degraded state of moral and patriotic feeling which thinks that nothing is worth a war, is much worse. ... A man who has nothing which he is willing to fight for, nothing which he cares more about than he does about his personal safety, is a miserable creature who has no chance of being free, unless made and kept so by the exertions of better men than himself."
73 Comments
Ken Golubski
Thursday, February 18, 2010 at 11:29 AM
At best, Hussein Obama is an agnostic leaning towards Islam. At worst, he is a Muslim working on the inside, against what he considers the enemy. Us.
Bruce Bryant
Thursday, February 18, 2010 at 11:46 AM
Would someone translate the latin phrase at the end of each article. My formal education began in a two room school house on the Oklahoma prarie during the depression era and latin wasn't stressed.Semper Fi I can handle from my years in the Marine Corps, the others I can only guess at. Thanks.
Rick Myerscough
Thursday, February 18, 2010 at 11:49 AM
Well said...
Walt
Thursday, February 18, 2010 at 11:50 AM
Democracy? Pray they become a Republic - as we USED to be!
Aaron Ashcraft
Thursday, February 18, 2010 at 11:58 AM
Mark:Thank you for the thoughtful wisdom expressed in this particular Patriot Post. Your travels around the world help us understand what is occurring in the Middle East.
Debra Brown
Thursday, February 18, 2010 at 12:00 PM
I am so thankful to have a source of thought provoking and realistic information such as what is contained in your newsletter. I am most grateful for the contributing editors and the vigilance with which they purvey the truth about what is going on world wide. As a Christian and an Army Brat, I couldn't agree more with the sentiments expressed. I also want to ask "What are some people in government thinking..?"
frances
Thursday, February 18, 2010 at 12:08 PM
Outstandingly and succintly put! I am filled with pride for you and for all our service men and women.Thank you, thank you, thank you.
Dwaine Goodwin
Thursday, February 18, 2010 at 12:08 PM
Mr. Alexander, thank you for remembering to capitalize "Marines" in this newsletter. So often many do not and "we" deserve it. The message was strong and to the point. My wife and I consider the Patriot Post part of our daily briefings, Thank You.
PatriotUSA
Thursday, February 18, 2010 at 12:10 PM
Excellent post! All the issues you have raised are valid and why Afghanistan will never be what we 'want' it to be. What is often overlooked is that the Iraqi 'Constitution' has much in it that is based on Islamic or Shariah law. This ties in directly what you have brought up here. We are at war with Islam, and that is in the Koran, as we are all infidels or Kafirs. Unless we convert(Islam will accept nothing else), we are doomed to a life as a second class person, at best under Islam and shariah law. Ultimately you are persecuted until they kill you or you convert.No, the mullah in the White House does not get it, nor does he see it. he does not want to. He is a Islamosympathizer of the worst kind and is pushing an agenda of 'stealth jihad.' Jihad is Jihad, with the end result being the same.
Dave Meekins
Thursday, February 18, 2010 at 12:17 PM
This is one of the most excellent essays that I have read, lately. It should be required reading for every adult american, whether they agree or not.I wonder if we will see Mark and his essay in "Time Magazine"?
William Best
Thursday, February 18, 2010 at 12:17 PM
A local US Air Force member returning from Afghanistan was asked about her experiences. In essence she said that Afghan President was in effect the mayor of Kabul and had little or no influence outside of that city. The US in general (the State Department in particular) is used to dealing with the head of a nation state on a one on one basis. I agree. We don't know how to deal with Afghanistan as it presently exists. The Army strategy of building up the security in the individual provinces to create stability of civilian everyday life is the right approach but will take time. The US usually, unfortunately, does not show patience required for such a plan to be successful. At the smae time the US has to play the diplomatic game of Afghanistan as a nation state balanced against the local provincial leaders (some good and some bad) who hold the real power.
ohio ralph
Thursday, February 18, 2010 at 12:18 PM
When we will ever learn that they are over here because we are over there. Bring all the troops home, end the wars and let our troops rejoin the liberty that we originally created with our founding.
J. Adams Clymer
Thursday, February 18, 2010 at 12:18 PM
Mr. Bryant:Veritas vos Liberabit = The Truth Shall Set You FreeSemper Vigilo, Fortis, Paratus, et Fidelis = Always Vigilant, Brave, Prepared and Faithful
Dick Leffler
Thursday, February 18, 2010 at 12:29 PM
Thanks to Mark Alexander for his comments and analogy of the current situation we Americans find ourselves. The photo of the heavily laden soldier on his knee said it all for the courage of our fighting forces. Kudos to the PATRIOT!
David Webb
Thursday, February 18, 2010 at 12:31 PM
Mark,POWERFUL essay. Thank you.This needs to be published in the traditional media so the people who need to read it, can. Please consider submitting it to some of the papers there in DC.As much as I loved reading it, I'm guessing you're mostly "preaching to the converted" here. If you get this in the Washington Times for example, then Fox News can pick it up and it will spread into areas where more Americans who really need to read or hear about it, will.Plus, it will be good PR for the Patriot Post!!Best,