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"Groundhog Day" in Asia: Unwinnable Wars

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CrisisPapers Donating Member (271 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jun-06-06 08:30 AM
Original message
"Groundhog Day" in Asia: Unwinnable Wars
| Bernard Weiner |

The hit Bill Murray movie "Groundhog Day," you may remember, concerns a cynical, manipulative man who, to his horror, finds himself locked in a circular life-loop; only after he's able to open his heart can he finally begin to grow into a full human being, loved and loving. Bush & Co.'s Iraq war reminds me of that film, the same events unfolding day after day after day; the difference is that the architects of this war have their hearts and minds locked so tightly that no change appears possible.

In a sense, America itself seems caught up in a "Groundhog Day" loop in that region of the world, continually ignoring the same warning generals for decades have been giving us: Do not get involved militarily on the landmass of Asia.

Korea in the '50s, Vietnam in the '60s and '70s, currently in Iraq (and Afghanistan). Each time, the same ignorance and bravado seem to take hold. We'll whip these backward buggers into shape. How can we not fail? Look at all our high-tech weaponry and look at those peasants trying to stop us with their stones and punji sticks and homemade explosives and old-fashioned rifles.

But, time and time again, local patriotism and nationalist fervor trumps technology. It's the old David & Goliath story, with the more nimble and creative David driving the high-tech Goliath batty, because the Big Guy is too musclebound to do much about it except cause collateral-damage mayhem.

THE WARNING ABOUT ASIA WARS

Why have so many war heroes continually warned against the U.S. becoming militarily engaged in Asia? Part of the reason had to do with the vastness of the geography and the historical tendency for massive local populations to "absorb" and repel invaders (Napoleon and Hitler learned these facts the hard way, as did the U.S. in Vietnam and Korea). Part has to do with the fact that Westerners stand out like sore thumbs, don't speak the indigenous languages, have very little concept of how to relate to the varied ethnic groups and religions, don't know the customs and traditions and geographical quirks and hiding places of those lands, etc. etc.

The U.S. military leaders were not issuing their warnings because they considered such wars in Asia to be immoral or illegal; it was mainly because they were unwinnable. Nothing much could be gained in these "stalemate" wars, and much would be lost, not the least of which was the moral high ground and reputation of the United States. In addition, unless the U.S. military gets in and out quickly (the 1991 invasion of Iraq, for example, which lasted 100 days), the public grows impatient and begins asking embarrassing questions about the necessity for such wars and and the lack of carefully-considered exit plans.

Also, high-tech wars are horribly expensive, and tend to drain the coffers of the U.S. treasury. What this translates to back home, in addition to huge budget deficits, is lack of funds for infrastructure maintenance, popular social programs, educational improvements, innovative civilian research, etc. To make up this funding gap occasioned by ballooning war costs (a good deal of which is eaten up by corruption, cost overruns, "losing track" of billions of dollars), the middle class yet again tends to take the hit, both immediately and in the long term, with debilitating debt burdens placed on their children. Of course, the situation gets even worse for middle-class citizens if the government gives massive tax breaks and refunds to corporations and wealthy individuals, which is the case with the Bush Administration.

So, apparently learning nothing from the generals' warnings and from earlier experiences of American military forces in Asia (and those of earlier British and French colonialists, as well as that suffered by Napoleon and Hitler in Russia and by the Russians later in Afghanistan), the Bush Administration has taken the U.S. into two wars on the Asian mainland, in Afghanistan and Iraq.

CHENEY/RUMSFELD AXIS OF DEFEAT

Cheney and Rumsfeld, the prime movers in initiating those wars, are following the same self-destructive path as their predecessors from decades earlier. They barely understand those cultures, don't speak the languages (and have little use for those who do have that ability), have little real knowledge of the ethnic, religious and political tensions in those countries, and wind up alienating the native populations - so much so that even the supposedly U.S.-friendly leaders installed during the occupations are incensed at the arrogant, aggressive behavior of the American military, which is killing, brutalizing and humiliating their citizens.

It was relatively easy for the U.S. and its local allies to overthrow the repressive Taliban regime in Afghanistan, although Rumsfeld and his in-theater generals seemed disappointed that the country was so backward and undeveloped, providing very few targets worth bombing. The U.S. and its client leader, President Karzai, control sections of the capital Kabul but little else, as the ancient warlord system of geographic control is returning in full force. And the Taliban is regrouping and showing off its growing strength. In short, Asian War #1 is by no means over; indeed, it's threatening to flare up big time once again.

Since there was no oil or much of anything else of value in Afghanistan, the U.S. basically abandoned it precipitously, with Osama bin Laden and his lieutenants still at large and in charge of al-Qaida. With its work unfinished, the Bush Administration ordered the bulk of its forces out of Afghanistan and into Iraq, the Bush Administration's real goal because of its abundance of oil reserves, a weakened military and its great geopolitical importance for further U.S. adventures in the Middle East region in general. Thus the building of permanent military bases in Iraq and the largest embassy anywhere in the world.

In short, all the signs seem to confirm that the Bush Administration has no intent of leaving Iraq for a long, long time, though it may be forced by domestic considerations at home - namely the November 2006 election, and 2008 presidential vote after that - to at least talk about drawing down a goodly number of troops, at least until after the election is over.

VIETNAM AND IRAQ PARALLELS

But it's conceivable that even that long-range plan may go awry. It is an axiom of warfare that an occupying army facing a native insurgency will commit acts of aggression on the civilian population that will wind up losing the hearts and minds of the locals and, in effect, drive them to join or at least tacitly support the insurgency. That was the case in Vietnam, it's certainly what's happening in Iraq right now.

The U.S. soldiers, more and more having to face the reality that their deaths and maimings can come from anywhere, grow increasingly trigger-happy, firing first and asking questions later. Further, following their civilian leaders, they truly believe themselves to represent a superior culture and religion, which ipso facto makes the local Iraqis into some sort of lower species, who can be handled and mishandled at will when the anger and fear hormones are aroused.

In Vietnam, the symbol for this arrogant ruthlessness was My Lai, where several hundred innocent civilians were massacred. ("The only good gook is a dead gook.") Here, the flash-point symbols are Abu Ghraib and Haditha. Tortures and murders and brutalities are constant and widespread in Iraq, as they were in Vietnam, not "aberrations" by a few lowly soldiers who go "off the reservation," to use this most revealing military terminology.

The bloody result of such vicious, bullying behavior is that not only is the Bush Administration watching its approval ratings at home plummet, on both the war specifically and on other issues in general, but the local populations in Iraq, even those regarded as most friendly to U.S. interests, want the Americans out of there as soon as is practicable. The secular and religious Iraqi leaders may disapprove of the daily insurgent bombings but are absolutely incensed by the seemingly wanton and daily brutilization and slaughter of their citizens by the U.S. occupiers. Estimates range from 40,000 to more than 100,000 Iraqi civilian deaths since the U.S. began its Shock & Awe campaign more than three years ago; imagine how we would feel if an equivalent number of Americans, about 1,000,000, were killed and wounded during an Occupation by a foreign power.

At each stage of the Occupation, Rumsfeld and his incompetent war-planners have been many months, or usually years, behind where they should be. Currently, for example, nearly four years late, the troops in Iraq are being given lessons in battlefield "ethics"; i.e., how to relate to the local population in such a way as to minimize civilian deaths. The irony of chief-torturer Rumsfeld and his cohorts lecturing anyone on ethics and battlefield niceties is grotesque, but there we are.

In Vietnam, there were so-called "free-fire" zones, where anybody spotted by U.S. troops was regarded as likely enemy, so blanket permission was given to fire at will. We're fast approaching that gruesome, counterproductive situation in Iraq; the Iraqis have lived that reality for years, the citizenry back home in the States is quickly coming to realize what kind of war is really being fought there in their names. No wonder the U.S. under Bush is regarded as a reprehensible pariah state around much of the globe, and why so many Americans are ashamed of their government's behavior.

CITIZENS TURNING ON THE WAR

More than two-thirds of polled Americans believe the Iraq War to be a mistake, and probably unwinnable. The main thing tamping down active anti-war resistance, a la the Vietnam days, is the lack of a military draft. We now have an all-"volunteer" army, in effect covert mercenaries - many from poor and minority communities in the U.S. - plus thousands of overt mercenaries, hired by private companies under contract to the Pentagon. (How these private soldiers are supervised, if at all, by the U.S. military is a good question; how often do these guns-for-hire operate as rogue elements who can violate the rules of engagement and cut ethical corners while in the field, thus angering the locals even more?)

Eventually, the patriotic middle-class home folk back in the States turned on the Vietnam War and on those officials who were responsible for its conduct. Those officials, finally seeing the light, eventually negotiated their way out - too late for the more than 50,000 U.S. soldiers who died there, along with several million Vietnamese. One suspects that today's current Bush & Co. leaders also know that the Iraq War is unwinnable, that the best that can be hoped for is ongoing stalemate, death by a thousand cuts. However, rather than face the facts and do the honorable thing of taking their losses and exiting, the Bush Administration is preparing to attack another country in the region, Iran, which - well, imagine that! - happens to sit on top of huge oil reserves.

The pattern that is leading to Iran is unnervingly similar to that which preceded the U.S. attack on Iraq. The leadership of Iran is demonized, with hyped-up stories of how they endanger America because of their alleged WMD and their fledgling nuclear program and their supposed support of "terrorists." Of course, even the Bush Administration's own experts say that Iran is five to ten years away from having operational nuclear missiles, which surely provides time enough to try solutions other than military. (Also, dastardly stories are invented about the "enemy." In Iraq, prior to the 1991 invasion, it was Kuwaiti babies being ripped from incubators by Saddam's forces; here it was a widely-reported tale of Christians and Jews being forced to wear yellow badges in Iran. Both stories were phony, but used to generate hatred and desire for revenge against the "enemy.")

But Rice and Bolton and Cheney and the other Bush war-hawks are issuing threatening ultimatums to Iran and are not about to aim for a diplomatic solution to the Iran situation, other than to get some kind of an ambiguously threatening resolution from the United Nations Security Council that can be twisted into use by the Bush Administration in order to launch its war. The Bush & Co. ideology and schedule are taking them inexorably down the road to an attack, probably an air assault on Iran's weapons laboratories and nuclear-research buildings. (The timetable? My guess is either within a month, or after the November elections.) The aim is to cripple Iran's nuclear capacities for a decade or more, and to foment an uprising against the hardline mullahs who run that country.

AVOIDING THE "GROUNDHOG DAY" LOOP

Remember Cheney, Perle, Wolfowitz and others telling us how the Iraqis would greet the advancing American troops as "liberators" with flowers and kisses - the B.S. "cakewalk" theory of Occupation? Believe it or not, the Busheviks express much the same scenario with regard to Iran. The theory goes that when the Iranian population (especially the more liberal young people) see their leaders humiliated after the weapons facilities are bombed to smithereens, they will rise up and overthrow the current hardline regime. Yeah, sure. The more likely result will be a patriotic population rallying around their leaders - in short, exactly as we would respond if attacked by outside forces.

No, Cheney and Rumsfeld, representing the ideologues in control of American foreign and military policy, will have their war. Unless we stop them.

After four-and-a-half years, America has checked and once again has seen its shadow, which predicts several more years of moral winter, unless we act to prevent them. In this revised "Groundhog Day" scenario, that means defeating the BushCheneyRumsfeldRove forces in November (acting aggressively to demand honest balloting and vote-counting), impeaching and removing them from office, and thereby providing the opportunity for our country to open its heart and grow once again into the larger, decent America we all love.

-- BW
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sweetheart Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jun-06-06 08:57 AM
Response to Original message
1. eloquent article
Good metaphor... why they * us... took years for the layers of honesty to
reveal this plainly... perhaps in behaving badly, persons are morally willing
to listen than before when it was all testosterone.
"No wonder the U.S. under Bush is regarded as a reprehensible pariah state around much of the globe, and why so many.."
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HeartLikeAWheel Donating Member (5 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jun-06-06 10:45 AM
Response to Original message
2. Worse than we think
This brilliant article speaks nothing more than the truth.

To give a measure of how bad things are: the Army is apparently out of money. Word has it that all promotions are frozen because raises can't be funded and even such things as purchase of office supplies must be approved by senior personnel or bought out of soldiers' own pockets. In ordinary times, such crises are temporary and occur in the fall, as the armed forces wait for authorizations for the new fiscal year. Not now. This is a request for anyone with journalism skills to look into the matter and publicize it. But at least the rich are getting more tax cuts.
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Scriptor Ignotus Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jun-06-06 05:42 PM
Response to Original message
3. also
never match wits with a Sicilian when death is on the line.
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tocqueville Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jun-06-06 09:01 PM
Response to Original message
4. I think that the problem is much deeper than just Asia
Edited on Tue Jun-06-06 09:04 PM by tocqueville
See thread "Groundhog Wars"

http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=show_mesg&forum=103&topic_id=215666&mesg_id=215666


If you look at all the wars the US has fought after WWII, all of them have been lost or fought against such an inferior enemy that the outcome was given in advance. When the US have been meeting a REAL enemy, they have lost the wars.

I don't count ridiculous "victories" like Panama or Grenada where the problem (?) was "solved" at the price of extensive collateral damage.

I don't think that the fact that it is Asia that is the determining factor. Countries like Afghanistan, Korea, Vietnam and Iraq have very different geography, climate and environment. The size of the populations, their history is very different too...

But fact is that Vietnam and Korea were defeats (and against conventional forces), Iraq will be one soon and signs show that the next step could go from urban guerilla to more conventional warfare... specially if the US trained army goes against its "masters" as it did in S Vietnam.

small "incidents" like Beirut and Somalia were blatant defeats and provoked a swift retreat from US intervention.
In both cases it was urban warfare against poorly equipped fanatical elements.

The two other wars that the US "won" were Bosnia/Kosovo and Gulf War. In the both cases the US won an air war because the antagonist didn't have any matching defenses in form of planes or triple A, which resulted that the countries infrastructure was so heavily damaged that they have to give in. This resulted too in extensive collateral damage.

The difference between the two wars was that in the first one (Bosnia/Kosovo) the US presence on the ground was and is practically non-existent and all the burden fell on Europeans. The occupation forces then succeeded with their task. Noteworthy too is that in the Kosovo case the air war was a total military failure (90% of the Serb forces escaped it). The Serbs gave up because the bombing sent them back 50 years in time and because the Russians told Milosevic now, you've played enough, you won't win this one.

In the Gulf case, the ground fight was minimal too and the Allies fought an army that surrendered to journalists.
The discrepancy is staggering : http://www.cnn.com/SPECIALS/2001/gulf.war/facts/gulfwar/

The war ended with an unnecessary massacre (The Bassorah road kill) and massacres of Shiites and Kurds.

The Gulf war was a war fought against an enemy unwilling to fight and with an 20-50 years outdated technology.
It's easy to win such a war, but it was a Pyhrrus victory that made the bed for the next war.

Summary :

Air wars are "won" as long as they don't imply a massive US presence on the ground. If the presence is necessary
the war is lost either to an insurgency or conventional forces.

Question :

How come the nation that won 62 years ago a two front's war against an enemy that at least in the beginning was militarily superior at air, land and sea (of course the US got a major Russian, British and in the end French backup) - loses all its wars after becoming the #1 militarily power in the world ?
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Bernard Weiner Donating Member (22 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Jun-07-06 10:35 AM
Response to Reply #4
5. Bernard Weiner replies
Yes, I definitely think there are other factors beyond simply "Asia" that must be considered. Thank you for expanding out the argument. Though we shouldn't rule out U.S. military adventurism in Latin America, by and large most of the current wars are following the "energy (gas/oil) arc" in Asia. So I wanted to keep my focus on that region of the world.

As for the efficacy of air bombardment, yes such assaults from the air do major damage and can influence the outcome of wars, but these days they often are used as a hoped-for alternative to ground action. But, as you wisely point out, if ground troops are necessary, "the war is lost either to an insurgency or conventional forces."

As for why the mighty U.S., which defeated Germany and Japan in World War II, is having such problem defeating smaller, less-armed opponents, it could be that the wars are ill-advised neo-imperial ones, which out of arrogance and stupidity pay no attention to the strength and determination and patience of nationalistic opposition on the ground. Thanks again for your important views. -- BW
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tocqueville Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Jun-07-06 07:22 PM
Response to Reply #5
6. Thank you for your kind response
Tocqueville
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cliss Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jun-08-06 11:46 AM
Response to Original message
7. An excellent article.
and thanks for posting.
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