Indian Country. By Robert D. Kaplan.
Indian Country. By Robert D. Kaplan. Wall Street Journal, September 21, 2004. Also here.
Kaplan:
An
overlooked truth about the war on terrorism, and the war in Iraq in particular,
is that they both arrived too soon for the American military: before it had
adequately transformed itself from a dinosauric, Industrial Age beast to a
light and lethal instrument skilled in guerrilla warfare, attuned to the local
environment in the way of the 19th-century Apaches. My mention of the Apaches
is deliberate. For in a world where mass infantry invasions are becoming
politically and diplomatically prohibitive – even as dirty little struggles
proliferate, featuring small clusters of combatants hiding out in Third World
slums, deserts and jungles – the American military is back to the days of
fighting the Indians.
The red
Indian metaphor is one with which a liberal policy nomenklatura may be
uncomfortable, but Army and Marine field officers have embraced it because it
captures perfectly the combat challenge of the early 21st century. But they don’t
mean it as a slight against the Native North Americans. The fact that radio
call signs so often employ Indian names is an indication of the troops’
reverence for them. The range of Indian groups, numbering in their hundreds,
that the U.S. Cavalry and Dragoons had to confront was no less varied than that
of the warring ethnic and religious militias spread throughout Eurasia, Africa
and South America in the early 21st century. When the Cavalry invested Indian
encampments, they periodically encountered warrior braves beside women and
children, much like Fallujah. Though most Cavalry officers tried to spare the
lives of noncombatants, inevitable civilian casualties raised howls of protest
among humanitarians back East, who, because of the dissolution of the conscript
army at the end of the Civil War, no longer empathized with a volunteer force
beyond the Mississippi that was drawn from the working classes.
* * *
Indian
Country has been expanding in recent years because of the security vacuum
created by the collapse of traditional dictatorships and the emergence of new
democracies – whose short-term institutional weaknesses provide whole new
oxygen systems for terrorists. Iraq is but a microcosm of the earth in this
regard. To wit, the upsurge of terrorism in the vast archipelago of Indonesia,
the southern Philippines and parts of Malaysia is a direct result of the
anarchy unleashed by the passing of military regimes. Likewise, though many do
not realize it, a more liberalized Middle East will initially see greater
rather than lesser opportunities for terrorists. As the British diplomatist
Harold Nicolson understood, public opinion is not necessarily enlightened
merely because it has been suppressed.
I am
not suggesting that we should not work for free societies. I am suggesting that
our military-security establishment be under no illusions regarding the
immediate consequences.
In
Indian Country, it is not only the outbreak of a full-scale insurgency that
must be avoided, but the arrival in significant numbers of the global media. It
would be difficult to fight more cleanly than the Marines did in Fallujah. Yet
that still wasn’t a high enough standard for independent foreign television
voices such as al-Jazeera, whose very existence owes itself to the creeping
liberalization in the Arab world for which the U.S. is largely responsible. For
the more we succeed in democratizing the world, not only the more security
vacuums that will be created, but the more constrained by newly independent
local medias our military will be in responding to those vacuums. From a field
officer’s point of view, an age of democracy means an age of restrictive ROEs
(rules of engagement).
The
American military now has the most thankless task of any military in the
history of warfare: to provide the security armature for an emerging global
civilization that, the more it matures – with its own mass media and governing
structures – the less credit and sympathy it will grant to the very troops who
have risked and, indeed, given their lives for it. And as the thunderous roar
of a global cosmopolitan press corps gets louder – demanding the application of
abstract principles of universal justice that, sadly, are often neither
practical nor necessarily synonymous with American national interest – the
smaller and more low-key our deployments will become. In the future, military
glory will come down to shadowy, page-three skirmishes around the globe, that
the armed services will quietly celebrate among their own subculture.
The
goal will be suppression of terrorist networks through the training of – and
combined operations with – indigenous troops. That is why the Pan-Sahel
Initiative in Africa, in which Marines and Army Special Forces have been
training local militaries in Mauritania, Mali, Niger and Chad, in order to
counter al-Qaeda infiltration of sub-Saharan Africa, is a surer paradigm for
the American imperial future than anything occurring in Iraq or Afghanistan.
In
months of travels with the American military, I have learned that the smaller
the American footprint and the less notice it draws from the international
media, the more effective is the operation. One good soldier-diplomat in a
place like Mongolia can accomplish miracles. A few hundred Green Berets in Colombia
and the Philippines can be adequate force multipliers. Ten thousand troops, as
in Afghanistan, can tread water. And 130,000, as in Iraq, constitutes a mess
that nobody wants to repeat – regardless of one’s position on the war.
In
Indian Country, the smaller the tactical unit, the more forward deployed it is,
and the more autonomy it enjoys from the chain of command, the more that can be
accomplished. It simply isn’t enough for units to be out all day in Iraqi towns
and villages engaged in presence patrols and civil-affairs projects: A
successful FOB (forward operating base) is a nearly empty one, in which most
units are living beyond the base perimeters among the indigenous population for
days or weeks at a time.
Much
can be learned from our ongoing Horn of Africa experience. From a base in
Djibouti, small U.S. military teams have been quietly scouring an anarchic
region that because of an Islamic setting offers al Qaeda cultural access. “Who
needs meetings in Washington,” one Army major told me. “Guys in the field will
figure out what to do. I took 10 guys to explore eastern Ethiopia. In every
town people wanted a bigger American presence. They know we’re here, they want
to see what we can do for them.” The new economy-of-force paradigm being
pioneered in the Horn borrows more from the Lewis and Clark expedition than
from the major conflicts of the 20th century.
In
Indian Country, as one general officer told me, “you want to whack bad guys
quietly and cover your tracks with humanitarian-aid projects.” Because of the
need for simultaneous military, relief and diplomatic operations, our greatest
enemy is the size, rigidity and artificial boundaries of the Washington
bureaucracy. Thus, the next administration, be it Republican or Democrat, will
have to advance the merging of the departments of State and Defense as never
before; or risk failure. A strong secretary of state who rides roughshod over a
less dynamic defense secretary – as a Democratic administration appears to
promise – will only compound the problems created by the Bush administration,
in which the opposite has occurred. The two secretaries must work in unison,
planting significant numbers of State Department personnel inside the
military's war fighting commands, and defense personnel inside a modernized
Agency for International Development.
The
Plains Indians were ultimately vanquished not because the U.S. Army adapted to
the challenge of an unconventional enemy. It never did. In fact, the Army never
learned the lesson that small units of foot soldiers were more effective
against the Indians than large mounted regiments burdened by the need to carry
forage for horses: whose contemporary equivalent are convoys of humvees
bristling with weaponry that are easily immobilized by an improvised bicycle
bomb planted by a lone insurgent. Had it not been for a deluge of settlers
aided by the railroad, security never would have been brought to the Old West.
Now
there are no new settlers to help us, nor their equivalent in any form. To help
secure a more liberal global environment, American ground troops are going to
have to learn to be more like Apaches.