The foggiest war (ISRAEL HAYOM OP-ED) Clifford D. May 05/03/12)
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_opinion.php?id=1819
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The “fog of war” is a concept derived from the writings of Carl von
Clausewitz, the great 19th century Prussian military theorist who
recognized that those leading troops into battle often lack data,
perspective and situational awareness. Enveloped within this fog of
uncertainty, they may not know whether they are winning or losing,
and they may take actions that weaken their position and strengthen
their enemies.
Would Clausewitz not be fascinated by the war dominating the 21st
century, a conflict so murky we can’t even agree on its name? It is
the War on Terrorism or the Long War or the War Against al-Qaida or
just Overseas Contingency Operations?
Over at Foggy Bottom -- an apt nickname if ever there was one -- an
unnamed “senior State Department official” told the National
Journal’s Michael Hirsh that “the War on Terror is over.” He (or
she?) elaborated: "Now that we have killed most of al-Qaida … people
who once might have gone into al-Qaida see an opportunity for a
legitimate Islamism.” A White House spokesman later issued a
clarification, explaining that: “We absolutely have never said our
war against al-Qaida is over. We are prosecuting that war at an
unprecedented pace."
Both statements miss if not the elephant in the room, the guerrillas
in the mist. Yes, Osama bin Laden sleeps with the fishes and many of
his lieutenants have learned the hard way how accurate American-made
unmanned aerial vehicles can be. But as Rand Corp. scholar Seth Jones
recently noted, with “a handful of regimes teetering from the Arab
Spring, al-Qaida is pushing into the vacuum and riding a resurgent
wave as its affiliates engage in a violent campaign of attacks across
the Middle East and North Africa. … al-Qaida is regrouping.”
Nor have we defeated al-Qaida’s many affiliates and allies, among
them: the Taliban, the Haqqani network, the Islamic Movement of
Uzbekistan, al-Shabaab, Boko Haram, Lashkar-e-Taiba, Tehreek-e-
Taliban Pakistan, Hezbollah and Hamas.
And, most significantly, there is Iran, which the State Department
itself has for years designated as the world’s leading sponsor of
terrorism. Iran’s rulers do not think their war against “the world of
arrogance” is over. And they have standing on this issue.
As for “legitimate Islamism,” that is meant to imply the Muslim
Brotherhood whose members may indeed believe that elections are
preferable to violence as a path to power. But if the Brothers differ
from the jihadis over means, they sing from the same hymnal when it
comes to ends. Both believe in Islamic supremacy; both are committed
to the establishment of Islamic hegemony over the Middle East and,
eventually, well beyond; both seek the power to silence critics at
home and abroad; both are engaged in persecuting religious minorities
in “Muslim lands”; both are committed to the destruction of Israel,
the only Middle Eastern nation not ruled by Muslims.
And, as Andy McCarthy recounts in “The Grand Jihad,” an American
Muslim Brothers meeting in Philadelphia in 1991 produced an internal
memorandum candidly proclaiming their mission: “Eliminating and
destroying the Western civilization from within and ‘sabotaging’ its
miserable house …” Should we really be calling this “legitimate
Islamism” -- and should we really be comfortable with it?
There are those who predict that the Islamists taking power in Egypt
and elsewhere will become pragmatic once they have to pay bills, fill
potholes and curry favor with voters. But that has not happened in
Iran over the past 33 years, much as we’ve tried, from time to time,
to convince ourselves such a transition was at hand. Nor has it
happened in Pakistan and Turkey -- both have become increasingly
Islamized in recent years.
Other scholars, my friend and colleague Reuel Marc Gerecht prominent
among them, argue that Islamism should be seen as a way station
rather than a destination. They argue that Muslim-majority societies
will learn soon enough that it’s not true that “Islam is the answer”
to all the vexing questions of economic and societal organization.
Once that happens, they predict, a process of liberalization and
democratization will commence.
But what is the basis for the belief that the Islamists will allow
themselves to be voted out of power? Again, that’s not been possible
for Iranians who, ample evidence suggests, long ago became
disenchanted with theocracy.
That brings us to the most egregious way in which our thinking has
been befogged. In 2009, President Barack Obama visited Fort Hood to
honor the 13 Americans massacred by Nidal Hasan, a U.S. Army officer
who proclaimed himself a “soldier of Allah.” The Americans who had
been gunned down, Obama said, “did not die on a foreign field of
battle. They were killed here, on American soil, in the heart of this
great state and the heart of this great American community. This is
the fact that makes the tragedy even more painful, even more
incomprehensible.”
Such incomprehensibility not only persists, it is being reinforced by
official U.S. policy. Last week, Gen. Martin Dempsey, chairman of the
Joint Chiefs of Staff, ordered all military schools to make sure they
were not including "anti-Islamic themes” in training courses.
Dempsey’s order prohibits instructors and guest lecturers
from “advocating ideas, beliefs and actions that are … disrespectful
of the Islamic religion."
Imagine if, during the 1930s, the U.S. government had prohibited
ideas, beliefs and actions that might be seen as disrespectful of the
German, Italian or Japanese nations. What if, during the Cold War,
there had been a ban against ideas, beliefs and actions that could be
seen as disrespectful of Russian culture or of socialism, since most
socialists were not “violent extremists”?
To see through the fog of war, Clausewitz wrote, requires “a fine,
piercing mind." He probably took for granted that it also requires
intellectual courage, something not often exhibited by Western
leaders in the current era.
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