 |
American soldiers
are dying in Afghanistan and Iraq. Terrorists,
bent on repeating 9/11, threaten the homeland. Enemy nations are acquiring
weapons of mass destruction. Little more than a decade ago, following the end of
the Cold War, U.S. power seemed virtually unchallenged. Giddy analysts spoke of
the "end of history." Today this nation looks distressingly
vulnerable.When we ponder what went wrong, it seems clear that although
the U.S. is unrivaled in conventional, high-end military hardware, its enemies
do not have to match equipment in order to hurt us. The leading cause of death
of U.S. troops in Iraq is the improvised explosive device. Many of these weapons
consist of nothing more than an artillery shell wired to a cell phone or
garage-door opener. Nothing fancy, but it works. Much of the advantage that the
U.S. armed forces enjoy in long-range warfare disappears when they get within
eyeball’s range of the enemy, as they are forced to do in order to police a
country like Iraq.
The United States must continue innovating to maintain its
technological lead. The same biotechnology that enemies use to produce
deadly
germs can also provide lifesaving antidotes. Advances in laser
systems hold out
the hope of stopping rogue missiles—or even artillery
shells—in midflight. Yet
the kind of military strength that this
country really needs today requires
innovation that the current system
does not provide.
In U.S. military war games, the armed forces are still
fighting the way the generals prefer—against mirror-image adversaries. The armed
services would become far more adept at perfecting the innovations they sorely
need if the military put its efforts into staging more realistic war games in
which adversaries use unconventional tactics.
Man Versus Machine The lobbying clout of defense contractors is such that the
Defense Department buys all manner of very expensive weapons programs that
troops or sailors are unlikely to ever use, when what they really need is more
personnel. Occupation duty and nation-building—the prerequisites for turning a
battlefield triumph into a long-term political victory—continue to demand vast
numbers of old-fashioned infantry, as well as specialists in civil affairs,
intelligence and policing. It is too late to undo the U.S. problems in Iraq, but
even a small increase in soldiers stationed there would help. The U.S. might be
able to control Baghdad, for example, if the Pentagon could send in an
additional 20,000 to 40,000 troops, both combat and noncombat soldiers. The
current army can clear an enemy area, but the troops cannot hold their ground
there and rebuild it.
Yet U.S. forces also need more troops of a different kind—people who understand
the enemy’s language and culture. Unless this country can produce more
diplomats, soldiers, spies and aid officials who can influence tribal chieftains
in fluent Arabic or Pashto, military strategists may find that the world’s most
sophisticated weapons provide scant protection from the world’s most ruthless
insurgents. And to foil the plots of terrorist cells and stop them from winning
more recruits, the U.S. will need to cultivate expertise in areas such as human
intelligence and information operations—two major weaknesses exposed by the wars
in Iraq and Afghanistan.
U.S. military planners need to be much more context-specific than they are. If
in 2003 they had been able to identify the moderate leaders in Iraq on both the
Sunni and Shiite sides, they could have strengthened the moderate Ayatollah Ali
al-Sistani and undermined his fiercely anti-Western rival Muqtada al-Sadr. Some
of the Pentagon’s small-scale counterinsurgency campaigns have shown that
military leaders can stabilize a war zone by taking a multipronged approach that
involves developing allies among the locals. In 2005, for instance, Colonel H.R.
McMasters was able to enlist local forces to route out insurgents in Tal
Afar.
Ultimately, defeating the Islamist insurgency will require not simply
killing insurgents, but also changing the conditions that breed anti-American
violence—in particular failed states and rogue states that foster a fertile
climate for terrorism. Even more importantly in the long run, the U.S. must
compete effectively with al Qaeda and its ilk in the battle for hearts and minds
in the Muslim world. The sooner the Pentagon recognizes that successful warfare
today is as much a matter of countering the enemy with information as with
weapons technology, the more successful, and safer, we will become.  | Max Boot is a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations
and
author of War Made New: Technology, Warfare, and the Course of History, 1500 to
Today. |
|