Forward Observer: War Is Asymmetrical
The terrorizing tactics of the bad guys in Iraq and Afghanistan all but unfurl a banner reading, "It's asymmetrical warfare, stupid."
Yet nobody in Congress, the White House or Pentagon seems to have read the banner and considered what it means for our armed forces and defense policies.
Asymmetrical warfare is a fancy term for finding the chinks in your enemy's armor and stabbing into them until he either gives up or bleeds to death.
The have-nots in military hardware have adopted this strategy, like the Vietcong before them. They are not trying to match the United States tank for tank, plane for plane, gun for gun, soldier for soldier. They are instead using terror, infiltration and propaganda to level the fighting field.
When all is said and done, the wars confronting the United States are for men's minds, not territory. So terror, infiltration and propaganda can be great equalizers.
Anti-American leaders in Iraq and Afghanistan are demonstrating their appreciation of these arts every day. Given that reality, our leaders in Congress and the executive and judicial branches need to be asking some tough questions on behalf of our country.
In the military realm, Congress -- whom the founding fathers put in charge of "the common defense" -- need to ask such politically incorrect questions as these:
What will the Army's $162 billion Future Combat System do to reduce casualties from Improvised Explosive Devices and their successors? The Pentagon says these hidden bombs account for 80 percent of U.S. casualties in Iraq.
How will the Navy's $3 billion-a-copy Virginia class killer submarine help us combat asymmetric warfare? Same question for the Air Force $355 million-a-copy F-22 fighter and Marine Corps $119 million-a-copy V-22 Osprey.
Granted, all the military threats facing us would not be carbon copies of the war in Iraq if it came to that.
Pentagon hawks are quick to say the Chinese are coming. But it will be years, probably decades if ever, before China or any other potentially hostile nation will field weapons as deadly and sophisticated as the ones in our arsenal today.
So why not redirect some of those billions earmarked for super weapons like the Future Combat System to resuscitate our worn-out Army? There is no threat out there to justify a hurry-up approach to fielding these colossally expensive super weapons.
Nobody in Congress since the late House Armed Services Chairman Les Aspin, D-Wis., left that office has shown the boldness to ask such "emperor has no clothes" questions in a systematic way.
The jobs attached to weapons inhibit the politicians to such an extent I think only a non-partisan royal commission comprised of former Defense secretaries can do the much-needed matchup of enemy threats and Pentagon plans.
This interregnum between the exit of the current administration and entrance of the next is a good time for qualified outsiders to assess where the Pentagon plans to go and where it should go, in view of radically changed threats.
The House and Senate Armed Services committees could appoint such a commission and make the most of its report public. The White House National Security Council would do the country a favor if it did a serious study of the matchup between forces planned and threats envisioned.
The series of toothless, stick-to-our-knitting, self-endorsing Quadrennial Defense Reviews issued by the Pentagon have proved anew that government agencies cannot be entrusted to devise the right strategies and tactics to win future asymmetrical wars.
The decisions that gave us Abu Ghraib, Guantanamo Bay, the murder of civilians by our troops in Iraq, denial of legal rights of suspected terrorists and parts of the USA PATRIOT Act have handed ammunition to our enemies.
We desperately need our best and brightest legal brains to stop giving our enemies fodder and embark on a cleansing mission. The House and Senate Judiciary committees have raised crucial questions about whether the PATRIOT Act has proved to be more drag than lift for our democracy and about what we lose as a democracy when we deny people their legal rights.
The panels would do well to name an impeccable commission, perhaps of retired judges, to tell us where we've been, where we are and where we should go to regain our reputation as a democracy respectful of legal rights.
The ghosts of two military officers I got to know well when they were alive are nudging me to add that every time Americans torture a prisoner, it makes it more certain enemies will torture an American prisoner in return.
Navy Cmdr. Lloyd Bucher, skipper of the USS Pueblo, which was captured by North Korea on the high seas in 1968, was tortured into signing anti-American statements while in captivity in North Korea.
Vice Adm. James Stockdale was tortured into doing the same thing while held in the Hanoi Hilton during the Vietnam War.
Bucher told me before he died broken-hearted that he never felt his country had given him a chance to explain himself. Stockdale told me he felt that after signing the anti-American statements he would live out his life in disgrace if he ever got back home to America.
Bucher was recommended for court martial. Stockdale received the Medal of Honor.
The opposite treatment speaks to our confusion as a nation about what is right and wrong when caught up in asymmetrical warfare. We need daylight on these dark dilemmas.
COMMENTS
- Mr. Cogan obviously has forgotten about Taiwan and other similar situations. The USA can not be a harbor for governments and citizens of other countries to come and settle as a sub-country within the US. What then support them until the time is ripe to go back---Bay of Pigs comes to mind! I welcome those who want to enter our country to start anew and embrace the principles for which we stand but become a place for governments in exile, I think not! Ed Strong Posted June 29, 2007 1:48 PM
- George Wilson, why you endeavor to maintain such a terrifically loyal band of misfits and dimwits is a tribute to your own stupidity. You are 4 years late on recognizing what the White House, congress even Rumsfeld (idiot) have known for years. We have been fighting an asymmetrical war for almost four and a half years, where have you been. Hans N. Weiffenbach Posted June 12, 2007 5:09 PM
- Here's the deal. We need to think asymetrically, unconventionally. What we need is another "Manhattan Project," not for nuclear weapons, but to develop alternatives to fossil fuel. Technology has advanced to a point where we can envision a future where fossil fuel is no longer our major energy source. I suggest we divert a few billion dollars of our nation's wealth and devote our national genius to developing renewable energy sources. John F. Kennedy committed our nation to landing a man on the moon in a decade; let's try being energy independent in 10 years! All we need is a leader with vision to get us there. Few realize that most of our military budget is spent defending our oil interests abroad. When we don't need foreign oil anymore, we would be free to spend our national wealth elsewhere. Who wouldn't love to tell OPEC, "try drinking that oil"? Let the world come to us for our energy technology. When we are energy independent, we can avoid engaging in asymmetric wars altogether. The middle east, which has been unstable and bloody for all of recorded history, will lose it's strategic importance to us. They can continue killing and torturing each other as they've done for 6,000 years - we won't be there to make a target of ourselves. I'm not suggesting we stop funding our defense department - let's just stop being stupid. As an old Star Trek aficionado, I'm betting on dilithium crystals. Star ships don't run on fossil fuels, you know. Dan B. Posted June 12, 2007 3:02 PM
RELATED STORIES
- Lawmakers hear flurry of reasons for failure in Iraqi police training 04/25/07
- Marines deploying Osprey aircraft overseas for first time 04/13/07
- New style of war key to success in Iraq 03/26/07
- Military cutting orders for costly high-tech weapons 02/05/07
- Intelligence analysis warns against rapid withdrawal from Iraq 02/02/07









