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The
war that could destroy both armies
By
Henry C K Liu
This article appeared in AToL
on October 23, 2003
The undeclared US war on Iraq ended some six months ago in a matter of
weeks, mostly through bribery of an Iraqi high command infiltrated by
US special operations that had been embedded during years of better
relations in the Iran-Iraq War and military cooperation with its US
counterpart, making treasonous plots possible. That may explain why the
US high command had been so confident of a quick victory in defiance of
mainstream military logic.
The Iraqi rank and file had also been demoralized by psychological
pressure from relentless "shock and awe" strikes launched from
locations safely beyond retaliatory range. Yet like Napoleon Bonaparte,
who upon entering Moscow was astounded by his inability to find the
czar to confirm an honorable victory, US President George W Bush, by
his dubious war policy to assassinate an opponent chief of state by
smart bombs, was unable to find Iraqi president Saddam Hussein in
Baghdad from whom to accept an honorable surrender. It is now plain for
all to see that while the world's sole superpower may be able to topple
a foreign government by the use of less-than-honorable force and force
its leader to go underground, it is another matter to occupy a nation
one-tenth its size to set up a puppet government to bring peace and
order, even for a country the allegedly oppressed population of which
US "experts" on Iraqi politics had predicted would welcome a US
invasion with flowers and hugs instead of rocket-propelled grenades.
It is interesting and instructive to compare the 19th-century British
subjugation of India, a country 10 times the size of Britain, with a
mere 75,000 expeditionary troops transported across oceans with slow
sailing ships, with the quagmire the United States is facing in Iraq
with 100,000 air-lifted combat soldiers. The British did not claim to
liberate India from its numerous principalities ruled by maharajas.
Instead, it built a political unit in the British Empire to incorporate
the separate princely states that had existed in pre-British India.
There was no sudden regime change. The British did not face resistance
until decades later, when the adverse effect of being non-white
subjects of the British Empire dawned on thinking Indians, who
gradually took up the European concept of nationalism as an
anti-imperialism ideology. Britain solved the problem by having Queen
Victoria assume the title of Empress of India (she was never Empress of
the British Empire) and kept India for another century.
The new proponents of "empire" would do well to note that the world has
changed since the Victorian era. Arab nationalism, promoted first by
Western imperialism during World War I as a destabilizing force against
the Ottoman Dominion, is a genie that cannot be forced back into the
bottle at the pleasure of neo-imperialism in the 21st century.
The Iraqi army has been destroyed by the second Iraq War, with its
treasonous high command sheltered by a secret US protection program,
and its common soldiers joining the ranks of the unemployed at home
under US occupation. Resistance in the form of guerrilla attacks
against foreign occupation is now being waged by an aroused civilian
population. Not only Sunni loyalists to Saddam, but Shi'ites, who
constitute some 60 percent of the population and were expected by US
"experts" on Iraq to be tolerant, if not ecstatic, about a US
"presence", if not liberation, have formed guerrilla cells of armed
resistance against US occupation forces. This is understandable, since
the United States has made clear that it will not permit a Shi'ite
majority to dominate any new Iraqi government, democracy or no
democracy. Theocratic democracy is only tolerated in Christian nations.
Last Friday, four more US soldiers were killed in one of the latest
clashes with militant Shi'ite clerics working for Mahmoud al-Hassani.
Mahmoud is an ally of Muqtada al-Sadr - the son of a revered Shi'ite
cleric who was killed in 1999 - whose forces clashed a week earlier
with US soldiers and killed two of them. Muqtada proclaimed his own
government in Iraq during his weekly sermon on the previous Friday,
October 10, in Kufa, near Najaf, a city south of Baghdad considered
holy by the Shi'ites. This pattern of attack on US occupation forces
can be expected to escalate. If the Shi'ites turned in large numbers
against US occupation, the effect could be explosive both in Iraq and
in domestic US politics.
The Associated Press has started a report on the number of daily US
deaths in Iraq. According to the Department of Defense, as of Friday,
October 17, a total of 336 US service members had died since the
beginning of military operations in Iraq, up from 326 a week earlier.
Since May 1, when Bush declared that major combat operations in Iraq
had ended, at least 198 US soldiers have died in Iraq, 63 more than the
132 killed in war combat. Since the start of military operations, at
least 1,536 US service members have been injured as a result of hostile
action, according to US Central Command. Non-hostile injured numbered
335. At the rate of 10 war deaths per week, the US military is looking
at a death rate of 520 per year of occupation, not counting likely
catastrophic incidents as the resistance gains experience and support.
The United States faces a lengthy, open-ended military occupation of
Iraq, requiring more than 100,000 troops. In a mid-August briefing,
General Tommy Franks, then head of the Central Command, suggested that
the length of the US military presence in Afghanistan could end up
rivaling the 50-year US presence in South Korea. As Iraqi and Afghan
resistance mounts as a natural reaction to foreign occupation, more US
troops will inevitably be needed in response, increasing the
statistical prospect for higher casualties.
The United States possesses the best-trained and best-equipped
offensive force in the world, which it spends about US$400 billion
annually to sustain, more than the combined total of all other major
military powers. Yet there is no more eroding effect on an offensive
force than duties of occupation. Soldiers are ideally non-thinking,
order-taking killing machines, and as such cannot be effective police
officers. Good policing requires members of the police force to think,
evaluate and make moral judgments, which in turn makes them ineffective
soldiers. Killing opponent soldiers on the battlefield is honorable by
military code, while killing civilians by armed police, even in
self-defense, turns any police force into a tool of oppression. This
has been a military truism from the time of the Roman legions down to
the German Wehrmacht.
The United States maintains 1.5 million active troops, with a reserve
of 2 million. There are more than 300,000 US troops currently deployed
around the world in 120 countries. Incoming National Security Adviser
Condoleezza Rice told the New York Times shortly after the 2000
election, "The United States is the only power that can handle a
showdown in the [Persian] Gulf, mount the kind of force that is needed
to protect Saudi Arabia, and deter a crisis in the Taiwan Strait. And
extended peacekeeping detracts from our readiness for these kinds of
global missions." Incoming Secretary of State Colin Powell also weighed
in, stating that "our plan is to undertake a review right after the
president is inaugurated and take a look not only at our deployments in
Bosnia but in Kosovo and many other places around the world, and make
sure those deployments are proper. Our armed forces are stretched
rather thin, and there is a limit to how many of these deployments we
can sustain."
Since World War II, the United States has gradually set up a global
military "base network" backed by locally based military bases. In
order to push its global strategy, the total number of such military
bases (facilities), big and small, exceeded 5,000 at their peak, half
of which were located overseas, with troops surpassing 610,000. The US
military has also formed an overseas base layout featuring a
combination of points with lines and multi-level disposition, the
control of main strategic points and vital passages on the sea. After
the Cold War, because of the limitation of its national defense
expenses and popular opposition in the host countries, the United
States repeatedly reduced its troops stationed overseas. US troops
abroad had shrunk to 247,000 people before the second Iraq War. At the
end of the Iraq War, the US Army announced its plan to set up four
military bases in Iraq. Up to now it still has more than 100,000 troops
stationed in Iraq and it will keep a considerable scale of forces there
for a long time to come.
Since the events of September 11, 2001, the United States has looked
upon terrorism and the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction as
the greatest threats to its national security, thinking that the main
threat comes from the "unstable arc-shaped region" encompassing the
coastal areas of the Caribbean Sea, Africa, the Caucasus, Central Asia,
the Middle East, South Asia and the Korean Peninsula. The US Defense
Department has drastically adjusted the disposition of its overseas
troops around this "unstable arc-shaped region" to cope effectively
with a global "preventive" war.
Advance disposition is a deployment concept of positioning in advance a
considerable number of weapons and equipment in overseas bases, doing
the defense and garrison work with very small forces. When a crisis
erupts, US forces will be sent by quick transport to the crisis region
and, by relying on the advance installed weapons and equipment, quickly
generate combat effectiveness in the crisis region and carry out
operational tasks. Currently, US forces have deployed equipment and
materials for two army divisions in Europe and four marine
expeditionary brigades each in Norway, Guam, Diego Garcia and the
Atlantic. In addition, US forces have 12 mobile advance-storage ships
in the Mediterranean and Indian Ocean regions.
In recent years, the United States has notably increased its input in
key bases by constantly rebuilding and expanding. US forces transferred
part of the facilities originally positioned in the Philippines' Subic
Base to Guam, and built the largest US ammunition-storing facility,
strategic bombers and strategic missile nuclear submarines base in the
Far East. The US Navy's Northeast Asian bases group centered on
Yokosuka, Japan, has been strengthened continuously. The expanded Diego
Garcia Base now serves B-2 strategic bombers. US forces have drafted a
plan for constructing a marine "floating island", one formula of which
is to construct a joint movable ocean base (JMOB). The JMOB can reduce
existing army units' dependence on forward bases and can reduce onshore
military logistic facilities to the minimum. It can also selectively
provide assistance to shore army units. And JMOB can provide an
all-directional joint operational platform for the expeditionary
troops. Under the circumstance of no combat task, the different modules
of the JMOB can be used separately. In the unstable and constantly
changing security environment, its separate parts can provide low-risk
yet very strong mobile capacity for US troops.
Judging from the plan for the adjustment of the disposition of forces
recently released by the Defense Department, US overseas military
presence has witnessed the trend of development in the direction from
the "forward-leaning presence" to the "in-depth presence" or to the
"elasticity presence". For example, after the eruption of the Korean
nuclear crisis, the United States began to reconsider the question of
stationing troops in Northeast Asia. The United States moved its 37,000
troops stationed in the Republic of Korea (ROK) out of the
long-range-artillery attacking scope of the North Korean army and plan
to cut further the scale of the entire US troop contingent in the ROK.
The New York Times in an October 5 editorial titled "An overstretched
army in Iraq" began with the sentence: "Now that it is clear the United
States faces a lengthy military occupation of Iraq, requiring perhaps
100,000 troops for the foreseeable future, it is possible to begin
calculating how the war may damage the American armed forces." It went
on to warn that "the burden of occupation will start to strain severely
the army's capacity to deploy trained and rested combat forces
worldwide in a matter of months".
For the long term, not only will the lives of thousands of military
families be disrupted, the army reserve system behind the United
States' move to a smaller, volunteer army three decades ago will be put
at severe risk and "the global reach of American foreign policy will
almost inevitably be diminished", said the Times. Nearly half of the
army's 33 combat brigades are now in continuous harm's way in the
Persian Gulf region. Replacing all of them with fresh units would leave
the army hard-pressed to meet its obligations elsewhere, including
Afghanistan and the Korean Peninsula.
A congressional study last month found that unless major adjustments
are made, the army will be forced to shrink its occupation force to
less than half, including cutting "other international commitments".
The Iraq War shows that a superpower empire cannot be maintained
without a massive occupational force, something that the US lacks. The
Times observed that this is "another regrettable consequence of the
unilateral way America went to war in Iraq".
A reader wrote on April 7: "If you want Asia Times Online to be taken
seriously, you might want to consider not using any more items from
Henry C K Liu [The war that may end the age of superpower, Apr 5]...Suggestion: Reread his article six months from now
as a test of his ability to prognosticate."
Six months have passed and I repeat: This war may end the age of
superpower.
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