MY TURN | Winslow Myers: Impossible contradictions of modern war
Published: Sunday, July 4, 2010 at 3:30 a.m.
Last Modified: Saturday, July 3, 2010 at 10:35 p.m.
Last Modified: Saturday, July 3, 2010 at 10:35 p.m.
The  article in Rolling Stone that ended the meteoric career of Gen. Stanley  McChrystal shines light on the thought process not only of one military  man, but also on the dysfunctional paradigm now failing in Afghanistan.  It is a textbook demonstration of how the mindset of war itself, the  notion of annihilating an enemy and emerging victorious, has become  obsolete.
It  has been clear for decades (so clear that Henry Kissinger, Sam Nunn,  George Schultz and William Perry called in 2007 for the abolition of all  nuclear weapons) that victory by nuclear war is a logical  contradiction. The level of destruction resulting from the detonation of  even a small number of warheads, such as might occur in a “regional”  war between two nuclear powers like India and Pakistan, could bring  about a planet-wide change in cloud cover that could shut down  agriculture worldwide for a decade — in effect a death sentence for our  species.
But what about  conventional war? Setting aside the risk that a “small” war between two  nuclear powers could escalate into nuclear war (and even if the war is  “small,” the risk is not — think Israel/Iran sometime in the future),  must we not retain the idea of the military force of a given nation  defending itself against direct attack or responding to conditions  beyond its borders that threaten its interests? 
Of  course there will continue to be circumstances so clear-cut that a  military response would be a necessary and positive step — most  especially the prevention of genocide, though the motivation in that  case would presumably be humanitarian rather than directly  self-interested. And yet everything points to the conclusion that war,  any war, works less and less well. There is need for this realization of  the obsolescence of war to sink in not just in the U.S., but globally,  leading to processes of reciprocal demilitarization.
In  terms of self-interest, Gen. Colin Powell has listed a series of  questions the United States ought to be able to answer clearly before it  goes to war:
Is a vital national security interest threatened?
Do we have a clear attainable objective? 
Have the risks and costs been fully and frankly analyzed? 
Have all other nonviolent policy means been fully exhausted? 
Is there a plausible exit strategy to avoid endless entanglement?
Have the consequences of our action been fully considered? 
Is the action supported by the American people? 
Do we have genuine broad international support?
Sensible  as this set of criteria may be, it resembles Just War Theory (just  cause, proportional response, right intention, last resort, minimum  necessary force, etc.). In both the Powell Doctrine and Just War Theory,  the assumption is that outcomes, including escalation, can be  calibrated and controlled. But as we keep having to relearn, war  inevitably includes unforeseen consequences — Mr. Donald Rumsfeld’s  “unknown unknowns.” The objective of annihilating al Qaida in  Afghanistan melted away with the melting away of al Qaida itself.  Suddenly the edges of our mission became blurred, bleeding into the  open-ended nation-building that also still drains our resources in Iraq.
And so we arrive at the root  contradiction: successful war, as a mind-set, requires the  dehumanization and utter destruction of the enemy, the motive behind  Gen. McChrystal’s past success with counter-insurgency. Only then can  the fearsome cruelty and destructiveness (proportionality be damned!)  that resulted in past victories be rationalized. But modern global  communications have made it far less simple to convince masses of  people, including trained soldiers, to accept the crude stereotypes of  dehumanization. If our adversaries are potential participants in a  post-conflict reconstruction process, it becomes schizoid madness to  keep on trying to kill them. The atomization of tribal culture makes it  impossible to discern who is beyond the reach of reconciliation and who  is not. We require our officers to read Greg Mortenson’s “Three Cups of  Tea,” a book about building schools for girls, and we also want them to  summon an efficient murderousness against the very same tribesmen who  just might welcome, beyond the alienating paradigm of “you’re with us or  against us,” new schools for their daughters. 
As  the Rolling Stone article puts it: Our strategy is “Green Berets as an  armed Peace Corps,” and the result is that having spent “hundreds of  billions of dollars on the fifth-poorest country on earth (we have)  failed to win over the civilian population, whose attitude toward U.S.  troops ranges from intensely wary to openly hostile.” It is no wonder  our soldiers come home half out of their minds, even if their bodies  make it through in one piece.
Time  for a new paradigm. Bring home the soldiers and send in the Peace  Corps. Greg Mortenson knows the territory and could put them in touch  with the right people. War is so 20th-century.
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