After Iraq, We will Still Have to Face Terrorism
The next time around, the threat is likely to be even
greater
http://www.nyu.edu/globalbeat/syndicate/dowell032403.html
By William Dowell,
New York--It took the American public and the rest of
the world a few years to turn against the Vietnam War.
Things may move faster this time around.
Although war is often exciting in the beginning stages,
it is important to keep its ultimate objective in mind
and to constantly ask oneself if the price that is being
asked is worth the final result. President Bush says
that America is proud of the servicemen who have died so
far. These men and women are unquestionably heroic. But
what will their deaths have accomplished? Will the
situation in Iraq, once this is over, really be worth
their sacrifice? Or will their commander-in-chief have
discarded their lives for no measurable gain?
In the case of the Vietnam War, history demonstrated
that Vietnam really did not matter in the long run
strategic defense of the united States. The former
Soviet Union occupied Camranh Bay the largest naval
harbor in the Pacific for 20 years, and hardly anyone
noticed. The real damage came from what we did to
ourselves the ripping apart of American society, the
loss of international prestige, the damaged relations
with our allies. Our pride and our refusal to admit that
we were wrong, forced us into a war that cost 50,000
American lives not to mention the millions of
Vietnamese.
It took the United States and the rest of the world
awhile to see that. It may not take the world very long
to ask the same questions about our troubled engagement
in Iraq. The world's greatest, most technologically
advanced, superpower takes on one of the world's weakest
and most dysfunctional dictatorships and threatens the
lives of hundreds of thousands of innocent people all in
its obsession to kill one man. Of course the "weapons of
mass destruction" that Saddam was supposed to have are
an important issue. But much of the world is beginning
to sense that the real damage is likely to come from
elsewhere. The damage to critical American alliances
that might actually stop the proliferation of weapons of
mass destruction, and in fact damage to the alliances
that make the global economy function, is reaching
alarming proportions. North Korea, Pakistan and Iran
will all have nuclear weapons soon, and the message
being put out by the Bush administration is clear:
strike first or be a victim. Preemption cuts both ways.
The real conflict as many Europeans see it is between
the weak and the strong. In the heady days after the
collapse of the Soviet Union, the Pentagon talked about
"asymmetric" defense. How does the little guy, who has
no practical way of projecting political power, get his
message across? We learned the answer on September 11.
Terrorism and guerrilla warfare are the options of the
weak who wish to defeat the strong. The terrorist can
never defeat the stronger power in a military sense. He
can only act as a catalyst to force the stronger power
to act in a manner that will ultimately lead to its
destruction.
The French and the Germans know a lot about terrorism.
The Germans had to cope with the Red Army Faction, the
Baader-Meinhoffs, and the French have had more than a
dozen murderous groups to contend with, ranging from the
Beirut-based Armenian Secret liberation Army to the
Algiers-based Group Armee Islamique. "By their nature,
terrorist groups tend to be small," A French police
inspector once told me. "They provide support to one
another, and they join forces for certain operations,
but there is no rigid structure that you can eliminate
once and for all. There is a quick turnover. It is not
the kind of profession that you stay in for a long
time."
In fact, the best analogy for countering this assymetric
threat is in the Greek myths. When Hercules cut off the
head of the hydra, ten more grew back. When Hercules
wrestled the Libyan giant, Antaeus, he failed to realize
that Antaeus's mother was the Earth. Everytime he threw
Antaeus to the ground, Antaeus was infused with new
energy. In the end, Hercules defeated Antaeus by holding
him in the air and separating him from his source of
power. In that light, Al Qaeda must be isolated from its
source of power. That source is a gowing feeling of
injustice, inequality and frustration in the Arab world
feeling that no matter what one does, no matter what one
says, no one in the West, and least of all anyone in
Washington, will listen. It is a reservoir of resentment
that both Osama bin laden and Saddam Hussein have tapped
and tried to use to increase their own personal power.
In that context, using technologically sophisticated
"smart" weapons to kill by remote control does not
really answer the questionespecially when hundreds of
thousands of already battered Arab civilians are
traumatized into becoming collateral damage. Even if we
were to win quickly in Iraq, the hydra will come back as
a more formidable monster. That is what the rest of the
world has been trying to tell us.
[to read William Dowell on Remembering Beirut, click
here]
http://www.nyu.edu/globalbeat/syndicate/dowell031703.html
ABOUT THE WRITER
William T. Dowell, editor of the Global Beat Website for
New York University's Center for War, Peace and the News
Media, is a veteran correspondent who covered numerous
wars and conflicts in the Middle East, Southeast Asia
and Afghanistan.
© 2000 New York University. All Rights Reserved. The
Global Beat Syndicate, a service of New York
University's Center for War, Peace, and the News Media,
provides editors with commentary and perspective
articles on critical global issues from contributors
around the world. For more information, check out

http://www.nyu.edu/globalbeat/syndicate/