The thought came to me that Afghanistan maybe our last
“conventional war”, ever! By conventional war, I am refereeing to organized
armed forces of two countries or political units facing one another on some
great battlefield. That definition even disqualifies the Afghanistan "conflict" as a war. General Patton, in
the WW II was the idol of conventional warfare; standing in a rapidly moving heavily
armored tank overlooking a battlefield of death and destruction and thinking how
glorious war is. Include the more recent event of General Colin Powell planning
Desert Storm, the first invasion of Iraq, by using massive overwhelming force
accompanied by an anticipated flood of feel good hormone following complete
victory, which never came. Or Bush and the second Iraqi war; liar, liar Baghdad on fire.
We are living in a seminal
era in terms of international conflicts; a shift from the clash of massive
war machines to conflict through terrorism. This change diminishes the
significance of industrialized nation’s military industrial complex that has dominated
the world for so long and shifts it to suicide bombers and roadside improvised
explosive devices (IED). It seems a legitimate question ask, “Is this change
here to stay?” What maybe overlooked is that it is in keeping with an overall
humanization trend, which makes it seem as if it is here to stay. Of course,
there will be some small army against small army conflicts but fewer in number but no more death dealing massive wars—a bold thing to say in light of the atomic
bomb. Unfortunately, with the diminished possibility of a huge war there will
be more and more acts of terror. In terms of natural history, belligerent behavior first evolved between
individuals, then families, then tribes, religious groups, politically defined nations
and now with the world becoming flat such behavior seems to be changing to conflict
between radical ideologues and society as a whole. In many case cases it is net
even groups but between individuals and society; Timothy McVey, the Unabomber
Ted Kaczynski, and Randy Weaver at Ruby Ridge. Regardless, the only way for a small force to fight a massive force is through use of terror.
Stephen Pinker’s book The
Better Angels of Our Nature: Why violence has declined, published in 2011
was a remarkable book because of the author’s diligence in his research and his
reduction of a massive database to an understandable discussion. The subtitle
points at the conclusion. Violence has declined through the centuries. Fewer and
fewer people are dying. Gore and “man’s inhumanity to man” is still there but
is no longer on such a massive scale.
Once we examine what could be the consequences of this shift
on our society, I think we will realize how much our ancestors have structured world society around war. Obviously, our national defense posture—both offensive and
defensive—will eventually reflect this paradigm shift from massive conflict to fighting small groups
of terrorists. This shift will influence our culture in terms of economic
structure and continue inducing changes right down to social values and even language. For instance,
our morally sensitive culturally values have changes tremendously in the past
century. In WW II, for example, we deliberately targeted civilian populations:
Dresden, Germany and Hiroshima, Japan. In contrast, the “killing” of a single 16–year-old
boy in Yemen, incensed us as a nation. While it is true that the media has
distorted the truth of that incident and made it sound as if we personally were
responsible by using the pronoun “we”, our government did target and kill a
group of al Qaeda operatives, which by chance included this boy. It happened in
a country, with which we are not at war in the old constitutional sense; that is, congress has not declared war on.
We call the people killed by drones in that restaurant and
other places as operatives and not soldiers. If we had captured them, we would
not call them prisoners of war. The POW Geneva Convention for treatment of prisoners
of war or “enemy combatants” no longer applies in an undeclared war. We can not release them at the end of the war if there is no war to end. We have no legal structure to make
a decision of when and where to shoot a drone missile any more than we have a legal
structure to handle a terrorist captured in a foreign country. Almost as aside,
if we did not use great waves of huge bombers or massive ships to kill people,
we will not need to make these weapons of war; we use single drones flown remotely.
A pentagon full of unneeded general and admirals will disappear. Our war veterans
will dwindle to a single person flying the drone from a building in the United
States and a few people at some remote airfield launched the drone and people
need for logistics. War of this sort will never have thousands of wounded veterans
and their families for our government to pledge lifelong care.
On the domestic manufacturing side and veteran entitlements,
the economic impact will be equally dramatic. Aside for drone and rocket manufacturing,
no weapons of war will be needed, only protective armor and whole body
scanners, and explosive detectors. The cost
of war will diminish to near zero. The next 100 years could be dramatic in a
nice way. Sure, we still have bomb, bomb McCain, neo-cons, and greedy industrialists
including arms manufacturers trying to exxpand to the domestic market. Nonetheless,
the shift is happening and will continue to happen. We should recognize it for
what it is, encourage it, always being vigilant, and keep fighting radial groups who
use terrorist techniques to get to the top of the peck order—the ones who want
to be the top chicken and are willing violate basic morality and kill people to
get there.
No comments:
Post a Comment