Military Victory is Dead

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war-is-dead

“MODERN WAR INSTITUTE AT WEST POINT”

“Victory’s been defeated; it’s time we recognized that and moved on to what we actually can accomplish.

We’ve reached the end of victory’s road, and at this juncture it’s time to embrace other terms, a less-loaded lexicon, like “strategic advantage,” “relative gain,” and “sustainable marginalization.”

Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos and Harvard Professor Steven Pinker triumphantly announced the peace deal between the government of Colombia and the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC). While positive, this declaration rings hollow as the exception that proves the rule – a tentative treaty, however, at the end, roughly 7,000 guerrillas held a country of 50 million hostage over 50 years at a cost of some 220,000 lives. Churchill would be aghast: Never in the history of human conflict were so many so threatened by so few.

One reason this occasion merited a more somber statement: military victory is dead. And it was killed by a bunch of cheap stuff.

The term “victory” is loaded, so let’s stipulate it means unambiguous, unchallenged, and unquestioned strategic success – something more than a “win,” because, while one might “eke out a win,” no one “ekes out a victory.” Wins are represented by a mere letter (“w”); victory is a tickertape with tanks.

Which is something I’ll never see in my military career; I should explain. When a government has a political goal that cannot be obtained other than by force, the military gets involved and selects some objective designed to obtain said goal. Those military objectives can be classified broadly, as Prussian military theorist Carl von Clausewitz did, into either a limited aim (i.e. “occupy some…frontier-districts” to use “for bargaining”), or a larger aim to completely disarm the enemy, “render[ing] him politically helpless or military impotent.” Lo, we’ve arrived at the problem: War has become so inexpensive that anyone can afford the traditional military means of strategic significance – so we can never fully disarm the enemy. And a perpetually armed enemy means no more parades (particularly in Nice).

Never in the history of human conflict were so many so threatened by so few.

It’s a buyer’s market in war, and the baseline capabilities (shoot, move, and communicate) are at snake-belly prices. Tactical weaponry, like AK-47s are plentiful, rented, and shipped from battlefield to battlefield, and the most lethal weapon U.S. forces encountered at the height of the Iraq War, the improvised explosive device, could be had for as little as $265. Moving is cost-effective too in the “pickup truck era of warfare,” and reports on foreign fighters in Syria remind us that cheap, global travel makes it possible for nearly anyone on the planet to rapidly arrive in an active war zone with money to spare. Also, while the terror group Lashkar-e-Taiba shut down the megacity Mumbai in 2008 for less than what many traveling youth soccer teams spend in a season, using unprotected social media networks, communication has gotten even easier for the emerging warrior with today’s widely available unhackable phones and apps. These low and no-cost commo systems are the glue that binds single wolves into coordinated wolf-packs with guns, exponentially greater than the sum of their parts. The good news: Ukraine can crowdfund aerial surveillance against Russian incursions. The less-good news: strikes, like 9/11, cost less than three seconds of a single Super Bowl ad. With prices so low, why would anyone ever give up their fire, maneuver, and control platforms?

All of which explains why military victory has gone away. Consider the Middle East, and the recent comment by a Hezbollah leader, “This can go on for a hundred years,” and his comrade’s complementary analysis, that “as long as we are there, nobody will win.” With such a modestly priced war stock on offer, it’s no wonder Anthony Cordesman of the Center for Strategic and International Studies agrees with the insurgents, recently concluding, of the four wars currently burning across the region, the U.S. has “no prospect” of strategic victory in any. Or that Modern War Institute scholar Andrew Bacevich assesses bluntly, “If winning implies achieving stated political objectives, U.S. forces don’t win.” This is what happens when David’s slingshot is always full.

The guerrillas know what many don’t: It’s the era, stupid. This is the nature of the age, as Joshua Cooper Ramos describes, “a nightmare reality in which we must fight adaptive microthreats and ideas, both of which appear to be impossible to destroy even with the most expensive weapons.” Largely correct, one point merits minor amendment – it’s meaningless to destroy when it’s so cheap to get back in the game, a hallmark of a time in which Wolverine-like regeneration is regular.

This theme even extends to more civilized conflicts. Take the Gawker case: begrudged hedge fund giant Peter Thiel funded former wrestler Hulk Hogan’s lawsuit against the journalistic insurrectionists at Gawker Media, which forced the website’s writers to lay down their keyboards. However, as author Malcolm Gladwell has pointed out – Gawker’s leader, Nick Denton, can literally walk across the street, with a few dollars, and start right over. Another journalist opined, “Mr. Thiel’s victory was a hollow one – you might even say he lost. While he may have killed Gawker, its sensibility and influence on the rest of the news business survive.” Perhaps Thiel should have waited 50 more years, as Colombia had to, to write his “victory” op-ed? He may come to regret the essay as his own “Mission Accomplished” moment.

True with websites, so it goes with warfare. We live in the cheap war era, where the attacker has the advantage and the violent veto is always possible. Political leaders can speak and say tough stuff, promise ruthless revenge – it doesn’t matter, ultimately, because if you can’t disarm the enemy, you can’t parade the tanks.”

https://mwi.westpoint.edu/defeat-military-victory/

4 responses »

  1. Pingback: America, when Military Victory is Dead | Eslkevin's Blog

  2. Love Plato’s quote, it really synthesizes what the core struggle is of being alive, to not be a slave to our ego’s propensity and ease for self delusion. It seems lately Truth does not matter, and getting away with anything at any cost is the new normal. Everyone is becoming a modern Pirate now, make a living out of nothing good for others but themselves; still “rapping” and “pillaging” for personal gain (the environment, social security, retirements, stock market manipulation, including false promises and lies, uncaring of future generations, etc., having and buying a different set of justice and rules for themselves). Same old story really, just with a more modern set of tools. This new amorphous MMA-like, no-limits Capitalism that is not Capitalism as it was intended is being regally nice, but only to some, making new Kings of corporations, too big to fail (not a real Capitalist concept). True Capitalism has been dead for a while actually, a sort of victim of it’s own success, sort of like a runaway nuclear reaction. But we all pretend it is still a gem and that we are still talking about the same as originally proposed, when honestly is more of a sugary turd that breeds malcontents like the new CEO’s who even when ruining a corporation they still come out on top and with hefty bonuses to boot (think Boing, Disney, etc. for example).

    Capitalism without boundaries, protections, and regulations where a corporations has more rights and influence in government than regular people is not how it was originally thought it should be for the good of all. Capitalism is supposed to be a positive moderator/balancer for our runaway self tendencies, instead of a negative moderator balancer/inhibitor like communism which proved to be an inferior system. It was meant to encourage fair competition and innovation and yes to also regulate self greed (no monopolies for example), but now is just a FFA, Mafia style corporate game were everyday people are just pawns, we are all encouraged into a rat race to the top, and the pointy pyramid topology keeps growing and the government is more and more beholden to corporations for its members own self interests (like reelection). Capitalism tries to encourage more of a flat pyramid, but the pointy one seems to be winning, and how good it is for those on the Top compared to the Bottom now a days.

    I think the Military might still be the least of the delusional and somewhat healthy entities left in the World, you never really win a War on lies, usually you lose them, facts actually matter, and at least the one’s on Top are usually there through merit and for thinking for the good of the whole system, but unfortunately the Military is no longer a real path to Victory as you say nor of Peace specially with atomics in the mix. Plus I am skeptical you would be able to continue to evade becoming politized and corporatized, clearly you have begun to lose your self imposed high values, not maintaining autonomy from the the political and corporations, you are beginning to let cancer spread through your ranks. I was a great admirer and have read much Military history but I have changed. I still am an admirer in the sense of some of the values you still uphold (like unity and meritocracy, accountability, good administration of resources, no care for color or nationality or sex, etc.) but I have become more of a pacifist and Spiritual person lately and really trying to find the answer to Plato’s conundrum. Unfortunately the existence of the Military will in the end always preclude a lasting peaceful future. It’s not the Military fault per se, it just that humanity does not know still after 15,000 years of supposedly evolution how to live in peace and have unity without it. A higher form of consciousness is required not to rely on the Military for peace and to achieve other human worthy endeavors that are not a rehashing of the past (mostly Military figures and events with just one Jesus and a Buddha as counterpoints), a real leap in evolution cannot have deadly weapons in the mix. Not sure if that would ever manifest here on Earth. The Military is not really pro Humanity, more like just a limit on extreme inhumanity while being inhumane itself but still with more self control and a pseudo-humanity. I see it more of the lesser of two evils now which would need to be undone in the end to have peace. Still l hope that you can keep your integrity cause in the end you are still the last line of defense. It’s really paradoxical, you (the Military) are the worst but also the best of us for the moment until we find a next level worst and best that does not include you. I think humans will always be paradoxical, eternal opposing forces (yin/yang) in struggle achieving new forms of balances of these opposing forces that are interpreted as evolution. We have been at the same level for thousands of years now, but I am sure a new level will eventually be gained or a reset to a lower known level will happen again.

    A small correction to your article, it is Colombia not “Columbia”, it is wrongly spelled at least 3 times. Besides that, I agree with your assessment, not to mention that atomics would ruin everyone’s potential parades in this Era. I wonder what you think might happen when we go to War for the Moon, Mars and specially for the mining of game changing space resources like asteroids, etc. Will a space War end up becoming a World War 3 here at home, making “Fallout” not just a good game and an entertaining TV series but our inevitable sad future or somehow we will just have a space War and still be content with being MAD here at home?

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