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Critique of the war on terror- US Army War College
LOSING PERSPECTIVE IN THE WAR ON TERROR
by Dr. Jeffrey Record, January 14, 2004
Dr. Jeffrey Record normally teaches strategy and
tactics at the U.S. Air Force's Air War College. He is currently a visiting
professor at the prestigious U.S. Army War College's Strategic Studies
Institute.
In an article just published, Dr. Record delivers an extraordinarily
blunt critique of where and why President Bush's "Global War on
Terror" (GWOT) has gone wrong.
Record's assessment: "In the wake of the September 11, 2001, al-Qaeda
terrorist attacks on the United States, the U.S. Government
declared a global war on terrorism (GWOT). The nature and parameters
of that war, however,remain frustratingly unclear.
The administration has postulated a multiplicity of enemies, including
rogue states; weapons of mass destruction (WMD) proliferators; terrorist
organizations of global, regional, and national scope; and terrorism
itself. It also seems to have conflated them into a monolithic threat,
and in so doing has subordinated strategic clarity to the moral clarity
it strives for in foreign policy and may have set the United States
on a course of open-ended and gratuitous conflict with states and nonstate
entities that pose no serious threat to the United States.
Of
particular concern has been the conflation of al-Qaeda and Saddam Husseins
Iraq as a single, undifferentiated terrorist threat.This was a strategic
error of the first order because it ignored critical differences between
the two in character, threat level, and susceptibility to U.S. deterrence
and military action. The result has been an unnecessary preventive war
of choice against a deterred Iraq that has
created a new front in the Middle East for Islamic terrorism and diverted
attention and resources away from securing the American homeland against
further assault by an undeterrable al-Qaeda.
The war against Iraq was not integral to the Global War on Terrorism,
but rather a detour from it. Additionally, most of the GWOTs declared
objectives, which include the destruction of al-Qaeda and other transnational
terrorist organizations, the transformation of Iraq into a prosperous,
stable democracy, the democratization of the rest of the autocratic
Middle East, the eradication of terrorism as a means of irregular warfare,
and the (forcible, if necessary) termination of WMD proliferation to
real and potential enemies worldwide, are unrealistic and condemn the
United States to a hopeless quest for absolute security. As such, the
GWOTs goals are also politically, fiscally, and militarily unsustainable.
Accordingly,
the GWOT must be recalibrated to conform to concrete U.S. security interests
and the limits of American power
(Dr. Jeffrey Record, The
Strategic Studies Institute, The U.S. Army War College, Carlisle Barracks)
http://www.nyu.edu/globalbeat/index.html#report