āVeni, Vidi, Vici,ā boasted Julius Caesar, one of historyās great military captains. āI came, I saw, I conquered.ā
Then-Secretary of State Hillary Clinton echoed that famed saying when summing up the Obama administrationās military intervention in Libya in 2011 — with a small alteration. āWe came, we saw, he died,ā she said with a laugh about the killing of Muammar Gaddafi, that countryās autocratic leader. Note what she left out, though: the āviciā or victory part. And how right she was to do so, since Washingtonās invasions, occupations, and interventions in Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya, and elsewhere in this century have never produced anything faintly like a single decisive and lasting victory.
āFailure is not an optionā was the stirring 1995 movie catchphrase for the dramatic 1970 rescue of the Apollo 13 moon mission and crew, but were such a movie to be made about Americaās wars and their less-than-vici-esque results today, the phrase would have to be corrected in Clintonian fashion to read āWe came, we saw, we failed.ā
Wars are risky, destructive, unpredictable endeavors, so it would hardly be surprising if Americaās military and civilian leaders failed occasionally in their endless martial endeavors, despite the overwhelming superiority in firepower of āthe worldās greatest military.ā Hereās the question, though: Why have all the American wars of this century gone down in flames and what in the world have those leaders learned from such repetitive failures?
The evidence before our eyes suggests that, when it comes to our senior military leaders at least, the answer would be: nothing at all.
Letās begin with General David Petraeus, he of āthe surgeā fame in the Iraq War. Of course, he would briefly fall from grace in 2012, while director of the CIA, thanks to an affair with his biographer with whom he inappropriately shared highly classified information. When riding high in Iraq in 2007, however, āKing Davidā (as he was then dubbed) was widely considered an example of Americaās best and brightest. He was a soldier-scholar with a doctorate from Princeton, an āinsurgentā general with the perfect way — a revival of Vietnam-era counterinsurgency techniques — to stabilize invaded and occupied Iraq. He was the man to snatch victory from the jaws of looming defeat. (Talk about a fable not worthy of Aesop!)
Though retired from the military since 2011, Petraeus somehow remains a bellwether for conventional thinking about Americaās wars at the Pentagon, as well as inside the Washington Beltway. And despite the quagmire in Afghanistan (that he had a significant hand in deepening), despite the widespread destruction in Iraq (for which he would hold some responsibility), despite the failed-state chaos in Libya, he continues to relentlessly plug the idea of pursuing a āsustainableā forever war against global terrorism; in other words, yet more of the same.
Hereās how he typically put it in a recent interview:
āI would contend that the fight against Islamist extremists is not one that weāre going to see the end of in our lifetimes probably. I think this is a generational struggle, which requires you to have a sustained commitment. But of course you can only sustain it if itās sustainable in terms of the expenditure of blood and treasure.ā
His comment brings to mind a World War II quip about General George S. Patton, also known as āold blood and guts.ā Some of his troops responded to that nickname this way: yes, his guts, but our blood. When men like Petraeus measure the supposed sustainability of their wars in terms of blood and treasure, the first question should be: Whose blood, whose treasure?
When it comes to Washingtonās Afghan War, now in its 18th year and looking ever more like a demoralizing defeat, Petraeus admits that U.S. forces ānever had an exit strategy.ā What they did have, he claims, āwas a strategy to allow us to continue to achieve our objectives… with the reduced expenditure in blood and treasure.ā
Think of this formulation as an upside-down version of the notorious ābody countā of the Vietnam War. Instead of attempting to maximize enemy dead, as General William Westmoreland sought to do from 1965 to 1968, Petraeus is suggesting that the U.S. seek to keep the American body count to a minimum (translating into minimal attention back home), while minimizing the ātreasureā spent. By keeping American bucks and body bags down (Afghans be damned), the war, he insists, can be sustained not just for a few more years but generationally. (He cites 70-year troop commitments to NATO and South Korea as reasonable models.)
Talk about lacking an exit strategy! And he also speaks of a persistent āindustrial-strengthā Afghan insurgency without noting that U.S. military actions, including drone strikes and an increasing reliance on air power, result in ever more dead civilians, which only feed that same insurgency. For him, Afghanistan is little more than a āplatformā for regional counterterror operations and so anything must be done to prevent the greatest horror of all: withdrawing American troops too quickly.
In fact, he suggests that American-trained and supplied Iraqi forces collapsed in 2014, when attacked by relatively small groups of ISIS militants, exactly because U.S. troops had been withdrawn too quickly. The same, he has no doubt, will happen if President Trump repeats this āmistakeā in Afghanistan. (Poor showings by U.S.-trained forces are never, of course, evidence of a bankrupt approach in Washington, but of the need to āstay the course.ā)
Petraeusās critique is, in fact, a subtle version of the stab-in-the-back myth. Its underlying premise: that the U.S. military is always on the generational cusp of success, whether in Vietnam in 1971, Iraq in 2011, or Afghanistan in 2019, if only the rug werenāt pulled out from under the U.S. military by irresolute commanders-in-chief.
Of course, this is all nonsense. Commanded by none other than General David Petraeus, the Afghan surge of 2009-2010 proved a dismal failure as, in the end, had his Iraq surge of 2007. U.S. efforts to train reliable indigenous forces (no matter where in the embattled Greater Middle East and Africa) have also consistently failed. Yet Petraeusās answer is always more of the same: more U.S. troops and advisers, training, bombing, and killing, all to be repeated at āsustainableā levels for generations to come.
The alternative, he suggests, is too awful to contemplate:
āYou have to do something about [Islamic extremism] because otherwise theyāre going to spew violence, extremism, instability, and a tsunami of refugees not just into neighboring countries but… into our western European allies, undermining their domestic political situations.ā
No mention here of how the U.S. invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq spread destruction and, in the end, a ātsunami of refugeesā throughout the region. No mention of how U.S. interventions and bombing in Libya, Syria, Somalia, and elsewhere help āspewā violence and generate a series of failed states.
And amazingly enough, despite his lack of āviciā moments, the American media still sees King David as the go-to guy for advice on how to fight and win the wars heās had such a hand in losing. And just in case you want to start worrying a little, heās now offering such advice on even more dangerous matters. Heās started to comment on the new ācold warā that now has Washington abuzz, a coming era — as he puts it — of ārenewed great power rivalriesā with China and Russia, an era, in fact, of āmulti-domain warfareā that could prove far more challenging than āthe asymmetric abilities of the terrorists and extremists and insurgents that weāve countered in Iraq and Syria and Afghanistan and a variety of other places, particularly since 9/11.ā
For Petraeus, even if Islamic terrorism disappeared tomorrow and not generations from now, the U.S. military would still be engaged with the supercharged threat of China and Russia. I can already hear Pentagon cash registers going ka-ching!
And here, in the end, is whatās most striking about Petraeusās war lessons: no concept of peace even exists in his version of the future. Instead, whether via Islamic terrorism or rival great powers, America faces intractable threats into a distant future. Give him credit for one thing: if adopted, his vision could keep the national security state funded in the staggering fashion itās come to expect for generations, or at least until the money runs out and the U.S. empire collapses.
Two Senior Generals Draw Lessons from the Iraq War
David Petraeus remains Americaās best-known general of this century. His thinking, though, is anything but unique. Take two other senior U.S. Army generals, Mark Milley and Ray Odierno, both of whom recently contributed forewords to the Armyās official history of the Iraq War that tell you what you need to know about Pentagon thinking these days.
Published this January, the Armyās history of Operation Iraqi Freedom is detailed and controversial. Completed in June 2016, its publication was pushed back due to internal disagreements. As the Wall Street Journal put it in October 2018: āSenior [Army] brass fretted over the impact the studyās criticisms might have on prominent officersā reputations and on congressional support for the service.ā With those worries apparently resolved, the study is now available at the Army War College website.
The Iraq War witnessed the overthrow of autocrat (and former U.S. ally) Saddam Hussein, a speedy declaration of āmission accomplishedā by President George W. Bush, and that countryās subsequent descent into occupation, insurgency, civil war, and chaos. What should the Army have learned from all this? General Milley, now Army chief of staff and President Trumpās nominee to serve as the next Chairman of the Joint Chiefs, is explicit on its lessons:
āOIF [Operation Iraqi Freedom] is a sober reminder that technological advantages and standoff weapons alone cannot render a decision; that the promise of short wars is often elusive; that the ends, ways, and means must be in balance; that our Army must understand the type of war we are engaged with in order to adapt as necessary; that decisions in war occur on the ground in the mud and dirt; and that timeless factors such as human agency, chance, and an enemyās conviction, all shape a war’s outcome.ā
These arenāt, in fact, lessons. Theyāre military banalities. The side with the best weapons doesnāt always win. Short wars can turn into long ones. The enemy has a say in how the war is fought. What they lack is any sense of Army responsibility for mismanaging the Iraq War so spectacularly. In other words, mission accomplished for General Milley.
General Odierno, who commissioned the study and served in Iraq for 55 months, spills yet more ink in arguing, like Milley, that the Army has learned from its mistakes and adapted, becoming even more agile and lethal. Hereās my summary of his ālessonsā:
* Superior technology doesnāt guarantee victory. Skill and warcraft remain vital.
* To win a war of occupation, soldiers need to know the environment, including āthe local political and social consequences of our actions… When conditions on the ground change, we must be willing to reexamine the assumptions that underpin our strategy and plans and change course if necessary, no matter how painful it may be,ā while developing better āstrategic leaders.ā
* The Army needs to be enlarged further because ālandpowerā is so vital and Americaās troops were āovertaxed by the commitments in Iraq and Afghanistan, and the decision to limit our troop levels in both theaters had severe operational consequences.ā
* The Iraq War showcased an Army with an āastonishingā capacity āto learn and adapt in the midst of a war that the United States was well on its way to losing.ā
The gist of Odiernoās ālessonsā: the Army learned, adapted, and overcame. Therefore, it deserves Americaās thanks and yet more of everything, including the money and resources to pursue future wars even more successfully. There would, however, be another way to read those lessons of his: that the Army overvalued technology, that combat skills were lacking, that efforts to work with allies and Iraqi forces regularly failed, that Army leadership lacked the skills needed to win, and that it was folly to get into a global war on terror in the first place.
On those failings, neither Milley nor Odierno has anything of value to say, since their focus is purely on how to make the Army prevail in future versions of just such wars. Their limited critique, in short, does little to prevent future disasters. Much like Petraeus’s reflections, they cannot envision an end point to the process — no victory to be celebrated, no return to America being āa normal country in a normal time.ā There is only war and more war in their (and so our) future.
The Undiscovered Country
Talk of such future wars — of, that is, more of the same — reminded me of the sixth Star Trek movie, The Undiscovered Country. In that space opera, which appeared in 1991 just as the Soviet Union was imploding, peace finally breaks out between the quasi-democratic Federation (think: the USA) and the warmongering Klingon Empire (think: the USSR). Even the Federationās implacable warrior-captain, James T. Kirk, grudgingly learns to bury the phaser with the Klingon ābastardsā who murdered his son.
Back then, I was a young captain in the U.S. Air Force and, with the apparent end of the Cold War, my colleagues and I dared talk about, if not eternal peace, at least “peace” as our own — and not just Star Trekās — undiscovered country. Like many at the time, even we in the military were looking forward to what was then called a āpeace dividend.ā
But that unknown land, which Americans then glimpsed ever so briefly, remains unexplored to this day. The reason why is simple enough. As Andrew Bacevich put it in his book Breach of Trust, āFor the Pentagon [in 1991], peace posed a concrete and imminent threatā — which meant that new threats, ārogue statesā of every sort, had to be found. And found they were.
It comes as no surprise, then, that Americaās generals have learned so little of real value from their twenty-first-century losses. They continue to see a state of āinfinite warā as necessary and are blind to the ways in which endless war and the ever-developing war state in Washington are the enemies of democracy.
The question isnāt why they think the way they do. The question is why so many Americans share their vision. The future is now. Isnāt it time that the U.S. sought to invade and occupy a different “land” entirely: an undiscovered country — a future — defined by peace?
A retired lieutenant colonel (USAF) and professor of history, Astore is a TomDispatch regular. His personal blog is Bracing Views.
This article first appeared on TomDispatch.com, a weblog of the Nation Institute, which offers a steady flow of alternate sources, news, and opinion from Tom Engelhardt, long time editor in publishing, co-founder of the American Empire Project, author of The End of Victory Culture, as of a novel, The Last Days of Publishing. His latest book is A Nation Unmade By War (Haymarket Books).
ZNetwork is funded solely through the generosity of its readers.
Donate