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Editorial
See other Editorial Articles

Title: The neocons have learned nothing from five years of catastrophe
Source: The Guardian UK
URL Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/comment/story/0,,2002290,00.html
Published: Feb 2, 2007
Author: Francis Fukuyama
Post Date: 2007-02-02 01:19:28 by Burkeman1
Keywords: None
Views: 316
Comments: 19

The United States today spends approximately as much as the rest of the world combined on its military establishment. So it is worth pondering why it is that, after nearly four years of effort, the loss of thousands of American lives, and an outlay of perhaps half-a-trillion dollars, the US has not succeeded in pacifying a small country of some 24 million people, much less in leading it to anything that looks remotely like a successful democracy.

One answer is that the nature of global politics in the first decade of the 21st century has changed in important ways. Today's world, at least in that band of instability that runs from north Africa and through the Middle East, sub-Saharan Africa and central Asia, is characterised by numerous weak and sometimes failed states, and by transnational actors who are able to move fluidly across international borders, abetted by the same technological capabilities that produced globalisation. States such as Afghanistan, Pakistan, Iraq, Lebanon, Somalia, Palestine and a host of others are not able to exercise sovereign control over their territory, ceding power and influence to terrorist groups such as al-Qaida, political parties-cum-militias such as Hizbullah in Lebanon, or various ethnic and sectarian factions elsewhere. American military doctrine has emphasised the use of overwhelming force, applied suddenly and decisively, to defeat the enemy. But in a world where insurgents and militias deploy invisibly among civilian populations, overwhelming force is almost always counterproductive: it alienates precisely those people who have to make a break with the hardcore fighters and deny them the ability to operate freely. The kind of counterinsurgency campaign needed to defeat transnational militias and terrorists puts political goals ahead of military ones, and emphasises hearts and minds over shock and awe.

A second lesson that should have been drawn from the past five years is that preventive war cannot be the basis of a long-term US nonproliferation strategy. The Bush doctrine sought to use preventive war against Iraq as a means of raising the perceived cost to would-be proliferators of approaching the nuclear threshold. Unfortunately, the cost to the US itself was so high that it taught exactly the opposite lesson: the deterrent effect of American conventional power is low, and the likelihood of preventive war actually decreases if a country manages to cross that threshold.

A final lesson that should have been drawn from the Iraq war is that the current US government has demonstrated great incompetence in its day-to-day management of policy. One of the striking things about the performance of the Bush administration is how poorly it has followed through in accomplishing the ambitious objectives it set for itself. In Iraq, the administration has acted like a patient with attention-deficit disorder. The US succeeded in organising efficiently for key events such as the handover of sovereignty on June 30 2004, or the elections of January 30 2005. But it failed to train Iraqi forces, failed to appoint ambassadors, failed to perform due diligence on contractors and, above all, failed to hold accountable those officials most responsible for these and other multiple failures.

This lack of operational competence could in theory be fixed over time, but it has important short-term consequences for American grand strategy. Neoconservative theorists saw America exercising a benevolent hegemony over the world, using its enormous power wisely and decisively to fix problems such as terrorism, proliferation, rogue states, and human-rights abuses. But even if friends and allies were inclined to trust America's good intentions, it would be hard for them not to be dismayed at the actual execution of policy and the amount of broken china this particular bull left behind.

The failure to absorb Iraq's lessons has been evident in the neoconservative discussion of how to deal with Iran's growing regional power, and its nuclear programme. Iran today constitutes a huge challenge for the US, as well as for America's friends in the Middle East. Unlike al-Qaida, Iran is a state, deeply rooted historically (unlike Iraq) and flush with resources as a result of energy price rises. It is ruled by a radical Islamist regime that - particularly since Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's election in June 2005 - has turned in a disturbingly intolerant and aggressive direction.

The US unintentionally abetted Iran's regional rise by invading Iraq, eliminating the Ba'athist regime as a counterweight, and empowering Shia parties close to Tehran. It seems reasonably clear that Iran wants nuclear weapons, despite protestations that its nuclear programme is only for civilian purposes; nuclear energy makes little sense for a country sitting on some of the world's largest oil reserves, but it makes sense as the basis for a weapons programme. It is completely rational for the Iranians to conclude that they will be safer with a bomb than without one.

It is easy to outline the obstacles to a negotiated end to the Iranian programme, but much harder to come up with an alternative strategy. Use of force looks very unappealing. The US is hardly in a position to invade and occupy yet another country, especially one three times larger than Iraq. An attack would have to be conducted from the air, and it would not result in regime change, which is the only long-term means of stopping the WMD programme. It is hard to have much confidence that US intelligence on Iranian facilities is any better than it was in the case of Iraq. An air campaign is much more likely to build support for the regime than to topple it, and will stimulate terrorism and attacks on American facilities and friends around the globe. The US would be even more isolated in such a war than during the Iraqi campaign, with only Israel as a certain ally.

None of these considerations, nor the debacle in Iraq, has prevented certain neoconservatives from advocating military action against Iran. Some insist that Iran poses an even greater threat than Iraq, avoiding the fact that their zealous advocacy of the Iraq invasion is what has destroyed America's credibility and undercut its ability to take strong measures against Iran.

All of this could well be correct. Ahmadinejad may be the new Hitler; the current negotiations could be our Munich accords; Iran could be in the grip of undeterrable religious fanatics; and the west might be facing a "civilisational" danger. I believe that there are reasons for being less alarmist. Iran is, after all, a state, with equities to defend - it should be deterrable by other states possessing nuclear weapons; it is a regional and not a global power; it has in the past announced extreme ideological goals but has seldom acted on them when important national interests were at stake; and its decision-making process appears neither unified nor under the control of the most radical forces.

What I find remarkable about the neoconservative line of argument on Iran, however, is how little changed it is in its basic assumptions and tonalities from that taken on Iraq in 2002, despite the momentous events of the past five years and the manifest failure of policies that neoconservatives themselves advocated. What may change is the American public's willingness to listen to them.

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#1. To: All (#0)

This is cute but it simply won't fly any longer. One cannot reasonable attribute to the Neowhores the "Good intentions" that Fukuyama does here. It just isn't rational. These are not dumb men. Things in Iraq are maybe not to their complete liking- but one must now assume that CHAOS and VIOLENCE were the GOALS ALL ALONG! That they are advocating a war with Iran under the current situation in Iraq demands that the intentions of the Neowhores not be assumed to be good- as Francis does here.

Indeed- one should now assume the worst- that having made Iraq a living hell hole in which the male population is being decimated- the Neowhores want to do the same in Iran. One has to take very seriously that the "Goal" all along was the current situation as IT WAS EASY TO PREDICT TO EVEN SUCH AS MYSELF- SOMEONE MODERATELY FAMILIAR WITH THE HISTORY OF THE REGION.

Burkeman1  posted on  2007-02-02   1:27:24 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#2. To: Burkeman1 (#1)

These are not dumb men. Things in Iraq are maybe not to their complete liking- but one must now assume that CHAOS and VIOLENCE were the GOALS ALL ALONG! That they are advocating a war with Iran under the current situation in Iraq demands that the intentions of the Neowhores not be assumed to be good- as Francis does here.

Indeed- one should now assume the worst- that having made Iraq a living hell hole in which the male population is being decimated- the Neowhores want to do the same in Iran.

Even I knew from the beginning it would only lead to chaos in the region.

I wonder if your theory is correct, I haven't been able to think of any reasonable explanation, though this could very well be it.

I also think they wanted to destroy ancient artifacts, though not sure as to why.

Diana  posted on  2007-02-02   1:38:20 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#3. To: All (#0)

The Bush doctrine sought to use preventive war against Iraq as a means of raising the perceived cost to would-be proliferators of approaching the nuclear threshold.

Ok, now that is just flat out nonsense. The "Bush Doctrine" (it doesn't merit the term) was never about "raising the cost" to would be proliferators. Francis- they knew he didn't even have a nuke weapon program. They lied Francis. You know it, I know it, everyone knows it. It wasn't "Failed intelligence". It wasn't the CIA dropping the ball. It wasn't a management snafu or a communication breakdown. It was the wholesale manufacturing of fake phoney intel and centrally run and secretly financed propaganda campaign. Stop embarassing yourself and insulting us Francis.

Burkeman1  posted on  2007-02-02   1:40:24 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#4. To: Dakmar (#0)

Francis Fukuyama ping

The moral and constitutional obligations of our representatives in Washington are to protect our liberty, not coddle the world, precipitating no-win wars, while bringing bankruptcy and economic turmoil to our people. ~Ron Paul

robin  posted on  2007-02-02   1:42:47 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#5. To: All (#0)

The US succeeded in organising efficiently for key events such as the handover of sovereignty on June 30 2004, or the elections of January 30 2005.

How could these have failed Francis? The "elections" were monitored by nobody but our embedded blinded press. There were no UN observers, no independent bodies monitoring these "elections". How could they have possibly have failed. The same question but even more so for the "handing over of sovereignty". Francis- these were propaganda stunts- without substance of any kind. They COULDN'T HAVE FAILED! Handing over Sovireignty? That meant absolutley nothing in reality. It was a photo op.

But it failed to train Iraqi forces, failed to appoint ambassadors, failed to perform due diligence on contractors and, above all, failed to hold accountable those officials most responsible for these and other multiple failures.

And, curiously, our "Oppossition" party has made exactly no hay over any of these facts. This massive failure has elicted a whimper out of the Dems to the effect that they "we can run Iraq better- and maybe we need a timetable."

Bush has quotes two years ago from the debates in which he claimed hundreds of thousands of trained troops as an accomplishment. That was a lie. Where are the Dems to make hay of it? Especially now? Where is our press to remind us of this now that the President is saying the same damn thing. What has changed now that will make the "Training" work?

This is all a fraud.

Burkeman1  posted on  2007-02-02   1:49:47 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#6. To: Burkeman1 (#3)

Glad to see you survived the Boston-Blinky-Bulb-Bombing (B4), bud.

01/31/07 Free Republic surrenders to Iran over an elecronic advertisment
Another proud day for America!

Esso  posted on  2007-02-02   1:55:13 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#7. To: Burkeman1 (#5)

I wonder how many Iraqi purple thumbs it's going to take until America gets its 'nads back? I'm thinkin' we're gonna need more thumbs...or something.

01/31/07 Free Republic surrenders to Iran over an elecronic advertisment
Another proud day for America!

Esso  posted on  2007-02-02   2:08:24 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#8. To: Esso (#6)

What an embarassment. Talk radio the other day- there was this caller- he made me so ashamed to be an American on so many levels. He called in- and said that he worked near the World Trade Center up until a month before the attacks. So okay- he wasn't even in the WTC and wasn't even there when it happened but he is already wrapping himself in the bloody flag of 9/11. He then goes on to say that he was just "blocks" away from one of these "Devices" (as there was something like 20 of them and Boston is a small city- everyone was just "Blocks away" from these things) and that prompted him to stay home from work that day- his voice cracking up as he was clearly about to cry as he said this. He then went on to scold the host of the show for saying how this was a big joke and a wholly incompetent and stupid reaction on the part of the "authorities". The show host, instead of telling this "man" to stop being such a fucking pussy- actually back tracked on his stance and said this collosal faggot had a point. I was dumbstruck. Shame. A nation of weenies.

Burkeman1  posted on  2007-02-02   2:09:01 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#9. To: Esso (#7)

Iraqi women must leave their homes every day in Baghdad under extreme conditions of violence and stress just to get enough food for their families to eat- and meanwhile- in this country- grown men are crying on talk radio programs about how frightened they were of some freaking light bright toys.

Simply disgusting. I am amazed Americans are able to procreate and reproduce with such eunuchs abounding everywhere.

Burkeman1  posted on  2007-02-02   2:14:11 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#10. To: Burkeman1 (#8)

(as there was something like 20 of them and Boston is a small city- everyone was just "Blocks away" from these things)

LOL! "OMG! I was just blocks away from a sign! I need PTSD counseling! Help me Mr. Gooberment!" HaHaHa!

FWIW My 81 Year-old mother who's not particularly technologically saavy, saw a picture of the "device" in the newspaper yesterday and could tell it was a sign. She wondered why someone on the bomb squad wasn't able to make that determination.

Must've been the D-size Duracell bomblets that threw them off.

01/31/07 Free Republic surrenders to Iran over an elecronic advertisment
Another proud day for America!

Esso  posted on  2007-02-02   2:27:21 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#11. To: Burkeman1 (#8)

he made me so ashamed to be an American on so many levels. He called in- and said that he worked near the World Trade Center up until a month before the attacks. So okay- he wasn't even in the WTC and wasn't even there when it happened but he is already wrapping himself in the bloody flag of 9/11. He then goes on to say that he was just "blocks" away from one of these "Devices" (as there was something like 20 of them and Boston is a small city- everyone was just "Blocks away" from these things) and that prompted him to stay home from work that day- his voice cracking up as he was clearly about to cry as he said this. He then went on to scold the host of the show for saying how this was a big joke and a wholly incompetent and stupid reaction on the part of the "authorities".

I love it! Burkeman you are the best! You could write script for Leno or Letterman.

Sadly this ditz-brain is not a TeeVee character - the man you described is our neighbor, our colleague, our relative.

scrapper2  posted on  2007-02-02   2:32:47 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#12. To: Burkeman1 (#9)

meanwhile- in this country- grown men are crying on talk radio programs about how frightened they were of some freaking light bright toys.

Simply disgusting. I am amazed Americans are able to procreate and reproduce with such eunuchs abounding everywhere.

Unfortunately, this ditz-brain is no eunuch - he probably has 2 or 3 kids carrying his ditzy genes.

scrapper2  posted on  2007-02-02   2:35:22 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#13. To: Burkeman1 (#9)

Some blinky lights brought a major American city to it's knees yesterday. I'd hate to think what a real threat would do, but I already know. Under Baghdad conditions, people would be lining up to be admitted to "Freedom Camps". Shameful.

Guess who's won?

01/31/07 Free Republic surrenders to Iran over an elecronic advertisment
Another proud day for America!

Esso  posted on  2007-02-02   2:37:51 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#14. To: Esso (#13)

Seriously- they closed down interstates yesterday and major arteries into the city- FOR HOURS. What will happen if some lone schitzo Moslem goes whacko and shoots someone? Are they going to call the national guard- close the city down- have speaker vans warning everyone to stay inside til the 101st airborne arrives to round up every bushy haired olive skinned male in the city?

As it is now- I am reminded of how idiotic this whole WOT is whenever the L&G gas tanker comes into port which I see out my window. Now- it was already determined that a "Terrorist" RPG or even a cannon- couldn't make this gas tanker explode- as they have redundant safety measures. IT COULDN"T HAPPEN. But that does not matter. Facts don't matter in the WOT. Emotion rules. So- every time it comes to the harbor- it is escourted by a half dozen police boats- and at the end of every single pier in the harbor- like dozens of them- is a police officer with a blinking light- or a police car. Also- TWO helicopters overhead. This is every time- entering and leaving (while empty). And- to top it off- the City is going to build a terminal outside the harbor to the tune of hundreds of millions so the gas tanker doesn't even have to port to offload its cargo. The whole thing is disgusting. I can just imagine who is making the millions of this fear.

Burkeman1  posted on  2007-02-02   2:48:39 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#15. To: scrapper2 (#11)

Thanks for the high praise.

Burkeman1  posted on  2007-02-02   3:07:33 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#16. To: Burkeman1 (#1)

These are not dumb men

They are stupid men. The neoconservatives are overwhelmingly Jewish, and politicaly Jews are the stupidest people in the history of the world. If they weren't, they wouldn't have been expelled from at least 81 territories.

The idea they want Israel surrounded by an ocean of chaos is ridiculous. Surrounded by friendly governments isn't.

Their failures are why they are fleeing from Bush, stabbing him in the back and claiming their plans weren't followed even when they were.

"We become what we behold. We shape our tools and thereafter our tools shape us." -- Marshall McLuhan, after Alexander Pope and William Blake.

YertleTurtle  posted on  2007-02-02   6:55:24 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#17. To: Burkeman1 (#3)

Good catch. I think that the actual effect of invading Iraq was the opposite of what Fukuyama is saying. If the Bush Doctrine was about deterring nuclear desires, we would have invaded North Korea, since they actually have the weapon. The message we sent was that if you actually have the capability, we'll leave you alone no matter what you do, while if you don't we'll invade you, no matter how much you cooperate. It should be called Schoolyard Bully doctrine, since we don't mess with anyone who can actually strike back.

historian1944  posted on  2007-02-02   6:57:25 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#18. To: YertleTurtle (#16)

politicaly Jews are the stupidest people in the history of the world.

You must admit that the conservative Republicans have demonstrated a definitive lack of political savvy ... Let's deport em !

“The First Highest Masonic Council was, as we have already said, formed on 31st May 1801 in Charleston, 33 degrees northern latitude, under the chairmanship of the Jew Isaac Long, who was made inspector general by the Jew Moses Cohen, and who had received his degree from Hyes, from Franken, and the Jew Morin.”

noone222  posted on  2007-02-02   7:06:39 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#19. To: historian1944 (#17)

If the Bush Doctrine was about deterring nuclear desires, we would have invaded North Korea, since they actually have the weapon. The message we sent was that if you actually have the capability, we'll leave you alone no matter what you do, while if you don't we'll invade you, no matter how much you cooperate. It should be called Schoolyard Bully doctrine, since we don't mess with anyone who can actually strike back.

Absolutely, that's a good name for it.

The moral and constitutional obligations of our representatives in Washington are to protect our liberty, not coddle the world, precipitating no-win wars, while bringing bankruptcy and economic turmoil to our people. ~Ron Paul

robin  posted on  2007-02-02   10:42:36 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


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