According to U.S. Military Theory, We Can't Win in Iraq
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During the Algerian war of independence between 1954 and 1962, French leaders decided to permit torture against suspected insurgents. Though they were aware that it was against the law and morality of war, they argued that:
This official condoning of torture on the part of French Army leadership had several negative consequences. It empowered the moral legitimacy of the opposition, undermined the French moral legitimacy, and caused internal fragmentation among serving officers that led to an unsuccessful coup attempt in 1962. In the end, failure to comply with moral and legal restrictions against torture severely undermined French efforts and contributed to their loss despite several significant military victories. ... France eventually recognized Algerian independence in July 1963.Under the circumstances, especially given the list of reasons for the French policy, it is hard not to read this paragraph as the professional military's direct repudiation of the Bush-Gonzales-Rumsfeld torture doctrine.
During Napoleon's occupation of Spain in 1808, it seems little thought was given to the potential challenges of subduing the Spanish populace. Conditioned by the decisive victories at Austerlitz and Jena, Napoleon believed the conquest of Spain would be little more than a "military promenade." Napoleon's campaign included a rapid conventional military victory but ignored the immediate requirement to provide a stable environment for the populace.
The French failed to analyze the Spanish people, their history, culture, motivations and potential to support or hinder the achievement of French political objectives. ... Napoleon's cultural miscalculation resulted in a protracted occupation struggle that lasted nearly six years and ultimately required approximately three-fifths of the Empire's total armed strength, almost four times the force of 80,000 Napoleon originally designated.
The Spanish resistance drained the resources of the French Empire. It was the beginning of the end for Napoleon.The authors are not so blunt as to draw a direct comparison with Bush's present misadventure, though they do certainly invite one. (Note the phrase "military promenade," so like the "cake walk" we were promised in Iraq.) The analogy also poses inevitable questions, questions the manual does not and probably cannot answer directly: Given the central importance of political legitimacy, what do you do when the government is not legitimate, when the war is not just? What happens when the moral high ground has been irrevocably lost?
See more stories tagged with: iraq, petraeus, counterinsurgency
Kristian Williams is the author of "American Methods: Torture and the Logic of Domination" (South End Press, 2006) and "Our Enemies in Blue: Police and Power in America" (revised edition August 2007).
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