This strategic approach forms
but one element in General
Votel’s multifaceted (if murky)
“command
narrative,”
which he promulgated last year
upon taking the helm at CENTCOM
headquarters in Tampa, Florida.
Other components include a
“culture,” a “vision,” a
“mission,” and “priorities.”
CENTCOM’s culture
emphasizes “persistent
excellence,” as the command
“strives to understand and help
others to comprehend, with
granularity and clarity, the
complexities of our region.”
The vision,
indistinguishable from the
mission except perhaps for
those possessing advanced
degrees in hermeneutics, seeks
to provide “a more stable and
prosperous region with
increasingly effective
governance, improved security,
and trans-regional cooperation.”
Toward that estimable end,
CENTCOM’s priorities
include forging partnerships
with other nations “based upon
shared values,” “actively
counter[ing] the malign
influence” of hostile regimes,
and “degrading and defeating
violent extremist organizations
and their networks.”
At
present, CENTCOM is busily
implementing the several
components of Votel’s command
narrative across an “area of
responsibility” (AOR) consisting
of 20 nations, among them Iran,
Iraq, Syria, Afghanistan, and
Pakistan. As the CENTCOM
website
puts it,
without batting a digital
eyelash, that AOR “spans more
than 4 million square miles and
is populated by more than 550
million people from 22 ethnic
groups, speaking 18 languages
with hundreds of dialects and
confessing multiple religions
which transect national
borders.”
According to
the Department of Defense
Dictionary of Military and
Associated Terms, an AOR is
the “geographical area
associated with a combatant
command within which a
geographic combatant commander
has authority to plan and
conduct operations.” Yet this
anodyne definition fails to
capture the spirit of the
enterprise in which General
Votel is engaged.
One imagines that there must be
another Department of
Defense Dictionary, kept
under lock-and-key in the
Pentagon, that dispenses with
the bland language and penchant
for deceptive euphemisms. That
dictionary would define an AOR
as “a vast expanse within which
the United States seeks to
impose order without exercising
sovereignty.” An AOR combines
aspects of colony, protectorate,
and contested imperial frontier.
In that sense, the term
represents the latest
incarnation of the informal
empire that American elites have
pursued in various forms ever
since U.S. forces “liberated”
Cuba in 1898.
To say that a military officer
presiding over an AOR plans and
conducts operations is a bit
like saying that Jeff Bezos
sells books. It’s a small truth
that evades a larger one. To
command CENTCOM is to function
as a proconsul, to inhabit as a
co-equal the rarified realm of
kings, presidents, and prime
ministers. CENTCOM commanders
shape the future of their AOR --
or at least fancy that they do.
Sustaining expectations of
shaping the future requires a
suitably accommodating version
of the past. For CENTCOM,
history is a record of events
selected and arranged to
demonstrate progress. By
testifying to the achievements
of previous CENTCOM commanders,
history thereby validates
Votel’s own efforts to carry on
their work. Not for nothing,
therefore, does the command’s
website include this highly
sanitized
account
of its recent past:
“In the wake of 9-11, the
international community found
Saddam Hussein's continued lack
of cooperation with United
Nations Security Council (UNSC)
Resolutions regarding weapons of
mass destruction unacceptable.
Hussein's continued
recalcitrance led the UNSC to
authorize the use of force by a
U.S.-led coalition. Operation
Iraqi Freedom began 19 March
2003.
“Following the defeat of both
the Taliban regime in
Afghanistan (9 November 2001)
and Saddam Hussein's government
in Iraq (8 April 2003), CENTCOM
has continued to provide
security to the new
freely-elected governments in
those countries, conducting
counterinsurgency operations and
assisting host nation security
forces to provide for their own
defense.”
Setbacks, disappointments,
miscalculations, humiliations:
you won’t hear about them from
CENTCOM. Like Broadway’s Annie,
down at headquarters in Tampa
they’re “just thinkin' about
tomorrow,” which “clears away
the cobwebs, and the sorrow,
till there's none!”
(Give the Vietnam War the
CENTCOM treatment and you would
end up with something like this:
“Responding to unprovoked North
Vietnamese attacks and acting at
the behest of the international
community, a U.S.-led coalition
arrived to provide security to
the freely-elected South
Vietnamese government,
conducting counterinsurgency
operations and assisting host
nation security forces to
provide for their own defense.”)
In fact, the U.N. Security
Council did not authorize the
2003 invasion of Iraq. Indeed,
efforts by George W. Bush’s
administration to secure such an
authorization failed abysmally,
collapsing in a welter of
half-truths and outright
falsehoods. What much of the
international community found
unacceptable, more so even than
Saddam’s obstreperousness, was
Bush’s insistence that he was
going to have his war regardless
of what others might think. As
for celebrating the “defeat” of
the Taliban and of Saddam,
that’s the equivalent of
declaring “game over” when the
whistle sounds ending the first
quarter of a football game.
More to the point, to claim
that, in the years since,
CENTCOM “has continued to
provide security to the new
freely-elected governments” of
Afghanistan and Iraq whitewashes
history in ways that would cause
the most shameless purveyor of
alt-facts on Fox News to blush.
The incontestable truth is that
Afghans and Iraqis have not
known security since U.S.
forces, under the direction of
General Votel’s various
predecessors, arrived on the
scene. Rather than providing
security, CENTCOM has undermined
it.
CENTCOM Headquarters (Where It’s
Always Groundhog Day)
Even so, as the current steward
of CENTCOM’s culture, vision,
mission, strategic approach, and
priorities, General Votel
remains undaunted. In his view,
everything that happened prior
to his assuming ownership of the
CENTCOM AOR is irrelevant. What
matters is what will happen from
now on -- in Washington-speak,
“going forward.” As with Artie
Shaw, serial disappointments
leave intact the conviction that
persistence will ultimately
produce a happy ending.
Earlier this month, Votel
provided a progress report to
the Senate Armed Services
Committee and outlined his
expectations for future
success. In a city that now
competes for the title of Comedy
Central, few paid serious
attention to what the CENTCOM
commander had to say. Yet his
presentation was, in its own
way, emblematic of how, in the
Age of Trump, U.S. national
security policy has become fully
divorced from reality.
General Votel began by
inventorying the various
“drivers of instability”
afflicting his AOR. That list,
unsurprisingly enough, turned
out to be a long one, including
ethnic and sectarian divisions,
economic underdevelopment, an
absence of opportunity for young
people “susceptible to unrest
[and] radical ideologies,” civil
wars, humanitarian crises, large
refugee populations, and
“competition among outside
actors, including Russia and
China, seeking to promote their
interests and supplant U.S.
influence in the region.” Not
qualifying for mention as
destabilizing factors, however,
were the presence and activities
of U.S. military forces, their
footprint dwarfing that of
Russia and China.
Indeed, the balance of Votel’s
64-page written statement
argued, in effect, that U.S.
military activities are the key
to fixing all that ails the
CENTCOM AOR. After making a
brief but obligatory bow to the
fact that “a solely military
response is not sufficient” to
address the region’s problems,
he proceeded to describe at
length the military response
(and only the military response)
that will do just that.
Unfortunately for General Votel,
length does not necessarily
correlate with substance. Once
upon a time, American military
professionals prized brevity and
directness in their writing.
Not so the present generation of
generals who are given to
logorrhea. Consider just this
bit of cliché-ridden drivel -- I
could quote vast passages of it
-- that Votel inflicted on
members of the United States
Senate. “In a region beset by
myriad challenges,” he reported,
“we must always be on the
look-out for opportunities to
seize the initiative to
support our objectives and
goals. Pursuing opportunities
means that we are proactive --
we don’t wait for problems to be
presented; we look for ways to
get ahead of them. It also means
that we have to become
comfortable with transparency
and flat communications -- our
ability to understand our AOR
better than anyone else gives us
the advantage of knowing where
opportunities exist. Pursuing
opportunities also means we have
to take risk -- by delegating
authority and responsibility to
the right level, by trusting our
partners, and being willing to
trust our best instincts in
order to move faster than our
adversaries.”
In third-tier business schools,
bromides of this sort might pass
for “best practices.” But my
guess is that George C. Marshall
or Dwight D. Eisenhower would
award the author of that
paragraph an F and return him to
staff college for further
instruction.
Frothy verbiage aside, what
exactly does General Votel
propose? The answer -- for
those with sufficient patience
to wade through the entire 64
pages -- reduces to this:
persist. In concrete terms,
that means keeping on killing
and enabling our “allies” to do
the same until the other side is
finally exhausted and gives up.
In other words, it’s the movie
Groundhog Day
transposed from Punxsutawney,
Pennsylvania, to Tampa and then
to Afghanistan, Iraq, and other
countries where the bodies
continue to pile up.
True, the document Votel
presented to Congress is
superficially comprehensive,
with sections touting everything
from “Building Partner Capacity”
(“we must be forward-leaning and
empower our partners to meet
internal security challenges”)
to creating a “Global Engagement
Center” (“The best way to defeat
an idea is to present a better,
more appealing idea”). Strip
away the fluff, however, and
what’s left is nothing more than
a call to keep doing what
CENTCOM has been doing for years
now.
To see what all this really
means, practically speaking,
just check out CENTCOM press
releases for the week of March
5th through 10th. The titles
alone suffice to describe a
situation where every day is
like the one that preceded it:
March 5: Military
airstrikes continue against ISIS
terrorists in Syria and Iraq
March 6: Military
airstrikes continue against ISIS
terrorists in Syria and Iraq
March 7: Military
airstrikes continue against ISIS
terrorists in Syria and Iraq
March 8: Military
airstrikes continue against ISIS
terrorists in Syria and Iraq
March 9: Military
airstrikes continue against ISIS
terrorists in Syria and Iraq
March 10:
Military airstrikes continue
against ISIS terrorists in Syria
and Iraq
As the good nuns used to tell me
back in parochial school,
actions speak louder than
words. What the CENTCOM
commander says matters less than
what CENTCOM forces do. What
they are doing is waging an
endless war of attrition.
Ludendorff Would Have Approved
“Punch a hole and let the rest
follow.”
During the First World War, that
aphorism, attributed to General
Erich Ludendorff, captured the
essence of the German army’s
understanding of strategy,
rooted in the conviction that
violence perpetrated on a
sufficient scale over a
sufficient period of time will
ultimately render a politically
purposeless war purposeful. The
formula didn’t work for Germany
in Ludendorff’s day and yielded
even more disastrous results
when Hitler revived it two
decades later.
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Of course, U.S. military
commanders today don’t make
crude references to punching
holes. They employ language
that suggests discrimination,
deliberation, precision, and
control as the qualities that
define the American way of war.
They steer clear of using terms
like attrition. Yet differences
in vocabulary notwithstanding,
the U.S. military’s present-day
MO bears a considerable
resemblance to the approach that
Ludendorff took fully a century
ago. And for the last decade
and a half, U.S. forces
operating in the CENTCOM AOR
have been no more successful
than were German forces on the
Western Front in achieving the
purposes that ostensibly made
war necessary.
To divert attention from this
disturbing fact, General Votel
offers Congress and by extension
the American people a 64-page
piece of propaganda. Whether he
himself is deluded or dishonest
is difficult to say, just as it
remains difficult to say whether
General William Westmoreland was
deluded or dishonest when he
assured Congress in November
1967 that victory in Vietnam was
in sight. “With 1968,”
Westmoreland promised, “a new
phase is now starting. We have
reached an important point when
the end begins now to come into
view.”
Westmoreland was dead wrong, as
the enemy’s 1968 Tet Offensive
soon demonstrated. That a
comparable disaster, no doubt
different in form, will expose
Votel’s own
light-at-the-end-of-the-tunnel
assessment as equally fraudulent
is a possibility, even if one to
which American political and
military leaders appear to be
oblivious. This much is
certain: in the CENTCOM AOR the
end is not even remotely in
view.
What are we to make of this
charade of proconsuls parading
through Washington to render
false or misleading reports on
the status of the American
empire’s outer precincts?
Perhaps the time has come to
look elsewhere for advice and
counsel. Whether generals like
Votel are deluded or dishonest
is ultimately beside the point.
More relevant is the fact that
the views they express -- and
that inexplicably continue to
carry weight in Washington --
are essentially of no value. So
many years later, no reason
exists to believe that they know
what they are doing.
To reground U.S. national
security policy in something
that approximates reality would
require listening to new voices,
offering views long deemed
heretical.
Let
me nonetheless offer you
an example:
“Fifteen years after launching a
worldwide effort to defeat and
destroy terrorist organizations,
the United States finds itself
locked in a pathologically
recursive loop; we fight to
prevent attacks and defend our
values, only to incite further
violence against ourselves and
allies while destabilizing
already chaotic regions..."
That is not the judgment of some
lefty from Cambridge or San
Francisco, but of Major John Q.
Bolton, a veteran of both the
Iraq and Afghan Wars. Within
that brief passage is more
wisdom than in all of General
Votel’s 64 pages of blather.
I submit that Bolton’s grasp of
our predicament is infinitely
superior to Votel’s. The
contrast between the two is
striking. The officer who wears
no stars dares to say what is
true; the officer wearing four
stars obfuscates. If the
four-stars abandon obfuscation
for truth, then and only then
will they deserve our respectful
attention. In the meantime,
it’s like looking to Artie Shaw
for marriage counseling.
Andrew J. Bacevich, a
TomDispatch regular,
is the author most recently of
America’s War for the Greater
Middle East: A Military History.
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Shadow Government: Surveillance,
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Copyright 2017 Andrew J.
Bacevich