A veteran war correspondent recalls the
ignorance, poor judgement, exceptionalism,
and hubris in all of our interventions.
By H.D.S Greenway
October 22, 2021 -- "Information
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Nearly half a century ago I watched
the South Vietnamese army, an army that had
been trained and equipped by the United
States, simply melt away before a less well
equipped but better motivated army of North
Vietnam. The South Vietnamese fled in panic
before the North’s final offensive. I saw
soldiers taking off their uniforms and
fleeing in their underwear. Cities were
falling before the North Vietnamese had time
to get there.
In the end I had to leave the county in a
hurry by helicopter from the American
Embassy, with the streets of Saigon seething
with panicked people we were leaving behind.
Thirty years of American effort, first for
the French and then for ourselves, was going
up in smoke.
In 2014 another American trained and
equipped Iraqi army packed up and fled
before a less well equipped but better
motivated Islamic State when they attacked
Mosul.
And in August, once again, a similarly
American trained and American equipped army
of Afghanistan simply melted away before a
less well equipped but better motivated
Taliban.
There is a clear connection between these
disasters. It had become clear to me during
visits to Baghdad and Kabul that America had
not learned the lessons of Vietnam. There
has been a strong element of hubris in
American foreign policy.
Harvard’s Stephen Walt put it perfectly
when he wrote that after the fall of the
Soviet Union, “instead of defending its own
shores, maximizing prosperity and well-being
at home, Washington sought to remake other
countries in its own image and incorporated
them into situations and arrangements of its
own design.”
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Let me step back a moment and put this in
a larger historical context. What Walt
described is what colonial powers have
always done. The Portuguese and the Spanish
always dressed up their colonial ambitions
as saving souls — converting the heathens to
Christianity, making the people they
conquered more like themselves. Later the
French always claimed their colonial mission
was “civilisatrice,” bringing Western
civilization to the unenlightened, to make
their colonized people more like Frenchmen.
And the British, too, claimed they were
bringing law and order and enlightenment to
what Rudyard Kipling called “new caught,
sullen people, half devil and half child.”
This was his poem to encourage Americans to
“take up the White Man’s burden” and join
the empire club after our capture of the
Philippines.
When spreading Christianity faded as an
imperial cause, Americans began to fixate on
spreading democracy to their new caught
sullen people, to make other countries more
like ourselves often by force: democracy out
of the barrel of a gun.
While through our lens we saw the Vietnam
war as a fight against Communism, to many
Vietnamese we were just another foreign
invader, following in the footsteps of the
French. We didn’t understand that to many,
perhaps most of the people of the world, the
struggle against colonialism was more
important than the struggle between
communism and capitalism.
And likewise, while we saw Afghanistan
through the lens of fighting Islamic
extremism, too many Afghans saw a struggle
against yet another foreign invader not
unlike the Russians, and before them the
British.
As in Vietnam, our Afghan clients could
never capture the high ground of
nationalism. Our South Vietnamese allies
could never shake the image of being
American puppets. Similarly, our Afghan
partners always appeared as American
puppets.
A second link between the disasters of
Vietnam and Afghanistan was corruption. We
could never curb corruption, and in
Afghanistan we contributed to it by flooding
the country with more money than the economy
could absorb. Corruption drained away
support for the government. A friend of mine
on an operation with the Afghan army saw
officers demanding bribes from the villagers
they were supposed to protect.
“Do you think you are going to win the
support of the population that way?” My
friend asked the officers. “We know, but we
had to pay bribes to get our commissions and
this is the way we get our money back.”
A third link between the Afghan disaster
and Vietnam was that too few Americans
bothered to learn the history and culture of
the country. Often this was because of a
sense of American exceptionalism. I asked a
senior American officer in Vietnam if he had
ever read about the French experience in
Vietnam. He said: “No, why should I. They
lost didn’t they?” Robert McNamara admitted
after the war that he had never understood
Vietnamese culture and history. But by then
it was too late. We had already lost that
war.
In Iraq I found that many Americans did
not have any appreciation of the great
schism in the Muslim religion between Sunni
and Shia. Many didn’t care to know. They
were Americans and they were going to bring
American democracy to Iraq. My friend Tony
Shadid, of the Boston Globe and later the
New York Times, who died covering Syria,
once overheard Iraqi soldiers talking among
themselves. They didn’t know Tony was fluent
in Arabic. One was saying to the others: “I
know I am a bad Muslim fighting for
foreigners but I need the money.”
The invasion of Iraq was the result of
magical thinking among the neoconservatives.
They believed that if they could transform
Iraq into something resembling America then
the entire Middle East would follow suit,
and autocracies would crumble and become
American style democracies. Henry Kissinger,
who was originally in favor of the Iraq war,
later wrote that seeking to impose American
values by military occupation in a part of
the world where they had no historical
roots, and expecting fundamental political
change in a politically relevant period of
time, “proved beyond what the American
public would support and what Iraqi society
could accommodate.”
In Kabul I interviewed the Russian
ambassador. He had been in the Soviet
administration during the Soviet occupation,
and now he was ambassador to Kabul during
the American occupation. He said we
Americans were making the same mistake the
Russians had made. You thought that every
Afghan if he had a choice would like to be
an American, and some do. And we thought
that every Afghan in his heart would like to
be a communist, and some did. But you think
that purple ink on an Afghan’s finger is the
answer to a thousand years of ethnic and
tribal rivalry.
Another link between Afghanistan and
Vietnam was American self-deception, or as
some would call it, lies. In Vietnam there
was always a light at the end of the tunnel.
We were always winning the war. It became so
ridiculous that we called official briefings
the five o’clock follies after the hour when
the military briefed the press every day.
In Afghanistan I found the same. We were
always “turning the corner,” we were always
on the way to winning the war.
The American military’s can-do sprit, so
attractive in one sense, became a mill stone
in our losing wars. Our military may have
known the wars were hopeless, but weren’t
about to admit it. Defeatism was
unacceptable. Is it always darkest before
the dawn they told themselves. The old
saying “the difficult will be done promptly,
the impossible will take a little longer” is
ingrained in the military. And had not
Julius Caesar said “It’s hubris only if I
lose?” There was no incentive in the
military tradition to say, sorry the task
you have set for us can’t be done.
When I was in Baghdad I met General
Martin Dempsey, later chairman of the joint
chiefs, but then in charge of training the
Iraqi Army. He said it is comparatively easy
to train a man to fight. Harder to master
logistics, keeping an army fed and supplied
with ammunition. But what we can’t do is
instill in Iraqis the motivation to fight.
Only the Iraqis can do that for themselves.
I also felt that in both Afghanistan and
Vietnam we were equipping our clients to
fight big complicated wars, not the light
infantry wars that our opponents were
fighting. We created a dependency that need
not have been. I was truly shocked to read
that, after 20 years, the Afghans were still
completely dependent on American contractors
to service their aircraft. Couldn’t we have
trained the Afghans to service their own
planes?
As for Afghans, they were not an enemy
you want to fight on their own turf with the
Afghan tradition of jihad against foreign
invaders. They were masters of terrain. And
talk about a military tradition, when the
Waziristan campaign of 1936 was over, and
when the British were handing out medals to
their troops, the Waziris came to the
British and said: where are our medals?
What are you talking about? said the
British. You were the enemy.
Maybe so, said the Waziris, but you
couldn’t have had a Waziristan campaign
without us.
Were the American military and civilian
briefers lying to us when they told us how
they were winning these wars when they were
not? There were plenty of outright lies, God
knows, but I prefer Sebastian Junger’s
description of the military and political
briefings Americans gave in Kabul. “Rather
than outright lying, they were inviting you
to join a conspiracy of wishful thinking.”
When Saigon fell and the Vietnam war was
over, S. Rajaratman, foreign minister of
Singapore and a great friend of America,
said that the true meaning of the war’s end
was not that the communists had won — he was
decidedly anti-communist — but that for the
first time in 400 years there were no
foreign armies in Southeast Asia.
Maybe something similar is being said
even by America’s friends now that we are
out of Afghanistan.
This essay was adapted from remarks
Greenway made at an event at Boston
University in October.