9th November 2005
Military Strategy of Washington
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by Dr. Michael A. Weinstein -- Source: www.pinr.com
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As Washington's geostrategy has evolved after the
September 11, 2001 airliner bombings of the World
Trade Center and Pentagon by Islamic
revolutionaries linked to al-Qaeda, the Horn of
Africa has taken on vital strategic
importance.
In the thinking of U.S.
defense planners, the Horn occupies the western
end of an "arc of instability" that runs through
the Middle East, the Southern Caucasus and into
Central Asia to Afghanistan's eastern border. The
vast area encompassed by the arc contains the
world's largest supply of energy reserves, is
composed mostly of states with authoritarian and
quasi-authoritarian governments that are subject
to instability, and has a predominantly Muslim
population, a disaffected portion of which
provides recruits for and support of violent
Islamic revolutionary movements.
Washington's overriding interests in the arc of
instability are to contain and suppress Islamic
revolutionary movements in order to secure
strategic resources and prevent further attacks
on U.S. soil, and to cultivate stable and
friendly governments in the area that will serve
broader U.S. aims in its competition with the
power centers of China, Russia and India.
After Washington's initial response to
9/11 of invading Afghanistan and overthrowing the
Taliban regime, it set out on a course of
effectively unilateral action, outlined in its
2002 National Security Strategy, which announced
that the U.S. was committed to maintaining global
military supremacy and was ready to fight
preemptive wars against states that threatened
its vital interests by harboring "terrorists" or
developing weapons of mass destruction. The
generally multilateral approach of previous U.S.
administrations was abandoned in favor of
organizing "coalitions of the willing" under
Washington's leadership.
The test of
Washington's strategy came in its invasion and
occupation of Iraq that had the ambitious and
comprehensive aims of demonstrating the
effectiveness of U.S. military might to hostile
powers and creating a model of regime change to
serve as an example of market democratization to
be emulated by regimes and publics within the arc
of instability.
The failure of
Washington's self-imposed test caused defense
planners to rethink their strategy. Facing a
Sunni-led insurgency in Iraq, Washington no
longer had the military resources necessary to
make its unilateralist strategy credible. A shift
in policy was necessary to protect U.S. interests
and it was made through 2005 without the
publicity attending the National Security
Strategy. Nonetheless, the new strategy has been
declared openly and frequently since it was put
into place in March.
The "Long
War"
At the core of Washington's
new geostrategy is the explicit acknowledgment
that its enemy is not "terrorism" in general, but
"Islamic extremism." In order to fight that enemy
with any effectiveness, Major General Douglas
Lute, director of operations for the U.S. Central
Command (CENTCOM), which has military
responsibility for the entire arc, said in August
that the U.S. has embarked on a "long war" that --
all else being equal -- will become the dominant
U.S. military engagement once -- as Washington
hopes -- Afghanistan and Iraq are stabilized.
Stability in Iraq, in particular, will,
according to Washington's expectations, drive the
Islamic revolutionaries, who are now concentrated
there as parts of the insurgency, to seek safe
havens and new battlegrounds elsewhere in the arc
of instability. The region to which they are most
likely to head, in CENTCOM's view, is the Horn of
Africa, where large areas are not effectively
controlled by central governments or, such as in
Somalia, where there is no functioning central
government.
As a variety of Pentagon
briefings and statements describe it under
various rubrics, the long war is not a
conventional military conflict, but a
multi-faceted campaign including
military-military cooperation with states in the
arc, military-administered humanitarian aid and
public diplomacy. The aims of the campaign are to
encourage governments within the arc to cooperate
in suppressing Islamic revolutionary groups and,
more importantly, to diminish the recruitment
base for those groups by winning over local
public opinion.
Washington's blueprint
for the long war marks an abandonment of its
former unilateral approach in favor of a
region-based multilateralism in which Washington
partners with governments in the regions
comprising the arc and attempts to get them to
cooperate with one another in the common effort
against Islamic revolution. The new strategy
represents a step back from the ambitions of
unilateralism. It further represents an
acceptance that Washington is dependent on
regional powers to satisfy its aims and must
negotiate with them while expecting only partial
success.
The new multilateralism must
adjust to the fact that regional partners have
their own agendas that may differ from
Washington's. They often have conflicts with
their neighbors and are split by domestic
divisions. The danger of the new strategy is that
Washington will be drawn into choosing sides in
regional and domestic conflicts, and will face
backlashes if it supports the losing side. Yet,
given the failure of unilateralism, the new
fall-back strategy appears to be the best that
Washington can do to protect its perceived
interests.
Washington's Engagement
in the Horn of Africa
As the
region in the arc that has attracted Washington's
most immediate concern and one in which it does
not face rivalry from other great powers, the
Horn of Africa has been the site of the fullest
development of the new strategy. Washington's
instrument in the region is the Combined Joint
Task Force - Horn of Africa (C.J.T.F.), which is
based in Djibouti and comprises 1600 troops from
all branches of the armed services, half of whom
are available for civil affairs and military
training missions outside the base. According to
a Defense Department release, U.S. Defense
Secretary Donald Rumsfeld has called the C.J.T.F.
"a model for the future of D.o.D."
At a wide ranging
September 21 press conference, C.J.T.F. commander,
Major General Timothy Ghormley, explained that the
command had evolved from a "crisis response force"
with a military focus to a unit of unconventional
war concentrated on fulfilling the new Pentagon
strategy. In a frank appraisal of his mission,
Ghormley said that the major requirement for its
success and his major difficulty was gaining
access to the region's countries, except for
Djibouti. Among the four core states of the Horn,
the C.J.T.F. is barred from Somalia because
Washington has ceded responsibility there to the
African Union; it is unwelcome in Eritrea, which
accuses Washington of backing Ethiopia in the
border dispute between the two countries, and it
has achieved solid footholds in Ethiopia and
Djibouti.
Although Washington's wish
is to execute its strategy in an environment of
tightly knit regional cooperation, it also
insists that it is committed not to back any
parties in regional conflicts. Ghormley's remarks
show that even where Washington is not opposed by
another great power, its access is severely
limited and it is constrained, if only by
default, effectively to take sides in
conflicts.
In the power configuration
of the Horn, Ethiopia is far and away the
dominant player and its agenda is to isolate
Eritrea, play the major role in determining a
future government in Somalia and keep its access
to Djibouti's port. Thus far, Washington has been
constrained to back Addis Ababa by refusing to
pressure it to honor an international boundary
settlement awarding the Badme region to Eritrea
and by allowing it to provide military support to
one of the factions of Somalia's deadlocked
government. In doing so, Washington has alienated
Asmara and the other Somali factions, and has
supported a regime in Addis Ababa that has become
increasingly authoritarian as it contends with a
noncompliant opposition that has refused to take
its seats in parliament and has threatened to
escalate its protest demonstrations into civil
disobedience.
The U.S. presence
in the region has also been unable to stop the
rise of Islamism in Somalia and to suppress a
reported al-Qaeda cell there, to prevent a
renewed military build up on both sides of the
border between Ethiopia and Eritrea, and even to
influence Djibouti's regime to refrain from
actions that threaten to reignite ethnic-based
civil war in that country.
Conclusion
After having
failed in its unilateralist short-cut strategy in
the arc of instability, Washington has opted for a
long war that inserts it into the briar patches of
regional balance-of-power politics where it faces
being drawn into taking sides with dubious
partners with their own agendas. This is not to
say that any other course, save withdrawal, is
open to Washington, but only that the long war is
going to be tortuous and is likely to have limited
success.