Why I think that we are politically retarded
The difficulties of imposing a democratic dogma upon a theocratic society)
On 10 September, 2001, I was fresh into my second enlistment and looking forward to a life of stateside service with the 10Th Mountain Division, out of Fort Drum, NY. I could never have predicted that the next day’s events would follow, but Soldiers are of a different breed, and react differently to situations than the majority of people reading this. I sat there in shock and awe for about three minutes the next day, when the second tower fell. My platoon sergeant looked at us all and said “All right! Everyone go back to your rooms and pack! Meet me back here in two hours!” My life has never been the same. I have deployed to Afghanistan three times since then, and have learned a lot about the Afghan peoples, Muslims in general, the nation of Islam, our own government and the changes in the military. Everything that I have learned has caused me to personally believe that this war is un-winnable. There is no way we as a nation can rightfully impose Democracy in this country without force, nor win the war on terrorism, because of the inherent belief-structure of these people.
From a geopolitical standpoint, the United States is not in a favorable position. Granted, we are the most powerful nation in the world militarily, and we are certainly the most compassionate nation, but we are the most restricted as well. Our social and economic dependence upon the provisions of other nations has caused us to become the global police. We are trapped in our own might, almost as though it is our responsibility to bring democracy to the rest of the world because of our affluence. Without our backing, I believe that NATO and the United Nations would lose much of their influence. It is only rarely, and in small conflicts, that they step in to preach for peace, or to keep peace militarily without our having occupied that territory first. NATO is in the process of taking over operations in Afghanistan, five full years after we first invaded. It took them the better part of seven years to step in and toe the line in Bosnia-Herzegovina (I was there after that transfer, as well), and that was in NATO’s own back yard. Our power seems to have become a bone of contention between the “enlightened nations” (superpowers and second-tier nations), and third-world and tertiary nations (Afghanistan, Kyrgyzstan, Syria, Lebanon etc…), who feel that we are using and abusing our global status to affect democratic change in formerly
autocratic nations (sticking our nose where it doesn’t belong). Public opinion, on a global level can be devastating to a nation’s credibility, and will almost certainly result in future religious and personal bias from satellite nations (the war in Afghanistan causes accusations of impropriety in the form of economic or political sanctions against Pakistan for example).
From a religious standpoint, most of the “war on terror” has, and will be fought against Muslims. The IRA, while dangerous in their area, is a terrorist organization, but not in a nation that the United States is willing to risk its political reputation on. As unfortunate as our supposed bias is, it seems to be the way that this war works. So we are going after the Muslim nations (or, at least starting there), creating a second crusade atmosphere. While comparatively impoverished and militarily crippled, these nations have one unifying factor that makes them more dangerous than we could ever hope to be: A unifying system of beliefs. Our open way of life (as far as decisions and religion are concerned) has made us into a powerful nation, the decisions leading up to this way of life, however, have made us into a soft nation, as well, akin to a has-been prize fighter. We can still pack a hell of a punch, but we are no longer as popular as we used to be.
The religion of Islam actually preaches that Muslims are to heed Allah’s call and wage jihad on the unbelievers in at least 154 verses throughout twenty-four separate Chapters or Suras (for a list of verses please go to http://www.challenging-islam.org/articles/jihadverses.htm ). Fanatic Muslims preach that we, as Christians in the United States and Europe are the infidels. That belief, though misdirected, gives them a sense of purpose that will unify them in ways that we could never hope for. Additionally, Americans have a short attention span and appear to have lost our sense of community, especially from a
religious standpoint. Because of our lack of unity (or our self-absorbed way of life, as dictated through our advertising and me-first attitude), it takes a disaster to pull us together. We stay around temporarily until things seem to be well underway, and then turn all responsibility over to the government (or, in the case of the global war on terror, NATO). Fanatics (and we are fighting against only fanatics, not Muslims as a whole) make things into all consuming causes. Fanatics have taken the teachings of their religion (possibly misinterpreted. I am actually reading the Koran for research, but it is slow going.), and whipped themselves into a frenzy we can only hope to match briefly. We are too compassionate to outright kill them, and won’t want to stick around for the long fight until they tire out. Their religion gives them their beliefs, and their beliefs give them an edge that we cannot hope to match for any extended period of time. This is a group of people that have held grudges for centuries.
I contest that the people of Afghanistan are too fragmented as a society to accept Democracy voluntarily. For democracy to work without force, it requires a popularized belief system and a common goal that is not based in religious ideology, combined with a non-polarized society. Afghanistan is the antithesis of this definition. I am aware that our money, our courts and our government all trust in God, but our society was founded upon the principle of free worship. This idea of free worship has transcended into a system of freedom in all aspects, and made us into a proud democracy. A society based solely upon secular beliefs is known as a theocracy, and leaves little room for interpretation or outside influence. Imposition of a form of government requiring freedom on to a restrictive society results in little more than a facade, with a puppet leader in place. Hamid Karzai is a well-intentioned man, with the United States backing, but without a majority representation among his peoples. Hopefully his beliefs represent the future of Afghanistan, but I believe that it will be several decades before they can come to fruition. The people of Afghanistan, again, are a fragmented society. They have miles and miles between villages, often with no way of communication besides car (and, recently, cell-phone). Outside of cities like Kabul and Kandahar, they rely on tribal law and religious customs to decide the fate of their peoples. It is not unusual for them to go months without news of any sort from neighboring villages. Their daily lives leave no room for the concerns of others anyway, as making a life in this hardscrabble existence seems to take up all their time, and understandably so.
This is not to say that they were not grateful for our intervention in ousting the Taliban, or unaware. They were extremely grateful. The Taliban imposed a set of rules upon the Afghan peoples that left no room for thought, art, music or joy. What the Afghan peoples did not count on, or condone was a continued military presence from the United States, and a subsequent resurgence of Taliban activity. This, coupled with the war in Iraq has given birth to a wave of anti-U.S. sentiment that is quickly spreading not only through Afghanistan, but through dogmatic and theocratic countries within the Middle East and Southwest Asia then spilling into the enlightened nations in the European Union, and affecting our trade with Europe as a whole.
Problems within our own borders give even grimmer promise to the outcome of this war on terror. As a whole, the American peoples have not only had enough of our self-imposed jihad, but enough of George Bush as well. In a nation that cannot sit through reruns of Hill Street Blues without flipping the channel, how did we, as a people ever expect to make it through a war that lasted in excess of five years? We cry about the deaths of two thousand Soldiers (I feel for them all, and have known a few, but it is the smallest number ever from a U.S. led conflict, especially one spanning two fronts on separate continents.), forgetting conveniently that the death toll for Vietnam exceeded two-hundred thousand American deaths and spanned the presidencies of Kennedy, Eisenhower, and Truman http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/vietnamwar ). For this, I blame pop-culture, 295,000 channels of cable television, and 900 different medications for ADD (and every other psychological disorder that stems from children playing video games instead of getting fresh air). While I acknowledge the uses for Ritalin, I feel that the needs for it are based solely upon our own culture, and of our own making, providing perfect examples of a systemic set of issues that have given justification to the Muslim world for calling us the Great Satan. If we cannot pull together as a nation and back our president in his global endeavors for more than 6 months, especially when it concerns retribution against the Taliban for the intentional murder of 2,819 people, then why are we still in the fight?
Mission migration has proved to be a problem as well. In 2001, the United States worked diligently to hunt down Osama Bin Laden, tracking through the Hindu-Kush mountains during Operation Anaconda and fighting a bitter battle against entrenched Taliban forces. In 2005, I returned for a third tour in country to find humanitarian assistance missions occurring, with food drops and school supplies taking precedence over the original mission. The Taliban are still a credible force, as evidenced by the rising tide of U.S. and coalition casualties. Why, then are we adding a second mission on top of our original?
Financially, this war on terror is a disaster. Kellogg, Brown, and Root in conjunction with other U.S. contractors have cost our nation hundreds of billions of dollars so that we can say that we have reduced our military footprint in Afghanistan. Oddly enough, these contractors do not provide a single service that cannot be provided by ourselves. KBR (known during the Bosnia-Herzegovina days as Brown and Root) has proceeded to charge the U.S. twenty-two dollars per meal, and forty-five dollars for a twelve-pack of soda. These prices are outrageous, but not surprising, as they proceeded to charge the government five dollars per gallon of gas in 2003. Couple KBR with the eleven other contractors near Bagram alone, and then ask yourself why there is no money for public education or cancer research. For years, the government has been paying outrageous prices to contractors that are running dining facilities and fuel points for a fighting force comprised of cooks and fuelers to guarantee the American public that we are not putting U.S. citizens lives at risk (when in fact most of the contractors are American).
George W. Bush has had a hard time of this war. The blame is not only on him, but the American public and their views as well. I am afraid that his reputation will sink even further; and as this endeavor concludes, the next president will have to clean up his mess. In his defense, he made the decisions he thought was best, without concern for the viewpoints of the people. While he tried very hard, the backing just wasnt there no matter his intentions. There is no easy solution to this. We cannot simply pull out
and let these people suffer, because we have began a humanitarian mission, and must see it through. We cannot continue this war, because it is costing us billions with no results. We cannot target other terrorist groups, because we have not been provoked. What a mess that we have gotten ourselves into. I hope that if we invade North Korea or Iran for their nuclear technology that we learn from these mistakes.
Hanlon said,
January 30, 2008 at 1:47 pm
First off, this is incredible reading, and thank you for taking the time to put it all down. Just a few minor quibbles.
It’s not exactly fair to say that impatience is why the nation is so against the war in Iraq. Remember what we were sold: Saddam had nukes and was best friends with Osama, the war would be very fast and cost $1.7bil taxpayer dollars, we’d be greeted with sweets and flowers and greeted as liberators and once Chalabi got put into place we’d be outta there.
By now the war is aiming to push the trillion dollar mark, we know Saddam had no nukes, was enemies with Al Qaeda, we were not greeted as liberators and there’s no end in sight (Bush wants to put in PERMANENT BASES for chrissakes). When you combine our knowledge that the war was far from necessary with the fact that it’s dragged on far longer and for far more money than we were told, that is why the nation has turned so vehemently.
Had we stuck it through in Afghanistan and not mucked around in Iraq, and I mean really buckled down to get the job done, I believe on our side there would be far more support even if we weren’t done now. At least we would know our premise for going in was legitimate.
Kurtlane said,
January 30, 2008 at 3:52 pm
I have read your article.
What you say, in essence, is that we are all too decadent to defend ourselves. That’s the very same thing jihadis say.
The thing is, if I agree on everything you say, then we are doomed. The reason they hate and attack us is not because we had bases in Saudi Arabia (we pulled them out), not because we support Israel (do we support Israel?), not because of our troops in Iraq and Afghanistan (they weren’t there on 9/11), but because we exist: because we have freedom and democracy, because we can choose what to believe, because our women can go unveiled, we can drink alcohol and we listen to music, go to movies and ballet, and don’t kick dogs. Because we are kaffir – their religious equivalent of the N. word.
And therefore, the enemy will not stop if we withdraw, but will intensify its attacks. If American withdrawal from Somalia signaled our weakness to bin Laden, think of what would withdrawing from Afghanistan and Iraq signal. Now that Iran is about to go nuclear and nuclear Europe is about to become Islamic (and particularly jihadist, as new converts typically are), can we afford to remain as decadent as we are at present?
And let’s not stick too close to democracy. “Democracy” is a word for our presidents to sell their foreign policy at home. Did Kuwait become democratic after the Gulf War? No, but it became free from Iraqi occupation, and that’s satisfactory to us and to Kuwaitis. In the present situation, it is our democracy too that needs to be curtailed. We are entering the new Dark Ages, when democracy is hardly an option. The issue is not longer democracy, it is our basic survival.
So here are a few simple recipes about improving our situation:
We are too dependent on the world opinion? We shouldn’t be. It’s better to be alive and cursed than dead and praised. Besides, I remember how Reagan’s America was cursed by everyone, just like Bush’s America is now, and 4-6 years later everyone praised it.
We are a soft nation? Then we should be a hard nation.
We don’t have a sense of purpose? We should have it. And it should be to defeat the jihadi scourge. Just as in WWII the purpose was to defeat the Nazi scourge. And that can make us as tough and united as our enemies. Maybe even more united, judging by the bombing of Shiite and Sunni mosques by Sunnis and Shiites, or Afghan warlord armies battling each other.
We are too compassionate to outright kill them? Then stop. Excessive compassion is only sentimentality, anyway. Kill them.
We are too impatient? We’d better drop it. The blame is not so much on “pop-culture, 295,000 channels of cable television, and 900 different medications for ADD” as on ourselves.
If we cannot pull together as a nation and back our president in his global endeavors for more than 6 months after 9/11, we deserve to be exterminated. And we will be. So pull together.
“We cannot continue this war, because it is costing us billions with no results.” Please, the result is that we are still alive, and there hasn’t been another 9/11 on American soil. And if we want to win, we’d better not just continue, but intensify.
“We cannot target other terrorist groups, because we have not been provoked.” Nonsense. We can target anyone we please. Do we need to wait for some Abu Sayaf to do a 9/11 to us until we feel in the right to target it. Should we actually help them? This is ludicrous.
The real problem is that so far there is no clear victory. Our victory on the Gulf War (for example) made all our critics shut up. And yes, we are spoiled brats, who take a total victory for granted and a lack of total victory as a defeat. So we should stop being spoiled brats.
We don’t have enough troops in the army. So I think we should begin general mobilization. (I don’t believe in draft anyway, its’ mechanism is too corrupting.) Every male between 18 and 30 should be in the army, either fighting in a foreign war or training to be a fighter. Serious physical or mental illness would be the only excuse. That will not only greatly increase our fighting force, it will also shut up most of those critics who undermine us – they will be training in the army. As for the rest, it wouldn’t hurt to introduce some degree of censorship. Abe Lincoln did it, Franklin Roosevelt did it, we can do it too. And shut down a few organizations that become a real thorn in our side.
Don’t think that jihadis’ plans to conquer the world are too far fetched. If we do nothing, they will win.
This is the Dark Ages. 9/11 was our equivalent of the Fall of Rome.
We have no other choice. It’s a matter of our survival.