If there were ever any doubts that ISIS (the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria) poses a threat to the international community, or that they are on a direct train, fast or slow, to the scrapheap of history, the vicious murder of journalist James Foley should have dispelled them. As clear as the problem may be, however, its causes and possible remedies remain murky in the discussions of pundits and politicians. The scramble to both assign blame and appear decisive in response has, predictably, produced a muddle of implausible diagnoses and cures.
Though there are many dimensions of this discourse one might examine, the discussion of American policy toward Syria is a particularly illuminating point of departure. Critics of the Obama administration fault the president for failing to arm the moderate Syrian opposition. The president responded to this criticism by noting that: "[The idea of] farmers dentists and folks who have never fought before
going up against...ruthless, highly trained jihadists if we just sent a few
arms is a fantasy. And I think it's very important for the American
people - but maybe more importantly, Washington and the press corps - to
understand that."
The empirical case supporting the president's reasoning here is very strong. If the Iraqi military, trained and armed by the United States for a decade, could not defeat ISIS during the battle for Mosul, it is foolish to insist that a small ragtag band of Syrian militia could fare well against ISIS given some fraction of that support. However, this type of logic only yields good results if it is applied rigorously and consistently.
Alongside his credible assessment of the Free Syrian Army's chances against ISIS, President Obama has been adamant in insisting that the key cause for the rise of ISIS was the exclusive and discriminatory policies of Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki: "The only lasting solution is for Iraqis to come together and form
an inclusive government — one that represents the legitimate interests
of all Iraqis." Inclusiveness and toleration are no doubt virtues that would serve any government well, but the idea that they could have prevented the rise (or can hasten the defeat) of ISIS is dubious, as demonstrated by the experience of neighboring Syria. No one would call the government of President Bashar al-Assad a model of inclusiveness, but his army was making gains in the field against ISIS even as Mosul fell. If one is going to compare apples to apples, as President Obama did in juxtaposing the Free Syrian Army to the Iraqi military, one must likewise assess the performance of Nuri al-Maliki's government against the other government that has opposed ISIS, that of Bashar al-Assad.
What could explain the disparity between Syrian and Iraqi military performance against ISIS? I would suggest that there is a rather simple answer that policy makers and commentators on all parts of the political spectrum have largely ignored.
By the end of 2013, the Syrian Air Force had 469 combat and reconnaissance planes in operation, mainly consisting of MiG-21 and MiG-23 jets. The Iranian Air Force has more than 600 fighter jets of various types. The emirate of Oman, a country of roughly four million people, has 12 American F-16 and 10 British Hawk 203 fighter jets, and is expecting delivery of another dozen British Eurofighter Typhoons.
At the time that ISIS captured the city of Mosul, the Iraqi air force
had only two planes, both Cessna prop planes modified to carry Hellfire
missiles. This last fact is key to understanding the current crisis in
Mesopotamia and the Levant. It exemplifies the culture of error that has
driven U.S. policy since the 9/11 attacks.
Why would the Republic of Iraq, a country of more than thirty-six million people, once home to one of the world's largest military forces, engaged in a decade-long civil war, be possessed of only two propeller-driven Cessna planes to serve as its air defense? What nation would risk being so lightly armed? The answer, of course, is that no sovereign nation would.
Air power is what distinguishes the army of a sovereign state from the paramilitary and insurgent forces that have proliferated since the end of the Cold War. Modern foot soldiers maintain discipline and mission focus in the face of extremely hostile circumstances, in part, because they know they can count on the logistical and tactical support of a sophisticated air wing. In 2014, an army that goes into battle with two armed Cessnas is not a real army, and the government commanding that army is not a real government. Is it any wonder that men who knew they were part of a fake army fighting in the name of a fake government should lose morale and break ranks when faced with a comparably armed force driven to suicidal frenzy by religious fervor?
This circumstance trumps all other variables in discussing the career of ISIS leading up to and beyond the capture of Mosul. Arguments over the training of the Iraqi military or the retention of U.S. combat forces in Iraq are rendered pointless by the raw reality of Iraq's neutered air defense. If the U.S. had kept 50,000 soldiers in Iraq until 2025 and only then
left Iraq armed with two Cessna planes, by 2028 the country would have
descended into a civil war just as destructive as we see today.
The fact that Iraq lacks a credible air defense has nothing to do with the wishes of anyone in Baghdad, it was mandated in Washington. Washington has refused to allow Iraq to arm itself because that would put Iraqi politics totally beyond the control of the United States. Some of this is no doubt an expression of the soft bigotry of low expectations. U.S. leaders do not trust Iraqis to manage their own affairs, thus they deny them the tools to genuinely do so even as they spout rhetoric about Iraqi accountability.
The absurdity of the situation, however, is driven to a large degree by systemic factors intrinsic to American politics. Since the 2003 invasion U.S. elected officials have been politically liable for the performance of the Iraqi government. This vulnerability has driven American policy decisions, not only in Iraq, but in the larger Middle East, for most of the Bush and all of the Obama presidencies. An American leader contemplating giving fighter jets to Baghdad has to worry about the prospect of their being used against the Kurdish regime in Erbil. Giving planes to the Kurds might result in their being used against the Turks. The downing of a Malaysian airliner by Russian separatists in the Ukraine provided an object lesson in the unpredictable volatility of war by proxy, and American leaders are accountable to forces (the media, the political parties, the voting public, etc.) with which Vladimir Putin need not contend.
All of this is to say that Colin Powell's oft-quoted "Pottery Barn" rule ("You break it, you bought it") did not nearly approximate the policy vexation confronting the U.S. in the wake of the invasion of Iraq. By expending so much blood and treasure on the dismantling of Iraqi state and society, the US assumed an exquisitely tangled complex of horizons of virtually infinite liability. The question of how to maneuver amid so many pitfalls of shifting contingency has predictably resulted in a general climate of paternalism and paralysis.
The neoconservative dream was to turn Iraq into a democratic, sovereign ally of the United States. The nightmare that ensued in the wake of the U.S. invasion has turned Iraq into something entirely different. U.S. policy toward Iraq does not merit the label "colonialism," as U.S. leaders have eschewed the level of responsibility and engagement of a genuine colonial metropole. Neither can it be called "neocolonialism," as it is far more intrusive than any cases previously falling under that rubric. Instead, since the invasion of Iraq U.S. policy has embarked upon a kind of "retrocolonialism," an attempt to exercise all of the control of an old colonial power with none of the effort or sacrifice.
This has predictably led to tragic consequences, of which the rise of ISIS is only the most recent and alarming. Moreover, despite the ample evidence of folly, the U.S. seems incapable of changing course. This may be because the remedy for the ills of retrocolonialism is counter-intuitive. If we are suffering now for aspiring to too much control with too little effort, the answer is not disengagement, but a full reversal of the dysfunctional dynamic: less control, MORE effort.
What would this entail? "Less control" is fairly self-explanatory. The U.S. must begin to trust the people of Iraq, Syria, and the Arab world more generally to run their own affairs and conduct their own politics. But this does not mean that the U.S. should abdicate all engagement or influence in Middle Eastern affairs. If there are groups whose interests align with our own, we should assist them even if the results of that assistance are unpredictable and beyond our ultimate control.
Syria provides a case in point. President Obama is correct that providing small arms to the Free Syrian Army would have produced dubious results against ISIS. But that is because, in its dealings with the FSA, the U.S. has remained focused on getting it to do what is in America's interest rather than on assisting it (and the larger Syrian resistance of which it is a part) to achieve its goals. The FSA might be a much larger and more powerful force today (and ISIS much weaker) if, from the outset, America had committed robustly and decisively to the resolution of the Syrian civil war. If the U.S. had declared a no-fly zone over Syria in 2011 or 2012, the FSA might have enjoyed the same success against the Syrian military (deprived of an air wing as the Iraqi military is today) as ISIS did more recently in the assault on Mosul.
We did not provide that kind of robust assistance to the Syrian resistance in 2011 because we could not control the ultimate outcome of the Syrian civil war, and feared that the fall of the Assad regime might empower militant Islamists. Yet despite all that caution, ISIS is more powerful in 2014 than any Islamist group in 2011 or indeed ever in history. We must begin to understand that, in the wake of the Arab Spring, groups like ISIS are as empowered by American inaction and disengagement as anything the U.S. might do.
ISIS's ideology and strategic culture (for example, its ability to motivate members to engage in suicide attacks) makes it uniquely effective in an assymetrical struggle like the Syrian civil war. The longer that war dragged on and the more desperate the position of the resistance became, the greater the ranks of ISIS grew. For all its new strength, however, ISIS has not been able to defeat the well-armed Assad regime. It has thus shifted focus to the "soft targets" of Baghdad and Erbil. Even here, its success has been provisional. Though the Iraqi military forfeited the majority Sunni city of Mosul, when Baghdad was threatened, volunteer Shi'ite militias were able to check ISIS's advance. All of this indicates that though the extraordinary circumstances of the U.S. invasion of Iraq and the Arab Spring have given ISIS remarkable momentum, there are powerful forces within Iraqi and Syrian society that constrain and counteract ISIS's advance. If the U.S. hopes to defeat ISIS in the long term, it must trust those forces and lend them robust aid, even in the absence of short-term control over outcomes.
"Trust" is the crucial word here. If we are to genuinely trust the Iraqi government, we must allow it to become fully sovereign and develop all of the military capabilities of a nation-state. If we are to trust the Free Syrian Army we must not only provide them with small arms, but assist them with air power in all of their operations, not only against ISIS but also against the Damascus regime.
Already some pundits are squawking that we should partner with the Assad government in Damascus in the fight against ISIS. This is the same kind of retrocolonial thinking that has led us down the primrose path to the current crisis. The Assad regime is a known quantity, so goes this reasoning, while the victory of the Free Syrian Army would create an unpredictable and uncontrollable situation that might bring into power Islamist groups with which the FSA is still allied. This paternalism can lead nowhere good. Conspiring to impose upon the Syrian people a regime they have fought and died to remove will rebound back upon the United States in ways that are impossible to foresee, but the severity of which are pictured in the disgraceful murder of James Foley. Less control, more effort, more trust. If the U.S. ever hopes to set its policy orientation toward the Arab world on a functional footing, it must begin to trust the Arab people themselves, and understand the role they play in determining their own destiny.
Politics can not be conducted in ignorance of the history and culture of other nations.
Thursday, August 28, 2014
Saturday, August 02, 2014
An Open Letter to My Fellow Jews
Dear Friends,
Like
you I am grief stricken by recent tragic events in Israel
and Gaza. Our community is as distressed as I have seen
it in my adult memory, and rightfully so. There is a sense that we have entered
a moment of significant crisis. Though
strife in and around Israel
is something we have come to accept as virtually inevitable, the current
troubles seem to constitute a turning point, and not for the better.
At
this time of turmoil I have one plea to make to our community at large. We must
support Israel.
We must work toward the establishment of a Palestinian state.
Note
that I say “one plea,” for that is precisely what I mean. As a Jew and a
Zionist, I firmly believe that the most important, perhaps the only way that we
can support Israel
in the long term is to work toward the establishment of a Palestinian state. Israel
is losing in the struggle to preserve the Zionist mission, and the only way to
set the deteriorating situation on a new course is the fulfillment of a
two-state solution.
Why
do I say that Israel
is losing? In the short term Israel
is not in existential danger. The Israeli state and military are very powerful
and very secure. But every conflict has two dimensions: the tactical and the
political. For the moment the Israelis enjoy substantial tactical superiority, both
with respect to the Palestinians and in terms of the region as a whole.
But
in the political realm a crossroads has been reached. World opinion is turning
against Israel,
and this downhill slide will continue indefinitely if it is not redressed. The
effects of this shift will not be felt immediately, but over years and decades
it will begin to sap the political and economic energies of Israeli state and
society, undermining Israel’s
strategic security. If nothing is done, generations to come will mark the
current crisis as the starting point of a long process that led to the
disintegration of the Jewish state.
Why is world opinion turning against Israel?
Anti-Semitism accounts for some of the anger and condemnation that is being
expressed in the international media, but we would be foolish to imagine that
this is the whole of the matter. Nor can ignorance be assumed to account for
whatever anti-Israeli feeling does not stem from anti-Semitism. The world is
aware that Hamas is an evil and depraved organization. The nihilistically
genocidal nature of its charter and ideology has been well publicized, and
everyone can see the deliberate and malignant manner in which Hamas uses
innocent civilians as human shields.
Why,
then, would current events erode Israel’s position in global
politics? It is because the issue of
Palestinian statehood remains unresolved. As much as world opinion generally
(with some exceptions) acknowledges the right of Israel to exist and defend itself,
it also affirms the right of the Palestinian people to a sovereign state of
their own. As the fiftieth anniversary of the occupation of the West Bank draws nigh, the patience of the world to see
this problem settled grows thin. With each passing year, the argument that Israel is fighting to defend itself is
undermined by the appearance that Israel is fighting to block the
establishment of a Palestinian state. The more this situation persists, the
less attention the global public will pay to the particulars of Hamas’s
doctrine or strategy, and the more they will focus upon images of the
destruction produced by Israel’s military, no matter how restrained the
Israelis may be in the exercise of force.
Continued
protests about the very real villainy of Hamas will progressively lose effect
in the face of this reality. Almost no winning cause in history would have done
so if it was required that its proponents all be moral paragons. Without ardent
Stalinists, Hitler would not have been beaten; without fervent slave owners,
the American Revolution would have gone down to defeat. It does not matter that
Hamas’s methods are evil or that their ultimate goal extends far beyond
Palestinian nationalism. In the short term they derive political capital from
fighting for a cause that is generally acknowledged as justified.
This may seem unfair, but it is a brute
fact that cannot be escaped. Nor are arguments over whether anyone is right to
support Palestinian statehood sensible or productive. If Israel annexed the West Bank and Gaza today and made all
of its inhabitants citizens, it would no longer be a demographically Jewish
state. The only alternatives left to Zionists are thus either ethnic cleansing
or a two-state solution. Since the former option is both immoral and
impossible, the establishment of a Palestinian state is the only way to end the
military occupation soon to enter its sixth decade, and the world knows that.
One
might protest that the establishment of a Palestinian state would give Hamas
what it wants. To this one can only answer that if it is so, Hamas should be
careful what it wishes for. Of course the creation of a Palestinian nation
would not make all of Israel’s
problems go away. Strife and violence would continue. The nightly news might
look very much the same in the wake of Palestinian sovereignty as it does
today. There would be a very real difference, however. If Hamas launched
rockets from sovereign Palestinian territory, there could be no pretence that
it was anything other than aggression bent on the destruction of Israel. In that
situation, all of the facts about Hamas’s perversion and malevolence would
regain the currency that they have gradually lost in recent years.
In
that new political climate, much of the anti-Israeli activism in Europe and America would
evaporate. Organizations like BDS would find fewer and fewer supporters.
Mainstream citizens who have joined anti-Israeli protests in recent years would
move on to other issues, leaving only the most diehard anti-Zionists to fight
from the margins.
In
the Middle East the effects could likewise be
significant. Hamas might find that it not only has fewer supporters abroad, but
at home as well. Once sovereignty is achieved, Palestinians’ tolerance for
Hamas’s rocket attacks and the destruction they bring in retaliation would
quickly run dry. A people given a proprietary stake in their own nation might
show little enthusiasm for the fight to establish an imaginary future
caliphate.
For
all of these reasons, as a people we should unite in focusing our political
energies on the achievement of a two-state solution. If we care about Israel and want
to see its future secure, our congregations, our civic groups, our rabbinical
leaders, and we ourselves as individuals should take up the cry in ways big and
small. Write letters to political leaders in Israel and abroad. Reach out to
Palestinian groups that support peace. Donate money to organizations like the
Israel Policy Forum that are working toward a two-state solution.
As
Jews we believe that the world is not going to fix itself, we must put our
hands to the work. If we want Israel
to remain a vital piece of the global tapestry, a new piece must be added.
Whether there has ever been a state such as Palestine is an academic question that is
ultimately of little consequence. One thing, however, is for certain: without Palestine, eventually there will be no Israel. We can
not let that come to pass. We must support Israel. We must work toward the
establishment of a Palestinian state.
Shalom,
Andrew
Meyer