In God We Trust


Inadequate indecision

An Afghanistan strategy is not enough

By Clifford D. May
WashingtonTimes.com
Don't fault President Obama for reconsidering his strategy in Afghanistan. Fault him for reconsidering his strategy only in Afghanistan. Nearing the end of his first year in office, his administration has not yet developed a coherent and comprehensive plan to defend Americans from the movements, groups and regimes that declare themselves our enemies, explicitly state their intentions - e.g., "Death to America!" - and, unless we take steps to prevent it, will soon have nuclear capabilities to help them accomplish their mission.

The Bush administration fought what it called a "Global War on Terrorism." The phrase was unsatisfactory because it suggested our fight was against a weapon rather than against an enemy using that weapon. But at least it acknowledged the obvious: An asymmetric war is being waged against the United States and other free nations.

The Obama administration has rejected the Global War on Terrorism. Its spokesmen say there is no global conflict - only "overseas contingency operations." The problem with this is not merely semantic. It's conceptual. It's disconnecting the dots.

In his new book, "Accomplice to Evil: Iran and the War Against the West," Michael Ledeen, the Freedom Scholar at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies (the policy institute I head), asks why, in the 1930s, so many otherwise smart people were so blind to the gravity of the threat posed by the Nazi movement that arose in Germany, the militarist movement that arose in Japan and the Fascist movement that arose in Italy.

Whatever the explanation, we might have learned from that experience. Yet today, so many otherwise smart people are equally blind to the gravity of the threat posed by the Khomeinist movement that arose in Iran in 1979 and the al Qaeda movement that arose in Pakistan and Afghanistan in 1988.

These movements are rivals - Khomeinism appeals primarily to Shia Muslims, while al Qaeda reaches out to the Sunni - but they can and do cooperate and conspire against those they view as common enemies. One or both have links to other groups - the Taliban, Hezbollah, Hamas - that are waging war against "infidels." The Wahhabis of Saudi Arabia stoke the fires of Islamic rage in mosques, madrassas and media, and they use their enormous oil revenues to fund Islamist terrorists, insurgents and militants around the world.

"The rise of messianic mass movements is not new, and there is very little we do not know about them," Mr. Ledeen notes in his book. Yet "there is little apparent recognition that we are under attack by a familiar sort of enemy, and great reluctance to act accordingly."

German Nazis, Italian Fascists and Japanese militarists all had grievances. They sought to redress those grievances and gain power through war and conquest. President Franklin D. Roosevelt's response was not to pursue "conflict resolution." His goal was to defeat them - utterly and unconditionally. After that, the United States could and would assist in a robust reconstruction effort.

Roosevelt understood, too, that he was not fighting one war in Europe, another war in the Pacific and a third in North Africa. He grasped that these were separate theaters in a single struggle to defend the West.

Seeing the current struggle similarly - recognizing that militant jihadists are fighting on multiple fronts from Iraq to Afghanistan to Gaza to Lebanon to Pakistan - would help clarify the administration's strategic thinking.

In Afghanistan, Mr. Obama appears to be considering three options. He can go all in, providing the resources required for a full-blown and prolonged counterinsurgency campaign. He can go all out - withdrawing and, almost certainly, accepting the Taliban's return to power. Or he can maintain the status quo, which at best would mean a prolonged stalemate.

It is not an easy decision. But to make it correctly requires asking how the outcome of this battle will affect the broader conflict, the "War Against the West," which is the real "war of necessity." But Mr. Obama and his advisers won't ask that question until and unless they acknowledge that such a war is under way.

Clifford D. May is president of the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies, a policy institute focusing on terrorism.
 

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