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Michael Barone: Waging postindustrial war
U.S. News ^ | 01/20/03 | Michael Barone

Posted on 01/11/2003 1:36:28 PM PST by Pokey78

The United States plans to fight a war in Iraq with half as many troops as it fielded in the Persian Gulf War 12 years ago, according to newspaper reports. Stop and think a minute about just what that means. Our military leaders believe they need only half as many men and women to take control of all of Iraq as their counterparts a dozen years ago required to expel Saddam Hussein's forces from Kuwait. Even more striking: Pentagon brass don't expect all the troops we are fielding to be needed on the battlefield; some troops will be there just in case plans don't go as well as expected.

How can the Pentagon be so confident that it can accomplish so much more than in the Gulf War with half as many troops? The answer is that our weapons are more lethal and our tactics bolder than they were in 1991. During the Gulf War, an aircraft carrier could destroy 162 targets a day; today, the Wall Street Journal reports, an aircraft carrier can strike nearly 700 targets daily. Since there will very likely be four carrier battle groups in the gulf in a war with Iraq, that means the carriers alone can hit something like 2,800 rather than 650 targets in the first 24 hours. In the Gulf War, bombing went on for 40 days until ground troops moved in. This time the apparent plan is to send in ground troops the first day–or perhaps even before–to secure western Iraq so that Saddam can't hurl his few remaining Scud missiles at Israel. And troops can be moved more quickly thanks to new equipment like modular geodesic tents, which can be rigged to establish a command center, complete with computers and phone lines, in just three hours–a process that just a few years ago required three or four days. Communications are better, too. In the Gulf War, information from the JSTARS surveillance planes could not be sent to field units in a timely fashion. Today, JSTARS information is available to commanders instantly on every corner of the battlefield.

Tribal wars. The way a nation fights shapes the way a nation is governed. This is one of the theses of law professor Philip Bobbitt's magisterial The Shield of Achilles, written before 9/11 and published this year. "Epochal wars have been critical to the birth and development of the state," writes Bobbitt, who held national security posts in the first Bush and Clinton administrations. "A new form of the state–the market-state–is emerging . . . in much the same way that earlier forms since the 15th century have emerged, as a consequence of war." The wars of the 17th century were fought by huge armies, of the same character as the centralized states of Louis XIV. The wars of the 18th century were fought by smaller armies, of the same character as the territorial states assembled by rulers like Frederick the Great.

The forces now gather- ing around Iraq are being marshaled by one of these "market-states." Industrial America fought its wars with industrial forces: huge armies and navies–15 million men in World War II–made up mostly of low-skill conscripts and equipped with relatively unsophisticated mass-production machines. The war was won with kids from Brooklyn and rural Texas and machines mass-produced in Detroit and Los Angeles. Today, postindustrial America is planning to fight its latest war with highly skilled professional soldiers and sophisticated high-tech machines. We need fewer people–and can expect far fewer casualties–to win quicker victories. Critics who look back at World War II with nostalgia and argue for shared sacrifice and a drafted military miss the point. We are no longer the kind of country that fights most effectively that way.

But the battleground is not just in the Middle East. Before 9/11, Bobbitt saw "the need for a shift from target, threat-based assessments to vulnerability analyses" and pointed out that "remote, once local tribal wars . . . have been exported into the domestic populations . . . through immigration, empathy, and terrorism." An open, high-tech society remains vulnerable to terrorism and cannot be entirely protected by centralized authorities. Our last line of defense must be those high-skill, high-tech, and high-initiative strengths. The heroes who brought down United Flight 93 in Pennsylvania and the alert truck driver who engineered the capture of the alleged beltway snipers used cellphones and ignored centralized authorities' rules (the truck driver acted on leaked information) to stop determined killers. We can fight today's wars with fewer troops than we used to need. But every citizen should stand ready to fight at any time in any place.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events
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1 posted on 01/11/2003 1:36:28 PM PST by Pokey78
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2 posted on 01/11/2003 1:39:12 PM PST by Anti-Bubba182
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Comment #3 Removed by Moderator

To: Pokey78
If we're using half the number of troops, it's also because the "Powel Doctrine" has finally been half-discredited.
4 posted on 01/11/2003 1:49:45 PM PST by Arkady
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To: Arkady
My understanding of the Powell doctrine is using overwhelming force to guarantee victory. I don't see anything in this article that refutes that, rather the article suggests that the number of troops we need to have overwhelming force is much smaller today (due to technological advances on our part and the depreciation of the Iraqi army)?
5 posted on 01/11/2003 3:05:46 PM PST by The Vast Right Wing
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To: The Vast Right Wing
It's a great article, and we do have technological advances and a depleted enemy.
But the Powell Doctrine of overwhelming forces was not to ensure victory over the enemy so much as to ensure an antiseptic victory for the benefit of the media, with no body-bags or American casualties.
It was designed for a time when the media was telling us that Iraq had the 4th largest army in the world, battle-tested soldiers who would kick our butts. It was the same line used in Afghanistan, "the quagmire" to come.
The truth is, Iraqis were surrendering to French reporters after we wasted months amassing an armageddon against a paper-tiger.
The downside is that it effects our ability to fight two fronts at once, as in the situation we face today with N.Korea and Iraq.
There is no more use trying to appease a pacifist media by staging casuaty-free wars, than in trying to appease Islamofacists with financial aid.
I suspect that W. appointed Powell not for his military prowess, but for the political-cover he could provide.


6 posted on 01/11/2003 3:40:02 PM PST by Arkady
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To: Pokey78
But every citizen should stand ready to fight at any time in any place.

And that's the only thing that we would need universal military service for -- homeland security, not overseas military ventures. The overseas combat duty should be strictly volunteer, and strictly professional. But ALL of us are on the front lines here at home, now, and all of us need to be trained, equipped, and organized to do the job.

7 posted on 01/11/2003 3:58:29 PM PST by Stefan Stackhouse
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To: Arkady
Thank you!
It is about time someone pointed out that by the time Powell has us ready to fight, if the Iraqis had had one talented or aggessive colonel and a real army, they could have easily taken Riyadh, or Mecca and Medina.

Let's hope this Bush did the right thing by putting that most un-military man where he truly belongs, amongst the canapé-passers over at State. When the fight begins, let's also hope that there are no more like him over at JCS.

8 posted on 01/11/2003 4:55:42 PM PST by Kenny Bunk
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To: Kenny Bunk
You're very welcome.
Fortunately we now have Rumsfeld the Great at the post while Powell is relegated to Sunday morning talking-head shows.
Once we get rid of activist-judges, liberal media bias and U.N. butt-kissing, we can start to work on cleaning up the State Dept. of careerist appeasers who still think 9/11 was our fault.
Strangely, Europe has decided to abdicate military funding in order to have deficts creating socialist utopias and the third world creates military slaves while starving their own people.
Neither strategy will ever overcome a free people fighting for freedom.
9 posted on 01/11/2003 5:59:46 PM PST by Arkady
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To: Arkady
Yes, those are good points. I think at the same time though, there was significant uncertainty about the Iraqi Army's abilities and our own. I would suggest that the reason we can't fight two wars at once is not the powell doctrine but the atrophy of the military over the last decade. If this was 1990, with a military designed to take on the Soviet Union, we would have no trouble fighting two wars. Unfortunately, over the past decade we have not made the investment in our military to fight two wars.
10 posted on 01/13/2003 9:21:17 AM PST by The Vast Right Wing
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To: Pokey78
The war to be won is the global media war.


BUMP

11 posted on 01/13/2003 10:00:57 AM PST by tm22721 (Those without a sword can still die upon it.)
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To: The Vast Right Wing
You're right, we do need to reinvest in our military. My rant on the Powell Doctrine was a bit off-subject.
Future trends do seem to favor robotic drones and smart missiles carrying the load.
If we can give our troops overwhelming odds, why not?
They deserve it, so long as it's not in response to a cowardly media.
Ever since Vietnam, the networks think they hold the keys - just show some body bags on the 5:00 news and Americans will lose the stomach for war.
I prefer the way Rummy looks them in the eye and says, "Quagmire? Are you nuts?"
12 posted on 01/13/2003 1:42:15 PM PST by Arkady
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