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comparisons between the events of September 11 and the attack on Pearl
Harbor 60 years ago have been as numerous as they have been apt. But
to appreciate fully the challenge we face, a different historical
comparison may be in order for the situation confronting the
U.S. today bears more than a passing resemblance to the situation
created when Communist North Korea invaded the south in June 1950.
That attack,
too, caught the United States sadly unprepared. Like this September's
terror attacks, Pyongyang's aggression thrust Americans into a conflict
unlike any they had known before. U.S. officials scrambled to devise
a vocabulary suited to a situation without precedent. (The ridicule
that President Truman endured for describing Korea as a "police
action" serves as a reminder of the penalty for choosing unwisely.)
In this new kind of war, it was said, traditional expectations of
victory did not apply. Many Americans bridled at this notion. As
the fighting dragged on, they became frustrated and impatient. They
seized upon the first available national election to express their
displeasure, turning out of office the party they held responsible
for the war's unsatisfactory progress.
Even today,
opinion remains divided on the Truman administration's conduct of
the war. Among conservatives, the view expressed by Gen. MacArthur
after Truman sacked him in 1951 "there is no substitute
for victory" retains considerable allure.
But the Korean
War and this is a point MacArthur never accepted was
never just about defeating a Communist attempt to overrun the south;
the conflict occurred within a larger strategic context. Unmistakable
evidence of growing U.S. vulnerabilities, famously catalogued in
the document NSC 68, had already begun to accumulate, but
prior to Korea Truman had been unable to summon up the political
will to reverse these trends. Once the war was joined, the president,
to his enduring credit, used aggression on the periphery as an occasion
to reinforce the center. He rebuilt U.S. military power, strengthened
America's commitment to defending key regions (notably, Western
Europe and Japan), and redoubled efforts to maintain a credible
nuclear deterrent.
Similar considerations
apply to how we should approach what President Bush has labeled
"the first war of the twenty-first century." Administration
officials have rightly proclaimed their determination to bring the
attackers to justice, and the president has mortgaged his political
future to the outcome of an all-out campaign to eliminate global
terror. But the real test looms larger still. To define U.S. objectives
too narrowly as a war against Osama bin Laden and his ilk
is to exhibit a MacArthur-like shortsightedness. As a measure
of strategic success, making an end of terrorists is necessary but
not sufficient. As Truman did with Korea, we must prosecute the
campaign against terror with one eye fixed on the larger game, namely
shoring up and relegitimizing American global preeminence. In that
sense, although the current crisis obliges Bush to deal with a danger
to our security, it also presents him as Korea did Truman
with a strategic opportunity.
To be sure,
the obstacles to seizing this opportunity are formidable. Over the
short term, the administration must focus on retaliation; but quick
retaliatory strikes may well be in tension with efforts to make
real progress toward uprooting terrorism. However great the public's
eagerness to destroy our adversaries, the availability of intelligence
not martial fervor should dictate the tempo of military
operations; but, as the events of September 11 indicate, the capabilities
of the U.S. government in this regard fall well short of adequate.
The U.S. has plenty of guns, but we don't know where to point them
or when to pull the trigger. Nor should we place much confidence
in our ability to anticipate our adversary's next move. Correcting
that gaping deficiency will require not only money and hard work
but also time. In the near term, the best hope for compensating
for the defects of our own apparatus may lie in securing assistance
from states whose intelligence services are better situated to keep
tabs on terror.
The cooperation
of others not only to gain intelligence, but also to secure
access to bases and air space and to deny terrorists external support
is a prerequisite for the near-term success without which
domestic support for the overall enterprise may fade. Pragmatic
considerations, not deference to the mythical "international
community," should caution us against any inclination to go
it alone, and should mandate a degree of restraint in the use of
force.
To the extent
that the perpetrators of terror (as opposed to states that tolerate
terror) remain the principal objects of attention, this war will
bear scant resemblance to a traditional military campaign. Action
will tend to be sporadic; it will vary greatly, from intense air
strikes to commando-style raids to operations mounted by police
authorities instead of soldiers; most of the operations will occur
on a relatively small scale; and some may remain invisible to the
public. But unlike episodes of the Clinton era, when the U.S. used
force to make a show of resolve, these will have as their aim the
step-by-step demolition of the enemy apparatus. Observers at home
may have a difficult time discerning how the various activities
add up to a coherent whole, and the Bush administration will be
hard-pressed to explain how a clutch of seemingly disparate actions
occurring over time signifies progress but making that case
will be essential.
Although the fight to root out terror will little resemble combat
in Korea, it may well elicit comparable feelings of frustration
and impatience. The administration is warning Americans to expect
a long struggle, but the reliance on terms like "war"
and "campaign" to drum up popular support conjures up
images and builds expectations that, however inadvertently, create
a potential for subsequent disappointment. The pressure on Bush
to meet those expectations by showing signs of real progress is
already considerable and will only increase as the weeks, months,
or years go by.
Worse, the
bin Laden organization and its supporters are unlikely to sit passively
and allow the U.S. to conduct this campaign on its own terms. Nor,
in a sense, do we want them to do so: If they resume their own campaign
they will expose themselves and facilitate their own destruction.
Yet as we have learned at far too great a cost, our opponents are
not only without scruples, they can mount sophisticated, daring,
and imaginative operations. The possibility of setbacks is real.
As the U.S. experience in Mogadishu in 1993 reminds us, possessing
an edge in firepower and technology is no guarantee against failure.
Given an adversary with sufficient cunning or monstrousness, the
level of violence could increase dramatically.
Yet if the
administration succeeds in maintaining a modicum of international
acquiescence or support, along with solid domestic backing, there
is no reason the U.S. should not ultimately prevail. What will victory
mean? Bush's more expansive claims notwithstanding, the U.S. cannot
expect to eradicate evil. But it can make a recurrence of September
11 or anything like it highly unlikely. This alone will qualify
as a formidable achievement; but even that will not be enough. The
war against terror provides the occasion to pursue a thoroughgoing
rejuvenation of national security policy.
Just as Korea
focused our attention on the need to be prepared for aggression
by the Red Army or its surrogates, the current crisis should increase
our awareness of today's true dangers: not the prospect of invasion
by mechanized armies, but regional disorders that undermine American-enforced
stability. U.S. forces, still for the most part organized as they
were during the Cold War, should be reconfigured accordingly. Truman
built up U.S. power in a Europe exposed to Soviet intimidation;
the current crisis is the moment to begin the long-overdue redistribution
of U.S. forces away from a Europe fully capable of defending itself.
Washington should reposition those troops to areas where U.S. interests
are more likely to be at risk e.g., Asia.
Finally, just
as Korea triggered a major effort to increase U.S. nuclear-strike
power, so today the Bush administration needs to expand our capabilities
for long-range precision strikes using conventional weapons. These
weapons have become America's trump card a category in which
the U.S. has, and must retain, undisputed superiority.
In June 1950,
Kim Il Sung posed a large problem for the U.S. But he was not the
problem. Stalin was, and Truman never lost sight of that fact. The
problem today is not a scattering of global terrorists, but a whole
raft of challenges to American economic, military, and political
primacy; and now is the time to reconfigure the instruments of U.S.
power to meet these challenges.
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