“Never was anything
great achieved without danger”
Niccolo Machiavelli
Bucharest, Romania. 11 December. Credibility
is everything in strategy. Watching John McCain, Chairman of the Senate Armed
Services Committee, savage US Secretary of State Ashton Carter this week as I
was about to brief Alliance commanders on NATO’s southern flank was sobering. The argument between McCain and Carter
essentially boiled down to the search for a ground force that could do the West’s
bidding in Syria and how to pay for it.
However, implicit in the stand-off was a dangerous malaise that now
afflicts all Western powers; how to achieve large structural changes in international
strategy for the least effort and the lowest political cost. If Joe Nye once
defined grand strategy as the organisation of large mean in pursuit of large
ends what was witnessed in Washington this week was hollow politics or power
without strategy.
For much of the Cold War NATO’s
Southern Flank incorporated Spain, Italy, Greece and Turkey. Today, it
stretches across the Middle East and North Africa and indeed beyond. Much like
Europe’s Thirty Years War between 1618 and 1648 NATO’s southern flank incorporates
a plethora of tensions and conflicts all of which will require sustained
strategic engagement by the West in support of regional states over decades if
legitimate stability is to be re-established. However, the West has become a
lame duck with lame duck leaders bereft of clear strategic or political
objectives who are simply not up the challenges now posed. Perhaps it was a
mark of how desperate things have become that Germany’s Chancellor Merkel was
this week named by Time magazine as “Person of the Year”, having narrowly
beaten IS leader al-Baghdadi to the accolade.
McCain also berated Carter and by
extension the Obama administration for having no timeline for the campaign
against IS. After all, the timeline is the essential backbone of any strategy. Critically,
there is no absolutely sense of power applied over time, distance and cost
towards any real end, other than the vague hope that air containment (for that
is what the strategy amounts to) will somehow ‘degrade’ IS. In other words, a
real anti-IS strategy would necessarily need a ground force that goes significantly
beyond Carter’s suggestion of a “Expeditionary Targeting Force”, which sounds
like something out of a Jason Bourne movie.
Such a strategy would also need a
defensive as well as an offensive component, and far more joined-upness with
allies than exists if it is to be sustainable. The Lebanese Prime Minister told
David Cameron recently that he believed for every 1000 migrants entering Europe
illegally there are at least 2 Jihadis embedded therein. This means some 16,000
IS fighters have probably entered Europe this year alone and now. And yet, all
Europe’s leaders can seem do is quibble over which European institutions and
which European borders should be strengthened and how best to get the ongoing influx
off TV news. Talk about rearranging deckchairs on the Titanic. Or is that
ostriches sticking heads in the deck of the Titanic?
The reason for this political nonsense
is that no Western leader wants to be honest (so few are these days about
anything of substance) about the vital strategic end implicit in the fight
against IS; the restoring of stability across the Middle East and North Africa.
Specifically, they do not want to admit they a) have no clue; b) cannot agree;
and c) even if they could agree the time and cost required to achieve such an
end. Air containment is thus the latest of the strategic placebos Western ‘leaders’
prefer to real strategy and action. Hollow politics means if a problem cannot
be resolved before the next election ignore it as much as possible and use the
words ‘long’, ‘term’ and ‘strategy’ endlessly.
When something ghastly happens express condolences in grave tones, talk vaguely
about doing everything that can be done, and then move on.
Take last week’s extension of Britain’s
air strikes against IS from Iraq to Syria. To what end? Yes, attacking the oil
exports from which IS benefits might help at the margins. Stopping financial flows
to IS and disrupting IS cyber-propaganda might disrupt the group for a time. Professor
Rosemary Hollis of City University, London made the valid point that stepping
up air containment can only be a first step. That begs a question; what are the
second, third, fourth and indeed many more steps that will be need to achieve
the ultimate goal of returning political stability and physical security to
Syria, the wider Levant, and in time the Middle East? Well, there will be no
strategy until Sunni states across the Middle East agree to form an
international coalition to fight IS on the ground, restore stability to the
Levant, and stop the funding flowing out of them into IS coffers.
A coherent Western strategy? Hollow
politics means that beyond the re-stating of lofty, ill-defined ends there will
be no commitment of diplomatic, economic, let alone military means, because
there is no political commitment to necessary ways, beyond symbolic air
containment. First, there can be no strategy without US leadership and there
will be no such leadership until at the very earliest after the November 2016
US presidential elections. Second, Europeans are incapable of crafting such
strategy, due to both political and military weakness, and cannot even agree
how to defend their own homelands and against which adversary – Russia or IS.
There is another essential
Western dilemma reflected in and by hollow politics; the eternal confusion of
values with interests from which Western power suffers nowadays and which
render all strategic ends broad in scope, but limited in commitment. Contrast
Western ‘strategy’ with contending Russia strategy. Russia has established
limited strategic objectives on a relatively narrow end designed to leverage
much wider strategic effect and is investing the necessary means to establish
the strategic end as credible. However, the Russian end is not the preservation
of the Assad regime, which is merely the means, and most certainly not the
destruction of IS, which for the Russians is merely a sideshow. The end is the preservation
of a Russia-friendly Syria and specifically an air and naval base in Syria which
Moscow sees as vital to ensure Russian influence and interests can be
maintained across the Mediterranean basin and much of the Middle East. In other words, Russia has little concern for
the broader stability of the Middle East so long as it does not affect Russia’s
ability to use the Middle East as a platform for its interests.
What air containment also reveals
is a refusal to confront cause and effect beyond the ‘something must be done’
manta central to hollow politics. IS only numbers some 30-40,000 fighters which
could be defeated in relatively quick order on the battlefield, especially so if
they continue to aspire through the Caliphate to the creation of a relatively
conventional military force. However, implicit in the Syria conflict is the
very real prospect that the West could soon find itself not only embroiled in a
general Middle Eastern war between states, and a simultaneous religious and
sectarian war, that would look much like the gruesome 1618-1648 Thirty Years
War. Sadly, such a war could be hastened not delayed by Western inaction and
irresolution.
In that light air containment is
merely the putting of a small Western toe into very hot water. As such, unless the
air containment of IS is accompanied by revealed strategy and commitment, precisely
because there is no revealed relationship between ends, ways and means it will
soon come to be seen as an extension of weakness, rather than a statement of
strength. ‘Strength’ in this instance would need to include a demonstrable
determination by Western powers to use ‘all necessary means’.
Now, there are times when sound
statecraft demands military action in a political and strategic vacuum. There
are indeed times when power must be used in the absence of strategy in an
effort to change the relationship on the ground between ends, ways and means. Such action is taken precisely to create the
conditions for successful strategy. However, the current action masks no such
intent. Rather, they are the lame duck actions of lame duck leaders either
clueless as to the reality of the threat posed to and by what is happening in
the Middle East, and/or determined as ever to keep reality filed in the too
politically difficult file. In other words, it is hollow politics masquerading as
strategy.
Talking of lame duck leaders.
David Cameron was also in Bucharest this week pretending to negotiate a new
relationship for Britain in the EU. At least I was in Bucharest doing something
serious!
Julian Lindley-French
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