Figures
on the Right, seeing
themselves cheated of
. . . a short, jolly
war in Afghanistan, demand one
against a more satisfying
adversary, Iraq; which is
rather like the drunk who lost
his watch in a dark alley but
looked for it under a lamp
post because there was more
light there.
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[images added
by this website]
London, October 31, 2001
Mistake
to declare this a 'war'
Sir
Michael Howard, the eminent
historian, has delivered a brilliant
analysis of the terrorist crisis -- and
an indictment of its handling -- which
is likely to prove highly influential
in this country and abroad.
Here is his
speech in full:
When in the immediate aftermath of the
attack on the World Trade Center the
American Secretary of State Colin
Powell declared that America was 'at
war', he made a very natural but a
terrible and irrevocable error. Leaders of
the Administration have been trying to put
it right ever since.
"What Colin Powell said made sense if
one uses the term 'war' in the sense of
war against crime or against
drug-trafficking: that is, the
mobilisation of all available resources
against a dangerous anti-social activity;
one that can never be entirely eliminated
but can be reduced to, and kept at, a
level that does not threaten social
stability.
"The
British in their time have fought many
such 'wars'; in Palestine, in Ireland, in
Cyprus and in Malaya, to mention only a
few. But we never called them 'wars': we
called them 'emergencies'. This meant that
the police and intelligence services were
provided with exceptional powers, and were
reinforced where necessary by the armed
forces, but all continued to operate
within a peacetime framework of civil
authority. If force had to be used, it was
at a minimal level and so far as possible
did not interrupt the normal tenor of
civil life. The object was to isolate the
terrorists from the rest of the community,
and to cut them off from external sources
of supply. They were not dignified with
the status of belligerents: they were
criminals, to be regarded as such by the
general public and treated as such by the
authorities.
"To 'declare war' on terrorists, or
even more
illiterately,
on 'terrorism' is at once to accord them a
status and dignity that they seek and
which they do not deserve. It confers on
them a kind of legitimacy. Do they qualify
as 'belligerents' ? If so,
should they not
receive the protection of the laws of
war? This was something that Irish
terrorists always demanded, and was quite
properly refused. But their demands helped
to muddy the waters, and were given wide
credence among their supporters in the
United States.
"But to use, or rather to misuse the
term 'war' is not simply a matter of
legality, or pedantic semantics. It has
deeper and more dangerous consequences. To
declare that one is 'at war' is
immediately to create a war psychosis that
may be totally counter-productive for the
objective that we seek. It will arouse an
immediate expectation, and demand, for
spectacular military action against some
easily identifiable adversary, preferably
a hostile state; action leading to
decisive results.
"The use of force is no longer seen as
a last resort, to be avoided if humanly
possible, but as the first, and the sooner
it is used the better. The press demands
immediate stories of derring-do, filling
their pages with pictures of weapons,
ingenious graphics, and contributions from
service officers long, and probably
deservedly, retired. Any suggestion that
the best strategy is not to use military
force at all, but more subtle if less
heroic means of destroying the adversary
are dismissed as 'appeasement' by
ministers whose knowledge of history is
about on a par with their skill at
political management.
Figures on the Right, seeing themselves
cheated of what the Germans used to call a
frischer, fröhlicher Krieg, a
short, jolly war in Afghanistan, demand
one against a more satisfying adversary,
Iraq; which is rather like the drunk who
lost his watch in a dark alley but looked
for it under a lamp post because there was
more light there. As for their
counterparts on the Left, the very word
'war' brings them out on the streets to
protest as a matter of principle. The
qualities needed in a serious campaign
against terrorists -- secrecy,
intelligence, political sagacity, quiet
ruthlessness, covert actions that remain
covert, above all infinite patience -- all
these are forgotten or overriden in a
media-stoked frenzy for immediate results,
and nagging complaints if they do not get
them.
"All this is what we have been
witnessing over the past three or four
weeks.
"Could
it have been avoided ? Certainly, rather
than what President Bush so
unfortunately termed 'a crusade against
evil', that is, a military campaign
conducted by an alliance dominated by the
United States, many people would have
preferred a police operation conducted
under the auspices of the United Nations
on behalf of the international community
as a whole, against an criminal
conspiracy; whose members should be hunted
down and brought before an international
court, where they would receive a fair
trial and, if found guilty, awarded an
appropriate sentence. In an ideal world
that is no doubt what would have
happened.
"But we do not live in an ideal world.
The destruction of the twin towers and the
massacre of several thousand innocent New
York office-workers was not seen in the
United States as a crime against 'the
international community' to be
appropriately dealt with by the United
Nations; a body for which Americans have
little respect when they have heard of it
at all. For them it was an outrage against
the people of America, one far surpassing
in infamy even the Japanese attack on
Pearl Harbor. Such an insult to their
honor was not to be dealt with by a long
and meticulous police investigation
conducted by international authorities,
culminating in an even longer court case
in some foreign capital, with sentences
that would then no doubt be suspended to
allow for further appeals. It cried for
immediate and spectacular vengeance to be
inflicted by their own armed forces .
"And who can blame them ? In their
position we would have felt exactly the
same. The courage and wisdom of President
Bush in resisting the call for a strategy
of vendetta has been admirable, but the
pressure is still there, both within and
beyond the Administration. It is a demand
that can be satisfied only by military
action -- if possible rapid and decisive
military action. There must be catharsis:
the blood of five thousand innocent
civilians demands it.
"Again,
President Bush deserves enormous credit
for his attempt to implement the
alternative paradigm. He has abjured
unilateral action. He has sought, and
received, a United Nations mandate. He has
built up an amazingly wide-ranging
coalition that truly does embody 'the
international community' so far as such an
entity exists.
"Within a matter of days, almost, the
United States has turned its back on the
unilateralism and isolationism towards
which it seemed to be steering, and
resumed its former position as leader of a
world community far more extensive than
the so-called 'free world' of the old Cold
War. Almost equally important, the
President and his colleagues have done
their best to explain to the American
people that this will be a war unlike any
other, and they must adjust their
expectations accordingly. But it is still
a war. The 'w' word has been used, and now
cannot be withdrawn; and its use has
brought inevitable and irresistible
pressure to use military force as soon,
and as decisively as possible.
"Now a struggle against terrorism, as
we have discovered over the past century
and not least in Northern Ireland, is
unlike a war against drugs or a war
against crime in one vital respect. It is
fundamentally a 'battle for hearts and
minds'; and it is worth remembering that
that phrase was first coined in the
context of the most successful campaign of
the kind that the British Armed Forces
have ever fought -- the Malayan Emergency
in the 1950s (a campaign incidentally that
it took some fifteen years to bring to an
end). Without hearts and minds one cannot
obtain intelligence, and without
intelligence terrorists can never be
defeated.
"There is not much of a constituency
for criminals or drug-traffickers, and in
a campaign against them the government can
be reasonably certain that the mass of the
public will be on its side. But as we all
know, one man's terrorist is another man's
freedom fighter. Terrorists can be
successfully destroyed only if public
opinion, both at home and abroad, supports
the authorities in regarding them as
criminals rather than heroes.
"In the intricate game of skill played
between terrorists and the authorities, as
we discovered in both Palestine and
Ireland, the terrorists have already won
an important battle if they can provoke
the authorities into using overt armed
force against them. They will then be in a
win-win situation. Either they will escape
to fight another day, or they will be
defeated and celebrated as martyrs. In the
process of fighting them a lot of innocent
civilians will certainly be hurt, which
will further erode the moral authority of
the government.
"Who here will ever forget Black Sunday
in Northern Ireland , when a few salvos of
small-arms fire by the British Army gave
the IRA a propaganda victory from which
the British government was never to
recover ? And if so much harm can be done
by rifle fire, what is one to say about
bombing ? I can only suggest that it is
like trying to eradicate cancer cells with
a blow-torch. Whatever its military
justification, the bombing of Afghanistan,
with the inevitable 'collateral damage' it
causes, will gradually whittle away the
immense moral ascendancy that we enjoyed
as a result of the bombing of the World
Trade Center.
"I hate having
to say this, but in six months time for
much of the world that atrocity will
be, if not forgotten, then remembered
only as history; while every fresh
picture on television of a hospital
hit, or children crippled by
land-mines, or refugees driven from
their homes by western military action,
will strengthen the hatred of our
adversaries, recruit the ranks of the
terrorists and sow fresh doubts in the
minds of our supporters.
"I have little doubt that the campaign
in Afghanistan was undertaken only on the
best available political and military
advice, in full realization of its
military difficulties and political
dangers, and in the sincere belief that
there was no alternative. It was, as the
Americans so nicely put it, an AOS
situation: 'All Options Stink'. But in
compelling us to undertake it at all, the
terrorists had taken the first and
all-important trick.
"I can also understand the military
reasoning that drives the campaign. It is
based on the political assumption that the
terrorist network must be destroyed as
quickly as possible before it can do any
more damage. It further assumes that the
network is master-minded by a single evil
genius, Osama bin Laden, whose
elimination will demoralise if not destroy
his organisation. Bin Laden operates out
of a country whose rulers refuse to yield
him up to the forces of international
justice. Those rulers must be compelled to
change their minds. The quickest way to
break their will is by aerial bombardment,
especially since a physical invasion of
their territory presents such huge if not
insoluble logistical problems. Given these
assumptions, what alternative did we
have?
But the best reasoning, and the most
flawless logic, is of little value if it
starts from false assumptions. I have no
doubt that voices were raised both in
Washington and in Whitehall questioning
the need and pointing out the dangers of
immediate military action; but if they
were, they were at once drowned out by the
thunderous political imperative: Something
Must be Done. The same voices no doubt
also questioned the wisdom, if not the
accuracy, of identifying bin Laden as the
central and indispensable a figure in the
terrorist network; demonising him for some
people, but for others giving him the
heroic status enjoyed by
'freedom-fighters' throughout the
ages.
"We are now in a horrible dilemma. If
we 'bring him to justice' and put him on
trial we will provide him with a platform
for global propaganda. If we assassinate
him -- perhaps 'shot while trying to
escape' -- he will be a martyr. If he
escapes he will be a Robin Hood. He can't
lose. And even if he is eliminated, it is
hard to believe that a global network that
apparently consisting of people as
intelligent and well-educated as they are
dedicated and ruthless will not continue
to function effectively until they are
traced and dug out by patient and
long-term operations of police and
intelligence forces, whose activities will
not, and certainly should not, hit the
headlines. Such a process that , as the
Chief of the Defence Staff rightly pointed
out, may well take decades.
"Now that the
operation has begun it must be pressed
to a successful conclusion; successful
enough for us to be able to disengage
with a reasonable amount of honour and
for the benefit of the tabloid
headlines to claim 'victory' (though
the very demand for 'victory' and the
sub-Churchillian rhetoric that
accompanies it shows how profoundly
press and politicians still
misunderstand the nature of the problem
that confronts us.) Only after we have
done that will it be possible to
continue with the real struggle that I
have described above; one in which
there will be no spectacular battles,
and no clear victory.
"Sir Michael Boyce's analogy
with the Cold War is valuable in another
respect. Not only did it go on for a very
long time: it had to be kept cold. There
was a constant danger that it would be
inadvertently toppled into a hot nuclear
war, which everyone would catastrophically
lose. The danger of nuclear war, at least
on a global scale, has now thank God
ebbed, if only for the moment, but it has
been replaced by another, and one no less
alarming; the likelihood of an on-going
and continuous confrontation of cultures,
that will not only divide the world but
shatter the internal cohesion of our
increasingly multi-cultural societies. And
the longer the overt war continues against
'terrorism', in Afghanistan or anywhere
else, the greater is the danger of that
happening.
"There is no reason to suppose that
Osmana bin Laden enjoys any more sympathy
in the Islamic world than , say, Ian
Paisley does in that of Christendom.
He is a phenomenon which has cropped up
several times in our history -- a
charismatic religious leader fanatically
hostile to the West leading a cult that
has sometimes gripped an entire nation.
There was the Mahdi in the Sudan in
the late nineteenth century, and the
so-called 'Mad Mullah' in
Somaliland in the early twentieth.
Admittedly they presented purely local
problems, although a substantial
proportion of the British Army had to be
mobilised to deal with the Mahdi and his
followers.
"The difference today is that such
leaders can recruit followers from all
over the world, and can strike back
anywhere in the world They are neither
representative of Islam nor approved by
Islam, but the roots of their appeal lies
in a peculiarly Islamic predicament that
has only intensified over the last half of
the twentieth century : the challenge to
Islamic culture and values posed by the
secular and materialistic culture of the
West, and their inability to come to terms
with it.
"This is a vast subject on which I have
few qualifications to speak, but which we
must understand if we are to have any
hope, not so much of 'winning' the new
'Cold War', but of preventing it from
becoming hot.
"In retrospect, it is quite astonishing
how little we have understood, or
empathised with, the huge crisis that has
faced that vast and populous section of
the world stretching from the Mahgreb
through the Middle East and central Asia
into South and South-East Asia and beyond
to the Philippines: overpopulated,
underdeveloped, being dragged headlong by
the West into the post-modern age before
they have come to terms with modernity.
This is not a problem of poverty as
against wealth, and I am afraid that it is
symptomatic of our western materialism to
suppose that it is. It is the far more
profound and intractable confrontation
between a theistic, land-based and
traditional culture, in places little
different from the Europe of the Middle
Ages, and the secular material values of
the Enlightenment .
"I would like to think that , thanks to
our imperial experience, the British
understand these problems -- or we
certainly ought to -- better than many
others. So, perhaps even more so, do our
neighbours the French. But for most
Americans it must be said that Islam
remains one vast terra incognita -- and
one, like all such blank areas on medieval
maps, inhabited very largely by
dragons.
"This is the region where we have to
wage the struggle for hearts and minds and
win it if the struggle against terrorism
is to succeed. The front line in the
struggle is not Afghanistan. It is in the
Islamic states where modernising
governments are threatened by a
traditionalist backlash: Turkey, Egypt,
Pakistan, to name only the most obvious.
And as we know very well, the front line
also runs through our own streets. For
these people the events of September 11th
were terrible, but they happened a long
way away and in another world. Those whose
sufferings as a result of western air
raids or of Israeli incursions are nightly
depicted on television are people, however
geographically distant, with whom they can
easily identify.
An
Israeli soldier confronts a
Palestinian in Hebron, March 24,
2001.
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"That is why prolongation of the war is
likely to be so disastrous. Even more
disastrous would be its extension, as
American opinion seems increasingly to
demand, in a 'Long March' through other
'rogue states' beginning with Iraq, in
order to eradicate terrorism for good and
all so that the world can live at peace. I
can think of no policy more likely, not
only to indefinitely prolong the war, but
to ensure that we can never win it.
"I understand that this afternoon,
perhaps at this very moment, the Prime
Minister is making a speech exhorting the
British People to keep their nerve. It is
no less important that we should keep our
heads.
Sir Michael Howard was speaking to
the Royal United Services
Institute
© Associated Newspapers Ltd.,
31 October 2001
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