Victory in war requires, at a minimum, honesty about the type of
war you're waging. So you really have to wonder if certain members
of Congress understand what's at stake.
Case in point: The House Armed Services Committee recently ruled
that the phrase "the long war" cannot be used in writing the annual
defense authorization bill. Committee leaders claim they want the
language of the law to be more precise. If that is truly what they
want -- that is, if this wasn't about scoring political points --
then maybe they don't understand what the war on terrorism is all
about.
Ironically, the one thing that every one in Washington
(Republican, Democrat, liberal, conservative, right, left) agrees
on is that transnational terrorism isn't going away anytime soon.
That admission is vital, because it means it is going to be a "long
war," and the strategies for protracted conflict differ from those
that might be used in other wars.
In long wars, leaders have to be as concerned about protecting
the capacity of the state to compete and thrive over the long term
as they are with getting the enemy. Otherwise, war devolves into a
battle of attrition where the two sides hit each other, tit for
tat, until the side least prostrate at the end declares itself in a
winner.
Without a good long-war strategy, states often taken steps that
are self-defeating and self-weakening (like establishing
state-directed economies or declaring martial law) in a desperate
battle to prevail. Good long-war strategy must provide for
security, economic growth, the protection of individual liberties
and winning the ideological struggle -- and doing all equally well
to ensure that the nation doesn't just win, but emerges from the
conflict a free, safe and prosperous victor.
Acknowledging that America is waging a long war is essential. It
must be recognized to make sure this nation takes the right steps
to win. It's just as important as when we called the Cold War
"cold," which helped Americans understand that we couldn't defeat
the Soviet empire through direct military confrontation.
When Congress tries to call a particular war by the wrong name,
it risks losing sight of what needs to be done.
At least the House Armed Services Committee had the good sense
to let its members continue to call the wars in Iraq and
Afghanistan "wars." This, at least, acknowledges the fact that our
troops are battling terrorists in both countries -- terrorists who
are trying to overthrow democratically-elected governments, fuel
sectarian violence and slaughter innocents in the street.
That said, it is a bit puzzling that they supported legislation
declaring the U.S. should simply give up and go home, as if
quitting wars had no serious consequences -- as if the enemy will
quit, too, and go home.
What the House Armed Services Committee appears to be guilty of
is the criticism so often thrown at the administration -- hubris,
or overweening self-confidence in its own beliefs. It is the
ultimate folly to believe that American power is so great that if
the U.S. isn't successful in the world it is because of us --
because our intelligence was flawed, or the Pentagon didn't send
enough troops, or officials lied, or we were the victims of bad
ethics, vain leaders and greedy corporations.
It is hubris to think it is all about us, to believe that if we
just change the words, elect new leaders, or adopt "smarter"
policies that America will automatically triumph. It takes a humble
and realistic leadership to admit that the fight is tough -- that
the war will, in fact, be a "long" one -- because the enemy is
determined.
Simply changing words won't change the nature of the war.
Changing words substitutes rhetoric for substance and sound
strategic thinking. Congress can do better.
James
Carafano is Senior Research Fellow for National Security
and Homeland Security at The Heritage Foundation and author of the
new book "G.I. Ingenuity."