Take two people, Joseph Cop and John Soldier. Call them Joe and
Johnny for short. Each of them has their job to do and each of them
does it well. And in some circumstances, that job, unfortunately,
causes someone to die. Let us look at a case in point.
Joe
Cop is walking down a city street when a person begins firing at him
from the second floor of a house. Since it's probably only this one
madman, he takes cover, calls for backup and waits for the SWAT team to
arrive and burn down the house. Or, hopefully, bring the poor deranged
gun-nut to trial and eventual commutation far away from his guns.
Johnny
Soldier is walking down a city street when a person begins firing at
him from the second floor of a house. He first tries to determine if he
can engage and destroy the sniper with direct fire. Determining that he
cannot, he has a choice of maneuver to close or call for heavy fire.
Since there are snipers all over the place, he calls down two
battalions of artillery fire, F-16s with five hundred pound bombs, a
wall of fuel air explosives and a B-52 arclight strike. That way the sniper dies, or at least quits shooting, and Johnny can go marching home again hurrah, hurrah. Or at least drive on with the mission.
Now,
let's take a look at "Operations Other Than War." Bosnia is a great
example. I recall, vividly, the image of a British major talking with a
CNN crew as the major and the fighting vehicle he was with came under
very poor quality sniper fire. The major kept the proverbial English
stiff upper lip and noted that there were usually only a few rounds and
then the sniper would go away. Pling! Pling! Duck! He also noted that
they knew, pretty well, where the sniper was. Pling! Pling! But they
preferred to let him continue firing rather than try to drive him off
or kill him. Pling! Finally, after this went on for a bit and they took
a casualty, the major ordered the gunner of the fighting vehicle to
fire a few rounds of cannon fire at the sniper. After that the sniper
either died or gave up, they did not send a patrol up to find out
which. They might take casualties.
So what we have here
is Johnny Soldier being Joseph Cop. And the two are clearly
incompatible. As a cop, you want to contain the position and minimize
casualties. That is an "operation other than war." As a soldier, you
have to advance to take and hold territory by closing with and
defeating the enemy. That is war. Unfortunately, if we prosecute the
war on terrorism as "Operations Other Than War" we'll be breathing
anthrax on a random basis for the next thirty years. Or until they find
a way to really annoy us.
So we need to fight it as a war.
War means closing with and destroying the enemy. I can't say that enough. It means destroying his means to fight and his will
to fight. It means killing the enemy using any reasonable force. There
is nothing clean or surgical or pretty about it; as one Civil War
general said: "Mars is not an aesthetic god."
One of the
reasons for the high level of restraint in OOTW is the treaties that
hem our troops and the care of the surrounding civilians. In a real
war, though, you have to think first of your national survival, second
of the survival of your forces and a distant third of "laws." That does
not mean becoming death-crazed criminals, it would take much to bring
Americans to that. But it does mean ignoring the convenient boundary.
It will mean civilian casualties among the populace of wherever we are
fighting, especially since the enemy will place its positions among
civilians for that very purpose. And it does mean using overwhelming
force and not "moderate" or "minimal force." William Slim during the
Burma campaign preferred to have five or six to one odds. When a senior
staffer commented that "That's a bit like crushing a walnut with a
steam-press", Slim replied: "There's nothing wrong with that if you
have a steam-press to hand and don't care about the condition of the
walnut."
Slim, and Grant, and Sherman and Patton, all
saw instances in which other officers attempted to use "appropriate" or
"minimal" force to achieve an objective. And were soundly trounced for
it. From this all of them came to the conclusion that the
right way to assault an enemy was with the most force you could bring
to bear, as fast as you could get it on target. In other words, "there
is nothing wrong with smashing a walnut with a steam-press."
But
that, as it should be, is anathema to "Operations Other Than War". And
"Operations Other Than War" was what all our officer corps was told
would be the future. We decided to study war no more. And what we get
is…
Joe Cop. With no backup.
It's time to study war some more. Or at least find some "rough man" who has.