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GRAND
STRATEGY
By Dr. Chet
Richards
Editor
Defense and National
Interest
The Free Congress Foundation
**
Washington, DC
USA
Infosearch:
José Cadenas
Analyst
Bureau Chief
USA.
Research Dept.
La Nueva Cuba
January 23, 2006
Militarythat
is, destructiveactivities have the potential to provoke a
backlash in public opinion (on both sides) and among allies and
the uncommitted. Nightly newscasts of civilian casualties in Vietnam,
for example, helped fuel public demands to end the war, as did reports
of carnage along the "Highway of Death" out of Kuwait
during the last days of the First Gulf War. In this age of instant
worldwide communications, the potential for such adverse consequences,
and even for their manipulation, has obviously increased. With the
growth of satellite television and the Internet, censorship is not
a realistic option.
One solution
is a "grand strategy" that guides military actions not
only to minimize these effects but to produce positive benefits
on morale and public/world opinion. Such a grand strategy would
also shape our alliance structure and form a key element in isolating
adversaries from physical, mental, and moral support.
The late American
strategist, John R. Boyd, suggested four functions of a "sensible"
grand strategy:
Support our
national goal, which at the highest level involves improving our
fitness, as an organic whole, to shape and cope with an ever-changing
environment
Pump-up our
resolve, drain-away our adversary's resolve, and attract the uncommitted
End the conflict
on favorable terms
Ensure that
the conflict and peace terms do not provide seeds for (unfavorable)
future conflict.
Note Boyd's
mention of the "uncommitted," a group often slighted (or
even antagonized!) in modern warfare. Grand strategy seeks to "influence
the uncommitted or potential adversaries so that they are drawn
towards our philosophy and are empathetic toward our success."
If they choose to join our cause, great; but at the very least they
should refrain from any actions that furnish comfort, support, or
information to our adversaries.
A tall order.
Boyd does not provide a checklist for accomplishing it, but instead
advises gaining "an appreciation for the underlying
self interests
critical differences
of opinion
internal contradictions
frictions
obsessions
that we as well
as the uncommitted and any potential or real adversaries must contend
with." In other words, to create a grand strategy that works,
we must carry Sun Tzu's admonition to "know the enemy and know
ourselves" at a step or two farther: to know potential opponents
and the uncommitted as well as we know the enemy and ourselves.
Boyd suggested
a three part approach:
With respect
to ourselves, live up to our ideals: eliminate those flaws in our
system that create mistrust and discord while emphasizing those
cultural traditions, experiences, and unfolding events that build-up
harmony and trust. [That is, war is a time to fix these problems,
not to delay or ignore them. As an open, democratic society, the
United States should have enormous advantages in this area.]
With respect
to adversaries, we should publicize their harsh statements and threats
to highlight that our survival is always at risk; reveal mismatches
between the adversary's professed ideals and how their government
actually acts; and acquaint the adversary's population with our
philosophy and way of life to show that the mismatches of their
government do not accord with any social value based on either the
value and dignity of the individual or on the security and well
being of society as a whole. [This is not just propaganda, but must
be based on evidence that our population as well as those of the
uncommitted and real/potential adversaries will find credible.]
With respect
to the uncommitted and potential adversaries, show that we respect
their culture, bear them no harm, and will reward harmony with our
cause, yet, demonstrate that we will not tolerate nor support those
ideas and interactions that work against our culture and fitness
to cope. [A "carrot and stick" approach. The "uncommitted"
have the option to remain that wayso long as they do not aid
our adversaries or break their isolationand we hope that we
can entice them to join our side. Note that we "demonstrate"
the penalties for aiding the enemy, not just threaten them.]
During the Vietnam
War, we committed every mistake in the grand strategic book. Instead
of attracting the uncommitted, we repelled them by a perception
of indiscriminate use of firepower (more tons of bombs than in all
of WW II), we failed to negate Ho Chi Minh's claim that he was fighting
a straightforward war for independence, we did not respect the ideals
and culture of our allies ("gooks"), and our population
came to believe that their government was not telling the truth
about either the goals or the progress of the war (which is why
our tactical victory in the 1968 Tet offensive resulted in a grand
strategic defeat.) As a result, achievements on the battlefield
were offset by our government's isolation first from its allies
and then from its own people.
As a basis for
a grand strategy, Boyd recommended a "unifying vision":
A grand ideal,
overarching theme, or noble philosophy that represents a coherent
paradigm within which individuals as well as societies can shape
and adapt to unfolding circumstancesyet offers a way to expose
flaws of competing or adversary systems. Such a unifying vision
should be so compelling that it acts as a catalyst or beacon around
which to evolve those qualities that permit a collective entity
or organic whole to improve its stature in the scheme of things.
The U.S. Constitution
represents such a theme for this country. The challenge of American
grand strategy, therefore, is to uphold the ideals embodied in the
Constitution, while showing that we respect the culture and achievements
of our allies, the uncommitted, potential adversaries, and even
the population of actual adversaries. Executing such a grand strategy
would have the effect of limiting the support forand so the
options available toviolent ideological, trans-national "terrorist"
groups.
Unlike military
strategy, which must of necessity be kept secret and shrouded in
ambiguity and misinformation, grand strategy must be well publicized
and proclaimed by top leaders on a daily basis. Churchill defeated
Hitler not because he was a great strategist (just one day after
Churchill dismissed the blitzkrieg as merely a "scoop or raid
of mechanized vehicles," German armor reached the English Channel,
effectively deciding operations in France) but because he was perhaps
the greatest grand strategist of the modern era:
Side by side,
unaided except by their kith and kin in the great Dominions and
by the wide empires which rest beneath their shieldside by
side, the British and French peoples have advanced to rescue not
only Europe but mankind from the foulest and most soul-destroying
tyranny which has ever darkened and stained the pages of history.
Behind thembehind us behind the Armies and Fleets of
Britain and Francegather a group of shattered States and bludgeoned
races: the Czechs, the Poles, the Norwegians, the Danes, the Dutch,
the Belgiansupon all of whom the long night of barbarism will
descend, unbroken even by a star of hope, unless we conquer, as
conquer we must; as conquer we shall.
First
Broadcast as Prime Minister, May 19, 1940
Lincoln was
his worthy equal in the previous century:
This is essentially
a people's contest. On the side of the Union it is a struggle for
maintaining in the world that form and substance of government whose
leading object is to elevate the condition of men; to lift artificial
weights from all shoulders; to clear the paths of laudable pursuit
for all; to afford all an unfettered start and a fair chance in
the race of life.
July 4,
1861
As the examples
of Churchill and Lincoln show, successful wartime leaders place
a high premium on grand strategy. During the early phases of a conventional
conflict, when alliances are being formed, and throughout a fourth
generation war, they have no more pressing responsibility. In any
stage, however, it is not enough just to formulate and proclaim
grand visions and noble ideals: Political leaders must also ensure
that military commanders understand the grand strategy, enthusiastically
support it, and harmonize their operations with it. They must remove
commanders who cannot or will not maintain such harmony, while still
achieving their missions, and promote those who can and do.
Sources:
John R. Boyd,
"Patterns of Conflict," 138-143.
___________,"Strategic
Game," 53-57.
Sun Tzu,
The Art of War, (Cleary trans, Shambhala, 1988). Sun Tzu advised
attacking alliances before engaging in military actions (69), placed
high premiums on intelligence (knowing the enemy, 82 and Chapter
13), emphasized moral unity ("momentum") as the key to
victory (43, 98-99), and proclaimed that winning without fighting
was best (67).
Carl von
Clausewitz, On War, 1832. Clausewitz placed the "passions of
the people" in the first position of his "Trinity of War."
(Book I, Chapter I, Section 28).
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