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IT'S THE TRIBES, STUPID
Steven Pressfield
October
2006
©
2006 Steven Pressfield
Defense
and National Interest
The Free Congress Foundation
**
Washington, DC
USA
Infosearch:
José Cadenas
Analyst
Bureau Chief
USA.
Research Dept.
La Nueva Cuba
October 09, 2006
Forget the Koran.
Forget the ayatollahs and the imams. If we want to understand the
enemy we're fighting in Iraq, the magic word is "tribe."
Islam is not
our opponent in Baghdad or Fallouja. We delude ourselves if we believe
the foe is a religion. The enemy is tribalism articulated in terms
of religion.
For two years
I've been researching a book about Alexander the Great's counter-guerrilla
campaign in Afghanistan, 330-327 B.C. What struck me most powerfully
is that that war is a dead ringer for the ones we're fighting today
even though Alexander was pre-Christian and his enemies were
pre-Islamic.
In other words,
the clash of East and West is at bottom not about religion. It's
about two different ways of being in the world. Those ways haven't
changed in 2300 years. They are polar antagonists, incompatible
and irreconcilable.
The West is
modern and rational; its constituent unit is the nation. The East
is ancient and visceral; its constituent unit is the tribe.
What is a tribe
anyway?
The tribe is
the most ancient form of social organization. It arose from the
hunter-gatherer clans of pre-history. A tribe is small. It consists
of personal, face-to-face relationships, often of blood. A tribe
is cohesive. Its structure is hierarchical. It has a leader and
a rigid set of norms and customs that defines each individual's
role. Like a hunting band, the tribe knows who's the top dog and
knows how to follow orders. What makes Islam so powerful in the
world today is that its all-embracing discipline and order overlay
the tribal mind-set so perfectly. Islam delivers the certainty and
security that the tribe used to. It permits the tribal way to survive
and thrive in a post-tribal and super-tribal world.
Am I knocking
tribalism? Not at all. In many ways I think people are happier in
a tribal universe. Consider the appeal of post-apocalyptic movies
like The Road Warrior or The Day After Tomorrow. Modern life is
tough. Who can fault us if now and then we entertain the idea of
going back to the simple life?
The people we're
fighting in Iraq and Afghanistan live that life 24/7/365 and they've
been living it for the past ten thousand years. They like it. It's
who they are. They're not going to change.
How do you combat
a tribal enemy?
Step one is
to recognize that that enemy is tribal. We in the West may flatter
ourselves that democracy is taking root in Iraq when we see news
footage of blue-ink thumbs and beaming faces emerging from polls.
What's really happening has nothing to do with democracy. What's
happening is the tribal chief has passed the word and everybody
is voting exactly as he told them to.
What is the
nature of the tribe? What can sociology tell us about its attributes?
The tribe respects
power.
Saddam Hussein
understood this. So did Tito, Stalin, Hitler. So will the next strong
man who ultimately stabilizes Iraq.
The tribe must
have a chief. It demands a leader. With a top dog, every underdog
knows his place. He feels secure. He can provide security for this
family. The tribe needs a Tony Soprano. It needs a Godfather.
The U.S. blew
it in Iraq the first week after occupying Baghdad. Capt. Nate Fick
of the Recon Marines tells the story of that brief interlude when
U.S. forces were still respected, just before the looting started.
Capt. Fick went in that interval to the local headman in his area
of responsibility in Baghdad; he asked what he needed. The chief
replied, "Clean water, electricity, and as many statues of
George W. Bush as you can give us."
The tribe needs
a boss. Alexander understood this. Unlike the U.S., the Macedonians
knew how to conquer a country. When Alexander took Babylon in 333
B.C., he let the people know he was the man. They accepted this.
They welcomed it. Life could go on.
When we Americans
declared in essence to the Iraqis, "Here, folks, you're free
now; set up your own government," they looked at us as if we
were crazy. The tribal mind doesn't want freedom; it wants security.
Order. It wants a New Boss. The Iraqis lost all respect for us then.
They saw us as naive, as fools. They saw that we could be beaten.
The tribe is
a warrior; its foundation is warrior pride.
The heart of
every tribal male is that of a warrior. Even the most wretched youth
in a Palestinian refugee camp sees himself as a knight of Islam.
The Pathan code of nangwali prescribes three virtues nang,
pride; badal, revenge; melmastia, hospitality. These guys are Apaches.
What the warrior
craves before all else is respect. Respect from his own people,
and, even more, from his enemy. When we of the West understand this,
as Alexander did, we'll have taken the first step toward solving
the unsolvable.
The tribe places
no value on freedom.
The tribe is
the most primitive form of social organization. In the conditions
under which the tribe evolved, survival was everything. Cohesion
meant the difference between starving and eating. The tribe enforces
conformity by every means possible wives, mothers, and daughters
add the whip hand to keep the warriors in line. Freedom is a luxury
the tribe can't afford. The tribesman's priority is respect within
the tribe, to belong, to be judged a man.
You can't sell
"freedom" to tribesmen any more than you can sell "democracy."
He doesn't want it. It violates his code. It threatens everything
he stands for.
The tribe is
bound to the land.
I just read
an article about Ariel Sharon (a tribal leader if there ever was
one.) The interviewer was describing how, as Sharon crossed a certain
stretch of Israeli real estate, he pointed out with great emotion
the hills where the Biblical character Abigail lived out her story.
In other words, to the tribesman the land isn't for sale; it's been
rendered sacred by the sagas of ancestors. The tribe will paint
the stones red with its own blood before letting itself be evicted
from the land.
The tribe cannot
be negotiated with.
Tribes deal
in absolutes. Their standards of honor cannot be compromised. Crush
the tribe in one century, it will rise again a thousand years from
now. We're seeing this now in a Middle East where the Crusades happened
yesterday. When the tribe negotiates, it is always a sham
a stalling tactic meant to mitigate temporary weakness. Do we believe
Iran is really "coming to the table?" As soon as the tribe
regains power, it will abrogate every treaty and every pact.
The tribe has
no honor except within its own sphere, deriving justice for its
own people. Its code is Us versus Them. The outsider is a gentile,
an infidel, a devil.
These are just
a few of the characteristics of the tribal mind. Now: what to do
about this?
How to deal
with the tribal mind.
You can't make
deals with a tribal foe; they won't be honored. You can't buy them;
they'll take your money and despise you. The tribe can't be reasoned
with. Its mind is not rational, it's instinctive. The tribe is not
modern but primitive. The tribe thinks from the stem of its brain,
not the cortex. Its code is of warrior pride, not of Enlightenment
reason.
To deal successfully
with the tribe, a negotiator of the West must first grant it its
pride and honor. The tribe's males must be addressed as warriors;
its women must be treated with respect. The tribe must be left to
its own land, to govern as it deems best.
If you want
to get out of a tribal war, you must find a scenario by which the
tribe can declare itself victorious. The tribal mind is canny; it
knows when it's whipped. But its warrior pride is so fierce, it
cannot admit this. The tribe has to be allowed its face.
How Alexander
got out of a quagmire.
It took Alexander
three years, but he finally got a handle on the tribal mind. (Perhaps
because so many of his own Macedonians were basically tribal.) Alexander
produced peace by marrying the daughter of his most powerful enemy,
the princess Roxane. The tribe understands such an act. This is
respect. This is honor.
Alexander made
the tribesmen his equals. He acknowledged their warrior honor. When
he and his army marched out to their next conquest, Alexander took
the bravest of his former enemies with him as his Companions. They
rode at his side in stations of honor; they dined at his shoulder
in the royal pavilion. (Of course he also beat the living hell out
of the Afghans for three years prior, and when he took off he left
a fifth of his army to garrison the place.)
The outlook
for the U.S. in Iraq
In the end,
unless we're ready to treat them they way we did Geronimo, the tribe
is unbeatable. They're just too crazy. They're not like us. Tolerance
and open-mindedness are not virtues to them; they're signs of weakness.
The tribe is too rigid to bend, and it can't be negotiated with.
Perhaps in the
end, our leaders, like Alexander, will figure some way to bring
the tribal foe around. More likely in my opinion, they'll arrive
at the same conclusion as did Lord Roberts, the legendary British
general. Lord Roberts fought (and defeated militarily) tribesmen
in two bloody wars in Afghanistan in the 19th century. His conclusion:
get out. Lord Roberts' axiom was that the farther away British forces
remained from the tribesmen, the more likely the tribesmen were
to feel warmly toward them; the closer he got, the more they hated
him and the more stubbornly and implacably they fought against him.
* Steven Pressfield
is the best-selling author of Gates of Fire, The Virtues of War, and
the recently published The Afghan Campaign. DNI has reviewed the Virtues
of War and The Afghan Campaign.
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