CLEVELAND, OH — As the American foreign-policy establishment drools
about “democracy,” the U.S. position in the Middle East
is collapsing. Its three legs are Egypt, Saudi Arabia, and Pakistan.
Two of those are disintegrating. One-legged stools make unstable seats.
The likelihood of any of the countries in the region becoming thriving,
secular democracies is about equal to the probability we will balance
the federal budget with bars of gold brought by flying monkeys. In
the Middle East as in most of the world, the two options are tyranny
and anarchy. When tyranny fails, anarchy moves in.
Establishment analysis perceives the possibility of disaster but
does not grasp its potential dimensions. It sees the worst possible
outcome as the rise of Islamic governments hostile to Israel, friendly
to Iran, unwilling to cooperate with the United States in the “war
on terror,” and dismissive of such “universals” as
feminist definitions of women’s rights.
However, if we look at unfolding events through the lens provided by
Fourth Generation war theory, a darker picture emerges. Fourth Generation
theory says that what is at stake is the state itself.
Behind the events in the streets, the fundamental contest will be
a war for legitimacy between non-state actors and the aspiring governments
of states. As states all over the world become private preserves of
a “new class” who use politics only to serve themselves,
people are transferring their primary loyalty away from governments
to a wide variety of other entities: religions and sects, races and
ethnic groups, gangs, ideologies, and so on. For these new primary
loyalties they are often eager to fight; this is especially true where
there are large surpluses of young men with nothing else to do. Think
of it as supply-side war.
From this perspective, the worst possible outcome of revolutionary
events in the Middle East is the disintegration of states and their
replacement either by statelessness—as we see in Somalia—or
by fictional states, as in Iraq and Afghanistan. Within the territories
that were formerly real states, power devolves to many non-state entities.
Internally, war becomes a permanent condition, while externally there
is no one with whom other states can deal. In the case of oil-producing
areas, the flow becomes erratic at best.
What is the likelihood of such Fourth Generation outcomes? It differs
place to place. Egypt has had a strong central government for some
5,000 years and will probably retain one. In Libya and Yemen, the state
is fragile. Pakistan was a real state but is one no longer. Saudi Arabia
is a riddle wrapped in an enigma. Iraq’s fictional state could
vanish with the rub of a lamp.
The states most likely to survive are those such as Syria and Iran
where the government is openly anti-American. Here we see the price,
most of it yet to be paid, of the folly of the Bush years. Where the
quest is for legitimacy, nothing is more corrosive than being seen
as the servant of a foreign power, especially one that is widely hated.
Bush’s invasion of Iraq and the endless war in Afghanistan made
America into the “Great Satan” in the eyes of Muslims everywhere.
At the same time, successive American administrations have openly given
orders to our “allies” in the region and forced their compliance.
We not only let the strings show, we painted them red, white, and blue.
Now, in terms of legitimacy, America has the reverse Midas touch.
The foreign-policy establishment can grasp none of this because to
do so it would have to see itself as others see it. Washington is a
hall of mirrors.
What should our policy toward new entities in the Middle East be?
If we understand we have the reverse Midas touch, we will also understand
we should assume the lowest of profiles. First, remove the irritants.
End the war in Afghanistan, close the American bases, shrink the embassies,
and stop legitimizing Likud’s expansionism. Then work to have
what happens in the Middle East stay in the Middle East.
Lower the profile of our relationship with Israel. Be careful whom
we admit within our own borders, including as refugees. (There may
be millions.) Reduce our dependence on imported oil by raising the
gas tax and using the revenue to bring back passenger trains.
In short, come home and close the gate. Leave our good Muslim friends
to wage jihad on one another.
© Copyright the American
Ideas Institute.
This
article appears in the May 2011 edition
of The
American Conservative,a monthly opinion magazine about politics,
culture, and foreign policy from the perspective of traditional conservatism.
Guest columnist, William S. Lind is a military historian theorist,
a former defense specialist on Capitol Hill, and a long time associate
of conservative leader Paul Weyrich. He first expounded the theories
of Fourth
Generation warfare in an article in
the Marine Corps Gazette in 1989. He is also a pundit on cultural conservatism.