Soldiers Can’t Win Unwinnable Wars

By: Daniel L. Davis
2021-02-01

We are often reminded by political leaders and pundits on television that the United States has the most powerful military in world history. Some wonder, then, why this uniquely powerful military has been unable to win the Afghan war, for example, after two decades of trying. The answers have more to do with what the military is ordered to do rather than how it performs its duty.

One of the primary reasons America can’t seem to win wars in the modern era is because when it comes to issues related to war and peace, nearly every administration since Bill Clinton has enacted bad foreign policy. It’s not merely that the Armed Forces have failed to subdue the enemy, it’s that the government has ordered the military to try and accomplish the unattainable—and that guarantees we’ll fail to win. 

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In response to the awful attacks on 9/11, President George W. Bush provided a clear, attainable, and limited mission to the initial military operation. He ordered them “to disrupt the use of Afghanistan as a terrorist base of operations and to attack the military capability of the Taliban regime.”  That was fully accomplished by the summer of 2002, and that’s where the wheels started coming off.

Instead of following his father’s lead and withdrawing the troops after the successful conclusion of the mission, Bush just let the military muddle along, without any identifiable mission, for five inconclusive years.  Bush’s 2003 invasion of Iraq, of course, was a disaster in every sense of the word. Even after deposing Saddam, our forces were given no follow-on mission whose attainment would signal the end of the war.  We just “fought” an insurgency, conducting tactical actions divorced from strategic purpose.

Then in 2007 Bush moved the Afghan goalposts, saying the mission now was to “defeat the terrorists and establish a stable, moderate, and democratic state that respects the rights of its citizens, governs its territory effectively, and is a reliable ally in this war against extremists and terrorists.”  In other words, nation-building.

That mission, as articulated, could never be militarily accomplished. There were no military objectives that could have been assigned to an infantry brigade, for example, whose successful tactical accomplishment would have resulted in “a stable, moderate, and democratic state.”  Such explicit political objectives are not even within the capacity of the military to produce.

Obama worsened the problem in Afghanistan, doubling-down on Bush’s nation-building objectives. In 2009, when ordering the Afghan surge, Obama said the mission had three objectives: “a military effort to create the conditions for a transition; a civilian surge that reinforces positive action; and an effective partnership with Pakistan.” The first order contained no militarily attainable tasks; the second two requirements weren’t military tasks at all.

Obama also sent the military to help depose Qadhafi in Libya in 2011 with no plan for what came next, and returned troops to Iraq in 2014 and to Syria in 2015, without any objectives beyond “helping” Iraq and the Syrian Democratic Forces. Trump followed suit by leaving troops in Iraq, Syria, and support for the Yemen war without providing any militarily attainable objectives.  The results for every one of these operations has been that the military was left merely conducting “tactical tasks” detached from strategy for producing a conclusive outcome.

Our military has been almost uniformly successful at every tactical task it has undertaken since 1990 (with occasional botched night raids and errant missile/drone strikes that killed innocent civilians). The problem hasn’t been an inability of our military to succeed on the battlefield. Our problem has been that successive Administrations have improperly used the military in an attempt to produce the unattainable. Our leaders have given objectives to the military to solve political and societal problems that military power can’t fix.

Read the rest of this article at The National Interest

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