A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Tuesday, September 27, 2016
An Obsolescent Military: Bombing Everything, Gaining Nothing
The consequences both probable and assured make the adventure unattractive, especially since likely pretexts for a war with China – a few rocks in the Pacific, for example – are too trivial to be worth the certain costs and uncertain outcome. Again, military superiority doesn’t mean much.
( September 25, 2016, Boston, Sri Lanka Guardian) What,
precisely, is the US military for, and what, precisely, can it do? In
practical terms, how powerful is it? On paper, it is formidable, huge,
with carrier battle groups, advanced technology, remarkable submarines,
satellites, and so on. What does this translate to?
Military power does not exist independently, but only in relation to
specific circumstances. Comparing technical specifications of the T-14
to those of the M1A2, or Su-34 to F-15, or numbers of this to numbers of
that, is an interesting intellectual exercise. It means little without
reference to specific circumstances.
For example, America is vastly superior militarily to North Korea in
every category of arms – but the North has nuclear bombs. It can’t
deliver them to the US, but probably can to Seoul. Even without nuclear
weapons, it has a large army and large numbers of artillery tubes within
range of Seoul. It has an unpredictable government. As Gordon Liddy
said, if your responses to provocation are wildly out of proportion to
those provocations, and unpredictable, nobody will provoke you.
An American attack by air on the North, the only attack possible short
of a preemptive nuclear strike, would offer a high probability of a
peninsular war, devastation of Seoul, paralysis of an important trading
partner – think Samsung – and an uncertain final outcome. The United
States hasn’t the means of getting troops to Korea rapidly in any
numbers, and the domestic political results of lots of GIs killed by a
serious enemy would be politically grave. The probable cost far exceeds
any possible benefit. In practical terms, Washington’s military
superiority means nothing with regard to North Korea. Pyongyang knows
it.
Or consider the Ukraine. On paper, US forces overall are superior to
Russian. Locally, they are not. Russia borders on the Ukraine and could
overrun it quickly. The US cannot rapidly bring force to bear except a
degree of air power. Air power hasn’t worked against defenseless
peasants in many countries. Russia is not a defenseless peasant. Europe,
usually docile and obedient to America, is unlikely to engage in a
shooting war with Moscow for the benefit of Washington. Europeans are
aware that Russia borders on Eastern Europe, which borders on Western
Europe. For Washington, fighting Russia in the Ukraine would require a
huge effort with seaborne logistics and a national mobilization. Serious
wars with nuclear powers do not represent the height of judgment.
Again, Washington’s military superiority means nothing.
Or consider Washington’s dispute with China in the Pacific. China cannot
begin to match American naval power. It doesn’t have to. Beijing has
focused on anti-ship missiles – read “carrier-killer” – such as the JD21
ballistic missile. How well it works I do not know, but the Chinese are
not stupid. Is the risk of finding out worth it? Fast, stealthed,
sea-skimming cruise missiles are very cheap compared to carriers, and
America’s admirals know that lots of them arriving simultaneously would
not have a happy ending.
Having a fleet disabled by China would be intolerable to Washington, but
its possible responses would be unappealing. Would it start a
conventional war with China with the ghastly global economic
consequences? This would not generate allies. Cut China’s oil lanes to
the Mideast and push Beijing toward nuclear war? Destroy the Three
Gorges Dam and drown god knows how many people? If China used the war as
a pretext for annexing bordering counties? What would Russia do?
The consequences both probable and assured make the adventure
unattractive, especially since likely pretexts for a war with China – a
few rocks in the Pacific, for example – are too trivial to be worth the
certain costs and uncertain outcome. Again, military superiority doesn’t
mean much.
We live in a military world fundamentally different from that of the
last century. All-out wars between major powers, which is to say nuclear
powers, are unlikely since they would last about an hour after they
became all-out, and everyone knows it. In WWII Germany could convince
itself, reasonably and almost correctly, that Russia would fall in a
summer, or the Japanese that a Depression-ridden, unarmed America might
decide not to fight. Now, no. Threaten something that a nuclear power
regards as vital and you risk frying. So nobody does.
At any rate, nobody has. Fools abound in DC and New York.
What then, in today’s world, is the point of huge conventional forces?
The American military is an upgraded World War II military, designed to
fight other militarizes like itself in a world like that which existed
during World War II. The Soviet Union was that kind of military. Today
there are no such militaries for America to fight. We are not in the
same world. Washington seems not to have noticed.
A World War II military is intended to destroy point targets of high
value – aircraft, ships, factories, tanks – and to capture crucial
territory, such as the enemy’s country. When you have destroyed the
Wehrmacht’s heavy weaponry and occupied Germany, you have won. This is
the sort of war that militaries have always relished, having much sound
and fury and clear goals.
It doesn’t work that way today. Since Korea, half-organized peasant
militias have baffled the Pentagon by not having targets of high value
or crucial territory. In Afghanistan for example goatherds with rifles
could simply disperse, providing no point targets at all, and certainly
not of high value. No territory was crucial to them. If the US mounted a
huge operation to take Province A, the resistance could just fade into
the population or move to Province B. The US would always be victorious
but never win anything. Sooner or later America would go away. The world
understands this.
Further, the underlying nature of conflict has changed. For most of
history until the Soviet Union evaporated, empires expanded by military
conquest. In today’s world, countries have not lost their imperial
ambitions, but the approach is no longer military. China seems intent on
bringing Eurasia under its hegemony, and advances toward doing it, but
its approach is economic, not martial. The Chinese are not warm and
fuzzy. They are, however, smart. It is much cheaper and safer to expand
commercially than militarily, and wiser to sidestep martial
confrontation – in a word, to ignore America. More correctly it is
sidestepping the Pentagon.
Military and diplomatic power spring from economic power, and China is
proving successful economically. Using commercial clout, she is
expanding her influence, but in ways not easily bombed. She is pushing
the BRICS alliance, from which the US is excluded. She is enlarging the
SCO, from which America is excluded. Perhaps most importantly, she has
set up the AIIB, the Asia Infrastructure Investment Bank, which does not
include the US but includes Washington’s European allies. These
organizations will probably trade mostly not in dollars, a serious
threat to Washington’s economic hegemony.
What is the relevance of the Pentagon? How do you bomb a trade agreement?
China enjoys solvency, and hegemonizes enthusiastically with it. Thus in
Pakistan it has built the Karakoram Highway from Xian Jiang to Karachi,
which will increase trade between the two. It is putting in the two
power reactors near Karachi. It is investing in Afghan resources,
increasing trade with Iran. .
When the US finally leaves, China, without firing a shot, will be predominant in the region.
What is the relevance of aircraft carriers?
Beijing is talking seriously about building more rail lines, including
high-speed rail, from itself to Europe, accompanied by fiber-optic lines
and so on. This is not just talk. China has the money and a very large
network of high-speed rail domestically. (The US has not a single mile.)
Google “China-Europe Rail lines.”
What is the Pentagon going to do? Bomb the tracks?
As trade and ease of travel from Berlin to Beijing increase, and as
China prospers and wants more European goods, European businessmen will
want to cuddle up to that fabulously large market – which will loosen
Washington’s grip on the throat of Europe. Say it three times slowly:
Eur-asia. EurasiaEurasia I promise it is what the Chinese are saying.
What is the Pentagon’s trillion-dollar military going to bomb? Europe? Railways across Kazakhstan? BMW plants?
All of which is to say that while the US military looks formidable, it
isn’t particularly useful, and aids China by bankrupting the US.
Repeatedly it has demonstrated that it cannot defeat campesinos armed
with those most formidable weapons, the AK, the RPG, and the IED. The US
does not have the land forces to fight a major or semi-major enemy. It
could bomb Iran, with unpredictable consequences, but couldn’t possibly
conquer it.
The wars in the Mideast illustrate the principle nicely. Iraq didn’t
work. Libya didn’t work. Iran didn’t back down. ISIS and related
curiosities? The Pentagon is again bombing an enemy that can’t fight
back – its specialty – but that it seems unable defeat.
Wrong military, wrong enemy, wrong war, wrong world.
Fred, a keyboard mercenary with a disorganized past, has
worked on staff for Army Times, The Washingtonian, Soldier of Fortune,
Federal Computer Week, and The Washington Times.
http://fredoneverything.org/p26/