Fred:
A True Son of Tzu
Guderian
Was the Mother
by Fred Reed
January 25, 2007
Being a military thinker of the
profoundest sort, I offer the following manual of martial affairs for
nations yearning to copy the American way of war. Read it carefully.
Great clarity will result. The steps limned below will facilitate
disaster without imposing the burden of reinventing it. The Pentagon may
print copies for distribution.
(1) Underestimate the enemy.
Fortunately this is easy when a technologically advanced power prepares
to attack an underdeveloped nation. Its enemy's citizens will readily be
seen as gadgetless, primitive, probably genetically stupid, and hardly
worth the attention of a real military.
(2) Avoid learning anything
about the enemy—his culture, religion, language, history, or response
to past invasions. These things don’t matter since the enemy is
gadgetless, primitive, and probably genetically stupid. Anyway,
knowledge would only make the enlisted ranks restive, and confuse the
officer corps.
Blank ignorance of the language
is especially desirable (as well as virtually guaranteed). For one
thing, it will allow your troops to be seen as brutal invaders having
nothing in common with the population; this helps in winning hearts and
minds. For another, it will allow English-speaking officials of the
puppet government to vet such information about the country as they
permit you to have.
(3) Explain the invasion to the
American public in simple moral terms suitable for middle-school
children at an evangelical summer camp: We are bombing cities to bring
the gift of democracy and American values, or to defeat some vague but
frightening evil, perhaps lurking under the bed, or to get rid of a bad
dictator no longer of service to us, or to bring freedom and prosperity
to any survivors. (This doesn’t work in Europe, which is honestly
imperialistic.) The public can then feel a sense of unappreciated virtue
when the primitives resist. Sententious moralism should always trump
reason.
(4) A misunderstanding of
military reality helps. Besides, comprehension would only lead to
depression. As Napoleon said, or may have, in war the moral is to the
material as three is to one, which implies that unpleasant facts should
be played down in favor of cultivating a cheerful attitude. Most
especially, it should not be noted that a few tens of thousands of
determined, probably genetically-stupid primitives with small arms can
tie down a cheerful force however gaudily armed.
Pay no attention to tactics,
which are boring. It should never enter your mind that in this sort of
war, if you don’t win, you lose; if the enemy doesn’t lose, he wins.
Think about something else. Above all, do not understand that the
enemy’s target is not you, but public opinion at home. You don't need
to remember this, as the enemy will remember it for you.
(5) Do not forget that a
military’s reason for existence is to close with the enemy and destroy
him. An army is not in the social-services business. Do not let the
mission be impeded by touchy-feely considerations. If you have to kill
seventeen children to get a sniper, so be it. The enemy must realize
that you mean business. Ignore cultural traits, which are of concern
only to idealistic civilians. Grope the enemy’s women. High-profile
rapes are a good idea as they teach respect. It is better to be feared
than loved. Be sure the embassy has a helipad.
(6) Intellectual insularity
should be a primary goal, as it avoids distraction. This salubrious
condition can be achieved by having officers read Tom Clancy instead of
history. In military discourse it also helps to encourage the use of
phrases like “force multiplier” and “multi-dimensional warfare,”
as these increase confidence without meaning anything.
Remember that doctrine and
optimism should always outweigh history and common sense. Discourage
colonels and above from reading about similar campaigns fought by other
armies, as this might lead to nagging doubts, conceivably even to
thought. Encourage the belief that other countries have lost wars by
being inferior to the United States. “The French lost in Viet Nam?
What else would you expect from the French? Never happen to us.”
Some military philosophers favor
actually removing from military libraries books on what happened to the
French in Viet Nam, the Americans in Viet Nam, the Russians in
Afghanistan, the Americans in Afghanistan (a work in progress), the
French in Algeria, the Americans in Iraq (also in progress), the
Israelis in Lebanon the first time, the Israelis in Lebanon the last
time, the Americans in Lebanon 1983, the Americans in Somalia the first
time, and so on. However, the best thinkers hold that it doesn’t
matter what books are in military libraries, as only those on stirring
victories will be checked out.
(7) Keep up to date with the
latest nostrums and silver bullets. Organize your military as a lean,
mean, high-tech force characterized by lightning mobility, enormous
firepower, and extraordinary unsuitability for the kind of wars it will
actually have to fight. Flacks from the PR department of Lockheed will
help in this. Recognize that an advanced fighter plane costing two
hundred million dollars, invisible to radar, employing dazzling
electronic countermeasures, and able to cruise at supersonic speed, is
exactly the thing for fighting a rifleman in a basement in Baghdad. Such
aircraft are crucial force multipliers in multi-dimensional warfare.
Anyway, Al Quaeda might field an advanced air force at any moment. It
pays to be ready.
(8) It is a good idea to bracket
your exposure. Be ready for wars past and future, but not present. The
Pentagon does this well. Note that the current military, an advanced
version of the WWII force, is ready should the Imperial Japanese Navy
return. It also has phenomenally advanced weaponry in the pipeline to
take on a space-age enemy, perhaps from Mars, should one appear. It is
only the present for which the US is not prepared.
(9) View things in a large
context. People who have little comprehension of the military tend to
focus exclusively on winning wars, missing the greater importance of the
Pentagon as an economic flywheel. Jobs are more important than wars
fought in bush-world countries. An American military ought to think of
Americans first. This is simple patriotism. It is essential to spend as
much money as possible on advanced weapons that have no current use, and
none in sight, but produce jobs in congressional districts. Good
examples are the F-22 fighter, the F-35, the Airborne Laser, the V-22,
and the ABM.
(10) Insist that the US military
never loses wars. Instead, it is betrayed, stabbed in the back, and
brought low by treason. For example, argue furiously that the US
didn’t lose in Viet Nam, but won gloriously; the withdrawal was due to
the treachery of Democrats, Jews, hippies, the press, most of the
military, and a majority of the general population, all of whom were
traitors. This avoids the unpleasantness of learning anything from
defeat. Further, it facilitates a focus on controlling the press, who
are the real enemy, along with the Democrats and the general population.
(11) Avoid institutional memory.
Not having lost of course means that there is nothing to remember.
Instead, read stirring novels and cultivate a cheerful, can-do attitude
unintimidated by primitives in sand-lot countries, who are probably
genetically stupid.
(12) Do it all again next time.