Carr Center and Gen. Petraeus Develop New U.S. Military Doctrine
by Tom Hayden
Should a human rights center at the nation's most prestigious
university be collaborating with the top U.S. general in Iraq in
designing the counter-insurgency doctrine behind the current military
surge?
Led by Gen. David Petraeus, the so-called surge - an escalation of
over 25,000 American troops - is resulting in hundreds of killings,
mass roundups, door-to-door break-ins, and military offensives in
Baghdad, al-Anbar and Diyala provinces, on the side of a
deeply-sectarian Baghdad regime which, according to the White House
benchmarks report, still compiles official lists of Sunni Arabs
targeted for detention or death. The counter-insurgency campaign is
explained as a military way to create "space" for Iraqis to reach a
political solution without violent interference.
The new doctrine was jointly developed with academics at the Carr
Center for Human Rights at Harvard. The Carr Center's Sarah Sewell, a
former Pentagon official, co-sponsored with Petraeus the official
"doctrine revision workshop" that produced the new Army-Marine Corps
Counterinsurgency Field Manual [U.S. Army Field Manual No. 3-24,
Marine Corps Warfighting Publication No. 3-33.5, 2007]. The workshop
was held at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, onFeb. 23-24, 2006, and can be
accessed here.
This is not an academic text but, in the Marine Corps' title, a
"warfighting doctrine", complete with hundreds of recommendations
ranging from how to "clear, hold and build", how to use secret agents
in calling in air strikes, even advice on public speaking ["avoid
pacing, writing on the blackboard, teetering on the lectern, drinking
beverages, or doing any other distracting activity while the
interpreter is translating."
The new counter-insurgency approach purports to be more civilized and
humane than conventional kinetic war. It seeks to save the population
["winning hearts and minds"] from the insurgents. It attempts to
minimize civilian casualties and avoid torture of detainees. It
promotes social programs. These no doubt were the attractions of the
collaboration for Harvard's "humanitarian hawks". The introduction to
the Manual is thoughtful and balanced, even raising questions whether
the effort can work at all. She tastefully avoids any references to
the brutal though targeted suppression necessary for the mission to
succeed, but states in Ivy League language why she stands in coalition
with the Marines:
"Humanitarians often avoid wading into the conduct of war for fear of
becoming complicit in its purpose. The field manual requires
engagement precisely from those who fear that its words will lack
meaning...
She goes on make an ambiguous comment about the dirty war supported by
U.S. Special Forces in El Salvador, now known as the "El Salvador
option":
"Military annals today tally that effort as a success, but others
cannot get past the shame of America's indirect role in fostering
death squads."
The only sense in which the fostering of those Salvadoran death squads
was "indirect" is that U.S. forces went to great extremes to hide
their role as advisers and trainers, the very role be carried out
today by US advisers embedded in Baghdad's Interior Ministry, which is
dominated by sectarian Shi'a Badr Brigade personnel.
The Manual is explicitly based on the traditions of the British in
Malaysia and Kenya, the French in Algeria, and the American forces in
the "strategic hamlet" and Phoenix operations. Called "gated
communities" in Iraq, these population control areas are surrounded by
concertina wire and watchtowers as Iraqis are identified,
fingerprinted, and eye-scanned in a system of total surveillance and
coercion. Outside the concertina wire, Iraqis who the Americans
officially call the Kit Carson Scouts are armed for divide-and-conquer
missions against other Iraqis in a plan devised by a Harvard-trained
academic named Stephen Biddle, now a Baghdad adviser to Gen. Petraeus.
Biddle's concept, described in Foreign Affairs, is to manipulate both
Shi'as and Sunnis into depending on the US occupation for
self-protection. Sewall of the Carr Center writes more generally that
the US "strategic challenge is stabilization", meaning the rescue of
multiple failed states like Iraq from their own internal insurgencies.
The Carr Center hosts a series called "The Long War", in which
generals like John Abizaid hold forth on the threat of "Shi'a
revolutionary thought" and the looming World War Three.
It's not that counter-insurgency Harvard-style has been effective, as
proven by the continued suicide bombings, sniper activity and
increasing casualties among US forces since the "surge" began. It is
an academic formulation to buttress and justify a permanent engagement
in counter-terrorism wars.
But counter-insurgency, being based on deception, shadow warfare and
propaganda, runs counter to the historic freedom of university life.
Why then should Harvard collaborate? Is it now a violation of academic
freedom to demand there be protocols limiting professors providing
support and legitimacy for inherently secretive, classified and
deliberately deceptive programs designed ultimately to kill people?
Perhaps it is the attraction of some intellectuals to the Devil's Game
[the phrase is Robert Dreyfuss'. These are not the "effete
intellectuals" so often scorned by the Right. These are intellectuals
who presumably can "get past the shame" of those death squads, and
this time do it right. They believe that the exposure of the generals
to a civilian academic atmosphere may humanize the process of
warmaking, not worrying that the actual danger may be the militarizing
of the university.
The Carr Center does not officially favor the war in Iraq, though one
of its former directors, Michael Ignatieff, is famed for endorsing the
US as a "21st century imperium", an "empire lite", and publicly
calling for "acceptable degrees of coercive interrogation." On the
other hand, there is the formidable Samantha Power, an Irish-born
humanitarian who strongly supported the US-NATO Balkans war and
campaigned for Gen. Wesley Clark in 2004. Power is a close adviser to
Sen. Barack Obama who supports a withdrawal of US combat troops by
next year with exceptions for "advisers" and special units to battle
al-Qaeda. Power, who worked last year in Obama's Washington DC office,
writes that even the proposed combat troop withdrawal can be reversed
if Iraq's condition continues to worsen. Intentionally or not, the
cautious, complicated Obama proposal as described by Power leaves open
the likelihood of thousands of American troops remaining in
counter-insurgency roles for years ahead.
If that is the limit of legitimate debate at Harvard, the Pentagon
occupation of the academic mind may last much longer than its
occupation of Iraq, and may require an intellectual insurgency in
response.
This piece was also posted at The Nation.