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Entries in War On Terror (6)

Friday
Nov282008

The Security Myth

In response to Mike’s post, why does Mumbai make the threat from asymmetric attacks any greater than it already is? It has always been there and it always will be unless we choose to live in a complete police state.



Take the case of the airports--because of the attack at Glasgow you now can't drive up to a terminal to drop a passenger off or pick someone up. Yet, there's absolutely nothing to stop someone from walking in with a backup containing an explosive and either leaving it in the terminal or detonating it amongst the passengers lined up to go through security. It's a "soft target." Now airports could institute a measure requiring everyone entering the terminal to be searched but then someone could blow themselves up in the parking lot so that would require a perimeter around the airport with every car being searched but then someone could blow them self up at the checkpoint .... and on .... and on. The only real solution would be to shut down air travel. So society wide there is an illusion of security created by the state to encourage people to go about their daily lives but in reality there is little that could be done to stop a determined terrorist. It’s about containment, not elimination, a point I make in the conclusion to my  book (gratuitous plug).



By the way, for an interesting examination of the faults with U.S. airport security see this from the current issue of The Atlantic.

Thursday
Nov272008

The P Word

The conflict is still continuing in Mumbai. Once events are settled, questions will quickly be asked about who supported these attacks. Already the Indian prime minister has talked about "external" forces. Based on previous events, attention will be played to any official or unofficial Pakistani involvement in these attacks. If these links exist, it will have rather significant implications for Indian-Pakistani relations and, of course, for the United States and the wider "war on terror."
Thursday
Nov202008

From the Archives (3 June 2008): Reservoir Academics and US Foreign Policy

Playing "Reservoir Academics" with US Foreign Policy: A Response to Timothy Lynch and Robert Singh was first published on Watching America at Libertas: The Centre for US Foreign Policy

I returned from vacation to an excellent discussion with a well-placed contact, complete with very good lunch at an Iranian restaurant (whatever you think of the Axis of Evil, it does have some quality food), about the state of US politics now and in 2009. The economic situation, the likely shifts in Congress after November, the possibility (or lack of such) of a meaningful American initiative on Israel-Palestine, even that perennial question "How 'anti-American' is American Studies?" were worked over and worked out.

When I returned to my office, I encountered a far different approach to these issues of “What Next”. Our colleagues Timothy Lynch and Rob Singh had e-mailed us their analysis from the Wall Street Journal to reprint on the Guest Blog page (thanks to both of them for the opportunity). Their argument is all in the headline, "Don't Expect a Big Change in US Foreign Policy."

For Lynch and Singh, “none of the main candidates has disavowed the war on terror". And, as past US presidents have deployed US forces overseas, so the next occupant of the White House will also have US forces overseas. Let's put aside any thought of "a peacenik vision of immediate withdrawal" from Iraq.

It seems that there’s nothing of difficulty to see here, folks. Move along. Because, if you’re a Bush-basher, your celebration of foreign policy after George is no more than "the joy of fools".

As an alleged Bush-basher, I am pleased to find that I share some common ground with Messrs. Lynch and Singh. I, too, don't expect a major change in US foreign policy in January 2009. US military forces are well-embedded in Iraq. The Bush Administration, despite opposition from almost every major Iraqi political faction apart from Prime Minister al-Maliki, is pursuing the Status of Forces Agreement that exempts American personnel from any oversight under Iraqi law (and exempts the President from going to Congress for approval of a formal treaty). A disturbing article in the Washington Post this week set out the latest American long-term investments, including a new prison north of Baghdad.

Contrary to the hopes expressed by others such as Joseph Nye, I don't expect a significant move by a new Administration on Israel-Palestine. Barack Obama, scrambling to cover his electoral flanks, is having to defend by distancing himself from engagement with the spectre of Hamas --- his appearance before the America-Israel Political Action Committee this week is already being framed in defensive terms, with demands that he distance himself from contacts with mad, bad, and dangerous people like Columbia University's Rashid Khalidi. Ditto re engagement with Iran, at least openly rather than through back channels. And, with every expert in Washington these days reducing Latin America to bad boy Hugo in Venezuela and, thus, someone who can be the good boy (Uribe in Colombia), even the prospect of a coherent American approach to the Western Hemisphere seems remote.

In other words, seven years of defining US foreign policy via a War on Terror to bolster policy judgements has succeeded in painting a global house of good and evil. Indeed, it's been such a success that the new President is handed the brush to carry on, only to find himself standing in one corner of one room.

Where I differ from Lynch and Singh's explanation of continuity in US foreign policy is that they forego the burden of these complexities in their portrayal of Life After George. It's only one leap of faith from a perpetual War on Terror --- "the debate is over how, where, and when" --- to victory: "We're winning the war in Iraq." Never mind that the next American administration is likely to jettison the phrase "War on Terror", since it has been distinctly unhelpful in the US political and military campaign from Afghanistan to Iraq to Europe. Never mind that Iraq (and indeed Afghanistan, which is absent from Lynch and Singh’s article) has long since moved beyond the easy sticker of "Mission Accomplished", since the issue is not of perpetual military dominance but of the failure to get a stable political resolution. Anyone questioning of both the US mission and its undoubted success can be brushed aside, not through everyday evidence but through reference to their dubious status --- "Euro-liberal", "Latin American leftist", "radical Islamist" --- and the reassurance that Bush is only doing what previous Presidents have done (he's just doing it bigger and better).

On the grounds of presentation rather than substantive analysis, I admire Lynch and Singh. Their forthright bravado, in the context of wobbly British academia, is quite clever. The masculine hyper-confidence, which has not just shades but colourful reflections of US writers like Victor Davis Hanson and Robert Kagan, gives them a distinctive platform, in contrast to other analysts who have to acknowledge the problems and challenges that have arisen from the last seven years of US foreign policy. With their duet, they provide reassuring music for the dwindling but still prominent orchestra in the United States (Wall Street Journal on first violin) claiming that American greatness is, always has been, and always will be assured.

This is not a posture without merit. It is useful to note that the fires set by the War on Terror, even as the term is set aside by those framing US foreign policy, still burn brightly. It is worthwhile to predict that they will not be extinguished in the near-future. To celebrate that firestorm, however, is useful more as a marketing pose --- let’s call it Reservoir Academics --- than as a constructive analysis of 2009 and beyond.
Monday
Nov172008

Do Not Panic: The Culture of Fear is Still Alive and Well

For those of you who were worried that an Obama Administration might bring an unwelcome sense of moderation regarding the projection of the War on Terror, let us (and the President-elect) reassure you:

"I think it's important to get a national security team in place because transition periods are potentially times of vulnerability to a terrorist attack," Obama told CBS's "60 Minutes." "We want to make sure that there is as seamless a transition on national security as possible."
Monday
Nov172008

Fact x Importance = News (Nov 17)

I'm fully recovered after spending Saturday evening at a friend's parents', after his Californian mum organised a party to celebrate Obama's victory. The pressure was on when word got around just before the election-themed quiz that I was an American Studies postgraduate, but luckily I put everything I'd learnt reading Enduring America to good use and helped my team ensure victory:



I wanted us to be called 'The Maverick Renegades', but apparently the name was too long.

What other important stories happened last week?:

Let us know what you think of these stories, and what other stories you've been watching, in the comments.