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A Memo to the President
William Lind | June 02, 2009

The recent fire/counterfire between President Obama and former Vice President Dick Cheney over Guantanamo, the prisoners held there and techniques used in their interrogation revealed a distressing ignorance in the White House.  Specifically, it revealed that Obama and his advisors are ignorant of military theory.

Cheney won the debate by drawing the usual Republican distinction, that between doing what is necessary for national security and being nice.  If Republicans are allowed to frame the issue that way, they will always win.  But in fact, theirs is a false position.  We do not have to choose between doing what works in the "war on terrorism" and doing what is morally right.  The two are the same.

The military theory that allows us to see this is the work of Colonel John Boyd, USAF.  Boyd argued that war is fought on three levels:  the moral, the mental and the physical.  Of the three, the moral level is the most powerful, the physical level is the least powerful and the mental level lies between the other two.

Cheney argued that we should sacrifice the moral level to the physical.  We should engage in torture because it may gain us information that could prevent another attack like 9/11.  That could be the case. 

But Boyd's theory would respond that the defeat we suffer on the moral level by adopting a policy of torture will outweigh any benefits torture might bring us on the physical level of war.  How so?  By pumping up the "terrorists" will, cohesion and ability to cooperate while diminishing our own.

In effect, both our enemies and our allies will come to see us as evil.  That enables enemies to recruit, raise money, and generate new operations while we must focus internally on papering over cracks in our coalitions.  They gain greater harmony, while we face increased friction, Boyd's dread "many non-cooperative centers of gravity."  They pull together, we are pulled apart.

For President Obama and other opponents of torture, the important fact here is that, if we understand what Boyd is saying, we no longer face the choice Cheney offered.  We need not choose between doing what military necessity commands and acting morally.  Military necessity itself demands that we act morally.  The real choice is between doing what wins wars and loses wars, with Cheney arguing for the latter.  Suddenly, it is the Republicans who are on the wrong side of the "national security" issue.

Let me offer President Obama three pieces of advice, all intended to escape the Republicans' trap:

• First, when this issue comes up again (and it will), go to your NSC director, General Jim Jones, for advice.  He is familiar with Boyd's work.  Your political people are not.

• Second, apply Boyd's insight about the three levels of war not only to the question of torture but to everything we do in places like Iraq and Afghanistan.  At present, we are sacrificing the moral level to the physical in lots of ways, which is to say we are defeating ourselves.  A good start would be a Presidential order forbidding air strikes on populated areas and demanding they be restricted elsewhere to situations where our troops would otherwise be overrun.

• Three, solve the issue of detainees at Guantanomo and elsewhere by designating all of them as what they are, namely Prisoners of War.  International law specifies how POWs must be cared for.  POW camps on American soil are nothing new; we have had them in every war.  POWs may be held until the war is over or exchanged.  This is what the Bush administration should have done from the outset, a point Democrats can make.  The current mess was created by Republicans.

Politicians usually roll their eyes when military theory is mentioned, deeming it too esoteric for "the real world."  As President Obama's inability to answer Cheney effectively shows, nothing could be further from the truth.  The Bush administration led America into two quagmires, in Iraq and Afghanistan, because of its ignorance of the theory of Fourth Generation war.  If the Obama White House continues as ignorant as its predecessor, it will set the country up for fresh disasters.  A wise President will prefer to learn from theory than from failure.

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Copyright 2012 William Lind. All opinions expressed in this article are the author's and do not necessarily reflect those of Military.com.

 
About William Lind

William Sturgiss Lind, Director of the Center for Cultural Conservatism at the Free Congress Foundation, is a native of Cleveland, Ohio, born July 9, 1947. He graduated magna cum laude, Phi Beta Kappa from Dartmouth College in 1969 and received a Master's Degree in History from Princeton University in 1971. He worked as a legislative aide for armed services for Senator Robert Taft, Jr., of Ohio from 1973 through 1976 and held a similar position with Senator Gary Hart of Colorado from 1977 through 1986. He joined Free Congress Foundation in 1987.

Mr. Lind is author of the Maneuver Warfare Handbook (Westview Press, 1985); co-author, with Gary Hart, of America Can Win: The Case for Military Reform (Adler & Adler, 1986); and co-author, with William H. Marshner, of Cultural Conservatism: Toward a New National Agenda (Free Congress Foundation, 1987).

Mr. Lind co-authored the prescient article, "The Changing Face of War: Into the Fourth Generation," which was published in The Marine Corps Gazette in October, 1989 and which first propounded the concept of "Fourth Generation War."