
#10
Pravda
No. 47
April 2003
[translation from RIA Novosti for personal use only]
BASIC LESSONS OF THE IRAQI WAR
By General of the Army Andrei NIKOLAYEV, chairman of the State Duma
defence committee
Like all other wars, the Iraqi war cannot be analysed without due regard for
the general trend in the development of the global military-political situation,
which has grown in the past 10-12 years after the collapse of the Soviet Union.
First, the disappearance of a superpower from the political and economic
scene disrupted the global balance of forces. The system of international
relations was set in motion, especially in the areas of active military policy.
The disruption of the power backbone of international life logically reduced the
effectiveness of international law and the institutes that had been created to
apply it.
The UN was created as a result of a redivision of the world in favour of the
anti-Hitler coalition during the Second World War. The world was redivided again
after the Cold War and the old rules no longer meet the demands of those who set
the tone of international behaviour. This is why the claimants to global
leadership are using sword, fire and bribes in a bid to establish the rules of
international life that would exclusively meet their egoistic interests.
Second, the bright hopes of the authors and advocates of "the new
political thinking" have been dashed. They thought that the withdrawal of
Soviet troops from foreign countries and the reduction of the Soviet military
might would encourage other countries to follow suit. They were mistaken. Even
after the Warsaw Treaty Organisation dissolved and the Soviet Union
disintegrated, their adversaries - NATO and the USA - did not follow their
disarmament example. On the contrary, they began to build up their military
might and take hold of new military-strategic positions in the direct proximity
to Russia and in the former Soviet state.
The USA and its old and new allies launched the rapid "privatisation"
of everything that remained of the powerful military organisation, including its
territory, hardware, infrastructure and everything else needed for waging a
modern war. (The Baltic countries fiercely protested against the Russian radars
and other facilities in their territory. These facilities have been liquidated
but NATO placed its own facilities in their place. The NATO radar station in
Estonia is monitoring an area of 400 km inside Russia, including St.
Petersburg.)
Third, the Iraqi was has confirmed that reliance on military might cannot
facilitate the solution of political problems; it only puts off their solution
and compounds it with new contradictions. The use of military force by the USA
and its allies created new problems without resolving old ones nearly
everywhere. The trouble is that the burden of the US technology of resolving
complicated problems by making them still more complicated is shifted onto the
shoulders of local people and governments. (We saw it in the Balkans and
Afghanistan and we will see it in Iraq, or rather in the territory that will
remain after its ruination.) The USA knows how to bomb, blow up, kill and
destroy but believes that restoration is the responsibility of others.
The use of US military might in the countries which it "helped" to
overthrow dictators and "transform" political regimes did not resolve
contradictions either. Even the favourable, for the US, outcome of the Iraqi
operation has aggravated internal problems in that country and contradictions
outside it. The entire chain of relations, including the lineup of forces in
Iraq, the situation of Kurds in neighbouring countries, the situation in the
Middle and Near East, and relations of the EU, Russia and China with the USA, is
acquiring a new meaning. The military-political and military-strategic situation
in the world and individual regions is changing.
Fourth, the Iraqi war is just one more example of an effective use of unique
possibilities for improving the art of war, which entails the creation,
production and use of novel weapons and hardware, command and reconnaissance
systems, and so on.
The bitter truth is that the absence of a befitting opponent capable of
keeping back the military expansion of the USA and its allies is creating
favourable conditions for the military opportunism of those political forces in
the USA that use their official positions to profit from the war and the
"law of the fist" to establish US domination in the world.
There is no force in the world now that would be able to stop the US military
machine. Meanwhile, US politicians are prepared to use any country of the world
as the testing range for its military machine. It is logical that such range for
live tests (there are also simulated tests) should be located in the direct
proximity to oil, gas and biological resources and have natural and man-made
values. In other words, it should have at least something that would entice the
USA on to its missionary way to the Olympus of global domination. No wonder that
it has set its eyes on the Caspian Sea zone, Syria, Iran and North Korea.
As for the effectiveness of military tests made by the USA and its allies in
Iraq, their results are questionable. In fact, the USA did not hold a full-scale
test because Iraq did not mount proper military resistance. In short, it was not
a "proper" war where everything is tested, beginning with troop and
weapons deployment and ending with their combat use, and the opponent clears up
the consequences of the use of weapons. It was an operation of a STRONG state
against a WEAK opponent.
Fifth, for ten years before the aggression, the USA had been weakening Iraq
economically, militarily and politically. As a result, there was no proper
fighting. What we saw was the all-out pressure of military power put by the
anti-Iraqi coalition on a country that had been weakened by all kinds of
embargoes.
This is probably the main lesson which the USA has given to Iraq and the rest
of the world. It demonstrated a technology of preparing for and waging a modern
war. It begins with setting public opinion against a certain state by denouncing
it as a rogue and "axis of evil" country. Next comes the time to
search for the culprit and punish him for his sins against the global
civilisation. After that, all kinds of bans and sanctions (embargoes) are
applied against the unlucky country, which is kept in these draconian conditions
until it weakens, above all militarily. The possible allies of the future victim
are neutralised. Only after that open preparations for and the launching of the
military aggression follow.
There may be minor differences but all states, including Russia, must draw
the main lesson for their security from this scenario. A military aggression is
possible against it if its economic, military and moral potential has been
maximally weakened, the country's prestige on the world scene has dropped and
its citizens are not ready to defend their homeland.
This leads us to one more lesson of the Iraqi war: the speed of changes in
the military-political situation can be much quicker than the speed of the
creation of a modern military organisation.
BACK TO THE TOP #254 CONTENTS NEXT ARTICLE
|