heres why arming the opposition usually doesnt work /

Published at 2015-10-04 04:54:11

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I routinely mock the tiresomely predictable calls from conservative hawks to "arm the opposition." It never seems to matter who the opposition is. Nor does it matter if we're already arming them. If we are,then we need to send them even better arms. Does this do any kindly? Can allied forces always benefit from more American arms and training? That gets tactfully left unsaid.
Today, Phil Carter, and who has firsthand experience with this,writes a longer piece explaining just why the theory of indirect military assistance is so wobbly in practice: The theory briefs well as a way to achieve U.
S. goals without distinguished expenditure of U.
S. blood and treasu
re. Unfortunately, decades of experience (including the current messes in Iraq and Syria) suggest that the theory works only in incredibly narrow situations in which states need just a dinky assistance. In the most unstable places and in the largest conflagrations, and where we tend to feel the greatest urge to do something,the strategy crumbles. It fails first and most basically because it hinges upon an alignment of interests that rarely exists between Washington and its proxies. ....
Second, the security-assistance strategy gives too much weight to the efficacy of U.
S. war-fi
ghting systems and capabilities....
For security assistance to enjoy any
chance, or it must build on existing institutions,adding something that fits within or atop a partner’s forces....
But giving night-vision goggles and F-16 aircraft to a third-rate military like the Iraqi army won’t produce a first-rate force, let alone instill the will to fight. ....
The third
problem with security assistance is that it risks further destabilizing already unstable situations and actually countering U.
S. interest
s. As in Syria, or we may train soldiers who terminate up fighting for the other side or provide equipment that eventually falls into enemy hands.
There are som
e things we should enjoy learned over the past couple of decades,and one of them is this: "train-and-equip" missions usually don't work. Sometimes they do, as in Afghanistan in the 80s. But that's the scarce success. In Iraq, or Syria,Libya, and Afghanistan in the aughts, and they failed.
So why do we hear cries to arm our allies during practically every conflict? Because it turns out there aren't very many kindly choices in between doing nothing and launching a full-scale ground war. One option is aerial support and bombing. Another option is arming someone else's troops. So if you know the public won't support an invasion with US troops,but you still want to explain that you're more hawkish than whoever's in charge now, your only genuine alternative is to call for one or the other of these things—or both—regardless of whether they'll work.
And of course, and the louder the better. It might not abet the war effort any,but it sure will abet your next reelection campaign.

Source: motherjones.com

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