I. Introduction to "New War?" Theme
Teachers may want to have the students read this
introduction before they read the selected essays on "New
War?" to provide a basic understanding of the concepts
included therein.
In his first major address to the nation after the events of
September 11th, President George Bush declared war on
terrorism and those who support it. He said that this would
be a new type of war, unlike any that the United States had
fought in the past.
Authors of the essays in this section ask the question
whether this engagement really is a new type of war, and if
so, what are the new characteristics of this war. They
investigate multiple causes of this transformation: advances
in military technology, changes brought about by the
post-Cold War era, impacts of US domestic politics, and new
types of engagement required to fight terrorists.
As background for exploring these questions, it is useful to
define the characteristics of "conventional warfare" as it
was known throughout much of the nineteenth and twentieth
centuries. Conventional warfare required the direct
engagement on land, sea, and/or air of two or more military
forces. Conventional wars were either between nation-states
or were civil wars between the established government of a
nation-state and dissident group(s) within that country.
1. Technologies and the New War
Technology is one of the major contributing factors to the
shift in the way that wars are waged today. For armed
networks around the world, like Al Qaeda, improved
information and communications technology offer the means for
these groups to organize across borders or from different
corners of the world. And it is based on these global
communication systems that they can raise money through
illegal trading in drugs, illegal immigrants, illicit
remittances from members of the networks throughout the
world, etc. It is also through information technology and
the global media that these networks can gain strategic
information about countries like the United States that was
not so accessible in years past.
It is not only armed networks that use information technology
to their advantage. Governments throughout the world use
technology for intelligence purposes. For example,
satellites can be used to determine the location of enemy
camps, criminal bank accounts can be monitored, and
developments in other countries can be observed through news
media there. Likewise, as will be discussed further in the
essays, leaders use communications media to influence
populations' views of events, and movies and television
programs can add legitimacy to particular political
positions.
Some experts also consider that advanced nation-states, which
are dependent on technology for everyday life, are especially
vulnerable to having their own technology used against them.
In the new age of "virtual war," hackers could attempt
attacks on anything that relies on information technology to
function -- from water supplies to banking systems -
potentially wreaking havoc in a given country. The question
remains whether terrorist networks possess the high level of
expertise necessary to commit these acts.
Advanced countries, especially the United States have used
technology to improve their defense systems. The development
of "smart weapons" means that forces can exact tremendous
damage on their opponents with only minimal loss of their
personnel because they use advanced technology to avoid
direct engagement. This type of high-tech warfare was first
demonstrated in the Persian Gulf War fought by the US in 1991
and was fine-tuned in the US engagement in the wars in Bosnia
and Kosovo in the mid- to late-1990s. And by all accounts,
smart weapons were militarily very effective in Afghanistan,
the first phase of President Bush's declared war against
global terrorism.
The great reduction in the potential for US casualties by
using smart weapons has significantly affected public opinion
about US military engagement, and has minimized domestic
opposition. Now the US can more easily use force - or the
threat of force - internationally.
However, the use of smart weapons raises important ethical
questions. The Geneva Conventions (i.e., a group of four
treaties, or written contracts, adopted in 1949 which govern
all nation-states' treatment of members of the military,
civilians and prisoners in times of war) call for the
protection of civilian non-combatants. In conventional
warfare where two armed forces are directly engaged, the
ethics of warfare recognize that soldiers will kill soldiers
but condemns harming civilians. This principle brings the
use of smart bombs into question, since even with their
increasing accuracy, smart weapons targeted by distant
combatants and dropped from high-altitude aircraft
occasionally miss their mark and kill or injure civilian
non-combatants, or may cause "collateral damage" (i.e.,
killing or injuring civilians and/or damaging civilian
objects) even when they directly hit their target.
2. Political Realities and the New War
Both global and domestic politics in the post-Cold War era
shape the type of wars that are now being fought and are
likely to be fought in the coming decades.
In terms of international politics, the convergence of the
easing of bi-polar tension at the end of the Cold War with
the expansion of globalization has greatly reduced the
likelihood of a major nuclear confrontation or a war that
would engage most of the major nations of the world.
However, at the same time, there has been a surge in informal
and privatized armed forces causing considerable instability
in various countries and regions of the world. While their
objectives range from conflict to conflict, it is
increasingly apparent that these groups rely on international
funding/trade and global crime networks to survive.
Domestically, the past decades have witnessed a growing
ambivalence on the part of the US policy makers and the US
public regarding the US's role in global politics. While
there is a bi-partisan agreement by the majority of the US
public, according to public opinion polls, in support of
active US engagement in the global economy, no such consensus
exists regarding US engagement in global politics. Indeed,
several scholars and commentators have noted an isolationist
tendency in the US. On the military front, this has surfaced
in the reluctance of the US, as the sole superpower, to
become militarily involved in conflicts in other areas of the
world except in cases where US national interests are clearly
and directly affected. However, as discussed above, the
development of technologically sophisticated weapons that
inflict fewer casualties and place many fewer US combatants
at risk has increased the willingness of the US public to
become militarily engaged in foreign conflicts.
3. New War and Global Terrorism
As will be expanded upon in the selected essays, neither
global terrorism nor the declared war on terrorism fits the
norms of conventional warfare, as described above. Global
terrorism is executed by small, secretive, and often
invisible networks of individuals who are not identified with
a particular nation-state. While these "non-state actors"
(i.e., those entities that are not official arms of
recognized nation-states or governments) networks often have
defined political objectives, they are not directly
associated with the traditional type of national objectives.
For example, the Al Qaeda network does not seek to take over
a particular nation or government, nor does it target the
military defeat of a particular government of a nation.
Moreover, its armed units are not organized into traditional
armies and do not engage their enemy with conventional
strategies and tactics.
Thus, the new war on global terrorism by necessity will
differ from conventional warfare. Because the enemy is not a
nation-state, victory cannot be achieved by defeating an
opposing government, even when it may be deemed necessary -
as in the case of Afghanistan - to defeat a regime that
collaborates with terrorists. While a combination of
high-tech weaponry and strong support for internal forces
opposing the Taliban led to the defeat of that regime, it is
questionable that the same military strategy can be used
effectively to destroy the capability of Al Qaeda and other
networks. Alternative technologies and strategies will need
to be employed if global terrorism is to be defeated.