Small Wars Journal

Global Shepherd Isn’t Working; Let’s Go Back to Global Marshal

Thu, 01/21/2016 - 5:13pm

Global Shepherd Isn’t Working; Let’s Go Back to Global Marshal

Gary Anderson

Barak Obama has appointed the United States to be the Global Shepherd. The term ‘leading from behind” has come to symbolize his approach to international security challenges ranging from the Arab Spring to Ukraine and stretching across Asia to the China Sea. The results have been the debacle that Libya has become, a humanitarian crisis of genocidal proportions in Syria and Iraq, and a diminished trust and respect among some of our oldest and steadiest allies in the world. We have lost control of the flock and the wolves are picking off the strays one-by-one.

Americans have never been comfortable with the role of global policeman; several Republican presidential candidates reiterated that fact in the January 14th primary debate. The fact is that since World War II we have acted unilaterally relatively rarely. Unilateral interventions such as Lebanon (1958), the Dominican Republic (1965), Haiti (1993), and Panama (1989) have averaged one per president since World War II. Most of these have been in-extremis operations to deal with fast breaking crises where there was little time to craft a coalition in order to deal with what appeared to be a situation spinning out of control.

The reality is that the preferred American method of operation has been to organize and lead coalitions; NATO, of course, is the most famous and durable of these. In areas where standing coalitions are not possible, such as the Pacific, we have crafted a series of bi-lateral relationships to deal with specific threats; the partnerships with Japan and South Korea are the most notable. Since the end of the Cold War, ad-hoc coalitions have been the norm. Some have worked better than others, but they lend an air of legitimacy that unilateral action lacks. Even in Granada, with a potential hostage situation brewing, President Reagan attempted to craft a quick coalition of Caribbean micro-states even as US forces were moving into position for the intervention.

Dr. Robert Wood, the former Dean of the Naval War College Center for Naval Warfare Studies, coined this as the “American Global Marshal” approach; he noting that, in the old west, the Marshall was usually a guy who was good with a gun and fists that other citizens would follow when a posse needed to be formed.

This approach has been particularly successful in responding to fast-breaking humanitarian assistance and disaster relief operations. Because of our military overseas forward presence posture, US naval and air forces are generally the first large scale responders on scene when a massive earthquake, Tsunami, Typhoon or other disaster occurs. Because these assets also have excellent communications capabilities, it is natural for later arriving military and civilian responders to coalesce around the American force already in the area.

Such posse-like coalitions are generally meant to solve fast-breaking crisis situations ranging from simple humanitarian emergencies to countering aggression in places where standing coalitions or bi-lateral agreements do not exist. Even NATO out-of-area interventions are meant to be relatively short affairs. Such coalitions fray when the operation becomes open-ended as it did when the UN took over the nation building effort in Somalia from 1993-5 and in Afghanistan. However, when the objective is unambiguous and achievable in a reasonable time frame, such American-led “posses” can be a useful tool in restoring stability when natural and man-made crises break out.

This ability to act quickly is a primary reason why the Global Shepherd construct doesn’t work. Finding someone with the logistics power projection capability and command and control sophistication to lead a major overseas effort and get those capabilities in place can be a time consuming process. Kuwait and Saudi Arabia might, today, be under Saddam Hussein’s control if we had not reacted decisively and promptly to the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait in 1990 by deploying forces and forming a coalition quickly. Russia and China would probably love to step into the Global Marshal role, but they simply lack the daily forward presence, logistics, and command and control capabilities to pull it off; in some cases, those two nations may actually be the actors that the posse needs to head off at the pass.

We are likely stuck with the lead from behind Global Shepherd doctrine until January 2017; this administration is not going admit that it is wrong at this point. The next president should immediately pick up the Marshal’s badge out of the dust and assume the corresponding responsibility to lead from the front. Shepherds don’t get much respect in this century.

Comments

Concerned.M.D.

Tue, 02/02/2016 - 2:55pm

In reply to by Warlock

That makes sense. Thank you.

Warlock

Tue, 02/02/2016 - 1:55pm

In reply to by Concerned.M.D.

I'm not overlooking anything...I'm saying that no one within the Beltway -- not the Administration, not Congress, and not any of the pundits publishing articles in newspapers -- lays out even as much as the bare-bones outline you have. The President says we should accept refugees because it's "doing our part." Various members of Congress castigate the President for not getting more involved in Syria sooner because Al Assad is a Bad Guy who indiscriminately drops barrel bombs without regard for collateral damage. Gary Anderson basically says we should intervene in all the world's crises because we can, and because we look bad if we don't. None of those speak to a linkage to "national interest" or even the current U.S. National Security Strategy. That's not to say there isn't a link in each case, but no one's stating it. So yes, they're all pissing down our backs....

Moreover, no one has really any appetite to pony up for the bill. Congress, for all its bleating about Syria and ISIS, hasn't laid a declaration of war, authorization for full mobilization, and a war tax on the President's desk for signature...nor has the President asked for any. So who's serious?

I go back to the old saw about "If it's worth doing, it's worth doing well." That means laying out clear reasoning, instead of emotional BS designed to score political points, and providing the resources.

Concerned.M.D.

Mon, 02/01/2016 - 4:15pm

I am not trying to be argumentative Warlock. It seems to me that you are overlooking the refugee crises underway in Europe and with the U.S.A. being told by our president that we must do our part by accepting some refugees.
I do not believe it is in our national best interest to allow a situation to deteriorate to the point that we are then obligated to deal with the fallout. Europe is struggling with that fallout right now. Just look at Sweden and Germany. Refugees are costly (both from the humanitarian and financial standpoints) and divisive to say the least.
I feel like saying (to quote Fletcher from "The Outlaw Josey Wales") "don't piss down my back and tell me it is raining."
That is my knee jerk response. I want to hear the other side.

Outlaw 09

Sat, 01/23/2016 - 12:51pm

Well that did not last to long.....Biden has been reigned in by the Obama WH and it appears confirmed that anything said by this Administration is just fluff and there is no strategy and they simply are truly kicking the can down the road for another 13 months and if I was Europe or the ME...run for cover as this Administration is all words and with the pull back of the Biden statement there is no real global US leadership anywhere but that is what Obama wanted as his retrenchment policy anyway.....Wilson 1920 would be proud.

The White House pool report says Biden's office corrected the "military solution in #Syria" remarks
pic.twitter.com/ad963BYMBN

Warlock

Fri, 01/22/2016 - 12:39pm

The "lead from behind" strategy is a response our government's desire to lead without sacrifice. A large part of the problem is that increasingly since Desert Storm, the national leadership -- both the Executive and Congress -- haven't spent much time asking why getting involved is in the best interest of the United States -- they just saddle us up and go. When the bill comes in, though, whether that be money, manpower, or prestige, they all look at each other and say, "We won't be reelected if we ask the electorate to pay for this," and they punt.

A little more public debate might serve us all well in the long run. Beyond hand-wringing about the human tragedy, no one really asked how our national interest was served by getting in the middle of civil wars in Bosnia, Libya, or Syria. No one publically debated the strategy of rebuilding Afghanistan or Iraq on Western lines, vice accomplishing the immediate objectives, then letting the locals sort out the aftermath. Yes, the human tragedy is awful...but is awfulness enough reason to strap up and ride off to the sound of the guns? If so, then our elected leaders need to put mobilization authority and revenue-supported funding (that means a war tax, or war bonds, or something besides credit) out there and take their chances with job security. After all, they've asked us to risk far more.

Until then, perhaps we should reconsider putting the badge back on.