Military Partnerships May Be Best Path to Peace
Military Partnerships May Be the Nation’s Best Path to Peace – David Ignatius, Washington Post opinion.
Gen. Stanley McChrystal this week expressed a truth that military commanders know better than anyone: “A political solution to all conflicts is the inevitable outcome,” he told the Financial Times. The problem is getting to that political settlement in a way that the combatants find acceptable. This can take years, even decades. The United States is now in its ninth year of fighting Muslim extremists around the world. People sometimes wonder whether America has learned anything during this painful time, or whether we are condemned to keep digging deeper holes for ourselves. Certainly, we’re still digging in Afghanistan, where McChrystal, the U.S. commander there, believes that an acceptable political settlement won’t be possible unless we squeeze the Taliban harder. I think he’s right about that.
But I sense there’s a growing recognition, especially within the U.S. military, that America has to get out of the business of fighting expeditionary wars every time a new flash point erupts with al-Qaeda. The Pentagon has adopted this proxy strategy of training “friendly” countries (meaning ones that share with us the enemy of Islamic extremism) from North Africa to the Philippines. This “partnership” approach hasn’t been articulated by the Obama administration as a formal strategy, and it doesn’t get much media coverage. But it’s worth a careful look, because it may offer the best path toward a world where the United States isn’t always operating as an anti-terrorist Robocop…
More at The Washington Post.