Warlords Revisited
What would such a historical/cross-cultural/psychological “warlord study” reveal ? Primarily the type of man that the German journalist Konrad Heiden termed “armed bohemians”. Men who are ill-suited to achieving success in an orderly society but are acutely sensitive to minute shifts that they can exploit during times of uncertainty, coupled with an amoral sociopathology to do so ruthlessly. Paranoid and vindictive, they also frequently possess a recklessness akin to bravery and a dramatic sentimentality that charms followers and naive observers alike. Some warlords can manifest a manic energy or regularly display great administrative talents while a minority are little better than half-mad gangsters getting by, for a time, on easy violence, low cunning and lady luck.
Every society, no matter how civilized or polite on the surface, harbors many such men within it. They are like ancient seeds waiting for the drought-breaking rains.
There are occasionally positive portrayals of warlords. Ahmed Shah Massoud, “the Lion of Panjshir” who fought tenaciously first against the Soviets, then later against the murderous Gulbuddin Hekmatyar’s army of thugs and the Taliban’s fanatics, providing a modicum of civilized governance to ordinary Afghans wherever his power ran, until his assassination by al Qaida. The cagey and mercurial Walid Jumblatt, made the transition from Druze warlord in the 1980’s to Lebanese politician and something of an elder statesman.
In literature, Xenophon was the de facto strategos of the retreating Greek mercenaries in The Anabasis of Cyrus, cut a noble example, but like Massoud, this is a rarity. In recent fiction, Stephen Pressfield created as an antagonist in The Profession, General James Salter, a totemic and caesarian figure who takes on the great powers with his PMC forces with impressive ruthlessness. In the popular fantasy series of George R.R. Martin that began with The Game of Thrones, the notable warlord is the outlandish, cruel and somewhat demented Vargo Hoat, who leads a freebooting company of misfit brigands “The Brave Companions“, whose nonstop atrocities and ludicrous pretensions lead all the other characters to call them “the Bloody Mummers“.
Given the world’s recent experiences with the Lord’s Resistance Army, General Butt Naked and the uprisings in Syria and Libya, I think Martin and Coppola have captured warlordism in it’s most frequent incarnation.
Page 2 of 2 | Previous page
Madhu:
July 24th, 2012 at 3:20 am
Huh. I never looked at it that way before. Interesting, zen.
zen:
July 24th, 2012 at 4:09 am
Thank you Doc Madhu. Charles is the one who started the ball rolling….
david ronfeldt:
July 24th, 2012 at 4:20 am
as for fictional characters, how about including captain ahab!?
zen:
July 24th, 2012 at 4:25 am
Hi David,
.
Good to hear from you. Interesting thought – Clare Spark (Hunting Captain Ahab: Psychological Warfare and the Melville Revival) would be best qualified to answer that one….I will ask her to weigh in on that
Clare Spark:
July 24th, 2012 at 11:23 pm
The reading of Captain Ahab as a warlord of a sort happened after 1939, and was a defense of big government by newly minted “progressive capitalists” and the liberal foundations who supported them. I wrote about this startling move in my book that Zenpundit kindly mentioned, but here is a blog that nails some of the chief perpetrators: http://clarespark.com/2010/06/10/herman-melville-dead-white-male/. For more on the progressive sociologists and the Committee for Economic Development, consult chapter 9 in my book, or read this one: http://clarespark.com/2010/06/19/committee-for-economic-development-and-its-sociologists/.
david ronfeldt:
August 5th, 2012 at 7:51 pm
thanks, mark. thanks to you too, clare.
captain ahab, as i recall from reading and writing about him long ago, had a lot of warlord behavioral traits: ruthlessly authoritarian, eloquently commanding, a user of special operatives that he snuck aboard, etc. of course, he was not a typical warlord in terms of material goals, for he did not aim for worldly plunder and profit.
my orientation and knowledge derives from a long-ago unfinished effort to compare fidel castro to captain ahab and don quixote. if interested, take a look at my “Draft Chapters on Two Faces of Fidel Don Quixote and Captain Ahab” available for free download at
http://www.rand.org/pubs/papers/P7641.html
if i had been able to finish it, i would have added chapters about castro having a “hubris-nemesis complex” much like ahab — and much like many modern-day warlords, to varing degrees.
meanwhile, let’s remember the illuminating june 2010 congressional report titled “Warlord, Inc.: Extortion and Corruption Along the U.S. Supply Chain in Afghanistan” available at
http://media.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/world/documents/warlords.pdf