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Monday, November 14th, 2005

VICE-ADMIRAL ARTHUR K. CEBROWSKI, R.I.P.

I was sad to see from Dr. Barnett’s blog that one of the nation’s preeminent strategic thinkers and creative defense intellectuals, Vice-Admiral Arthur K. Cebrowski, passed away this weekend after a long illness. Cebrowski was hailed as ” The Father of Network-Centric Warfare” and was noted for his vision and depth as a military theorist. The implications of Cebrowski’s NCO paradigm for warfare, economics and business management have yet to be fully realized or understood.

Until recently, Cebrowski headed the Office of Force Transformation, a post created in the wake of 9/11, and reported directly to the Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld. Zenpundit would like to offer sincere condolences to the family and friends of Art Cebrowski.

I’m not certain exactly how many first-rate strategic minds the United States can boast of having, but we just lost one of the giants.

Addendum:

Arthur K. Cebrowski on Defense Transformation

The 1998 Proceedings Article of Network-Centric Warfare

Department of Defense Report to Congress on Network-Centric Warfare

Monday, November 14th, 2005

MORAL COUNTERMEASURES AGAINST ANTI-GLOBALIZATION GUERILLAS

About two weeks ago an anonymous commenter asked of me ( and also Dan of tdaxp)

“What would an example of moral counter-blitz by the US against Al Qaeda? Are counters that have a negative effect on the morale of the external culture counter-productive? If so, what justifications would there be for short-term gains via negative counters-measures?”

Dan referenced Colonel John Boyd’s famed Patterns of Conflict brief, slides 105 -111 and then went on to give a more developed Boydian answer in the comments section of my post . The anonymous commenter also brought in to play John Robb’s post on Evo Morales. John followed up Sunday on his more formal blog by elaborating on a Morales Bolivia as a ” Gray Democracy” with gray denoting ” gray market” and not, as in the case of the EU or Japan, a sharply aging demographic.

So we have two types of strategic threats represented here for american policy makers to deal with – a 4GW conflict represented by al Qaida and an indirect ” Global Guerilla” geoeconomic and geopolitical attack in the vein of unrestricted warfare being played out on an international chessboard. Let us set al Qaida aside to look at the second threat so that we clarify its nature. John Robb wrote:

“Rogue democracies? Evo Morales (a very popular candidate for President of Bolivia), has given his support for legalizing coca production and voiced an intent to walk away from US anti-drug policies: “We are not interested in protecting US interests.” Additionally, Hugo Chavez in Venezuela is actively using his countries oil wealth to subvert US policy in the region. “

In my opinion, neither Morales nor Chavez are democrats except in the same nominal sense as Slobodan Milosevic -i.e. participating in a democratic electoral system only to the extent that they can maximize outcomes for themselves. Chavez is a former putschist and Morales toppled two democratically elected governments with street demonstrations; the only democratic scenarios these guys respect are the elections that their side wins. At best, Morales and Chavez are illiberal populists and the only intelligent aspect of a generally hapless U.S. policy toward Venezuela has been not providing Chavez with an anti-yankee pretext to formally seize absolute power.

These men and the explicitly authoritarian political networks they represent are the enemy every bit as much as al Qaida. They are the global radical Left regrouped after the fall of the Soviets in a corporate merger with the world’s most atavistic cultural reactionaries.

The challenge of the alternative economic model Chavez and Morales represent America has seen before, though not for some time, in the form of state -directed capitalism of fascist and quasi-fascist states during the 1930’s and 1940’s, including Peron’s Argentina and managed trade type barter agreements pioneered by Hjalmar Schacht. Essentially, it is an anti-free market policy designed to control currency reserves ( back then we would have said gold) for the regime’s import priorities and allow the state to exert control over the direction of the economy without the responsibility of total state ownership ( though Chavez may go in that direction in time).

Without getting hung up on labels and arguments over Left-Right terminology, this is a quasi-autarkic policy designed to produce short term economic results for the regime and hold the effects of globalization at bay. It worked for about six years in the case of Nazi Germany and yielded a prodigious rearmament program before the internal contradictions of Schacht’s program brought the German economy to the breaking point – at which time Hitler’s gamble for a limited war with Poland resulted in WWII. This updated and far less coherent anti-gringo version of Schacht’s econmic wizardry runs against an American policy for a freer world of global trade dating back to The Atlantic Charter.

So, from a certain perspective, Evo Morales, Hugo Chavez and Osama bin Laden are all anti-Globalization warriors using different means toward the same end – a world of politically sealed fiefdoms with only slender threads of connectivity to the outside world being allowed by local oligarchies. As a strategic goal, it is a vision with wide appeal to undemocratic elites the world over, including a sizable section of the professoriate in Western countries. While the nationalist, anti-Western and anti-American demogogy will be about sovereignty and evil multinational corporations, the concealed reality has mostly to do with political mafias of iron-hearted men keeping their own people ignorant and shackled.

What ” moral countermeasures ” can be taken then by the United States ?

Looking at Boyd’s slide 108 where he discusses a ” counter-guerilla” program there are many sensible suggestions that can be adapted or extrapolated for use by civilian policy makers at State, Treasury and in the IC. Dan has already done so in the comments section to which I will add my own observations.

1. This is a global contest of grand strategy and it is asymmetrical in nature.

” Our win” which is a greater good for humanity in terms of prosperity and individual choice is not viewed that way by local elites. This is the ” Mubarak problem”. From their perspective it is better to rule a poorer country and stay firmly at the top of the pyramid than to share (or lose) power in a rich one. Since a majority of the world’s ruling classes stand to lose authority or relative status in a globalized and democratic world, the U.S. needs to prioritize its diplomatic order of battle. America against the world for the sake of consistency is a recipe for America isolated. One or two wars at a time please.

2. At the same time the United States must hold the moral high ground as the nation that empowers the poor of the world.

Not just rhetoric of democracy but offering the kind of economic connectivity that spurs grass-roots economic growth in the Gap states most open to our aid and trade. Microloan programs, educational grants, a revitalized Peace corps, access to cheap communication technology. Imagine the political impact if the United States led the way to providing global wireless broadband internet in nations too poor or with governments too incompetent or corrupt to establish conventional fiber optic infrastructure. All the poor would then have to do is get access to relatively inexpensive connection devices for which a family or village might pool their resources.

3, We can only communicate with our potential allies if we walk the talk and know their language.

By ” language” I mean that our public diplomacy has to speak to people of other nations in a referential script they find comprehensible even it is in a presidential speech being translated from English. Every country, culture and civilization has its unique touchstones and some of these are congruent with American values and the practical ” win-win” results we would like to achieve. All too often our representatives say things in a way to turn potential victory into a media moment of international awkwardness and embarrassment.

4. Shift from crisis management to pro-active innoculation

“Shrinking the Gap” should start with stealthy Sys Admin work where it is seemingly needed least and not begin with the Gap equivalent of failed state black holes. Dr. Barnett counsels such triage in Blueprint For Action in discussing regional priorities for the U.S. and the Core. We need to lift the Seam states up to the New Core and top tier Gap states into the Seam in an act of geopolitical inkblot tactics.

We would be demonstrating competency, success, empowerment and communication – nonzero sum scenarios – to the audience we need to reach.

And our opponents, by their very nature, cannot.

Sunday, November 13th, 2005

GLOBALIZATION AND WAR: REBUTTALS AND COMMENTARY: DAVE SCHULER

Part of an occasional series, the rebuttal and commentary posts will address the roundtable on Globalization and War. This format is open to both the symposium’s participants and other interested bloggers or scholars who would like their views published here.

Link Preface:

Globalization and War by Dave Schuler


“Globalization and War

by Dave Schuler of The Glittering Eye

I thought I might put in my own two cents (uninvited) on ZenPundit’s roundtable topic, Globalization and War. First, a definition might be in order. Globalization is the idea that, as a result of increasing linkages in modern communications, trade, and social contact that the world is becoming consolidated on a global scale. This may be reflected in the development of a single world market, a single world society, a single world government or all three.

Opponents of globalization tend to portray the final outcome as a mean, homogenous mess in which economic welfare is spread out, as one critic put it, so that the average person would have a lifestyle that would “look good to a Pakistani bricklayer” and world culture would become a simulacrum of popular American commercial culture whose epitome is Ronald McDonald. That’s certainly a possibility but I think others are possible and, indeed, more likely than the “McDonald’s model” in which most people receive a subsistence wage and culture is a uniform commercial nightmare.

Another such model is the “Disney model”. In the Disney model there’s at least the illusion of prosperity but nearly all institutions worldwide are highly uniform. Everyone acts, believes, and thinks the same differing only in menu, language, and national costume. Think of the “It’s A Small World” ride at Disneyland.

A third model of globalization and one that I think is much more likely actually to come about might be characterized as the “linguistic model” in which there are many different styles of institutions and culture in “free variation”. In linguistics two sounds are in free variation when either sound may appear in the same environment without a difference in meaning and without a native speaker considering that either is wrong. For example, the word “economics” may be pronounced with the first sound as “eh” as in “get” or as “ee” as in “geese”, possibly by the same person. The sounds are in free variation.

This won’t mean that anything goes. There will be social pressure for a limitation on the number of acceptable options particularly on the outliers—whereever practice differs most dramatically from world norms.

Some people think that globalization is just another word for American dominance. I think that this is completely the opposite of the truth particularly if the “linguistic model” obtains. In many, many things including ideas of the nature of law, the role of government, and the position of the individual within society, the United States is the outlier and I suspect there will be mounting pressure on people in the United Status to adopt attitudes that are closer to those that are prevalent in the rest of the world.

Does globalization lead to war or discourage war? I think that the answer is “Both”. As countries become more interdependent economically war will become quite difficult and unpalatable. The commodity that Americans usually think of when they think of economic dependence on other countries is oil but I’d like to consider another: computer memories. Computer memories are not just used in computers. They’re used in a huge number of everyday objects including automobiles, electronic goods of all kinds, gas pumps, ATM’s, and stop lights. Computer memories are necessary for our military, government, and daily life to function as we’ve become accustomed.

We used to produce nearly all of our computer memories domestically. We produce nearly none now. Most are produced in South-East Asia: China, Taiwan, Malaysia, Thailand, the Philippines, etc. That’s globalization for you.

We’re simultaneously reluctant to go to war with the countries that produce the things we need (like oil or computer memories) and willing to go to war to protect our access to supplies of these things.

Still, as Clausewitz put it, “War is a continuation of politics by other means” and that doesn’t just mean external politics it pertains to internal politics as well. It’s possible to go to war with another country for reasons that have very little to do with country but everything to do with domestic politics. As countries come under the pressure to change due to globalization that pressure is all but certain to manifest from time to time as war. I suspect that this will be particularly true for the outliers especially when their cultural, political, or social variants depend on ignorance or force to maintain.”


(Editorial Note: Dave Schuler’s views are always welcome here at Zenpundit – an open invite to you Dave )

Sunday, November 13th, 2005

GLOBALIZATION AND WAR: REBUTTALS AND COMMENTARY: SAM CRANE

Part of an occasional series, the rebuttal and commentary posts will address the roundtable on Globalization and War. This format is open to both the symposium’s participants and other interested bloggers or scholars who would like their views published here.

Link Preface:

Globalization and Conflict in East Asia by Sam Crane

Globalization, War and Mencius by Sam Crane

Globalization and War by Simon of Simon World

Globalization, War and Mencius

by Dr. Sam Crane of The Useless Tree

Over at ZenPundit there is roundtable series of posts and discussion on the broad topic of globalization and war (I will have a post there tomorrow). I want to respond here to Simon’s (of Simon World) post. He focuses on the upcoming WTO talks in Hong Kong and, drawing on various East Asian data, comes to an optimistic conclusion about globalization and war:

As globalization brings economic growth, it will bring political growth. Countries that are economically successful and growing do not, as a rule, go to war. In a world where there are numerous flashpoints and delicate balances to be maintained, globalization is a key force pushing towards peace. It is that complicated. And that simple.

Many might look at that statement and say it is a clear expression of a classically liberal position: free trade brings economic growth and that engenders peace. It is also in keeping with the political economy of Mencius.

Let me just offer this passage and you can see for yourself the parallels between Mencius and Western liberalism on questions of trade and peace:

Mencius said: “Honor the wise, employ the able, and you’ll have great worthies for ministers – then every noble official throughout all beneath Heaven will rejoice and long to stand in you court. Collect rent in the markets but no tax, or enforce laws but collect no rent – then every merchant throughout all beneath Heaven will rejoice and long to trade in your markets. Conduct inspections at the border but collect no tax – then every traveler throughout all beneath Heaven will rejoice and long to travel your roads. Have farmers help with public fields but collect no tax – then every farmer in all beneath Heaven will rejoice and long to work your land. Don’t demand tributes in cloth from families and villages – then people throughout all beneath Heaven will rejoice and long to become your subjects.

“If you can do these five things with sincerity, the people in neighboring countries will all revere you as their parent. And not since people first came into being has anyone ever managed to lead children against their own parents. So if you do this, you won’t have an enemy anywhere in all beneath Heaven, you’ll be Heaven’s minister…(54-55)

Save for the “public fields” thing it sounds downright Smithian to me… “

Sunday, November 13th, 2005

A DIGITAL DIVIDE?

A good article here on the cultural, educational and organizational implications of information technology “Digital Natives, Digital Immigrants” (PDF) by Marc Prensky ( Hat tip net-centric dialog. Prensky also has a blog).

Having worked with students on the extreme ends of the spectrum ( both in terms of the Bell Curve and socioeconomic status) during the period where IT phased into schools, universities and the larger society, I have to give an endorsement to Prensky’s observations.

American children today are strikingly different learners in the classroom than those from as little as five years ago because IT and internet access has become ubiquitous. The changes are far more modest at the lower socioeconomic quintiles or at small rural school systems but even there they exist.

Students are more receptive to alinear thinking; they naturally multitask; they automatically incorporate IT into their socialization and autonomy from adult supervision; they have higher expectations for ( and impatience with) teacher-delivery of content; they can produce 4th grade presentations that look more visually appealing in terms of design than what a consultant might have produced to illustrate a proposal for, say, a meeting with a CEO circa 1995.

With that cultural assimilation comes some negatives, including a difficulty with sustained attention to task, particularly reading, though that can hardly be laid entirely at the door of IT. However, the cultural shift toward Toffler’s ” Third Wave” information society would appear to be taking root.


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