I
Am a Ground Troop
By Matthew Moten
I am a ground troop.
I'm the guy you've heard pundits, politicians, pollsters, and very
occasionally, real people talking about. You will usually
hear them
talking about "sending in" guys like me. But what
we "ground troops"
are to be "sent in" to do is the subject of much muffled
mumbling. The
banality of such discourse stems from the poverty of the average
American's military lexicon. This country has now reared
a second
generation that cannot tell a colonel from a corporal, a soldier
from a
Marine, a howitzer from a tank. And the reason for this limited
vocabulary is a dearth of military experience. The fact is
that most
Americans have not served, have never thought of serving, and have
no
close tie to anyone who has served in the military.
Now, one might argue that a societal ignorance of military experience
is
a good and precious thing. Indeed, America remains the only
superpower,
economically as much as militarily. And the power and reach
and
sophistication of our armed forces is such that we see no "peer
competitor" on the horizon as far as we can project. It
is a luxury,
and an accident of history, that we enjoy such prosperity and security
when our citizens are so free from the burdens of military service
that
they give little thought to war, or conflict, or much else that
happens
beyond our shores.
There's the rub. Americans give almost no attention to matters
of
national security. When a crisis rears, they give practitioners
of the
military art, us "ground troops," an unwitting compliment. They
believe
that we are equal to any task. Over a coffee break with a
strategic
wave of the hand, they "send in the ground troops," those
undifferentiated and interchangeable parts of military power, and
assume
that all will be well.
The American military profession is partly to blame for this cavalier
attitude. In the quarter century since the Vietnam War, we
have rebuilt
the military into an all-volunteer, professional force. We
won the Cold
War and then Desert Storm with such efficiency and such blood-stinginess
that most Americans now view war as antiseptic. America now
expects,
and regularly receives, military action that results in no U.S.
casualties and little loss of innocent life among our adversaries. The
recent bombings in Iraq, Afghanistan, and now Serbia are all examples
of
the art.
It seems that we have achieved a Clausewitzian absurdity. Carl
von
Clausewitz, the vaunted Prussian military historian and theorist,
argued
that Napoleon's great and horrible contribution was bringing the
people
into warfare. Prior to the French Revolution, war was a sport
of kings,
wherein the maneuver of small, expensive, professional armies was
frequently an end in itself. As on a chessboard, the outmaneuvered
opponents of Marlborough or Frederick often capitulated bloodlessly
and
acquiesced to the limited political demands of the victors. Napoleon,
on the other hand, wielding the emotion and violence of the levee
en
masse, ruthlessly and bloodily conquered enemies who still played
by
these old rules. Clausewitz theorized that Napoleon had changed
the
rules for all time, thereby transforming war. And as the
Industrial
Revolution reinforced state-harnessed popular violence, bloodbaths
in
the American Civil War and two World Wars ensued with greater and
greater fury.
Now it seems that we have returned to the pre-Napoleonic era. American
military forces are again small, expensive, and professional. Thanks
to
Information-Age technology they are also growing ever more effective
and
lethal. But the people are no longer there.
That change is not technological. It is political. As
Joseph Califano
has recently reminded us, young Americans began turning against
warfare
in 1968. That is when the Johnson Administration took steps
to see that
the sons of the middle class would begin to bear the burdens of
military
service alongside their poorer and darker fellow citizens. War
protests
began in earnest once the oxen of the articulate were gored. The
war
became unpopular. Johnson, then Nixon in his turn, lost support
of the
people. America lost that war in 1973 and turned away from
conscripting
its citizens to fill its military ranks.
Since that time the armed forces, and especially the Army, have
recruited an all-volunteer force disproportionately from the cohorts
of
the working class and the poor, the African-American and the Latino.
Even so, most of these do not join. And the sons and daughters
of the
middle and upper classes rarely
consider volunteering for military service. This phenomenon
has had
some salutary effects. Many of the less-privileged have come
to see
military service as a socio-economic ladder, and rightly so. And
the
military has become the most racially and ethnically integrated
and
diverse institution in the country. It is commonplace for
our bosses,
peers and subordinates to be of other races and ethnicities than
ourselves. But in a larger sense, the voluntary filling of
our military
ranks has caused a gap between the civilian and military cultures
that
is bad for both, and worse for our national security. Some
military
officers and thinkers have begun to note and even to celebrate
this
separation as significant of greater sacrifice, higher patriotism,
purer
morality in the armed forces.
Richard Kohn and Andrew Bacevich have reviewed this trend, expressing
concern over the coming "Grand Army of the Republicans." Their
worries
are well placed. Civilians, feeling no connection to our
military, have
a
detached view of our foreign policy. How long has it been
since
national security concerns have played any significant role in
an
election? No coherent foreign policy consensus has
emerged since the
collapse of the
Soviet Union, largely because our leaders perceive no political
benefit
to engaging the public on issues in which there is such widespread
disinterest. The American public tends to focus on foreign
problems
only so long as Christiane Amanpour does, and then with far less
fervor.
Whither now? I would suggest that Americans try to view our
role in the
world just as we "ground troops" do, which is, to ask
the question-does
this policy objective engage our national interest to the point
that I
am willing to fight and die for it? Don't misunderstand,
we
"ground
troops" don't vote on which missions we intend to support. We
have all
sworn to uphold the Constitution and to obey the orders of the
President
of the United States. We will go when and where we are ordered. Still,
we cannot and do not detach ourselves from critical evaluation
of
American foreign policy, because we have that personal stake in
it.
I realize that my prescription is a tall order for countless millions
of
Americans who have no such stake and who know of no one who does. Yet
I
am reminded of the admonition that former Senator Bill Bradley
gave us
about our national struggles with race. He noted that most
of us have
never sat and honestly engaged a member of the other race in a
conversation about racial issues. And he asked us, as Americans,
to do
so. Those who have taken up his challenge have found the
experience
enlightening, often moving.
Let me make a similar suggestion. Find a "ground troop" and
ask what he
-- or she -- is willing to die for. You will be moved, even
enlightened. And our collective thinking about our national
interests
will be the richer for your
conversation.
The author
is/was a U.S. Army lieutenant colonel assigned to the Pentagon.
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