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Saturday, July 16, 2005

A Blur of Citations and Graphs

Dan Darling comments on Richar Pape's argument that suicide bombers are not mostly religious-driven but are nationalists trying to eject occupiers. Tamil Tigers, I'm sure, provide the vast amount of the data needed to make Islamist suicide attacks seem like just part of a larger whole. Why Palestinians weren't suicide bombing until recently is another flaw ignored, it seems.

When I read another piece about Pape back in June, his piece seemed ... off. Reverend Sensing hit it hard (link in my post) so I didn't try to wade in on it, but I did want to comment on a part that was so startlingly wrong that it really caused me to wonder about Pape's whole analytical ability. Pape wrote that rather than giving the enemy reason to wage war by remaining on the continent, we needed to return to our successful policy of balancing offshore as we did in the decades of the 70s and 80s:

Our best strategy is to return to the policy that the United States had for decades. In the 1970s and 1980s, the U.S. secured its crucial interest in oil without stationing a single combat soldier in the Persian Gulf, instead relying on an alliance with Iraq and Saudi Arabia, the presence of naval air power off the coast and land bases to rapidly deploy troops in a crisis. Offshore balancing worked splendidly against Saddam Hussein in 1990 and is again our best strategy for securing our interest in oil, while preventing the rise of more suicide terrorists coming at us.


I wrote:

What is the good professor talking about? In the 1970s, after the British abandoned their stability role "east of Suez," we relied on arming the Shah of Iran with advanced weapons so he could be our policeman of the region. By the end of the decade that didn't work out so well when Iran was taken over by nutball Islamists--you know, the ones who now pursue nuclear weapons and long-range missiles and support terrorism? Good call, eh? And our so-called alliance with Iraq consisted of giving just enough support to keep the nutso Iranians under Khomeini at bay in the Iran-Iraq War of the 1980s.

Our ally Saudi Arabia was a weak substitute as our proxy enforcer. We led a Western naval flotilla in 1987-1988 to protect the oil shipping routes during the Tanker War and engaged the Iranians on a number of occasions.

As for our ability to rapidly deploy troops, the Rapid Deployment Force that President Carter set up to do this was, as wags put it, much like the Holy Roman Empire: it wasn't rapid or deployable and it wasn't much of a force. And when Iraq finally defeated Iran in the First Gulf War and turned on Kuwait in 1990, we had to rush forces to the Gulf to save Saudi Arabia and reverse the Kuwait conquest. Offshore balancing did not work at all. Our last minute naval demonstration on the eve of the August 1990 Iraq invasion of Kuwait impressed Saddam not one bit. We had to deploy several corps of ground forces to eject him. Not a very good record of relying on naval and air power to preserve our interests in the face of powerful land threats in the region.


If Pape's conclusion is so wrong, what about the rest before it? How can I trust his analysis of why we face suicide bombings? Dan comments in a way that I agree with completely:

Pape's thesis strikes me as one of those things that you have to be an academic in order to believe unless you dumb down the term occupation to the point where you accept al-Qaeda's definitions and make the word nothing short of meaningless.

Sometimes these people live in an echelon above reality.