People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol.
XXVII
No. 12 March 23, 2003 |
The Dogs Of War
Raghu
US
MILITARY SUPERIORITY
The
first aspect to be clearly understood is the vast asymmetry between the military
strength of the US-British forces and that of Iraq. Nominally, the Iraqi army is
said to be 350,000 strong but a large proportion of these troops are known to be
untrained and poorly equipped conscripts whose preparedness and willingness to
face combat under present circumstances are not rated highly. Iraq’s military
strength in general has been severely depleted since the previous Gulf War of
1991. Iraq’s veteran T-54 and
T-72 tanks and armoured vehicles are in poor condition and are down to a tenth
of the numbers it had a decade ago both because of the numbers destroyed then
and due to severe shortage of spares. Iraqi tanks are no match for their US
Abrams counterparts which can take the former out even before they themselves
are detected. Iraq’s best equipped and reliable forces are possibly its elite
Special and regular Republican Guard numbering about 85,000 in all, deployed
mostly in Baghdad and at Tikrit 160 km to the north-west, president Saddam
Hussein’s home town where many expect him to make his last stand.
The
US is making much of the possibility of Iraq using chemical and biological
weapons. It has equipped its troops with counter-measures and is also preparing
to use “e-bombs” or massive electronic pulses to disable CBW firing and
delivery systems. Iraq continues to deny that it has any chemical or biological
weapons, and the UN inspections have also brought out that while Iraq may have
some CBW capabilities there was no evidence of CBW weapons or delivery
capability. And since Iraq will
want to emphasise the wrong being done by the US, it does not appear very likely
that Iraq would use CBWs.
MASSIVE
ASSAULT
The
US is making no secret of its plans to launch the Iraq campaign with a massive
assault intended to overawe and shock the Iraqi forces and political leadership
into acknowledging the futility of resistance. The nature of the campaign will
be shaped by the immediate and strategic objectives of the US and also be the
kind of military capabilities it possesses. Of course, it is well known in
military history that even the best laid plans have had to be radically altered
due to unanticipated ground realities within the first week of the campaign. The
same may indeed happen in Iraq but, if not, the US-led assault is likely to take
the following course.
In
military campaigns even a few decades ago, the main objectives were to weaken
resistance by advance aerial or artillery attacks, seize territory through
ground troops and overwhelm the adversary in sheer size and firepower, a large
part of this being shaped by the fact that intelligence pertaining to actual
ground realities was weak. While today’s overall objectives may appear
similar, they take on a radically different thrust due to the “revolution in
military affairs” especially the unparalleled “situational awareness”,
that is, intimate knowledge of the adversary’s actions and capabilities.
During
the Gulf War in 1991, missile strikes against strategic targets and waves of air
attacks which destroyed the Iraqi air force, anti-aircraft capabilities and a
sizable proportion of ground force assets, lasted all of 39 days followed for
just 100 hours by thousands of ground troops. This time, the doctrine is
“simultaneity” with overlapping air and ground campaigns.
This
will be almost immediately followed by the other element of the US military
doctrine for the Iraq campaign, “vertical envelopment”, that is to drop
troops behind Iraqi lines by parachute and helicopter and seize key targets such
as airstrips, oil fields etc. The
idea of this highly “kinetic” campaign is to shock and overawe the Iraqis
and make them realise the futility of resistance. US leaflets are warning Iraqi
military formations to turn their weapons towards the ground, the classic
military gesture of surrender, and not adopt aggressive postures in which case
US forces will simply pass them by towards their goal!
US
ground troops will then advance, now mostly from the South but to a lesser
extent from the North as well, in a pincer movement. Ground troops accompanied
tanks, armoured vehicles and heavy artillery including multiple rocket
launchers, with appropriate air cover, will move along the Tigris and Euphrates
rivers which run through Iraq roughly north-east to south-west through the upper
and lower portions of the country. This
trajectory will bring the troops through major towns and strategic
installations, skirting the former if necessary, to Baghdad, with one flank of
each pincer protected by the great rivers.
The major oil fields and refineries will be prime targets for immediate
capture and control, such as Basra and Ulm in the south-west near the Kuwaiti
border and the strategic towns of Kirkuk and Mosul in the Kurd areas in the
north. If all this goes to plan, the US expects to have control of about 75
percent of Iraq in the first week or ten days.
HEAVY
CASUALTIES
Needless
to say, this frenetic campaign with heavy aerial bombardment, even if it prompts
mass surrender by Iraqi forces as the US hopes, is going to take a heavy toll
including of civilian lives and property, euphemistically termed “collateral
damage” in military terminology.
A
major US worry is its own casualties caused by “friendly fire” that is, by
its own forces, due to the simultaneous ground and air attacks. In the first
Gulf War, it is estimated that 38 out of a total 145 US dead were killed by
friendly fire. This figure could go up manifold this time around.
It
is also estimated that in 1991, 3500 Iraqi civilians died in the US-led
invasion. No one dares to guess what this figure could climb to this time.
Experience in Afghanistan has shown that even several super-smart cruise
missiles, as much as 10 per cent by some estimates, missed their targets by
several kilometres, and one shudders at the possible toll taken by hundreds of
such munitions raining down upon Baghdad and other towns and cities. And if,
contrary to expectations, street battles take place in major towns and cities,
civilian casualties will be much greater. US problems on this front will this
time be compounded by the presence of Al Jazeera, the independent
Arabic-language TV channel, which will bring these civilian casualties to the
attention of the whole world. Perhaps an even bigger incentive for the US to
minimise collateral damage is the fact that, given its unilateral action, it
will probably have to bear almost all the estimated 9 billion US dollars in
post-war reconstruction, a task for which Europe contributed significantly the
last time around. The US may try to minimise collateral damage by using
delayed-fuse ordnance. Similarly, “Bugsplat” software is said to be used by
the US military to predict the impact of hitting specific targets and thereby
take advance action to minimise collateral damage, but none of these will help
when targets are missed altogether. Nothing is as perfect or sanitised as it
appears on paper or on video monitors, certainly not in war.
There
is a huge chasm between the 41-nation coalition led by the US and sanctioned by
the UNSC during the first Gulf War to liberate Kuwait, the wide coalition forged
in the “war against terror”, and the present US-Britain axis waging an
illegal war on Iraq. No amount of signed statements by a handful of virtually
client states in Eastern Europe can mask the naked truth that the US is today
unimaginably isolated in the international community. The gulf between the US
and major European powers is especially wide and will not narrow down easily,
more so as it has been widening on major global issues ever since the advent of
the Bush administration such as on global treaties on greenhouse gases and
climate change, de-mining, monitoring of chemical and biological weapons
programmes, international court of justice, the list is endless. The enormous
and wilful damage inflicted by the US and Britain on the UN and the rule of
international law will not only have its own dangerous consequences but also
widen this gulf between the Anglo-American coalition and “old” Europe.
The
war on Iraq will also have strategic ramifications in the region and even within
Iraq. Even close US allies in the middle-east such as Saudi Arabia and Jordan
are opposed to the US policy and have not allowed their territory to be used for
war. Extremism and fundamentalism is likely to be spurred on by the US invasion
and subsequent occupation of Iraq. Within Iraq itself, ethnic and sectarian
cleavages may open up dangerously in the Shi’ite-dominated south and
south-east and the Kurdish-dominated north, with Iran and Turkey respectively
tempted to fish in these troubled waters. The present dispensation in the region
is likely to be profoundly affected with unpredictable consequences.
The
US has let loose the dogs of war. And the world will be quite a different place
after this one.