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    Middle East
     Mar 2, 2005
COMMENTARY
Black holes and rogue states
By Francesco Sisci

BEIJING - Was the Iraqi war worth fighting? History is not made of "ifs" and "buts"; however, as many people in America, and in Europe, are playing with the idea of fighting a new war in Iran, or even throwing around plans for intervention in North Korea, one should first reflect on what happened in Iraq.

The January 30 elections in Iraq were a great success. Nearly 60% of eligible voters went to the ballots, and given the present climate in the country, this could be interpreted to mean that the bulk of the population rejects the violent insurgency. Despite this, suicide attacks, bombings and kidnappings are part of daily life, and it will take years, if not decades, to restore normal life.

In the meantime, US troops have no realistic possibility of being withdrawn without further endangering security, and hundreds of billions of US taxpayers' money will have been spent by the time the last troops leave. At the same time, Iraq has become a training ground for thousands of restive youngsters who, once peace is established, might lend their experiences to the next terrorist leader or druglord.

The US in particular and the West in general are in a large quagmire that keeps energy prices high, imposing an additional burden on global development; this spreads waves of instability in Central Asia and the Middle East and forces huge expenditures that possibly could be better placed for growth at home.

The focus on Iraq overshadows the fact that Afghanistan also needs attention. Since the US kicked out the Taliban in late 2001, the old warlords have re-established their rule, financing themselves with the drug trade. Now, more opium is planted and sold in Afghanistan than ever before, and much of this money is used to finance the destabilization of the economies and societies of Central Asia and some Eastern European countries. If some of this money is used to finance terrorists, it may well mean a slow death for the West. By the time Iraq is at peace again, billions of dollars of drug money could already have polluted the region.

In theory, criminal activities are easier to tackle than ideological threats: Fundamentalists are revolutionaries bound to destroy their enemy, they are not interested in the market. However, history tells us that the boundaries between criminal and terrorist activities are often tenuous, overlapping is historically the rule, and al-Qaeda and the Taliban have in the past thrived on the proceeds from drug trafficking.

The arguments do not dismiss the reason for the war in Iraq, which was to eliminate a dangerous rogue state. Yet it is the very idea of a rogue state that is wrong.

This concept derives from the old pirate wars, and in part from a Cold War mentality. In the 16th and 17th centuries, Spain, Britain and Holland fought proxy wars by supporting pirates. Francis Drake, the most famous pirate of all, saved Britain from an invasion by the "invincible" Spanish armada of Philip II, and was knighted by the Queen for his efforts. During the Cold War, the USSR ordered Czechoslovakia to train "red" terrorists from Western countries, and Libya and Lebanon became training grounds for attacks aimed at destabilizing Europe.

In all of these instances, there were "rogue states", such as 17th-century Britain and 20th-century Libya, whose existence made possible the proxy war of pirates and terrorists.

Spain tried to wage war on the "rogue state" by invading Britain, but failed. Libya was to be taught a lesson when the US sent planes to bomb Muammar Gaddafi's house, but Washington did not go as far as to mount a full-fledged invasion, lest it provoke a larger conflict with the USSR, then the "super rogue state".

When the USSR faded into history, the difference in power between the US and other minor states was enormous; however, the threat they posed to the US was out of proportion to the size of their power. Therefore, the US started thinking that they were "rogue states", and that their threat could be easily removed by waging war. The pros were much larger than the cons, a war, say in the Gulf, would cost the US money, but would pose no larger threat to US security. And the US's image would be boosted, projecting itself as a power beyond the limits of the war itself. And this would bring home additional bounties in kind - ie, oil and crucial transportation routes.

This was true before globalization. It is a different matter in a world with the Internet, mobile phones and air transport that can take anyone anywhere for a few thousands dollars. One could set up a criminal or terrorist headquarters in a garage next to the White House. Trafficking opium or amphetamines, or any other criminal activity, can provide all the hidden cash necessary to finance any kind of terrorist activity. The only thing globalization can't provide is a safe haven, a geopolitical black hole, where militants can be trained and possibly even recruited.

A rogue state, whose power is vastly smaller than the US's, could be cowed into submission, as occurred with Libya. Even the most recalcitrant ones, like North Korea, will be very careful about shooting off their weapons, as their leaders will be afraid of US retaliation.

North Korea, the rogue state par excellence, is the classic example. It has nuclear weapons and delivery capabilities that could target Tokyo, and possibly even San Francisco. It has the political madness to act - as it did in the invasion of the South in 1950 - and has proved many times that it will use any action, such as kidnapping Japanese citizens. Yet North Korea is largely under control, and it has not exported its domestic crisis into launching a war.

Importantly, though, the attack on Iraq, and the fact that coalition forces remain in control of only a small portion of the country, has provided terrorist organizations a safe haven, a geopolitical black hole, to train their people. Not only that: the arrival of foreign troops and the disruption of former institutions have provided fertile ground for the recruitment of new militants. In a black hole, no leaders are threatened or cajoled. The leaders are in hiding and difficult to catch, and even if caught, others will take their place because behind the leaders as there is no solid institution responsive to pressure and afraid of disruption; behind the leader the organization is in hiding, and it is often very loose and poorly coordinated. It is very difficult to bring such a situation under control.

One may be reluctant to admit it, but rogue states can easily be brought into the normal political order, as happened to one country which until recently was considered the worst of all - Libya.

In the 1990s, the US went into Somalia to try to re-establish order there. It found that there was no state, no country, but only a loose cluster of tribes constantly at odds with one another. The US first had to impose a state on them, and then re-establish order. But organizing a state from scratch is a very long and cumbersome process. The US preferred to leave Somalia to its mess.

The question then is, are we certain that rogue states are worse than geopolitical black holes? The perception is that an organization like al-Qaeda could be easier to face if it were some kind of old-style Leninist structure, with a definite place. Now, al-Qaeda finds it convenient to fight its war in Iraq, where it doesn't have to search for enemies - the enemies are there to be targeted.
However, al-Qaeda might decide to move to Africa. With a satellite phone, a lap-top and the electricity generated by the engine of an automobile it could coordinate its actions while moving through this vast continent, where groups of militants could train themselves at ease. What it would not have in Africa are the facilities and the ease to move around through delicate spots in Europe and Asia, (what al-Qaeda had in Afghanistan, conveniently located at the center of the Eurasian continent), and there would be a shortage of recruits as Africans are at war with themselves and bear little grudge against Westerners, and even less against Asians.

In Afghanistan, 10 years of war against the Russians provided enough hatred for anything Western, be it materialist communism or materialist capitalism.

However, if another rogue state were to be hit, and its institutions were to be destroyed, like Iraq, this would add a new geopolitical black hole. That might avoid the risk of a geopolitical threat such as Iran or North Korea, armed with nuclear weapons, but it would create a bigger, long-term problem.

This could be life-threatening to the US. September 11 was launched from and by a geopolitical black hole, Afghanistan, not a rogue state. In fact, as it is fully clear now, Iraq had nothing to do with September 11.

One can raise many points to argue that North Korea now is much less of a problem than even de-Talibanized Afghanistan, which is pumping tons of drugs and billions in drug money into all of Eurasia.

Francesco Sisci, based in Beijing, is Asia Editor for the daily La Stampa.

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(Feb 26, '04)

The remaking of al-Qaeda
(Feb 25, '04)

 
 

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