November 10, 2011Once again, Rep. Allen
West hits the nail on
the headRep. West was the keynote speaker at this year’s sold-out ACT! for America
National Conference and Legislative Briefing. Next year’s conference will
be held June 13 – 15 (three nights, two full days) in Washington, DC. Save
the date and make your discounted hotel reservation today by calling 800
– THE – OMNI (800-843-6664) or going online here.
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Thursday, 10 November 2011
Dear Harold,
With Veterans Day tomorrow, we considered it most appropriate to bring you a recent column
by the highly decorated retired Army Lt. Colonel, and now U.S. Rep. Allen West.
In his op-ed that appeared in Roll Call (highlights added), U.S. Rep. West explains,
cogently and concisely, what we must do to win today’s battle against
what he terms “Islamic totalitarianism.”
West: U.S. Must Understand 21st-Century Combat
By Rep. Allen West
Today’s paradigm of battle and combat operations is completely different from
what I experienced in 1982 when I was commissioned as a young lieutenant in the
U.S. Army. At that time, the battlefield was much simpler.
In broad strokes, there was the Soviet Union on one side and the United States on
the other. We were familiar with their tactics and equipment, and they with ours.
Both sides wore uniforms, and every now and then we would stage war games
on border control missions.
battlefield with non-uniformed, non-state belligerents using unconventional weapons
and tactics. If the United States is going to be successful in protecting its citizens and
interests, it must quickly understand and adapt to this new battlefield and be prepared
for success and victory.
While America may lack an appropriate strategic level perspective, we will never lose
sailors, airmen, Marines and Coast Guardsmen the world has ever known. But
without the correct strategic and operational goals and objectives, we will find
ourselves on the proverbial hamster wheel. No matter how much effort we exert on
the wheel, we will not make forward progress.
To begin with, we must correctly identify our enemy. It is frankly naive to say we are at
war with “terror” because a nation cannot be at war with a tactic. Imagine, if during
World War II, the United States went to war against the “blitzkrieg” or the “kamikaze.”
Further, we cannot narrowly define the enemy as simply al-Qaida or the Taliban. It is
just as ridiculous to say we declared war against the 12th German Panzer
Division or the 55th Japanese Infantry Regiment in World War II or the 7th Guards
Tank Division during the Cold War.
Before the rise of al-Qaida, the terrorist group which had inflicted the most damage
on the United States was Hezbollah. Now Hezbollah has become a very capable
military force, albeit one without state or uniform — so capable in fact, it has armed
missiles within striking distance of every city in Israel.
The Obama administration has failed to identify Hezbollah as an enemy.
On this 21st century battlefield we are not fighting against a single organization,
leader or nation. We are fighting against the ideology of Islamic totalitarianism,
manifested at a tactical level as terrorism, which knows no country and recognizes
no borders.
Until we, as a nation, are able to correctly and openly identify our enemy, we will
continue to put our men and women on the ground in harm’s way without a clear
mission for success. Once we have identified the enemy, we must ensure we have
clearly identified the specific strategic level objectives to effectively fight. I believe
there are four:
1. Deny the enemy sanctuary. The number one asset our military has is
strategic mobility. When that is curtailed by a focus on nation-building or
occupation-style warfare, we eliminate our primary advantage, and worse, our military
forces become targets. Because this enemy has no respect for borders or boundaries,
we must be willing to take the fight directly to him.
2. Cut off the enemy’s flow of men, material and resources. We have to interdict
the enemy’s flow of resources in order to prevent the ability to fund, supply and replenish
his ranks.
3. Win the information war. Unfortunately, the enemy is far more adept at exploiting
the power of the Internet, broadcast media and dissemination of powerful imagery.
In addition, I fear our media now sees itself as an ideological political wing. If we
cannot fully use our own national informational power as an asset, we will lose the
strategic battle, if not our country.
4. Cordon off the enemy and reduce his sphere of influence. We must
shrink the enemy’s territory, but we are not being effective. We are allowing,
if not welcoming, the enemy into the United States. What happened with Maj. Nidal Hasan,
the alleged Fort Hood shooter, should not have happened in this country. We must not
turn a blind eye to a very bold enemy who is telling us exactly what he wants to do
and is willing to bring the battle to our doorstep.
We must recognize that Afghanistan and Iraq are not distinct wars, but combat theaters
of operation. It is up to our elected leaders and our senior military officials to identify
and agree on the correct strategic goals and objectives in order to be successful on
these battlefields and others. When we have a proper national security strategy,
we will have a focused national military strategy, preparing the defense-industrial base
to develop the right weapons systems for victory.
We must be mindful of the wise words compiled by Sun Tzu in “The Art of War” more
than 25 centuries ago, “to know your enemy and to know yourself and to know the
environment and countless amounts of battles, you will always be victorious.”
If we do not understand this simple maxim, we face dark days ahead.
For the sake of our nation, and of all nations who seek freedom for their citizens,
we must clearly identify the 21st century battlefield and ensure we are victorious on it.
Rep. Allen West (R-Fla.), a retired Army lieutenant colonel, serves on the
Armed Services Committee.
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ACT for America
P.O. Box 12765
Pensacola, FL 32591
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