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The Field of Fight

Page 14

by Lieutenant General (Ret. ) Michael T. Flynn


  If internal opposition could end the role of the last president of the Soviet Union, Mikhail Gorbachev, why not Khamenei’s?

  Nothing of the sort will be undertaken by the Obama administration, because this president wants to be remembered as the man who embraced the Islamic Republic, not as the American leader who brought it down. Our challenge to the mullahs and their allies in the Kremlin will have to await new leadership in Washington. Those new leaders will have to craft a winning strategy that will bring freedom to Iran, thwart Putin’s ambitious undertakings in the Middle East and Europe, and break the worldwide enemy alliance.

  Assembling Our Forces

  We are not without resources. Although our enemies are strong and growing stronger, and although our military and economic strength has been gravely weakened in recent years, we can win this thing. But only with good leaders capable of galvanizing the country, restoring morale and better intelligence to the military and the intelligence community, and establishing new and rebuilding our current international alliances. Our new leaders are going to have to undo the alienation of traditional friends from Europe and the Middle East to South Asia and Latin America. Diplomacy alone will not be sufficient; at the moment, nobody takes us seriously. We will have to demonstrate the ability and the resolve to crush our enemies.

  We should start with strengthening our relationships with Israel, Jordan, and Egypt. Israel is the only country in the world that routinely defends itself against terrorist attacks—when most of the world refuses to call it terrorism. The Israelis live next to terrorist states, and are constantly asked not to treat them as threats, but to make generous concessions to them.

  Israel is enormously valuable to us. Israeli intelligence organizations are exceptionally good, their understanding of Radical Islam is very deep, and their technology may be the best in the world. Of the many mistakes of the Obama presidency, its open hostility to Israel is one of the most damaging to our national security. I find it simply incredible that an American president should believe a strategic alliance with Iran to be more attractive than our traditional embrace of Israel. Our new leaders need to reverse that, pronto. We will need Israel if we’re going to defeat the Radical Islamists, and above all, the Iranians.

  Egypt is the biggest Arab country, which saved itself from the clutches of the Muslim Brotherhood. I have quoted at some length from President Sisi’s brave call for a Muslim “Reformation,” and he well understands the urgency of destroying the jihadi armies in Libya, Gaza, the Sinai, and Yemen, as well as doing everything he can to fight the Brotherhood inside Egypt. If we are to defeat al Qaeda and ISIS in North Africa, Egypt is indispensable. Here, too, we must reverse policy.

  Jordan has long been the one Arab country to really make peace with Israel, and Egypt has joined their ranks. King Abdullah’s kingdom is now doubly threatened: hundreds of thousands of refugees have headed to Jordan from the Syrian and Iraqi wars, and the Jordanian government lacks sufficient money and supplies to deal properly with them. Second, the Iranians and Syrians are supporting terrorist attacks, and although Jordan has a first-class intelligence community, they can certainly use additional help.

  We need to support the Jordanians any way we can, and our Middle East strategy should be coordinated with all three of these nations. We will also want to undo the severe damage that has been done to our relationship with the Saudis, who will have to deal with an intensifying Iranian campaign in the immediate future.

  We will also need to revive our working relations with countries such as Poland, Hungary, the Czech Republic, India, and Argentina. Long-standing friends such as Australia, Great Britain, France, Germany, and Italy will be easier, but there’s an awful lot of hard work to do.

  Good, strong diplomacy will be indispensable, but you can’t undo years of dithering and retreat with words alone. We will have to take real steps, we will have to take action on the battlefield. I don’t want to make specific tactical recommendations here, because the situation is changing so quickly, and good leaders are always ready to abandon a losing strategy in favor of something more promising.

  We wouldn’t have a country at all if our first commander in chief, General George Washington, hadn’t been willing to try something dramatically new at the darkest hour of the Revolutionary War. At the beginning of 1781, the British were clearly winning, having defeated the French in Rhode Island and Americans in the South, and were in firm control of New York. Washington was broke, unable even to pay the cost of delivering supplies to his soldiers, and was receiving intelligence to the effect that the French were on the verge of bailing out.

  The intel reports were wrong (sound familiar?). The French commander, Count de Rochambeau, told Washington that money was coming from Paris. He also suggested a change in military strategy: instead of concentrating on New York, it would be better for the Americans to coordinate with the French navy in the Chesapeake Bay, and Rochambeau’s own ground troops against General Charles Cornwallis. Over the course of the next several months, General Cornwallis moved his British troops south to Yorktown, Virginia, and Washington quickly agreed with the French to spring a trap. First, the French navy thwarted British efforts to relieve Cornwallis. Second, the Marquis de Lafayette kept Cornwallis in place. And third, Washington committed his troops to a joint operation with Rochambeau. That was the battle of Yorktown, won decisively by the French-American forces in October. It marked the effective end of the Revolutionary War.

  That is what good leadership is all about. We want the world, very much including our own people, to see that we are effective and determined to prevail. We will do whatever it takes to win, and we’re prepared to rethink our strategy at all times. If they see it, those who share our values will join with us to win the global war against Radical Islam and its allies. But I don’t think we can win without them. Like Washington at Yorktown, we will need help.

  As we enter the field of fight, we must never forget the firm convictions of our enemies. The man who created al Qaeda in Iraq and laid the groundwork for the Islamic State, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, wrote their motto: “The spark has been lit here in Iraq, and its heat will continue to intensify—by Allah’s permission—until it burns the crusader armies in Dabiq.” Dabiq is a town in Syria where a famous Ottoman Empire battle occurred in 1516, and where the leaders of the Islamic State expect the decisive battle between themselves and the West to take place. That is why they named their monthly publication “Dabiq.”

  We killed him in Iraq, now we must destroy the global jihad he spawned.

  Suggested Reading

  Ansary, Tamim, Destiny Disrupted: A History of the World Through Islamic Eyes. New York: PublicAffairs, 2010.

  Bar, Shumel, Warrant for Terror, The Fatwas of Radical Islam and the Duty to Jihad. Lanham, Md.: Rowman & Littlefield, 2006.

  Beck, Glenn, It Is About Islam: Exposing the Truth About ISIS, Al Qaeda, Iran, and the Caliphate. New York: Threshold, 2015.

  Cleary, Thomas, The Art of War: Sun Tzu. Boulder, Co.: Shambhala, 1988.

  Finkel, Caroline, Osman’s Dream: The History of the Ottoman Empire. New York: Basic Books, 2007.

  Gabriel, Brigitte, They Must Be Stopped: Why We Must Defeat Radical Islam and How We Can Do It. New York: St. Martin’s Press, 2008.

  Gertz, Bill, The China Threat: How the People’s Republic Targets America. Washington, D.C.: Regnery, 2002.

  Gorka, Sebastian, Defeating Jihad: The Winnable War. Washington, D.C.: Regnery, 2016.

  Hamid, Tawfik, Inside Jihad: How Radical Islam Works; Why It Should Terrify Us; How to Defeat It. Mountain Lake Park, Md.: Mountain Lake Press, 2015.

  Hopkirk, Peter, The Great Game. New York: Kodansha International, 1992.

  Ledeen, Michael, Accomplice to Evil: Iran and the War Against the West. New York: Truman Talley Books, 2009.

  ______, The Iranian Time Bomb: The Mullah Zealots’ Quest for Destruction. New York: Truman Talley Books, 2007.

  ______, The War Against the Terror Masters: Wh
y It Happened. Where We Are Now. How We’ll Win. New York: St. Martin’s Press, 2003.

  ______ and W. H. Lewis, Debacle: The American Failure in Iran. New York: Knopf, 1981.

  Murawiec, Laurent, The Mind of Jihad. Cambridge, Mass.: Cambridge University Press, 2008.

  Nakash, Yitzhak, The Shi’is of Iraq. Princeton, N. J.: Princeton University Press, 2003.

  Naylor, Sean, Relentless Strike: The Secret History of Joint Special Operations Command. New York: St. Martin’s Press, 2015.

  Patai, Raphael, The Arab Mind. Tucson: Recovery Resources Press, 2010.

  Quataert, Donald, The Ottoman Empire: 1700–1922. Cambridge, Mass.: Cambridge University Press, 2005.

  Rashid, Ahmed, Descent into Chaos: The U.S. and the Disaster in Pakistan, Afghanistan, and Central Asia. New York: Penguin, 2009.

  Weiss, Michael and Hassan, Hassan, ISIS: Inside the Army of Terror. New York: Regan Arts, 2015.

  Zakaria, Fareed, The Future of Freedom: Illiberal Democracy at Home and Abroad. New York: Norton, 2003.

  Index

  The index that appeared in the print version of this title does not match the pages in your e-book. Please use the search function on your e-reading device to search for terms of interest. For your reference, the terms that appear in the print index are listed below.

  25th Infantry Division

  82nd Airborne Division

  Abdel-Rahman, Omar

  Abdullah, king of Jordan

  Abizaid, John

  Abu Ghraib

  Adams, Sam, War of Numbers

  al-Adel, Saif

  al-Adnani, Abu Muhammad

  Afghanistan

  intelligence about

  International HQ

  Iraq’s involvement in

  Islamic foundation of

  listening tour in

  Soviet operations in

  U.S. operations in

  Afghanistan war (2001-)

  Aflaq, Michel

  Alavi, Mohammed

  Al-Azhar, Cairo

  alcohol in Muslim countries

  Algeria, French in

  Ali, Ayaan Hirsi

  Al-Kibar

  al Qaeda

  online skills

  still a growing threat

  training camps

  See also Radical Islamists

  al Qaeda in Iraq (AQI)

  al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP)

  al Qaeda in the Indian Subcontinent (AQIS)

  al-Qaim

  Anbar Province

  Ansar al-Islam

  Ansar al-Sunnah

  anti-Communism

  anti-semitism

  Apple Computer

  Apselof, Roy

  Arafat, Yasser

  Archer, Edward

  Argentina

  al-Assad, Bashar

  Assad regime

  Atmar, Hanif

  Australia

  Authorization for Use of Military Force (AUMF)

  Awakening, the

  Baath Party

  Baghdad

  al-Baghdadi, Abu Bakr

  el-Baghdadi, Iyad

  al-Baghdadi, Omar

  Bagram, Afghanistan

  Bakr, Haji

  Balad, Iraq, HQ

  Bangladesh

  Barakat brothers

  Baramshah, Pakistan

  battlefield

  technology on the

  value of intelligence on the

  Belgium

  Ben Ali, Zine

  Benghazi investigation

  Beslan, North Ossetia

  bin Laden, Mahrous

  bin Laden, Osama

  files captured at hideout of

  Bishop, Maurice

  blood, drinking of

  Bolivia

  book publishing in the Muslim world

  Bosnia

  Brazil

  Brezhnev, Leonid

  Brezhnev Doctrine

  Britain, and U.S.

  Bunker Hill, Battle of

  bureaucracy

  Bush, George H. W.

  Bush, George W.

  Caldwell, William

  Campbell, John F.

  Carter, Jimmy

  Casey, George

  Castro brothers

  Catholics

  cell phones, used in terror attacks

  censorship of analysts

  CENTCOM (Central Command for the war in the Middle East)

  Central America

  Central Intelligence Agency (CIA)

  Chavez, Hugo

  Chechnya

  China

  Churchill, Winston

  civilizations, war of

  clerical fascism

  Clinton, Bill

  Clinton, Hillary

  Cold War

  Commander of the North

  Communism

  defeat of

  in Grenada

  International

  in Iran

  in Palestine (1920s and 30s)

  Soviet

  in war against the West

  Congress for Cultural Freedom

  Congressional investigations

  Connable, Alfred R.

  Constitution, U.S.

  Cornwallis, Charles

  corruption

  counter-terrorism

  criminal networks, and financing of terrorism

  crusaders

  Cuba

  Czech Republic

  Dabiq, Syria

  death, worship of

  Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA)

  democracy

  contempt for, among our enemies

  foreign policy a weakness of

  dictators/strongmen, extolled by our enemies

  digital warfare

  diplomacy

  Diyala

  Djibouti

  documents, enemy, information from

  Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA)

  East Africa embassy bombings (1998)

  Egypt

  as U.S. ally

  Ekhtesari, Fatime

  electronic warfare

  executions, Islamic

  Facebook

  Faith Campaign (Iraq)

  Fallahian, Ali

  Fallujah

  Fascism

  defeat of

  Fatah

  Fedayeen Saddam

  Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI)

  “field of fight” (Homer)

  Flynn, Charlie

  Flynn, Helen

  Flynn, Michael T. (author)

  arrest and probation as youth

  birth family

  career in military intelligence

  college years

  Grenada operation

  Foley, Laurence

  foreign policy

  of democracies

  U.S.

  foreign terrorists in the Middle East

  Fort Bragg NC

  Fort Devens MA

  Fort Huachuca AZ

  Fort Polk LA

  France

  in Algeria

  and the American Revolution

  as U.S. ally

  Francis, Pope

  Freeh, Louis

  Free Syrian Army

  Friendship Gate

  Fumento, Michael

  Gates, Robert

  Gaza

  George (terrorist)

  Germany

  modern

  Nazi

  Global Coalition to Counter ISIL

  Google

  Google Maps

  Gorbachev, Mikhail

  Gore, Al

  Grand Mosque, Mecca

  Grant, Ulysses S.

  Green Movement (Iran)

  Grenada

  Grishin, Aleksey

  guerrilla war

  Haiti

  Hamas

  Haqqani

  Hartnett, Jesse

  Hayes, Stephen

  headscarves

  Helmand Province

  Hezbollah

  hijab

  history


  belief in inevitability of

  end of

  Hitler, Adolf

  Homeland Security

  Honduras

  human intelligence (HUMINT)

  Hungary

  Hussein, Saddam, regime of

  al-Husseini, Amin, grand mufti of Jerusalem

  ideologies

  regimes and movements driven by

  waging war against

  illiteracy in the Muslim world

  imperialism

  India

  Indonesia

  infidels

  information

  bad, dishonest

  from captured documents

  classified and suppressed

  real-time, actionable

  Ingush

  innovators and risk takers

  intelligence

  failures of

  increased importance of

  politicization of

  supporting war fighting

  truthful

  intelligence agencies (NSA, CIA, DIA) “three-letter”

  intelligence professionals, abilities needed by

  International Security Assistance Force (ISAF)

  Internet

  Internet service providers (ISPs)

  interrogation

  real-time, connected with operations

  Iran

  anti-American actions of

  capture of American ships by (January 2015)

  central to the anti-West alliance

  Communist Party of (Tudeh)

  espionage in U.S.

  failure of country

  intelligence about

  in Iraq

  Islamic Republic of

  nuclear program

  opposition within

  oppression of citizens in

  poetry forbidden in

  and Russia

  sanctions on banks and trading companies of

  shah overthrown

  terrorism sponsored by

  U.S. failure to challenge

  weapons from

  Iranian Revolution (1979)

  Iranian Revolutionary Guards

  Iran-Iraq War

  Iraq

  Islam in

  Iraq War (2003)

  Iran’s involvement in

  a mistake

  Radical Islamists in

  U.S. departure from (2011)

  U.S. success in

  Islam

  avoiding criticism of

  politicization of

  precepts of

  reformation of, urged

  Sunni vs. Shi’ite

  Islamic Jihad

  Islamic State (ISIS)

  allies of

  believe victory is inevitable

  criminal activities of

  intentions of

 

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