War Without Humans: Modern Blood Rites Revisited
For a book about the all-too-human “passions of war,” my 1997 work
Blood Rites
ended on a strangely inhuman note: I suggested that, whatever
distinctly human qualities war calls upon -- honor, courage, solidarity,
cruelty, and so forth -- it might be useful to stop thinking of war in
exclusively human terms. After all, certain species of ants wage war
and computers can simulate “wars” that play themselves out on-screen
without any human involvement.
More generally, then, we should define war as a self-replicating
pattern of activity that may or may not require human participation. In
the human case, we know it is capable of spreading geographically and
evolving rapidly over time -- qualities that, as I suggested somewhat
fancifully, make war a metaphorical successor to the predatory animals
that shaped humans into fighters in the first place.
A decade and a half later, these musings do not seem quite so airy
and abstract anymore. The trend, at the close of the twentieth century,
still seemed to be one of ever more massive human involvement in war --
from armies containing tens of thousands in the sixteenth century, to
hundreds of thousands in the nineteenth, and eventually millions in the
twentieth century world wars.
Tomgram: Barbara Ehrenreich, The Fog of (Robot) War
Last week, William Wan and Peter Finn of the Washington Post reported
that at least 50 countries have now purchased or developed pilotless
military drones. Recently, the Chinese had more than two dozen models
in some stage of development on display at the Zhuhai Air Show, some of
which they are evidently eager to sell to other countries.
So three cheers for a thoroughly drone-ified world. In my lifetime, I've repeatedly seen
advanced weapons systems or mind-boggling technologies of war hailed as
near-utopian paths to victory and future peace (just as the atomic
bomb was soon after my birth). Include in that the Vietnam-era,
"electronic battlefield," President Ronald Reagan’s Strategic Defense
Initiative (aka “Star Wars”), the “smart bombs” and smart missiles of
the first Gulf War, and in the twenty-first century, "netcentric warfare," that Rumsfeldian high-tech favorite.
You know the results of this sort of magical thinking about wonder
weapons (or technologies) just as well as I do. The atomic bomb led to
an almost half-century-long nuclear superpower standoff/nightmare, to
nuclear proliferation, and so to the possibility that someday even
terrorists might possess such weapons. The electronic battlefield was
incapable of staving off defeat in Vietnam. Reagan’s “impermeable”
anti-missile shield in space never came even faintly close to making it
into the heavens. Those "smart bombs" of the Gulf War proved remarkably dumb, while the 50 "decapitation" strikes
the Bush administration launched against Saddam Hussein's regime on the
first day of the 2003 invasion of Iraq took out not a single Iraqi
leader, but dozens of civilians. And the history of the netcentric
military in Iraq is well known. Its "success" sent Secretary of Defense
Rumsfeld into retirement and ignominy.
In the same way, robot drones as assassination weapons will prove to
be just another weapons system rather than a panacea for American
warriors. None of these much-advertised wonder technologies ever turns
out to perform as promised, but that fact never stops them, as with
drones today, from embedding themselves in our world. From the atomic
bomb came a whole nuclear landscape that included the Strategic Air
Command, weapons labs, production plants, missile silos, corporate
interests, and an enormous world-destroying arsenal (as well as
proliferating versions of the same, large and small, across the planet).
Nor did the electronic battlefield go away. Quite the opposite -- it
came home and entered our everyday world in the form of sensors,
cameras, surveillance equipment, and the like, now implanted from our borders to our cities.
Rarely do wonder weapons or wonder technologies disappoint enough to disappear. And those latest wonders, missile- and bomb-armed drones,
are now multiplying like so many electronic rabbits. And yet there is
always hope. Back in 1997, Barbara Ehrenreich went after the human
attraction to violence in her book Blood Rites: Origins and History of the Passions of War.
In it, among other brilliant insights, she traced the beginnings of
our modern blood rites not to Man, the Aggressor, but to human beings,
the prey (in a dangerous early world of predators). Now, in an
updated, adapted version of an afterword she did for the British
edition of that book, she turns from the origins of war to its end
point, suggesting in her usual provocative way that drones and other
warrior robotics may, in the end, do us one strange favor: they may
finally bring home to us that war is not a human possession, that it is
not what we are and must be. (To catch Timothy MacBain’s latest
TomCast audio interview in which Ehrenreich discusses the nature of war
and how to fight against it, click here, or download it to your iPod here.) Tom
War Without Humans:
Modern Blood Rites Revisited
by Barbara Ehrenreich
It was the ascending scale of war that originally called forth the
existence of the nation-state as an administrative unit capable of
maintaining mass armies and the infrastructure -- for taxation, weapons
manufacture, transport, etc. -- that they require. War has been, and we
still expect it to be, the most massive collective project human beings
undertake. But it has been evolving quickly in a very different
direction, one in which human beings have a much smaller role to play.
One factor driving this change has been the emergence of a new kind
of enemy, so-called “non-state actors,” meaning popular insurgencies and
loose transnational networks of fighters, none of which are likely to
field large numbers of troops or maintain expensive arsenals of their
own. In the face of these new enemies, typified by al-Qaeda, the mass
armies of nation-states are highly ineffective, cumbersome to deploy,
difficult to maneuver, and from a domestic point of view, overly
dependent on a citizenry that is both willing and able to fight, or at
least to have their children fight for them.
Yet just as U.S. military cadets continue, in defiance of military
reality, to sport swords on their dress uniforms, our leaders, both
military and political, tend to cling to an idea of war as a vast,
labor-intensive effort on the order of World War II. Only slowly, and
with a reluctance bordering on the phobic, have the leaders of major
states begun to grasp the fact that this approach to warfare may soon be
obsolete.
Consider the most recent U.S. war with Iraq. According to then-president George W. Bush, the casus belli
was the 9/11 terror attacks. The causal link between that event and
our chosen enemy, Iraq, was, however, imperceptible to all but the most
dedicated inside-the-Beltway intellectuals. Nineteen men had hijacked
airplanes and flown them into the Pentagon and the World Trade Center --
15 of them Saudi Arabians, none of them Iraqis -- and we went to war
against… Iraq?
Military history offers no ready precedents for such wildly misaimed
retaliation. The closest analogies come from anthropology, which
provides plenty of cases of small-scale societies in which the death of
any member, for any reason, needs to be “avenged” by an attack on a more
or less randomly chosen other tribe or hamlet.
Why Iraq? Neoconservative imperial ambitions have been invoked in
explanation, as well as the American thirst for oil, or even an Oedipal
contest between George W. Bush and his father. There is no doubt some
truth to all of these explanations, but the targeting of Iraq also
represented a desperate and irrational response to what was, for
Washington, an utterly confounding military situation.
We faced a state-less enemy -- geographically diffuse, lacking
uniforms and flags, invulnerable to invading infantries and saturation
bombing, and apparently capable of regenerating itself at minimal
expense. From the perspective of Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld
and his White House cronies, this would not do.
Since the U.S. was accustomed to fighting other nation-states --
geopolitical entities containing such identifiable targets as capital
cities, airports, military bases, and munitions plants -- we would have
to find a nation-state to fight, or as Rumsfeld put it, a “target-rich
environment.” Iraq, pumped up by alleged stockpiles of “weapons of mass
destruction,” became the designated surrogate for an enemy that refused
to play our game.
The effects of this atavistic war are still being tallied: in Iraq,
we would have to include civilian deaths estimated at possibly hundreds
of thousands, the destruction of civilian infrastructure, and
devastating outbreaks of sectarian violence of a kind that, as we should
have learned from the dissolution of Yugoslavia, can readily follow the
death or removal of a nationalist dictator.
But the effects of war on the U.S. and its allies may end up being
almost as tragic. Instead of punishing the terrorists who had attacked
the U.S., the war seems to have succeeded in recruiting more such
irregular fighters, young men (and sometimes women) willing to die and
ready to commit further acts of terror or revenge. By insisting on
fighting a more or less randomly selected nation-state, the U.S. may
only have multiplied the non-state threats it faces.
Unwieldy Armies
Whatever they may think of what the U.S. and its allies did in Iraq,
many national leaders are beginning to acknowledge that conventional
militaries are becoming, in a strictly military sense, almost
ludicrously anachronistic. Not only are they unsuited to crushing
counterinsurgencies and small bands of terrorists or irregular fighters,
but mass armies are simply too cumbersome to deploy on short notice.
In military lingo, they are weighed down by their “tooth to tail”
ratio -- a measure of the number of actual fighters in comparison to the
support personnel and equipment the fighters require. Both hawks and
liberal interventionists may hanker to airlift tens of thousands of
soldiers to distant places virtually overnight, but those soldiers will
need to be preceded or accompanied by tents, canteens, trucks, medical
equipment, and so forth. “Flyover” rights will have to be granted by
neighboring countries; air strips and eventually bases will have to be
constructed; supply lines will have be created and defended -- all of
which can take months to accomplish.
The sluggishness of the mass, labor-intensive military has become a
constant source of frustration to civilian leaders. Irritated by the
Pentagon’s hesitation to put “boots on the ground” in Bosnia,
then-Secretary of State Madeline Albright famously demanded of Secretary
of Defense Colin Powell, “What good is this marvelous military force if
we can never use it?” In 2009, the Obama administration unthinkingly
proposed a troop surge in Afghanistan, followed by a withdrawal within a
year and a half that would have required some of the troops to start
packing up almost as soon as they arrived. It took the U.S. military a
full month to organize the transport of 20,000 soldiers to Haiti in the
wake of the 2010 earthquake -- and they were only traveling 700 miles to
engage in a humanitarian relief mission, not a war.
Another thing ho
bbling mass militaries is the increasing
unwillingness of nations, especially the more democratic ones, to risk
large numbers of casualties. It is no longer acceptable to drive men
into battle at gunpoint or to demand that they fend for themselves on
foreign soil. Once thousands of soldiers have been plunked down in a
“theater,” they must be defended from potentially hostile locals, a
project that can easily come to supersede the original mission.
We may not be able clearly to articulate what American troops were
supposed to accomplish in Iraq or Afghanistan, but without question one
part of their job has been “force protection.” In what could be
considered the inverse of “mission creep,” instead of expanding, the
mission now has a tendency to contract to the task of self-defense.
Ultimately, the mass militaries of the modern era, augmented by
ever-more expensive weapons systems, place an unacceptable economic
burden on the nation-states that support them -- a burden that
eventually may undermine the militaries themselves. Consider what has
been happening to the world’s sole military superpower, the United
States. The latest estimate for the cost of the wars in Iraq and
Afghanistan is, at this moment, at least $3.2 trillion, while total U.S.
military spending equals that of the next 15 countries combined, and
adds up to approximately 47% of all global military spending.
To this must be added the cost of caring for wounded and otherwise
damaged veterans, which has been mounting precipitously as medical
advances allow more of the injured to survive. The U.S. military has
been sheltered from the consequences of its own profligacy by a level of
bipartisan political support that has kept it almost magically immune
to budget cuts, even as the national debt balloons to levels widely
judged to be unsustainable.
The hard right, in particular, has campaigned relentlessly against
“big government,” apparently not noticing that the military is a sizable
chunk of this behemoth. In December 2010, for example, a Republican
senator from Oklahoma railed against the national debt with this
statement: “We're really at war. We're on three fronts now: Iraq,
Afghanistan, and the financial tsunami [arising from the debt] that is
facing us.” Only in recent months have some Tea Party-affiliated
legislators broken with tradition by declaring their willingness to cut
military spending.
How the Warfare State Became the Welfare State
If military spending is still for the most part sacrosanct, ever more
spending cuts are required to shrink “big government.” Then what
remains is the cutting of domestic spending, especially social programs
for the poor, who lack the means to finance politicians, and all too
often the incentive to vote as well. From the Reagan years on, the U.S.
government has chipped away at dozens of programs that had helped
sustain people who are underpaid or unemployed, including housing
subsidies, state-supplied health insurance, public transportation,
welfare for single parents, college tuition aid, and inner-city economic
development projects.
Even
the physical infrastructure -- bridges, airports, roads, and tunnels --
used by people of all classes has been left at dangerous levels of
disrepair. Antiwar protestors wistfully point out, year after year, what
the cost of our high-tech weapon systems, our global network of more
than 1,000 military bases, and our various “interventions” could buy if
applied to meeting domestic human needs. But to no effect.
This ongoing sacrifice of domestic welfare for military “readiness”
represents the reversal of a historic trend. Ever since the introduction
of mass armies in Europe in the seventeenth century, governments have
generally understood that to underpay and underfeed one's troops -- and
the class of people that supplies them -- is to risk having the guns
pointed in the opposite direction from that which the officers
recommend.
In fact, modern welfare states, inadequate as they may be, are in no
small part the product of war -- that is, of governments' attempts to
appease soldiers and their families. In the U.S., for example, the Civil
War led to the institution of widows' benefits, which were the
predecessor of welfare in its Aid to Families with Dependent Children
form. It was the bellicose German leader Otto von Bismarck who first
instituted national health insurance.
World War II spawned educational benefits and income support for
American veterans and led, in the United Kingdom, to a comparatively
generous welfare state, including free health care for all. Notions of
social justice and fairness, or at least the fear of working class
insurrections, certainly played a part in the development of twentieth
century welfare states, but there was a pragmatic military motivation as
well: if young people are to grow up to be effective troops, they need
to be healthy, well-nourished, and reasonably well-educated.
In the U.S., the steady withering of social programs that might
nurture future troops even serves, ironically, to justify increased
military spending. In the absence of a federal jobs program,
Congressional representatives become fierce advocates for weapons
systems that the Pentagon itself has no use for, as long as the
manufacture of those weapons can provide employment for some of their
constituents.
With diminishing funds for higher education, military service becomes
a less dismal alternative for young working-class people than the
low-paid jobs that otherwise await them. The U.S. still has a civilian
welfare state consisting largely of programs for the elderly (Medicare
and Social Security). For many younger Americans, however, as well as
for older combat veterans, the U.S. military is the welfare state -- and a source, however temporarily, of jobs, housing, health care and education.
Eventually, however, the failure to invest in America’s human
resources -- through spending on health, education, and so forth --
undercuts the military itself. In World War I, public health experts
were shocked to find that one-third of conscripts were rejected as
physically unfit for service; they were too weak and flabby or too
damaged by work-related accidents.
Several generations later, in 2010, the U.S. Secretary of Education
reported that “75 percent of young Americans, between the ages of 17 to
24, are unable to enlist in the military today because they have failed
to graduate from high school, have a criminal record, or are physically
unfit.” When a nation can no longer generate enough young people who are
fit for military service, that nation has two choices: it can, as a
number of prominent retired generals are currently advocating, reinvest
in its “human capital,” especially the health and education of the poor,
or it can seriously reevaluate its approach to war.
The Fog of (Robot) War
Since the rightward, anti-“big government” tilt of American politics
more or less precludes the former, the U.S. has been scrambling to
develop less labor-intensive forms of waging war. In fact, this may
prove to be the ultimate military utility of the wars in Iraq and
Afghanistan: if they have gained the U.S. no geopolitical advantage,
they have certainly served as laboratories and testing grounds for forms
of future warfare that involve less human, or at least less
governmental, commitment.
One step in that direction has been the large-scale use of military
contract workers supplied by private companies, which can be seen as a
revival of the age-old use of mercenaries. Although most of the
functions that have been outsourced to private companies -- including
food services, laundry, truck driving, and construction -- do not
involve combat, they are dangerous, and some contract workers have even been assigned to the guarding of convoys and military bases.
Contractors are still men and women, capable of bleeding and dying --
and surprising numbers of them have indeed died. In the initial six
months of 2010, corporate deaths exceeded military deaths in Iraq and
Afghanistan for the first time. But the Pentagon has little or no
responsibility for the training, feeding, or care of private
contractors. If wounded or psychologically damaged, American contract
workers must turn, like any other injured civilian employees, to the
Workers’ Compensation system, hence their sense of themselves as a
“disposable army.” By 2009, the trend toward privatization had gone so
far that the number of private contractors in Afghanistan exceeded the
number of American troops there.
An alternative approach is to eliminate or drastically reduce the
military’s dependence on human beings of any kind. This would have been
an almost unthinkable proposition a few decades ago, but technologies
employed in Iraq and Afghanistan have steadily stripped away the human
role in war. Drones, directed from sites up to 7,500 miles away in the
western United States, are replacing manned aircraft.
Video cameras, borne by drones, substitute for human scouts or
information gathered by pilots. Robots disarm roadside bombs. When
American forces invaded Iraq in 2003, no robots accompanied them; by
2008, there were 12,000 participating in the war. Only a handful of
drones were used in the initial invasion; today, the U.S. military has
an inventory of more than 7,000, ranging from the familiar Predator to
tiny Ravens and Wasps used to transmit video images of events on the
ground. Far stranger fighting machines are in the works, like swarms of
lethal “cyborg insects” that could potentially replace human infantry.
These developments are by no means limited to the U.S. The global
market for military robotics and unmanned military vehicles is growing
fast, and includes Israel, a major pioneer in the
field, Russia, the United Kingdom, Iran, South Korea, and China. Turkey
is reportedly readying a robot force for strikes against Kurdish
insurgents; Israel hopes to eventually patrol the Gaza border with
“see-shoot” robots that will destroy people perceived as transgressors
as soon as they are detected.
It is hard to predict how far the automation of war and the
substitution of autonomous robots for human fighters will go. On the one
hand, humans still have the advantage of superior visual
discrimination. Despite decades of research in artificial intelligence,
computers cannot make the kind of simple distinctions -- as in
determining whether a cow standing in front of a barn is a separate
entity or a part of the barn -- that humans can make in a fraction of a
second.
Thus, as long as there is any premium on avoiding civilian deaths,
humans have to be involved in processing the visual information that
leads, for example, to the selection of targets for drone attacks. If
only as the equivalent of seeing-eye dogs, humans will continue to have a
role in war, at least until computer vision improves.
On the other hand, the human brain lacks the bandwidth to process all
the data flowing into it, especially as new technologies multiply that
data. In the clash of traditional mass armies, under a hail of arrows or
artillery shells, human warriors often found themselves confused and
overwhelmed, a condition attributed to “the fog of war." Well, that fog
is growing a lot thicker. U.S. military officials, for instance, put the
blame on “information overload” for the killing of 23 Afghan civilians
in February 2010, and the New York Times reported that:
“Across the
military, the data flow has surged; since the attacks of 9/11, the
amount of intelligence gathered by remotely piloted drones and other
surveillance technologies has risen 1,600 percent. On the ground, troops
increasingly use hand-held devices to communicate, get directions and
set bombing coordinates. And the screens in jets can be so packed with
data that some pilots call them “drool buckets” because, they say, they
can get lost staring into them.”
When the sensory data coming at a soldier is augmented by a flood of
instantaneously transmitted data from distant cameras and computer
search engines, there may be no choice but to replace the sloppy
“wet-ware” of the human brain with a robotic system for instant
response.
War Without Humans
Once set in place, the cyber-automation of war is hard to stop.
Humans will cling to their place “in the loop” as long as they can, no
doubt insisting that the highest level of decision-making -- whether to
go to war and with whom -- be reserved for human leaders. But it is
precisely at the highest levels that decision-making may most need
automating. A head of state faces a blizzard of factors to consider,
everything from historical analogies and satellite-derived intelligence
to assessments of the readiness of potential allies. Furthermore, as the
enemy automates its military, or in the case of a non-state actor,
simply adapts to our level of automation, the window of time for
effective responses will grow steadily narrower. Why not turn to a
high-speed computer? It is certainly hard to imagine a piece of
intelligent hardware deciding to respond to the 9/11 attacks by invading
Iraq.
So, after at least 10,000 years of intra-species fighting -- of
scorched earth, burned villages, razed cities, and piled up corpses, as
well, of course, as all the great epics of human literature -- we have
to face the possibility that the institution of war might no longer need
us for its perpetuation. Human desires, especially for the Earth’s
diminishing supply of resources, will still instigate wars for some time
to come, but neither human courage nor human bloodlust will carry the
day on the battlefield.
Computers will assess threats and calibrate responses; drones will
pinpoint enemies; robots might roll into the streets of hostile cities.
Beyond the individual battle or smaller-scale encounter, decisions as to
whether to match attack with counterattack, or one lethal technological
innovation with another, may also be eventually ceded to alien minds.
This should not come as a complete surprise. Just as war has shaped
human social institutions for millennia, so has it discarded them as the
evolving technology of war rendered them useless. When war was fought
with blades by men on horseback, it favored the rule of aristocratic
warrior elites. When the mode of fighting shifted to
action-at-a-distance weapons like bows and guns, the old elites had to
bow to the central authority of kings, who, in turn, were undone by the
democratizing forces unleashed by new mass armies.
Even patriarchy cannot depend on war for its long-term survival,
since the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan have, at least within U.S.
forces, established women’s worth as warriors. Over the centuries, human
qualities once deemed indispensable to war fighting -- muscular power,
manliness, intelligence, judgment -- have one by one become obsolete or
been ceded to machines.
What will happen then to the “passions of war”? Except for individual
acts of martyrdom, war is likely to lose its glory and luster. Military
analyst P.W. Singer quotes an Air Force captain musing about whether
the new technologies will “mean that brave men and women will no longer
face death in combat,” only to reassure himself that “there will always
be a need for intrepid souls to fling their bodies across the sky.”
Perhaps, but in a 2010 address to Air Force Academy cadets, an under
secretary of defense delivered the “bad news” that most of them would
not be flying airplanes, which are increasingly unmanned. War will
continue to be used against insurgencies as well as to “take out” the
weapons facilities, command centers, and cities of designated rogue
states. It may even continue to fascinate its aficionados, in the manner
of computer games. But there will be no triumphal parades for killer
nano-bugs, no epics about unmanned fighter planes, no monuments to
fallen bots.
And in that may lie our last hope. With the decline of mass
militaries and their possible replacement by machines, we may finally
see that war is not just an extension of our needs and passions, however
base or noble. Nor is it likely to be even a useful test of our
courage, fitness, or national unity. War has its own dynamic or -- in
case that sounds too anthropomorphic -- its own grim algorithms to work
out. As it comes to need us less, maybe we will finally see that we
don’t need it either. We can leave it to the ants.
Copyright 2011 Barbara Ehrenreich