Unrestricted Warfare
Qiao Liang and Wang Xiangsui
[pp. 34-59 in original]
"Throughout the Entire
Course of History, Warfare is Always Changing." --Andre Beaufre
Ever since early man went
from hunting animals to slaughtering his own kind, people have been equipping
the giant war beast for action, and the desire to attain various goals has
prompted soldiers to become locked in bloody conflict. It has become
universally accepted that warfare is a matter for soldiers. For several
thousand years, the three indispensable "hardware" elements of any
war have been soldiers, weapons and a battlefield. Running through them all has
been the "software" element of warfare: its purposefulness. Before
now, nobody has ever questioned that these are the basic elements of warfare.
The problem comes when people discover that all of these basic elements, which
seemingly were hard and fast, have changed so that it is impossible to get a
firm grip on them. When that day comes, is the war god's face still distinct?
Why Fight and for Whom?
In regard to the ancient
Greeks, if the account in Homer's epic is really trustworthy, the purpose of
the Trojan War was clear and simple: it was worth fighting a ten-year war for
the beautiful Helen. As far as their aims, the wars prosecuted by our ancestors
were relatively simple in terms of the goals to be achieved, with no complexity
to speak of. This was because our ancestors had limited horizons, their spheres
of activity were narrow, they had modest requirements for existence, and their
weapons were not lethal enough. Only if something could not be obtained by
normal means would our ancestors generally resort to extraordinary measures to
obtain it, and then without the least hesitation. Just so, Clausewitz wrote his
famous saying, which has been an article of faith for several generations of
soldiers and statesmen: "War is a continuation of politics." Our
ancestors would fight perhaps for the orthodox status of a religious sect, or
perhaps for an expanse of pastureland with plenty of water and lush grass. They
would not even have scruples about going to war over, say, spices, liquor or a
love affair between a king and queen. The stories of wars over spices and
sweethearts, and rebellions over things like rum, are recorded in the pages of
history--stories that leave us not knowing whether to laugh or cry. Then there
is the war that the English launched against the Qing monarchy for the sake of
the opium trade. This was national drug trafficking activity on probably the
grandest scale in recorded history. It is clear from these examples that, prior
to recent times, there was just one kind of warfare in terms of the kind of
motive and the kind of subsequent actions taken. Moving to later times, Hitler
expounded his slogan of "obtaining living space for the German
people," and the Japanese expounded their slogan of building the so called
"Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere." While a cursory look at
these slogans would suggest that the goals must have been somewhat more complex
than the goals of any previous wars, nevertheless the substance behind the
slogans was simply that the new great powers intended to once again carve up
the spheres of influence of the old great powers and to reap the benefits of
seizing their colonies.
To assess why people fight
is not so easy today, however. In former times, the ideal of "exporting
revolution" and the slogan of "checking the expansion of
communism" were calls to action that elicited countless responses. But
especially after the conclusion of the Cold War, when the Iron Curtain running
all along the divide between the two great camps suddenly collapsed, these
calls have lost their effectiveness. The times of clearly drawn sides are over.
Who are our enemies? Who are
our friends? These used to be the paramount questions in regard to revolution
and counterrevolution. Suddenly the answers have become complicated, confusing
and hard to get hold of. A country that yesterday was an adversary is in the
process of becoming a current partner today, while a country that once was an
ally will perhaps be met on the battlefield at the next outbreak of war. Iraq,
which one year was still fiercely attacking Iran on behalf of the U.S. in the
Iran-Iraq War, itself became the target of a fierce attack by the U.S. military
in the next year (see Endnote 1). An Afghan guerilla trained by the CIA becomes
the latest target for an attack by U.S. cruise missiles overnight. Furthermore,
NATO members Greece and Turkey have nearly come to blows several times in their
dispute over Cyprus, and Japan and South Korea, who have concluded a treaty of
alliance, have come just short of an open break as a result of their dispute
over a tiny island. All of this serves to again confirm that old saying:
"all friendship is in flux; self-interest is the only constant." The
kaleidoscope of war is turned by the hands of self-interest, presenting
constantly shifting images to the observer.
Astonishing advances in
modern advanced technology serve to promote globalization, further intensifying
the uncertainty associated with the dissolution of some perceived
self-interests and the emergence of others. The reason for starting a war can
be anything from a dispute over territory and resources, a dispute over
religious beliefs, hatred stemming from tribal differences, or a dispute over
ideology, to a dispute over market share, a dispute over the distribution of
power and authority, a dispute over trade sanctions, or a dispute stemming from
financial unrest.
The goals of warfare have
become blurred due to the pursuit of a variety of agendas. Thus, it is more and
more difficult for people to say clearly just why they are fighting (see
Endnote 2). Every young lad that participated in the Gulf War will tell you
right up front that he fought to restore justice in tiny, weak Kuwait. However,
the real reason for the war was perhaps far different from the high-sounding
reason that was given. Hiding under the umbrella furnished by this
high-sounding reason, they need not fear facing the light directly. In reality,
every country that participated in the Gulf War decided to join "Desert
Storm" only after carefully thinking over its own intentions and goals.
Throughout the whole course of the war, all of the Western powers were fighting
for their oil lifeline. To this primary goal, the Americans added the
aspiration of building a new world order with "USA" stamped on it.
Perhaps there was also a bit of missionary zeal to uphold justice. In order to
eliminate a threat that was close at hand, the Saudi Arabians were willing to
smash Muslim taboos and "dance with wolves." From start to finish,
the British reacted enthusiastically to President Bush's every move, in order
to repay Uncle Sam for the trouble he took on their behalf in the Malvinas
Islands War. The French, in order to prevent the complete evaporation of their
traditional influence in the Middle East, finally sent troops to the Gulf at
the last moment. Naturally, there is no way that a war prosecuted under these
kinds of conditions can be a contest fought over a single objective. The aggregate
of the self-interests of all the numerous countries participating in the war
serves to transform a modern war like "Desert Storm" into a race to
further various self-interests under the banner of a common interest. Thus,
so-called "common interest" has become merely the war equation's
largest common denominator that can be accepted by every allied party
participating in the war effort. Since different countries will certainly be
pursuing different agendas in a war, it is necessary to take the self-interest
of every allied party into consideration if the war is to be prosecuted
jointly. Even if we consider a given country's domestic situation, each of the
various domestic interest groups will also be pursuing its own agenda in a war.
The complex interrelationships among self-interests make it impossible to
pigeonhole the Gulf War as having been fought for oil, or as having been fought
for the new world order, or as having been fought to drive out the invaders.
Only a handful of soldiers are likely to grasp a principle that every statesman
already knows: that the biggest difference between contemporary wars and the
wars of the past is that, in contemporary wars, the overt goal and the covert
goal are often two different matters.
Where to Fight?
"To the
battlefield!" The young lad with a pack on his back takes leave of his
family as his daughters and other relatives see him off with tears in their
eyes. This is a classic scene in war movies. Whether the young lad is leaving
on a horse, a train, a steamship or a plane is not so important. The important
thing is that the destination never changes: it is the battlefield bathed in
the flames of war.
During the long period of
time before firearms, battlefields were small and compact. A face-off at close
quarters between two armies might unfold on a small expanse of level ground, in
a mountain pass, or within the confines of a city. In the eyes of today's
soldier, the battlefield that so enraptured the ancients is a "point"
target on the military map that is not particularly noteworthy. Such a
battlefield is fundamentally incapable of accommodating the spectacle of war as
it has unfolded in recent times on such a grand scale. The advent of firearms
led to dispersed formations, and the "point" ["dian" 7820]
type battlefield was gradually drawn out into a line of skirmishers. The trench
warfare of the First World War, with lines extending hundreds of miles, served
to bring the "point" and "line" ["xian" 4775]
type battlefield to its acme. At the same time, it transformed the battlefield
into an "area" ["mian" 7240] type battlefield which was
several dozens of miles deep. For those who went to war during those times, the
new battlefield meant trenches, pillboxes, wire entanglements, machine guns and
shell craters. They called war on this type of battlefield, where heavy
casualties were inflicted, a "slaughterhouse" and a "meat
grinder." The explosive development of military technology is constantly
setting the stage for further explosive expansion of the battlespace. The
transition from the "point" type battlefield to the "line"
type battlefield, and the transition from the two-dimensional battlefield to
the three- dimensional battlefield did not take as long as people generally
think. One could say that, in each case, the latter stage came virtually on the
heels of the former. When tanks began roaring over military trenches, prop
airplanes were already equipped with machine guns and it was already possible
to drop bombs from zeppelins. The development of weapons cannot, in and of
itself, automatically usher in changes in the nature of the battlefield. In the
history of warfare, any significant advance has always depended in part on
active innovating by military strategists. The battlefield, which had been
earthbound for several thousand years, was suddenly lifted into three
dimensional space. This was due in part to General J.F.C. Fuller's Tanks in the
Great War of 1914-1918 and Giulio Douhet's The Command of the Air, as well as
the extremely deep operations that were proposed and demonstrated under the
command of Marshall Mikhail N. Tukhachevsky. Erich Ludendorff was another
individual who attempted to radically change the nature of the battlefield. He
put forth the theory of "total war" and tried to combine battlefield
and non-battlefield elements into one organic whole. While he was not
successful, he nevertheless was the harbinger of similar military thought that
has outlived him for more than half a century. Ludendorff was destined only to
fight at battlefields like Verdun and the Masurian Lakes. A soldier's fate is
determined by the era in which he lives. At that time, the wingspan of the war
god could not extend any farther than the range of a Krupp artillery piece.
Naturally, then, it was impossible to fire a shell that would pass through the
front and rear areas on its parabolic path. Hitler was more fortunate than
Ludendorff. 20 years later, he had long range weapons at his disposal. He
utilized bombers powered by Mercedes engines and V-1 and V-2 guided missiles and
broke the British Isles' record of never having been encroached upon by an
invader. Hitler, who was neither a strategist nor a tactician, relied on his
intuition and made the line of demarcation between the front and rear less
prominent in the war, but he never really understood the revolutionary
significance of breaking through the partition separating battlefield elements
from non-battlefield elements. Perhaps this concept was beyond the ken of an
out-and- out war maniac and half-baked military strategist.
This revolution, however,
will be upon us in full force soon enough. This time, technology is again
running ahead of the military thinking. While no military thinker has yet put
forth an extremely wide-ranging concept of the battlefield, technology is doing
its utmost to extend the contemporary battlefield to a degree that is virtually
infinite: there are satellites in space, there are submarines under the water,
there are ballistic missiles that can reach anyplace on the globe, and
electronic countermeasures are even now being carried out in the invisible
electromagnetic spectrum space. Even the last refuge of the human race--the
inner world of the heart--cannot avoid the attacks of psychological warfare.
There are nets above and snares below, so that a person has no place to flee.
All of the prevailing concepts about the breadth, depth and height of the
operational space already appear to be old-fashioned and obsolete. In the wake
of the expansion of mankind's imaginative powers and his ability to master
technology, the battlespace is being stretched to its limits.
In 1985, China implemented a
"Massive Million Troop Drawdown" in its armed forces. With this as a
prelude, every major nation in the world carried out round after round of force
reductions over the next dozen or so years. According to many commentators on
military affairs, the main factor behind the general worldwide force reductions
is that, with the conclusion of the Cold War, countries that formerly were
pitted against each other are now anxious to enjoy the peace dividend. Little
do these commentators realize that this factor is just the tip of the iceberg.
The factors leading to armed
forces reductions are by no means limited to this point. A deeper reason for
the force reductions is that, as the wave of information technology (IT)
warfare ["xinxihua zhanzheng" 0207 1873 0553 2069 3630] grows and
grows, it would require too much of an effort and would be too grandiose to set
up a large-scale professional military, cast and formed on the assembly lines
of big industry and established according to the demands of mechanized warfare.
Precisely for this reason, during these force reductions, some farsighted
countries, rather than primarily having personnel cuts in mind, are instead
putting more emphasis on raising the quality of military personnel, increasing
the amount of high technology and mid- level technology in weaponry, and
updating military thought and warfighting theory [see Endnote 4]. The era of
"strong and brave soldiers who are heroic defenders of the nation"
has already passed. In a world where even "nuclear warfare" will
perhaps become obsolete military jargon, it is likely that a pasty-faced
scholar wearing thick eyeglasses is better suited to be a modern soldier than
is a strong young lowbrow with bulging biceps. The best evidence of this is
perhaps a story that is circulating in Western military circles regarding a
lieutenant who used a modem to bring a naval division to its knees [see Endnote
5]. The contrast between today's soldiers and the soldiers of earlier
generations is as plain to see as the contrast which we have already noted
between modern weapons and their precursors. This is because modern soldiers
have gone through the severe test of an uninterrupted technological explosion
throughout the entire 100 years of the twentieth century, and perhaps also
because of the salutary influence of the worldwide pop culture; viz., rock and
roll, discos, the World Cup, the NBA and Hollywood, etc., etc. The contrast is
stark whether we are talking about physical ability or intellectual ability.
Even though the new
generation of soldiers born in the 70's and 80's has been trained using the
"beast barracks" style of training, popularized by West Point
Military Academy, it is difficult for them to shed their gentle and frail
natures rooted in the soil of contemporary society. In addition, modern weapons
systems have made it possible for them to be far removed from any conventional
battlefield, and they can attack the enemy from a place beyond his range of
vision where they need not come face to face with the dripping blood that comes
with killing. All of this has turned each and every soldier into a
self-effacing gentleman who would just as soon avoid the sight of blood. The
digital fighter is taking over the role formerly played by the "blood and
iron" warrior--a role that, for thousands of years, has not been
challenged.
Now that it has come on the
stage of action and has rendered obsolete the traditional divisions of labor
prevailing in a society characterized by big industry, warfare no longer is an
exclusive imperial garden where professional soldiers alone can mingle. A
tendency towards civilianization has begun to become evident [see Endnote 6].
Mao Zedong's theory concerning "every citizen a soldier" has
certainly not been in any way responsible for this tendency. The current trend
does not demand extensive mobilization of the people. Quite the contrary, it
merely indicates that a technological elite among the citizenry have broken down
the door and barged in uninvited, making it impossible for professional
soldiers with their concepts of professionalized warfare to ignore challenges
that are somewhat embarrassing. Who is most likely to become the leading
protagonist on the terra incognita of the next war? The first challenger to
have appeared, and the most famous, is the computer "hacker." This
chap, who generally has not received any military training or been engaged in
any military profession, can easily impair the security of an army or a nation
in a major way by simply relying on his personal technical expertise.
A classic example is given
in the U.S. FM100-6 Information Operations regulations. In
1994, a computer hacker in England attacked the U.S. military's Rome Air
Development Center in New York State, compromising the security of 30 systems.
He also hacked into more than 100 other systems. The Korea Atomic Energy
Research Institute (KAERI) and NASA suffered damage, among others. What
astounded people was not only the scale of those affected by the attack and the
magnitude of the damage, but also the fact that the hacker was actually a
teenager who was merely 16 years old. Naturally, an intrusion by a teenager
playing a game cannot be regarded as an act of war. The problem is, how does
one know for certain which damage is the result of games and which damage is
the result of warfare? Which acts are individual acts by citizens and which
acts represent hostile actions by non-professional warriors, or perhaps even
organized hacker warfare launched by a state? In 1994, there were 230,000
security-related intrusions into U.S. DOD networks. How many of these were
organized destructive acts by non-professional warriors? Perhaps there will
never be any way of knowing [see Endnote 7].
Just as there are all kinds
of people in society, so hackers come in all shapes and colors. All types of
hackers, with varying backgrounds and values, are hiding in the camouflage
provided by networks: curious middle school students; on-line gold diggers;
corporate staff members nursing a grudge; dyed-in-the-wool network terrorists;
and network mercenaries. In their ideas and in their actions, these kinds of
people are poles apart from each other, but they gather together in the same
network world. They go about their business in accordance with their own
distinctive value judgments and their own ideas of what makes sense, while some
are simply confused and aimless. For these reasons, whether they are doing good
or doing ill, they do not feel bound by the rules of the game that prevail in
the society at large. Using computers, they may obtain information by hook or
by crook from other people's accounts. They may delete someone else's precious
data, that was obtained with such difficulty, as a practical joke. Or, like the
legendary lone knight-errant, they may use their outstanding on-line technical
skills to take on the evil powers that be. The Suharto government imposed a
strict blockade on news about the organized aggressive actions against the
ethnic Chinese living in Indonesia. The aggressive actions were first made
public on the Internet by witnesses with a sense of justice. As a result, the
whole world was utterly shocked and the Indonesian government and military were
pushed before the bar of morality and justice. Prior to this, another group of
hackers calling themselves "Milworm" put on another fine performance
on the Internet. In order to protest India's nuclear tests, they penetrated the
firewall of the network belonging to India's [Bhabha] Atomic Research Center
(BARC), altered the home page, and downloaded 5 MB of data. These hackers could
actually be considered polite. They went only to a certain point and no
further, and did not give their adversary too much trouble. Aside from the
direct results of this kind of action, it also has a great deal of symbolic
significance: in the information age, the influence exerted by a nuclear bomb
is perhaps less than the influence exerted by a hacker.
More murderous than
hackers--and more of a threat in the real world--are the non-state
organizations, whose very mention causes the Western world to shake in its
boots. These organizations, which all have a certain military flavor to a
greater or lesser degree, are generally driven by some extreme creed or cause,
such as: the Islamic organizations pursuing a holy war; the Caucasian militias
in the U.S.; the Japanese Aum Shinrikyo cult; and, most recently, terrorist
groups like Osama bin Ladin's, which blew up the U.S. embassies in Kenya and
Tanzania. The various and sundry monstrous and virtually insane destructive
acts by these kinds of groups are undoubtedly more likely to be the new
breeding ground for contemporary wars than is the behavior of the lone ranger
hacker. Moreover, when a nation state or national armed force, (which adheres
to certain rules and will only use limited force to obtain a limited goal),
faces off with one of these types of organizations, (which never observe any
rules and which are not afraid to fight an unlimited war using unlimited
means), it will often prove very difficult for the nation state or national
armed force to gain the upper hand.
During the 1990's, and
concurrent with the series of military actions launched by non-professional
warriors and non-state organizations, we began to get an inkling of a
non-military type of war which is prosecuted by yet another type of
non-professional warrior. This person is not a hacker in the general sense of
the term, and also is not a member of a quasi-military organization. Perhaps he
or she is a systems analyst or a software engineer, or a financier with a large
amount of mobile capital or a stock speculator. He or she might even perhaps be
a media mogul who controls a wide variety of media, a famous columnist or the
host of a TV program. His or her philosophy of life is different from that of
certain blind and inhuman terrorists. Frequently, he or she has a firmly held
philosophy of life and his or her faith is by no means inferior to Osama bin
Ladin's in terms of its fanaticism. Moreover, he or she does not lack the
motivation or courage to enter a fight as necessary. Judging by this kind of
standard, who can say that George Soros is not a financial terrorist?
Precisely in the same way
that modern technology is changing weapons and the battlefield, it is also at
the same time blurring the concept of who the war participants are. From now
on, soldiers no longer have a monopoly on war.
Global terrorist activity is
one of the by-products of the globalization trend that has been ushered in by
technological integration. Non-professional warriors and non-state
organizations are posing a greater and greater threat to sovereign nations,
making these warriors and organizations more and more serious adversaries for
every professional army. Compared to these adversaries, professional armies are
like gigantic dinosaurs which lack strength commensurate to their size in this
new age. Their adversaries, then, are rodents with great powers of survival,
which can use their sharp teeth to torment the better part of the world.
What Means and Methods Are
Used to Fight?
There's no getting around
the opinions of the Americans when it comes to discussing what means and
methods will be used to fight future wars. This is not simply because the U.S.
is the latest lord of the mountain in the world. It is more because the
opinions of the Americans on this question really are superior compared to the
prevailing opinions among the military people of other nations. The Americans
have summed up the four main forms that warfighting will take in the future as:
1) Information warfare; 2) Precision warfare [see Endnote 8]; 3) Joint
operations [see Endnote 9]; and 4) Military operations other than war (MOOTW)
[see Endnote 10]. This last sentence is a mouthful. From this sentence alone we
can see the highly imaginative, and yet highly practical, approach of the
Americans, and we can also gain a sound understanding of the warfare of the
future as seen through the eyes of the Americans. Aside from joint operations,
which evolved from traditional cooperative operations and coordinated
operations, and even Air- Land operations, the other three of the four forms of
warfighting can all be considered products of new military thinking. General
Gordon R. Sullivan, the former Chief of Staff of the U.S. Army, maintained that
information warfare will be the basic form of warfighting in future warfare.
For this reason, he set up the best digitized force in the U.S. military, and
in the world. Moreover, he proposed the concept of precision warfare, based on
the perception that "there will be an overall swing towards information
processing and stealthy long-range attacks as the main foundations of future
warfare." For the Americans, the advent of new, high-tech weaponry, such
as precision-guided weapons, the Global Positioning System (GPS), C4I systems
and stealth airplanes, will possibly allow soldiers to dispense with the
nightmare of attrition warfare.
Precision warfare, which has
been dubbed "non-contact attack" by the Americans, and "remote
combat" by the Russians [see Endnote 11], is characterized by concealment,
speed, accuracy, a high degree of effectiveness, and few collateral casualties.
In wars of the future, where the outcome will perhaps be decided not long after
the war starts, this type of tactic, which has already showed some of its
effectiveness in the Gulf War, will probably be the method of choice that will
be embraced most gladly by U.S. generals. However, the phrase that really
demonstrates some creative wording is not "information warfare" or
"precision warfare," but rather the phrase "military operations
other than war." This particular concept is clearly based on the
"world's interest," which the Americans are constantly invoking, and
the concept implies a rash overstepping of its authority by the U.S.--a classic
case of the American attitude that "I am responsible for every place under
the sun." Nevertheless, such an assessment does not by any means stifle
our praise of this concept because, after all, for the first time it permits a
variety of measures that are needed to deal comprehensively with the problems
of the 20th and 21st centuries to be put into this MOOTW box, so that soldiers
are not likely to be in the dark and at a loss in the world that lies beyond
the battlefield. Thus, the somewhat inferior "thought antennae" of
the soldiers will be allowed to bump up against the edges of a broader concept
of war. Such needed measures include peacekeeping, efforts to suppress illicit
drugs, riot suppression, military aid, arms control, disaster relief, the
evacuation of Chinese nationals residing abroad, and striking at terrorist
activities. Contact with this broader concept of war cannot but lessen the
soldiers' attachment to the MOOTW box itself. Ultimately, they will not be able
to put the brand new concept of "non-military war operations" into
the box. When this occurs, it will represent an understanding that has genuine
revolutionary significance in terms of mankind's perception of war.
The difference between the
concepts of "non-military war operations" and "military
operations other than war" is far greater than a surface reading would
indicate and is by no means simply a matter of changing the order of some words
in a kind of word game. The latter concept, MOOTW, may be considered simply an
explicit label for missions and operations by armed forces that are carried out
when there is no state of war. The former concept, "non-military war
operations," extends our understanding of exactly what constitutes a state
of war to each and every field of human endeavor, far beyond what can be
embraced by the term "military operations." This type of extension is
the natural result of the fact that human beings will use every conceivable
means to achieve their goals. While it seems that the Americans are in the lead
in every field of military theory, they were not able to take the lead in
proposing this new concept of war. However, we cannot fail to recognize that
the flood of U.S.-style pragmatism around the world, and the unlimited
possibilities offered by new, high technology, were nevertheless powerful
forces behind the emergence of this concept.
So, which [of many kinds of
unconventional] means, which seem totally unrelated to war, will ultimately
become the favored minions of this new type of war--"the non-military war
operation"--which is being waged with greater and greater frequency all
around the world?
Trade War: If one should note that, about a dozen years
ago, "trade war" was still simply a descriptive phrase, today it has
really become a tool in the hands of many countries for waging non-military
warfare. It can be used with particularly great skill in the hands of the
Americans, who have perfected it to a fine art. Some of the means used include:
the use of domestic trade law on the international stage; the arbitrary
erection and dismantling of tariff barriers; the use of hastily written trade
sanctions; the imposition of embargoes on exports of critical technologies; the
use of the Special Section 301 law; and the application of most-favored-nation
(MFN) treatment, etc., etc. Any one of these means can have a destructive
effect that is equal to that of a military operation. The comprehensive
eight-year embargo against Iraq that was initiated by the U.S. is the most
classic textbook example in this regard.
Financial War: Now that Asians have experienced the financial
crisis in Southeast Asia, no one could be more affected by "financial
war" than they have been. No, they have not just been affected; they have
simply been cut to the very quick! A surprise financial war attack that was
deliberately planned and initiated by the owners of international mobile
capital ultimately served to pin one nation after another to the
ground--nations that not long ago were hailed as "little tigers" and
"little dragons." Economic prosperity that once excited the constant
admiration of the Western world changed to a depression, like the leaves of a
tree that are blown away in a single night by the autumn wind. After just one
round of fighting, the economies of a number of countries had fallen back ten
years. What is more, such a defeat on the economic front precipitates a near
collapse of the social and political order. The casualties resulting from the
constant chaos are no less than those resulting from a regional war, and the
injury done to the living social organism even exceeds the injury inflicted by
a regional war. Non-state organizations, in this their first war without the
use of military force, are using non-military means to engage sovereign
nations. Thus, financial war is a form of non-military warfare which is just as
terribly destructive as a bloody war, but in which no blood is actually shed.
Financial warfare has now officially come to war's center stage--a stage that
for thousands of years has been occupied only by soldiers and weapons, with
blood and death everywhere. We believe that before long, "financial
warfare" will undoubtedly be an entry in the various types of dictionaries
of official military jargon. Moreover, when people revise the history books on
twentieth-century warfare in the early 21st century, the section on financial
warfare will command the reader's utmost attention [see Endnote 12]. The main
protagonist in this section of the history book will not be a statesman or a
military strategist; rather, it will be George Soros. Of course, Soros does not
have an exclusive monopoly on using the financial weapon for fighting wars.
Before Soros, Helmut Kohl used the deutsche mark to breach the Berlin Wall--a
wall that no one had ever been able to knock down using artillery shells [see
Endnote 13]. After Soros began his activities, Li Denghui [Li Teng-hui 2621
4098 6540] used the financial crisis in Southeast Asia to devalue the New
Taiwan dollar, so as to launch an attack on the Hong Kong dollar and Hong Kong
stocks, especially the "red-chip stocks." [Translator's note:
"red-chip stocks" refers to stocks of companies listed on the Hong
Kong stock market but controlled by mainland interests.] In addition, we have
yet to mention the crowd of large and small speculators who have come en masse
to this huge dinner party for money gluttons, including Morgan Stanley and
Moody's, which are famous for the credit rating reports that they issue, and
which point out promising targets of attack for the benefit of the big fish in
the financial world [see Endnote 14]. These two companies are typical of those
entities that participate indirectly in the great feast and reap the benefits.
In the summer of 1998, after
the fighting in the financial war had been going on for a full year, the war's
second round of battles began to unfold on an even more extensive battlefield,
and this round of battles continues to this day. This time, it was not just the
countries of Southeast Asia, (which had suffered such a crushing defeat during
the previous year), that were drawn into the war. Two titans were also drawn
in--Japan and Russia. This resulted in making the global economic situation
even more grim and difficult to control. The blinding flames even set alight
the fighting duds of those who ventured to play with fire in the first place.
It is reported that Soros and his "Quantum Fund" lost not less than
several billion dollars in Russia and Hong Kong alone [see Endnote 15]. Thus we
can get at least an inkling of the magnitude of financial war's destructive
power. Today, when nuclear weapons have already become frightening mantlepiece
decorations that are losing their real operational value with each passing day,
financial war has become a "hyperstrategic" weapon that is attracting
the attention of the world. This is because financial war is easily manipulated
and allows for concealed actions, and is also highly destructive. By analyzing
the chaos in Albania not long ago, we can clearly see the role played by
various types of foundations that were set up by transnational groups and
millionaires with riches rivaling the wealth of nation states. These
foundations control the media, control subsidies to political organizations,
and limit any resistance from the authorities, resulting in a collapse of
national order and the downfall of the legally authorized government. Perhaps
we could dub this type of war "foundation-style" financial war. The
greater and greater frequency and intensity of this type of war, and the fact
that more and more countries and non-state organizations are deliberately using
it, are causes for concern and are facts that we must face squarely.
New Terror War in Contrast
to Traditional Terror War: Due
to the limited scale of a traditional terror war, its casualties might well be
fewer than the casualties resulting from a conventional war or campaign.
Nevertheless, a traditional terror war carries a stronger flavor of violence.
Moreover, in terms of its operations, a traditional terror war is never bound
by any of the traditional rules of the society at large. From a military
standpoint, then, the traditional terror war is characterized by the use of
limited resources to fight an unlimited war. This characteristic invariably
puts national forces in an extremely unfavorable position even before war
breaks out, since national forces must always conduct themselves according to
certain rules and therefore are only able to use their unlimited resources to
fight a limited war. This explains how a terrorist organization made up of just
a few inexperienced members who are still wet behind the ears can nevertheless
give a mighty country like the U.S. headaches, and also why "using a
sledgehammer to kill an ant" often proves ineffective. The most recent
proof is the case of the two explosions that occurred simultaneously at the
U.S. embassies in Nairobi and Dar es Salaam. The advent of bin Ladin-style
terrorism has deepened the impression that a national force, no matter how
powerful, will find it difficult to gain the upper hand in a game that has no
rules. Even if a country turns itself into a terrorist element, as the
Americans are now in the process of doing, it will not necessarily be able to
achieve success.
Be that as it may, if all
terrorists confined their operations simply to the traditional approach of
bombings, kidnappings, assassinations, and plane hijackings, this would
represent less than the maximum degree of terror. What really strikes terror
into people's hearts is the rendezvous of terrorists with various types of new,
high technologies that possibly will evolve into new superweapons. We already
have a hint of what the future may hold--a hint that may well cause concern.
When Aum Shinrikyo followers discharged "Sarin" poison gas in a Tokyo
subway, the casualties resulting from the poison gas accounted for just a small
portion of the terror. This affair put people on notice that modern biochemical
technology had already forged a lethal weapon for those terrorists who would
try to carry out the mass destruction of humanity [see Endnote 16]. In
contradistinction to masked killers that rely on the indiscriminate slaughter
of innocent people to produce terror, the "Falange Armed Forces"
[Changqiangdang Wuzhuang 7022 2847 7825 2976 5944] group in Italy is a
completely different class of high-tech terrorist organization. Its goals are
explicit and the means that it employs are extraordinary. It specializes in
breaking into the computer networks of banks and news organizations, stealing
stored data, deleting programs, and disseminating disinformation. These are
classic terrorist operations directed against networks and the media. This type
of terrorist operation uses the latest technology in the most current fields of
study, and sets itself against humanity as a whole. We might well call this
type of operation "new terror war."
Ecological War: Ecological war refers to a new type of
non-military warfare in which modern technology is employed to influence the
natural state of rivers, oceans, the crust of the earth, the polar ice sheets,
the air circulating in the atmosphere, and the ozone layer. By methods such as
causing earthquakes and altering precipitation patterns, the atmospheric
temperature, the composition of the atmosphere, sea level height, and sunshine
patterns, the earth's physical environment is damaged or an alternate local
ecology is created. Perhaps before very long, a man-made El Nino or La Nina
effect will become yet another kind of superweapon in the hands of certain
nations and/or non-state organizations. It is more likely that a non-state
organization will become the prime initiator of ecological war, because of its
terrorist nature, because it feels it has no responsibility to the people or to
the society at large, and because non-state organizations have consistently
demonstrated that they unwilling to play by the rules of the game. Moreover,
since the global ecological environment will frequently be on the borderline of
catastrophe as nations strive for the most rapid development possible, there is
a real danger that the slightest increase or decrease in any variable would be
enough to touch off an ecological holocaust.
Aside from what we have
discussed above, we can point out a number of other means and methods used to
fight a non-military war, some of which already exist and some of which may
exist in the future. Such means and methods include psychological warfare
(spreading rumors to intimidate the enemy and break down his will); smuggling
warfare (throwing markets into confusion and attacking economic order); media
warfare (manipulating what people see and hear in order to lead public opinion
along); drug warfare (obtaining sudden and huge illicit profits by spreading
disaster in other countries); network warfare (venturing out in secret and
concealing one's identity in a type of warfare that is virtually impossible to
guard against); technological warfare (creating monopolies by setting standards
independently); fabrication warfare (presenting a counterfeit appearance of
real strength before the eyes of the enemy); resources warfare (grabbing riches
by plundering stores of resources); economic aid warfare (bestowing favor in
the open and contriving to control matters in secret); cultural warfare
(leading cultural trends along in order to assimilate those with different
views); and international law warfare (seizing the earliest opportunity to set
up regulations), etc., etc In addition, there are other types of non-military
warfare which are too numerous to mention. In this age, when the plethora of
new technologies can in turn give rise to a plethora of new means and methods of
fighting war, (not to mention the cross-combining and creative use of these
means and methods), it would simply be senseless and a waste of effort to list
all of the means and methods one by one. What is significant is that all of
these warfighting means, along with their corresponding applications, that have
entered, are entering, or will enter, the ranks of warfighting means in the
service of war, have already begun to quietly change the view of warfare held
by all of mankind. Faced with a nearly infinitely diverse array of options to
choose from, why do people want to enmesh themselves in a web of their own
making and select and use means of warfare that are limited to the realm of the
force of arms and military power? Methods that are not characterized by the use
of the force of arms, nor by the use of military power, nor even by the
presence of casualties and bloodshed, are just as likely to facilitate the
successful realization of the war's goals, if not more so. As a matter of
course, this prospect has led to revision of the statement that "war is
politics with bloodshed," and in turn has also led to a change in the
hitherto set view that warfare prosecuted through force of arms is the ultimate
means of resolving conflict. Clearly, it is precisely the diversity of the
means employed that has enlarged the concept of warfare. Moreover, the
enlargement of the concept of warfare has, in turn, resulted in enlargement of
the realm of war-related activities. If we confine ourselves to warfare in the
narrow sense on the traditional battlefield now, it will very difficult for us
to regain our foothold in the future. Any war that breaks out tomorrow or
further down the road will be characterized by warfare in the broad sense--a
cocktail mixture of warfare prosecuted through the force of arms and warfare
that is prosecuted by means other than the force of arms.
The goal of this kind of
warfare will encompass more than merely "using means that involve the
force of arms to force the enemy to accept one's own will." Rather, the
goal should be "to use all means whatsoever--means that involve the force
of arms and means that do not involve the force of arms, means that involve
military power and means that do not involve military power, means that entail
casualties and means that do not entail casualties--to force the enemy to serve
one's own interests."
ENDNOTES
1. For more on the close
relationship between Iraq and the U.S., the reader may refer to Desert
Warrior: A Personal View of the Gulf War by the Joint Forces Commander,
Junshi Yiwen [6511 0057 6146 2429] Publishing House, p. 212. "Iraq had
established extremely close relations with the United States. Iraq had received
weapons and valuable intelligence regarding Iranian movements from the U.S., as
well as U.S. military support for attacks on Iran's navy."
2. An article by the
then-U.S. Secretary of Defense Les Aspin entitled "On the Sea Change in
the Security Environment" was published in the February, 1993, issue
of The Officer magazine, (published in the U.S.):
A Comparison
of The New and the Old Security Environments
|
1. In Regard
to the Geopolitical Environment
OLD
SECURITY ENVIRONMENT
|
|
NEW
SECURITY ENVIRONMENT
|
Bipolar (rigid)
Predictable
Communism
U.S. the number one
Western power
Permanent alliances
A paralyzed U.N.
|
|
Multipolar (complex)
Uncertain
Nationalism and
religious extremism
U.S. only the number one
military power
Temporary alliances
A dynamic U.N.
|
2. In Regard
to Threats Faced by the U.S.
OLD
SECURITY ENVIRONMENT
|
|
NEW
SECURITY ENVIRONMENT
|
Single (Soviet)
Threat to U.S. survival
Clear
Deterrable
Europe-centered
High risk of escalation
Use of strategic nuclear
weapons
Overt
|
|
Diverse
Threat to U.S. interests
Unclear
Non-deterrable
Other regions
Little risk of
escalation
Terrorists using nuclear
weapons
Covert
|
3. In Regard
to the Use of Military Force
OLD
SECURITY ENVIRONMENT
|
|
NEW
SECURITY ENVIRONMENT
|
Attrition warfare
War by proxy
Reliance primarily on
high technology
Forward deployed
Forward based
Host nation support
|
|
Decisive attacks on key
targets
Direct reinforcement
Integrated use of high,
medium and low technology
Power projection
Home based
Reliance on own strength
|
|
From the table above, one
can see the sensitivity of the Americans to the changes in their security
environment, and also the various types of forces and factors that are
constraining and influencing the formation of the world's new setup since the
conclusion of the Cold War.
3. "Technological
space" is a new concept that we are proposing in order to distinguish this
type of space from physical space.
4. According to the U.S.
Department of Defense National Defense Report for fiscal year
1998, the number of U.S. military personnel has been cut by 32% since 1989. In
addition, the U.S. retired a large amount of obsolete equipment, thus actually
increasing combat strength to some degree even while large reductions in U.S.
military personnel were being carried out. The U.S. DOD issued its Quadrennial
Defense Review (QDR) in May of 1997. The QDR emphasized "taking the future
into consideration and reforming the U.S. military." It advocated
continued personnel cuts and building the U.S. military in accordance with new
military affairs theories. However, it also advocated comparatively greater
expenditures for the purchase of equipment.
5. This story first appeared
in the British Sunday Telegraph. According to this report, the U.S.
military carried out a "Joint Warrior" exercise from Sep 18 until Sep
25, 1995, in order to test the security of its national defense electronics
systems. During the exercise, an Air Force officer successfully hacked into the
naval command system, (see The Network is King by Hu Yong
[5170 3144] and Fan Haiyan [5400 3189 3601], Hainan Publishing House, pp.
258-259.) There are many similar stories, but there also are some military
experts who believe that these are cases of "throwing up a confusing mist
before someone's eyes."
6. In their book War
and Anti-War, Alvin and Heidi Toffler wrote: "If the tools of warfare
are no longer tanks and artillery, but rather computer viruses and microrobots,
then we can no longer say that nations are the only armed groups or that
soldiers are the only ones in possession of the tools of war." In his
article entitled "What the Revolution in Military Affairs is Bringing--The
Form War Will Take in 2020," a Colonel in the Japanese Self-Defense Forces
by the name of Shoichi Takama has noted that the civilianization of war will be
an important characteristic of 21st century warfare.
7. Many hackers are adopting
a new tactic which might be styled "network guerrilla warfare."
8. Precision warfare is a
new form of warfighting. It came about as a result of combining increased
weapons accuracy with increased battlefield transparency. (See "From
Gettysburg to the Gulf and Beyond," by Colonel Richard J. Dunn III [McNair
Paper 13, 1992], quoted in World Military Affairs Yearbook for 1997,
[1997 Nian Shijie Junshi Nianjian], published by the PLA in Chinese, pp.
294-295.)
9. "Joint Vision
2010," a document prepared by the [Chairman of the] U.S. Joint Chiefs of
Staff/Joint Staff. See Joint Force Quarterly, Summer 1996.
10. See the U.S. Army's 1993
edition of Operations Essentials, [translator's note: this probably
refers to FM 100-5, "Operations," Department of the Army, June,
1993]. Consult ARMY Magazine (U.S.), June, 1993.
11. After his research on
the Gulf War, the Russian tactical expert I.N. Vorobyev pointed out that remote
combat is a warfighting method that has great potential. (Military Thought,
in Russian, 1992, #11.)
12. There was an article
entitled "Financial Markets are the Biggest Threat to Peace" in the
August 23, 1998, issue of the Los Angeles Times. The article noted:
"At present, financial markets constitute the biggest threat to world
peace, not terrorist training camps." (See Reference News [Cankao
Xiaoxi 0639 5072 3194 1873], Beijing, September 7, 1998.)
13. Who Has Joined
the Fray?--Helmut Kohl, by Wang Jiannan [3769 0494 0589], China
Broadcasting Publishing House [in Chinese], 1997, pp. 275, 232, 357.
14. An article entitled
"A New York Corporation that Affects Economies" in the July 29, 1998,
issue of The Christian Science Monitor disclosed how Moody's
credit rating reports influence and even manipulate economic trends in Italy,
South Korea, Japan and Malaysia. See Reference News,
August 20, 1998.
15. Soros pours out all his
bitterness in his book, The Crisis of Global Capitalism. On the
basis of a ghastly account of his investments in 1998, Soros analyzes the
lessons to be learned from this economic crisis.
16. Some security experts in
the U.S. have suggested to the government that it lay up large stores of
antidotes, in order to guard against a surprise chemical attack by a terrorist
organization.
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