“The war termination problems that the United States encountered during the major post-9/11 interventions may not be an aberration. The Vietnam conflict suffered from the same factors, albeit in subtly different ways…Examination of war termination challenges enriches these perspectives. An important difference from the Iraq and Afghanistan case studies is that a negotiated outcome—in the form of North Vietnamese capitulation—was discussed from 1964 to 1966 during deliberations over whether to escalate the Vietnam War,” Christopher D. Kolenda writes in his new book, Zero-Sum Victory: What We’re Getting Wrong About War. The title is simple enough, encapsulating Kolenda’s wide-ranging yet refreshingly succinct meditation on the nature of modern warfare. It’s clear where he sits on the position he’s covering topically. And Kolenda makes no apologies about being biased, rather in place of said apolog(ies) providing extensive examples, point-by-point breakdowns, and sometimes out-and-out damning statistical data models. As far as Kolenda is concerned, we both haven’t learned from and should be extensively studying our history with a contemporary lens. "America’s bureaucratic way of war encourage(s) military officials to stay in their bureaucratic lane and focus on military progress and risks,” he continues in this vein. “Officials from other agencies (report) metrics from their silos. What no one question(s) (is) whether a successful military campaign could still result in strategic failure. After all, the military could not make a dent in the Taliban’s sustainability and the government legitimacy problems (during Afghanistan). No one addressed those damaging cross-cutting issues, because no person below the president was accountable for strategic success and thus forced to confront them.”
Kolenda is all about deconstructing the American exceptionalism mindset, specifically when it comes to how we have approached our foreign policy. It’s a gutsy position to take, particularly these days when divisions are running high, and certain positions are likely to shoehorn someone into a specific, political think tank regardless of the specificities of their respective position. As far as he’s concerned, Kolenda writes that with increasingly complex times come mandated, increasingly complex methods for how to deal with both ongoing and potential conflicts. Gone are the days of black being white, up being down being something that can be politically advantageous when it comes to the initiation of modern warfare. If anything, such an approach can prove disastrous. “Bureaucratic frictions, lack of vision, poor coordination, inadequate strategic empathy, and sloppy execution damaged reconciliation,” he writes, using Afghanistan as an example. “The lack of agreed conceptual frameworks for war termination inhibited clear communication and consensus-building within the US government, making the status quo harder to change…Individual actions in one, like the abortive opening of the Taliban political office, created setbacks in others. In the end, reconciliation further poisoned the relationship with Karzai, undermined American credibility in Afghanistan and the region, and heightened political uncertainty and instability as Afghanistan approached the 2014 elections and the end of the international combat mission.” In short, it’s about time we actually did discuss what treading carefully means - particularly in an era where a new cold war could be brimming on the horizon.