Concern about war on multiple fronts is already a reality
By: Rachel Marsden
PARIS -- America's military could potentially lose a war against either China 
or Russia, according to a report from the National Defense Strategy Commission, 
a panel of national-security experts selected by Congress. The report says the 
U.S. is "particularly at risk of being overwhelmed should its military be forced 
to fight on two or more fronts simultaneously." 
But the reality is that America is already fighting wars on multiple fronts. 
They're just not the kind of wars you see in Hollywood films. 
Since the panel responsible for the report includes generals, admirals and 
former members of the CIA brass, it's puzzling why they insist on viewing modern 
warfare through the lens of conventional, second-generation warfare. When was 
the last time America squared off against a foe in traditional battlefield 
combat? Such a scenario is unlikely to happen even on one front, let alone two 
or more simultaneously, as the report suggests. 
Instead, warfare is increasingly being conducted covertly and by proxy. In this 
sense, America is already engaged on multiple fronts, but it's relying on 
questionable allies to represent its interests. Those interests aren't limited 
to just the end result of any military action -- that is, the eventual 
"nation-building" contracts that might ensue. They also include benefits to the 
military-industrial complex via weapons sales. 
The potential blowback from such arrangements can be highly embarrassing -- as 
was the case when the CIA recently concluded that Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed 
bin Salman ordered the killing of Washington Post columnist Jamal Khashoggi, who 
died a violent death inside the Saudi consulate in Istanbul. President Donald 
Trump spilled the inconvenient truth of U.S. foreign policy in remarks to 
reporters. 
"We also have a great ally in Saudi Arabia," Trump said. "They give us a lot of 
jobs. They give us a lot of business, a lot of economic development. They have 
been a truly spectacular ally in terms of jobs and economic development. And I 
also take that -- you know, I'm president; I have to take a lot of things into 
consideration." 
That's not all Trump has to take into consideration. The U.S. relies on Saudi 
Arabia and the United Arab Emirates to do a lot of the dirty work in the Middle 
East. That included the recent sponsorship of the so-called Syrian "rebels" in 
the failed attempt to oust Syrian President Bashar al-Assad , a staunch Russian 
and Iranian ally. In essence, the U.S. was already at war with Russia and Iran.
Likewise, the Saudis and Emiratis are fighting Iranian proxies in Yemen using 
the American hardware they've purchased. According to the New York Times, U.S. 
Army commandos were also engaged alongside the Saudis and Emiratis in these 
operations. So America is effectively at war with Iran right now -- in Yemen.
Unbeknownst to many Americans, the U.S. is also at war in Libya, where the UAE 
is using U.S. weapons and hardware. While the fighting in Libya might have 
started as a counterterrorism or counterinsurgency operation, it has now become 
a proxy war against Russia. There was a tug of war between America and Russia 
over Libya's rebel army commander, Khalifa Haftar, a longtime CIA asset who 
figured prominently in the CIA-supported uprising that led to the assassination 
of Libyan strongman Muammar Gaddafi. Haftar, who lived in Virginia for 20 years 
after being exiled from Libya, seems to be increasingly cozying up to Russia. So 
America is already effectively at war with Russia -- in Libya. 
And how long will it be before America is also at war, via proxy, with China 
along China's proposed New Silk Road economic corridor in Africa and the Middle 
East? 
America's smaller footprint in these conflicts is a strategy to create plausible 
deniability and avoid the body-bag sensitivity and public accountability that 
comes with conventional warfare. However, in this age of technology-facilitated 
hyper-transparency, such tactics tend to get unmasked. 
If America has a weakness in its national defense strategy, it's the outsourcing 
of dirty work to Middle Eastern partners of convenience, who seem to be chosen 
primarily for their willingness to buy American weapons. 
COPYRIGHT 2018 RACHEL MARSDEN