
BY_ STEVE CLEMONS
FROM_ THE ATLANTIC
JUN 1 2012
David
Ignatius' gripping novels are quickly emerging as the spy industry's narcotic
for smart, complex intelligence yarns to read on long flights. His made-for-movies stories seem to be
a hybridized LeCarre with a twist of Michael Crichton as he reveals tectonic
fault lines between an overly self-confident, reckless America and a
fragmented, in spots radicalized, almost always misunderstood Islamic world.
His latest
novel, Bloodmoney: A Novel of Espionage, has recently appeared in paperback and
should be required reading for wannabe strategists who want a glimpse of how
messy and convulsive the future is probably going to be. America will remain a big, important
power into the foreseeable future, but a myriad of new players pushing back on
U.S. institutions and interests heighten the complexity and danger for a
declining superpower holding tightly to anachronistic global arrangements.
Ignatius,
long-time national security columnist for the Washington Post and author as
well of the novel-turned-movie Body of Lies, makes an important policy point via
fiction that 'the other guys' -- in this case, vengeance-driven Pakistanis who
have legitimate grievances against a drone-lobbing America -- will one day have
the technology and systems sophistication to to turn the West's military and
economic assets against it.
Bloodmoney
probably should have been called Blowback: The Costs and Consequences of
American Empire, but that title was already taken by the late Chalmers Johnson
who wrote a pre-9/11 treatise arguing that American hubris, its global sprawl
of US military bases, and influence-machinery around the world were going to
trigger push-back, or blowback as it were, from states no longer wanting to
play by U.S. rules in a post-Cold War World -- eventually leading to a
cataclysmic event.
One of the
cases Johnson starts with in the book was the 1993 murder of CIA employees at a
stoplight near the entrance to the Central Intelligence Agency by an aggrieved
Pakistani man, Aimal Qazi, who was upset about American policy towards
Palestinians. When the terror strikes by al Qaeda hit Washington, New York, and
rural Pennsylvania on September 11, 2001, Johnson's Blowback became the most
difficult in-print but out of stock book to get. The publisher could not keep
the fast-selling, prescient books on the shelves.
Ignatius'
novel starts out on a similar track to this real world event, opening with a US
clandestine drone wiping out an innocent family -- mother and father, siblings,
and nieces and nephews -- of an unusually smart tribal youth from South
Waziristan, Pakistan. The youth,
Omar, was the West's dream kid -- moving via educational opportunity from the
backward, tribal pool of an ignorant, terrorist-generating culture, to
modernity -- becoming a globally-aware, traveled, and in the Western sense,
rational person. (drone photo credit: Reuters)
Ignatius'
Omar is a mathematical wunderkind who not only escaped the geographic
gravitational forces of his Pashtun tribe but became an academic consulting to
the world's spy agencies who wanted to know more about the world he came
from. This fictional fabrication
again tracks closely with real life.
Like some
others from Pakistan and Afghanistan who have quietly and deeply buried their
grievances with the West -- perhaps because of religion, or the loss of loved
ones due to the military operations of the U.S. and its allies -- and bided
their time until they were in important military and intelligence operations
only to eventually explode killing their duped allies, Omar is committed to
achieving a 'calibrated revenge' against those who killed his family.
I won't
reveal more of the plot, but I want to raise a few of the themes and nods that
Ignatius weaves into this smart page-turner.
First of
all, the West may be deceiving itself that education and roads, modernity writ
large, will be a quick fix correcting ancient behavioral norms and codes
written deeply into the DNA of tribal groups -- in this case Pashtun tribes but
certainly not limited to them.
Ignatius'
protagonist killer in the book is a professor possessed by deep impulses to
avenge his family's murder. Ignatius' portrait of Omar defies easy typecasting
as he sits between primitive and turbo-charged modern worlds; interestingly,
Ignatius positions him at the end of the novel to be the one most ready to see
a way back to 'balance', or a deal that would end the killing and restore calm.
None of the
other personalities in the book -- not the head of Pakistan's ISI, or the
operatives of an off-the-books intelligence operation, or the spymasters
running the CIA -- could understand that Omar could choose to stop his
successful campaign and might strike an arrangement. Ignatius is telling us that American policymakers still
don't understand what could be achieved with the Taliban -- that it's not just
a tug of war between a Pashtun uber alles formula or obliterating them.
Secondly,
Ignatius has subtly taken sides in the novel, and surprisingly it's with the
victimized Pakistani. Omar, driven
by understandable outrage, hit above his weight and achieved an intellectual
and technical sophistication besting his adversaries. The Americans in the novel arrogantly thought it would be
impossible for anyone from relatively primitive circumstances in tribal zones
in Pakistan to develop the
capacity to challenge the U.S. and Western allies in the way Omar did. Ignatius reminds the reader that
technology and innovation are globally accessible today and that neither the US
nor any power have a monopoly on technological or economic innovation.
In other
words, Ignatius warns that weapons technology -- and complex financial
instruments and structures -- will not remain the sole preserve of the U.S. and
its allies. What we throw at them
may come back and be deployed against us.
The pattern
and link analysis that the Department of Treasury, National Security Agency,
CIA, FBI, and other parts of the intelligence industrial complex have used with
great effect to target terrorists and influence the behavior of thuggish
officials in problematic nations, like Iran, North Korea, and Syria, could
conceivably be acquired by our rivals.
While the US
is today preparing to further expand its drone force and as of late arm Italian
drones, Iran is now trying to develop its own drones. So too it seems China and Russia.
The question
that President Obama, who has admitted direct, routenized involvement in
creating the drone 'kill list', should ponder is what will happen as the
barriers to entry on drone technology fall enough so that an adversary's drones
can be deployed against U.S. and allied forces and interests.
The key
message behind David Ignatius's interesting book is that day is probably coming
sooner than most think.
PHOTO_ AP