Soldiers from the Bedouins Reconnaissance Battalion
trained in southern Israel
IN THE wake of the Orlando and Istanbul attacks, President Obama reiterated his
determination to “destroy” ISIS by executing a strategy that combines air
strikes, American special-operations units and support for local ground forces.
Both of the candidates campaigning to succeed him insist that the United States
must do more: Donald Trump advocates that Washington “bomb the hell out of” the
group, while Hillary Clinton promises to “smash the would-be caliphate.” All
three, however, are in violent agreement on one point: the overriding objective
must be to destroy ISIS.
The insistence on the
“destruction” of ISIS has become such a reflexive linchpin of America’s
counterterrorism project that few pause to consider its strategic merit. But
the nation with arguably the most experience and success combatting terrorism has
considered it—and found it wanting.
Israelis live much closer to ISIS than do Americans. ISIS has pledged to
conquer the Jewish state and incorporate it into its core caliphate. Yet
surprisingly, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) has rejected the option of taking
the fight directly to ISIS. Instead, faced with an operational threat that
could mean the death of hundreds of Israelis at any moment, it has embraced a
strategy that has not even been on the U.S. policy menu. Adopting a page from
the playbook the United States used to defeat revolutionary Soviet-led
communism in the Cold War, Israel is preventing ISIS attacks through a strategy
of patient, vigilant deterrence. Obviously, the United States cannot simply
adopt the Israeli approach whole cloth. It operates in a different security
environment than the Jewish state, which faces a multiplicity of terrorist
threats on its borders. But there are important lessons that America can learn
to enhance its national security.
Israel’s approach to ISIS is
straightforward. Israel seeks to persuade ISIS not to attack it by credibly
threatening to retaliate. If you attack us, the thinking goes, we will respond
in ways that will impose pain that exceeds any gain you can hope to achieve. As
Cold War strategists learned, making this work in practice is demanding. To be
effective, deterrence requires three Cs: clarity, capability and credibility.
Specifically, this means clarity about the red line that cannot be crossed,
communicated in language the adversary understands; capability to impose costs
that greatly exceed the benefits; and credibility about the willingness to do
so. Failures occur when the deterrer falls short on any one of the three Cs.
So, if I draw a red line, you cross it, and I respond with words rather than
the decisive punishment threatened, I fail the third C. Whatever excuse I give
for not executing my threat, and however earnest my claim that next time will
be different, the blunt fact is that adversaries will find my threats less
credible.
If that were not enough, as
the great nuclear strategist Thomas Schelling taught us, successful deterrence
requires more than just a threat. The flip side of the deterrence coin is an
equivalent promise: if you refrain from the prohibited action, I will withhold
the threatened punishment. If, for whatever reason, I decide to administer the
specified punishment even though you have complied with my demands, I spend
that coin—and can no longer use that threat to deter you. As the saying goes,
if you’re damned if you do and damned if you don’t—you might as well do.
The suggestion that terrorists
as vicious as ISIS could be deterred is routinely dismissed by most members of
the U.S. policy community as silly or dangerously naïve. Some assert that
terrorists just want to kill. Others argue that they are irrational and that,
when facing adversaries who are prepared to die for their cause, threatening to
kill them will have no effect. American strategists have also been traumatized
by Al Qaeda’s attack on the World Trade Center and Pentagon. Imagine a
responsible government knew that it was facing hostile terrorists who had the
capability to conduct an attack that could kill hundreds. If it chose to
counter that threat by attempting to deter, rather than preemptively attack,
the adversary, how would that government justify itself to its citizens in the
aftermath of another Paris-scale assault?
ISRAELI STRATEGISTS ask all of
these questions—and struggle with uncomfortable solutions. They have concluded
that, however imperfect, deterrence is the best option. Indeed, the IDF
believes that it is successfully deterring adversaries along all azimuths:
states (Iran, Lebanon and Syria), substates (Hezbollah and Hamas) and even
terrorist organizations (ISIS, Palestinian Islamic Jihad and Al Qaeda–linked
groups). Israeli strategists reject the consensus view in Washington that ISIS
is an ominous threat to “the entire civilized world.” In contrast to President
Obama’s argument that ISIS should be the “top priority” for the IDF, it is just
one more terrorist group—one that does not even make the top half of Israel’s
threat matrix. As former chief of military intelligence Amos Yadlin
provocatively put it, “At the end of the day, we are talking about several
thousand unrestrained terrorists riding pickup trucks and firing with
Kalashnikovs and machine guns.”
The American
counterterrorism debate has largely ignored Israeli calculus. Washington is
generally averse to learning from others, and Israel’s security establishment,
until recently, was reticent about revealing its thinking. That changed last
August when, for the first time in the IDF’s history, Chief of General Staff
Lt. Gen. Gadi Eizenkot published an unclassified version of the IDF defense doctrine.
But because the document appeared only in Hebrew, it has remained largely
unknown in the American strategic community. To make it accessible, Harvard
Kennedy School’s Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs recently
posted an
English translation of the document.
The “IDF Strategy” document
discusses in detail how to deter terrorist groups, specifically Hezbollah and
Hamas. In the U.S. policy lexicon, Hezbollah and Hamas are labeled
“terrorists.” The IDF calls them “substate organizations.” Substate actors have
headquarters, hold territory and govern populations. Thus they present targets
of value, making them vulnerable, like states, to a combination of “general
deterrence” and “specific deterrence.” General deterrence is achieved by
maintaining overwhelming military superiority and earning a reputation like
that of the Godfather. The Godfather “takes everything personal.” As his
consigliere observed, “If a bolt of lightning hit a friend of his the old man
would take it personal. . . . Accidents don’t happen to people who take
accidents as a personal insult.” In Eizenkot’s words, Israel must be seen as
“an unpredictable enemy that can react in a very severe way.”
Specific deterrence is tailored to each enemy and focuses on particular
actions. It requires “an ongoing analysis of the enemy’s characteristics,
considerations, capabilities, identity, and decision making processes.” Israel
seeks to influence the “calculations” of its enemies directly by persuading
them of “the futility of continuing to fight” and reminding them of the
“outcome of previous confrontations.”
The IDF constantly worries
about whether its deterrent is sufficiently strong. It works daily to ensure
that it meets each and every condition required for success. Red lines are
clearly, publicly and repeatedly announced by top Israeli officials not only in
Hebrew, but also in Arabic. Israel’s capability to enforce these red lines is
demonstrated by “building a force that is partially visible to the enemy.”
Credibility is enhanced by taking “limited offensive actions to signal that the
‘rules of the game’ have been broken.” And it is careful to withhold punishment
otherwise. (Indeed, Israeli policymakers have occasionally chosen not only to
avoid punishment but to reward good behavior, for example, in supporting the
reconstruction of Gaza even though Hamas uses some of the material Israel
supplies to build tunnels and rockets.)
Israel sees Hezbollah as the
“most severe threat.” A proxy of Iran, it has assembled an arsenal of more than
one hundred thousand missiles and rockets aimed at Israel—many of them
precision-guided with the ability to hit strategic targets, including the
equivalent of the Pentagon in Tel Aviv. Hamas, whose charter pledges to “raise
the banner of Allah over every inch of Palestine” occupied by “warmongering
Jews,” stands second among substates whose attacks must be deterred. It has
fought three wars against Israel in the past decade. During the Second
Intifada, Hamas perfected the suicide bomb and used it to kill hundreds of
Israeli civilians. Today, the group has thousands of rockets and is burrowing
tunnels into Israeli territory for future attacks. (Israel has discovered a
number of tunnels in recent months, each buried one hundred feet underground.)
How does the IDF meet threats
posed by these groups? Not by direct attacks to degrade them; not by all-out
war to destroy them. Instead, it attempts to deter them. As Yadlin explained,
“Vis-a-vis Hamas and
Hezbollah, we haven’t destroyed their capabilities, but we were able to
establish deterrence. And this is basically because we hit them hard, and
because the terrorists became . . . half-state entities. . . . The terrorists
have discovered that when they are responsible for their economy, for
education, for the life of their people, suddenly they are not that daring to
use terror all day.”
Of course, deterrence is not
the only strand in Israel’s strategy to counter its enemies. Full-spectrum
prevention of terrorist attacks includes detection (deep penetration to
identify threats), defense (such as the Iron Dome missile-defense system and
secure walls or fences on all borders) and decisive defeat (when, despite best
efforts, attackers succeed). While many states, including the United States,
invest heavily in similar efforts, Israel is unique in its placing deterrence
at the core of its counterterrorism strategy.
The IDF accepts the fact that
this strategy sometimes fails. When it does, Israeli citizens die. But Israel’s
national-security community still considers deterrence better than any feasible
alternative for meeting threats posed by its substate adversaries. And after
each conflict, the IDF has redoubled efforts to establish a new level of
deterrence.
Israeli security professionals
readily admit that they cannot successfully deter all terrorists. In
particular, lone wolves who conduct terrorist attacks with little preparation
remain a persistent, unsolved problem. Only days before the Orlando attack,
Israel experienced its own lone-wolf attack in which two Palestinian cousins
using homemade guns killed four civilians at an upscale shopping mall in Tel
Aviv. Israel’s security establishment has tried to deter future lone-wolf terrorists
by demolishing the attackers’ homes and taking other punitive actions against
their families and communities. Nonetheless, Eizenkot noted recently, “I have
to stress the fact that there is virtually no way to stop every terrorist
planning a stabbing attack.”
TO MEET the threat of ISIS today, the IDF is following essentially the same
script. Officials have been reticent about discussing details of the strategy
in public, but its outlines are clear in the IDF doctrine, and senior Israeli
military officials confirmed this reading of the strategy in recent
off-the-record meetings.
In stark contrast with the
United States, Israel sees ISIS as just one more armed group fighting in Syria
alongside Al Qaeda and other terrorist affiliates. For each of these adversaries,
as well as for state actors including Iran and Assad, Israel has conveyed three
“red lines”: no attacks on Israel; no transfer of advanced conventional weapons
(namely precision-guided missiles and rockets) to terrorist groups that
threaten Israel; and no transfer of chemical weapons to terrorist groups. The
“dozens” of Israeli airstrikes in Syria that Prime Minister Netanyahu recently
acknowledged are calculated components of a strategy that reminds all
adversaries of the cost of even minor violations of its rules. It was no
accident that Israel reportedly killed a prominent Iranian general last year on
the Syrian Golan Heights as he surveilled the Israeli border, planning strikes
on Israel. Nor was it coincidental that Israel reportedly killed Hezbollah
operations officer Samir
Kuntar in December—after Israel discovered him plotting attacks on
Israelis.
On its immediate border,
Israel faces two ISIS affiliates: Wilayat
Sinai (Sinai Province) on the Egyptian peninsula, and the Yarmouk Martyrs
Brigade on the Syrian side of the Golan Heights. While both are small,
their proximity and firepower concern Israeli military leaders. Despite their
capability to attack at a moment’s notice, both have exercised restraint. Since
declaring allegiance to ISIS in November 2014, Wilayat Sinai
has focused primarily on fighting the Egyptian security forces, not Israel. Its
most noteworthy success was the downing of a Russian airliner in the Sinai in
October 2015, which did not kill or injure any Israelis. On the Golan, the
Yarmouk Brigade controls a ten-square-kilometer area where some forty thousand
civilians live. Despite the fact that the group stands, as one Israeli
newspaper put it, “several hundred meters away from reaching Israeli school
buses,” it has not conducted a single attack against Israel.
Israeli strategists emphasize
relevant similarities between ISIS, Hamas and Hezbollah: each controls
territory, attempts to govern a population and, therefore, has something to
lose. Even though ISIS propaganda recently declared
in flawless Hebrew that “soon there will not be one Jew left in Jerusalem,” the
groups have largely refrained from attacking Israel. The reason, according to
Eizenkot’s predecessor, Benny Gantz, is that “they would lose,” and in doing so
risk their population and assets. ISIS leaders appear to have heard this
message. As a German journalist who was embedded with ISIS in 2014 explained,
“The only country ISIS fears is Israel. They told me they know the Israeli army
is too strong for them.”
Could the United States deter
ISIS? At least one of President Obama’s speechwriters thought so. At the
National Counterterrorism Center in December, the president directed his
remarks to ISIS leaders: “We’re sending a message: If you target Americans, you
will have no safe haven.” If I were teaching Strategy 101 next semester, this
statement would lead my weekly quiz. The assignment would simply reproduce the
quote and say: “Assess.” Any student unable to explain why the president’s
threat fails to satisfy the elementary requirements for successful deterrence
would not receive a passing grade.
Obama made this threat just
days after ISIS’s attack in Paris, which killed 130 people. His objective was
to dissuade ISIS leaders from ordering a similar attack on the United States.
If you attack us, the president warned, America will respond by attacking you.
Students of deterrence would remind Obama that he is already conducting a
campaign of air strikes and special-operations raids that he says aims to kill
ISIS’s leaders and destroy the organization—before they attack the
homeland. Moreover, he has argued at length why, he believes, the current
campaign includes everything the United States can productively do to
destroy ISIS. Thus, his attempt to deter ISIS by threatening more rings hollow.
A few months
from now, a newly elected president will be thinking about how he—or she—will
deal with ISIS. One can be sure that the president-elect will ask her/his
national-security team to conduct a fundamental reassessment of the war against
ISIS, Al Qaeda and the dozen related strains of Islamic jihadi terrorism. A
serious review would begin with recognition of a brute fact: a decade and a
half beyond the 9/11 attacks and President Bush’s declaration of a “War on
Terrorism,” the United States undoubtedly faces more terrorists determined to
do harm than when this effort began.
In anticipation of that
review, the analytic community should be studying Israel’s playbook now. The
United States is not Israel. Deterrence is not the only strand in Israel’s
defense strategy. Not every strategy that works for Israel is appropriate for
America. At this point in the fight against ISIS, it is hard to imagine a path
back to a posture of containment and deterrence. But as America confronts the
next ISIS, or indeed, the next dozen strains or mutations of this cancer, the
United States is unlikely to have the resources and will to send even American
drones and special-operations forces to every ungoverned space or valley ruled
by a hostile terrorist group. Standing as they do on the front line confronting
deadly threats 24/7, Israel offers what Eizenkot has called a “laboratory” of
security. It is not too late to begin a debate about how lessons learned by
Israel’s security community can enrich America’s conceptual arsenal for
countering terrorism in what promises to be a very long war.
Graham T. Allison is director of the Harvard Kennedy School’s Belfer Center for
Science and International Affairs and a former assistant secretary of defense
for policy and plans. He is the author of the forthcoming book, Destined for War: America, China, and Thucydides’s Trap.
Image:
“Soldiers from the Bedouins Reconnaissance Battalion trained in southern
Israel.” IDF photo, CC BY-NC 2.0.
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