"Strategy" Not Appropriate for Social Justice Movements
Wednesday 06 October 2010
by: Ed Kinane, t r u t h o u t | Op-Ed

(Photo: Tim & Selena Middleton)
All warfare is based on deception. Hence when able to attack, we must seem unable; when using our forces, we must seem inactive; when we are near, we must make the enemy believe that we are away; when far away, we must make him believe we are near. Hold out baits to entice the enemy. Feign disorder, and crush him.
-Sun Szu, "The Art of War"
With deft brushstrokes Sun Szu, writing 500 years before Christ, distills the essence of strategy. His words appear on the first page of military historian B.H. Liddell Hart's own summing up, "Strategy" (2nd edition, 1967). Both Sun Szu and Liddell Hart are required reading at West Point.
Confucius, Sun Szu's contemporary, taught that to reform society we must reform our thinking - and to do so, we must reform our language. Therefore, Confucius taught, we need to call things by their real name.
Activists sometimes chide each other for not "thinking strategically" - by which I suppose we mean we're not planning for three or five years down the pike. Or, often, "strategy" is an inflated way of referring to tactics - a more modest concept having to do with the near future and with limited goals.
Within the movement, "strategy" enjoys a kind of cachet, a kind of borrowed glory. But I'm skeptical of its value or relevance. Let me explain.
The word comes from the Greek, strategos, the leader of an army. My American Heritage dictionary defines "strategy" as "the science or art of military command as applied to the overall planning and conduct of large-scale combat operations" [italics added].
While one can consult other dictionaries and find other, vaguer, definitions of "strategy," they all derive from the military. "Strategy" is standard corporate jargon; it's even become standard jargon in our movement. Often, losing sight of what the word essentially means and where it comes from, we use "strategy" as a synonym for such useful things as planning, goal-setting, coordinating and coalition building.
These activities are themselves perfectly valid. But why not call them what they are? They don't need to be prinked up as "strategy." In these notes, I argue against such unmindful usage.
Let's be wary when we find ourselves parroting military or business jargon. Let's be wary when such terminology infiltrates our language. After all, language is not without its influence on thought … and action. The language of war and greed can hardly foster cooperation and social justice.
Let's review that dictionary definition. No need here, I hope, to say anything more about military or combat. So let's consider command. Command calls for hierarchy, for centralized and top-down directives, for concentrating power. Is that really how we want our movement to operate?
Further, strategy is large-scale. Most grassroots activism is anything but large-scale. Given the sheer size of the Pentagon and the imperium, we might wish we were operating on a larger scale, but we aren't.
Let's not forget the drawbacks of large-scale: depersonalization, lack of accountability and lack of respect for sentient life. Small is beautiful, big is problematic.
Am I arguing against mass movements? Hell no. But I question whether such motors of history emerge through "strategy."
Yet another element in the definition is overall planning. Overall planning (in contrast to mere planning) assumes that the planners have a grip on what's coming next. In this fast moving, complex world, even Pentagon strategists - with the most spies, the world's biggest computers, and the best-funded think tanks - tend to be clueless about the future. The Pentagon certainly wasn't able to predict what the US military was in for when it invaded such "weak" nations as Iraq … or Afghanistan … or Viet Nam.
For all its glamour, strategy - at least the US version - has a dismal track record. It's a failed tool. For better or worse, much of the Pentagon's strategic thinking involves deploying overwhelming force and throwing vast amounts of taxpayer money at preparing for every contingency. But that is a luxury few others, especially oppositional movements, can afford.
Strategy requires having some control over one's field of operation. Activists don't set the conditions, we respond to the conditions. And those conditions keep changing. Our work happens, not where we "call the shots," but - so to speak - where we are being shot at.
Such work is mostly reactive, a response to the onslaughts and injustices of those far more powerful than ourselves. Sometimes we're not reactive - for example, when we build alternative institutions or communities. But this proactive work calls for marrying values with planning. It's not "strategy."
Strategy requires resources. In its archetypal sense, it now demands immense resources. The Pentagon employs millions and spends billions, hundreds of billions. Our groups, by contrast, are understaffed; our few staff work overtime to generate their own salaries and rent. Although some of us bandy the word about, being "strategic" may well be a mode of operation beyond our wildest dreams.
And strategy should be beyond our wildest dreams. We have no business being strategic. There may even be something intrinsically co-opting about being in a position to strategize. Consider the Democratic Party. Once believed by some to be the party of the people, it's big enough and rich enough and corrupt enough to be … strategic.
Strategy, it seems, seeks wealth and power.
Dorothy Day contrasted faithfulness and effectiveness. We can argue over which should get priority, or about what the ratio between them should be. About this, seasoned activists can properly differ.
Those of us committed to nonviolence, however, while valuing effectiveness, are likely to favor faithfulness. If we are true to ourselves and to each other, effectiveness will emerge organically.
As Gandhi taught, nonviolence requires that means be consistent with ends. Strategy, insofar as it relies on hierarchy and force, is a stranger to consistent means and ends - at least when those ends are clothed, as they tend to be, in strategic deception (Bush's "bringing democracy to the Middle East," etcetera).
So, let us not hanker for the tinsel fruit of strategy. Let us focus on democratic process and developing our consciousness and our humane values. Let us avoid Gandhi's seven social sins. Let us reduce our own addictions, distractions and co-optations. And in doing so, let us develop an ever-deepening empathy, an ever-broadening solidarity.
And if we can't yet see the light at the end of the tunnel, still let us keep the flame of faithfulness burning bright.

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Comments
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I could not disagree more.
Sat, 11/06/2010 - 13:36 — Shelley Gordon (not verified)I could not disagree more.
That is itself a
Sat, 11/06/2010 - 14:29 — tangenjill (not verified)That is itself a strategy...not giving up. C'mon people...
And I could not agree more
Sat, 11/06/2010 - 14:31 — Rhonda Sussman (not verified)And I could not agree more with Shelley!
I also could not disagree
Sat, 11/06/2010 - 14:35 — Dan DiMaggio (not verified)I also could not disagree more. This is the complete opposite of what is necessary now and in social movements in general. Ask any activists in victorious movements whether they had a "strategy" and the answer is usually yes. I really hope someone writes a response to this and Truthout publishes it.
I love you dude, but I stand
Sat, 11/06/2010 - 14:39 — No more bread and circuses (not verified)I love you dude, but I stand with Shelley.
Hundreds of thousands of war dead, while our children play games on computers to get ready to kill more.
We all have limited time. We need to work together, and we need to make our time count.
We need to plan.
No, no, the author makes
Sat, 11/06/2010 - 14:43 — Dixie Demolition (not verified)No, no, the author makes great sense. In the context of politics, one party or stooge will frequently cave for the sake of convenience, then claim that it's good strategy for that big legislative victory that's forever just ahead. The forclosure crisis, still raging for years, exemplifies how well the current administration of deceit played around with cramdown, only to smother it to death, all part of their strategy to hide their sellout complicity. I believe the point is you don't strategize for the sake of good.
The author misunderstands
Sat, 11/06/2010 - 14:51 — OG (not verified)The author misunderstands what the point was of wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. They are supposed to be never-ending. They were planned this way. It was very strategic.
The world does not look the way it does due to an organic process, though it was indeed a plan hatched by a relatively small number of bankers. A small number thinking strategically.
Of course, protesters married to a vision of nonviolence and salt marches are going to disdain strategy. Thought about strategically, it becomes quite obvious that protesting on the street corner or at Pennsylvania avenue, has absolutely no effect on changing the course we were set upon by the aforementioned bankers, Nor does voting, giving money to political campaigns, or writing letters to politicians.
Critical thinking and strategic thinking are redundant terms. They are just other ways of referring to thought, to thinking.
This is a wonderful
Sat, 11/06/2010 - 15:02 — Apolitico (not verified)This is a wonderful exposition of a serious concern. I agree wholeheartedly with Ed Kinane with a caveat. My belief in non-violence was born within a context where there were rules, both of the game and of "engagement". However, Ghandi could lie down in front of a train because there was a "gentleman's understanding" of the rules of the game. There was a sense of balance and fairness before the forces of capital refined their objectives and methods. Today, co-optation is a word that avoids the lexicon. Today, the forces in power would just as soon obliterate the opposition as try and co-opt those counter forces. The "playing field" is not level and the rules now read, "first, there are no rules and secondly, forget rule number one." "Stiff upper lipped" Britishers have been replaced with Americans who can't read and wouldn't know Ghandi from Blondie. Strategy is an errant concept indeed because the resource differential is so great. But make no mistake, you are in a war!
The reason why strategy and
Sat, 11/06/2010 - 15:16 — RanDomino (not verified)The reason why strategy and 'command' aren't antithetical to large-scale social/environmental justice movements is because of the decentralized nature of these movements. Like an ant colony that carries out complex tasks without central organization, our movements are composed of thousands and thousands of small collectives, usually not more than a few dozen people; but the aggregate effect is huge, and the 'swarm' operational-level strategy works well with that organizational model. It's true that ends and means should be close to the same; that's why this organizational model is prefigurative to a world where coordinating but autonomous voluntary collectives are the *main* form of organization.
Overall, this article sounded pathetic and defeatist, and that's a shame.
OG has it right.
Sat, 11/06/2010 - 15:19 — Anonymous (not verified)OG has it right.
This is a load of airy fairy
Sat, 11/06/2010 - 16:31 — Anonymous (not verified)This is a load of airy fairy bullshit guaranteed to have no effect on the economic and political situation.
Of course, that's the intention.
More than anything, the
Sat, 11/06/2010 - 20:47 — Peter G Cohen (not verified)More than anything, the peace-progressive movement needs to do far more organizing. Numbers count! By Organizing I mean, fist of all, letting people know what we are for in speech, meetings, circulars. We need people to join local groups (like Peace Clubs) and continue to reach out to get members and to make it FUN TO PARTICIPATE! Our poor, stuck nation needs the people's voice, sans tea, to be loud enough to influence elections. This election showed that incumbents are not vulnerable. Elections are one of many tools we must use to work for peace, employment, fair mortgages, and to preserve our fragmented communities. #
This article is unparalleled
Sun, 11/07/2010 - 10:36 — Anonymous (not verified)This article is unparalleled in its arrogance, its ignorance, and its foolishness. In the real world we've murdered hundreds of thousands and spent a trillion on horrific wars while this clown was looking for his American Heritage Dictionary?
"The violence inherent in
Sun, 11/07/2010 - 13:20 — Scott ffolliott (not verified)"The violence inherent in the system is something that you and I cannot undo without systemic change, but we can undo and reduce the violence in our lives. It is the means that is important and the time we have to do the impossible is not that long. So in looking at the problems that befall almost all of us is the need to feel less alienated from our surroundings, that we have for ourselves and our neighbors a place to live, that we will not be forced from if our economic situation changes, that we have enough to eat and that we need not eat alone, that our health is maintained though the common support of one and all, that we educated and train one another to broaden our lives and especially our imaginations. Finally, we need a place to go with our friends and neighbors where we can use our imaginations to work on the impossible projects and begin reducing and undoing the violence that surrounds us."
from Renounce War
With no disrespect intended,
Mon, 11/08/2010 - 00:24 — Cynthia Boaz (not verified)With no disrespect intended, I think this author's argument is dangerously erroneous. I know he comes from a background of nonviolence, and I honor that. However, my fear is that he's been swept into the conspiracy theories about the role of US agencies in various nonviolent uprisings around the world. Theories that make the same case this author does- that where there is obvious strategy, the United States must be commandeering the movement. This seems to be characteristic of the reflexive viewpoint that strategy is mutually exclusive of principle. That notion represents a misunderstanding of the dynamics of nonviolent action and is fundamentally threatning to our collective endeavor as progressives and advocates of social justice. And it's one thing to argue that strategy should not eclipse principle- it's another to argue against it entirely. Gandhi and MLK were both highly sophisticated strategists. With nonviolent action, there can be no victory without planning, training, organization, and discipline.
Another thing we need is
Mon, 11/08/2010 - 14:19 — Anonymous (not verified)Another thing we need is education.
This author, bound up in rhetoric and self-righteousness, doesn't seem to realize that without strategy, organizations--whether they promote peace or build bombs--fail. I'd trust him to carry a banner or write a vacuous article, but not to lead.
Strategy is far more than
Mon, 11/08/2010 - 15:18 — FreeDem (not verified)Strategy is far more than faking out the opposition. Building a fact based framing that folk will know where the other side has been using long term strategy to subvert and fake out your own troops and allies, needs at the least to be a program that is quite separate from the daily push and shove of ordinary politics.
Key to this is the support and advance of values that mark a socialized society, and contrasting them with the values of antisocialists and the unsocialized.
The long term planning and development of those concepts along with a re-rebranding of the very concept of Socialism is not the work of a week, or single project, and if that is not strategy then the world has no meaning.