From COIN to chaos

By Katherine Tiedemann Share

By David P. Fidler

The White House, Congress, the military, and the State Department are gripped with the question of what strategy to pursue in Afghanistan. The confusion emanating from the policy debates is pervasive. After committing to a counterinsurgency (COIN) strategy in the spring, complete with a military surge and a "civilian uplift" to increase civilian capabilities, the Obama administration is showing signs of moving towards a strategy that is something less than a full COIN strategy and something more than a pure counterterrorism approach. What this strategy might entail is not yet clear, but what is clear is the danger for such an approach to collapse under the weight of political expedience piled on incoherent strategy and doctrine.

The fissure through which the confusion is now pouring is the Obama administration's spring commitment to a COIN strategy to reduce the threat posed by al Qaeda in Afghanistan and Pakistan. In other words, a COIN approach was selected to achieve a counterterrorism objective. The assumption bridging this divide was that defeating al Qaeda required defeating the Taliban, which required a COIN effort. That assumption apparently no longer holds, which exposes a dangerous moment for U.S. policy.

Under COIN doctrine, counterinsurgents must include, and coordinate application of, all elements of national power. There are no "half measures" in COIN, which is why President Obama addressed the "under-resourced" mission in Afghanistan by sending more military forces to improve security and an influx of civilian personnel to engage in stability operations, all coordinated under a new commander, Gen. McChrystal, known for his grasp of both COIN and counterterrorism. Gen. McChrystal's grim assessment of the campaign in Afghanistan and what is needed to turn it around are consistent with the principles of fighting COIN effectively.

But the torrent of bad news from Afghanistan, from the increasing insecurity, growing American and allied casualties, Taliban gains, and a legitimacy-wrecking election, have caused doubts about the COIN strategy to swell, and skeptics are urging adoption of a something more like a counterterrorism strategy. Unlike COIN, the U.S. government does not have "doctrine" on counterterrorism. Those favoring a counterterrorism-oriented strategy emphasize that it would require fewer combat forces, more operations by special forces, and use of high-tech weapons, such as missiles fired from drones. But these ideas represent means and tactics and do not amount to strategy or doctrine.

More dangerously, a shift in the direction of counterterrorism would undermine military and civilian efforts underway to secure the population, improve governance and the rule of law, rebuild public services, and empower Afghans to govern themselves. All these efforts have been grounded in COIN doctrine, especially the over-riding objective of achieving governance legitimacy. Re-orienting policy towards a counterterrorism-centric approach would mean the U.S. is not actually concerned about the Taliban ruling huge swaths of Afghanistan, which destroys prior and present claims that the U.S. has sacrificed blood and treasure to create something better than the return of Taliban rule.

In particular, a shift towards counterterrorism erodes the rationale for the "civilian uplift" that is deploying civilians to improve governance, the rule of law, economic development, agricultural production, education, women's rights, and the daily lives of Afghans. A counterterrorism-oriented approach supports neither extensive stability operations nor vigorous nation-building efforts, as the skeptics of the COIN strategy in Afghanistan have made clear. A shift away from a COIN strategy would undercut the rationale for the on-going training and deployment of hundreds of new civilian personnel for stability operations in Afghanistan.

Ironically, the U.S. adopted a COIN strategy in Iraq because the counterterrorism approach failed. Indeed, Afghanistan is not Iraq, and Iraq was not Vietnam. But the "less than COIN, more than counterterrorism" messages being sent by President Obama threaten to leave the U.S. with no clarity of strategy, doctrine, tactics, and objectives, which -- as we know from Vietnam, Iraq, and the "global war on terror" -- creates great peril for the U.S., its allies, and those at the mercy of our political machinations.

David P. Fidler teaches law at Indiana University, is director of the Center on American and Global Security, and is co-editor of India and Counterinsurgency: Lessons Learned (2009, with Sumit Ganguly).

DAVID FURST/AFP/Getty Images

 
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DANIELET

12:10 PM ET

October 17, 2009

First we're taken by Wall Street then by McChrystal

Reading the Petraeus PhD Thesis and the McChrystal August 09 proposal, one realizes that self-promoters are not necessarily the best COIN experts. Insurgents are people making the best of what's around them to use in order to mobilize local people. Sure, Mao and Lenin and some others gave us the benefit of their experiences but that's not a cookbooks, that's just some men's experiences. Success or failure, as they admit, is not based on what they dream up as an initiative but in large part on how they survive whatever the GOV troops do. Adaptive behavior is key for an insurgent. But for the GOV the task is greater. It must set up a wall of security behind which people must be able to function normally and productively. Any pin-prick by the insurgents becomes a septic infection for the GOV. So its emphasis has to be on prevention. That immediately distinguishes the insurgent, who initiates action and from then on must behave tactically to avoid
destruction, from the GOV that must work at a strategic level to prevent insurgency effectiveness. One would do better studying one's own immune system deals with infection than the new military COIN manual. Petraeus and McChrystal, if you read their works are declarative not analytical. They order reality rather than study it. They present a bunch of tactics to respond to assumed enemy tactics, thus inviting tactical change by insurgents to scale a rigid GOV wall. To this the generals offer only surges of more of the same when you really get down to it. The GOV must have a strategy for neutralizing the insurgents. But too often the GOV has got mutually antagonist elements in it, including insurgents. In Afghanistan ALL SIDES are in the GOV, including the insurgents! So far I have seen nothing strategic coming from the Pentagon, just a lot of counter-tactics based on past tactics of the other side. And, in the end, they always call for more troops
because their previous counter-tactics didn't work so the answer is always more kill-power. MORE IS NOT BETTER. Foreign forces always create immune reactions locally and systemically in any nation where sent. How Petraeus got his surge in Iraq and how McChrystal might get his in Afghanistan are infuriating tales of political pressure on a helpless President from generals and their propaganda teams at home (bordering on the illegal). It is not an army that goes to war but a nation. This nation doesn't want to go to Afghanistan anymore so McChrystal better level with the people who will have not bear the burden as the Pentagon did during the Vietnam War: WITH TEACH-INS and with meaningful dialogue, not propaganda monologue as he did on 60 MINUTES (how smart was the CBC correspondent questioning him is shown by the fact that he wore body armor but no helmet). The generals are betting that the nation wants much more not to lose than to stop wasting life and
treasure. So they present their proposals as ANTI-DEFEAT MEASURES rather than means to victory. Nothing could be further from the truth. We might come much closer to wining by getting out than sending in more troops. But this is not discussed because our mediocre generals control the discussion with their think-tank propagandists. This so called War on Terror is what will make the USA a totalitarian country. First we give Wall Street lots of money, then we give lots more to the Pentagon, both let do as they please by a Congress bought and sold. But what backs up those dollars: THE SOVEREIGNTY WE SURRENDER TO CHINA IN EXCHANGE FOR BACKING OUR CURRENCY. Soon we will wake up reversing our notions of who won the Cold War because our strategy dumb and tactical "more is better" generals got their way. China is still carrying war by other means against us shooting dollars from the barrel of its gun.

 
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