Friday, December 16, 2011 - 12:27 PM

When the U.S. Army and Marine Corps released their FieldManual (FM) 3-24, Counterinsurgency, in2006, key military leaders and civilian advisers promised a different kind ofwarfare. Written as Iraq crumbled, the manual institutionalized key tacticaland operational methods that were geared to fighting against irregular armedfoes, rather than the maneuver warfare most of the U.S. military had preferred.The new theory was based around several key principles, including proportionateand precise use of force to minimize civilian casualties, separating insurgentgroups from local populations, protecting populations from the insurgents, theimportance of intelligence-led operations, civil-military unity of effort, andsecurity under the rule of law.
Some of these methods had already been practiced in Iraq byinnovative commanders, but Gen. David Petraeus, who oversaw the process of writingFM 3-24 and later went on to command U.S. forces in the country, was key to theirinstitutionalization and broad implementation in the context of an overalltheater-level strategy.
As President Barack Obama decided to "surge" forces intoAfghanistan in late 2009, former Joint Special Operations Command head Gen.Stanley McChrystal was tasked to follow the Petraeus playbook in Afghanistan.When he was relieved, Petraeus, the man many saw as having helped bringstability to Iraq, was called upon to do it again in Afghanistan. However,success has eluded the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF), whichhas been unableto translate operational progress into strategic success. A number oftriumphant obituaries for counterinsurgency have since emerged, as it becomesclear that the campaign in Afghanistan is failing to deliver on its promises.
There are five inter-related drivers of this cauldron ofdiscontent with COIN: First, the rise of counterinsurgency as a standardpractice in the U.S. military left skeptical American officers and institutionswho preferred emphasizing conventional capabilities (large-scale armoredwarfare, for instance) feeling disenfranchised. Second, the common narrative ofthe war in Iraq viewed (and somestill view) Gen. Petraeus as the hero who brought counterinsurgency (andsubsequently stability) to the country. This narrative alienated some officerswho had already been using some counterinsurgency methods effectively beforethe introduction of FM 3-24. Third, among the commentariat, the caustic domestic political divisions from thefirst phase of the Iraq War, divisions that were aggravated in the lead-up tothe Afghan "surge", remain unhealed. Fourth, the military officers and thinktank scholars who became most closely associated with COIN's rise developed apartially-deserved reputation for cliquishness, self-reference, and conceit.And finally, there has been a dearth of clarity on the goals of the Afghancampaign on the policy and strategy levels.
Col. Gian Gentile (who represents the first, second, andfinal strands of anti-counterinsurgency discontent) presents one of his standardarguments in "COINis Dead: U.S. Army Must Put Strategy Over Tactics." He argues the UnitedStates military has failed in Afghanistan and Iraq because it allowed afascination with the tactical and operational methods of COIN to supersedeimplementation of an actual strategy in those conflicts. In fact, looking atoperations in Iraq and Afghanistan for lessons is a fundamentally misguidedventure, he argues. Rather, we can only view our experiences of the lastdecade as lessons in failure and return to embracing our conventionalcapabilities.
Others are preoccupied with the political battles behind counterinsurgency.Michael Cohen, a vocal critic ofthe war in Afghanistan, refusesto acknowledge that counterinsurgency lessons are worth keeping andinstitutionalizing until advocates of the population-centric approach inAfghanistan "loudly acknowledge - indeed even shout to the hills - that everytime someone recommends fighting a counterinsurgency this is [a] really,really, really bad idea...." This seems akin to arguing that we cannot updateour doctrine on nuclear warfare, expeditionary warfare, and other capabilitiesthat are far more costly until we "shout to the hills" that to use these wouldbe a "really, really, really bad idea." Advocates of maintaining counterinsurgencycapabilities have been happyto acknowledgethese campaigns tendto be long, hard slogs, but Mr. Cohen's criticism does not address the military'sneed to be able to adapt to contingencies as ordered. We cannot wish away theagency of our enemies.
Still others see those who support counterinsurgency's place inthe toolbox of American power as being part of a new "military-industrialcomplex." Major Mike Few, an armor officer (like Colonel Gentile) and editor ofSmall Wars Journal, arguesthat some think tanks and defense contractors have formed a "cottage industry"that champions counterinsurgency for ego and profit at the cost of "trillionsof dollars, thousands of lives and abandoned security projects elsewhere thatcould have benefited our republic exponentially more..."
For one thing, the weaponssystems, equipment, and capabilities necessary for modern "conventional"campaigns are far more costly and more lucrative for defense contractors (the2009 defense industry-subsidized congressional debateabout the F-22 reminded the world that the original military-industrialcomplex is alive, well, and costing the U.S. taxpayer for over-budget,malfunctioning weapons systems of questionable utility). Further, the use ofconventional capabilities against a major power may well take more militarylives than those we have lost in Iraq andAfghanistan. But this aside, our abilities to conduct counterinsurgencyoperations and major combat operations are not mutually exclusive. Moreover, aspeople like Maj. Few understand, John Nagl's Centerfor a New American Security -- the unnamed bogeyman in his critique andothers -- did not decide to go to war in Iraq or Afghanistan. Nagl was merely oneof many in the U.S. Armed Forces who sought to make the campaigns of twoconsecutive Commanders-in-Chief work.
Indeed, the debate surrounding counterinsurgency has becomehighly personal, emotional, and angry. This has been most recently demonstratedby the snideand personalrejoindersto a recent articleteasing out the lessons of Iraq by Dr.David Ucko of the National Defense University. Increasingly for somecritics of counterinsurgency, their opponents are not just wrong, but immoralliars. Yet for all of the heat this debate, it has produced little substantivediscussion of the future of counterinsurgency after the wars in Iraq andAfghanistan, or more broadly the appropriate uses of limited funds andmanpower.
Before declaring the death of counterinsurgency and maligningthose who see value in some of its precepts, analysts should ask if insurgencyis dead. Indeed, the most significant failure of these anti-COIN arguments istheir shared focus on the response to a problem -- counterinsurgency tacticsand strategy -- at the expense of the problem itself. None of these articlesproclaim that "insurgency is dead" because to do so would be absurd. Insurgencylives, and has proven itself throughout history as the best means by which tooppose established political and military power. AsAndrew Exum recently observed, about 80 percent of all conflicts since theend of the Napoleonic Era have been insurgencies or civil wars. Futureinsurgencies are all-but-certain to challenge American interests to the pointthat our civilian political leadership will need to decide if our military willbecome involved in countering them. And if insurgency lives, then so must counterinsurgency.
Critics also make the mistake of particularizing a form of counterinsurgencydesigned during a specific historical period meant to counter a distinctiveform of insurgency known as popularprotracted warfare. If anything, the key failure of counterinsurgency inthe past decade has been the myopic view of the military and key counterinsurgencyproponents that counterinsurgency could only take the form advocated byscholar-practitioners like the French officer David Galula (who developed histheories in Asia before implementing them in Algeria) and the British officerSir Robert Thompson in Malaysia, who were both grappling with different, lessevolved forms of violent struggle than what we have seen in Iraq andAfghanistan. Thus, for critics to proclaim the death of counterinsurgencymakes them guilty of the same error that they often pin on their opponents: relyingon an expired intellectual framework.
The real question is: what form will American counterinsurgencytake in the future? It seems reasonable to argue that "big footprint," "population-centric"counterinsurgency is dead, but "small footprint" counterinsurgency that focuseson security force assistance, Special Operations, and/or foreign internaldefense lives on (see Yemen,the Philippines,and Somalia).But is it really inconceivable that we will ever again conduct another large-scalepopulation-centric counterinsurgency campaign? Those who think it impossible mightconsider how the United States would respond to violence spilling over theborder from catastrophic state failure and humanitarian crisis in Mexico, forinstance.
As always, our choices will be structured by the agency ofour competitors. Therefore, we would be foolish to avoid learning the tacticaland operational as well as the policyand strategic lessons of the last ten years. We must maintain our capabilities and competencies for counterinsurgency,if only because history has shown that they will come in handy again.
How we do this is what we mustdebate and discuss.
Ryan Evans is anassociate fellow at the International Centre for the Study ofRadicalisation and Political Violence and served in Helmand Province, Afghanistan as a Human Terrain TeamSocial Scientist. The views and opinions expressed here do not represent those of theDepartment of the Army, Training and Doctrine Command, or the Human TerrainSystem.
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It remains amazing to me how complete debates of Counter-Insurgency, a tactic intended to bolster and protect a seated government of any nation from insurgencies, can be fully argued by military analysts with no mention whatsoever of the state of national, provincial and local governance, or any voices or consideration from the nation itself.
Where, on either side of this debate, is the foundation strategy and objective against which the merits of COIN can be measured?
Iraq was, initially, a limited exercise in regime replacement which, without planning, resourcing and intentionality, stumbled quickly into a nation-building exercise of which COIN was a part and parcel, coming, with substantial prior baggage, to the fore as a necessary precondition for exit AFTER governance, economic, cultural and security conditions deteriorated to a hair's breadth of catastrophe.
Reading a debate on COIN (Ryan's, Ucko's, Gentile's, Exum's or Nagl's) that is wholly contained within the military community of the external nation, and devoid of genuine context to the nation for which it was applied is a meaningless exercise.
Of course, COIN is a tactic used throughout history, and one which will never die. The question is: How applicable, useful, well-applied, etc..., is/was it in Iraq, Afghanistan, etc...?
This month is the anniversary of the start of Siege of Kut (1915-1916) during and after which 4,400 British Soldiers died following the hapless British Mesopotamian Campaign.
How was the US effort in Iraq (or Afghanistan) any different than the British Colonial Campaigns, right down to the delusional myths of Lawrence and Gertrude Bell in the romantic bedouin but feeble "infidel" culture which, in the end, had little relevance to actual Arab countries which, in their urban cores, were complex cultures of inter-generationally competing and cooperating masses of peoples with their own unique histories, religions, politics, and economic positions?
My read of mid-2008, from first hand involvements across ministries and provinces, was the emergence of Iraqi confidence in its ability to govern without US gun trucks in the middle of their street---as expressed in the 2008 SOFA. As with the British Occupancy, they just wanted to the foreigners out, and would deal with the serious results on their own.
That Iraqi change, expressed through its formally executed SOFA, is why General Austin "cased the colors" on December 15, 2011.
Where and how did COIN fit into that now-historical fact?
How did COIN support or drive Iraqi confidence in self-governance, positive and negative, as it probably did?
What legacies has COIN left that will impact Iraqi futures (including the "money as a weapon," and the Lawrence-inspired tribal reinforcement attributes) for better or for worse?
How does this whole COIN effort, for example, relate to Edward Wadie Said's entire "Orientalism" critique which has, within academia, haunted the US military's and "failed state/colonialist" parties' love affair with Lawrence and the "infidels" in need of what the US can bring to them?
This debate needs much more context, breadth and depth before it can be meaningfully analyzed.
Limits and Context of COIN Operations
Steve,
Thank you for your comment and for reading the article. You may be encouraged to know I am working on an article on the specific context of Central Helmand Province and the limits of COIN operations there due to specific local political, historical, and economic circumstances.
Best,
Ryan
Ryan:
For obvious reasons, well-researched and supported articles on COIN, applied to particular places and circumstances by people who were actually there doing it, always seem to be about "the limits of COIN" and the humility earned by the author during the exercise.
I look forward to such an article.
Correct in so many ways. The problem that we had in Iraq was we were not partnered with anyone until we made the deal with the Sunni's. It got better, we routed AQ and all the other jihadists opposing stability. It will NEVER work in A-stan due to the many ethnic and tribal groups. The "country" will remain fractured, and the Talibs are not coming to any table no time no how.
I never said either ego or profit.
"Today, population-centric counterinsurgency has become a cottage industry that lines the pockets of think tanks and defense contractors who have vested financial and political interests in ensuring that these unproven theories are cemented into Army doctrine. At the same time, our country is facing massive fiscal restraints. As the COIN industry has grown, we’ve had to seriously consider handing out pink slips to many multi-tour combats troops as well as cutting back on benefits for retirees and veterans."
Sorry, Mike.
I neglected to mention your substantial critiques in my listing of COIN debaters.
I have always been more interested in your initial comments about the lack of homework, the genuine background, intelligence and research, that is lacking in support of the effort.
Without foundation, of course, the effort becomes unmeasurable---with substantial domestic budget ramifications. How do you know who, what, when, where or How Much?
The important and effective military parts I saw in Iraq were those non-Coin ones, of McCrystal's snipers, and lots and lots of patrolling, bad guy chasing, and route clearance and protection (the regular military efforts), for which a separate analysis of its contributions are warranted.
PS: I saw no rose petals on the way in or the way out. Isn't a successful COIN effort measured by the love and respect engendered with the people of the host nation? Militarily, on the other hand, the US did what it was tasked to do.
My comment was for the author. He's misquoting me here as he did in the comments section of my article at Carl Prine's Line of Departure. Speaking of ego's, the author is a former HTT guy. Doesn't the Af-Pak channel know that he might have an ax to grind?
I am neither for or against COIN. I just want us to talk openly about it and fully understand what it is and what it isn't.
Mike:
I think that is the point. COIN is a basic tactic, arguably used since Alexander's time and before, by which local populations are controlled, coerced, co-opted, pacified or protected. It is not a thing to be for or against, and will always have validity under certain circumstances.
Your separate point about the HTT folks is, to me, as interesting as the discussion about COIN.
Assuming these folks had an accurate bead on things, they should have been deeply immersed in the social/societal background and context needed to effect substantial changes at the strategic level.
What serious purpose is there in having an anthropologist peering out the muddy window of a HumVee to advise on ground-level phenomenon, but devoid of a valid bigger picture?
Despite having seen some very good work product from some HTT folks, that program, as applied, warrants its own discrete analysis (and not just within the five walls of the Pentagon.
Spot on. I'm just glad the discussion is happening again. I find it funny when people that don't know me try to corner me into one side or the other. It's also funny that the author labels me as an armor officer without knowing my full background. By the way, he never asked :).
But, what the military is going to have to figure out is if they are going to call COIN a strategy or not. A more senior officer the other day was referring to COIN as a method with it's own separate doctine, tactics, and strategy. That has implications. Better yet, and I continue to ask with no replies--- On the company and platoon level, with the exception of implementation of new technology, what exactly is "new" that was not included in the old tank platoon, infantry platoon, scout platoon, or special forces manual?
Armor?
Oh, that's right. I was a sergeant/tank commander back in the black boot days. (3/64 Armor, 3ID)
Down the street in 2/64 Armor was young LT, now LTG Mark Hertling, who I had the opportunity to work with in Northern Iraq (2007/2008, 1AD/MND-North).
Didn't seem to know or care much about COIN, but he was exactly the right combination of soldier/diplomat to make a difference. He and his staff knew a lot about Iraq on many levels from multiple deployments, including to avoid too much money as a weapon (CERP efforts), and to focus Iraqis on their own way forward.
His personal stand-off between the Peshmerga and Iraqi Army in Diyala in September 2008 is the stuff of legend.
The good thing about Armor, I guess, is learning the terrain, and how to maneuver in it without getting stuck.
Major Few,
All of my quotations of your post are correct. And my characterization of your arguments (for ego and profit) are also accurate. Quoting your LoD post:
1) "population-centric counterinsurgency has become a cottage industry that lines the pockets of think tanks and defense contractors" = For profit
2) "To flatter intellectually the theories of a few, we’ve had to sacrifice..." = For ego
If you did not intend to argue that ego or profit are driving this "cottage industry," I apologize.
I'm not sure what pro- or anti-COIN biases my HTT experience would have left me with (if anything, it would be anti-, and you can listen to me talk here about that: http://icsr.info/seminar/counter-insurgency-in-helmand-and-beyond), but I'd appreciate any further comments you have that engage with the substance of my arguments rather than accusations of bias. A tendency to attack the analyst rather than his arguments is one of the problems of the COIN debate I point to in my article.
If you are for an open conversation about COIN, what it is, and what it isn't, we are in 100% agreement.
Best,
Ryan
Ryan, you speak of context, but you took a sentence fragment out of my article that had nothing to do with either the full context of the sentence or the intent of the article.
I quote the rest of it in my article. :) So now we have the whole thing. But for your benefit:
"To flatter intellectually the theories of a few, we’ve had to sacrifice trillions of dollars, thousands of lives and abandoned security projects elsewhere that could have benefited our republic exponentially more than what we’ve garnered during a generation-long struggle in the Middle East and South Asia."
Read more: http://www.lineofdeparture.com/2011/12/12/is-coin-too-big-to-fail/#ixzz1gj33WnZP
amazing how you leave out the important part
Bottom line is you rushed to judgement. You can either fix your error now or live with it. If you want to get to know my extensive background and writing on COIN, then please feel free to visit Small Wars Journal.
I will have to respectfully disagree as I think I interpreted your comments accurately. But I appreciate your input.
I am happy that there is critical discussion of it all now, and folks who are coin advocates are feeling the need to defend it. Three years ago when we really needed to have this discussion it didnt happen since all there was at time was the FM 3-24 matrix, super charged by the surge triumph narrative. Nobody really questioned Coin critically then, which is partially why we ended up taking the foolish approach to trying to do Surge 2 in Afghanistan.
Prine's criticism of Ucko was spot on correct. Sure it was full of Prine-isms and sarcasm, but that is just how he rolls, and there were no "personal attacks" in it as you say.
Lastly since you mentioned Galula please do consider the fact that Galula, when he applied his 8 methods in Algeria (contrary to what he says in his book) actually FAILED at most of them. This argument is made in a new book by French researcher Gregor Mathias. The book is based on primary source evidence. So this thing we call American Coin as codified in FM 3-24, of which its writers have frequently acknowledged that it was influenced heavily by Galula's book and senior generals like McChrystal publicly noted that it was on his bed stand to read every night, is based on an operational method that failed.
COL Gentile: I am critical of the over-reliance on Galula in my article. Thank you for your comments and Mathias' book is on my shelf waiting to be cracked open.
Gian:
Just as Lawrence and Gertrude Bell's efforts to insert the bedouin prince Faisal did not work well.
Steve
Ryan,
We're still trying to figure this stuff out. Outside of implementing new technology, what are these COIN lessons learned? Can you name one on the ground level?
There are a few I am writing about now (in draft form), but just to name a few interrelated issues: The structure of ISAF precludes those confronted most directly with underlying causes of violence from not just addressing these causes, but having any meaningful input up the chain on how to address them. We are great at addressing symptoms, but not the actual problems. In Helmand, these include land tenure disputes, the systemic incentives of the narcotics trade, enduring mujahideen factional disputes...These are all political issue and we always talk about how COIN is 80% political, but we do not get involved in any of these political issues in a meaningful way, nor do we seriously seek to nudge the Afghan government (which we fund) in the right direction on any of these issues... This is an old lesson IDENTIFIED, but not a lesson LEARNED.
I would not address 1. international peacekeeping structure issues, 2. Afghanistan drug trade, or 3. Tribal factions disputes (political issues) as COIN issues. Nothing there falls solely in the realm of so-called COIN.
So, again, what's new here?
You'll all just have to wait until my next article comes out...but thank you for engaging!
These three issues, which you would not include, are some key issues that do need to be addressed in the context of Afghanistan. It appears that you are addressing COIN separately from the context in which it is currently being attempted. That discussion is valid, but it appears that you and the author are talking past each other.
I would disagree with you on the issue of political issues as being in the realm of COIN, since an insurgency is at its core a struggle for political power. In fact, one of the key failures of implementing COIN in Afghanistan, other than in discrete areas, is the near-total failure to engage in improving governance. Even if we separate the issue of COIN from Afghanistan in particular, COIN requires an approach that cannot rely solely on the military. As such, the discussion of the inability to engage in political solutions (again, other than in discrete successes by individual units and/or commanders) remains a failure mode that we keep defaulting to. This is a COIN issue, not just an Afghanistan issue.
It matters not if the locale is Afghanistan or any other; the failure to meaningfully engage in resolving the political drivers of conflict/instability will have poor results for a counterinsurgent.
Unfortunately, this is not the only area in which American counterinsurgents rather consistently fail. Some of the failures are due to systemic separations and distrust amongst our own institutions. There are other systemic behaviors which inhibit the ability to conduct effective COIN/stability operations. Our inability to adapt to circumstances and convert a political imperative into a developed strategy and a clearly understood commander's intent and desired end state, work together with other institutions and work towards a common goal, similar to the dysfunctional structure of ISAF, is an issue that must be addressed in future discussions of COIN as well.
Since the military cannot succeed at COIN by itself, and unity of effort is necessary, a methodology for establishing that unity of effort in the absence of unity of command is needed. The demonstrated inability of most American military officers to work well with the officers of other arms of our government indicates a disabling weakness that will haunt any future efforts. So perhaps a look at the dysfunction of Afghanistan's framework for application would indeed be appropriate.
Ryan:
Now we are back to the substantial limits of US COIN as applied.
Mostly political/domestic issues, but not in the military's bailiwick. The military in Iraq did what it could, but too often piecemeal and out-of-context. Afghanistan? The same.
During British control of Iraq, Gertie and Winnie (along with Bomber Harris) found those pesky Kurds to be a bothersome disturbance to their man Faisal.
Costs (British blood and treasure) dictated the best military method was an air campaign: machine guns and chemical bombs. In the end, these were strong motivators to route Faisal and the British.
Same limitations for the US?
Ryan:
Then if you are critical of the over reliance on Galula, then in turn you should be quite critical of FM 3-24 since it is largely a rehash of Galula. I mean think about it, we have a text (Galula's book) which has come to be seen in almost canonic form within the American army over the past three years (pundits like Ricks and Nagl promoted it endlessly, McChrystal says it is on his bedstand at night, at the Coin Academy in Taji in Dec 05 when I attended the course was basically Galula 101, people like Doug Ollivant after their tours in Iraq come back and write articles on how they did Galula in Iraq) yet the text of Galula was never understood in its context, and the context that surrounded Galula shows that he failed. So our entire Coin doctrine is based on a method that did not work in the first place.
Dont as an analyst you see a problem with this?
gian
Gian,
I think if you take another look at my article, you'll see that I am critical of the FM 3-24 framework, but FM 3-24 only offers one conceptualization of what COIN is. It is not the final word on COIN, as I think you will agree.
These disagreements are not quite so black and white. For example, David Ucko, who you have devoted a lot of typing to criticizing lately, wrote the forward to the Mathius book you recommend on Galula.
Best,
Ryan
Sir, one book says that Galula's attempt of his principles in Algeria failed. As an analyst, don't you see a problem with that?
One book says that 8-10 CAV made a poor showing in Baghdad in 2006. I know you've got a problem with that.
One book invalidates Galula, and that's definitive. One book invalidates 8-10 CAV in the pre-surge, and that is arguable. The metrics are broken, and there is a problem with that. Either one book is enough or not. In short, cherry-picking when one book is definitive and when one book is not definitive is a roll of the dice. It all depends on when that book agrees with one's personal opinion, doesn't it?
Ryan:
Before jumping into international efforts, you would do well to read the frightfully accurate "Chasing the Flame," Samantha Powers' book on UN SRSG Sergio De Mello.
It accurately depicts a group of often very dedicated UN people working in an organization with very serious structural political limitations.
The Wiki Cables on disputed boundaries issues, for example, describes the substantial 2008 external (NY) pressures against UN staff going forward with disputed boundaries resolutions.
Today, the Kurds believe they were "sold out" by the UN, which is, in fact, an over-simplification of the substantial limitations on that organization, and its otherwise highly motivated folks.
Too, often, US military analysts simply point to some other US or international organization as a culprit, or responsible party, and move on with their own opinions. Reality is much more complex, recognizing, as Powers does, the real limitations of these organizations. (Re: Ucko's comment: the civilian effort in Afghanistan was never up to the task....)
So Ryan,
If COIN is not Galula and not FM 3-24, what is COIN. You seem to claim that it can't die, so what is it?
It was the wrong forward to what is otherwise an exceptionally good book. Ucko wants to salvage the reputation of Galula when based on the book itself, that kind of argument just doesnt make sense.
What the Forward should have highlighted is what i pointed out above; that the American Army based its coin doctrine on a text, but without a contextual understanding of Galula and his failed operations.
The nature of combat operations in conventonal war varies less at the lower echelons of command, and increases the higher one goes. The adaptation of one form of war versus others was always built into the Army's order of battle refined after the Lousiana Maneuvers. video to iMovie
Gian: I'm just shocked that you did not like the foreword. Man, I just can't do anything right... Still, at least the author was happy with it. And I rather liked it too.
But then I am a COIN pamphleteer. Which explains how I concluded it:
"All of this – Galula’s mixed record and his tentativeness in proposing his concept – should instill a much-needed measure of humility about what is possible in counterinsurgency operations, and through military intervention writ large. For this very reason, it is incumbent on those militaries with expeditionary ambitions to study the history of their intellectual forefathers, to learn from their experiences, and try not to repeat their mistakes."
Complete rubbish, right??
Thanks and continue the debate
Ryan and co,
A few points
1) Thanks for writing this very important article. I've been following the COIN debate closely. I'm now in graduate school after a tour in Iraq, and it has concerned me immensely that the military might respond to our strategic failure in Iraq (and likely failure in Afghanistan), by merely deciding that we don't want to fight these kinds of wars anymore.
That, to me, doesn't seem to be an option, because our enemies have a say. It seems logical to me that we will face a series of threats that at least partially resemble insurgency, or have an insurgency element within them. For example I think long term strategic competition with China is likely to involve a mix of insurgency, cyberwar, and conventional war (if not the whole spectrum of conflict).
2) I've been equally concerned that we might come away from these conflicts thinking that we have institutionalized a strong counterinsurgency capability. I think most of the US Army, but not all, UNDERSTAND counterinsurgency, but that doesn't mean that we have actually learned how to implement good counterinsurgency operations.
I think some of Colonel Gentile's writing is correct, COIN has been part of a larger strategic failure. But insurgency is not dead. To draw upon an analogy familiar to the US Army, Germany had a terrible Grand Strategy for both WWI and WWII, but they produced some amazing operational and tactical advances. I think we need to be careful to develop on our operational successes with COIN, and learn how to enhance it, without throwing out COIN all together just because these wars have been, to a degree, strategic failures.
3) I appreciate the tone of the article and the comments that follow. That you and Colonel Gentile can have a productive discussion (which I am learning from), speaks volumes to the tone and intent of the article. An open productive discussion about COIN is absolutely needed and it needs to be as little about personalities as possible.
COIN = Hire one set of thugs to kill other
COIN is based on hiring one set of local thugs (beautifully named 'awakening') to kill the other set.
So COIN dies when the payroll stops and first set is fired while second set was never totally vanquished.
Gian P. Gentile, Paul Olsen, and others are debating over whether counterinsurgency is dead. Elsewhere, Colin Clark reports that COIN is being “scrapped” by the military. Gentile and Douglas Ollivant has written about the formation of a dominant COIN narrative, and it’s clear that at for a combination of material, academic, and political reasons this narrative is no longer dominant. But is COIN dead? In suspended animation? Some quick thoughts as I continue to hack away at the information warfare and deception research project…
First, it is a bit too soon for us to hail or mourn the death of COIN. What this represents is the end of COIN as practiced and theorized by elements within the Army and Marine Corps from 2006-2010, just as the Kennedy-era idea of counterinsurgency within elements of the US defense establishment died with Vietnam. The United States has faced insurgencies, terrorists, armed rebellions, guerrillas, partisans, and irregular raiding forces since the early days of colonization. It will continue to do so in the near future as long as American allies, clients, and proxies face irregular threats, although the shape of the response will vary.
Second, COIN, for all of the heat and noise about it, is still rather poorly understood in Iraq and Afghanistan. So much of the debate is weighted down with external baggage, mainly because it was never entirely about Iraq or Afghanistan. Rather, the COIN debate was often a proxy for many different political, professional, interdepartmental, and other battles within the United States political and defense establishments. Ollivant’s paper, and newer research highlights significant uncertainty to cause and effect in both sides of the COIN debate that will likely not be definitely settled soon.
Most importantly, it is important not to replace one orthodoxy for another. The emerging consensus of drones, special forces, and Asia has its own flaws which need their own airing.
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The core curriculum that came out of Vietnam was packaged as Stability Operations the substance of which carried on in the Petraeus FM. The foundation of FM 23-4 is presuming that a given political entity (nation) has been already destabilized by insurgents, hence step by step the insurgents are suppressed and the necessary nation repairing is done.
The concept of fixing up a shot up country is not the same as nation building. One assumes a nation exists in some form acceptable to the citrizenry. Nation building starts with no nation and builds from there. The steps may look alike on papar, as building a nation whee none was before has a short shelf life.
Iraq has a concept of nation hood a few millenia long, and calling those who fought against the Coallition occupation authority created by an invasion did not create a credible replacement for Saddam. Any such regime we built fits the same model as what the Japanese and Germans did in WW2. We called them puppet regimes of no legitimacy,
The irony of that is that Indonesia and Burma were built on a military framwork trained by Japan, although with no love lost over Japan.
I don't think we have a good word to use in describing patriots fighting to get their own country back, and I don't ascribe any buzz to the patriot word. The psychology of a patriot counter movement is more clearly defined than an insurgency who efforts are destabilitzation.
In this regard, the Taliban plays the patriot card, and Al Qaeda are the insurgents. The Taliban was dragged into this war for refusing to out Osama bin Ladin in a most insulting way, Insulting Afghans is not considered good form.
The basic problem of defining the next war is that nothing is new under the sun, and Murphy holds the cards. The nature of combat operations in conventonal war varies less at the lower echelons of command, and increases the higher one goes. The adaptation of one form of war versus others was always built into the Army's order of battle refined after the Lousiana Maneuvers. There were two kinds of battalions: divisional and non divisional. Corps and higher were just headquarters companies.
The destruction of that battle tested order of battle in Transformation which ignores any variation in conditions of MET-TC. The concept is so ludicrous in battle that no one really pays attention to it. The adaptiveness of the US soldier adaptd and has been more effective in task organization than ever before.
The trouble for the future is that no cohesive structure for contingency operations above brigade is chaotic and dependant on civil servants and contractors like it was done in the 1600's (Sixteen hundreds). This can be fixed with a simple swearing in ceremony.
The codification of types of war needs review but fundamenally needs to be cranked into the culture of the parties inovlved on all sides. A deal that is not acceptable to the defeated means anotther war.
Here is an oped of mine published in the Des Moines (Iowa) Register. Not sure if it fits this discussion but my sense is that it does.........
Right Force, WrongLeaders For Afghanistan
When asked about forms ofgovernment, Winston Churchill famously remarked, “democracy is the worst formof government, except for all the others”. I would use Churchill’s observation in another manner: the U.S. Department of Defense is the worstof all groups at practicing stability operations, except for all the others. Itis time to operationalize this observation by putting the right set of militaryleaders in the drivers seat.
The wrong branch of the military isleading stability operations in Afghanistan. The largest part of stabilityoperations is essentially a distribution network that provides goods (bridgerepair, school construction) and services (mentoring of government workers,monitoring of performance, creating transparent legal and financialnetworks). Stability operations willonly fully succeed when U.S. Department of State and other non-lethal decisionmakers are able to authoritatively direct the significant assets that the U.S.Department of Defense brings to the table.
Like most of us, combat armscommanders are slaves to their own background, training and, most importantly,their performance evaluations. Combatarms commanders are rewarded for the conduct of combat operations. Asking themto do anything else is unfair to them. Puttingcombat arms officers in charge of stability operations is the wrong use of anotherwise excellent tool.
The “right set” of militaryleadership should be sourced from other branches of the military. Combatcommanders and casual observers of events in Afghanistan (and other places)will violently object to this proposition, citing the chimera of “security” asthe most important piece of the stability operations puzzle, and they are notwrong. It’s just that combat commandersare the wrong leaders for the operation as a whole.
There is a place for the militarycombat commander, and that place is the conduct of combat operations. And until we put the right type of commanderin charge of stability operations, we will continue to reward ourselves with marginaland unsustainable gains.
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I welcome your comments. tom
The American military is doomed to failure because: (a) it has to compete with high paying careers like on Wall Street that pay wonderfully so you can buy your self-satisfaction and (b) the dull-witted in command can hide as top secret the products of their dullness and bureaucratic in-fighting far better than even the CIA from the President. All Americans care about when it comes to the military is that we don't lose. That makes them feel insecure and humiliated. So long as commanders can hide that from the public, they can always squeeze more money, war toys and troops from the nation. The media will, for the most part, prostitute itself to the Pentagon for access as it lives only on scoops. So in these times of voluntary service when Americans can say: "ain't my kid going to war," so long as they're not seen as losing, generals can always intimidate presidents into more, more more in men and supplies to cover-up their failures with yet another surge. Indeed, Petraeus in a high school level PhD thesis at Princeton argues that COIN success depends on having enough PR guys in your force. Hasting's new book, THE OPERATORS, kind of exposes the "yes sir" losers in the civilian realm where the best and brightest do operate, that command is made up of stunt-men who blame their failure always on the civilians above them. Many of the West Point grads that command were there during the great engineering math cheeting on exams scandal so one just might suspect that abstract calculation is not their forte. Having come up the ranks as "YES SIR" men, one cannot see them as the best of recipients of field criticism from below. What our intel commanders write about the gathering and use of intel by command makes clear why surge-king Petraeus would feel that PR men rather than intel is what he needed. COIN, in the final analysis is stealing the hearts and minds of the people back home with PR rather than winning those of the locals with good CONSTRUCTIVE plans. Thus, our real field focus has been on killing and destroying (even a return to "body count" as PR) rather than on modernizing the society so that it leaves Jihad behind culturally. All that our killer generals produced is ever more people ready to die killing our men in revenge for their relatives that we killed with our mass destruction war toys. Indeed, over the post-war decades we'll discover how during the war a lot of our officers retired in order to come back to the contractor role of COIN and steal $billions. Thus, the concept of COIN was never really testes as our goals were body count of locals killed indiscriminately and $$ stolen, also indiscriminately. The thesis requires, not our best minds to dream up COIN, but to implement it. The high-school drop out or grad seeking college tuition means by joining up, led by the duller knives in the drawer cannot be considered a good test of the COIN warfare thesis. We were warned about this by Marines Gen. Greene in Vietnam but we never learned. Instead, we listened to the "yes sir" wooden heads as we do now who think self-deception the way to eventual victory. History does repeat itself when the best and brightest are silenced by dull command and covered-up by a parallel army of PR men, as recommended by Petraeus based on his "analysis" (sic) of the Vietnam War.
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