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Warfare in urban centers
The Washington Times ^ | July 2, 2004 | Austin Bay

Posted on 07/02/2004 9:53:47 PM PDT by neverdem

The Washington Times
www.washingtontimes.com

Warfare in urban centers

By Austin Bay
Published July 2, 2004

China's great sixth century B.C. strategist, Gen. Sun Tzu, had a poet's knack for the epigram -- the ability to "write tight" and sneakily sinking the infinitely complex into a single phrase. His "Art of War" is a diamond mine of insight.


    "All warfare is based upon deception," Sun Tzu wrote, simultaneously succinct and voluminous. Italy's Renaissance political genius, Niccolo Machiavelli, added: "Though fraud in other activities may be detestable, in the management of war it is laudable and glorious, and he who overcomes the enemy by fraud is as much to be praised as he who does by force."


    Sun's and Machiavelli's soundbites are the "deep background" for a Rand pamphlet titled "The Art of Darkness: Deception and Urban Operations" (see the Rand Web site, www.rand.org). Written by Scott Gerwehr and Russell Glenn for the U.S. Army and published in 2000, the short study examines the role of deception in city and suburban security operations.


    The immediate relevance to Iraq is obvious. Follow the train of headlines -- U.S. Marines in Fallujah, the British in Basra, the U.S. Army in Najaf, Iraqi police in Baghdad.


    However, the global scope of urbanization has put a Mogadishu, if not a Los Angeles, in virtually every corner of the planet. As early as the 1960s, European strategists began to see Western Europe as an extended city. For French strategist Pierre Gallois, urbanization meant "a nation's human and material assets are now concentrated in relatively small spaces and their annihilation would require only a handful of missiles."


    "The Art of Darkness," though pre-September 11, 2001, presciently addresses urban fighting in its 21st century War on Terror context. Messrs. Gerwehr and Glenn note: "many of the advantages held by U.S. forces are curbed or eliminated by the distinctive qualities of the urban environment." Cities are ripe with opportunities for an enemy to "deceive" U.S. sensors and soldiers. They also offer opportunities for the United States and its allies to employ deception -- if troops are trained for it.


    In urban terrain:


    • The scope for deception is greater than in any other.


    c  "Background noise" (the bane of city life) "hampers" sensors and "counterdeception" operations. "Urban clutter" also limits the employment of certain technologies.


    c  The "presence and proximity of noncombatants" complicates intelligence operations. Noncombatants and "important sociopolitical institutions" (e.g., mosques in Najaf) also complicate the politics, which complicates combat operations. The complications are reflected in what the military calls ROE, the Rules of Engagement, which tell soldiers when and what to shoot.


    The authors' analysis of the Chechens' deception operations in the defense of their capital of Grozny against Russian forces (January 1995) has resonance for Fallujah-type operations. The Chechens used Red Cross vehicles to move troops and "co-mingled forces with noncombatant crowds and activities when moving in advance or retreat." Russian soldiers were frightened and confused. I thought the Ba'athists intended to turn Fallujah into a Grozny. They failed. What looked like political reluctance in Fallujah may well have been operational caution by U.S. forces to ensure accurate intelligence.


    Put another recent Rand studies on the must-read list. Published in 2003, "America's Role in Nation-Building, From Germany to Iraq" is a balanced, multiauthor historical survey of U.S.-led nation-building efforts since World War II.


    This caveat, in the "Lessons Learned" chapter, adds to the debate on troop strength: "Postconflict nation-building, when undertaken with adequate numbers of troops, has triggered little violent resistance. Only when the number of stabilization troops has been low in comparison to the population have U.S. forces suffered or inflicted significant casualties."


    The book has a succinct and dead-on discussion of challenges faced in Iraq. "The military, security services and bureaucracy need to be radically reformed and purged." A working justice system must be created, the economy overhauled.


    "Any attempt to achieve transformation in Iraq would have had to face these challenges," but the United States must "cope with unsympathetic neighbors -- Iran, Syria, and Turkey. All have an interest in shaping Iraqi politics and perhaps destabilizing a smooth transition."


    


    Austin Bay is a nationally syndicated columnist.


    



Copyright © 2004 News World Communications, Inc. All rights reserved.


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TOPICS: Editorial; Foreign Affairs; Government; News/Current Events; Russia; US: District of Columbia; United Kingdom; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: iran; iraq; niccolomachiavelli; suntzu; syria; turkey; urbanwarfare

1 posted on 07/02/2004 9:53:47 PM PDT by neverdem
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To: neverdem
Thanks..I've always thought Art of War (and Book of Five Rings, for that matter) were vastly underrated (I'm not being critical) by the US MIL. until the late 50s...
2 posted on 07/02/2004 10:07:05 PM PDT by skinkinthegrass (Just because you're paranoid, doesn't mean they aren't out to get you :)
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To: neverdem
"The military, security services, and bureaucracy need to be radically reformed and purged." A working justice system must be created, the economy overhauled."

With the exception of the military and security services, this sounds like a great plan for America, as well...

3 posted on 07/02/2004 10:42:19 PM PDT by Gigantor (Bread and circuses -- the time-proven antidote to reality. Until it's too late.)
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To: Gigantor

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4 posted on 07/02/2004 10:42:57 PM PDT by Gigantor (Bread and circuses -- the time-proven antidote to reality. Until it's too late.)
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To: Gigantor

Hey Gigantor, John Robinson added automatic tag closers like 2 years ago.

I keep a Denma Translation of The Art of War next to my desk at all times. By far the most true to original translation out there.

The most obvious evidence of the US military's use of these concepts is evidenced in the fact that news of only One snipers' nest has been overtaken in Fallujah has made it Stateside. Total superiority in these sniper operations was the reason the Falljah militants offered a truce, and the removal of the snipers was their first and one one of few non-negotiable demands.


5 posted on 07/02/2004 11:50:36 PM PDT by JerseyHighlander
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To: neverdem
For French strategist Pierre Gallois, urbanization meant "a nation's human and material assets are now concentrated in relatively small spaces and their annihilation would require only a handful of missiles."

If people don't think that forcing rural citizens into cities in America, surrounded by "greenbelts" and "open space," with Wildlands Project "no entry zones" inbetween don't accomplish precisely this, you don't understand the strategy to destroy America.

6 posted on 07/03/2004 6:21:19 AM PDT by Carry_Okie (Privatizating environmental regulation is critical to national defense.)
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