Absolutely. Surgical means understanding the lessons learned in this Operation. It is impossible to identify, locate and remove a small number of enemy combatants using ambush techniques on targets of opportunity without the active involvement, support and co-operation of local residents. We didn't find 45 of the 52 in the deck by happenstance. We weren't digging a latrine when we stumbled upon Saddam. The Brothers' Grim weren't victims of bad luck in Tikrit.
From day one, we have viewed Fallujah, and it's citizens, as hostile enemy combatants. The various Army units "securing" the city have done nothing to give Fallujahians of lawful rationality, peace and civic duty any reason to view our purpose as just liberators. The entire operation - strategic and tactical - has been a debacle. Most of our KIAs in this region have been easily planned and quickly implented detonations of roadside bombs against supply convoys supporting Airborne and Infantry units woefully ill suited for the Fallujah mission. It was obvious as of last May that Fallujah was not a last stand target of Revolutionary Guard professionals and weaponry and 500,000 civilians willing to go to their death for Saddam and Baathist rule. We need to replicate what the 4th ID did in Tikrit. House by house, weapons cache by weapons cache, little fish dropping dime on bigger fish until Uday takes a TOW up his tailpipe.