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Retreat, Hell! (Analysis of Fallujah situation and tactics)
Belmont Club ^ | May 1, 2004 | Wretchard

Posted on 05/01/2004 10:42:32 AM PDT by John Jorsett

The guesswork hasn't been too far off. From the beginning it seemed clear that an Iraqi component was always going to be needed in Fallujah, both to process civilians and restore order. On April 2nd, before Valiant Resolve was formally announced, the Belmont Club guess was that:

CPA Administrator Paul Bremer chose a graduation ceremony for Iraqi police cadets to vow that the incident "will not go unpunished", possibly because a large role has been assigned to the Iraqi police in the forthcoming operation. From these elements one can deduce the basic shape of the counterstroke. Since Fallujah and its anti-coalition forces are largely run on tribal (read Mafia) lines, the strategic goal will be to arrest the tribal leadership structure and other ringleaders such as imams. A secondary goal will be to capture the thousands of weapons and magazines that are bound to be present. This will require a block by block reduction of an entire city of 230,000 persons. Hence, a plentiful supply of Iraqi cops is needed for large-scale interrogation. And all this must be accomplished within the limits of acceptable collateral damage levels.

One of the risks to taking the town was always that the defenders would use the opportunity to stage their own Viking funeral pyre by torching the town and roasting as many civilians as they could with it. The answer, it seemed back in April 3 was:

However, if the Marines exert only gradual pressure, and use neighbors or Iraqi police from outside Fallujah to guide other neighbors into processing areas, the defenders will never be presented with a clear opportunity to precipitate a crisis. Once the Marines get the momentum of processing going, the tribal leaders will lose control and the whole structure will start to crumble. The Marines can exploit their physical domination by offering clemency or even rewards to those who rat out on other perps. The inner bastion of Fallujah will collapse like a termite-eaten post as each man looks out for himself.

It is in this context that the perplexing cycle of ceasefires punctuated by nocturnal assaults can be understood. The Corps, besides incorporating the Chinese word Gung Ho into it's vocabulary, may have finally proved to the Arabs that they can out-hudna anyone who ever stood on a patch of sand. By alternately throttling and releasing the enemy, or in cruder terms, by a process of talking and shooting, the USMC seems to have squeegeed the foe into the 'Golan' without ever precipitating the feared crisis. ("Like a cut flower in a vase, fair to see, yet doomed to die" -- Winston Churchill)

When the Press began trumpeting a humiliating Marine withdrawal and their ignominous replacement by Iraqi Fallujah Protection Army, the Belmont Club, although perplexed by the origins of the Fallujah Protection Army, still guessed that the Marines would not be withdrawn, as per innuendo, from around the 'Golan' cordon and that the Iraqis would be employed in stabilization and police duties simply because it was impossible for a force in contact with the enemy to be replaced by a unit which had yet to be constituted.

One of the most difficult operations of war is relieving a unit in contact with the enemy. It first of all requires the existence of the relief force. News accounts which suggest that this-still-to-be formed Fallujah Protection Army (FPA) will take over from the Marines, said to be evacuating "front line positions" within a few days, are only slightly less incredible than a report that Batman, the Hulk and Wolverine have joined the Navy to see the world. ... The most likely scenario is that the FPA will be given charge over city areas free from heavy fighting and assigned general police duties.

Although the appearance of the Fallujah Protection Army (FPA) and its effects still remain to be seen, the mystery of it origins has been solved at last. It appears to be a creature of the Marines themselves, tricked out in Iraqi uniform. This would go a long way toward explaining the kind of training Marines were providing to Iraqis in southeastern industrial area of the city. They were training locals who will be assigned police duties. This April 30 press release from CENTCOM is here quoted in full.

CAMP FALLUJAH, Iraq - As part of the overall effort to restore security and stability in Fallujah, the 1st Marine Expeditionary Force is overseeing the formation of the 1st Battalion of the Fallujah Brigade.

The mission of this interim organization, to be completely integrated with that of I MEF, is part of the ongoing aspiration to have Iraqi Security Forces fully cooperate with Coalition Forces to perform security tasks and, eventually, to assume responsibility for security and stability in Fallujah and other cities.

The Coalition objectives remain unchanged -- to eliminate armed groups, collect and positively control all heavy weapons, and turn over foreign fighters and disarm Anti-Coalition insurgents in Fallujah. The Coalition welcomes the assistance of the Iraqi forces, including the 1st Battalion of the Fallujah Brigade, in efforts to achieve these objectives.

Like most of the existing Iraqi Security Forces, this battalion will be recruited largely from former soldiers of the Iraqi Army. The battalion will be employed in Fallujah alongside the 1st MEF to assist in the return of peace and stability for the city. Their employment will facilitate the flow of support and foster rapid reconstruction, thereby stimulating the job market for citizens inside the city. The Battalion will function as a subordinate command under the operational control of the 1st Marine Expeditionary Force, and 1st MEF will provide the resources and equipment necessary to ensure mission accomplishment by this force.

Until the battalion's units demonstrate a capability to man designated checkpoints and positions, Marines will continue to maintain a presence in and around Fallujah. Consistent with our duty to provide security, Coalition Forces will maintain their right of freedom of movement in all areas of the AOR. As calm is restored, families will be allowed to return to the city, and during the transition, the number of families allowed into the city on a daily basis will increase to 200.

After commencing the restoration of law and order inside the city of Fallujah, Iraqi security forces inside the city will assist police with investigations to identify the murderers and mutilators of the four American contractors on 31 March, and the criminals responsible for the 14 February attack on the Fallujah Police Station. When captured, those persons will be tried in the Iraqi judicial system.

If this interpretation proves to be accurate, it will have flowed directly from the basic operational requirements of Valiant Resolve. The goals of that operation would have been to root out enemy cells in Fallujah without massacring everyone in the city. This had to be accomplished against an active resistance schooled in the methods which brought the Russians to grief in Grozny. All with the final goal of wresting control of Fallujah from its gang leaders into the hands of an American-controlled Iraqi administration. And although the final victory remains to be won and 'Golan' still to be reduced, no one should ever, ever, call Marines Jarheads again without meaning it in irony.


TOPICS: Editorial
KEYWORDS: afterbash; belmontclub; fallujah; iraq
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To: don'tbedenied
Yes, the USMC and the Iraq command is invovled in a complex and difficult situation. The mainstream press is unable to report very well on the situation because they only report through a single prism--BUSH BAD.

Not only that, the agit-prop media is also pathetically ignorant of anything military. It doesn't interest them and they have no capacity to understand it. I never expect them to get stories about military actions right.

The situation on the ground is much more complex and we may be succeeding, only time will tell. More depressing than the elite media is the chicken littles on this site who should know better.

Exactly. Just like the media reporting that the Tet Offensive was a defeat for us. Such bad reporting had the requisite effect on the irresolute among the US populace--sapping their strength and their will to stay in the fight even though militarily, we were winning.
41 posted on 05/01/2004 9:09:26 PM PDT by Antoninus (In hoc signo, vinces †)
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To: Travis McGee
Amen. I put The Belmont Club above Stratfor or the Northeast Intelligence Network for excellent current anaylysis.

I stopped reading Stratfor after it carefully explained how we were going to get our butts kicked in Afghanistan, just before we didn't.

42 posted on 05/01/2004 9:12:17 PM PDT by John Jorsett
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To: swarthyguy
Not so good to allow the Fallujans to score a victory over the US. Yes, despite all the convoluted rationalisation and justification, it's a victory for the jihadis and will be percieved by the world as such.

Actually, the convoluted rationalization is on the side of the jihadis. Only a fool thinks that the statements played in the agit-prop elite media represent the reality of the situation. The jihadis left alive are exuberent today because they expected to be dead by now. Certainly, the thousands already killed in Fallujah are not so exuberant.

However, I reckon their reprieve is only temporary. Time will tell.
43 posted on 05/01/2004 9:15:14 PM PDT by Antoninus (In hoc signo, vinces †)
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To: Light Speed
Shoulder fired missiles too.

I was wondering when we'd hear about this. Those AC-130s must've really scared the cr@p out of them.
44 posted on 05/01/2004 9:18:54 PM PDT by Antoninus (In hoc signo, vinces †)
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To: Southack
Yeah, I've been thinking the same thing. People worry that this General might take his thousand troops and join the resistance. And maybe he will. But my hunch is that he's smart enough to recognize what he's being handed here. The Americans will be gone someday. If he plays his cards right, he could be the guy in the right place at the right time to become the next Saddam.

He'll pretend that's not his goal, and the Marine General will pretend that he doesn't know it's his goal. This is a very capitalistic solution... it harnesses the guy's own greed to make him do the right thing.

The General knows that one of the steps in becoming the next Saddam is to crush all of his future rivals. So he might as well start with these guys -- and their damned imams -- right now. And of all people, the Americans are going to hand him the guns to do this. If he wasn't a Ba'athist, he'd be screaming, "Allah be praised."

45 posted on 05/01/2004 9:31:59 PM PDT by Nick Danger (We reserve the right to serve refuse to anyone)
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To: don'tbedenied
The mainstream press is unable to report very well on the situation because they only report through a single prism--BUSH BAD.

Oh man, did YOU ever hit the nail on the head. I haven't paid any attention to the partisan media about what was happening in Fallujah because they either cannot get it right because of their built in bias against the President, or because what they're being fed by the Marines is what the Marines want the Iraqi enemy to believe. I'll wait until the dust settles to see what really happened.

46 posted on 05/01/2004 9:37:27 PM PDT by SuziQ
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To: Antoninus
Only a fool thinks that the statements played in the agit-prop elite media represent the reality of the situation.

This is especially true among the Arabs. I remember interviews from a year ago with guys in "the Arab Street," and one of the things they were most pissed about was how they were lied to through the whole thing. On TV, it was one great Iraqi victory after another. The Americans were being routed. Iraqis were roasting their stomachs. And never mind Al Jazeera, that's what they were seeing on CNN.

The next thing they knew, there were pictures of American soldiers with their feet up on Saddam's living room sofa. Saddam ran like a dog, and his mighty army fell apart like a cheap suit.

When the press starts to blow the horns of Iraqi Victory again, they're gonna wait to see whose statue gets pulled down this time.

47 posted on 05/01/2004 9:55:16 PM PDT by Nick Danger (We reserve the right to serve refuse to anyone)
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To: McGavin999
Good question.
48 posted on 05/01/2004 10:21:55 PM PDT by Travis McGee (----- www.EnemiesForeignAndDomestic.com -----)
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To: John Jorsett
Thanks, I learn something new every login at FR!
49 posted on 05/01/2004 10:32:42 PM PDT by endthematrix (To enter my lane you must use your turn signal!)
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To: livius
A very inciteful post.

If indeed, in the face of all televised appearances to the contrary, this is actually and American victory, it certainly has not been sold as such.

Worse, we are now vulnerable to charges very difficult conclusively to refute, that we have buggered out and tried to manipulate appearances to cover a defeat. Suppose there is a period of quiet and then another incident. Do we send the Marines back in? If so, then much of the world will say the policy has failed and most of the bad guys have escaped. If we do not send them back in, the world will say not only did the policy fail but the whole deal was a sham.
50 posted on 05/01/2004 10:59:14 PM PDT by nathanbedford
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To: All; wretchard
Eurotwit has started a Belmont Club ping list.
51 posted on 05/02/2004 6:04:32 PM PDT by Cannoneer No. 4 (I've lost turret power; I have my nods and my .50. Hooah. I will stay until relieved. White 2 out.)
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To: Cannoneer No. 4
Thanks.
52 posted on 05/02/2004 6:28:44 PM PDT by wretchard
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To: archy; Gringo1; Matthew James; Fred Mertz; Squantos; colorado tanker; The Shrew; SLB; Darksheare; ..
Recently photos of M1A1/A2's have appeared..burning..gutted. The Higher scale RPG 7's..the 93 to 105mm are most likely the reason.
53 posted on 05/02/2004 6:59:14 PM PDT by Cannoneer No. 4 (I've lost turret power; I have my nods and my .50. Hooah. I will stay until relieved. White 2 out.)
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To: Cannoneer No. 4
I have some suspicions about what we are up to over there.
a nagging little voice in the deepest corners of my cynical souls whispers "we're giving them a target they cannot but engage... we are sucking them in, and getting as many as we can into the killbox before we drop the hammer on them all."

I'll have to look into this Belmont Club thing, and see if there are hints and intimations along these lines...
54 posted on 05/02/2004 7:09:17 PM PDT by King Prout (poets and philosophers should NEVER pretend to Engineering... especially SOCIAL Engineering!)
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To: King Prout
I think the Marines at Fallujah know what they are doing. This is the un-Grozny.
55 posted on 05/02/2004 7:22:17 PM PDT by Cannoneer No. 4 (I've lost turret power; I have my nods and my .50. Hooah. I will stay until relieved. White 2 out.)
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To: Cannoneer No. 4
one can only hope they will be permitted to execute their jobs with minimal micromanagerial interference.
56 posted on 05/02/2004 10:06:35 PM PDT by King Prout (poets and philosophers should NEVER pretend to Engineering... especially SOCIAL Engineering!)
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