Posted on 08/21/2013 12:41:23 PM PDT by neverdem
A remarkable book has recently been published: Wrong Turn: Americas Deadly Embrace of Counterinsurgency, by Colonel Gian Gentile, U.S. Army. Gentile, a professor at West Point, commanded a battalion in Iraq. In his fast-paced, intellectually challenging book, he argues that Americas strategy in Iraq and Afghanistan was unworkable from the start. Below are his responses to the basic questions I asked him.
BING WEST: In a few sentences, describe the counterinsurgency doctrine that our grunts were supposed to employ in Iraq and Afghanistan.
COLONEL GIAN GENTILE: American counterinsurgency, as codified in Marine/Army Field Manual 3-24, is armed nation building by a foreign occupying power. It aims to defeat an insurgency in a foreign land by providing to the host population things like infrastructure, governance, security, local security forces, and economic improvement. The idea is that once these things are provided, the counterinsurgent force will then win the trust and allegiance of the local population, which then will allow for the separation of the people from the insurgents. This is the theory, at least, behind American COIN; unfortunately, in practice it simply does not work.
WEST: On the ground, when you were a commander, what were the problems with that doctrine that you encountered?
GENTILE: FM 3-24 states unequivocally that in any situation, whatever the cause, there will be a small minority of a population that is strongly against the counterinsurgency and the supported government, and a small minority in favor, while the rest of the population will be a neutral or passive majority (often called fence sitters), who are just waiting to have their hearts and minds won over by the counterinsurgent force as long as it follows the rules and precepts laid out in the doctrine of counterinsurgency. But when I read that doctrinal prescription upon returning from my year in West Baghdad in 2006, it did not match at all not in any way the complexity of the Iraqi sectarian civil war which my squadron and I had been caught in the middle of. In the population we confronted there were few fence sitters, only fences and a red line drawn right through the population between Shiite and Sunni.
WEST: Was the problem that the troops did not understand nation building, or that there were fatal flaws in the doctrine?
GENTILE: The commonly used aphorism by counterinsurgency experts is that COIN is the graduate level of war, thus implying that it requires some special kind of skill set to be carried out correctly and that it should be led by enlightened savior generals such as David Petraeus and Stanley McChrystal. But the truth of the matter is that American counterinsurgency armed nation building at the tactical level of platoons, companies, battalions, and brigades is simply not that difficult. The difficulty of these wars, rather, rests at the levels of strategy and policy, and the American failure in Iraq and Afghanistan can best be explained from those angles. Unfortunately, the myth of the counterinsurgency narrative is that modern American counterinsurgency wars Vietnam, Iraq, and Afghanistan could have been won if only the army had done counterinsurgency better under enlightened generals. Yet the truth about Americas failures in these wars has to do with weakness in other places.
WEST: Is the doctrine believed by those who served as battalion, company, and platoon commanders?
GENTILE: I think there was a period of time between 2007 and 2010 mostly the years of the Surge under Petraeus and a year or two afterwards when there was a belief by many folks in the army and Marines that counterinsurgency worked. This was certainly the driving force behind the relief from command in Afghanistan of Army general David McKiernan, who was replaced by another anointed savior general in Stanley McChrystal in spring 2009. But for the last two to three years, based on what is written on military blogs and in published articles by serving soldiers, I think there is a general sense that certain parts or aspects of COIN may have worked in Iraq and Afghanistan, but that, overall, when you pull it all together, it has not added up to any meaningful strategic or policy success. An honest look at what the two wars in Iraq and Afghanistan have cost the U.S. in blood and treasure, and at the current state of affairs in those places, causes serious doubt that counterinsurgency has worked as an operational method to achieve policy aims at a reasonable cost.
WEST: So where do the Army and Marines go from here? What percentage should be structured for force-on-force warfighting versus unconventional (i.e., facing foes who do not wear uniforms and who blend in among the population)?
GENTILE: We should focus on our core function which is to kill the enemies of the United States of America through all arms and joint operations. Our purpose is to do whatever we are told to do by our civilian masters. However, if we cant fight effectively at all organizational levels then we cannot do any other missions we may be assigned. Contrary to what the COIN experts have espoused over the last five years, the most adaptable ground forces are those trained and optimized for high-end conventional warfare. If the Marines and Army can fight at that level effectively, they can easily step in other directions to do stability and peace-support operations and counterinsurgency. Over the past ten years, the Army has moved to having close to two thirds of its active-combat brigades as either light or motorized infantry, and only one third as heavy-combat brigades with tanks and infantry fighting vehicles a wrongheaded trend in my view. To be sure there must be a reasonable mix of light and motorized infantry in the army, but we have gone too far in that direction and depleted the kinds of combat brigades needed to fight at the higher end of the conflict spectrum.
WEST: Why do you think American strategy has failed in Afghanistan?
GENTILE: British historian and strategist B. H. Liddell Hart said many years ago that the object of war is to produce a better state of peace at a reasonable cost in blood and treasure. If strategy approached in this way gets a state a passing grade, then the United States has failed miserably in Afghanistan. Since early 2002 the United States has suffered over 2,000 Americans killed with many more seriously wounded. Thousands of Afghan civilians have been killed. The United States has spent close to $1 trillion trying to turn Afghanistan into a modern, functioning state. With these costs what has the United States achieved? The place is more violent today than it was at the height of the Afghan surge of troops under Stanley McChrystal in 2009, the government is one of the most corrupt in the world, and the ability of the Afghan security forces is dubious at best. Would Afghanistan have been any worse if the U.S. had left after toppling the Taliban and crushing al-Qaeda by early 2002? This question becomes more pointed when one considers the fact that the U.S. had by and large accomplished its core political objective in Afghanistan the destruction of al-Qaeda by early 2002. This is why American strategy has failed.
WEST: What should American strategy for national security look like in the future?
GENTILE: Good strategy is ultimately about making choices, setting priorities, and assigning resources of national power to achieve policy aims at the least cost in blood and treasure. Sometimes good strategy must discern that there are limits to what American power especially military power can accomplish in the world and, when necessary, demonstrate strategic restraint. A better American grand strategy for the future must jettison the flawed notion that Americas security interests can be achieved by carrying out lengthy military occupations of foreign lands and transforming their societies. When American vital interests in the world are threatened and the application of military force is deemed appropriate, the idea should be to go in quickly with decisive military force, accomplish important objectives, and then leave.
A former assistant secretary of defense and combat Marine, Bing West has written five books about combat in Iraq and Afghanistan. He is working on his sixth book, about an embattled Marine platoon in Afghanistan and the role of courage.
British historian and strategist B. H. Liddell Hart said many years ago that the object of war is to produce a better state of peace at a reasonable cost in blood and treasure.The object of war is to destroy the enemy. Period.
0bama’s counterinsurgency in the USA is working just fine.
LLS
If we had the civilian and military leadership that we did during WWII, Islam would have ceased to be a world wide threat six months after 9/11/2001.
That approach worked pretty well with the establishment of the armistice ending the First World War, didn’t it?
“If we had the civilian and military leadership that we did during WWII, Islam would have ceased to be a world wide threat six months after 9/11/2001.”
Followed by 70 years of occupation?
WWI and previous wars ended with irresolute results that led to further wars. Churchill and other WWII leaders recognized this and set a goal of UNCONDITIONAL SURRENDER. It worked so well that we decided to abandon that strategy in future wars, proving that while we attempt to learn from our mistakes, we do not learn from our successes.
He makes some good points, but I disagree with the impression that COIN (COunterINsurgency) is a wrong strategy. COIN encompasses things that should and must be done to shape the future situation in any area to our interest. Does he advocate that we should ignore the plight of the non-combatant population? Not address their security or essential life support services? Disregard how the locals view us? No, of course he does not. The laws of War demand it, and it will shape how the locals view us for generations to come. COIN is an approach which must be pursued to some degree in any situation where enemy activity remains, and in the final phase of any operation when we have blown the place up. There is no getting away from it, and it is good doctrine to promote to the troops and field commanders. It is motivational to be fighting for righteous principles - it cultivates good behavior and thereby influences favorable attitudes toward us.
What was missing in Afghanistan/Iraq in my opinion, was the political will and skill to drive an end state most favorable to the USA. Rushing to elections before civic organizations, political parties and open media mature - before the population comes around and has been able to absorb and thoroughly digest the implications of the policies that potential leaders would likely implement in an informed and reasoned way - will allow the best organized thugs, the best liars, or those with the best covert foreign support to take control.
Letting Islamists base the constitution of Afghanistan on Islam instead of objective law was a disaster. Letting Iranian surrogates like Mookie al Sadr organize and operate in Iraq undermined our interests. If we had been hard nosed and installed local strongmen like Iyad Allawi in Iraq, they could have more quickly stabilized a pro-American regime (albeit with some heaping of dead bodies). If the author wants the low-cost effective outcome, that’s it and always has been - install an ally as strongman. If you want to shape the society for the future, or are more concerned with placating international (largely Anti-American) opinion, then spend relatively more blood and treasure developing relatively more of civil society and the economy.
I guess one take away for me is that you must gauge where the population is well ahead of time to estimate the resources required to achieve strategic success - they will vary widely. He points out that the population was polarized in Iraq, not mostly fence-sitters. That will require more time and effort to overcome. There were some world-class deep and extreme ideologies driving folks - more time and effort still. There was large scale foreign subversion underway. In Afghanistan, the economy and infrastructure were exceptionally under-developed. If you can’t afford the time, money, blood, lives and limbs; then install a strongman and give him lots of ammo. These strategic calls are made at the political level with military advice.
In any event, COIN practices should (must) be used whenever insurgency is part of the mix. We need capability for the full spectrum of threats. The one thing that we can safely assume about the next war, is that it won’t be the same as the last. Just as its a mistake to discard heavy high intensity capability for light COIN-only force structure, we have to maintain COIN capability as part of the full spectrum of potential challenges.
COIN capability is more amenable to contracting out versus maintaining a large, expensive standing force structure though - if it is well planned for, as is done for logistics under the Logistics Civil Augmentation Program (LOGCAP), which conducts ongoing deliberate planning in addition to providing a vehicle for contingency support. Assess and plan for the end state political objectives in the theater of operations as part of the operational plan - don’t leave it to chance, muddling, waffling - ultimately risking strategic defeat. It must be a realistic end state, based on the actual political situation of the population.
Peace is when your enemy refuses to die for his cause.
Your view of the Treaty of Versailles is rather different from mine, I guess.
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