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Joseph Galloway - Analysis: Iraq strategy rooted in Soviet doctrine
Knight Ridder Newspapers | March 28, 2003 | JOSEPH L. GALLOWAY

Posted on 03/28/2003 9:31:34 PM PST by HAL9000

WASHINGTON - Coalition commander Gen. Tommy Franks won't begin his ground attack against the Republican Guard divisions on the outskirts of Baghdad until U.S. air power has whittled Saddam Hussein's frontline units down to less than half-strength. The trouble is that it may be hard to know when or whether that goal has been reached.

So far, Saddam has managed to preserve many of his best forces by moving, dispersing and sheltering them - and, some U.S. officials say, by using decoys to deplete American stocks of precision munitions. U.S. assessments of bomb damage and of the exact locations of enemy units can best be described as "conflicted."

A senior U.S. military officer said Friday that Air Force and Army aircraft have attacked half of all Republican Guard targets, but the assessments of the damage the bombs have done are "imprecise and often unclear." That means the coalition doesn't have a clear picture of how much the bombing has "degraded" the Republican Guard and other units, despite the upbeat public assessments and sensational video footage from Pentagon and Central Command representatives.

The same senior officer confirmed what some U.S. analysts have suspected. Iraq's strategy and tactics have been drawn directly from an old Soviet doctrine called "maskirovka" - a mix of measures designed to mislead the enemy about everything from the disposition of forces and their combat readiness to the commander's plans. That's not surprising: The Soviet Union was Iraq's military mentor for many years.

According to the 1978 Soviet Military Encyclopedia: "Strategic maskirovka is carried out at national and theater levels to mislead the enemy as to political and military capabilities, intentions and timing of actions."

Foreign intelligence sources that U.S. officials called largely reliable said the Iraqis have been deploying a "huge number of various kinds of target mockups and other decoys on the ground." In one U.S. air strike against targets at an Iraqi airfield, American pilots reported destroying all 20 Iraqi planes on the field. The intelligence sources, however, said the bomb damage assessment after the strike showed that the destroyed planes were all mockups.

The Iraqis also have been moving their radars and other air defense assets around Baghdad, and so far they haven't revealed their locations by turning on the radars or launching even one large surface-to-air missile, a trick U.S. intelligence officials said they appear to have learned from Yugoslavia, which learned it the hard way a few years ago. They also have been moving their air defense radars, the intelligence sources said.

U.S. intelligence sources said it appears that the Iraqis, lifting another page from the old Soviet playbook, also appear to have been transmitting phony radio and telephone messages to mislead coalition forces about the whereabouts and condition of Iraqi leaders and military units. Couriers, they suspect, may be carrying some of the real orders so spy satellites and planes can't intercept them.

They said the Iraqis also might have deliberately tricked the Americans and British into believing that key Republican Guard commanders were prepared to surrender.

Trained in counterintelligence by the Soviet KGB and the former East German Stasi, the Iraqis have fooled the West before. In one case, Saddam's agents penetrated a U.S.- and British-backed coup attempt against Saddam, then allowed it to proceed until all the plotters exposed themselves. The plotters were promptly executed, and the Iraqis announced the end of the $6 million enterprise in July 1996 by calling the CIA station in Amman, Jordan on the secret communications gear the CIA had provided to its agents, said a former U.S. intelligence officer who participated in the covert operation.

The second part of the Iraqi strategy appears to have been leading coalition forces to believe that they wouldn't encounter significant opposition until they got to Baghdad, meanwhile sending a few reliable officers and Baath Party enforcers to shore up the resistance in the southern part of the country. As a result, the Iraqis have tied down a significant number of American troops and slowed the march to Baghdad by fighting in Basra and An Nasiriyah and harassing Army and Marine supply lines and rear area bases.

Anthony H. Cordesman of the Center for Strategic International Studies in Washington says: "The best Iraqi tactic is to use elements of the Republican Guard and larger elements of the more expendable regular Army to slow down the advance and inflict casualties, while keeping most Republican Guard forces intact for defensive battles."

So it still isn't clear whether the United States will get the Desert Storm-type decisive battle outside Baghdad that it wants, or whether American troops will have to win the war in the streets of a capital city with a population of 5 million people.



TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: galloway; iraq; saddamhussein; soviet; warplan; warstrategy

1 posted on 03/28/2003 9:31:35 PM PST by HAL9000
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To: HAL9000
so now we will have boys in the field to spot out the real stuff...kill it, and then motor into Carpet City.
2 posted on 03/28/2003 9:34:06 PM PST by Keith
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To: HAL9000
"The second part of the Iraqi strategy appears to have been leading coalition forces to believe that they wouldn't encounter significant opposition until they got to Baghdad, meanwhile sending a few reliable officers and Baath Party enforcers to shore up the resistance in the southern part of the country. As a result, the Iraqis have tied down a significant number of American troops and slowed the march to Baghdad by fighting in Basra and An Nasiriyah and harassing Army and Marine supply lines and rear area bases."
This is false on its face. The expectations of Tommy Franks are best shown by the seizure of H2, H3, Talil, Bashur and Umm Qasr even as the 3rd ID advanced up the Euphrates. He understood that he would be logistically, rather than force limited. As matters stand, the 101st Airborne and the 325th brigade of the 82nd have not yet been more than lightly committed. Nearly 30% of Frank's command has yet to see serious action.

Franks could never have made his sprint to Baghdad with two mech infantry divisions abreast, because the logistical tail to Kuwait would not support it. Even now, the full deployment of the 4th ID must await the development of the bases that Franks had planned on seizing at the outset because it cannot be supported without them.

Galloway, like many commentators, has grossly misunderstood the 3rd ID's sprint to Baghdad. It's purpose was never to rush Baghdad, without supporting infantry, without its supporting logistical train, though Galloway might think that a good idea. Rather it's purpose was the fix the Republican Guard. By appearing so quickly near Baghdad, the 3rd ID has effectively nailed Saddam's johnson to the floor, and now Franks can proceed to beat his tethered foe over the head with the baseball bat of air and airmobile. Since the IRG is chained to the southern arc of Baghdad, it cannot rush north to oust the 173rd from Bashur. Nor can it swoop down on the flank of the Marines who are establishing a Euphrates-Tigris line which cuts Iraq in half at the waist.
3 posted on 03/28/2003 9:49:26 PM PST by wretchard
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To: HAL9000
This ranks a duh.

We knew or should have known that troops, armor, artillery, missles are parked in "houses" built over the last 12 years. Uniforms are for chumps.

Bunkers are 50 to 100+ meters down with a converted Metro maze of probably more than 100 miles on many levels. We cover the holes after filling vents with pure O2. (Yes, easier said than done.)

We will slug this one out like killing rats. ALLJAZZERA will keep screaming faces, bandaged babies, and covered coffins on prime time while we get serious and expand our munitions production lines and tools of war, likely with a draft for the Homeland defense.

GW recognizes that this Battle of Iraq is but one in declared 21st Century Terror War on America. The world needs to watch what we're willing to do to Islam's most powerful if murderous national leadership after "only" 9/11.

Try another mass murder against our men, women, and children at work and play, even by proxy, and HELLFIRE and JDAMnation must visit the perps and conspirators, in mosques or Forbidden City and wherever they hide.
4 posted on 03/28/2003 9:53:35 PM PST by SevenDaysInMay
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To: SevenDaysInMay
"Bunkers are 50 to 100+ meters down with a converted Metro maze of probably more than 100 miles on many levels. We cover the holes after filling vents with pure O2. (Yes, easier said than done.)"

Pure oxygen? THat's all? Do you want them to immolate themselves when they light a match or something?

Sorry, you've lost me.

--Boris

5 posted on 03/28/2003 10:01:35 PM PST by boris (Education is always painful; pain is always educational)
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To: wretchard
Since the IRG is chained to the southern arc of Baghdad, it cannot rush north to oust the 173rd from Bashur. Nor can it swoop down on the flank of the Marines who are establishing a Euphrates-Tigris line which cuts Iraq in half at the waist.

Bump.

6 posted on 03/28/2003 10:01:40 PM PST by vbmoneyspender
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To: SevenDaysInMay
with a draft for the Homeland defense.

Expand on this please.

7 posted on 03/28/2003 10:03:26 PM PST by Amerigomag
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To: HAL9000
Fool this, Saddam:


8 posted on 03/28/2003 10:04:08 PM PST by boris (Education is always painful; pain is always educational)
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To: wretchard
Thanks for the clarification. It didn't seem realistic to rush to Bagdad to engage theee Rep Guard Div with just 3rd Infantry and the MEU.

Its so annoying to listen to the press. Tonight, on CNN, the advance is portrayed as stalled due to short supplies (e.g. that soldiers are limited to one meal a day). However, the same situation on Foxnews is portrayed as a planned pause to build up a 10 day supply of fuel and ammo and await the arrival of 4th Infantry and the next attack.

This war has way to much premature carping. Having lived during the 8 year period of Vietnam with 58,000 dead, I can't believe how timerious and hysterical modern commentators are over an 8 day war with 15 combat deaths.
9 posted on 03/28/2003 10:12:42 PM PST by Mark Hamilton ("You can't reason someone out of something that they did'nt reason themselves into.")
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To: SevenDaysInMay
Try another mass murder against our men, women, and children at work and play, even by proxy, and HELLFIRE

They will, and they don't care what the retribution is. They are ultimately suicidal maniacs.

10 posted on 03/28/2003 10:20:45 PM PST by Poincare ((not a good time for a Frenchish screen name))
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To: Mark Hamilton
The press is so determined to label every American military operation a Vietnam-style quagmire that they forget that Vietnam involved EIGHT years of serious combat and FIFTY-EIGHT THOUSAND American deaths. Bush, Rumsfeld, or Franks should say to the media: "Yes, we are concerned about a quagmire. When this war lasts one-tenth as long as Vietnam, or costs us one-tenth the casualties, we'll talk. Until then, put a sock in it."
11 posted on 03/28/2003 10:22:32 PM PST by Burma Jones
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To: HAL9000
Foreign intelligence sources that U.S. officials called largely reliable said the Iraqis have been deploying a "huge number of various kinds of target mockups and other decoys on the ground."

That has been obvious in Defense Dept. films of "tanks" being blown up where instead of the roman candle of a tank full of munitions burning we can see plywood flying about.

12 posted on 03/28/2003 10:25:01 PM PST by Poincare ((not a good time for a Frenchish screen name))
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To: Mark Hamilton
Fox has had Greg Kelly reporting with the 3rd ID, which is on the west side of the Euphrates in front of Karbala, reporting that they don't have any supply problem. He said the troops are ready to push forward but the older guys are happy to use this pause that everyone is talking about to get everything ready to go. Rick Leventhal, who is with the Marines is reporting that they are having a problem getting MREs, but he says they have had that problem since they left Kuwait. Leventhal says that as far as fuel and water are concerned, they are not having any problems getting supplied with those things. Leventhal hasn't mentioned ammo, but one presumes that if they are getting water and fuel, they are almost certainly getting ammo as well.
13 posted on 03/28/2003 10:48:16 PM PST by vbmoneyspender
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To: wretchard
The expectations of Tommy Franks are best shown by the seizure of H2, H3, Talil, Bashur and Umm Qasr even as the 3rd ID advanced up the Euphrates.

This is heartening analysis. Now I know why the 3rd ID has had to do so much with so little.

14 posted on 03/29/2003 2:57:18 AM PST by risk
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To: wretchard
I like your analysis better than Galloway's.

But I'm also assuming some divine Providence to assist us in our effort.

15 posted on 03/29/2003 6:52:02 AM PST by happygrl
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