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Will Iraq Be an Afghanistan -- or another Bay of Pigs?
STRATFOR ^ | 15 August 2002 | Staff

Posted on 08/15/2002 3:09:26 PM PDT by Axion

Will Iraq Be an Afghanistan -- or another Bay of Pigs?
15 August 2002

Summary

Certain factions inside Washington are pushing the Afghan model of warfare -- combining massive air power with cooperation by opposition forces already in country -- as a viable strategy for a possible attack on Iraq. However, the conditions inside Iraq are much different, causing some to question whether such a campaign could raise the specter of the Bay of Pigs operation.

Analysis

Iraq has become the focus of many debates, one of the most important of which is occurring within the American defense and intelligence communities about the current state of U.S. military power and the manner in which war will be waged in the 21st century. Alongside this debate is the question of the effectiveness of U.S. intelligence to enable the American military to achieve victories.

From the standpoint of many military analysts, the United States experienced a string of decisive military victories during the 1990s -- bracketed by the Gulf and Kosovo wars -- while sustaining extraordinarily low casualties. As important, as the end of the decade approached, the quantity of ground forces required to achieve victory declined dramatically.

The successes of the 1990s led to a school of thought within the military, particularly in the U.S. Air Force, that a qualitative shift in warfare already had taken place. Advances in both the technology and the doctrine of the air campaign had reached the point that air power could paralyze an enemy's capability to wage war.

The argument was that it was air power that was decisive during Desert Storm, and that the massed armored formations that recaptured Kuwait were a waste of resources. A much smaller force would have been sufficient to sweep aside an Iraqi army whose command and control functions were destroyed and whose morale was shattered. By Kosovo, the need for massive ground forces had disappeared.

Afghanistan was the crowning glory for this school of thought. The war consisted of an air campaign combining aircraft carriers, long-range bombers and cruise missiles. The ground forces consisted primarily of special operations teams, most working in tandem with indigenous forces, with some light infantry (Marine and Army) moving in to hold key positions and provide support for special operations teams.

The Afghan model seemed to serve as a paradigm for future war fighting, and there is a faction inside the Bush administration and within the defense and intelligence communities that argues this is the model that ought to be applied to Iraq, and that the kind of buildup required in 1990-1991 is no longer necessary.

According to this model, the primary burden of the war will be carried by U.S. air power. Aircraft and cruise missiles will first suppress Iraq's air defenses, then attack its command and control infrastructure and finally decimate any concentrations of ground forces, particularly armor. At the same time, special operations teams will deploy throughout the country. Their mission will be to provide targeting intelligence, disrupt lines of supply and communications and, most of all, organize resistance to Saddam Hussein's regime on the ground.

The attack on command and control facilities will destroy Hussein's ability to control his forces nationwide, isolate (if not kill) him and create a vacuum into which opposition forces can move. At the end, conventional ground forces will move in to mop up, impose control and secure the country.

There are two premises operating here. The first is that air power can weaken Hussein's control over the country. The second is that Special Forces teams will find discontented populations that can be formed into an effective paramilitary force.

The second premise is the most important. Even if the Air Force is completely successful in disrupting Hussein's control, effective ground action to dislodge enough of his forces that they do not threaten follow-on conventional forces is critical. In Afghanistan, that force was provided by the Northern Alliance and other warlords who could be induced to work with the United States.

There are obvious and critical differences between Afghanistan and Iraq. Afghanistan is deeply divided along ethnic and tribal lines, not only between the Northern Alliance and the Taliban, but also within the Taliban itself. The marriages of convenience that comprised the bulk of the Taliban crumbled when they became inconvenient. Moreover, the Northern Alliance was comprised of heavily armed, experienced and willing combatants under the control of a few men. If the leadership could be persuaded, an effective force was in place -- relative to the strength of the Taliban.

Thus, the ability of air power to disrupt the Taliban's command and control, and to provide coordinate air support for indigenous operations, depended on the existence of forces to carry out those operations. Those forces were ready to go in Afghanistan. That is not the case in Iraq.

The Kurds will be quick to point out that they are armed and ready, but they should not be mistaken for the Northern Alliance. The Kurds' ultimate goal is a Kurdish state -- something they have de facto achieved in northern Iraq by walking a fine line between the Turks and Hussein. Turkey has no interest in the emergence of an internationally recognized Kurdish state, and Washington has sided with Ankara on that point, declaring that a post-Saddam Iraq will be a unitary state. There is little to no chance that Iraq's Sunnis or Shiites would tolerate a significant Kurdish role in the government of that state.

For the Kurds, therefore, cooperation with the United States in toppling Hussein promises great risk but denies their desired reward. And finally, the Kurds are on the periphery of Hussein's core strategic area. Hussein has been extremely efficient at sealing or eliminating any internal rifts that might be exploited to stage an uprising.

So Hussein has opposition, but opposition alone is different from effective opposition. Saddam's security forces are highly effective, in large part because of their brutality. After many years of successfully destroying and disrupting any organized opposition inside of Iraq, it is extremely doubtful that indigenous opposition forces can be mobilized, armed and trained between the time the air campaign loosens Saddam's grip on them and the moment they must commence offensive operations.

There is an analogy here with the Bay of Pigs, which was predicated on the assumption that the landing of a few hundred paramilitaries, coupled with U.S. air power, would trigger a rising against Cuban leader Fidel Castro. There was never an expectation that the direct force would be successful, only that it would trigger indigenous forces. It could be argued that the cancellation of planned air strikes represented a major shift from the original plan, but it is extremely unlikely that even air strikes would have led to an uprising. Castro's security services were simply too good and his popularity was too secure.

In Iraq, the premise of the operation is similar to assumptions made about Cuba -- namely the fact that conditions for an effective uprising are in place. Some argue that air power has advanced so dramatically since 1961 that the relative weakness of the Iraqi opposition would be compensated for by more effective air strikes. Obviously, U.S. intelligence knows that the Iraqi opposition being paraded in Washington is an empty shell. It also knows that raising a meaningful force inside of Iraq is unlikely.

Therefore, the United States seems to be making the following bet: Air power has demonstrated its ability to so destroy an enemy that a relatively small force could engage and defeat what little may be left of the Iraqi armed forces. The force deployed in 1991 represented massive overkill. A much smaller force, perhaps 20 percent as large, could have been as effective.

Therefore, in the 2002 or 2003 model, a substantial air campaign, combining naval air in the Persian Gulf with Air Force strikes from Turkey and Qatar, will be sufficient to permit a ground force of two divisions or less to manage the situation. Special operations troops will focus on intelligence, targeting and disruption missions but will not be expected to raise an effective indigenous force.

Given the experience, this argument appears plausible. But it does not deal with a single crucial element: Baghdad.

When the Israelis invaded Lebanon nearly two decades ago, they struck deep and went to the outskirts of Beirut. They were hoping that panic among the Palestinian Liberation Organization forces there would denude the city of defenders, giving them control.

When the PLO stood and fought, Israel declined combat, knowing that urban warfare provides a huge advantage for the defender, particularly one familiar with the landscape. When the Soviet army closed on Berlin in 1945, it had complete air superiority, ringed the city with artillery, outnumbered the defenders and was enormously better armed, equipped and trained. The German defenders -- children and old men in many cases -- knew that the war was lost. Nevertheless, the Soviets suffered tens of thousands of casualties taking the city.

The U.S. Army has not assaulted a very large, defended city in its history. Since the United States is casualty-averse, its doctrine calls for maneuvering around urban areas without entering them. That means that there is a tremendous unknown: the ability of the United States to paralyze with a high degree of certainty any defense of Baghdad -- bearing in mind that a disorganized defense can be just as devastating as an organized one in that environment.

The essential assumption has been that air power could so destabilize Saddam's armed forces that they would be unable to maneuver and defend. The core unanswered question is whether air power would be equally effective in disrupting defenses inside of Baghdad.

Would forces there stand and fight? Would they melt away? Could a two-division mechanized force subdue the city with acceptable casualties? Most important, could the United States know the answers to these questions prior to launching the attack?

We should add to this that there will be political constraints placed on the air campaign. A strategic bombing campaign against Baghdad causing tens of thousands of casualties might win the war, but the pressure it would place on the international coalition would be enormous. Yet in tactical combat inside an urban environment, close air support without massive collateral damage is hard to come by.

These are the nightmares confronting American planners. On the one side is the very real promise of air- and special operations-based warfare. On the other side is the question of just how far you can push this model before it traps you into a war of attrition. For those who assert confidence in the political consequences of a military action, there is the memory of the Bay of Pigs. On the other side -- in its extreme form -- there is Stalingrad and the memory of what defensive warfare can do to a mobile enemy when drawn into a major city. These are the cautionary tales with which U.S. defense planners are working.



TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS:

1 posted on 08/15/2002 3:09:26 PM PDT by Axion
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To: Axion
Nonsense. Bay of Pigs was a poorly conceived clandestine operation that depended mostly upon CIA-trained Cuban expatriates instead of professional soldiers.

Bay of Pigs is not even in the same ballpark with what is apparently about to transpire in Iraq. Here, we have had months to openly prepare and deploy our assets. We know every square inch of the terrain and our soldiers will be supported by vast technology that was unheard of back in 1961.

If we decided to do this thing, it is going to be one of the most lopsided military contests in history.

2 posted on 08/15/2002 3:15:57 PM PDT by SamAdams76
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To: Axion
there is the memory of the Bay of Pigs

No spineless JFK in charge this time.

3 posted on 08/15/2002 3:16:20 PM PDT by SMEDLEYBUTLER
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To: SamAdams76
And we don't have the USSR on Iraq's side. If the USSR wasn't there, we'd have cleaned up Cuba right then and there.
4 posted on 08/15/2002 3:18:07 PM PDT by SoDak
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To: Axion
Even if there is a substantial risk that this strategy may fail, it seems to me it is worth trying. First of all, I think it is more probable than not that it will work. Secondly, the risks if we adopt the alternative of a massive ground invasion, Desert Storm II, particularly, that Saddam will attack those troop concentrations with his weapons of mass destruction, strike me as greater.

If Afghanistan II fails, it will hopefully at least dissipate Saddam's weapons of mass destruction. And its failure will probably make the U.S. more willing to face the costs of a massive ground invasion.

5 posted on 08/15/2002 3:23:06 PM PDT by aristeides
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To: Axion
When they start with a false dichotomy in the title, you wonder whether to bother reading the rest.
6 posted on 08/15/2002 3:37:01 PM PDT by jlogajan
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To: SamAdams76
The Bay of Pigs was the JFK revised landing site that eliminated the contingency plan should invasion objectives not materialize. On top of that orders were issued by McNamara at JFK's direction to delay and then reduce the number B-25 allowing Castro's small "air force" to enter the battle. Then our Navy fighter cover was cancelled while the invasion was underway and under attack. Thank God GWB is NO JFK ...rto
7 posted on 08/15/2002 3:40:11 PM PDT by visitor
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To: SamAdams76
I concur, SA76... a surprisingly tepid analysis from Stratfor. FWIW, I believe that the only thing keeping us from already implementing the so-called "blitz" operation....that is massive airstrikes of the Iraqi militarty infrastructure and a total obliteration of all of saddam's centers of control; coupled with armored speadheads driving into the country from several directions...maybe 40,000 troopers total, under an air armada......is the fear that Saddam wowuld loose a WMD on the invasion force.....that's the joker here...
8 posted on 08/15/2002 3:45:56 PM PDT by ken5050
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To: Axion
Exact same bullshit that they said in the first war against Iraq and then against Afganastan.

If America wants to do something, shes going to do it. You'd think people would have figured that out by now

9 posted on 08/15/2002 3:46:31 PM PDT by stuck_in_new_orleans
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To: visitor; Axion
There was no US Airpower unleashed in Bay of Pigs ... THAT WAS THE PROBLEM.
10 posted on 08/15/2002 3:48:35 PM PDT by dodger
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To: dodger
exactly...rto
11 posted on 08/15/2002 3:54:05 PM PDT by visitor
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To: SoDak
You say "If the USSR wasn't there, we'd have cleaned up Cuba right then and there."

WRONG!!! If the JFK wasn't there, we'd have cleaned up Cuba right then and there...rto

12 posted on 08/15/2002 3:59:10 PM PDT by visitor
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To: SamAdams76
Will Iraq Be an Afghanistan -- or another Bay of Pigs?

Well, at least it is different then the usually cry of "Another Vietnam".

He gets two points for that. That brings his score to, hmmmm, two points out of a possible one hundred. Better luck next time ol' chum and we do have some lovely parting gifts for you.

a.cricket

13 posted on 08/15/2002 4:19:47 PM PDT by another cricket
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To: SamAdams76
If you will recall, lo-tech in Viet Nam defeated quite a bit of our high-tech. We bombed that country into the stone age and still they moved troops and supplies and we couldn't stop them. Many of our high-tech planes were shot down by the single bullets fired into the air by simple farmers. Don't place too much hope on hi-tech, it will still take the grunts to take control of the ground. And many will die. Been there, done that.
14 posted on 08/15/2002 4:27:57 PM PDT by gunshy
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To: gunshy
I'm afraid you date yourself with the Vietnam comparison. Our military in the Vietnam-era was not all that high-tech. Satellites were in their infancy. The integrated circuit was still on the drawing board for most of that war and the equipment used in that war was mostly of WW2 or Korean-War vintage. Furthermore, the whole operation in Vietnam was one big clusterf*#k. We had to fight the war with one hand tied behind our back because the top brass did not want to commit to an all-out war. There were no real specific offensive objectives so most of the time we were just reacting defensively. We were sitting ducks! Many of the soldiers were drafted and didn't even want to be there. Many Americans back home (and not just the hippies) didn't want us there either.

We just cannot compare Iraq to Vietnam. Even the terrain is totally different. For example, there are no jungles to hide in in Iraq.

15 posted on 08/15/2002 4:41:05 PM PDT by SamAdams76
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To: Axion
What was Stratfor's track record on forecasting the Afghan campaign, BTW? Just curious...
16 posted on 08/15/2002 4:44:11 PM PDT by The Great Satan
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To: SamAdams76
My point was that overconfidence in our technology can cause a breakdown in our ability to win the next war. We had "puff" in nam and we had lots of napalm, it didn't do us much good. All I am saying is that we should not enter this war thinking it will be a picnic. There are 50,000 gi's from nam who I think will agree with me.
17 posted on 08/15/2002 5:12:33 PM PDT by gunshy
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To: gunshy
You are right about that. No war is ever a "picnic." Otherwise it wouldn't be a war. A lucky shot will bring down a plane or two and there is always the chance that Sadaam might lob chemicals (or worse) at our troops. But I do not think it is an overconfidence in technology that causes me to believe a war in Iraq will be a (relatively speaking) cakewalk. They are overmatched, period. The United States will not lose this war.
18 posted on 08/15/2002 5:42:18 PM PDT by SamAdams76
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To: SamAdams76
I pray that you are correct.
19 posted on 08/15/2002 8:32:57 PM PDT by gunshy
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Its late and I dont have my history book around, but I cannot believe that the US Army hasnt taken a single large city defended by an enemy?

Mexico City is not a city? Vicksburg is not a city? Souel (sp) is not a city? Hue is not a city?

I appreciate the point about the US Army being risk-averse--and thats a good strategy--but come on...we've taken cities before and we will take them again.
20 posted on 08/15/2002 8:51:35 PM PDT by Vermont Lt
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