Afghanistan Mission Creep Watch - The Wrong Tactics Version
Posted by Michael Cohen
Over at Registan, Josh Foust links to a recent post by Tim Lynch that captures much of my concern over the current focus in Afghanistan on rules of engagement (ROE) aimed at limiting civilian casualties rather than targeting the enemy. The post is rather long, but worth a read:
This post makes me deeply uncomfortable for a couple of reasons. First, the suggestion that killing civilians is acceptable; and second that I think the author makes an important point.
The current mission in Afghanistan is predicated on the operational approach of population centric counter-insurgency - i.e. separating the population from insurgents by, in part, providing them with protection and security. As General McChrystal has made clear: ""The Afghan people are at the center of our mission," he said. "In reality, they are the mission. We must protect them from violence -- whatever its nature. We must respect their religion and traditions."
Here's the problem: if there is one constant in counter-insurgency it is the use of violence and coercion to achieve one's goals. Malaysia, for example, is often portrayed as a successful approach to counter-insurgency and capturing "hearts and minds" - less commented upon is the most successful element of that effort, the forcible relocation of half a million ethnic Chinese. That is, unfortunately, one way to separate the insurgent from the population.
In the Philippines, the US fought a counter-insurgency that killed hundreds of thousands of civilians while introducing techniques of torture, like waterboarding. In the counter-insurgency manual, FM 3-24, there is discussion of the CORDS, counter-insurgency program in Vietnam. Less discussed is one of its key features - the Phoenix Program, an assassination program of Vietcong leaders that killed more than 25,000 people. Finally, in Iraq, the "success" of the surge and COIN tactics there had far more to do with the ethnic cleansing and sectarian conflict of 2005 and 2006, which separated rival Sunni and Shiite ethnic groups from one another. Even more rarely mentioned in the surge narrative is the high levels of US military violence that accompanied the surge - indeed in 2007 US air strikes killed 3 1/2 times as many civilians as they did in 2006.
The point here is that successful counter-insurgency is not simply a matter of offering carrots to your enemy; there is also a lot of stick. But to read the post above suggests that in Afghanistan we are using far more carrots - and in the process potentially prolonging the conflict. For all the talk of reconciliation, what is the motivation for disaffected Pasthuns to switch sides if a) they believe they are winning the war and b) they aren't coming under the sort of military pressure that would serve as leverage for encouraging reconciliation. Now granted, one can't lump all Taliban together, but if we are not willing to use coercion to get them to switch sides or give up arms then we truly are looking at a much longer possible conflict.
Now before I get in another blog dust-up I should say that I am not advocating this approach. But the very fact that we've taken military coercion off the table as a tactic is part of the reason why I am so skeptical about the mission in Afghanistan. We have created a paradox in Afghanistan - our announced goal is to protect the Afghan population from the Taliban, which will in the short-term make it far harder to win the war because we are not targeting the enemy directly. In other words, since we don't have effective host country support or enough US troops on the ground the process of building and holding will take that much longer to achieve. Again, this is not to say such an approach won't work, but it's predicated on a long-term trajectory of building up the confidence of the population, providing security and offering services.
In the mean time, by not taking the war to the the Taliban directly - outside the core 5-10% ideological Taliban - we appear to be emboldening them to attack US and ISAF troops and operate with some degree of impunity. Where is the incentive of the $10 a day Taliban or disaffected Pashtun nationalist to switch sides? The fact that we are unable to dismantle their safe havens in Pakistan makes it even more difficult. So the process of political reconciliation that everyone agrees will be the key to "winning the war" will become that much harder to achieve.
We are, for lack of a better word, betwixt and between. Unwilling, for public relations reasons, to really take the fight to the Taliban and yet at the same time embarking on a mission organized around carrots and not sticks that flies in the face of past COIN "successes."
In a sense, it appears that we've chosen a mission in Afghanistan that minimizes our military's comparative advantage and accentuates practices for which we have neither the will, the resources nor the core competency to successfully implement.
The United States has also used similiar violent tactics in the Phillipines and Vietnam. In the Phillipines the Americans starved the local population in order to get them into populated sectors held by the government. While in Vietnam, massive firepower was used on VC controlled villages in order to get the villagers into leaving their surroundings and moving into ARVN controlled cities. Afghanistan is different from Vietnam,Iraq,and the Phillipines in that the population is nomadic and unlikely to move into the government controlled cities and towns. Moreover the United States lacks the soldiers to spread out to every town in Afghanistan.
Posted by: Peace | August 13, 2009 at 06:14 AM
"The game of strategy can, like music, be played in two keys. The major key is direct strategy, in which force is the essential factor. The minor key is indirect strategy, in which force recedes into the background and its place is taken by psychology and planning."
Andre Beaufre
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