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COIN, another example of our difficulty learning from history or experience

Summary:  What is our military strategy in the 21st century?  More foreign counter-insurgencies?  More going abroad in search of monsters to destroy?  Followup to COIN – Now we see that it failed. But that was obvious before we started (when will we learn?).

{There is an} arc of instability. … The recipe there is for significant conflict over the next few decades … I see no reason to think the world is going to get any nicer over the next two decades.”
— Commandant  Jim Amos (General, USMC) speaking to think-tankers and government contractors on 18 November, Arlington, Va.  From “Hotspots: You might deploy here next“, James K. Sanborn, Marine Corps Times, 5 December 2011.

What I have been saying in all of this is that when we are thinking about small wars in the present and the future we need to do it with the understanding that the way the US has fought these wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, operationally, has failed. If we treat them as successes then we are learning the wrong things from them. It would be like the British after the disastrous and failed Galipoli campaign in 1915 afterward claiming that they were successful and that there was a trove a strategic lessons to be gotten from it.
— Gian P. Gentile (Colonel, US Army) at the Small Wars Journal, 6 December 2011

Contents

  1. Guessing about our future wars
  2. Not everybody wants to face the future
  3. A realistic appraisal and sound advice
  4. For more information – other articles about COIN
  5. For more information – about our war hawks

(1)  Guessing about our future wars

As we walk away from the Iraq and Af-Pak Wars, we face many questions about the future.  Two of these are:

Given the historical record, this series of posts suggest the answers are:

That does not mean that counter-insurgency is impossible for foreign armies.  It suggests that repeating failed doctrines (Vietnam, Iraq, Af-Pak) will not work.  As the old Alcoholics Anonymous saying goes, insanity is repeating the same actions but expecting a different result.

Update:  Not all foreign wars, or even all small foreign wars, are counter-insurgencies.

(2)  Not everybody wants to face the future

In the previous post of this series I said that we would learn from our experience.  But I’m an optimist.

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Our expeditions to Vietnam, Iraq, and Af-Pak resulted in part from a combination of hubris and refusal to learn.  There are indications that our hawks learned little since 9-11.  That’s odd, since the COIN literature bristles with descriptions of how much our military learned, mostly re-discovery of lessons from the many counter-insurgencies Mao brought 4GW to maturity after WWII.

During the next few years we’ll hear many excuses for our past wars:

  1. We didn’t really properly do counter-insurgency.  We didn’t use enough firepower, follow FM 3-24, whatever.  It’s the No True Scotsman Fallacy (see Wikipedia).
  2. We really won great if vague or imaginary benefits.
  3. Things would have been worse if we had not waged long wars in those nations (counter-factuals are easy and fun to write)

Then there’s war advocacy as fantasy: “The Next Fight: Time for a Mission Change in Afghanistan“, by Abu Muqawama (aka Andrew Exum), David W. Barno (Lt General, US Army, Retired), and Mathew Irvine, Center for a New America Security, 6 December 2011.   It is fine black humor, an advocate of foreign wars (conducted at great cost, to little advantage of America) ignores his long string of bad advice and false analysis — confidently giving advice about the future.  Future historians will speculate about the causes of these delusions.

Perhaps Exum has not read the dissertation of his Abu Muqawama co-writer:  “The Perils of Third-Party Counterinsurgency Campaigns”, Doctoral dissertation by Erin Marie Simpson in Political Science from Harvard, 17 June 2010 — available through Proquest.  Her conclusion:

Ultimately, I argue that third parties win when they’re able to overcome these intelligence challenges before public support runs out. This typically requires rather substantial military reforms and complex deal-making with local leaders. Unfortunately, the nature of selection effects in these cases gives rise to a population of insurgencies whereby these conditions are very unlikely to be met.

This is another step in the evolution of Exum and Baro.  Exactly one year  they accellerated their retreat from full-bore war-boosting in Af-Pak with  “A Responsible Transition”.  See Bernard Finel’s review of that report.

(3)  A realistic appraisal and sound advice

From Chapter 6.2 in Martin van Creveld’s Changing Face of War (2006):

What is known, though, is that attempts by post-1945 armed forces to suppress guerrillas and terrorists have constituted a long, almost unbroken record of failure … {W}hat changed was the fact that, whereas previously it had been the main Western powers that failed, now the list included other countries as well. Portugal’s explusion from Africa in 1975 was followed by the failure of the South Africans in Namibia, the Ethiopians in Ertrea, the Indians in Sri Lanka, the Americans in Somalia, and the Israelis in Lebanon. … Even in Denmark {during WWII}, “the model protectorate”, resistance increased as time went on.

Many of these nations used force up to the level of genocide in their failed attempts to defeat local insurgencies. Despite that, foreign forces have an almost uniform record of defeat. Such as the French-Algerian War, which the French waged until their government collapsed.

John Quincy Adams gave us sound advice on 4 July 1821 at the House of Representatives:

… if the wise and learned philosophers of the elder world…  should find their hearts disposed to enquire what has America done for the benefit of mankind?  Let our answer be this: America … has held forth to them the hand of honest friendship, of equal freedom, of generous reciprocity.

  • She has uniformly spoken among them … the language of equal liberty, of equal justice, and of equal rights.
  • She has … respected the independence of other nations while asserting and maintaining her own.
  • She has abstained from interference in the concerns of others, even when conflict has been for principles to which she clings …

Wherever the standard of freedom and Independence has been or shall be unfurled, there will her heart, her benedictions and her prayers be. But she goes not abroad in search of monsters to destroy. She is the well-wisher to the freedom and independence of all. She is the champion and vindicator only of her own. She will commend the general cause by the countenance of her voice, and the benignant sympathy of her example.

She well knows that by once enlisting under other banners than her own, were they even the banners of foreign independence, she would involve herself beyond the power of extrication, in all the wars of interest and intrigue, of individual avarice, envy, and ambition, which assume the colors and usurp the standard of freedom. The fundamental maxims of her policy would insensibly change from liberty to force.

(4)  Other articles about COIN

(5)  For more information — about America’s war hawks

(a)  Defining terms

It’s become politically incorrect to use the term war-monger.  Hawks and other flattering terms are required for those who advocate spending our blood and treasure abroad in often futile wars.  Looking back at history, when people called things what they were, we can ask What is a warmonger? Who are the warmongers?, 10 March 2011.

(b)  About the record

As has been observed by so many for so long, being a war hawk in America means never having to admit you are wrong — or losing prestige for being consistently wrong.  As we see in these posts by Andrew Exum justifying the Af-Pak War.  Two years later, ten years after the invasion, it continues to roll along — with its architects happily and confidently planning the next phase.

  1. Exum: “Introducing the Afghanistan Strategy Dialogue”, 8 August 2009
  2. The first salvo in the Afghanistan Strategy Debate, 9 August 2009
  3. Second salvo in the Afghanistan Strategy Debate — Bernard Finel, 9 August 2009

To see all posts about COIN, go to the FM reference page about Military and strategic theory — section 3.

(c)  About our hawks

  1. Who are the experts advising our generals? We know what they’ll say., 3 August 2009
  2. A Quote of the Day – we cannot help but see ourselves as Lords, and other nations as peons, 11 August 2009
  3. Exum looks at Af-Pak campaign of the Long War, revealing more about ourselves than the foe, 7 June 2010
  4. The threat of insurgents using MANPADS is exaggerated (SOP for our experts), 31 July 2010
  5. Our geopolitical experts will destroy America, if we let them, 27 October 2010
  6. What is a warmonger?  Who are the warmongers?, 10 March 2011
  7. Our geopolitical experts see the world with the innocent eyes of children (that’s a bad thing), 14 March 2011
  8. A child-like credulity is required to be a US geopolitical expert, 25 April 2011
  9. We can learn an important lesson about ourselves from the “Three Cups of Tea” affair (part one), 26 April 2011
  10. The lessons about ourselves we can learn from the “Three Cups of Tea” affair (part two), 27 April 2011

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