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03/03/2008

#2 with a bullet

The death of Raul Reyes, one of the top leaders of the FARC, has inspired the predictable, reflexive, pointless discussion about command hierarchies in a revolutionary organization: Who will be the new #2?

Of course, that question presupposes that Reyes was the #2 leader in the FARC. He was certainly close to Tirofijo, the top man in the FARC. Reyes was the "public face" of the FARC, a member of the governing directorate, and Tirofijo's confidant. But in what sense was he #2?

In most revolutionary organizations, there is no #2. Instead, there are leaders with different roles. In Al Qaeda, Ayman al-Zawahiri is the top "operational" person. He is not, however, the "public face" of Al Qaeda in the same fashion as Suleiman Abu Gaith. Abu Mohammed al-Masri often has a more direct role in Al Qaeda operations, even though he's nominally not as high-ranking as Zawahiri. Meanwhile, with Osama bin Laden in hiding, with less freedom of action than he had before the 2001 invasion of Afghanistan, it's hard to see what being the #1 guy in Al Qaeda really means.

Organizations with parallel military and political arms only confuse matters. How would you rank Gerry Adams' role as the head of Sinn Fein, when the IRA was still pursuing the "armed struggle"? Was he #2 by virtue of being the head of the political wing, or did he have less influence within the overall IRA/Sinn Fein organization than other military leaders?

Other terrorist and guerrilla groups have different roles, with more or less power in the hands of the top leader, and different responsibilities (fund-raising, operations, policy, propaganda, etc.) distributed across the top leaders. It's hard, therefore, to find any organization like the FARC or Al Qaeda in which #2 is a meaningful designation.

I don't know the origins of the "Who will be #2?" question. Maybe the people asking it assume that terrorist or guerrilla groups operate in the same fashion as SPECTRE, with a clear top Bond villain and an equally clear trusted lieutenant. (Which means that US agents will have to kill the lieutenant before they can duke it out with the top leader. And they have to be ready for the top leader to appear dead, only to suddenly make a last, desperate lunge for his gun, laser cannon, or earth-penetrating drill.) Or maybe it's from watching the old BBC series, The Prisoner, in which the question, "Who is #2?" had special meaning.

In any case, it's a pretty stupid question. Reyes had a particular role in the FARC. Judge the effects of his death based on that reality, instead of some goofy shorthand for people who can't bother to research the news stories they're covering.

12/03/2006

Now I get it

IN THE NEWS
I have to confess something. I was being extremely dense about the whole "Is Iraq in the thick of a civil war or not?" controversy. Silly me, I took the question at face value. A few weeks ago, I finally realized that there was a deeper, poisoned vein of politics running through the discussion.

If you ask political scientists, "What is a civil war?" you're likely to get as many answers as the experts you ask. In the general contours, you won't find much disagreement. However, you'll find a lot of difference among scholars about the most descriptive term to use, as well as the different species of animal we're describing. Internal war, civil war, revolutionary warfare, guerrilla war--these terms often get jumbled up together. There's little doubt, however, that what we've seen in Iraq for the last three years is a [select your preferred term]. The only real questions are the conflicts' scale, the participants, the strategies they are using, and the stage of the conflict (choose your preferred series of phases).

In nearly every respect, the question "Is it a civil war or not?" is just plain silly. Its dark comedy is visible in both the Bush Administration's tortured efforts to describe the Iraq war as something else, and NBC News' ponderous, pompous declaration that Iraq is riven by civil war. (The label "pompous" is deserved because, the way NBC anchor Matt Lauer announced it, he made it sound as if it were a brave or profound statement. If NBC had quietly changed its terminology for the Iraq war during its regular news broadcasts, the effect would have been much the same. The American public hardly needs convincing.)

The denials that Iraq is in the middle of a civil war are about as naked a lie as you can get. It's the sort of lie that we've come to accept too readily in the United States: we know the speaker doesn't believe a word he's saying, and he knows that we know. The point of the lie, therefore, is purely political, an effort to deflect bad consequences away from you by sheer willpower, demonstrating through laughable semantics exactly how determined you are. Ultimately, lies like these collapse, but they cost valuable time by generating non-controversies.

07/05/2005

Revolutionaries on the Internet

IN THE NEWS
Global Guerrillas has a nice example of how revolutionary groups--guerrillas and terrorists alike--are making clever use of the Internet. The funny thing is, it's not hard to follow what these groups are discussing among themselves. Certainly, you won't see any operational details. You will, however, learn a fair amount about their doctrine, objectives, and organization.

The author, John Robb, sometimes gets a little overheated in his use of software metaphors applied to revolutionary warfare. For example, I think his "open source model of insurgency" is a bit strained, but his discussion of it does describe some key details about how insurgents innovate and adapt.

05/12/2005

You may qualify for a civil war!

IN THE NEWS
I have mixed feelings about this Newsday article that's making the rounds in the blogs today. What good does it do to label the conflict in Iraq a civil war instead of an insurgency, the recent troubles, or whatever else you might call it?

First, there are no universally agreed-upon definitions of many of these terms. Professionals who write about terrorism, guerrilla warfare, fourth generation warfare, and the like usually start their books with a statement like, "I am defining [insert term here] the following way."

That's not the same as saying there are no standards. There is agreement among scholars and practicioners of revolutionary and counterrevolutionary warfare about the rough contours of these conflicts. The efforts to delineate crisply-defined edges between different types of combatants or methods is where agreement breaks down. For example, would you equate the Taliban remnants in Afghanistan with the French maquis during WWII? I don't think everyone reading this post would answer in exactly the same way.

Second, common assumptions about the scale of violence needed to sustain a "civil war" are usually wrong. It takes far fewer insurgents to make an insurgency than most people would expect. Only a few thousand Taliban guerrillas--maybe even under 1,000--are sufficient to keep the movement alive and kicking. During many phases of internal wars, the insurgents are merely trying to sustain enough political and military strength to survive until opportunities to expand arise.

Third, what makes a "civil" war is intent, not strength. One side is trying to reshape the political landscape, by seceding, toppling a leader, replacing an entire regime, or just forcing a government to change particular policies.

I know why many bloggers are jumping on the Newsday article. Civil war is shorthand for things are not going well in Iraq. It's also a way of expressing concern that the different ethnic and sectarian divisions in Iraq will begin fighting more directly, or new groups who have been sidelined will enter the fray. So why not just say that?

12/23/2004

The dilemma

IN THE NEWS

According to the Pentagon, the culprit behind the deadly attack on the US military mess tent in Mosul was not a rocket or mortar, but a suicide bomber. That fact is significant, to the extent that it defines which painful dilemma we face, but not if we face a terrible dilemma. The horns of the dilemma are quite real, and quite sharp.

The most basic operational question now is, where do American commanders deploy their forces? Force protection demands that US troops patrol, wherever they are. If they are trying to establish a safe area around a base wider at all points of the compass than the effective range of Katyusha rockets or light mortars, the troops need to patrol. If they are trying to intercept anyone on foot or in a car who may be trying to deliver a suicide bomb, they need to patrol. If they are trying to keep snipers from making harassment attacks on the bases, they need to patrol.

The dilemma is the choice between from where they will patrol, into what areas. If force protection were the top priority, American commanders would redeploy outside inhabited areas, preferring open ground where they can establish a no man's land around each base. All the technical advantages the Americans enjoy—night vision, IR vision, motion sensors, cameras, highly accurate weapons with very long ranges, on-call supporting artillery and air power—would be available. Traffic into the base would be confined to a narrow corridor, where each person passing in and out could be searched in an orderly fashion.

Of course, if the Americans were to redeploy in this fashion, they might as well not be in Iraq at all. "The mission" for now is to provide Iraqis with some respite from daily mayhem while the Iraqi security forces become a viable replacement. Surrendering the cities and towns of Iraq, a highly urbanized country, would be tantamount would be just that—surrender.

Unfortunately, as long as American troops patrol the streets and alleys of Iraq, they lose their significant technical, tactical, and operational edges over the different Iraqi insurgent and terrorist groups. Night vision doesn't peek around corners or into buildings where insurgents might lay in ambush. No amount of training protects you from getting shot in the face while your squad is clearing out a minaret, and you're unlucky enough to be on point. Artillery, tanks, and air strikes are not only militarily less effective inside a city, but they're politically counterproductive when the mission is to keep a substantial number of Iraqis supportive, or just tolerant, of the US occupation. (No election will change that reality, by the way.)

But, you may ask, what about the much-touted American skill in urban warfare? Here's where a name can be somewhat misleading, particularly if you're not familiar with how the different levels of strategy interact, and the variety of strategies at each level. The US military's skill at urban warfare is, by most measures, excellent when faced with a particular kind of opponent, fighting in a particular fashion. It's not very good when faced with certain types of enemy with much different goals and techniques. That's no slight to the Army and Marines at all, it's simply the reality of training and equipping your troops for one kind of war, and not another.

Andrew Krepinevich made the same point in his excellent and, unfortunately, not very well known book, The Army and Vietnam. The first decade or two of post-Vietnam post mortems suffered from very simplistic explanations of why the world's greatest military suffered defeat at the hands of a Third World country (North Vietnam) and its guerrilla allies (the National Liberation Front). Depending on whom you asked, the American problem was stupidity, arrogance, imperialism, back-stabbing politicians, war protesters, failure to use atomic weapons, or the tide of history. While any or all of these factors might have played a role, they didn't provide much of a military analysis of the war.

Krepinevich's point was obvious, but surprisingly, previously unexplored. The US military spent decades preparing for both nuclear and conventional war against the USSR and its Eastern European allies. Not only did the services train and equip for this scenario, but it also rewarded commanders who were part of the NATO effort. Other commanders in other theaters received fewer career benefits, so the best and the brightest naturally gravitated towards preparation for stopping the Soviet juggernaut crashing through the Fulda Gap.

The American forces on the ground had some experience with "little wars." Unfortunately, the branch that had this experience, the Marines, not only had a smaller number of troops, but also lacked the Army's power to decide the Vietnam theater, operational, and tactical strategies. When the Marines had the latitude to use their experience, such as with the combined action platoon (CAP) program, they got results. (For an insider's account of the CAP program, which can tell you a lot about how US troops should be working with "local forces" in Iraq, see Bing West's The Village.)

With the Army in charge, the ground war in Vietnam was an effort to cram an entirely different war into the NATO/Warsaw Pact mold. Familiar features of the Vietnam War, such as the omnipresent helicopters, were originally developed to fight the Soviets, not the North Vietnamese, and certainly not the Viet Cong. Helicopters were supposed to be maneuvering US troops around the highly familiar European battlefield, planting them at locations like the flanks or rear of a Soviet spearhead where they could do the most harm. In Vietnam, air mobility helped move troops quickly into "hot LZs" where other troops had "made contact" with the enemy. With the assistance of helicopter gunships and aerial spotters for air and artillery strikes, US forces could effectively clear a spot on the map of enemy troops. Unfortunately, since their services were soon needed elsewhere, for a new clash with the enemy, these same highly capable troops did not effectively secure that spot from further enemy infiltrations or attack. The effort was much like trying to hold back a flood with a broom.

Sound familiar? It should, because we're engaged in much the same exercise now in Iraq. We're trying to cram the unfamiliar enemy into a familiar mold, and it's not working. US doctrine is actually making the situation worse, both militarily and politically. Not only are we losing and increasing number of soldiers each month, both killed and wounded, but we're losing the political battle for Iraq.

That's a long way of coming back around to the topic of urban warfare, but it was an important detour. When American commanders talk about urban warfare, they're referring to an operational, tactical, and technical approach to fighting conventional or irregular forces. If we were fighting the battle of Stalingrad, our urban warfare doctrine would make eminent sense. The enemy is fighting for control of important pieces of terrain. These targets—let's start with the city of Stalingrad—easily break down into objectives for each level of command. The army commander is responsible for taking the city; a divisional commander might have complete or partial responsibility for some arbitrarily-designated zone of the city; a company commander might be ordered to seize and hold a city block. The battle for Stalingrad, not surprisingly, is a story not only about the deadly struggle between men, but the distinct urban locations for which they struggled. The "tractor works" factory, the grain elevator, the sewers, Pavlov's house, the Tsaritsa Gorge, the banks of the Volga—these clearly-identifiable locations are where the battle for Stalingrad was decided.

Similar locations exist in Fallujah, Karbala, Najaf, and Sadr City. The soldiers who fought to capture and defend these locations will never forget them. However, temporarily occupying them is no more likely to break the back of the Iraqi insurgency than the "big sweep" operations in Vietnam worked against the Viet Cong.

We're not fighting the Wehrmacht, a conventional military organization for which control of Stalingrad determined the front lines of the German invasion. We're not even fighting irregular forces like the ones we faced in Mogadishu and the Balkans. Our enemy is far less interested in terrain: rather than pointlessly dying in the siege of Fallujah, many of them simply shifted their attention elsewhere, including Mosul. Not only don't they care about their own front lines (or lack thereof), they don't care about ours. The target of their attacks isn't our military capability, which could be crippled by taking a strategic town, or killing a lot of American troops. Their goal is to make a political and psychological point, simply by being able to execute horrific attacks like the one in Mosul. These attacks are aimed at both Americans and Iraqis, and they're far easier to execute than a conventional military assault.

That's what makes our current dilemma extremely painful. In the cities, towns, and villages of Iraq, the enemy can ambush us more easily. They don't need to have control of the city to attack us; they only need to infiltrate a few people to carry out a suicide bombing, mortar attack, or roadside bombing. However, we need to keep the Iraqi population safe from the same enemy—but to do so, we have to put American troops in the most dangerous spots possible, where their advantages are all diminished.

The Viet Cong often made just the same type of attacks. They executed local leaders branded as imperialist collaborators, fired rockets into marketplaces, detonated bombs in movie theaters where US troops were relaxing. While there are no triple-canopy jungles in Iraq to frustrate us, there are plenty of buildings, alleys, and rubble piles to take their place.

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