March 24, 2008 | Posted by Abu Muqawama - 10:56am |
11 Comments
Everyone has been talking up David Ucko's new article in
Orbis --
Innovation or Inertia: The U.S. Military and the Learning of Counterinsurgency. Michael Noonan, Frank Hoffman, and the
Insurgency Research Group have all recommended it.
On the Small Wars Journal blog, Hoffman had this to say:
In his Orbis article, provocatively titled “Innovation or Inertia,” the author recounts in detail the new directives and initiatives undertaken by the American military since 9/11. He suggests that the reforms point to “a potential turning-point in the history of the U.S. military.” Yet the Pentagon’s defense strategy and budget suggests otherwise. This leads Ucko to ask “what are the prospects of the U.S. military truly learning counterinsurgency”? Aside from rhetoric, how committed is DoD to the required changes needed to make America’s military as dominant in COIN and other forms of irregular warfare as it currently is in conventional warfare?
Abu Muqawama
just printed off the article and is about to read it on his way home. You can do the same either via
SWJ or the
IRG.
Update: Okay, Abu Muqawama just read this article in his local Algerian coffee shop and can whole-heartedly recommend it to his readers. (The article, that is -- though the Desert Rose in Walthamstow has the best -- and most reasonably-priced -- espresso in London should you be looking for coffee to go along with your COIN.) Man, Ucko's article really gets to the heart of the debates which have raged within the U.S. military and on sites such as this one and
Small Wars Journal. Basically, if you're a regular reader of this blog, you should read Ucko's article. Key passages:
...Whether through inertia or conviction, large swathes of the DoD continue to view all ‘‘operations other than war’’ as an afterthought to the U.S. military’s primary mission: major combat operations – and this in spite of the threat of terrorism, the U.S. military’s involvement in Afghanistan and Iraq and the significant difficulties faced in these campaigns. This mindset expresses itself most clearly in the Pentagon’s budgetary allocations and decisions over force structure, which are oriented predominantly toward high-intensity combat. ... Both in force structure and in budgetary allocations, the Army and the Marine Corps are displaying notable continuity with traditional priorities....Another tempting, yet misleading, conclusion to be drawn from a negative Iraq outcome would be that counterinsurgency simply does not work and should be abandoned as a priority....The DoD is also a highly conformist institution, complicating efforts to introduce a new way of thinking, particularly one that goes against the organization’s prevailing logic and culture....emerging opportunities to change force structure or budgetary priorities have not been seized. ... The future of counterinsurgency within the U.S. military thus seems to hang in the balance, dependent on whether the message and cause of the COIN community is accepted and thereby gains momentumor whether it is rejected and pushed off the table.Great, great article.
No offense, but when someone makes it their policy to murder my neighbors pity goes out the window. And threats from DC border on empty.
If Sherman could make war upon King Cotton, then we can make war of King Oil.
Money isn't everything.
We stopped in the cul de sac of crap that is Iraq because we could take them down and still influence the region. I'm not talking about Liberty and Democracy here. We're talking about "howdy, I'm in your back yard
No, he's just being his usual *sshole, dishonest self, pretending to be a 'straight talker', or something like that.
In the end, note that his campaign theme is 'a meaner, rougher, cheneyer Bush'.
-Barry
Anon "on 5 divisions doing COIN, 5 Regular warfare?"
ah, no. Unless you count 16 guys as a division (@ MTT).
Anon- parts 1-3: yeah, of course we'll discard COIN. Unless we chapter 7 the Army's leadership (bankruptcy where you change the management).
Barry- well, they're all selling something. At least he has at some times in the past looked at the
"Perhaps a McCain type could set the stage if President. He is certainly selling that line. "
Oh, he's selling that line. He sells a sh*tload of lines. Each more dishonest than the last.
-Barry
Part 3 - who knows, maybe the Army will break from its history, and not discard COIN as soon as possible, despite all evidence to the contrary.
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Another thing the article doesn't address
Just two comments:
FIRST: Learning is a complex process, so it would have been great to explain why and how it occurred (
Until a Harry Truman type takes a steam hose to the puzzle palace nothing will change.
And the necessary condition for that is: Start.Firing.Generals.
Perhaps a McCain type could set the stage if President. He is certainly selling that line.
As a recent critique of the current US Army said, it's hard to change a man at age 50, after 25 years fast-tracking in a career under a
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