Small Wars Journal

Taliban and Hells Angels: Same Difference

Sun, 07/18/2010 - 8:08am
Taliban and Hells Angels: Same Difference - Jason Thomas, The Interpreter.

In many respects, the war against the Taliban is no different to a war on gangs such as the Hells Angels. Both rely on a breakdown in the socio-economic conditions that force sections of the community to make unfortunate decisions. Where the community is ravaged by violence, drugs and intergenerational deprivation, how do you stop people supporting the Taliban or their local gang? This is how I began to look at the struggle against the Taliban during my time in Afghanistan.

Counterinsurgency is the military's version of what criminal and social justice systems have been doing for years. Whether it's Afghanistan or the Bronx, the population is the prize and it is no longer acceptable just to shoot the bad guys.

Counterinsurgency has become a blindingly complex approach to winning the war in Afghanistan. Fighting the Taliban has become a multi-layered offensive that combines the maintenance of security, the restoration of law and order, community and tribal mapping ('human terrain analysis'), rebuilding social, health and educational facilities, establishing systems of governance and straight-out capturing and killing the enemy. Counterinsurgency is only effective by winning on all these fronts...

More at The Interpreter.

Comments

In stating that the Taliban and domestic gangs (or any criminal gang, domestic or foreign) operate in similar fashion therefore requiring a similiar response, you seem to imply that the "whole-of-government" approach is the way to go; i.e. the logical conclusion of your argument regarding Afghanistan and other nation-building/ COIN efforts would be something akin to the establishment of a "colonial" government, perhaps along the lines of the Marines in Haiti or maybe the Brits in India (after 1857) whereby an entire governance element, from military to law enforcement to infrastructure management, be emplaced in order to fix the problem.

Am I way off in my reading of this?

SWJED

Fri, 10/21/2011 - 11:45pm

In reply to by Cab

CAB, I deleted your comments and those from another anonymous commenter because they were, simply put, nothing more than a personal attack on the author. That is our policy, a good one to boot, and it will remain so as long as I am associated with SWJ. - Dave D.

Now this is a censored commentary

Dayuhan

Fri, 07/23/2010 - 10:31pm

Not sure how we got from the Hell's Angels to here, but to respond to this...

<i>An informed populace is hard to keep down no matter how "friendly" the dictator you have in power over them is to your interests.</i>

This is true enough, but I can't see it as terribly relevant to today's problems. There are some dictators around, but they aren't "ours" and they aren't terribly responsive to our interests: they're mostly concerned with their own. Many are overtly hostile to us or are barely on manageable terms with us.

The problems we face today don't come from popular rebellion against US-supported dictators. In Iraq and Afghanistan we intervened to remove dictatorial regimes and try to replace them with democratic ones. These regimes now face insurgencies, not because they are dictatorial but because they are perceived (reasonably) as weak, vulnerable, and potentially displaceable by those who seek power for their ownb purposes.

Look at our other trouble spots... Somalia has no government, it's not a rebellion against a US-supported dictator but a civil war among armed parties contending to fill a power vacuum. Pakistan and Yemen aren't facing popular rebellion against dictatorship, they are seeing civil unrest against superficially democratic but essentially dysfunctional governments styled on Western models that don't fit the societies they were imposed on. We're not seeing insurgencies against US-supported dictatorships in these countries, but armed players contending for pole position in the struggle to fill what is seen as an impending power vacuum.

I certainly agree that the US shouldn't impose dictatorships in countries where we've intervened, but I'd have to point out that attempts to install democracies haven't worked out so well either. The problem here is not that we install dictatorships, but the illusion that we have the capacity to install any sort of government in another country.

I agree that we shouldn't artificially sustain dying dictatorships that serve as our puppets, but I don't see us doing that (possibly in a few cases, Egypt springs to mind, but not as a prevailing pattern).

I do see us dealing with dictatorships that exist independently of us, do not require our support, and which circumstances dictate that we have to deal with. China, Uzbekistan, Saudi Arabia and a few others spring to mind. It's not always what we want to do, but I don't see what choice we have: these are not our client states, they don't dance to our tune, and we've little or no influence over them.

slapout9 (not verified)

Fri, 07/23/2010 - 10:00pm

It's called Pulp Wood where I live. Pup wood if you speak southern.

Bob's World

Fri, 07/23/2010 - 7:54pm

Giving away trade secrets?? :-)

But then, I'm not talking about some flatland, toothpick and paper producing Alabama forest here...

I had an Uncle who was assigned to a unit primarily from Oklahoma during WWII. He grew up in the 20s and 30s in the same forests I worked (after decades of logging) later. He was a big joke and known as "tall timber" for the "lies" he told about the trees in Oregon.

After the war, on a troop train from SF up the coast, their train passed several carrying logs heading south to California. Typical load was three logs per flat car, as that was all they could carry. A guy from his unit tracked him down on the train to apologize for the years of them all thinking he was FOS...

We're in some "tall timber" ourselves these days. Not impossible, but it does take a bit more thought and energy on how to deal with.

slapout9 (not verified)

Fri, 07/23/2010 - 7:25pm

"To attack the flames is crazy, and requires resources you probably don't have." By R.C. Jones

You can also light a backfire...a counter attack fire by using the resources(oppressed population) that the environment provides.

Bob's World

Fri, 07/23/2010 - 5:58pm

Slap:

UW is the art of inciting and manipulating insurgency in a country where one desires to pursue national interests that the current regime is not willing to entertain. One must understand insurgency to do this. Those who work in UW understand this, and study insurgency.

To execute COIN, one must also understand insurgency. COIN is not about preseving a particular government, though that may happen. COIN is not about defeating a particular insurgent organization, though that may happen as well. COIN is about understanding the nature of insurgency and pulling the fuel away from the fire.

As a teenager I spent three summers fighting forest fires in the mountains of SW Oregon. We didn't actually attack the fire, we just got as close to the fire as humanly possible and attacked the fuel, digging like men (boys, oblivious to the real dangers) possessed to drag the fuel away from the flames, creating narrow handtrails through the forest until we had contained a blaze, at which point it would simply fade away naturally. To attack the flames is crazy, and requires resources you probably don't have.

slapout9 (not verified)

Fri, 07/23/2010 - 5:44pm

R.C.Jones,
I don't know that it is a breakthrough moment as much as I am just learning the new complicated lingo-jingo stuff being used.
When I learned it, UW was comprised on BOTH insurgency and counter insurgency. FID didn't exist,that I knew of. BOTH were done by Guerrilla forces. COIN was more of a Counter Attack by armed Civilians of the oppressed population group, then Civil Affairs set up the guvmint. The really big idea was that SF would conduct them quietly so the US could maintain some type of deny-ability from interfering in the affairs of other governments. The US would never win by design!!!!...they would let the oppressed population group win! and change their bad guvmint or start a new one.

Maybe I need to start a thread on my one minute Green Beret course. Cause a lot of stuff sure has changed and or been forgotten.

Carl/COL Jones,

"As to Mike, I won't argue that bad is good, it isn't. But as you well know, we've taught a lot of hate on our own shores; Hate for non Puritans in New England in the name of religion; Hate for Blacks in the South in the name of commerce; hate for native Americans on the frontiers in the name of manifest destiny; etc, etc. No one has a corner on this market, but it also tends to fade as situations change."

So true. I've had to stop (non-violently) eight year old kids from emplacing IED's. In the past three months, I've help counsel a young paratrooper who had to kill a nine-year old suicide bomber in A'stan.

So, that's the context behind how I feel.

I hope COL Jones is right, and that's why I take the time to critique him.

Bob's World

Fri, 07/23/2010 - 4:44pm

Ken,

(I'll avoid the obvious shot that living the history personally gives one a front row seat...) But, like all kids, yeah, we've wanted to be like "Dad" all of our lives, it just took a while of copying his every act that we really grew into it. Won't dispute your dates and events, they all contributed to where we ended up. I actually pick the date I did as that is when the new information/knowledge age began to really kick in, and led first to the popular uprising that tore the Soviet Union apart, and then the Balkans; and ultimately into the Middle East and Africa. An informed populace is hard to keep down no matter how "friendly" the dictator you have in power over them is to your interests. Plus these things splash back on the home front far easier now then back when "Dad" was in the business. Oh for the good old days...

As to Mike, I won't argue that bad is good, it isn't. But as you well know, we've taught a lot of hate on our own shores; Hate for non Puritans in New England in the name of religion; Hate for Blacks in the South in the name of commerce; hate for native Americans on the frontiers in the name of manifest destiny; etc, etc. No one has a corner on this market, but it also tends to fade as situations change.

This is why I argue principles over values; as I see values to be a principle with a judgment assessed to it. For example, my copy of the Declaration declares that all men are created equal (principle), yet at the time one really had to be white and landed and protestant to be a player (value). This value has morphed considerably over time as our society matured. This is why I say we need to be more tolerant of those who do not share our values currently. Stand for the principle and take the long view on evolving the values they hold. To do otherwise is to judge and by a hypocrite. Neither is much appreciated in any setting. We need to be more Christ like, and live the example we wish others to follow, and not judge harshly those who fall short. Instead we come across like Christians, judging harshly any who can't meet standards we don't even meet ourselves.

carl (not verified)

Fri, 07/23/2010 - 4:43pm

Mike:

I fear that I may have expressed myself very poorly when I said I can empathsize (sic) with the PA/ISI. I can, but I can also so the same with an SS trooper about to commit a massacre or the Japanese Army officer who wrote "How to kill Filipinos". I can imagine what they felt and why they felt that way. I can imagine the evil that is in so many of us that we fight but others embrace. But because I can imagine their feelings and motivations does not mean I approve. If given to the chance to remove them from this world I would or try to help those who do get the chance.

The same goes for the PA/ISI. If I could stop them I would. But I can imagine how and why they do what they do. I am more fool than I care to be so maybe I can better imagine what fools think. The PA/ISI are fools who are killing their country.

You and I are in agreement about what they are doing to their children. I disagree that it has nothing to do with governance. It does, bad, evil governance that will be a disaster for Pakistan.

Carl,

I have little tolerance and much disdain for those that would indoctrinate hate into young children. This is one point where COL Jones and I may depart. I could not reconcile with such men unless they denounced their actions and reformed. Personally, breeding hate is akin to molestation regardless if it is religious radicalization in Pakistan or racism in other places.

That has nothing to do with governance.

Mike

carl (not verified)

Fri, 07/23/2010 - 3:51pm

Robert:

I think reconciliation is an good idea that can't possibly work in Afghanistan. Here are the reasons I think so.

The Taliban are winning. If they feel they are going to get it all anyway, why should they reconcile except as a tactical move to hasten their victory? All they have to do is kill time until July, 2011. Any negotiations help kill the time.

They are an absolutist movement, God approves of them. How can they compromise? Mullah Omar wrapped himself in the cloak of the prophet, and was proclaimed "Amir al-Mu'minin". I don't think he would be inclined to take second place to anybody, or share first place.

The Pakistani Army/ISI won't let any reconciliation take place that doesn't serve the interests of the Pakistani Army/ISI and that they don't control. Anybody who shows any inclination to stray gets picked up. Some of the Pathans, or maybe most of them, resent this greatly, but there isn't anything they can do about it. They have to have sanctuary somewhere and the PA/ISI controls that sanctuary. In any event Mullah Omar hasn't shown much inclination to stray. He wants back what was his pre9-11 and so does the PA/ISI. Haqqani and Gulbidin are creatures of the PA/ISI.

If there was by some miracle a reconciliation between the Karzai gov and the Taliban it would be between Pathan and Pathan. The other ethnic groups would fight that and Afghanistan would fall back into the depths of the 90's whence it came. No big deal for the PA/ISI but a return to hell for a lot of Afghans.

You mentioned that the Taliban get beat up good when they are away from the people. That I'm sure is true, but it doesn't matter. They do their harm when they are amongst the people. If we destroy some group that is foolish enough to concentrate for an adventure but don't stop the night letters or assassinations in the villages it matters not.

I have been careful in this post to always say Pakistani Army/ISI rather than Pakistan. I didn't in my last post and am sorry for that. The interests of the PA/ISI and the country are NOT the same. They and their assisting elites have run the country since the 40s and are responsible for the possibly fatal mess they are in now. I have zero sympathy for the PA/ISI though I think I can empathsize (sic) with their position. "Poor Pakistan" absolutely, for the people of that nation their worst enemy is their own army and elites.

Mike:

That article is great. I agree there is great danger there. But the danger is the PA/ISI. The article states the change in curriculum started in 1979, that is long be AQ or the Taliban showed. But the PA was there and running the show.

Ken White (not verified)

Fri, 07/23/2010 - 2:45pm

<b>Robert C. Jones:</b><blockquote>I would suggest that it began to happen around 1985, but really began in earnest in 1989, and became obvious to everyone else by 9/11/2001. For us, the realization is still yet to fully sink in.</blockquote>Not really...

I think you're well over a hundred years late...<a href=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monroe_Doctrine>LINK</a&gt;

Even as late as 110 years before your year of choice, perhaps, per Senator Stevens but most commonly attributed to FDR re: Somoza...<a href=http://message.snopes.com/showthread.php?t=8204>LINK</a&gt;.

Speaking of Roosevelts and manifest destinies of sorts, to discover that you're about 80 years late at a minimum, you should read this:<a hef=http://www.amazon.com/Imperial-Cruise-Secret-History-Empire/dp/03160089…;

"Now we have a problem making our power credible and Vietnam looks like the place", to James Reston of The New York Times immediately after meeting Khrushchev in Vienna." <a href=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vietnam_War>LINK</a&gt;.

We've been there before...<a href=http://www.globalresearch.ca/articles/BRZ110A.html>LINK</a&gt;.

Selective misuse of history to make an ideological point on this Board seems to be endemic among some of you old Colonels.... :D

Ken White (not verified)

Fri, 07/23/2010 - 2:42pm

<b>Robert C. Jones:</b><blockquote>I would suggest that it began to happen around 1985, but really began in earnest in 1989, and became obvious to everyone else by 9/11/2001. For us, the realization is still yet to fully sink in.</blockquote>Not really...

I think you're well over a hundred years late...<a href=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monroe_Doctrine>LINK</a&gt;

Even as late as 110 years before your year of choice, perhaps, per Senator Stevens but most commonly attributed to FDR re: Somoza...<a href=http://message.snopes.com/showthread.php?t=8204>LINK</a&gt;.

Speaking of Roosevelts and manifest destinies of sorts, to discover that you're about 80 years late at a minimum, you should read this:<a hef=http://www.amazon.com/Imperial-Cruise-Secret-History-Empire/dp/03160089…;

"Now we have a problem making our power credible and Vietnam looks like the place", to James Reston of The New York Times immediately after meeting Khrushchev in Vienna." <a href=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vietnam_War>LINK</a&gt;.

We've been there before...<a href=http://www.globalresearch.ca/articles/BRZ110A.html>LINK</a&gt;.

Selective misuse of history to make an ideological point on this Board seems to be endemic among some of you old Colonels.... :D

Bob's World

Fri, 07/23/2010 - 1:16pm

Slap - "Bingo" (as I touch the tip of my nose with my index finger).

You have just had a breakthough momoment: If what we are doing if FID to sustain oppressive governments friendly to us in power, then it is AQ that is conducting UW among their populaces in order to "liberate the oppressed."

Or, as I like to say, "The US has grown up and become its father." (Picture Uncle Sam looking in the mirror shaving, and seeing good old King George looking back at him, and thinking to himself "when the hell did this happen?")

I would suggest that it began to happen around 1985, but really began in earnest in 1989, and became obvious to everyone else by 9/11/2001. For us, the realization is still yet to fully sink in.

slapout9 (not verified)

Fri, 07/23/2010 - 12:45pm

R.C. you have me confused now. What you say (USA)is doing would be called FID as opposed to UW, wouldn't it? Which I agree is a problem.

My thinking is to simply follow the SF motto, "Liberate The Oppressed" often done through a resistance movement and all it's elements.

"Actually, the organization "fighting and winning UW" across the Middle East today most effectively is Al Qaeda."

Sir, to further bolster your argument, I'd recommend reading Ali Chrishti's examination of radicalization in the public school systems of Pakistan.

http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2010\05\26\story_26-5-2010_pg3_6

If this is true, then it's classic revolutionary tactics and quite worrisome.

Mike

Bob's World

Fri, 07/23/2010 - 12:27pm

Actually, the organization "fighting and winning UW" across the Middle East today most effectively is Al Qaeda.

UW is to foment and incite insurgency among the populaces of States where one hopes to modify the existing form of governance to one that is more supportive of the UW organizations goals, objectives and interests. UW only really works well where there already exists conditions of what I call "Poor Governance" between the existing governance and the segment of the populace one is targeting for their UW campaign.

I would argue that the US does not need to conduct UW with these states, as the fact is we already have relationships with these governments in large part that are willing to support our goals, objectives and interests. The problem is that those same governments have in many places come to act with impunity toward their own populaces based on the security this relationship with the US provides; thereby creating ripe ground for UW as being executed by AQ.

So, I would argue that we do not need to execute UW, but rather that we must understand UW and how it works, and then adjust our approaches with these countries so as to make those governments less vulnerable to UW and insurgency within their borders; and also to make the US less vulnerable to acts of "terrorism" by these nationalist insurgents globally as well.

I don't think the President needs to be Billy Jack, but he should damn sure know his phone number so that he can leverage his capabilities and perspectives when he needs to.

slapout9 (not verified)

Fri, 07/23/2010 - 12:09pm

Maybe we should let Special Forces do what Special Forces were created to do. Fight and win UW. The President should call Billy Jack.

Bob's World

Fri, 07/23/2010 - 11:42am

When senior leadership is misinformed and ill advised by those who do not understand the nature of a particular problem set, its causes or its cures; it is essential for those who do to speak up.

The US is like the Semi-truck wedged firmly beneath the overpass; as a dozen experts on road construction, emergency operations, public security, civil engineering, etc all stood about and discussed the problems and relative expense associated with raising the bridge, lowering the road, etc as a small boy sat watching the scene with curiosity from his bike nearby. Finally he said "why don't you let some air out of the tires?"

We can go around the world lowering proverbial road beds and raising proverbial overpasses; but such programs are terribly disruptive and expensive. It is time to look for ways to simply let some air out of the tires; and that can not be done by changing the tactics, tools, and design of DOD; it can only be done by changing the policies contributing to the rise of the products of friction we face, and that shape our approaches to dealing with the same.

I'm just sitting here on my bike.

COL Jones,

Concur (particularly on empathy), but that would require a new policy and strategy. That's way above my level. We just execute. That's my own difficulty in transitioning back and forth between theory and practice.

Mike

Bob's World

Fri, 07/23/2010 - 9:19am

One of the biggest problems the US (our people, our policy, etc) has is this incredible lack of Empathy. Sympathy? We have that in spades. But Empathy? The ability to truly see and apreciate things from the perspectives of others? No. We mirror image ourselves, our values, our perspectives on others and are shocked or angry when others reject or fail to conform to that perspective. They are deemed "failed states" or "immoral" or "evil empires" etc.

Currently Ms Flournoy and others call for "pragmatism." Ok, but lets start with some empathy first, and THEN get pragmatic about how to best address our interests in a manner that does not inadvertantly create greater problems by trodding all over the interests of others in the process. Maybe we need to seen the Humnan Terrain Teams to DC instead of Afghanistatn.

We have a President with great instincts for this, but he is not getting great advice from his "experts." Hard is indeed not impossible, but we need to focus on the right hard tasks if we want to produce the best effects.

We can't start with "dirct tone" or "secure first" as one never gets past "Clear-clear-clear." We need to start with a fresh understanding of the problem and the cures; then a comprehensive messaging campaign to beat that in a steady drumbeat; then a family of actions across that spectrum that are clearly consistent with and linked to that drumbeat message.

COL Jones,
Sir, we do not fundamentally disagree along the lines of what GEN Petraeus would call, "killing the irreconcilables and turning the reconcilable." In application, I would start with my direct tone while indirectly attempting your approach.

The tone affects your posture and resolve while the enemy and populace are trying to read your intent. In other words, it projects power.

Additionally, the urgency of the DC clock hampers "patience, presence, and persistance." I tried to include time into one of my factors and the political demand for results.

Mike

Bob's World

Fri, 07/23/2010 - 8:56am

Carl,

A few thoughts, first, anyone who doesn't think we are beating up the Taliban out on the ground is misinformed. Sure, we walk away from many engagements where civcas and civdamage is likely, but when we get them away from their civilian shields it goes very bad for them very fast.

As to Pakistan (and several other nearby states that are using the US involvement in Afghanistan as an opportunity to make life hard for us - but nearly so much as we did when the Soviets were in the same boat) I would suggest that first we need to as a matter of policy fully recognize that US interests and US values are NOT UNIVERSAL INTERESTS AND VALUES.

We have to evolve from "you are with us or against us" mindset that every nation, friend or foe, would share and prioritize their interests the same way the US does, because they don't. We abuse allies by strong-arming them with NATO to participate in our little adventures; and we add unnecessary friction with "foes" as well simply because they disagree with us. Same with values. It is a galactic level of arrogance to assume that US values circa 2010 are somehow now "universal values" for all people in all times.

Point being that countries such as Pakistan, Iran, the other Stans and China (which all have borders with Afghanistan) have very unique and distinct national interests in regards to their relationships with Afghanistan that we in large part ignore in our demand that that everyone help us with ours. This puts friends and foe alike in difficult positions. Oh, and significant segments of the Afghan populace have unique and distinct relationships back with these neighboring countries as well.

Poor Pakistan is supporting the TB with one hand, and now attacking them at our demand with the other. Don't think that that has not contributed significantly to the instability in that country. They play a balancing game, and we have them in a precarious position. Any US position in Afghanistan must include a serious sit-down with Pakistan to insure that their interests are recognized as well. As to the insurgents who take advantage of the sanctuary the border provides, they have their own interests as well. All must be taken into account, and to skew them to line up with US interests as the measure of "right" or "wrong" is not helpful. Dangerous in fact.

To tell our senior leaders that we can "Develop" our way out of this is as wrong and dangerous as it is to tell them we can "Secure" our way out of this. Similarly, to take a condition that we must preserve the Karzai government and help them to "Govern" their way out of this is even more flawed unless they can fix their legitimacy issues. Reconciliation is the last, best chance Karzai has at fixing his Legitimacy. We can't fix it for him, and we need to stop being an obstacle to his efforts to fix it himself merely because we can't square that with how we see our national interests.

carl (not verified)

Fri, 07/23/2010 - 1:26am

Robert:

Given Pakistan's malevolent intent, is reconciliation at the top practicable at all? Haqqani, Hekmatyar and Mullah Omar have, to my limited knowledge, always been in line with the Pakistanis. So with that group as it is, and anybody else who might be inclined to reconcile getting picked up, who is left to make a deal? If by some stratagem they were able to do a deal would it not be liable to split the country along ethnic lines as the other groups do not remember the Taliban with fondness?

I know only what I read, mostly at this site, but I don't see how a deal can be made unless two things happen. First, as Mike says, the Taliban have get beat up more severely than they are now.

Second, and this goes to strategy (Gian is reading this I hope), Pakistan's behavior must be changed. Nothing is going to work well or at all in Afghanistan unless this happens and it won't happen unless we see "what we don't want to see." Then if we see it, we have to figure what to do about it. That might require something fairly radical.

I think Pakistan's actions are motivated by something beyond their silly notion of strategic depth. I think there is also a pretty strong ideological component to their actions, the notion of Pakistan, leader of the pious Muslim world etc. What do you, or anybody else, think the strength of the ideological component is?

Anonymous (not verified)

Thu, 07/22/2010 - 6:14pm

What would then Karzi get out of a reconciliation or reintegration as they will challenge him on both the political and corruption cash flows.

Why would I if I perceive myself to be winning even want to share---that was what triggered the internal civil war after the Soviets left and then the TB sold themselves as the "peacemakers" and he know how that went.

slapout9 (not verified)

Thu, 07/22/2010 - 3:31pm

Mike, I hear you. That is why we need an Operation: Jawbreaker II.

Bob's World

Thu, 07/22/2010 - 3:30pm

Why the Taliban would be willing to reconcile even though they are already currently winning:

This is just my assessment, so take it for what it's worth (true of everything posted on here by anyone, but important to note all the same):

1. The Taliban are being employed by the government of Pakistan as their agent to destabilize Afghanistan at a minimum, but ideally to take control and ensure that Afghanistan is available as rearward maneuver room that is critical for ensuring the survival of Pakistan in any major confrontation with India. I know many say "no, there is no direct intel on this, and it is just the ISI doing this." Ok, so if it is just the CIA doing something it is not the USA doing it? This is a silly nuance to play. We don't see what we don't want to see.

2. If the Taliban senior leadership make a break from their Pakistani masters and take the Karzai deal they have a true chance at the one thing they have no chance at under the current situation - they have a chance at a major leadership role at some point down the road in Afghanistan free and clear from Pakistani control. THAT is huge!

3. Some evidence of this is the recent roll up of about half the Qetta Shura by Pakistan. I think that was a non too subtle message to TB leadership that, much like being a hitman for the Mafia, there is no quitting.

So, why is reconciliation so important? Because it take the TB leadership out of the fight and into the governance of Afghanistan. There they operate in the light of day and we can work with the entire new, more comprehensive GIROA as a whole. This addresses the top of the insurgency, the revolutionary movement that MUST be resolved prior to being able to have success with the rank and file resistance insurgency.

Reintegration only deals with the bottom of the insurgency. This will largely cure itself once the top is addressed. We need to get over our revulsion to dealing with the top. Reintegration programs will be fairly simple and low cost. The current program to dump buckets of cash into a reintegration program that is not tied to following a successful reconciliation program is a mindless attempt to buy the support of the popualce, and will merely contribute to the conditions feeding the insurgency and further line the pockets of governmnet officials and their cronies. It has no basis in sound insurgency or COIN theory to go with this plan.

My opinion. Reasonable minds can and do differ, but look hard at the insurgency understanding of those who shun reconciliation and promote reintegration instead. Make them make their case.

Slap,

I forgot to add that right now, the Taliban believe that they are winning. That understanding is important.

Mike

slapout9 (not verified)

Thu, 07/22/2010 - 1:43pm

Mike Few I believe you are right. And the only answer may be a Hell's Angel Strategy. The Angels symbol is from a Air Force B-17 Bomber group!! not some commando,or dirty dozen type outfit as is often believed,usually by people who have never been toe to toe or nose to nose with OMG's(Outlaw Motorcycle Gangs). It's time for an Air Campaign from Hell.

"What will it take to get the Taliban to reconcile?"

Their perception/realization that they are in a losing situation and negotiating from a point of disadvantage. Unfortunately, that will require a lot of violence by some actor (ISAF, A'stan Army, Pak Army). We will not persuade them with words or money.

carl (not verified)

Thu, 07/22/2010 - 12:27pm

Robert:

I have a couple of questions about this quote.

"This is why Reconciliation is far more important of a COIN program than the Reintegration program that the Coalition is so fixated on. The Reistance will reintigrate all by itself once the Revolution is effectively reconciled."

What will it take to get the Taliban to reconcile? I don't understand why they would since they are an absolutist movement who believe they are winning anyway.

Related to the above question: what would it take to get the Pakistani Army/ISI to allow the Taliban to reconcile?

If a reconciliation involved giving power to the Taliban, would the other non-Pathan groups put up with it?

slapout9 (not verified)

Wed, 07/21/2010 - 5:58pm

PS: Virgins writing sex manuals; that is superb! From Jason's post.

I disagree we are more like "Sex Therapist With Amnesia". As R.C.Jones has pointed out our country was born from an Insurgency we know exactly how to fight them when we use the American System of UW. We did it not once but twice in Afghanistan and we have forgotten what made us successful, so now we are blaming the Hell's Angeles method of Gang organization/intimidation as the problem.

Infanteer

Wed, 07/21/2010 - 11:00am

Bob's World point gets to the crux of the matter (and the likely difference between the two).

If the Afghan National Army was roving amongst our neighbourhoods, would:
a) The Hells Angels fight them;
b) Would we turn over Hell's Angels members living in the neighbourhood when the ANA came through?

Anonymous (not verified)

Mon, 07/19/2010 - 2:28pm

Seems to me that "conflict ecosystem" research even applies to gangs as gangs think, act, and organize much in the same way insurgent groups do in order to survive against the "counter-insurgent" or in the case of gangs survive other gangs or the police.

"Conflict ecosystems" do not exclude the possibility of multiple gangs and or insurgent groups competing in the same environment--something to think about.

slapout9 (not verified)

Mon, 07/19/2010 - 11:14am

Fnord:
Im a bit confused by the assumption that the Taleban, or more accurately, the mujahedin isnt a lifestyle choice too. Why work home on the farm breaking your back all day when you can be part of gods army, ride a cool motorbike and fight Shaitan?

That is the greatest attractiveness of crime/ gangs. But it is not just that,it is the sense of Brotherhood along with it. The US has a policy of no child left behind. Angels have the policy of no Angel(read citizen)left behind. They share prosperity and protection,if one Angel is attacked there will be a counter-attack by all the Angels. That is an extremely powerful motive. Which is why I keep saying the Strategic model of Ends,Ways,and Means want work. The LE model of Motive,Methods and Opportunity is a lot more appropriate, because until you understand the Motive (why are they doing what they are doing) your chances of developing a counter Strategy are not very good IMO. The best you can do is suppress it.

Bob's World

Mon, 07/19/2010 - 9:51am

The majority of the Taliban are resistance fighters. They fight us because they are pashtun, because they feel no loyalty to the current government (must be shown to them first, and it is not), because they can earn an honest wage for a days work doing it, and because the Coalition is there.

The resistance will be there as long as the revolutionary leadership for the taliban (the target of Karzai's reconciliation program) want to keep it going and as long as the Coalition is present.

This is why Reconciliation is far more important of a COIN program than the Reintegration program that the Coalition is so fixated on. The Reistance will reintigrate all by itself once the Revolution is effectively reconciled.

The problem is that we are waging our own little resistance to the Reconciliation program, because WE don't like the likely results. So long as we make it all about us we will not make much headway.

Im a bit confused by the assumption that the Taleban, or more accurately, the mujahedin isnt a lifestyle choice too. Why work home on the farm breaking your back all day when you can be part of gods army, ride a cool motorbike and fight Shaitan?

SJPONeill

Mon, 07/19/2010 - 2:09am

Great thread!! And the contemporary environment stuff is pretty good as well!

I think that COL Gentile's first post pretty well hit the nail on the head, in that how can we..."solve its problems and transform (or build) its institutions in a matter of months or even years?"

I'm not sure where it came from but for the last 18 months or so, we've been using as a model that it takes at least a full generation, more likely two, for change to really take effect in a society. At the very minimum, a year of stability to overcome every year of chaos/irregularity, which for Afghanistan would give us 31 years if we got back to 1979...and that period of stability has not yet started in Afghanistan...in some ink spots, yes, in other areas, not even close...Conversely, the descent into chaos can take effect in a disproportionately short period of time e.g. the former Yugoslavia, East Timor, Iraq, etc

Noting a general lack of success in quelling organised crime since the end of WW2, the analogy between the Taliban and organisations like Hells Angels might be more apt that it first appears...?

Gentlemen

I thoroughly admire the depth of thought put into responding to this article. Will pursue the critical thinking further with your combined comments.

There are nuances that I may have missed however Im a great believer in the psychology of incentives that drive people to make decisions and believe they dont change too much no matter where you live.

Within two weeks of a project finishing in an RC E Province in AFG two former labourers blew themselves up laying an IED. They were young guys faced with incentives from opposing sides - there had been zero incidents in this area during the period of the project. (there are of course many other issues here such as the often short term approach to many projects in clear to hold areas or the poor retention of labourers to be re-employed in another project to keep them out of the grip of the instigators)

In other words it is hard to break that bond with the only way you know in life - cloaked in the mist of religious fanaticism and it is even more dangerous and difficult to break.

I take street kids up the Kokoda track in PNG. It is as much of a mental and emotional challange as physical. A few come back with a completely different view of the world. Yet others slip back into what they know given the incentives of their surrounding environment - violence, crime, drugs, associations gangs etc

Im not ignoring obvious differences between AFG and our societies - but I found the many similarities and tried to keep the analysis to simple constructs in this respect and therefore any practicable implementation of actions.

It also played out in both environments that information was gathered on leadership structures and tensions and where the real bad-guys lived so that "other people" could do their job - call it neighbourhood watch. So it wasnt all just about being nice. There needs to be equal amounts of carrot and stick.

Thanks

Jason

PS: Virgins writing sex manuals; that is superb!

slapout9 (not verified)

Mon, 07/19/2010 - 12:32am

Speaking of quotes anybody know what the Hell's Angels motto is?

"When we do right,nobody remembers. When we do wrong,nobody forgets"

You may use it but I cannot take credit for it. Saw it on a sign somewhere but cannot recall where so I cannot give you a citation for it. But it does come in handy to provide some levity as well as provide an (in)appropriate analogy sometimes!

GI Zhou

Sun, 07/18/2010 - 11:48pm

Dave, Could I please steal your comment:"Don't bother us. We are like virgins writing sex manuals." It sounds like the Army War College paper I am writing. I'll bludge anything anytime if it helps. Even my nickname I purloined off David Finkelstein.

carl (not verified)

Sun, 07/18/2010 - 11:25pm

Mike:

I am normally too stubborn to admit defeat but your comment lost me.

Jason Thomas,

First, Ive given up on trying to reel in the Active Duty Colonels and prior enlisted reporters and law enforcement officials. They are incorrigible so I submit. I am but one man :).

Second, Ive been following your short anecdotes on SWJ and other sites. Your voice has merit. What I would encourage is for you to consolidate your thoughts and experience into a thorough essay for SWJ. If you need advice or assistance, then you can click on my name and send me an email. We need more non-mil types with boots on the ground experience to voice their truth.

Carl,

My brother focused on the Apostle Pauls optimism while under house arrest to encourage the populace of Philippi to stay the course and not drink the Kool-Aid of false idols.

I listened well.

Best,

Mike

carl (not verified)

Sun, 07/18/2010 - 9:57pm

I think Mr. Thomas got a little confused when said "Hells Angels". His comments more closely describe inner city drug gangs and the dystopia that results the "don't rat" syndrome etc.

He also misses some very important things. American criminal gangs are American. They are not sponsored, trained and directed from abroad. The Taliban is.

Society in some parts of American inner cities has completely broken down, even the basic family structure is wrecked. The basic family structure from what I've read is still pretty strong in Afghanistan. The village and regional social structure and been under terrible pressure since the Russians showed up but they still exist even though the Taliban tries to break it when it suits them.

American gangs don't seek to replace the existing political and cultural structure. All they want is to make money and have their fun fights. The Taliban seeks to overthrow everything and control everything.

Some things that apply to fighting gangs in the US apply to Afghanistan, knowing the people, having people in the hood or ville close by and through the night, things like that. But for the most part I don't think the article stands up.

Ironically, I think the task in Afghanistan may be more practicable than restoring normal society in the American inner cities. In our cities society has to be completely rebuilt. I don't think that is true in Afghanistan. Perhaps what mostly needs to be done is get the Taliban off the backs of the people, get the warlords off the backs of the people and get the Kabul kingpins off the backs of the people.

All those contested villages didn't have much in the 60's before the communists came. But there was no big insurgency. They handled their own affairs tolerably well with their various arrangements, and the government was fairly well respected. The more I think about this, the more I think we are trying to do to much. If we mainly fought the Taliban using the methods that have worked in the small wars of the past (I was tempted to say counterinsurgencies but I didn't want to excite Gian), kept the Paks out of it (a very tall order), provided the warlords with chartered jets to Dubai and twisted some arms in Kabul, the Afhgans may be able to handle things over the years to come.

slapout9 (not verified)

Sun, 07/18/2010 - 8:56pm

anonymous,
If you really believe I am ignorant and if you really believe I condone criminal behavior then there is nothing I can say to you....so I want.

"MAC" McCallister,
Short answer is yes, but let me explain. Your father because of his business skills and guerrilla warfare, weapons skills would be a prime target for recruitment "IF" he believed in the Biker lifestyle. Despite popular myth you don't really join a Biker Gang you are recruited and you usually have to have a sponsor who will vouch for you. And if you mess up you and your sponsor will pay for it.

To be effective in fighting a gang you have to understand their appeal from THEIR point of view, not some abstract rational college degree theory, it just ain't gonna work in the real world. These guys are more like Vikings, they value Warriorship of any kind,even if they then decide to kill you.

As for Republicans, I still stand by my above statement. Republicans are perceived by the 3 R's(I just invented this) Rich... and don't care about anyone else,Racist.... (how many Black US Senators do we have)and don't care about anyone else, few Rules (anti-regulation)and don't care about any other group. Hell's Angels pretty much think like that.

What would Democrat Hell's Angels be, probably be Easy riders as you suggested. For those folks who don't know what an Easy rider is. An Easy rider is a Biker who's Ole Lady (wife so to speak) is a prostitute, hence the easy ride on her efforts.

I can speak more to this subject but I think I hit the high points, if not let me know.

gian,
I survived,her commander's intent was very clear. Slap