Small Wars Journal

Thoughts as I Watch My Army Walk Away from Counterinsurgency Once Again

Thu, 02/11/2016 - 3:25pm

Thoughts as I Watch My Army Walk Away from Counterinsurgency Once Again by Brig. Gen. John Scales, USAR (Ret.), Foreign Policy’s Best Defense

Will the Army forget or discard the counterinsurgency lessons learned over the last 15 years? I hope not but, if history is a guide, there is little reason to be optimistic…

Now, over the past dozen years or so, the Army has developed a significant cadre of officers with extensive counterinsurgency experience and more competency in that regard than the institution has ever enjoyed. Will this experience and wisdom be lost by the current perception that we’ll never do that again?

Unfortunately, history says yes. The Army as an institution loves the image of the big war: swift maneuver, tanks, heavy artillery, armed helicopters overhead, mounds of logistics support. The nitty-gritty of working with indigenous personnel to common ends, small unit patrols in civilian-infested cities, quick clashes against faceless enemies that fade back into the populace — not so much. Lessons will fade, and those who earned their PhDs in small wars will be passed over and left by the wayside…

Read on.