Small Wars Journal

RFI for Practitioners of Modern Small Wars

Mon, 12/13/2010 - 4:00pm
To those directly involved in small wars during the last decade,

Ultimately, this may be the most important project that I've pursued while commissioned as an officer in the United States Army. This project is my attempt to pay it forward...

Here at Small Wars Journal, we've begun a discussion on the need/utility to update FM 3-24, Counterinsurgency, given the depth and breadth of our military's experience during the last decade. Most professionals agree that the COIN manual was desperately needed during the 2005/06 timeframe, but it is limited in scope and mostly based off post-World War II, post-colonial examples. Insurgency and small wars have existed since the beginning of the first government - men seeking to rebel, revolt, or separate from the local power structure. My personal favorite remains Moses who brought locust and the Angel of Death in to play for his separatist movement from the Pharaoh. Mostly, it fails to address the level of violence often required to quell rebellions. Dr. David Kilcullen, in his most recent talks, spoke that violence was assumed to the military practitioner. Sometimes, assuming is not enough.

In my own opinion, the doctrine is void of the heart and soul and emotion of the fight. It is too sterile missing the most important of things.

Currently, we've heard mostly from academics and defense analysts. My hope is to compile an article entitled, "An Empty Canvas: The Practitioners Voice Truth to Power on Modern Counterinsurgency." I want to capture thoughts, comments, and pictures from men and women who have been in the field over the last decade. I want to know what they have to say in frank, stark words. We want to hear from you. Ultimately, I'd hope that we can generate enough energy to conduct another symposium to compliment the 1962 Rand Counterinsurgency Symposium.

To accomplish this goal, I am asking a simple question;

Given your experience, in a picture or written paragraph or two, what do you have to contribute to the literature on small wars? Simply put, what do you want to tell those that come after you to fight these wars?

The question is as broad and deep as is the nature of our experiences. I decided that the answers will be anonymous sources validated through internal peer-review to ensure quality of content. We want thoughts from practitioners. One quantifying question remains, "Where did you sleep?" We want men and women to answer who slept outside of the FOB or American controlled areas to relay their experience for the greater good; however, we wish to provide a forum that protects their careers while allowing honest feedback.

Please forward all responses to mike@smallwarsjournal.com.

Thank you for your time in this endeavor. Please pass on to your friends, colleagues, students, and subordinates. Below are some initial responses.

"First, I would ask if the manual covered the concepts needed to fight the full spectrum of conflict you experienced while doing COIN. Does it adequately discuss the use of "kinetic ops" as part of a greater COIN approach? Did it assist your units in integrating combined and joint assets into your campaign? How was it useful in dealing with civilian elements of the interagency? Did the IA use it? That type of thing.

Second, does FM 3-24 assist in planning COIN operations? How? How was it inadequate? I don't know how to get around asking questions about metrics/assessments that aren't leading, but that needs to be addressed as well - since the manual fails to in any sort of usable way.

Finally, I think there's a lot of consensus to move the manual away from purely Galula-inspired thought to something else. While I may agree with that, the manual needs to be useful to units doing this stuff while acknowledging that there is a lot of stuff we won't ever get into a manual. So less theory (as that will always be contested), more how-to based on what's worked."

"Mike, I think that we would agree that the best part of FM 3-24 is the section on intelligence. It's the most commonsensical part of the manual and the one least likely to be ripped apart by doctrinal disputes. It is as relevant for Kitsonian practitioners as it is for today's COIN warriors out fighting a most un-Maoist gaggle of enemies."

"Part of my problem with FM 3-24 is that it's a Maoist cartoon. It limns best practices, but they're dated. The enemies that are described in FM 3-24, their organization and their objectives, no longer seem all that relevant to the company commanders who are facing them. Neither, I suggest, would be the "counter-guerrilla" manuals produced in an earlier age and used perhaps inaccurately by certain unnamed Stryker brigades in OEF."

"What proved so important in Anbar -- the buying of loyalties at just the right time -- actually is frowned upon in FM 3-24, for example, and the manual infamously treats bribery as something exotic a commander might notice in an insurgent environment but not something he should exploit for his own purposes."

"When C.E. Callwell was penning his compilation of best practices, he wasn't so reluctant to discuss the most Machiavellian of methods, should they prove successful. But he was writing case studies, which gets me to my larger point."

"A real problem with FM 3-24 is its structure. It pretends to define a subject (it's even called "Counterinsurgency") with a monolithic listing of best practices, without mentioning how these might have worked, or failed to work, in a given historical moment. Looking beyond the manual's opening koans, those wisdom-provoking aphorisms and thought experiments, it really is a catalog of operational advice, just like any other military effort...This has two effects. It treats practitioners as if they're morons who can't nimbly figure it out on their own, thereby forcing them to be reliant on the doctrinaire mistakes of FM 3-24, and it locks into place best practices as if they're important for all times and places, and they're not. A better way to write it would be as a book of case studies, much as Callwell did his opus (and not necessarily as the USMC in 1940 did theirs, although the Small Wars Manual, too, was more open-minded than FM 3-24). It would look at the event being studied in several different ways, and discuss how various audiences would have seen and reacted to the event: The enemy, the "people," a domestic audience, and international one. This is very different from the way all other manuals are constructed. But that's my point. It needs to be."

Again, please forward all responses to mike@smallwarsjournal.com.

Michael Few is Editor of the Small Wars Journal.

Comments

gian p gentile (not verified)

Mon, 12/13/2010 - 7:17pm

Mike:

great work with this, thanks for your hard effort.

By chance do you know the status of any official army revision of FM 3-24? If it is occurring is your work connected to the official army effort?

thanks

gian

Oliver Belcher (not verified)

Mon, 12/13/2010 - 8:28pm

I am a long time reader of this blog and the journal, and I want to say thanks for the amount of labor that is put into it on a daily basis. It has been a critical resource for my own research.

Nevertheless, a quick question: why are you only asking for the views of "practitioners" of COIN, and not including any analysts or critics? There have been plenty of critiques levelled against COIN and FM-24 within academic journals that I think should be taken into serious account. I'm thinking of the work of Derek Gregory, Michael Dillon, James Der Derian, Andrew Neal, Julien Reid, Eyal Weizman, Stephen Graham, among others.

Many authors on here wax lyrical on the importance of social science for "cultural awareness," yet there seems to be very little engagement, perhaps with an exception of Kilcullen, although his ontological position of his work is questionable.

Cheers,
Oliver Belcher

MikeF (not verified)

Mon, 12/13/2010 - 8:54pm

Gian,

"If you build it, they will come."

This is our grassroots effort.

Tomorrow, I'll publish my interview with Dr. Porch.

-Mike

Mike

Count me in. Excellent initiative. I will send you photos and an account of working in Afghanistan. Would also be keen to participate in the Symposium.

Given the background of the major counterinsurgency campaigns that are held up as models for the modern day warrior, and probably formed the basis of the FM 3-24 it does not take a TE Lawrence to work out that Afghanistan is substantially different. As with political campaigns it also seems as if we are devising polices and strategies to fight the last small war and not future small wars. This argument by no means neglects to recognise the behind-the-scenes influence of foreign powers in each of these counterinsurgency style wars.
In Afghanistan there continues to be a substantial proportion of the population who support the Taliban. This support is not necessarily based on an Afghan nation administered from Kabul by a Taliban Government. Just because they support the Taliban does not mean they support nor have any ideas on international terrorism.

Any enough from me here will send you more via email.

More power to your arm brother.

Jason

This sounds great and I'd love to particpate/ contribute.

But I'm not sure if I qualify as a COIN practitioner having only served as a advisor and slept primarily on US FOBs, both large & small.

Are you looking for commentary from a specific group of people who executed certain types of missions/ duties? From what level of the leadership chain would you prefer to receive commentary - jundi? Platoon leaders? Higher?

If I can play, I will. But I don't want to waste anyone's time with unnecessary input.

This sounds great and I'd love to particpate/ contribute.

But I'm not sure if I qualify as a COIN practitioner having only served as a advisor and slept primarily on US FOBs, both large & small.

Are you looking for commentary from a specific group of people who executed certain types of missions/ duties? From what level of the leadership chain would you prefer to receive commentary - jundi? Platoon leaders? Higher?

If I can play, I will. But I don't want to waste anyone's time with unnecessary input.

gian p gentile (not verified)

Tue, 12/14/2010 - 4:01pm

Mike, or anybody else who knows:

Got it, but do you know if there is any work at all being done on the official army revision of FM 3-24. Or has it been concluded from within our ranks that it is just fine the way it is now?

thanks

gian

MikeF (not verified)

Tue, 12/14/2010 - 9:01pm

Jason,

Thanks and look forward to your input.

Morgan,

I think you're experience as an advisor will be quite helpful.

Gian,

I don't know of any institutional movement to date just small grassroots efforts to start the conversation.

Best

Mike

gian p gentile (not verified)

Wed, 12/15/2010 - 7:32pm

Wow that is suprising, but really it is deeply troubling.

Shoot, the Germans revamped their in 1917 after two years of trench warfare. Even the Aemrican Army in Vietnam revised theirs in 1967 only two years after major committment. Now we have 3-24 in place for four years now and no official revision of it. Unbelievable, are we that full of ourselves, do we think we are that good, that perfect, that we cant learn from the field and revise it.

Good on you Mike et al for doing this grass roots effort; let me know if i can do anything to help.

gian