Small Wars Journal

Crusader Mentality

Wed, 10/01/2008 - 8:07pm
Crusader Mentality

A Response to Andrew Bacevich

by Matthew E. Valkovic and Brian M. Burton

Small Wars Journal Op-Ed

Numerous commentators in policy community, media, and academia have recently expounded upon the US Army's unusually public debate over the appropriate lessons to draw from the Iraq war to shape the institution for the future. Andrew Bacevich is the latest to lend his distinguished voice to the fray. While we greatly admire and respect Prof. Bacevich and his work, his essay in the October 2008 issue of The Atlantic presented a flawed analysis of this important issue that warrants a response.

Bacevich argues that the Army's perceived current focus on preparing for counterinsurgency has supplanted the Army's traditional conventional war-fighting doctrine and set the military on course for future Iraq-style conflicts that are "protracted, ambiguous, and continuous." On the first point, Bacevich presents Colonel Gian Gentile as a stand-in for his own views. Gentile's concern is that the Army's ability to perform conventional combat operations has seriously deteriorated because soldiers are not conducting training for the fundamentals of military conflict. Its soldiers have become "constabulary" forces charged with the protecting the local populations of failed states and re-building their communities, and in doing so have lost sight of their core mission of fighting and winning the nation's wars.

But even today, with counterinsurgency doctrine supposedly taking over as the Army's organizing principle, the organizational culture of the Army has not really changed. This is not to say that the Army has not learned counterinsurgency and, in addition, it is not to say certain functions of the Army (like the field artillery branch) have not suffered as a result of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Nevertheless, the Army today remains very much organized as a conventional force. Newly recruited soldiers, when they go through basic training and receive their advanced individual training are still taught their traditional military occupational specialty. The fire support specialists, formerly known as forward observers, still learn how to call for fire at Fort Sill. The Army school houses fundamentally teach the same things.

Bacevich and Gentile cite the National Training Center at Fort Irwin as a prime example in their lament about the degradation of the Army's combat skills. There's no doubt that conventional force-on-force training is no longer exclusively executed there, what has taken its place is not just counterinsurgency training, but a mix of both - termed "full spectrum operations." Units that rotate through NTC today have provided security to the local population one day and sent a company of mechanized infantry to destroy a platoon of Soviet look-alike BMP infantry fighting vehicles the next. Tank gunnery training and maneuver combat exercises still occupy much of a battalion's pre-deployment time.

The point is that Army, in the midst of waging two counterinsurgency campaigns, is still very much a force concerned with its conventional combat role. The balancing act is hard, but unavoidable. It has to prepare its soldiers to be effective in an irregular operating environment, while -- at the same time - attempting to maintain a high level of proficiency in conventional military missions and tasks. Given this situation, it is unclear what Gentile would propose as a solution. Would he prefer that the Army ignore the wars it is currently involved in to prepare for conventional wars that may or may not happen in the future?

Bacevich's second argument and his deeper fear is that, now that the Army is capable of conducting counterinsurgency and stability operations, the United States will continue to be bogged down in a costly and unnecessary path of interventionism with the pipe-dream purpose of saving the world. It is, Bacevich charges, an "affirmation" of the Long War launched recklessly in the aftermath of September 11, 2001 by President Bush and the "Vulcans" in his war cabinet.

In the course of this critique, Bacevich (like Gentile) seeks to tear down the importance of counterinsurgency, as well as those who have advocated its development within the Army. He uncritically repeats Gentile's dubious assertion that General David Petraeus's successes in Iraq had more to do with buying off the enemy than a change in approach, as if cooptation of foes were not a well-established component of any counterinsurgency. He further conflates Petraeus's and John Nagl's advocacy for adapting the force for irregular warfare with an unquestioning acceptance of the Bush Administration's post 9/11 foreign policy goals. He tars them as "Crusaders" who are wedded to counterinsurgency as the solution to all foreign policy problems, rather than simply as part of a community of innovators who have helped devise more effective ways to prosecute the wars of today. When did striving to fight America's current wars better become the wrong thing to do?

Like Gentile, Bacevich offers much criticism but no alternative solution for America's current predicament. He says the United States must retain "strategic choice." We agree: maintaining a variety of capabilities, both military and civilian, to operate across a range of strategic environments is essential to preserve US national security. But what of Iraq and Afghanistan today? Is America supposed to simply turn its back on those countries and act like the past seven years never happened? Is the Army supposed to go back to preparing only for the conventional wars it wants to fight rather than the irregular ones it actually is fighting? We humbly submit that the answer is no.

Matthew E. Valkovic is a first lieutenant in the US Army currently deploying to Iraq. Brian M. Burton is a research assistant at the Center for a New American Security and a graduate student in Georgetown University's Security Studies Program. The opinions expressed here are those of the authors and do not reflect the views of the Department of Defense or Department of the Army.

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Comments

Berlin93

Thu, 10/02/2008 - 1:49pm

Dale, I think the formulation you're searching for is "wrong", not "taken out of context". But I can understand your reluctance to smash-mouth a guy from South Boston like Casey.

Here's the context:

<blockquote>Gen. Casey made his remarks during an interview outside the town of Medina Jabal in the National Training Center's range area, "the box," during a visit to NTC Aug. 14.

This adjustment, Casey said, would involve including "major conventional operations training" as well as "irregular warfare training" at NTC over the next couple of years, as Soldiers spend more time at home and not deployed.

"And we're already starting the planning to reset the scenarios and the OPFOR [opposing force], so that we can do that," Casey said.</blockquote>

Obviously, NTC, as you and the OPs state, is training units in conventional ops scenarios as they rotate through. But, equally obviously, the focus is almost exclusively on conventional ops in an Operation Enduring Freedom/Operation Iraqi Freedom/COIN context.

It appears that Casey thinks the balance needs to swing a little further towards prepping for a confrontation with Russian BMPs in Georgia.

Casey states that we can expect to see dwell times at home station between deployments to increase to 17 and then 24 months from the 12 or 13 they're currently at... and so reassures us that this change in focus towards conventional ops won't take away from the COIN training.

We've heard civilian/military leadership promise decreased op tempo/increased dwell time several times over the last 5 years -- often shortly before an American election and often immediately followed by an unexpected upsurge in violence in Iraq or Afghanistan.

I personally don't expect we'll be able to withdraw more troops from Iraq or avoid committing more to Afghanistan. I personally don't expect dwell times to increase to 17 months. At least not without a major change in our Mid East strategy... and that's made at a higher level than Army chief of staff.

Dale Kuehl

Thu, 10/02/2008 - 11:15am

I believe Gen Casey's comments are taken out of context. At the NTC we do focus on counterinsurgency, but we are also conducting out of sector missions which focus on training skills for a more conventional fight to include integration of artillery and CAS, defile operations and breaching. The STX lanes focused at company and platoon level are heavy on lethal operations to include one of the most realistic urban combat lanes I have seen. The challenge we face before us to how best to balance the need to train for a more conventional fight while not losing the lessons learned in fighting among the people.

Berlin93

Thu, 10/02/2008 - 3:52am

Thanks for your post. It makes some good points -- which I find articulate and cogent but disagree with.

Bacevich may not have offered a "solution" in this article... but he's offered one in the past. Don't salute and say "can do" when civilian leadership asks you to do the impossible -- e.g. start and win a war with a second enemy in say, Iraq, before you've finished the war with the first in say, Afghanistan. And don't let the civilian leadership simultaneously declare "major combat operations are over" in both the unfinished wars and start bringing your troops home for domestic political reasons... while both wars are still unwon.

You state that NTC has been training units in for both conventional and counter-insurgency warfare. Army chief of staff, General Casey says you're wrong. <a href="http://www.army.mil/-news/2008/08/27/11941-csa-more-dwell-time-will-all… August, speaking at Ft. Irwin, Casey said:</a>
<blockquote>Dwell time for Soldiers between deployments is expected to increase to 17 months next year, and almost to 24 months by 2011, said Army Chief of Staff Gen. George W. Casey Jr. He said this will allow the National Training Center to once again focus on "conventional operations" and not just counter-insurgency training.</blockquote>

If General Casey is incorrect and Ft Irwin has been focusing on conventional AND counter-insurgency... I think Colonel Bacevich would quote Sun Tzu, who said that to be strong everywhere is to be strong nowhere... and that trying to train for conventional and Iraq-style warfare in the space of a single year between year-long deployments... is exactly that.

Additonally, you say, Bacevich "uncritically repeats Gentiles dubious assertion that General David Petraeuss successes in Iraq had more to do with buying off the enemy than a change in approach as if cooptation of foes were not a well-established component of any counterinsurgency" -- this deserves a whole separate article. General Petraeus originally stated that the surge needed to be much larger (at least 50,000 more troops) than it was to have any hope of working. Second, the cooptation of the 'Sunni Awakening' forces happened before Petraeus took command, back in October and November, 2006 and was, I believe, far more a case of nationalist Sunnis reacting to the vicious/murderous methods used by Al Qaeda in Iraq to try and take command of the insurgency than succumbing to our attempts to wheedle them over.