Small Wars Journal

Journal

Journal Articles are typically longer works with more more analysis than the news and short commentary in the SWJ Blog.

We accept contributed content from serious voices across the small wars community, then publish it here as quickly as we can, per our Editorial Policy, to help fuel timely, thoughtful, and unvarnished discussion of the diverse and complex issues inherent in small wars.

by SWJ Editors | Mon, 04/14/2008 - 6:27pm | 1 comment
Observations from a Year in the Sunni Triangle

By LTC Craig Collier

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From September 2005 to September 2006 my brigade deployed to Iraq for Operation Iraqi Freedom IV. Most of our time was spent in Salah-ad-Din Province, part of the "Sunni Triangle" north of Baghdad. The brigade's mission was to defeat the insurgency and create the conditions for a successful Iraqi democracy. The latter part of the mission involved working along all of our lines of operation to assist and train the Iraqi Security Forces, establish a working government and improve the local economy.

We can still achieve victory in Iraq in spite of the dramatic rise in violence and public dissatisfaction with our progress. However, we need an honest assessment of why 2006 was such a disappointing year and apply those lessons. From my perspective, we had too much faith in economic incentives and too little confidence in combat operations as a means to lower the level of violence. We didn't fully recognize the powerful influence of money on Iraqi behavior and hence did not do enough to address the corruption which fueled the insurgency. Finally, we had too many Soldiers and contractors whose presence in Iraq was more burdensome than helpful.

The Army's new Field Manual (FM) 3-24, "Counterinsurgency" accurately states that an insurgency "...is a shifting 'mosaic war' that is difficult for counterinsurgents to envision as a coherent whole." 1 My observations may be significantly different from what others experienced in other parts of Iraq at different times, but I believe that they are at least common to what leaders in my brigade experienced in our area of operations during our year in Iraq.

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by SWJ Editors | Sun, 04/13/2008 - 8:22pm | 21 comments
Winning the Ideological Battle for the Support of the Populace

(Understanding the Role of Ideology in Insurgency)

by Colonel Robert Jones

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To date far too much focus has been placed on the nature of the specific (though ever changing) ideology espoused by Bin Laden, and also on the aggrandized, almost mystical, value assessed to the role of ideology in insurgency in general, and for the Global War on Terrorism in particular. To take the position that ideology is the strategic center of gravity (source of all strength and power) of this, or any, insurgency shows a lack of understanding of both the concept of centers of gravity and the nature of insurgency. This is a topic for an entire book in of itself, so this paper will merely address a few key points on the narrower topic of the role of ideology in insurgency.

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by SWJ Editors | Sun, 04/13/2008 - 7:40pm | 0 comments
Understanding Arab Culture

by Lazar Berman

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The North was burning. It was the summer of 2006, and I was a young lieutenant in the newest company of recruits in the Bedouin Scout Battalion 585. Our soldiers had been inducted four months earlier, and the company staff was involved in a two-day workshop on the coast of Netanya after successfully guiding the soldiers through basic training. The workshop was run by two women, organizational consultants brought in from the civilian sector. I sat astounded. The other commanders were deliberately misrepresenting the situation in the company. I struggled to understand why they were un—to face our problems and improve themselves and their soldiers. The answer became clear to me as the workshop progressed, and has served me as a paradigm for understanding Arab culture.

The 585 is the only unit of its kind in Western militaries. Its soldiers come almost exclusively from Israel's Arab communities. The majority of soldiers and almost all of the officers' corps come from Israel's sizeable Bedouin minority. There is a large number of Muslim Arabs who are not Bedouin, called Felahim, as well several Christian Arabs. The only non-Arabs are the occasional Circassian, and Jewish officers transferred in to fill command positions when the battalion lacks the manpower to do so.

I was the only Jew in my company. Upon completing the eight month Officers School in February 2006, I requested a position in the 585. I had done my basic training on the same base as their recruits, and had several Bedouin friends from various courses we had completed together. I admired the battalion's singular mission and its soldiers' bravery, and I saw an opportunity to discover a new facet of Israeli society while instructing young Arab Israelis who had volunteered for service. Naí¯ve, maybe, but to me this was real Zionism.

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by SWJ Editors | Fri, 03/28/2008 - 6:33pm | 3 comments
Considerations for Organizing and Preparing for Security Force Assistance Operations

by COL David Maxwell

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by SWJ Editors | Mon, 02/18/2008 - 12:31am | 10 comments
The Global Counter Insurgency

America's New National Security and Foreign Policy Paradigm

by Jonathan Morgenstein & Eric Vickland

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by SWJ Editors | Mon, 02/18/2008 - 12:23am | 6 comments
Oil Security and the Necessity for Global Cooperation

by Dr. David A. Anderson

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by SWJ Editors | Sat, 02/09/2008 - 2:38pm | 2 comments
Indigenous Forces and Sanctuary Denial

Enduring Counterinsurgency Imperatives

by LTC Robert M. Cassidy

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by SWJ Editors | Thu, 02/07/2008 - 11:15am | 0 comments
The Two Sides of Economic and Democratic Change:

An Economic Model of Terrorism & Insurgency

by 1stLt John A. Sautter

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by SWJ Editors | Thu, 02/07/2008 - 11:10am | 0 comments
UNITED STATES FOREIGN POLICY IN SOUTH ASIA:

AFGHANISTAN, PAKISTAN, AND REVOLUTIONARY ISLAM

by COL Philip Lisagor

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by SWJ Editors | Thu, 02/07/2008 - 11:06am | 0 comments
Can the United States Iraq-ify the problem?

Consider the Soviet Lessons in Afghanistan

by MAJ Daniel S Morgan

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by SWJ Editors | Thu, 02/07/2008 - 11:03am | 0 comments
Fighting a Small War during The Great War

British Strategic Planning and Operations in Central Asia, 1917-1919

by Frederick Dotolo, PhD

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by SWJ Editors | Thu, 02/07/2008 - 10:57am | 2 comments
A Method & Estimate For Counterinsurgency Aircraft Procurement

by Major David L. Peeler, Jr.

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by SWJ Editors | Thu, 02/07/2008 - 10:55am | 0 comments
New Thinking on a 'New Deal' for Post-Conflict Countries?

by Greg Mills & Terence McNamee

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by SWJ Editors | Thu, 02/07/2008 - 10:52am | 0 comments
Culture Warriors:

Marine Corps Organizational Culture and Adaptation to Cultural Terrain

by Maj Ben Connable

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by SWJ Editors | Tue, 02/05/2008 - 9:20am | 0 comments
A Battalion's Employment of "The Elements of National Power"

by LtCol Robert R. Scott

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by SWJ Editors | Tue, 02/05/2008 - 9:10am | 1 comment

Collateral Damage and Counterinsurgency Doctrine

by Major General Charles J. Dunlap, Jr.

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