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http://csmonitor.com/2004/0920/p01s01-woiq.html
Classic guerrilla war forming in Iraq
Brad Knickerbocker | Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor

Recent upsurge in attacks against authorities and US forces
has parallels, and differences, with past insurgencies.

September 20, 2004 - War is never by the books. Adversaries learn and adapt.
The political climate shifts on both sides. Loyalties and alliances couple
and decouple. The civilian populace - caught in the crossfire - often
remains passive just to survive.

To many experts, the conflict in Iraq has entered a new phase that resembles
a classic guerrilla war with US forces now involved in counterinsurgency.
And despite the lack of ideological cohesion among insurgent groups, history
suggests that it could take as long as a decade to defeat them.

"Guerrilla warfare is the most underrated and the most successful form of
warfare in human history," says Ivan Eland, a specialist on national
security at the Independent Institute in Oakland, Calif. "It is a defensive
type of war against a foreign invader. If the guerrillas don't lose, they
win. The objective is to wait out your opponent until he goes home."

>From the Filipino insurrection during the Spanish-American War to Vietnam to
El Salvador, American troops have had plenty of experience in fighting
home-grown enemies that look nothing like a conventional army. As have
France in Algeria, Britain in Malaysia and Northern Ireland, Israel in the
occupied territories.

Though "counterinsurgency" calls up memories of Vietnam, there may be as
many differences as similarities.

Different from Vietnam

Iraqi insurgents have no means of deploying battalion-size forces, as North
Vietnam and the Viet Cong did with help from the former Soviet Union. Iraq
won't become a proxy conflict between superpowers, as the Vietnam War was.
There is a heavy criminal dimension to the violence in Iraq, just as there
has been in Algeria, Colombia, and Chechnya. And there is unlikely to be a
negotiated resolution as long as Iraq is seen as part of the broader war on
terrorism.

Still, Iraqi insurgents have the advantage of terrain - not jungles but an
urban setting. They appear to have at least the passive support of many
Iraqis. It's often difficult to tell the fighters from innocent civilians.
And they try to force American forces to overreact, causing civilian
casualties and consequent outrage.

"No two insurgencies are alike," says retired Army Col. Dan Smith of the
Friends Committee on National Legislation. "Except that they are violent
affairs in which noncombatants tend to suffer most and national
infrastructure tends to be destroyed."

Since early April, when the health ministry in Baghdad began keeping
figures, some 3,200 civilians (not including Iraqi police or insurgents)
have been killed - some in terrorist attacks, some by the US-led coalition.
On average, insurgents now are attacking US forces 87 times a day. More than
100 foreigners have been kidnapped, and some 30 of those killed. Attacks on
oil pipelines are occurring nearly every day now.

Four insurgencies

In fact, Iraq at the moment has four simultaneous insurgencies: Sunni
tribalists, former Saddam regime loyalists, fighters loyal to anti-US cleric
Moqtada al-Sadr, and foreign jihadists.

"Most importantly, the insurgents haven't made much effort to develop a
coherent political program or identify a leadership," says Professor Steven
Metz of the US Army War College. "I see this as their most serious
weakness."

Still, they do have a common enemy: those they see as foreign occupiers, not
liberators.

Within the US military, much of the debate over how to deal with
insurgencies revolves around one assertion: "No more Vietnams."

Army Lt. Col. Robert Cassidy, who has served in Iraq and is now stationed in
Germany, notes that the US military "has had a host of successful
experiences in counterguerrilla war, including some distinct successes with
certain aspects of the Vietnam War."

But, he writes in a recent issue of the Army journal Parameters, "Because
the experience was perceived as anathema to the mainstream American
military, hard lessons learned there about fighting guerrillas were neither
embedded nor preserved in the US Army's institutional memory."

How to win: the hard lessons

"Unconventional war" in fact has been studied, trained for, and practiced
for more than 40 years. But fighting guerrillas doesn't necessarily allow
for the best use of the largest, most technologically advanced armed force
in human history. Nor does it always address the real basis for defeating an
insurgency, which rests more on political, cultural, and economic factors.
Other militarily dominant countries have learned this as well.

"In many aspects, the French counterinsurgency effort typified the
frustrations faced by modern powers in a classic unconventional conflict,"
states a US Marine Corps training document. "Like the US in Vietnam, the
French in Algeria were unable to transform military successes (of which
there were many) into a political victory."

Challenges for US forces

Defense analyst Loren Thompson of the Lexington Institute sees two basic
defects in the US-led counterinsurgency campaign in Iraq today.

"First, policymakers wrongly assume that Sunni Arabs can be induced to join
in a democratic government where they are assured of permanent minority
status," says Dr. Thompson, who supported the US invasion of Iraq. "Second,
policymakers insist on viewing violence through the prism of the war on
global terrorism, which obscures the sources of conflict and requirements
for victory." Thompson's controversial answer would be to partition Iraq
into three countries: Sunni Arab, Shiite Arab, and Kurd.

That US military planners did not adequately plan for an organized Iraqi
resistance that would become an insurgency reflects a way of thinking that
has often afflicted governments and militaries, says RAND Corp. analyst
Bruce Hoffman, who spent a month this year in Baghdad advising the Coalition
Provisional Authority on counterterrorism and counterinsurgency.

Problem unleashed

What this amounts to, writes Dr. Hoffman in a recent RAND paper, is "the
failure not only to recognize the incipient conditions for insurgency, but
also to ignore its nascent manifestations and arrest its growth before it is
able to gain initial traction and in turn momentum."

With the insurgency apparently gaining traction and momentum, such
criticisms now are coming from prominent Republicans in Congress. "The lack
of planning is apparent," Senate Foreign Relations Committee chairman
Richard Lugar (R) of Indiana said last week. Sen. Chuck Hagel (R) Nebraska,
a decorated infantry squad leader in Vietnam, says the recently announced
shifting of reconstruction funds to security is "an acknowledgment that we
are in deep trouble."

Classified British documents, reported in the Daily Telegraph newspaper over
the weekend, warned a year before the invasion of Iraq that even if a
democratic government could be created there, "it would require the US and
others to commit to nation-building for many years" and that this would
"entail a substantial international security force."

What a few can do

Even if the insurgents dwindle to a handful of terrorists, their impact on
security and stability in Iraq could far outweigh their numbers. RAND's
Hoffman points out that just 20-30 members of the Baader Meinhof Gang
terrorized the former West Germany for two decades; 50-75 Red Brigadists did
the same in Italy; and some 200-400 IRA gunmen and bombers required the
prolonged deployment of tens of thousands of British troops in Northern
Ireland.

Is it possible to prevail over the Iraqi insurgency?

First, says John Pike of the group GlobalSecurity.org, enemy combatants must
be killed, captured, or demoralized faster than new ones can be recruited,
and the majority of the population must come to see the insurgency as
illegitimate and its defeat as inevitable.

It's a tough job, one that's likely to take years - as long as 10 years,
says Dr. Metz at the Army War College. And the outcome is by no means
assured.

"The government must appear to be legitimate, inevitable, and effective at
providing security and services," says Mr. Pike. "As long as Iran does not
stir the pot, these objectives could be approached by the end of this
decade, with luck."









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DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are unwelcomed. Substance—not soap-boxing—please!   These are
sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'—with its many half-truths, mis-
directions and outright frauds—is used politically by different groups with
major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought.
That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and
always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no
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Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
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