[Quote
The former Punjab Director-General of Police, K.P.S. Gill's signal
contribution was demonstrating that alternatives to population-centric
counter-insurgency could succeed. Instead of engaging in protracted,
large-force operations, Mr. Gill focussed on offensive operations targeting
the leadership and cadre of Khalistan terrorists. In effect, unconventional
war-fighting methods were used to defeat unconventional
war-fighting methods. Evidence that such tactics work has piled up. In Jammu
and Kashmir, the Special Operations Group succeeded in decimating the
leadership of the Hizb ul-Mujahideen. Andhra Pradesh's Greyhounds destroyed
a once-powerful Maoist insurgency. Tripura defeated an intractable tribal
insurgency.
Unquote

Praveen Swami is calling for targeted killing of the insurgent leaders (and
cadres)!
Understandably, away from the battlefields. Dragged out of homes or on the
city streets? A la Mossad!?
And deriding Chidambaram for not doing that. For being "conservative"!

He proclaims that "Indian forces are losing" - to justify his call for
adoption of "unconventional" methods.
Evidently the execution of this fiendish call would call for drumming up of
insane paranoia.

If the "democratic" state starts emulating the Maoists, then the state loses
its legitimacy. Life, in general, radically degrades. Maoist, and such
other, armed and systematic violence becomes the only feasible option for
protest against state policies and actions.
Violence escalates. Gory turns gorier.
That's too nauseous.]

http://www.hinduonnet.com/2010/04/13/stories/2010041362531000.

*For a review of counter-insurgency doctrine*

Praveen Swami

*Key to India's failure in combating Maoist insurgency is an ahistorical,
one-size-fits-all security doctrine.*

Eric Hobsbawm wrote: “There is nothing in the purely military pages of Mao,
Nguyen Giap, Che Guevara or other manuals of guerrilla warfare which a
traditional guerrillero or band leader would regard as other than simple
common sense.”

Last week, after the massacre of 76 police personnel in Dantewada, Union
Home Minister P. Chidambaram urged Indians to “remain calm, keep your nerve,
and do not stray from the carefully chosen course that we have adopted since
November 2009.”

The last of those recommendations may prove profoundly misguided. Few of the
strategists charged with executing the Minister's ambitious counter-Maoist
offensive appear to have grasped its doctrinal and tactical demands.
Premised on the belief that counter-insurgency campaigns must be
population-centric — in other words, dominate territories and thus deny
insurgents contact with the population — the strategic foundation of India's
war against Maoist insurgents is flawed. The bottom line is this: Indian
forces are losing. Last year, 312 security personnel were killed to 294
Maoists. This year, too, the figures are grim.

For centuries, insurgents have known that a superior force can be defeated.
Napoleon Bonaparte believed that his 1808 occupation of Spain would be a
“military promenade.” Instead, France found itself bogged down by a
protracted guerrilla struggle that lasted six years and compelled to commit
three-fifths of its imperial army. Irish insurgents who fought the British
in 1848 were taught to “decompose the science and system of war.” “The force
of England,” advised the radical James Lalor, “is entrenched and fortified.
You must draw it out of position; break up its mass; break its trained line
of march and manoeuvre; its equal step and serried array.”

Much of this would have been familiar to peasant rebels and bandits in
India. Back in 1813, Kallua Gujjar led a successful series of raids
targeting moneylenders, travellers and police posts in the Saharanpur-Dehra
Dun belt. His 1,000-strong irregular force was, on one occasion, able to
loot a group of some 200 police personnel. Bhil insurgents staged a series
of revolt between 1820 and 1860 — driven, among other things, by the
large-scale expropriation of Adivasi land by the state and growing
exploitation by moneylenders. Despite the use of irregular formations like
James Outram's Bhil Corps and a policy of pacification that involved pushing
the Adivasis to become settled farmers, the Bhil raids continued for
decades.

Major-General Akbar Khan, who commanded the Pakistani irregular offensive
directed at Srinagar in 1947, described the tactical mindset of such
irregular warriors in his memoirs: “One Mahsud tribesman aptly described to
me their tactics as being like that of the hawk. The hawk flies high in the
sky, out of danger; he flies round and round until he sees his prey and then
he swoops down on it for one mighty strike and when he has got his prey, he
does not wait around, he flies off at once to some far off quiet place where
he can enjoy what he has got.”

Ossified doctrine

Key to India's failure in combating Maoist insurgency is an ahistorical,
one-size-fits-all security doctrine. In essence, state responses have
consisted of pumping in forces for conventional, ground-holding operations
in the hope of displacing guerrilla forces; maintaining high force levels
over sustained periods of time; and, using this military presence to push
forward with developmental and political initiatives to deprive insurgents
of their political legitimacy.

Indian counter-insurgency tactics and strategy, Vijendra Singh Jafa notes,
“have remained fundamentally conservative and traditional, influenced
substantially by accounts of British experiences.” Drawing on the British
campaign against the Malayan Communist Party, Indian strategists believe
that successful counter-insurgency campaigns must focus on winning popular
support. New work, like that of historian Karl Hack, has shown that the back
of the Malayan insurgency was, in fact, broken long before Britain set about
winning hearts and minds. Little of this revisionist literature, though, has
been studied seriously in Indian military academies.

Despite plenty of evidence that population-centric strategies do not work
—witness the durability of insurgencies in the northeast and Jammu and
Kashmir — the doctrine has never been reappraised.

The former Punjab Director-General of Police, K.P.S. Gill's signal
contribution was demonstrating that alternatives to population-centric
counter-insurgency could succeed. Instead of engaging in protracted,
large-force operations, Mr. Gill focussed on offensive operations targeting
the leadership and cadre of Khalistan terrorists. In effect, unconventional
war-fighting methods were used to defeat unconventional war-fighting
methods. Evidence that such tactics work has piled up. In Jammu and Kashmir,
the Special Operations Group succeeded in decimating the leadership of the
Hizb ul-Mujahideen. Andhra Pradesh's Greyhounds destroyed a once-powerful
Maoist insurgency. Tripura defeated an intractable tribal insurgency.

In a thoughtful 1988 paper for the United States Air Force Airpower Research
Institute, Dennis Drew noted that counter-insurgency operations called for
an upturning of military thinking. Military professionals, he wrote, believe
“that the basic military objective in war is to conduct operations that lead
to the destruction of the enemy's centre of gravity.” India's policy of
pumping company-sized formations into the Maoist heartland, and attempting
to dominate the territory around them, is one manifestation of this
thinking. The problem is successful insurgents have no fixed centre of
gravity — no bases that conventional forces may overwhelm.

Population-centred counter-insurgency has received renewed legitimacy from
the apparent success of the U.S. troop surge in Iraq, which was marketed as
having subdued a growing insurgency. But, as scholar and soldier Gian
Gentile has pointed out, the notion that the reduction of insurgent violence
in Iraq was “primarily the result of American military action is hubris run
amok.” In fact, Gentile argued, a “combination of brutal attacks by Shia
militia in conjunction with the actions of the Iraqi Shia government and the
continuing persecution by the al-Qaeda against the Sunni community convinced
the insurgents that they could no longer counter all these forces and it was
to their advantage to cut a deal with the Americans.”

Capacity crisis

For many in the Indian intelligentsia, the defeat of insurgents is an
inevitability: part, as it were, of the manifest destiny of the state. Last
week, Shekhar Gupta, editor of Indian Express, offered a ringing endorsement
of this received wisdom, arguing that insurgencies “follow a pattern pretty
much like a bell curve,” “The graph of violence,” he argued, “rises in the
initial period, producing more and more casualties on both sides. But at
some stage the rebels come to the realisation that the state and its people
are too strong and resolute to be ever defeated, no matter what the score,
in a particular day's battle in a long war. That is the point of inflexion
when rebels see reason. There is no reason why the Maoist insurgency will
not follow that same pattern.”

But will it? Back in 1954, when India first committed troops to battling
Naga insurgents, just one State was hit by insurgency. Now, 265 of 625
districts are affected by one form or the other of chronic conflict — a
figure that excludes areas with unacceptably high levels of organised crime,
as well as cities periodically targeted by jihadist violence. It is far from
clear if the resources exist to address the problem. Italy has 559 police
officers for every 1,00,000 citizens; Bihar has 60, Orissa 97, Chhattisgarh
128 and Jharkhand 136. Even the Army, despite its apparently enormous size,
will be stretched if it is committed to internal security duties. The United
States has one soldier for every 186 citizens; India has one for 866.

Worse, it is far from clear if the Indian state has the capacity needed for
rapid, transformative projects. The U.S., figures compiled by the Institute
for Conflict Management's Ajai Sahni show, has 889 federal employees, and
6,314 state and local employees for every 1,00,000 citizens. India's Union
government has 295 — and if one excludes railway employees, 171.
Chhattisgarh has 1,067 government employees per 1,00,000 population; Bihar,
a pathetic 472.

Even if forces are found to saturate the ground, experience shows,
development will not necessarily follow. In both Jammu and Kashmir and the
northeast, state spending has yielded only limited results. Funds have often
been siphoned off by local contractors and politicians — and, worse, preyed
on by insurgents. In effect, the injection of cash into troubled regions has
subsidised insurgency.

Learning from its own success stories, India needs to fight insurgencies in
smarter, leaner ways. Like Andhra Pradesh, States must invest in training
facilities that meet their particular needs; expand intelligence
capabilities; and use technology effectively. Instead of focussing on simply
expanding the size of Central forces, the Union government must understand
the need for them to be properly trained and equipped. Soldiers without
skills have only one fate: defeat.

In time, it is true, Indian forces may succeed in wearing down the Maoist
insurgency, albeit at a horrible cost of lives — but there are reasons to
worry that they may not. India's strategic strengths are manifest. But as
the work of military scholar Ivan Arreguin-Toft teaches us, the weak do
sometimes win. Instead of despatching ever-greater numbers of men to support
those already flailing in the face of insurgent fire, a dispassionate review
of both doctrine and tactics is needed.

-- 
Peace Is Doable

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