http://www.fromthewilderness.com/members/100506_insurgent_handbook.shtml

 

[If you are reading this article it is likely that you are an “insurgent”—at
least as defined by the United States government. From Stan Goff’s
perspective, since we are all considered insurgents, we may as well be good
at it. This is the first segment in a series by Stan on what domestic
counter-insurgency actually is, how it became that way, the role of gender
in the equation, and how we can learn from the successes and failures of
revolutionaries, past and present.—CB]

THE INSURGENT’S HANDBOOK - Part I

by
Stan Goff
FTW Military/Veterans Affairs Editor

Introduction

October 5th 2006, 12:34PM [PST] - No one should ever follow anyone who runs
around saying “The sky is falling!” even if it is.  Good leadership does not
sow fear, but patience, realism, and Sisyphean determination.  There are a
lot of bad things in the world these days, and a bad system, and the people
who run that system.  When they are using naked brutality is the time to be
least afraid of them.  There real power is based not on fear, which we can
lose comparatively easily, but on dependency.  The exercise of brutality is
a sign of weakness, not strength, and from that revolutionaries should only
take heart.

It’s easy enough for any of us to say, “Stop crying wolf, and do something.”
But we need to have some idea what to do.

This handbook is for revolutionaries.

Revolution is defined here as a fundamental transformation of the power
relations within a society.

A revolutionary is someone who is committed to this vision, and who actively
works to bring it about.

in·sur·gent Pronunciation (n-sûrjnt)
adj.
1. Rising in revolt against established authority, especially a government.
2. Rebelling against the leadership of a political party.
n. One who is insurgent.
[Latin nsurgns, nsurgent-, present participle of nsurgere, to rise up : in-,
intensive pref.; see in-2 + surgere, to rise; see surge.]

Insurgents “intensively” “rise up.”  Seems to me, at least, a good thing… if
done effectively.

Recent uses of the word insurgent popularized in the media have been based
on the US War Department’s characterization of anyone who opposes US
military occupations abroad… or as a claim of status for locals killed by
American bombs and bullets.  Fifty Iraqis are killed, and the military
reports that fifty insurgents are killed.  The news media repeats these
terms to appear “in the know,” which further popularizes and legitimates the
terminology.

The technical use of the term by the US government began during the Vietnam
occupation, and was incorporated into a specific military, then security
(military and police) doctrine, called counterinsurgency.  This is still a
doctrine, and anyone who (1) opposes the government or (2) is known to be
committed to the vision of transforming the fundamental relations of power
in society, is considered to be an insurgent.

If we are called insurgents, and regarded as insurgents, and if the policies
directed against our political vocation are counterinsurgency, then we’d
better learn to become good insurgents.  I worked inside the US government’s
counterinsurgency apparatus for a very long time.  That is why I am writing
this handbook.

Any discussion of insurgency has to begin with Mao.  Let me make a few
preparatory comments to inoculate readers from the inevitable knee-jerk
reactions.

(1)  I am not a “Maoist.”  I do not deify dead revolutionaries, or accept
the transformation of contingent strategies and statements from the past
into religious doctrines.

(2)  Maoism was a theoretical perspective for national independence, not
communism.  This point is often missed, because the organization that
developed what is called Maoism -- in practice -- was the Chinese Communist
Party.  They were the leading organization in a political struggle, but that
struggle was not for communism, and they said so.  It was for the more
immediate goal of Chinese autarky.

(3)  Maoism, the strategic theory, was developed for a specific time and
place, China as a semi-feudal society, economically colonized, immersed in a
cultural history of Confucianism, and militarily occupied by the Japanese.
It is not universally transferable as a cookie-cutter principle for other
places and times, cultures, or social systems. The minute anyone tries to
sell me on “Marxism-Leninism-Mao Zedong-Thought,” s/he has already lost me.
A bible-thumping, millenarian, Southern preacher will hold my attention more
effectively; at least he is telling me something about the society that I
live in.

(4)  The specific approach of what has come to be called Maoism was
developed in response to emerging situations during a protracted resistance,
and tested in practice; it was not determined in someone’s head beforehand,
then applied.  It only became an Ism after the fact.

(5)  Just because we cannot always generalize from specifics doesn’t mean no
general principles ever emerge from specific circumstances.  Hand washing is
a generally good preventative medicine measure.  Obviously, I believe that
there are some more or less universal lessons that can be drawn from the
Chinese Revolution led by Mao Zedong, or I wouldn’t be going to all this
trouble to disclaim about the “Maoist” religious cults and their
hagiographies of Mao, that serve to put a ridiculous face on the Chinese
Revolution and any lessons we might learn from it.

(6)  Math matters.  That’s why I say we have to begin a discussion of
insurgency with Mao.  The Chinese Revolution, under the leadership of Mao
Zedong, did succeed in achieving political independence for the largest
country in the world, and largely succeeded in protecting that independence
from hostile encirclement.

That which has survived in terms of validity from the Maoist tradition, in
this writer’s humble opinion, is the organizing principle called “mass
line.”  The shorthand is, to think of the masses as in three general groups,
based on how well they understand the system or the problem at hand:
Advanced, Intermediate, and Backward.  This is not a strict taxonomy, but
one that facilitates a general method.

The guiding maxim of “mass line” is to consolidate the advanced with
organization and strategic orientation that can (1) isolate the backward,
and (2) win over the next layer of the intermediate to the advanced.   This,
of course, raises a lot of questions about what constitutes “advanced” and
so forth, but even that is contingent upon circumstances.  In organizing
against the war in Iraq, for example, there were two distinct axes along
which to plot out this schema: one programmatic, and one philosophic.

Within the larger mass movement, the programmatic question was unilateral
and immediate withdrawal.  Those with whom I organized in that movement
defined this as the advanced position.  Out now was advanced, stay and kill
Ay-rabs was the backward (generalizing here), and those who wanted out but
had questions about the repercussions of immediate withdrawal were the
intermediate.  The vast majority of those who were politically engaged and
wanted to understand the war better, those in the intermediate category who
we targeted to win over to the advanced, were consolidated around their
opposition to the Bush administration… in other words, mostly Democrats.
Obviously, an approach that identified all Democrats as the enemy and anyone
who voted for Democrats as idiots would have defeated any chance we had of
reaching that next layer of the intermediate.  And so we concentrated our
public education efforts on being present, supportive, and visible at
anti-Bush venues, expressing solidarity with those who shared our alarm and
revulsion at aspects of the Bush administration’s actions and policies, then
providing information about (1) the bipartisan history of imperialism
(without all the lefty jargon that stimulates a post-McCarthy hiccup) that
led to the current conjuncture, and (2) pointed out the underlying premise
of white supremacy that underwrote almost every concern about a “bloodbath”
that would inevitably ensue in the absence of Western troops in Iraq.
Isolating the backward, in this case, was a fairly straightforward case of
persistently attacking a couple of key lies, i.e., that Saddam did 9-11 or
that the US is a beacon of democracy in the region.

Within the somewhat smaller pool of people who are potential activists in a
more general politics of resistance, the mass line approach focused more on
philosophical orientation.  Advanced was taken to mean “anti-imperialist.”
Backward is seen as plain, uncritical, white-male patriotism.  Intermediate
are those who fall in neither category, with the next logical layer targeted
for the advanced being those who are showing an active interest in the
larger questions of history and social systems.  Outreach here is more
focused on teach-ins, workshops, book clubs, dinner-and-a-movie potlucks at
people’s homes, and recruitment into actual work for political actions.

This is mass line in both “mass work” and “political work,” as the tradition
calls it.  It is not based, when done correctly, on promoting a “line” to
the masses.  It is based on paying close attention to the real grievances
and anxieties of the masses themselves, and developing a political line out
of that.  The term “line,” which has been much abused, does not mean
imposing ideological conformity on everyone, even though this became its
distorted meaning under the war-communism of Stalin.  It originally referred
to a brick mason’s line, the string stretched on-level to go back and
re-evaluate the placement of the last and next brick.  It is a strategic
orientation, which is not the same as a concrete strategy.  In fact, I am
going to argue that strategy should never be anything except an orientation
-- written in pencil and not in ink, so to speak.

There is a reason I am taking readers through this Chinese museum.

The lessons of Maoism, and later of Che Guevara as well, as they relate to
insurgency, were not just studied by the left around the world.  Our own
government has been studying them for decades, and its entire social policy
-- at one level -- has been based on thinking of us as insurgents or
potential insurgents.  So in order to fully understand how the repressive
apparatuses of the US state function, we have to understand that state’s
organizing principles.

Saying that the US security state is becoming more repressive does not tell
us much about it, nor does saying that the neo-cons are accelerating the
pace of militarization of domestic and foreign policy.  What specific
military doctrines are being employed, based on what canon of military
analysis?

The answer has been the same since Vietnam.  The US-directed world system
keeps (inevitably) throwing up resistance to an overwhelmingly superior
technical military force, i.e., insurgency (or in the new vernacular,
asymmetric warfare).  Yet few of us actually study counter-insurgency
doctrine to see what it is.

Like it or not, if we don’t go along with the dominant program, we are
already insurgents.  So we’d better be good at it.

Just as in the world-at-large, the claim that all political enemies are
insurgents eventually creates the reality.  An effective politics of
resistance will require that we learn principles of insurgency that
outmaneuver the operational principles of counter-insurgency, not by taking
up arms (did you get that, guys?), but by exploiting the interstices of the
system, amplifying grievances (while weeding out the “backward” contents of
the populist impulse), setting up “bases” off the grid (with the Chinese,
that was geographical, organizing in the countryside to eventually surround
the cities), building strengths beyond the reach of the Panopticon, creating
de facto alternative social systems, destroying the legitimacy of the
existing order in the minds of the masses, and eventually taking political
power for the express purpose of establishing popular sovereignty.


Insurgency/Counter-insurgency


I want to begin this section by thanking Ken Lawrence and Kristian Williams
for the excellent pamphlet The New State Repression (Tarantula Press).  We
don’t use pamphlets enough any more.  From The New State Repression:

Today’s political repression differs fundamentally from the repression
practiced around the world in the past.  The most basic difference is on the
level of strategy -- the general approach of the state, the outlook of the
ruling class.

Their belief is that insurgency is not an occasional, erratic idiosyncrasy
but a constant occurrence -- permanent insurgency, which calls for a
strategy of permanent repression as the full-time task of the security
forces.

In preparing to examine the validity of this claim, let’s go to the source:
the US government.


DEFINITION OF INSURGENCY


1-1. An insurgency is organized movement aimed at the overthrow of a
constituted government through use of subversion and armed conflict. It is a
protracted politico-military struggle designed to weaken government control
and legitimacy while increasing insurgent control. Political power is the
central issue in an insurgency.  (from FMI 3-07.22 , the US Army’s latest
field manual on “counterinsurgency”, October 2004) 

This could have been written by Mao Zedong.

It does not say simply armed conflict.  It says subversion and armed
conflict.

This particular field manual was written to incorporate the lessons of Iraq.
In a very real sense, the tail was wagging the dog, since rather than
reformulate their basic premises about insurgency and counter-insurgency
(I/CI), they reformulated their experiences in Iraq to fit with their
preconceptions about I/CI.  Welcome to the American government. 

The American way of war includes mass, power, and the use of sophisticated
smart weapons. However, large main force engagements that characterized
conflict in World War II, Korea, and Operations Desert Storm and Iraqi
Freedom in the Middle East have become the exceptions in American warfare.
Since the American Revolution, the Army has conducted stability operations,
which have included counterinsurgency operations. Over the past half-century
alone, the Army gained considerable experience in fighting insurgents in
Southeast Asia (Vietnam, Laos, Philippines), Latin America (Colombia, Peru,
El Salvador, Guatemala, Nicaragua), Africa (Somalia), Southwest Asia
(Afghanistan), and now the Middle East (Iraq). Dealing with
counterinsurgency since the Vietnam War has fallen largely on SOF [special
operations forces]; however, conventional forces have frequently come into
contact with insurgent forces that seek to neutralize the inherent
advantages of size, weaponry, and conventional force TTP [techniques,
tactics, and principles]. Insurgents use a combination of actions that
include terror, assassination, kidnapping, murder, guerrilla tactics such as
ambushes, booby traps, and improvised explosive devices aimed at US and
multinational forces, the host country's leaders, and ordinary citizens.

While this introductory statement is self-consciously inclusive of the
recent experience in Iraq and Afghanistan (neither of which has been
adequately or accurately interpreted), it does freely admit that US special
operations forces were involved in places where the US had heretofore denied
they were actually participating, i.e., Colombia, Peru, El Salvador,
Guatemala, and Nicaragua, the first four in which I personally participated
in US military missions between 1983-92.  I was in Vietnam, as an
infantryman, in 1970-71.

Nowhere does this document acknowledge directly that the conventional
capacity of US armed forces makes asymmetric warfare (which they selectively
call terrorism, depending on the political content of specific actions) more
likely, though this can be easily inferred.  The most remarkable thing,
however, about this doctrine (FM’s represent doctrine), is the utter
inability to differentiate between, say, Colombia, Nicaragua, and Iraq.
What this tells us is that either (1) they don’t know any better, or (2)
acknowledging the differences carries too high a degree of political risk in
the indoctrination of military officers.  In either case, the implication is
the same for our purposes here:  they are hobbled by their own doctrine.  To
this we shall return.

Counterinsurgency is those military, paramilitary, political, economic,
psychological, and civic actions taken by a government to defeat insurgency.
It is an offensive approach involving all elements of national power; it can
take place across the range of operations and spectrum of conflict. It
supports and influences an HN’s IDAD [host nation’s internal defense and
development] program. It includes strategic and operational planning;
intelligence development and analysis; training; materiel, technical, and
organizational assistance; advice; infrastructure development;
tactical-level operations; and many elements of PSYOP [psychological
operations]. Generally, the preferred methods of support are through
assistance and development programs. Leaders must consider the roles of
military, intelligence, diplomatic, law enforcement, information, finance,
and economic elements (MIDLIFE) in counterinsurgency. (emphasis added)

Here we have to make a conceptual leap.  The US Department of Homeland
Security is, at its very base, a counter-insurgency organization, imperial
references to “host nations” notwithstanding.

We cannot start the history of the I/CI bias of the US state with 9-11.
That pivotal event was used merely to accelerate a process already in
motion, and to author a massive government reorganization that would
consolidate a higher level of executive power and simultaneously bust the
government workers’ union (American Federation of Government Employees --
AFGE).  This makes more sense than many realize, because ever since the
Vietnam occupation, when US domestic security adopted a I/CI model for
population control, breaking mass organizations like unions  -- already a
part of I/CI doctrine abroad -- has been integral to the I/CI doctrines.

The most infamous of the US state’s domestic counterinsurgency operations
was the FBI-directed counter-intelligence program (COINTELPRO), a massive,
often extra-legal covert operations campaign directed at a whole range of
social activist organizations and individuals in the 1960s and 70s.

The original adoption of I/CI doctrine by domestic state security forces in
the US was a panicked reaction to the social upheavals of the 1960s, most
especially the Black Freedom Movement (BFM).  The anti-war movement that
emerged toward the end of this decade was largely facilitated by the ruling
class disruptions caused by the BFM and the culture of resistance that was
in its wake. 



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