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Insurgency and SMALL WARS

Insurgency and SMALL WARS. DR WILLIAM DEAN. Overview. Problems of definition Types of Insurgency Charles Callwell and Small Wars T.E. Lawrence to Robert Thompson French small wars American small wars

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Insurgency and SMALL WARS

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  1. Insurgency and SMALL WARS DR WILLIAM DEAN

  2. Overview • Problems of definition • Types of Insurgency • Charles Callwell and Small Wars • T.E. Lawrence to Robert Thompson • French small wars • American small wars • Small wars and technology/air power • Small wars since Vietnam

  3. What are Small Wars? “The primary characteristic of small wars is that there is no obvious field of battle; there are only areas to be controlled, civilians to be protected, hidden foes to be subdued.” Max Boot, Savage Wars of Peace, 2002

  4. Small Wars: by the Book Small War Manual Definition:“As applied to the United States, small wars are operations undertaken under executive authority, wherein military force is combined with diplomatic pressure in the internal or external affairs of another state whose government is unstable, inadequate or unsatisfactory for the preservation of life and of such interests as are determined by the foreign policy of our nation.”

  5. Irregular Small Wars • Defeat of Braddock in the French and Indian War - 1754 • The U.S. campaign in the Philippines - 1898-1914 • French War against Samori Toure in West Africa - 1885-1898 • The Malayan Emergency - 1948-1960

  6. Limited vs Total Wars • Small wars are often limited for the western conquerors but total for their indigenous opponents • Spanish conquest of Mexico - 16th century • French conquest of Algeria - 1830-1857 • Anglo-Boer War - 1899-1902 Abd-al Qadir

  7. Small Wars and Western Disasters • In an “Operational/Tactical” sense Small Wars can be total for western forces • First Afghan War - 1842 • Custer’s Last Stand - 1876 • Dien Bien Phu - 1954

  8. Traditional Insurgencies • French peasants in the Vendee (1790s) • Opposed draft, supported church, royalist • Spanish guerillas (1808-1813) • Supported church, anti-French, banditry, used by conservative regular forces • Sepoy Rebellion (1857) • Wanted to restore Mughal dynasty, protect traditonal religion • Menalamba Revolt in Madagascar (1896-98) • Pro-Hova monarchy, protect hearth and home

  9. Ideological Insurgencies • Rif Rebellion is a transitional insurgency • French Indochina 1946-54 • Communist Rebellion in Malaya 1948-60 • El Salvador 1980s • Columbia, FARC, and ELN, 1980s til today

  10. Charles Callwell: Eminent Theorist of Small Wars Small Wars, Their Principles and Practice,1896 • Anglo-Irish family, born 1859 • Graduate of Royal Military Academy Woolwich • Saw action in India, Afghanistan, and Natal

  11. Callwell’s Biography • From 1885-1899 he served at Camberley (British Army Staff College) or at the War Office • During Anglo-Boer War he served on General Redvers Buller staff and then had a field command • During World War I he rose to rank of Major General and was Director of Operations

  12. Basic Ideas of Callwell • Warfare is seen primarily in cultural terms not political terms • Small Wars are seen in terms of imperial conquest and as a technical problem • Small Wars is mainly a technical manual that deals with diverse tactical and operational issues from supply to hill warfare • Lacks the abstraction and sophistication of Jomini and Clausewitz

  13. Basic Ideas of Callwell • Callwell argues that tactics and organization are more important than technology • He ignores the role of machine guns and prophylactic medicine (tools of empire) • He believes that victory is achieved in Small Wars because of “dash and vigor” rather than by “force of numbers”

  14. The Insurgent is Not Unbeatable • Callwell and other small war theorists (e.g. Thompson) argue contrary to revolutionary theorists that insurgencies are not unbeatable • Every insurgency assumes a different complexion • This complexion is determined by politics, ideology, culture, geography, and climate

  15. Callwell and COGs • To defeat traditional or revolutionary insurgency a commander must find opponent’s Center Of Gravity • Callwell’s ultimate value is that he helps inform the violent end of MOOTW • Examples of COGs: Zulu capital of Ulundi, capture of Abd-al Qadir, Boer farms, women and children

  16. Weaknesses of Callwell’s Ideas • He sees the solution to all Small Wars in military terms • Not interested in western commanders learning local customs, culture, or language • Opposed to “Hearts and Minds” method of Gallieni and Lyautey in Tonkin, Madagascar, and Morocco Hubert Lyautey

  17. T.E. Lawrence and the Triumph of the Insurgent • After World War I there was a growing belief that the insurgent would always win and Callwell’s ideas appeared to be dated • T.E. Lawrence’s Book Revolt in the Desert began to develop the “Cult of Invincibility” of the insurgent • Lawrence stands as a transitional figure between colonial and revolutionary warfare

  18. The Rise of Ideological Insurgencies • From the end of WWI Marxist and nationalist inspired insurgencies spread throughout much of Africa and Asia • Examples of these insurgencies were: Indochina 1946-54, Malaya 1948-60, Algeria 1954-62, Kenya 1952-55 • Callwell’s work was ignored because it appeared irrelevant Ho Chi Minh

  19. Robert Thompson: Theorist of Counter-Insurgency • A major theorist of small wars in the era of decolonization • He was a theorist of the British colonial government during the Malaya Emergency • The British conduct of the Malaya Emergency was a model counter-insurgency

  20. Context of the Malaya Campaign • Chinese communists seek to end British rule • Communist insurgents use Maoist strategy to capture the countryside to drown the cities • 10,000 communist guerillas target civilians

  21. Malaya Military Context (Continued) • The British attempted to destroy communist military wing and concentrated on removing sources of discontent • The peasants on the jungle fringe were relocated into new villages where they could be protected and kept from aiding the insurgents

  22. Hearts and Minds • Robert Thompson believed that the insurgents could be defeated by a “hearts and minds” campaign • The new villages were protected by a wire enclosure and contained running water, schools, and medical clinics

  23. Hearts and Minds • Massive self-help programs and government aid was given to Chinese peasants • Chinese and Malay peasants were given free land • Malaya was made independent in 1957

  24. New Villages and Strategic Hamlet Program • Over 480 new villages were created and resettlement became the lynch-pin of British counter-insurgency strategy • New villages led to greater humint gathering...many Chinese were paid for information • Thompson advised U.S. Forces in Vietnam in the 1960s and the above village program was the basis for the strategic hamlet program

  25. Military Option • Throughout the Malayan Emergency the military was used in a variety of ways • This campaign saw the birth of helicopter operations • Special Air Service units penetrated deep into the jungle

  26. Thompson’s Counter-Insurgency Doctrine Defeating Communist Insurgency (1966) isThompson’s Major Work Five Basic Principles: • Government must have a clear political aim (politically and economically stable and viable) • Government must function in accordance with the law (concept of minimum force) • Government must have an overall plan (civil and military action) • Government must give priority to defeating political subversion not guerillas • In the guerilla phase of an insurgency, a government must secure its base area out of which it could then expand

  27. Comparing Callwell and Thompson • Callwell sees war in terms of military solutions only • Thompson takes a “hearts and minds” approach with emphasis on socio-economic solutions

  28. French Counter-Insurgency: Guerre Revolutionaire • French counter-insurgency ideas came out of the war in Indo-China…in Vietminh POW camps conservative French officers were introduced to Maoist doctrine • They came to see colonial wars as crusades against communism • They believed France had a duty to preserve its colonies and spread Christianity

  29. Guerre Revolutionaire in Practice • Guerre Revolutionaire was tried in Algerian Conflict • Key practitioners were: Roger Trinquier, Jean-Bastien Thierry, General Massu • 5th Bureau was created for political indoctrination of the populace and psy-ops

  30. Failure of Guerrre Revolutionaire • The wide spread use of terror and torture by Trinquier, Massu, et. al. weakened France’s claim on Algeria in the UN • The attempted assassination of DeGaulle destroyed domestic support of the counter-insurgents

  31. Small Wars and Changing Technology • Improved communications after World War II (more radios) • Improved medical care—penicillin • Improved fire power (more mobile artillery, ubiquitous machine guns)

  32. Insurgents and New Technology • Insurgents are better armed than previous colonial wars • Opponents have radios—hence the need for SIGINT • Insurgents have better fire power (e.g. Vietminh artillery at Dien Bien Phu) • Insurgents have a great power sponsor—Soviet Union

  33. Small Wars and Air Power • Heavy use of aircraft in inter-war air policing (Iraq and the Rif Rebellion) • Origins of modern helicopter warfare in Malaya and Algeria • Airpower used for intelligence gathering from Malaya to Aden

  34. Small Wars and Air Power (Continued) • Post-war transport aircraft increases mobility (back to Callwell’s principles) and eases logistics • Rise of the role of paratroopers (e.g. SAS and REP) • Not always successful—Dien Bien Phu

  35. American Small Wars • A long history of American small wars - Indian Wars (Seminole and Trans-Mississippi) • Guerilla operations in American Civil War • Largest U.S. small war— Philippine Campaign - 1898-1914 • Banana Wars: Nicaragua and Haiti • The Marines are the American “colonial infantry”

  36. USMC operations in Nicaragua 1926-1932 • 2,000 devil dogs protect govt. of Adolfo Diaz • Diaz govt. opposed by Augusto Sandino • July 1917: major battle between Marines, Guardia National and Sandinistas • Battle shows folly of fighting conventional battle against US

  37. Marine Innovations in Nicaragua • After ‘28 election Hooverbegins Marine draw down • Competent constabulary,Guardia National, created • Led by Chesty Puller • He will win five Navy Crosses, serve with great distinction in WW II, Korea

  38. Reasons for US Success In Nicaragua • Puller believed in nonstop patrol: at night, in rainy season • 20 days a month in the field • Light logistics • Sandino’s forces held a small portion of the country • Sandinistas did not take over after the US left in 1932

  39. Best School for Counter-Insurgency • A generation of Marines gained valuable experience in the Banana Wars • They developed small unit operations, combat patrolling, close air support, the use of automatic weapons, and jungle fighting • This would serve the Marines well in the jungles of the South Pacific in WWII

  40. USMC Small Wars Manual • Technical “How To” manual…not abstract like Clausewitz or Jomini • Probably inspired by Callwell and often covers similar technical topics • More sophisticated and extensive than Callwell in that it looks at civil-military relationships and creating free elections

  41. Basic Principles of USMC Small Wars Phases of Small Wars • Initial landing or action of vanguard • General military operations in the field • Assumption of control of executive agencies and cooperation with legislative and judicial agencies • Routine police functions • Withdrawal from theater of operations

  42. Small Wars: Vietnam Was Vietnam a Small War? • U.S. Marines create the CAP Program to fight VC and NVA in the tradition of Thompson • U.S. Army unprepared to fight a small war in Vietnam (A. Krepinevich The Army and Vietnam) • It failed to absorb British and French lessons • Vietnam is both a Small War and a large conventional War

  43. Small War Command and Control in Vietnam • US officers not in command of ARVN forces as in the past • ARVN commanders chosen because of political allegiance, family connections • Inappropriate training, poor leadership = poor ARVN performance • Strategic Hamlets not given a fair chance

  44. Westmoreland and Counter-Insurgency • Key to counterinsurgency is fire power, large unit search and destroy missions. • Avoided major population areas, left pacification to ill-trained, ill-equipped Vietnamese militias • Ignored history of small wars; believed problems lay with ARVN forces, not faulty doctrine & force structure

  45. Civil Operations and Rural Development Support (CORDS) • Besides Westmoreland’s big war approach there was a pacification effort waged by the CIA, AID, the US Information Agency, and the State Department. • In 1967 president Johnson unified all these effort under CORDS led by Bob Komer • CORDS built schools and hospitals, resettled refugees, improved rice production, electrify rural areas, and spread pro-govt. propaganda • This program experienced some success at winning Hearts and Minds

  46. USMC Combined Action Platoon (CAP) • Gen Brute Krulak: tache d’huile and fighting in populated areas • FID experience in Banana Wars • Enhancing village security • Binh Nhgia in 1966 • Living with the people • Popular Forces as HUMINT • Limited application • Highly effective • High morale among Marines

  47. Why America Lost • Inability to fight an asymmetric and symmetric war at the same time • Too large and inappropriately trained force • Problems of using draftees creates operational and political problems • Forgetting history • Ignoring FID and Limited Use of CORDS and CAP • The most skillful and determined foe the US had faced in a small war

  48. Creighton Abrams’ One War Approach • Takes command over after TET • Pacification: no longer the other war • Ended search & destroy; more extensive night patrols with smaller units • Phoenix Program was very effective • land reform finally initiated • Vietnamization • In 1970 90% of the South’s population was under Saigon’s control

  49. Success and Failure in Afghanistan • Special Forces: quick and immediate use • Goal: smallest footprint possible • Innovative coordination of air power and special forces • Failure of symmetric forces to adapt to a small war (Roberts Ridge) • Problematic use of local auxiliaries

  50. Shifting from Symmetric to Asymmetric War in Iraq • Quick symmetric war with smaller forces • US military commanders surprised by shift from symmetric war to asymmetric war • Most coalition forces not organized trained/equipped for asymmetric warfare • Failure of PME,a paucity of doctrine • Relearning the history of small wars the hard way • Steep learning curve with political consequences

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