-Caveat Lector-

http://www.counterpunch.org/lind04012003.html
March 31, 2003

The Pitfalls  of War Planning

The Duke of Medina Sidonia

By WILLIAM S. LIND

In planning a war, the most important task is to understand what can be
planned and what cannot. In general, the initial disposition of forces can
be planned, and it must be planned with great care. As Field Marshal von
Moltke said, "A mistake in initial dispositions can seldom be put right." But
Moltke also said, "No plan survives its first contact with the enemy." Once
you cross the enemy's border, you have to adjust and improvise
constantly. The conduct of war, as distinct from preparation for war, is
(Moltke again) "a matter of expedients." Count von Schlieffen thought
otherwise, and in the famous Schlieffen Plan he attempted to extend the
logic of railway mobilization planning into the campaign itself. Not
surprisingly, the result was failure and, for Germany, a lost war.

A second planning error is to make the war plan depend on a single
assumption. Here, the Spanish Armada provides an example. The single
assumption on which the Armada depended was that the Spanish
commander in the Netherlands, the Duke of Parma, would somehow get his
own army to the sea and out into the English Channel, where the Armada
would protect its crossing. The Armada's commander, the Duke of Medina
Sidonia, did everything he was expected to do. He brought his fleet into
the Channel in splendid order, ready to convey Parma's troops. But Parma
never came. All Medina Sidonia could do was try to get home (he made it,
with his flagship and a goodly portion of his fleet).

Yet a third error in planning is to assume that the enemy will fight the way
you would. The classic example here is Napoleon's march to Moscow.
Napoleon knew he would have fought a great battle to keep the enemy
from taking his capital. But Tsar Alexander did not do that (he fought at
Borodino, but was careful not to let his army be destroyed there). He let
Napoleon take Moscow, moving the Russian army east and south. Then, he
waited. Baffled, Napoleon had no choice but to march back the way he
came -- losing nine-tenths of his army in the process.

How does our current war with Iraq look, if we examine it in light of these
three errors in military planning? Regrettably, not very good. Normally, the
American military can be counted on to plan initial deployments
thoroughly, and, once again, it did. But the Pentagon threw the plan out
at the last minute, resulting in chaos. James Kitfield wrote in the March 28
National Journal,

"By far the most dramatic and disruptive change to the battle plan,
however, was Rumsfeld's decision last November to slash Central Command's
request for forces...Notably, the Pentagon scrapped the Time Phased
Force Deployment Data, or "TipFid," by which regional commanders would
identify forces needed for a specific campaign, and the individual armed
services would manage their deployments by order of priority."

This mess was multiplied by the Schlieffen error: we had a rigid plan for
the campaign itself, and did not adjust it despite changes in the situation.
Specifically, when the Turks said no to the passage of American forces
through Turkey, putting an end to the planned northern front, we
continued with the rest of the plan as if nothing had changed. The result
at this point is a campaign that looks like a balloon on a string, with a
single Army division (about 3,500 combat troops) deep in Iraq and a slender
thread of a supply line connecting it to its food, water, fuel and
ammunition. The First Marine Division is slowly putting itself in the same
situation. No classical strategist can see the picture without his hair
standing on end.

On top of all that, like the Armada, our plan depended on a single
assumption: that the Iraqis would not fight. Unfortunately, they are
fighting, leaving General Franks in the position of the Duke of Medina
Sidonia. One division was enough to accept the surrender of Baghdad, but
one division is far from enough to take Baghdad. One hates to say so, but
the fact that the Iraqis are fighting has caused our initial campaign plan to
collapse.

Finally, we seem to have assumed that the Iraqis would fight as we would,
relying primarily on their heavy armor units. Instead, they have fallen back
on the age-old Arab tradition of light cavalry warfare, directed against our
rear. Arabs have a dismal record in tank battles, but at light cavalry
warfare, they are quite good. We might recall that an Englishman named
Lawrence used Arabs that way against the Turks, with pretty decent
results.

The pitfalls in planning a war or a campaign are many. History does,
however, warn us what some of them are. Perhaps it is time for Clio to ask
Mr. Rumsfeld why he fell into three of the most obvious anyway.

William S. Lind is Director of the Center for Cultural Conservatism at the
Free Congress Foundation.
Forwarded for your information.  The text and intent of the article
have to stand on their own merits.
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