-Caveat Lector-

Posted on Wed, Apr. 02, 2003


http://www.centredaily.com/mld/centredaily/news/5540077.htm


Lesson of Napoleon still valid: A gnat can beat the lion

BY RON GROSSMAN
Chicago Tribune

CHICAGO - (KRT) - At the height of Napoleon's power, Europe lay at his
feet. The French emperor
could make and break kings as he pleased. But when he put his brother on
the throne of Spain in 1808, the nation's unhappy peasants responded with
a tactic that utterly baffled Napoleon, perhaps the greatest general in
history.

Small bands of lightly armed Spaniards fell upon French soldiers when and
where least expected, then faded back into the countryside before a
counterattack could be mounted. As a result, Napoleon was compelled to
keep large forces tied down in Spain that he desperately needed
elsewhere when his empire began to crumble.

"The lion in the fable tormented to death by a gnat gives a true picture of
the French army," observed a contemporary, the Abbe de Pradt.

The Spanish word for war is guerra, and, in that language, guerrilla is a
band that wages war. The term has been adopted by English to describe
the kind of unconventional, hit-and-run warfare, and those who wage it,
currently bedeviling U.S.-led forces in Iraq.

It is a confounding form of warfare in which traditional military textbooks
go out the window. It can transform the lesser armed into the more
formidable force. Stunning battlefield success can leave the victor the
more vulnerable.

At the beginning of World War II, success was a German monopoly; the
defeats belonged to the Russians.

Josef Stalin's forces were ill-prepared, the Soviet dictator having purged
most of the officer corps in paranoid fear of a military coup. He steadfastly
refused to believe intelligence data that a German attack was imminent.
Accordingly, Adolf Hitler's army quickly drove hundreds of miles into
Russian territory, much as U.S. soldiers and Marines have in Iraq.

---

But that left the Germans with hugely extended lines of supplies that
Russian partisans began to harass - just as Iraq's Fedayeen Saddam are
attacking American supply convoys.

Frederick the Great of Prussia confronted similar difficulties trying to keep
his cavalry supplied in the face of attacks by 18th Century Bohemian
guerrillas.

"Every bundle of hay cost blood," Frederick noted afterward.

Military history shows that when a nation finds itself invaded by a more
powerful one, two responses are possible. The invaders can be met in set
battles, in which case the defenders most often go down to defeat. Or,
they can realize that such is a losing strategy - as did Mao Tse-tung, the
Chinese communist leader, while battling Japanese invaders during World
War II.

Mao set down his military philosophy in a few maxims: "The enemy
advances, we retreat; the enemy camps, we harass; the enemy tires, we
attack; the enemy retreats, we pursue."

---

T.E. Lawrence, the famed Lawrence of Arabia, used that strategy during
World War I. The British officer worked behind the lines stirring up an Arab
resistance movement to the Turks. It bore postwar fruit in the creation of
Arab states that eventually became independent, among them Iraq.

"If we came as an army with banners," Lawrence said, he and the Arab
tribesmen would surely be defeated. "Armies were like plants, immobile,
firm-rooted, nourished through long stems to the head. We might be a
vapor, blowing where we listed."

Commanders facing guerrilla resistance often are unprepared by previous
experience to know that winning battles doesn't necessarily end a war.
The English found that when fighting the Welsh in the 12th century,
reports a contemporary chronicler, Gerald of Wales.

"Though defeated and put to flight one day," he noted of the Welsh, "they
are ready to resume combat on the next, neither dejected by their loss,
nor by their dishonor."

The Pentagon's thinking was that Saddam Hussein's repressive regime would
rob Iraqis of the will to fight.

Yet repression can be trumped by patriotism when a people find
themselves invaded. The Russians had suffered terribly under the Soviet
regime. Yet they set those feelings aside when Stalin dropped the
revolutionary propaganda and called upon them - using religious symbolism
- to defend Mother Russia.

Guerrillas don't win wars by defeating their opponents as conventional
military forces do. They realize their job is to make the other side weary
of a stalemated conflict.

When the Viet Cong mounted their Tet offensive in 1968, they suffered
tremendous casualties. By traditional military calculus, they lost. But they
won the propaganda battle. Increasingly, the U.S. lost its taste for the
Vietnam War and eventually withdrew its forces.

As the American patriot Thomas Paine clearly recognized, when armies
face guerrillas all bets are off. He was convinced that George Washington's
lightly armed soldiers could defeat the British army, even though the
Americans often couldn't stand up to their opponents in open battle. That
was set aside, in Paine's thinking, by another consideration: The enemy
troops were foreigners, the Americans were fighting for their homeland.
That would decide the matter, no matter how many initial victories the
British might have.

"There is something in a war carried on by invasion that makes it differ in
circumstances from any other mode of war," Paine noted, "because he
who conducts it cannot tell whether the ground he gains, be for him, or
against him, when he first makes it."

---

© 2003, Chicago Tribune.

Visit the Chicago Tribune on the Internet at
http://www.chicago.tribune.com

Distributed by Knight Ridder/Tribune Information Services.







© 2003 KRT Wire and wire service sources. All Rights Reserved.



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