http://www.isn.ethz.ch/isn/Current-Affairs/ISN-Insights/Detail?lng=en&id\
=123528&contextid734=123528&contextid735=123525&tabid=123525123528
<http://www.isn.ethz.ch/isn/Current-Affairs/ISN-Insights/Detail?lng=en&i\
d=123528&contextid734=123528&contextid735=123525&tabid=123525123528>
08         November 2010
Understanding         Counterinsurgency Strategy
Afghan and NATO         troops

US counterinsurgency strategy is         frequently talked about but
also frequently         misunderstood. A better grasp of its
broad-spectrum approach to         warfare is         warranted.

By Gail Harris for ISN Insights

For months, media coverage of the         war in Afghanistan has        
focused on the failures of counterinsurgency (COIN) at the heart        
of US         President Barack Obama's strategy shift outlined
<http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/remarks-president-address-na\
tion-way-forward-afghanistan-and-pakistan>  in December 2009. While
criticizing the impact of COIN efforts, media         outlets have
simultaneously latched onto the successes of the         stepped-up
capture and kill techniques used in recent months. While the        
"counterinsurgency strategy has shown little success […] what
has turned         out to work well is an approach American officials
have talked         much less about:         counterterrorism,
military-speak for the targeted killings of         insurgents from
Al Qaeda and the Taliban," stated
<http://www.nytimes.com/2010/08/01/world/asia/01afghan.html?scp=1&sq=afg\
hanistan%20strategy&st=cse>  a recent New             York            
Times article.

This media analysis signals a         general lack of        
understanding about COIN strategy, setting up a false dichotomy        
between COIN         and counterterrorism. COIN is more than a 'hearts
and minds'         campaign; it is a         military operation that
also employs more traditional forms of         warfare that        
include counterterrorism.

Toward a workable definition

COIN consists of three basic         phases: First, neutralize        
or kill insurgent forces in order to provide a secure and stable        
environment         for the host nation; second, train host nation
security forces         to successfully         deal with external and
internal threats; and, finally, turn over         all aspects of        
security operations to the host nation.

In a recent interview
<http://www.defense.gov/Blog_files/Blog_assets/20100804_ferrari_transcri\
pt.pdf> , Colonel John Ferrari, the deputy         commander for
programs of the NATO         Training Mission-Afghanistan (NTM-A),
elaborated:

COIN is a strategy of warfare           which includes the full
spectrum of warfare. So it includes everything from          
reconstruction to           reintegration to building the security
forces to being with           the population, but           it also
includes killing the enemy […] if the insurgents or           enemy
doesn't want           to be reconciled and they want to fight, then the
military           here, as part of the           COIN strategy, will
kill them […] or they can come in and be           part of          
reconciliation.

Thus, what the public and many in         the media seem to        
misunderstand - as illustrated in the NYT excerpt above - is        
that killing or         capturing the enemy is         part of the COIN
strategy. When he assumed command of NATO         troops in Afghanistan
in         August this year, General David Petraeus put out a detailed
COIN         Guidance memo
<http://www.isaf.nato.int/images/stories/File/COMISAF-Guidance/COIN%20Gu\
idance%2001%20Aug%2010.pdf> . It included 21 points, two of        
which - "pursue the enemy         relentlessly" and "fight hard and
fight with discipline" -         directly address combat operations.

It appears then that the         stepped-up efforts to kill         and
capture insurgents is not so much a shift away         from COIN but a
shift of priorities within         the COIN strategy         itself.
This shift itself adheres to the COIN principle
<http://usacac.army.mil/cac2/coin/repository/FM_3-24.pdf>  addressing
the need to constantly         adapt and change tactics, techniques
and procedures as the situation requires. Thus, a shift toward        
more targeted         killings does not mean abandoning the training of
Afghan         security forces, for         example. Instead, the
training and fielding of Afghan security         force continues.
The two objectives are not mutually exclusive, but instead        
complementary.

Modest gains?

The shift in COIN strategy seems         to have merited some        
successes of late. In September while traveling with reporters,        
Petraeus         outlined how increased counterterrorism efforts have
yielded         some tangible         results. He stated
<http://www.foxnews.com/world/2010/09/03/analysis-gen-petraeus-promotes-\
special-ops-success-afghan-war-winning>  that 235 Taliban leaders were
either killed or captured in the previous         90 days, along with
1,066 of their followers killed and another         1, 673        
detained. NATO forces have also been forthcoming about the        
increased use of         drones and smart weapons to find and kill
targets with greater         precision.

Additionally, the training of         Afghan security forces         has
shown progress. Sergeant Major Michael Logan of the NTM-A stated
<http://www.defense.gov/Blog_files/Blog_assets/20100720_logan_transcript\
.pdf>  in a recent interview that         training of the 134,000 man
army
<http://www.defense.gov/Blog_files/Blog_assets/20100722_kem_transcript.p\
df>  had been accomplished ahead of         schedule, with 1,228
coalition and 4,600 Afghan
<http://www.defense.gov/Blog_files/Blog_assets/20100720_logan_transcript\
.pdf>  trainers involved. They have been         conducting a 'train the
trainer'         program in order to enable the Afghans to sustain the
effort         after the NATO         trainers are gone. There has also
been a major emphasis on         developing a strong        
noncommissioned officer corps, which Logan         believes will be the
backbone of the Afghan army leadership.

The Afghan police force currently       numbers
<http://www.defense.gov/Blog_files/Blog_assets/20100722_kem_transcript.p\
df>  106,000 with a target of 109,000         by the end of November. Dr
Jack Kem,         deputy to the commander NTM-A pointed to
<http://www.defense.gov/Blog_files/Blog_assets/20100722_kem_transcript.p\
df>  female subscription as a positive         sign of change:

There is a goal now to have           about 5,000 police          
officers recruited in the next two years who are women. And I          
think what the           "a-ha" moment is for many of the Afghans: when
they realize           that it           does make sense, culturally,
that if you're having border           police, or Afghan          
police who are doing inspections at airports and borders, that          
it's culturally           right to having a woman doing the inspection
of another woman.

The biggest obstacles to COIN         success will continue to        
be corruption, literacy, attrition, insurgent safe havens in        
Pakistan and         the July 2011 withdrawal deadline, which encourages
the Taliban         to wait out         NATO forces. During a recent
interview
<http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/38698040/ns/meet_the_press-meet_the_press/>
, Petraeus said the withdrawal         deadline was not set in stone and
emphasized that "this is a date when the process begins and is        
conditions         based."

Military commanders' capacity to         adapt COIN strategy         to
evolving challenges on the ground may impact on the         withdrawal
timetable.

Gail Harris was the first-ever         African-American woman assigned
by the US Navy to a combat intelligence job. Her 28-year career        
included         hands-on leadership in the intelligence community
during every         major conflict         from the Cold War to Desert
Storm and Kosovo. At her retirement,         she was the         highest
ranking African-American female in the Navy. Her         professional
ventures         have been chronicled in her autobiography, A Woman's
War:               The Professional and               Personal Journey
of the Navy's First African American               Female Intelligence
Officer.  <http://www.gailharrisspeaker.com/about_book.html>

International Relations and Security             Network (ISN)
<http://www.isn.ethz.ch/isn/Current-Affairs/ISN-Insights/Detail?lng=en&o\
ts627=fce62fe0-528d-4884-9cdf-283c282cf0b2&id=13306>


 
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d=123528&contextid734=123528&contextid735=123525&tabid=123525123528>



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