Experts: U.S. using wrong tactics
Fighting in Iraq likely to stay at same level
By Stephen J. Hedges
Washington Bureau
0617/06 "Chicago
Tribune " -- -- WASHINGTON -- Despite the
recent killing of insurgent leader Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, some
former military officials and experts worry that the U.S. has
not learned the lessons of counterinsurgency warfare in Iraq and
that, as a result, a significant improvement in the fighting may
not be around the corner.
In confronting a frustratingly resilient insurgency, the U.S. is
relying heavily on precision bombing, which destroys buildings
and can kill civilians, generating ill will. Tactics used in
house clearings have led to incidents such as an alleged
massacre by Marines in the town of Haditha. Large incursions
into the cities of Fallujah and Ramadi have bred dissatisfaction
among ordinary Iraqis, violating a cardinal principle of
counterinsurgency.
Pentagon leaders repeatedly have vowed to improve their
counterinsurgency training, but only last year did the Army
begin a revision of its tactics, and a new manual on the topic
has not been warmly received. U.S. commanders in Iraq also have
opened a counterinsurgency school in Iraq in an attempt to
better confront the enemy.
But many specialists in this type of fighting, including
recently retired military officers, worry that key lessons have
not been learned three years into the war. Even as the military
targets al-Zarqawi's apparent successor, Abu Ayyub al-Masri,
they say killings of insurgent leaders will have a limited
effect.
"It's about the will of the American people and the trust of the
Iraqi people, and situations like Haditha attack both," said T.X.
Hammes, a retired Marine colonel and Iraq veteran whose book on
counterinsurgent warfare, "The Sling and the Stone," is
considered a "must-read" among younger officers in Iraq.
"Fighting insurgents is about not making any more enemies."
Despite his recent high-profile Camp David, Md., summit with his
war Cabinet and select outside experts, there is little evidence
that President Bush has made any changes to his strategy for
Iraq.
Bush holds his ground
Indeed, during his surprise visit to Iraq on Tuesday and in a
news conference upon returning to Washington on Wednesday, Bush
repeated what he has said often about the U.S. military presence
there.
"The policy of the United States government is to stand with
this new government and help them succeed, and we will do what
it takes to help them succeed," the president said.
The good news of the killing of al-Zarqawi all but eclipsed a
run of negative developments in Iraq for the U.S. In mid-May the
Pentagon acknowledged that it was investigating allegations that
Marines might have shot 24 Iraqi citizens in Haditha in revenge
for the roadside bomb attack that killed a Marine. Marine
officers, the Pentagon suggested, might have covered up the
incident.
The Haditha allegations prompted allegations of other alleged
civilian shootings by U.S. troops. The military dismissed one as
previously investigated, but eight Marines have been detained at
Camp Pendleton, Calif., pending possible charges in a second
case.
Though al-Zarqawi's demise has shifted the spotlight off Haditha,
the shootings there could represent a dividing line in U.S.
military operations in Iraq. Civilian deaths violate a primary
rule of counterinsurgency doctrine, which emphasizes
non-violent, community police actions that enhance personal
security instead of endangering it.
The Haditha incident, still under Pentagon review, isn't the
only suggestion that the U.S. counterinsurgency campaign is off
track. Al-Zarqawi's bombing death aside, U.S. forces in Iraq
have made frequent use of precision bombing as a means of
targeting insurgents.
That tactic, while sometimes effective, can also lead to
extensive civilian deaths and property damage.
A `losing' tactic
The increased use of air strikes, said G.I. Wilson, a retired
Marine colonel who recently finished a second tour in Iraq and
who writes frequently on fighting insurgents, "means that you're
losing. A 500-pound bomb causes a lot of destruction."
One of the allegations of wrongful civilian deaths leveled at
the military recently involved the destruction of an Iraqi home
by a C-130 gunship. The U.S. military said it investigated a
nighttime raid on the village of Ishaqi, about 55 miles north of
Baghdad, and found that U.S. troops used proper force. An Iraqi
human-rights group alleged that 11 civilians were wrongfully
killed in Ishaqi, and citizens there alleged that a building was
destroyed by the C-130 to conceal dead residents.
The same troubles have vexed U.S. troops in Afghanistan, where
the Taliban enemy is more remote. Last month, the Afghan
government complained that a U.S. bomb struck a village where
Taliban suspects had taken refuge. Sixteen civilians died in
that air strike, the government said. An estimated 20 Taliban
fighters were also killed in the strike.
Bush said in December that about 30,000 Iraqi citizens had died
"as a result of the initial incursion and the ongoing violence."
Although some of those deaths can be attributed to al-Zarqawi's
campaign of car bombing and suicide attacks, Iraqi civilian
deaths have continued in a spate of car bombings and shootings
since al-Zarqawi's death.
The reasons for the missteps by U.S. troops can be traced to an
ingrained Pentagon tradition of training and fighting for
conventional war, with well-plotted battle lines and an easily
distinguished enemy. The U.S. force in Iraq was slow to
recognize the emergence of the Iraqi insurgency in 2003 and it
has been reluctant to adopt counterinsurgency tactics.
Commanders trained in heavy artillery assaults bristled at the
notion of exposing troops on street patrols, interacting with
Iraqi citizens and gathering intelligence on likely insurgents.
Gen. George Casey, the U.S. commander in Iraq, developed a
counterinsurgency school there because, as one subordinate told
The Washington Post, the task was not getting done during
predeployment training in the U.S. In addition, Lt. Gen. Pete
Chiarelli, commanding general of the multinational force in
Iraq, is credited by many with putting a heavier emphasis on
counterinsurgent tactics.
Hint of drawdown
The strain on U.S. troops during three years of war and the
possible political necessity of reducing the U.S. presence in
Iraq before the November congressional elections may play a part
in any decision to cut the number of troops. Brig. Gen. Carter
Ham, deputy director for regional operations for the Joint
Chiefs of Staff, suggested last week that the force might be
gradually be drawn down as the end of normal seven-month and
yearlong rotations are completed.
"The overall strategy, it's important to remember, is not driven
by numbers but by effect," Ham said. "And as the Iraqis are able
to exercise greater responsibility and independence, then over
time we would certainly like to see the U.S. number come down."
shedges@tribune.com
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