McChrystal Pushes COIN, COIN, COIN

McChrystal Pushes COIN, COIN, COIN

Afghan commander Gen. Stanley McChrystal spoke Thursday in Britain at the International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS); it’s worth reading his prepared remarks that can be found here along with a video of the speech.

Interestingly, McChrystal engaged forcefully at the strategic level of the debate over the war by clearly enunciating U.S. national security interests in Afghanistan: first, that Afghanistan could easily return to its previous status as Al Qaeda’s home base; and second, that so goes Afghanistan, so goes its neighbors and the rest of the region.

Headlines will invariably focus on McChrystal’s warning that time is running out for the U.S. and NATO forces to turn the war around and that the Obama administration is dithering. Time is certainly of the essence, although probably more for the battle of perceptions than the balance of forces on the ground, as flowing large numbers of troops into non-existent bases will take time; what some miss in the discussion on boosting the numbers of troops in Afghanistan is that the country’s austerity places limits on how fast a buildup can be executed.

As for the sense of urgency and the ongoing debate within the Obama administration: McChrystal points out that the U.S. led war in Afghanistan is now in its eighth year and that the Afghans have been at war for the past 30 years. It’s highly unlikely Afghanistan’s thirty years war will be wrapped in the next 12 months, but McChrystal is waging a war of perceptions, in addition to the shooting war: “The perception of the villager matters in terms of which side he should support, so winning the battle of perceptions is key.” My sense is that he hopes an announcement from the administration that more troops are coming would go far to demonstrate U.S. commitment in Afghan eyes.

I found the most interesting part of McChrystal’s speech to be his discussion of “counterinsurgency mathematics,” which explains, in part, the Afghan insurgency’s growth over the past eight years:

“There is another complexity that people do not understand and which the military have to learn: I call it ‘COIN mathematics’. Intelligence will normally tell us how many insurgents are operating in an area. Let us say that there are 10 in a certain area. Following a military operation, two are killed. How many insurgents are left? Traditional mathematics would say that eight would be left, but there may only be two, because six of the living eight may have said, ‘This business of insurgency is becoming dangerous so I am going to do something else.’

There are more likely to be as many as 20, because each one you killed has a brother, father, son and friends, who do not necessarily think that they were killed because they were doing something wrong. It does not matter – you killed them. Suddenly, then, there may be 20, making the calculus of military operations very different. Yet we are asking young corporals, sergeants and lieutenants to make those kinds of calculations and requiring them to understand the situation. They have to – there is no simple workaround.”

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I’m disappointed in him for using the Domino Theory justification. If we leave and AQ moves back in to set up shop, its not going to “so go” A’stan’s neighbors. Prior to 2002, AQ WAS in A’stan and their neighbors weren’t in a fit over it. Afghanistan has been a disorganized mess for most of its history and its neighbors have done just fine.

Give what the Gen. McChrystal wants. Send in more troops.

He might as well. Something tells me once the President gets over his cold feet he’s going to realize that you can’t have a functioning Afghanistan army and little girls schools dotting the country, without a counterinsurgency strategy.

Why are we debating sending 20,000–40,000 more troops or pulling all troops out while keeping spec ops in to target UAVs?

Why not send 40,000 troops and every UAV we have into Afghanistan/Pakistan and destroy AQ? The Taliban is like Iraq, a distraction. While evil still not our main target.

Washington Post states, that Obama managed to fit a 25 minute meeting in with the General after his speech in London. I wonder what motivated the President to suddenly send for a man who he has spoken to a handful of times(this meeting makes it twice in person)rarely spoken to in 100 days?

You think he could spend as much time preparing for the Olympic bid of Chicago as meeting with his CIC

Let’s play Cowboys and Taliban. It worked with the Comanches!
Bob X from Twxas

I seem to recall that the campaigns against the Apache and Comanches wasn’t a walk-over for the US Military back then either.

SIMPLE SOLUTION… PULLOUT AND JUST NUKE THE WHOLE MIDDLE EAST.
SGT. CHAPMAN, RET/USMC

Afghanistan is not in the Middle East.

chapman what an enlightened plan, you should pursue public office you sound about as intelligent as your average congress critter.

Well, I read his speech and McChrystal does seem to know what he’s talking about. In fact, he’s probably more qualified to talk about Afghanistan than most of us here combined, which is why he got the job.____If the american public wants less soldiers to get killed in Afghanistan, sending more troops might actually be the best way to do it. If those guys in Ganjal (did i spell that right?) had more firendly forces in the area, maybe they wouldn’t have suffered as many casualties. Maybe they wouldn’t have been attacked at all.____In this kind of long, protracted counterinsurgancy campaign, what matters most is the will to fight. As long as coalition forces keep upping the pressure the Taliban don’t have a chance. The problem is that our military operations are based on popular support by our public, and as soon as they begin to waver (what is happening right now) that’s when the possibility of defeat starts rearing its ugly head.____We can’t actually “lose” the war in Afganistan, but once people get the idea that we ARE losing, we HAVE lost.____If our will to fight it broken, all the means in the world cannot turn defeat into victory.

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