Tuesday, January 13, 2009

What Stops Us from Finishing the Fight = Sultan Knish








from NY to Israel Sultan Reveals The Stories Behind the News


Link to Sultan Knish







What Stops Us from Finishing the Fight



Posted: 12 Jan 2009 08:38 PM CST


Year after bloody year the American Civil War dragged on with a terrible toll
in lives squandered while Lincoln replaced general after general, until a terrible
lesson was finally learned at great cost. To finish the war and overrun and
destroy the enemy's armies.



It was a lesson the British never learned, ponderously moving armies
around the map, seizing major cities and remaining unable to crush the
smaller Continental forces contending with them. As a result the British
lost America, even as they sat securely in major cities like New York and
Charleston. And though on paper the war was won, in the field the war
had already been lost because they lacked the energy, will and political
capital to keep fighting it.



The paradox of a larger well organized force assaulting a smaller and
disorganized but more mobile one, is that time is on the side of the
guerrillas. A large army costs a great deal to keep in the field, and
the more organized the army, the more organized the nation it
belongs to which usually cannot spare armies for long from
checkmating its other enemies, and cannot long spare a large
draft force of men who would otherwise be working.



By contrast all that the smaller force needs to do to win is stay
alive, and manage a raid here and there that will require the
larger force to commit men to the field to hunt and destroy them.



Time and time again, the British Empire gave up and withdrew or
came to terms with smaller, weaker insurgents who managed to
continue functioning as a threat. Both George Washington and
General Smuts succeeded, not because Yorktown and Okiep
were such devastating victories, but because they wore out
the morale and energy of an Empire that chose to deal rather
than prolong a war it had decided was futile. This of course
forewarned that the entire British Empire would in time fall
apart when London decided that it took too much energy
and monies to maintain.



But this isn't a history, it's what we're facing today. The tide was
turned in Iraq in no small part because we chose to cut a deal
with Sunni factions that we had previously been fighting, once
the strain of the war became too great. But the tide also turned
because we used that deal to focus on clear goals with the
objective of destroying Al Queda in Iraq, while
checkmating the Sadrists with our newfound Baathist
allies. The tactics are cynical, but they were the game
changer on the ground.



Nevertheless the US and Israel remain handicapped by an
inability to finish the fight, brought on by having too many
broad goals, many of which are non-military and depend
on the cooperation of a local hostile population.



Our strength gives us the illusion of invulnerability, which gives
rise to broad overarching goals, that fall apart in the field, where
our strength can just as easily turn into a handicap. Technology
can help get many things done, but it also creates the illusion
that we can do anything. An overreliance on air power is a
particular problem as we have to keep relearning over and over
again bombing produces a very limited result when attacking
insurgents and terrorists on the ground.



Not only is air power expensive
and terrorists and insurgents
routinely use civilians as shields
offering us the Catch 22 of giving
them a get out of jail free card or
taking the morale and PR hit from
collateral damage broadcast
worldwide, but the effective
yield remains very small.
Like using a cannon to swat a fly,
air power is too big to effectively
use in most instances. Air power is
appealing because it promises
casualty free operations against
undeveloped enemies, but it cannot
replace boots on the ground. Accurate
strikes against insurgents requires
intelligence, which itself usually
requires informants in the local population, who are difficult to recruit unless
you exercise some measure of control over the local area itself.



Combine broad goals, overreliance on air power and arrogance,
and the same fallacy keeps repeating itself. Victory requires
quickly and ruthlessly finishing the fight. By contrast long
term occupations practically nurture the enemy, which
can always retreat from any battle and lay low and rebuild,
while draining our strength.



Holding down the fort is well and good if you have the strength,
morale and people to spare. But even so, it only prolongs the
bleeding while dragging out a drawn out war that only benefits
the other side. The longer an occupation goes on, the more
guerrilla forces will learn in the field and attract foreign
sponsors. The bloody lesson that the Union learned at great
cost was that you either finish the fight by taking the battle
to the enemy, or be prepared to surrender or spend a
long time bleeding.



Those who fail to learn from history are doomed to repeat it.



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