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Centurian1985 said:Are our troops conducting house-to-house searches for weapons as well?
Ummm.... yeah - what do you think VP does while in theatre?
Centurian1985 said:Are our troops conducting house-to-house searches for weapons as well?
CENTERS OF GRAVITY
In conventional warfare, the enemy's military forces and capital city are often considered its centers of gravity, meaning that losing either would spell defeat. In the Iraq war, for example, the coalition concentrated on destroying Saddam's Republican Guard and capturing Baghdad. But the centers of gravity in counterinsurgency warfare are completely different, and focusing efforts on defeating the enemy's military forces through traditional forms of combat is a mistake.
The current fight has three centers of gravity: the Iraqi people, the American people, and the American soldier. The insurgents have recognized this, making them their primary targets. For the United States, the key to securing each one is winning "hearts and minds." The Iraqi people must believe that their government offers them a better life than the insurgents do, and they must think that the government will prevail. If they have doubts on either score, they will withhold their support. The American people must believe that the war is worth the sacrifice, in lives and treasure, and think that progress is being made. If the insurgents manage to erode their will, Washington will be forced to abandon the infant regime in Baghdad before it is capable of standing on its own. Finally, the American soldier must believe that the war is worth the sacrifice and think that there is progress toward victory. Unlike in Vietnam, the United States is waging war with an all-volunteer military, which gives the American soldier (or marine) a "vote" in the conflict. With over 150,000 troops in Iraq and Afghanistan, soldiers must rotate back into those war zones at a high rate. If confidence in the war wanes, veterans will vote with their feet by refusing to reenlist and prospective new recruits will avoid signing up in the first place. If this occurs, the United States will be unable to sustain anything approaching its current effort in Iraq. A precipitous reduction in U.S. forces could further undermine the resolve of both the American and the Iraqi people. At present, U.S. Army and Marine Corps reenlistment rates are strong. Army recruiting, however, is down substantially.
The insurgents have a clear advantage when it comes to this fight: they only need to win one of the centers of gravity to succeed, whereas the United States must secure all three. Making matters even more complicated for the coalition, a Catch-22 governs the fight against the insurgency: efforts designed to secure one center of gravity may undermine the prospects of securing the others. For example, increased U.S. troop deployments to Iraq -- which require that greater resources be spent and troops be rotated in and out more frequently -- might increase security for the Iraqi people but erode support for the war among the U.S. public and the military. This risk is especially great given the nature of the current U.S. operations against the insurgents. They put too great an emphasis on destroying insurgent forces and minimizing U.S. casualties and too little on providing enduring security to the Iraqi people; too much effort into sweeping maneuvers with no enduring presence and too little into the effective coordination of security and reconstruction efforts; and too high a priority on quickly fielding large numbers of Iraqi security forces and too low a priority on ensuring their effectiveness.
The key to securing the centers of gravity in the current war is to recognize that U.S. forces have overwhelming advantages in terms of combat power and mobility but a key disadvantage in terms of intelligence. If they know who the insurgents are and where they are, they can quickly suppress the insurgency. The Iraqi people are the best source of this intelligence. But U.S. forces and their allies can only gain this knowledge by winning locals' hearts and minds -- that is, by convincing them that the insurgents' defeat is in their interest and that they can share intelligence about them without fear of insurgent reprisals.
zipperhead_cop said:So Teddy, to get this straight: Because the people in a given country have a poor image of the occupying force, the onus is on that force to change their SOP's and get killed at the same rate as the indigent population in order to win the "hearts and minds".
zipperhead_cop said:Six of one...
Maybe one of the guys that has been on one of these ops can explain why it is so important to have the locals in love with you. There are obvious reasons, less aggravation, less stress etc. But is it really necessary in order to secure the area? If it is just Intel that is needed, my experience (all in Canada) has been that the rats will seek you out and give info regardless of what else is going on for their own gain. Isn't that what the HumInt guys are there for? Aren't the uniformed soldiers there for area security and aggressive patrols? I stand to be put back in my lane, but I would like to know one way or the other.
I would be very cautious about trying to draw too close a parallel between operations in Afghanistan and your experience as a municipal police officer, or even the collective experience of your entire PD. Police agencies in this country start out much further ahead than the Coalition does: police are the recognized, legitimate and (more or less) trusted agents of a public order that most of us have agreed to and support. There is a long-standing belief amongst most people (most, I said...) that there is a reasonable chance that if you turn to the police, you will receive fair and effective response. And, with the exception of a relatively small group of hard core sh*tbirds, most citizens do not believe that they will be killed or their homes destroyed if they call 911.
the battle for hearts and minds is complicated by the competition
GAP said:Probably, AStan will be more of a generational thing.
teddy49 said:Ok where to start?
Zipperhead_Cop. I gather from you're profile that you are a member of Windsor's finest. Perhaps I'm mistaken. Allow me to stretch the analogy a little further. Would you like to roll through the streets of Windsor in a no smaller than 3 vehicle convoy, armed with C-7s and C-8s and C-9s, while tucked behind armour with a gunner on top with a fifty or C-6 mounted? Would you like patrolling to mean that you never got out of the vehicle between leaving the police station and returning to it unless there was some kind of drama, like one of your vehicles was blown up? Would you like the situation in Windsor to degrade to the point where you had too? Or would you rather be able to stop at Timmy's for lunch and a Double Double and be able to talk to the citizens you meet in a courteous and professional manner. Or conduct a traffic stop instead of a VBIED Magnet...I mean Vehicle Control Point. Would you like all the hotels and government buildings in Windsor to be surrounded by 3 meter concrete blast walls, razor wire, and armed guys who make 3-4 times what you do? How would you feel about having another group of guys, who work for a private company, but are contracted to the Mayor's office running around with C-6s, C-8s, C-9s, up armoured suburbans, who were above the law. They could shoot anyone they thought was a threat, or who got inside their bubble, and you had to deal with the aftermath. Would you like Windsor to be a place where you launched 3 or 4 rounds at citizen's vehicles, because they were in your way and even though you didn't have an emergency to go to, if you'd slowed down anymore, you'd be vulnerable to attack? Would you like the media both locally and worldwide, to complain about everything that you did in Windsor and accuse you of things you didn't do. This is life in Bagdad, today. Put yourself in a citizen's shoes. If this was life in Windsor, why would they possibly have anything at all to do with you.
pbi said:Isn't there great value in the old traditional foot patrol that works a neighbourhood over a long period, gets to know and trust the people, and can hear/see/smell/check all kinds of things that some guy rolling by in a cruiser (once in eight hours) with the windows up and the radio on will never even notice? Don't police services in Canada express great frustration that certain communities do not trust them, and will not share information with them?
teddy49 said:To answer this go here and scroll down to number 184
http://www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook/rankorder/2066rank.html
Then scroll up and take a look at the countries that are above #184. The US mil would love to have their death rate go this low.
I just wanted to hear if increased contact which will certainly lead to more deaths will be WORTH it for what is gained bac
Comparing police informants vs terrorist informants.
I'm not sure what you are referring to about "certain communities", but if you are referring to the GTA, those "communities" made their bed and now are getting to sleep in them. Frustration only stems from still caring. I believe TPS got over that several years ago
zipperhead_cop said:Okay, I am kind of stupid with numbers. I don't get what you are saying with this. ???
Right, you're a selfless martyr working for minimum wage to help both the Iraqi people and your NGO staff. Point made. :teddy49 said:Now the, GO!!! Firstly I don't see the hypocrisy that you speak of. But I'm not going to get into a pissing match about who has the moral high ground in the GWOT. Secondly, if it's hypocritical of me to do what I do and protect the people I protect, while understanding and publicly acknowledging that I don't think it has to be this way then I guess the shoe fits. Sorry for thinking that my presence here, might actually help these people and do some small part to help them forge better lives for themselves. I didn't realize that was hypocritical. I'll be honest I don't think that's going to happen in Iraq anymore, for the reason's I stated in my first post. Perhaps, then I should quit my job. Would that mean I wasn't a hypocrite anymore. The clients I work for, (an NGO, not the army)would still be here, and would still believe in their mission, but because I think there's a better way for Uncle Sugar to be doing their part of the mission, I'm a hypocrite. Sorry, I said earlier that I wasn't going to get into a pissing match about moral high ground. I guess I'm a liar too.
You stated in your earlier post that this switch in tactics would "definitely" lead to "much" higher casualties, now you are defending the existing body count in comparison to WWII. While I realise that military operations are inherently dangerous, your implication that the US should accept even higher numbers of casualties in order to make the Iraqi people like them more is ludicrous. Force Protection is job one, hearts and minds is job two.For your second point, I understand that this isn't WWII. And I don't think Iraq is a meat grinder either. Remember the total number of casualties here is still lower than the first 20 minutes of D-day. In fact I would argue that the way they are doing things now is analogous to Haig's solution to the western front. Where as troop dispersal and force decentralization might be a more Curry-like way of looking at things. Perhaps you disagree. Hindsight is 20/20 and I don't want to rag on the Yanks to much, but if they'd tried a lower key approach from the beginning, perhaps they wouldn't be in the boat they're in now. Where to switch tactics would definitely lead to higher casualties.
I was wrong on this one, thinking you were suggesting that the Coy bases that Canada is using in Afghanistan are the way to go - and they may well be in rural areas to start.For your third point, I never mentioned word one in my post about Afghanistan. The sum total of my experience with insurgency is in Iraq. Perhaps I should have stated that I was only speaking to my firsthand knowledge of Iraq. The challenges I feel that face our guys in Afghanistan, of which again, I have no first hand knowledge, would be the subject of another post, if not another thread. But suffice to say, I don't think that has nearly as much to do with Coalition tactics as it does with the intransigence and independent spirit of the Afghan people. But this post was strictly from my experience in Iraq and I think only applies to Iraq.
GO!!! said:Are you expecting me to believe that you do not use similar ROE in protecting your customers to US troops also in the same geographical area?
GO!!! said:You stated in your earlier post that this switch in tactics would "definitely" lead to "much" higher casualties, now you are defending the existing body count in comparison to WWII. While I realise that military operations are inherently dangerous, your implication that the US should accept even higher numbers of casualties in order to make the Iraqi people like them more is ludicrous.
GO!!! said:Force Protection is job one, hearts and minds is job two.