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Army, Marines
Release New Counterinsurgency Manual
By Jim Garamone
American Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON, Dec. 18, 2006 –
"Learn" and "adapt" are the key messages of the new Army and Marine
Corps Counterinsurgency
Field Manual, which just hit the streets.
The Counterinsurgency
Field Manual, FM 3-24 and Marine Corps Warfighting Publication 3-33.5,
is a unique joint effort between the Army and Marines to put in place
doctrine to help operators as they face the challenges of asymmetric
warfare.
The manual codifies an important
lesson of insurgencies: it takes more than the military to win. "There
are more than just lethal operations involved in a counterinsurgency
campaign," said Conrad Crane, director of the U.S. Army Military
History Institute, in Carlisle, Pa., and one of the leaders of the
effort.
He said the team working on the
manual decided early on to emphasize the interagency aspect of
counterinsurgency fights. "The military is only one piece of the
puzzle," Crane said. "To be successful in a counterinsurgency, you have
to get contributions from a lot of different agencies, international
organizations, non-governmental organizations and host-nation
organizations. There are so many people involved to make
counterinsurgency successful."
All of these organizations bring
important weapons to the campaign, "and you've got to bring unity of
effort if you can to make it effective," he said.
Lt. Col. Lance McDaniel, a
branch head at the Marine Corps Combat Development Center at Quantico,
Va., said the manual is aimed at battalion-level officers and NCOs, but
felt that all who read it could gain some insight into the difficulties
of a counterinsurgency war.
"We see this being part of the pre-deployment training units undergo,"
McDaniel said. "Once on the ground they can adapt the ideas from
the manual to their particular location and enemy."
The Army and Marine Corps have
shared field manuals in the past,
but this is the first on which the two services worked closely to
write, both Crane and McDaniel said. "This was a real team effort of
Army and Marine writers," Crane said. "What I tell people is we had
about 20 primary writers on the manual and about 600,000 editors."
Crane said many soldiers and
Marines commented on the manual and provided input to the final
product. "We received more than 1,000 comments from people actually
doing the mission," he said.
But it didn't stop with military
feedback. State Department employees, CIA officials, academic experts
and representatives of the international human rights community
contributed insights to the manual, McDaniel said. "I hope the
publication will make it easier
for other agencies and organizations to work with us," he said.
Chapter 4, a discussion on
Campaign Design, is a unique aspect of the manual. "The Marines brought
that to the manual," Crane said.
Before beginning a campaign,
planners must identify the problem that needs solving, then be ready to
change the plan as conditions change on the ground, Crane said. "In
counterinsurgency, that is so important because it is a complex
situation," he said.
A counterinsurgency campaign is
much more complex than a traditional military-on-military conflict. The
make-up of the community, the needs of the various groups, the history
of the area, traditional allies in the region, and many other things
contribute to understanding how to design a counterinsurgency campaign.
"It takes a lot more analysis before you jump into it, because if you
do the wrong thing, it could
have major implications," Crane said. "You have to be sure you are
applying the right solution to the right problem."
Crane said the idea of campaign
design will probably permeate other Army field manuals.
The new counterinsurgency manual
uses examples from fighting in Afghanistan and Iraq, but also uses
examples from the Napoleonic War, the U.S. experience in Vietnam, and
counterinsurgency efforts
in the Philippines, Malaya (now Malaysia) and South America.
Crane and McDaniel agree that
insurgencies are the wars of the future. The idea of a nation taking on
the United States army to army or navy to navy is remote, given the
U.S. conventional expertise. "Enemies will make us fight these kinds of
wars until we get them right," Crane said. "Then they'll switch."
The manual is informed by
Afghanistan and Iraq, but also informed
by history, Crane said. "We tried to glean what was useful from the
historical record, but also with the realization that there are a lot
of things that are new out there, Crane said. "Trying to grapple with
the nature of contemporary insurgency was one of the toughest parts of
writing it."
The manual is not limited to
operations in Iraq and Afghanistan. "If we've created a manual that is
just good for Iraq and Afghanistan, we've failed," he said. "This thing
has got to be focused on the future and the next time we do this."
The manual is going to be useful
in Iraq and Afghanistan, but much
of what the manual covers is already being done in those theaters. "The
manual is future-focused," Crane said. "The manual gives you the tools
to do your analysis and the guidelines to apply it with the
understanding that every situation is going to be unique."
It also will be rewritten, as
needed, the men said.
Both men said the manual is
receiving a good reception. "This is not
a doctrine that is being jammed down peoples' throats," Crane said."
This is a doctrine that they are demanding."
Related Sites:
Counterinsurgency
Field Manual

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