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SWJED
02-21-2006, 08:42 AM
21 Feb. Washington Post - U.S. Counterinsurgency Academy Giving Officers a New Mind-Set (http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/02/20/AR2006022001303.html) by Tom Ricks.


If the U.S. effort in Iraq ultimately is successful, one reason may be the small school started recently on a military base here by Army Gen. George W. Casey Jr., the U.S. commander in Iraq.

Called the COIN Academy -- using military shorthand for "counterinsurgency" -- the newest educational institution in the U.S. military establishment seeks, as a course summary puts it, to "stress the need for U.S. forces to shift from a conventional warfare mindset" to one that understands how to win in a guerrilla-style conflict. Or, as a sign on the wall of one administrator's office here put it less politely: "Insanity is doing the same thing the same way and expecting a different outcome."

The purpose of the school north of Baghdad is to try to bring about a different outcome than the U.S. military achieved in 2003-04, when Army commanders committed mistakes typical of a conventional military facing an insurgency. "When the insurgency started, we came in very conventional," said Col. Chris Short, the District native and recent Manassas resident who is the new school's commandant.

Back then, U.S. forces rounded up tens of thousands of Iraqis, mixing innocent people in detention with hard-core Islamic extremists. Commanders permitted troops to shoot at anything mildly threatening. And they failed to give their troops the basic conceptual and cultural tools needed to operate in the complex environment of Iraq, from how to deal with a sheik to understanding why killing insurgents usually is the least desirable outcome in dealing with them. (It is more effective, they are now taught, to persuade them either to desert or to join the political process.)

Last year, an internal study by Army experts of U.S. commanders here found that some understood the principles of counterinsurgency and applied them well, while others faltered. "If the commander had it, the unit had it, but if the commander got it halfway, then the unit got it halfway," Casey said in a recent interview. The new school is designed to ensure that all the commanders get it...

Strickland
02-24-2006, 02:18 PM
I am not convinced that the Army should be patting itself on the back for establishing a COIN school 34 months after the invasion? For the record, the USMC established their first school within 8 months of the invasion, and have continued to improve its facilities and trainers ever since. Why did this take nearly 3 years to happen? As for the indiscriminate use of force and mass detentions, I did not see this happen with Marine units, though I am confident that mistakes were made.