Quite right, but the operational and strategic level mistakes can be laid at the Generals' door. At the tactical level there are examples of good and bad practice, like every other army iin every other conflict.
But the army as a whole has a very sophisticated and nuanced feel for how the conflict is evolving.
The ROE are robust. Some will always want more leeway and some less, but the consensus (not just British) is that the ROE are good and workable.
Some would say it is a flawed policy and a flawed strategy. The army still seeks to close with and kill the enemy but only in so far as this will further the aims of the strategy. Of course if the strategy is flawed...
The view among senior officers at the moment appears to be that:
Decisive engagement in maritime, land or air environments is no longer an
effective means of achieving desired political outcomes.
The ascendancy of non-traditional domains of warfare: particulary cyber,
information and perception. The view that the outcome of most operations
is as much a matter of perception as fact.
I do not necessarily agree with the prevailing view.
Bookmarks