Overall, like Bill M and many others, I largely enjoyed the argument put by Gian, albeit wishing he had used a few more facts and a little less assertion to justify his argument. Hence my view that it read liked a Post or Times opinion piece rather than an article in a refereed journal. (The Editor(s) chasing balance or controversy, perhaps?)
A couple of thoughts:
1. I think the term 'population centric COIN' refers to quite a specific set of circumstances, which, as identified by Gian, reflect an 'FM -24' centric view of COIN. Perhaps a clearer distinction is required. Gian applies the term with such broad brush that I think it becomes hard to distinguish whether his real problem is with the strategic choice that America's leadership has made to engage with insurgencies in Iraq and Afghanistan (and a few other places such as the Philippines) or merely the operational / tactical decision to pursue a 'population centric' strategy.
2. The depiction of Briggs' role in the article as supposedly view by 'COIN experts' is perhaps more than a little bit of artistic license in order to allow Gian to set up the contrived Briggs / Templar and Casey / Petraeus comparison. Any student of the Malayan campaign that does not recognise the 'Briggs Plan' as the operational scheme that both 'turned' the campaign and the plan that was largely carried out by Templar is missing the point.
3. It is a false argument to say that Casey didn't get the COIN problem. Whether one is doing it as a 'COIN expert' or a commentator.
Lets not forget the review(s) that he commissioned , nor the fact that he created 'COIN' aids like the MNF-I CFE in Taji. This makes the Casey 'not getting it argument' ring a little hollow to me - no matter whether it is coming from 'COIN experts' (who, bizarrely, increasingly appear to be journos, academics, ex-soldiers, political pundits and beltway think tankers - rather than actual soldiers) or authors seeking to contrive a point.
4. The point that Gian (and others) keep trying to make about strategy vs tactical / operational technique is cloudy. It is hampered by the association with the term 'population centric'. Indeed, 'population centric' is a 'way' , as identified by Gian. But that does not mean that there are not instances where counterinsurgency is a strategy (as I argued in my recent monograph, Confronting the Hydra ).
I think many of Gian's points about 'Population- centric COIN' (and 'COIN experts') have some merit. However, isolating 'population centric COIN ' and making it synonomous with all COIN to derive a view about COIN strategy or its general utility is a stretch.
Cheers,
Mark
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