ARMY UPDATES COUNTERINSURGENCY DOCTRINE
Three years into the war in Iraq, the U.S. Army has nearly
completed a thorough revision and update of its official doctrine
on counterinsurgency.
"It has been 20 years since the U.S. Army published a manual
devoted to counterinsurgency operations, and 25 since the Marine
Corps published its last such manual. With our Soldiers and
Marines fighting insurgents in both Afghanistan and Iraq, it is
thus essential that we give them a manual that provides principles
and guidelines for counterinsurgency operations (COIN)."
The new doctrine begins with a thoughtful presentation of the
nature of insurgency and counterinsurgency, their evolution and
their characteristic strategies, and proceeds to consider the
design of counterinsurgency operations.
"Traditionally, armies have had to unlearn much of their doctrine
and (re)learn the principles of COIN while waging COIN campaigns."
Counterinsurgency "presents a complex and often unfamiliar set of
missions and considerations for a military commander."
Among the "paradoxes of counterinsurgency" are the fact that "the
more you protect your force, the less secure you are"; "the more
force [is] used, the less effective it is"; and "sometimes doing
nothing is the best reaction."
The new counterinsurgency doctrine has not been publicly released,
but a copy of the final coordination draft was obtained by Secrecy
News.
See "Counterinsurgency," U.S. Army Field Manual 3-24 (Final Draft),
June 2006 (241 pages, 2.4 MB PDF file):
http://www.fas.org/irp/doddir/army/fm3-24fd.pdf