The Accidental Guerilla: Fighting Small Wars in the Midst of a Big One.
Bullington, J.R.
David Kilcullen, The Accidental Guerrilla: Fighting Small Wars in
the Midst of a Big One, Oxford University Press, 2009, 346 pp, $27.95
This book is likely to emerge as one of the seminal works in the
growing field of contemporary counterinsurgency doctrine and practice,
along with the U.S. Army-Marine Corps Counterinsurgency Field Manual (a
2007 publication whose production was overseen by General David
Petraeus) and books and articles by other warrior-intellectuals such as
John Nagl, H. R. McMaster, Peter Mansoor, and T. X. Hammes.
In it, David Kilcullen shares experiences and insights gained from
his 20 years as an Australian Army officer with "small war"
combat experience in the Middle East and Southeast Asia; as an astute
student of such wars (his Ph.D. thesis was on the political effects of
insurgency, counterinsurgency, and terrorism in traditional societies);
as a special advisor on counterterrorism strategy to Secretary of State
Rice; and as one of the architects of the new U.S. strategy that
accompanied the 2007 "surge" in Iraq, where he was senior
advisor on counterinsurgency to General Petraeus.
A principal thesis of the book is that although the global
"neo-Salafi jihadists" are implacable fanatics with whom there
is no room for compromise, most of the people they recruit and exploit
have limited aims and sometimes legitimate grievances, and are fighting
us because we are in their space, not because they wish to invade ours.
U.S. policymakers, Kilcullen maintains, have tended to conflate these
"accidental guerrillas" with the jihadi religious terrorists.
The book covers both the global challenge of Islamist extremism and
current and recent wars involving insurgency:
* Chapter one lays out a conceptual framework and patterns of
conflict.
* Chapters two and three examine Afghanistan and Iraq in detail,
adding context to the concepts and patterns as well as several case
studies and anecdotes.
* Chapter four looks briefly at three other conflicts--East Timor,
southern Thailand, and Pakistan--to identify variants in the overall
framework.
* Chapter five explores strategies and practical solutions for
dealing with both the global terrorists and the "accidental
guerrillas."
Kilcullen's broad policy prescription is to disentangle the
real global threat from local conflicts, deal with the former, and avoid
the latter whenever possible but win them if necessary. He recommends a
full-spectrum approach to counterinsurgency, encompassing political,
security, economic, intelligence, and information ("hearts and
minds") tracks. He approvingly quotes Vietnam War historian and
counterinsurgency theorist Bernard Fall that "a government that is
losing to an insurgency is not being outfought, it is being
outgoverned." He points out that the new strategy associated with
the 2007 surge in Iraq:
... finally began to reflect counterinsurgency best practice as
demonstrated over dozens of campaigns in the last several decades. In
essence, enemy-centric approaches ..., assuming that killing
insurgents is the key task, rarely succeed. Population-centric
approaches that center on protecting local people and gaining their
support succeed more often.
Kilcullen concludes that "if we must engage in large-scale
counterinsurgency campaigns, then there are certain techniques that can
work when properly applied in support of a well-considered political
strategy. ... It is possible to distill a set of principles for
effective counterinsurgency." These principles are:
* A political strategy to build host government effectiveness
* A comprehensive, integrated civil-military approach
* Continuity of key personnel and policies
* Population-centric security
* Synchronization of security and development
* Putting the host nation in the lead
* Building effective local security forces
* A region-wide approach that disrupts insurgent safe havens and
controls borders
In assessing the Iraq War, Kilcullen makes clear his opinion that
launching it was a huge mistake:
In my view the war, in grand-strategic terms, was a deeply misguided
and counterproductive undertaking, an extremely severe strategic
error, and a model of exactly how not to do business.
While he considers that with the surge and new strategy we seem
"to have saved ourselves from some of the more egregious
consequences of a bad decision to invade Iraq," he points out that
serious issues remain:
If we were to draw historical analogies, we might say that operations
in Iraq are like trying to defeat the Viet Cong (insurgency) while
simultaneously rebuilding Germany (nation-building following war and
dictatorship), keeping peace in the Balkans (communal and sectarian
conflict), and defeating the IRA (domestic terrorism). ... the
interaction of these multiple problems means that improvements in
counterinsurgency technique and capability, while important in
addressing the insurgency part of the problem, are not enough to deal
with the broader strategic issue in Iraq.
On Afghanistan, Kilcullen concludes that:
... the Afghan campaign is at a strategic crossroads. ... the
conflict remains winnable, but the overall trend is extremely
negative, and a concerted, long-term effort is needed--lasting 5-10
years at least--if we are to have any chance of building a resilient
Afghan state and civil society that can defeat the threat from a
resurgent Taliban ...
This is a timely, well-written, soundly reasoned book. As Fareed
Zakaria recommended in his endorsement, it "should be required
reading for every American soldier, as well as anyone involved in the
war on terror."
Review by J. R. Bullington