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Issue

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'We oversaw the full spectrum of operations simultaneously across the OE (I am ... view QIPs as instruments of political engagement or strategic communication. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Issue


1
Land Conflict in the 21st Century Some
Implications for the UK Comprehensive
Approach Maj Gen Paul Newton CBE Director
General Development, Concepts and Doctrine 12
June 2008
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  • Caveats
  • DCDC conceptual view.
  • Not an endorsed pan-MOD view.
  • Certainly not a pan-Whitehall view.
  • Scope
  • What is the CA?
  • Progress?
  • Development filling the hourglass.

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FSEC Group Photo
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A Comprehensive Approach
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A Flawed Paradigm
Concurrent not Sequential
Phase
Phase
  • WAR

Post-Conflict Reconstruction
Civil Lead
Military Lead
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The major security challenges require an
integrated response that cuts across departmental
lines and traditional policy boundaries.
(Cabinet Office, National Security Strategy,
Mar 08.)
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The Comprehensive Approach
  • A Comprehensive Approach requires clear national
    objectives, strong political leadership and
    coordination across Departments to ensure the
    coherent application of all instruments of
    national power.
  • British Defence Doctrine 3rd Edition (Draft)

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The Four Guiding Principles
  • Proactive Engagement Requires a shared approach
    to the collection and interpretation of crisis
    indicators and warning systemsrelies on existing
    relationships and familiarity built up over time.
  • Shared Understanding Should be engendered
    through cooperative working practices, liaison
    and education in between crises.
  • Outcome-Based Thinking Planning and activity
    should be focussed on a single purpose and
    progress judged against mutually agreed measures
    of effectiveness.
  • Collaborative Working Institutional
    familiarityIntegrated information management,
    infrastructure and connectivity.

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  • Two National Security Action Memoranda of August
    1962 recommended that the United States
  • adopt a strategy of integrating economic and
    political development along democratic lines with
    counterinsurgency effects in order to enable
    threatened governments to eliminate the roots of
    popular discontent and suppress guerrilla attacks
    upon their freedom.

Hew Strachan, Strategy and the Limitation of War,
Survival Feb-Mar 2008
22
  • Great progress has been made on the ground by
    our civilians and our military, who have learned
    to work together and have adapted in innovative
    ways to meet these challenges. But for every
    ingenious adaptation we see in the field, we
    should ask ourselves what institutional failure
    were they trying to overcome? What tools did we
    fail to provide them?
  • Amb Eric Edelman, Under Secretary of Defense for
    Policy, 28 Sep 2006

David Ucko, Innovation or Inertia The U.S.
Military and the Learning of Counterinsurgency,
Spring 2008
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General Raad Majid al-Hamdani
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  • Missing BBC journalist, Abdul Samad Rohani, was
    found shot dead in Afghanistan on Sunday 8 June
    2008.
  • He disappeared from Lashkar Gah in Helmand
    province the day before.

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  • 1 year and 12 days since 5 British contractors
    were taken hostage.

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Non-Permissive
  • Non-permissive environments are assessed as too
    dangerous for civilians to move around in
    freelyCivilian Stabilisation Advisers can only
    work in more secure conditions with
    non-permissive situations (i.e. in a compound or
    other secured area) for short periods to help
    draw up strategies and tasks that are essential
    for stabilisation.
  • Stabilisation Unit Guidance Note (Draft 18 Mar
    2008)

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The Americans are more deeply committed to
winning in Afghanistan -militarily, economically
and in terms of mental effort than any of their
allies.
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FM 3-24
  • In a sense the doctrine was written by the wrong
    people. Perhaps more accurately, it emerged of
    necessity from the wrong end of the COIN
    equation. Because counter-insurgency is
    predominantly political, military doctrine should
    flow from a broader strategic framework..But the
    doctrine is a moon without a planet to orbit.

Sarah Sewall, A Radical Field Manual,
Introduction to the University of Chicago Press
Edition of the Counterinsurgency Field Manual
39
  • We have to be able to plan well, in depth and in
    coordination with others.
  • Donald Braum, Dept of State, 8 May 08

40
  • We oversaw the full spectrum of operations
    simultaneously across the OE (I am not sure where
    the 3 Block War concept went to but we did it).
    We were clearing streets with Air-Ground
    Integration (AGI), Strykers and main battle tanks
    on one side of the city while opening Zoos and
    handing out footballs on the other!
  • Major John Russell BLO, British Army
  • Chief of Operations MND-B

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USMC Changes the Strategic Geometry
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The Late Sheikh Abd al-Sattar Baziya al-Rishawi
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Southern Belts - Aug 07
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Different Organisational Perspectives within the
CA
  • Different Government departments deliver Quick
    Impact Projects (QIPs) that outwardly look very
    similar but
  • There are often marked differences in the
    objectives, priorities and concerns.1
  • Military tend to focus on consent.
  • FCO tend to view QIPs as instruments of political
    engagement or strategic communication.
  • DFID tend to focus on their direct contribution
    to sustainable development and immediate
    alleviation of suffering.
  • These differences result from strong Departmental
    preferences and are, to some extent, inevitable.

1 Stabilisation paper on QIPs
46
  • CERP (Commanders Emergency Response Fund) is a
    nuclear weapon it is the asymmetrical weapon of
    choiceI really pity other nations that dont
    have it.for every bad CERP project there are ten
    good ones.
  • Col Mark Johnstone 173rd Airborne Brigade
  • The Economist 24 May 2008 Afghanistan Briefing

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  • If you dont get progress in the short term,
    there will be no long term.
  • Gen David Petraeus
  • US Army

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The Mesopotamian Stampede
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