From the Los Angeles Times
Gates faults NATO force in southern Afghanistan
The U.S. Defense secretary says he thinks
alliance troops do not know how to fight a guerrilla insurgency.
By Peter Spiegel
Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
January 16, 2008
WASHINGTON —
In an unusual public criticism, Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates said
he believes NATO forces currently deployed in southern Afghanistan do
not know how to combat a guerrilla insurgency, a deficiency that could
be contributing to the rising violence in the fight against the Taliban.
"I'm worried we're deploying [military advisors] that are not properly
trained and I'm worried we have some military forces that don't know
how to do counterinsurgency operations," Gates said in an interview.
Gates' criticism comes as the Bush administration has decided to send
3,200 U.S. Marines to southern Afghanistan on a temporary mission to
help quell the rising number of attacks. It also comes amid growing
friction among allied commanders over the Afghan security situation.
But coming from an administration castigated for its conduct of wars in
Iraq and Afghanistan, such U.S. criticism of the North Atlantic Treaty
Organization is controversial. Many NATO officials blame inadequate
U.S. troop numbers earlier in the war in part for a Taliban resurgence.
"It's been very, very difficult to apply the classic counterinsurgency
doctrine because you've had to stabilize the situation sufficiently to
start even applying it," said one European NATO official, who discussed
the issue on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to
speak for the alliance. "Even in the classic counterinsurgency
doctrine, you've still got to get the fighting down to a level where
you can apply the rest of the doctrine."
Gates' views, however, reflect those expressed recently by senior U.S.
military officials with responsibility for Afghanistan. Some have said
that an overreliance on heavy weaponry, including airstrikes, by NATO
forces in the south may unwittingly be contributing to rising violence
there.
"Execution of tasks, in my view, has not been appropriate," said one
top U.S. officer directly involved in the Afghan campaign who discussed
internal assessments on condition of anonymity. "It's not the way to do
business, in my opinion. We've got to wean them of this. If they won't
change then we're going to have another solution."
Gates has publicly criticized European allies in the past for failing
to send adequate numbers of troops and helicopters to the Afghan
mission. But concerns about strategy and tactics are usually contained
within military and diplomatic channels.
In the interview, Gates compared the troubled experience of the
NATO forces in the south -- primarily troops from the closest U.S.
allies, Britain and Canada, as well as the Netherlands -- with progress
made by American troops in the eastern part of Afghanistan. He traced
the failing in part to a Cold War orientation.
"Most of the European forces, NATO forces, are not trained in
counterinsurgency; they were trained for the Fulda Gap," Gates said,
referring to the German region where a Soviet invasion of Western
Europe was deemed most likely.
Gates said he raised his concerns last month in Scotland at a meeting
of NATO countries with troops in southern Afghanistan and suggested
additional training.
But he added that his concerns did not appear to be shared by the NATO
allies. "No one at the table stood up and said: 'I agree with that.' "
The NATO forces are led by a U.S. commander, Army Gen. Dan McNeill, who
has called for greater contributions by NATO countries. Some member
nations are reluctant to deepen their involvement.
NATO officials bristled at suggestions that non-U.S. forces have been
ineffective in implementing a counterinsurgency campaign. They argued
that the south, home to Afghanistan's Pashtun tribal heartland that
produced the Taliban movement, has long been the most militarily
contested region of the country.
The European NATO official, who is directly involved in Afghan
planning, angrily denounced the American claims, saying much of the
violence is a result of the small number of U.S. troops who had
patrolled the region before NATO's takeover in mid-2006, a strategy
that allowed the Taliban to reconstitute in the region.
"The reason there is more fighting now is because we've uncovered a
very big rock and lots of things are scurrying out," the NATO official
said.
Pentagon concerns have risen as violence in the south has steadily
increased, even as other parts of Afghanistan have begun to stabilize.
Last year was the deadliest for both U.S. and allied forces in
Afghanistan since the 2001 invasion, according to the website icasualties.org.
But both U.S. and NATO officials have expressed optimism that eastern
Afghanistan, which is under the control of U.S. forces led by Army Maj.
Gen. David Rodriguez, has substantially improved in recent months.
Rodriguez implemented a campaign that incorporated many of the same
tactics being used in Iraq by Army Gen. David H. Petraeus, the U.S.
commander in Baghdad who co-wrote the military's new counterinsurgency
field manual.
"If you believe all the things you hear about Afghanistan, this ought
to be real hot," Navy Adm. William J. Fallon, commander of U.S. troops
in the Middle East and Central Asia, said of eastern Afghanistan. "More
than half the border is Pakistan, it's a rough area, historically it's
been a hotbed of insurgent activity. It's remarkable in its
improvement."
At the same time, violence has continued to rise in the south, which is
controlled by a 11,700-soldier NATO force largely made up of the
British, Canadian and Dutch forces. Britain saw 42 soldiers killed last
year, almost all in southern Afghanistan, its highest annual fatality
count of the war; Canada lost 31, close to the 36 from that country
killed in 2006. American forces lost 117 troops in 2007, up from 98 in
2006, but U.S. forces are spread more widely across Afghanistan.
"Our guys in the east, under Gen. Rodriguez, are doing a terrific job.
They've got the [counterinsurgency] thing down pat," Gates said. "But I
think our allies over there, this is not something they have any
experience with."
Some U.S. counterinsurgency experts have argued that the backsliding is
not the fault of NATO forces alone.
Some have argued that an effective counterinsurgency campaign
implemented by Army Lt. Gen. David W. Barno and Zalmay Khalilzad, who
were the U.S. commander in and ambassador to Afghanistan from 2003 to
2005, was largely abandoned by officials who came later.
Barno retired from the military and heads the Near East South Asia
Center at the National Defense University. In an article in the
influential Army journal Military Review last fall, he blamed both NATO
and U.S. commanders for moving away from the counterinsurgency plan
since 2006.
Barno accused NATO and U.S. forces of ignoring the cornerstone of a
counterinsurgency campaign -- protecting the local population -- and
said they instead focused on killing enemy forces.
"We had a fundamentally well-structured, integrated U.S. Embassy and
U.S. military unified counterinsurgency campaign plan which we put in
place in late '03 that took us all the way through about the middle of
2005," Barno said in an interview. "And then it was really, in many
ways, changed very dramatically."
Currently serving American officers, however, have singled out non-U.S.
NATO forces for the bulk of their criticism. Among the concerns is that
NATO forces do not actively include Afghan troops in military
operations.
As a result, local forces in the south are now less capable than those
in the east, which operate very closely with their American
counterparts.
"Every time you see our guys in the field, you don't have to look very
far and you'll see them," said the senior U.S. officer involved in the
Afghan campaign. "Getting the Brits to do this and the others is a
little more of a problem."
In addition, U.S. military officials said NATO forces in the south are
too quick to rely on high-caliber firepower, such as airstrikes, a
practice which alienates the local population.
"The wide view there, which I hear from Americans, is that the NATO
military forces are taking on a Soviet mentality," said one senior U.S.
military veteran of Afghanistan. "They're staying in their bases in the
south, they're doing very little patrolling, they're trying to avoid
casualties, and they're using air power as a substitute for ground
infantry operations, because they have so little ground infantry."
The European NATO official said, however, that alliance data show that
all countries, including the U.S., use air power in similar amounts
when their troops come in contact with enemy forces.
"Everyone is grateful for the Americans . . . but this kind of constant
denigration of what other people are doing isn't helpful," the official
said. "It also makes the situation look worse than it is."
Copyright 2008 Los Angeles Times