Here's why Gen. David McKiernan was sacked as Afghanistan commander
Gen. David McKiernan was fired as
American commander in Afghanistan and replaced by Gen. Stanley McChrystal. This
is the first U.S. commander fired during war time since Harry Truman fired
Douglas MacArthur in the Korean War. It was so far out of the ordinary way of
treating American Generals during combat that eyebrows rose all over the place.
What the Hell happened? Rajiv Chandrasekaran of the Washington Post now explains.
In mid-March, as a White House assessment of the war in Afghanistan was nearing completion, Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates and Adm. Mike Mullen, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, met in a secure Pentagon room for their fortnightly video conference with Gen. David D. McKiernan, the top U.S. commander in Kabul.
There was no formal agenda. McKiernan, a silver-haired former armor officer, began with a brief battlefield update. Then Gates and Mullen began asking about reconstruction and counternarcotics operations. To Mullen, they were straightforward, relevant queries, but he thought McKiernan fumbled them.
Gates and Mullen had been having doubts about McKiernan since the beginning of the year. They regarded him as too languid, too old-school and too removed from Washington. He lacked the charisma and political savvy that Gen. David H. Petraeus brought to the Iraq war.
McKiernan's answers that day were the tipping point for Mullen. Soon after, he discussed the matter with Gates, who had come to the same conclusion.
Mullen traveled to Kabul in April to confront McKiernan. The chairman hoped the commander would opt to save face and retire, but he refused. Not only had he not disobeyed orders, he believed he was doing what Gates and Mullen wanted.
You're going to have to fire me, he told Mullen.
Two weeks later, Gates did. It was the first sacking of a wartime theater commander since President Harry S. Truman dismissed Gen. Douglas MacArthur in 1951 for opposing his Korean War policy.
The humiliating removal of a four-star general for being too conventional reveals the ferocious intensity Gates and Mullen share over a growing war that will soon enter its ninth year. It also demonstrates their zeal to respond to President Obama's demand for rapid success in a place where foreign armies have failed for centuries.
McKiernan
is an old school American general. You don't get more hard corps old line
American than being an Armor Commander. Armor, Artillery and to a lesser
extent, tactical air (close air support), are the epitome of conventional war.
What's so old line about being an Armor General? That's a logistics war, big
army against big army. The commander who can bring the greatest numbers against
the weak point of the enemy normally wins. And what are "the greatest
numbers?"
The numbers that matter in conventional war are rounds of ammunition and tons
of ordnance. A conventional commander coordinates the firepower of more weapons
on the battlefield to greater effect than does the commander of the enemy
forces. The ultimate weapon in conventional war is a nuclear weapon. The most
important resources for the winning commander come from either the largest
economy or the greatest population. The commander's most important skills are
coordinating the use of these resources - logistics.
How do you defeat the army that posses an essentially unlimited number of
rounds of ammunition and ordinance to drop on you? The Chinese tried
overwhelming numbers of troops, which works as long as the opponent isn't losing
so badly they resort to nuclear weapons and you have enough troops. Since many
of the Chinese troops used in Korea were previously Kuo Ming Tang troops and as
such politically unreliable, they were expendable and available. But human wave
attacks were not the best solution. A few years after Korea, the Algerians
adapted Leninist guerrilla techniques and applied what is now called asymmetric
warfare against the French. You don't offer the dominating power an army for a
target. The new strategy was effective. Algeria is no longer French dominated
even though the French had both the police forces and the conventional army
with the conventional power. The asymmetric warfare technique migrated to South
Vietnam and defeated the U.S. military also.
Asymmetric warfare was a logical solution when the occupation following
American conventional invasion of Iraq was so badly screwed up by the American
conservatives from the Heritage Foundation and the Bush administration who sent
them there. The attempt to impress a foreign political ideology will always
fail with it does not match the existing culture the ideologues attempt to
impress it on. Such an effort creates a perfect ground for asymmetric warfare.
So how does it work?
Instead a conventional army, you place highly skilled and very political cadres
into the population and convince the population that the conventional forces
and police of the government are their enemy. That is done in several ways.
First, make promises that, given power, the cadre will focus on and provide for
the needs of the population. Whatever can be done to back these promises up
makes them more credible, so the cadres have humanitarian needs organizations -
with political brands. This is easier when the government has no similar humanitarian
efforts.
Second, conduct guerrilla operations against the enemy military and police that
cause them to attack the population as the source of those operations. The
extreme version of this is terrorist operations in which the attackers are
prepared to and plan to die in the attacks. The most effective of these cause a
massive counter reaction by conventional forces against the general population.
Such efforts also create martyrs who have died to benefit the population. "Collateral damage" of innocent civilians is inherently a loss on the battlefield. It
really helps the insurgents when the government is inherently corrupt, since
the population will always recognize this and act to reject it. How do you
think the Iraqi population reacted to the corruption of Blackwater and
Halliburton? Was there any doubt that these organizations represented the Bush
administration? Since the conservative American philosophy of individualism
with no government regulation encourages such corruption, the Conservative philosophy
creates its own enemies.
Afghanistan is a political war. Where is the effective conventional warfare
counter for these asymmetric techniques? Conventional warfare has only one
solution to asymmetric warfare techniques - destroy every last member of the cadre of insurgents, and if they
keep being recreated from the population (as they will be), conduct genocide on
the population. This has been the Soviet reaction in Chechnya. It hasn't worked
very well there, and with the most modern forms of journalism, works even less
well. The media has become a major theater in such wars now. That's because the
battleground is the minds of the population involved.The actual geography being fought over is now little more than a stage on which the real battle is played out for the minds of the onlookers.
LtC. John A. Nagl in his superb book Learning to Eat Soup with a Knife: Counterinsurgency Lessons
from Malaya and Vietnam describes the traditional U.S. military
conventional war culture beautifully. It is a culture that permeates both the
military forces and, more important, the American political culture. You can
tell that Gen. Petraeus and Gen. Chrystal are violating it because they are
accused of being "political generals." The American culture of war
fighting looks down on "political generals", but that is the essence
of fighting an asymmetric war successfully.
In the American political culture, Americans fight wars against other armies.
When America is at peace, the military is subordinate to the political leaders,
but when America is at war, the military leaders determine how the war will be
fought. That includes the political effects, because modern wars are total wars
in which both the military and the civilians are combatants. Let's not forget
that both WW I and WW II were won in large part because the American economy
was nationalized and directed by the government planners. That's the definition
of total war. In total war, there is no essential difference between the
civilian sector and the military sector. America fights modern wars in which
scientific logic based on observable facts dominates the actions taken by both
armies and civilians. West Point was created in 1803 and run by the Army Corps
of Engineers to create an officer corps dominated by scientific thinking rather
than the traditional thinking of European armies. West Point succeeded. It has
been a major element in creating modern America.
By the way, buy a copy of colonel Nagl's book. Most intelligent and promotable
U.S. officers already have.
As a company grade officer during the Vietnam War, I read Mao's writings on how
to fight a war. His techniques were inherently political. They started with a dedicated
political cadre and worked up to a conventional army, but only as each stage
before it succeeded. Let me say it again. The stages were inherently political, not military. As one who
firmly believed in logistics and the idea that the biggest battalions win, I
was hard to convince. But I was thinking on the wrong battlefield. The
conventional war battlefield is just that - armies, trenches and ordnance. The
modern battlefield is men's minds. Thomas Kuhn would describe this as a paradigm
shift. George Lakoff would describe it as "reframing the issue." Both are
correct. But who would have thought that shifting the paradigm or reframing the
issue would determine who might win a war? But it does.
Gen. David McKiernan was not able to make the shift or reframe the issue.
That became obvious to Secretary Robert M. Gates and Adm. Mike Mullen.
The
fact that McKiernan was unsuited to win that war was demonstrated by his refusal to
accept a face-saving way out of his command. Afghanistan is simply not a war suitable for an armor general who sees war as a
challenge for an engineer or logistician. It is a war for a politician.
I don't blame McKiernan. I don't trust political generals, either. I was a logistician.
That's my generation. McKiernan was one of our very best. But then, so was
General Westmoreland in Vietnam. Let's not forget that we didn't win that one,
either.











