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          | THE STRATFOR WEEKLY 18 June 2003
 
 by Dr. George Friedman
 
 Guerrilla War in Iraq
 Summary
 
 The United States is now clearly involved in a guerrilla war in the Sunni regions of Iraq.
          As a result, U.S. forces are engaging in counterinsurgency operations, which historically
          have proven most difficult and trying -- for both American forces and American politics.
          Suppressing a guerrilla operation without alienating the indigenous population represents
          an extreme challenge to the United States that at this point does not appear avoidable --
          and the seriousness of which does not appear to be broadly understood.
 
 Analysis
 
 The United States currently is involved in an extended, low- intensity conflict in Iraq.
          More precisely, it is involved in a guerrilla war in the Sunni areas of the country,
          including much of Baghdad proper as well an arc that runs from due west to the north. The
          almost daily guerrilla attacks against U.S. forces have resulted in nearly 50 deaths since
          U.S. President George W. Bush declared the end of major military operations; they also
          have tied down a substantial number of troops in counterinsurgency operations, two of
          which (Operations Peninsula Freedom and Desert Scorpion) have been launched already. The
          war is not strategically insignificant, even though the level of intensity is relatively
          low at this point. Guerrilla warfare can have a disproportionate effect strategically,
          even when it can be tactically and operationally managed. There are two reasons for this.
          The first is that it violates the principles of economy of force: The quantity of force
          required to contain a guerrilla operation is inherently disproportionate because the
          guerrilla force is dispersed over a large geographic area, and its stealth and mobility
          requires a much larger force to contain. Second, guerrilla war generates political
          realities that affect the strategic level of war. Because of the nature of
          counterinsurgency operations, guerrillas can generate a simultaneous perception of
          weakness and brutality, regardless of the intentions of the conventional forces. Since
          guerrillas choose the time and place of their own attacks and use mobility to evade
          counterattacks, the guerrilla appears to be outfighting the regular forces. Even when they
          are merely holding their own or even losing, their continued operation generates a sense
          of power for the guerrillas and weakness for the counterguerrilla force.
 
 The nature of counterinsurgency requires that guerrillas be distinguished from the general
          population. This is extraordinarily difficult, particularly when the troops trying to make
          the distinction are foreign, untrained in the local language and therefore culturally
          incapable of making the subtle distinctions needed for surgical identification. The result
          is the processing of large numbers of noncombatants in the search for a handful of
          guerrillas. Another result is the massive intrusion of force into a civilian community
          that may start out as neutral or even friendly, but which over time becomes hostile -- not
          only because of the constant intrusions, but also because of the inevitable mistakes
          committed by troops who are trying to make sense of what appears to them an incoherent
          situation. There is another level on which the guerrilla war intersects strategy. The
          United States invaded Iraq in order to be perceived as a decisive military power and to
          set the stage for military operations elsewhere. Guerrilla warfare inevitably undermines
          the regional perception of U.S. power -- justly or not -- while creating the impression
          that the United States is limited in what it can do in the region militarily. Thus, the
          United States is in a tough spot. It cannot withdraw from Iraq and therefore must fight.
          But it must fight in such a way that avoids four things:
 
 1. It cannot fight a war that alienates the general Iraqi populace sufficiently to
          generate recruits for the guerrillas and undermine the occupation.
 
 2. It cannot lose control of the countryside; this could destabilize the entire
          occupation.
 
 3. It cannot allow the guerrilla operation to undermine its ability to project forces
          elsewhere.
 
 4. It cannot be allowed to extend the length of the conflict to such an extent that the
          U.S. public determines that the cost is not worth the prize. The longer the war, the
          clearer the definition of the prize must be.
 
 Therefore, the task for U.S. forces is:
 1. Identify the enemy.
 2. Isolate the enemy from his supplies and from the population.
 3. Destroy him.
 
 The dos and don'ts of guerrilla warfare are easy to write about, but much more difficult
          to put into practice.
 
 The centerpiece of guerrilla warfare, even more than other types of war, is intelligence.
          Knowing who the enemy is, where he is and what he plans to do is the key to stopping him.
          In Vietnam, the North Vietnamese had much better intelligence about these three things
          than the United States. Over time, despite material weakness, they were able to turn this
          and a large pool of manpower into victory by forcing the United States to do the four
          things it should never have done.
 
 Since intelligence is the key, we must consider the fact that this war began in an
          intelligence failure. The core assumption of U.S. intelligence was that once the Baath
          regime lost Baghdad, it would simply disappear. Stratfor had speculated that Saddam
          Hussein had a postwar plan for a national redoubt in the north and northeast, but our
          analysis rejected the idea of a guerrilla war on the basis that Iraq's terrain would not
          support one.
 
 Nevertheless, it is the strategy the Baathists apparently have chosen to follow. In
          retrospect, the strange capitulation of Baghdad -- where large Iraqi formations simply
          melted away -- appears to have been calculated to some degree. In Afghanistan, the Taliban
          forces were not defeated in the cities. They declined combat, withdrawing and dispersing,
          then reorganizing and returning to guerrilla warfare. Hussein appears to have taken a page
          from that strategy. Certainly, most of his forces did not carry out a strategic retreat to
          return as guerrilla fighters; most went home. However, a cadre of troops -- first
          encountered as Mujahideen fighters in Basra, An Nasiriyah and Karbala -- seem to have
          withdrawn to fight as guerrillas.
 
 What is important is that they have retained cohesion. That does not necessarily mean that
          they are all being controlled from a central location, although the tempo of operations --
          daily attacks in different locations -- seems to imply an element of planning by someone.
          It does mean that the basic infrastructure needed to support the operation was in place
          prior to the war:
 
 1. Weapons and reserve weapons caches placed in locations known to some level of the
          command.
 
 2. A communications system, whether simply messengers or communications gear, linking
          components together by some means.
 
 3. Intelligence and counterintelligence capabilities designed to identify targets and
          limit enemy intelligence from penetrating their capabilities.
 
 The central question is how they do this. First, how many and what kind of weapons are
          stored, and where are they? Not only in terms of conventional weapons, but also of weapons
          of mass destruction. This is a critical question. We continue to suspect that Hussein had
          chemical and possibly biological weapons before the U.S.-led war. Where are the weapons
          now? Are they stored in some way? Are they available for use, for example, against U.S.
          base camps at some point?
 
 Second, what is the command and control system? Are these autonomous units operating
          without central control, are they centrally controlled or is it a mixed system? Suddenly,
          the question of Hussein's whereabouts ceases to be irrelevant. Are Hussein and his
          lieutenants operating the war from a bunker somewhere? How do they communicate with
          whatever command authority might exist?
 
 How can U.S. intelligence penetrate and disrupt the guerrilla movement? The United States
          is best at electronic and image intelligence. If the guerrillas stay away from electronic
          communications except in extreme cases, electronic intelligence will not work. As for
          image intelligence, it might be used to find arms caches, but it is generally not
          particularly helpful in a guerrilla war at this level.
 
 Vo Nguyen Giap, who commanded communist forces against both France and the United States
          in Vietnam, divided guerrilla war into three stages:
 
 1. Stage one: very small unit, hit-and-run actions without any attempt to hold territory.
 
 2. Stage two: continuation of stage one attacks combined with larger units, regimental and
          below, engaging in more intense attacks and taking and holding remote terrain as needed.
 
 3. Stage three: conventional warfare against a weakened enemy who is engaged and defeated.
 
 Giap argued that the transition between stages is the key to successful guerrilla
          operations: Too late or too early are the issues. In Iraq, the guerrillas have a separate
          problem -- the terrain makes the concentration of forces too risky. It is one thing to
          mass several companies of light infantry in the Vietnamese jungle. It is another thing to
          do the same in the Iraqi desert. The Iraqi Achilles heel is that the transition from the
          current level of operations is very difficult to achieve.
 
 This is the same problem facing the U.S. forces. If a guerrilla war is to be won, the
          second stage is the point at which it can be won. During the first stage, the ratio
          between operational costs and damage to the enemy is prohibitive. Carrying out
          battalion-sized operations to capture or kill three guerrillas is not only exhausting, it
          also undermines popular support for counterinsurgency measures. In a stage two operation,
          the ratios are more acceptable. But the Iraqis can't move to stage two without playing
          into the hands of the Americans.
 
 That seems to argue that the Iraqis intend to remain at this level of operations for an
          extended period of time. How long depends as much on their resources as on their
          intentions. How many fighters they have, how secure their command system is, where their
          weapons are located and how many they have will determine the length of the fight.
 
 From the U.S. point of view, fighting a retail guerrilla war is the worst possible
          strategy. The key for the United States is the destruction of the Iraqi guerrilla command
          and control system. The North Vietnamese had a clearly defined command and control system,
          but it was in the north and in Cambodia. There were sanctuaries. At this moment, it would
          appear that the Iraqis have no sanctuary. Therefore, the command centers are within
          political reach of the United States. The question is where are they? Where are Hussein,
          his sons and his other commanders? Gen. Abid Hamid Mahmoud al-Tikriti, Hussein's No. 4
          commander, was seized today, which certainly represents a breakthrough for the United
          States. What is not yet clear is whether this is the beginning of the systematic collapse
          of the guerrilla command structure or whether he was irrelevant to that.
 
 Unless the United States is fortunate and this war comprises only a handful of fighters
          who quickly will be used up, the only strategy the United States has is to find and
          destroy the command structure. Every army -- even a guerrilla army -- depends on
          commanders, communications and supplies. Find and destroy the commanders, and the army
          will not be able to resist a general offensive. But first you have to find the commanders.
          Sweeping after foot soldiers will only upset the population; going after the generals is
          the key.
 
 Therefore, the question of where Hussein, his sons and the rest of the officials pictured
          on the deck of cards is not academic. It has become the heart of the military equation.
 
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