Headed the Wrong Way: The British Army's Painful Re-Acquaintance with Its Own COIN Doctrine in Southern Iraq

Abstract

The purpose of this research was to obtain a historically rooted understanding of the development, application, and adaptation of the British COIN approach--one from which the US has borrowed heavily. It focuses upon those factors which interfere with timely, adaptive application of current COIN doctrine as soon as the warning signs of insurgency present themselves. The price of failing to do so in terms of blood and treasure has been widely proclaimed daily in the news media during the past decade of American and British involvement in Iraq and Afghanistan. Authors on both sides of the Atlantic have already made much of the US Army's failure to capture COIN lessons from Vietnam and its abandonment of COIN education in its schools after the 1970s. For this reason, most American commanders went into Iraq with no doctrinal guide for COIN, a deficiency corrected only after painful reflection on the characteristics of the environment and the inefficacy of the conventional methods they initially employed. The British Army, on the other hand, went into Iraq with a COIN doctrine revised five times since the completion of its successful operations in Malaya, 1948-1960, including a version published only two years prior to entry into Iraq. Why did the British Army struggle with identifying insurgency and application of its own corresponding doctrine?

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Jun 10, 2011
Accession Number
ADA547320

Entities

People

  • Thomas E. Walton Sr.

Organizations

  • United States Army Command and General Staff College

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Biomedical
  • Energy and Power Technologies
  • Ground and Sea Platforms
  • Human Systems
  • Weapons Technologies

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Civil War
  • Contingency Operations (Military)
  • Doctrine
  • Employment
  • Ethnic Groups
  • Insurgency
  • Military History
  • Military Organizations
  • Military Science
  • National Politics
  • Organizational Structure
  • Personnel Management
  • Psychology
  • Societies
  • Terrorism
  • Terrorists
  • Warfare

Readers

  • Educational Psychology
  • Military History of the United States in the 20th Century.
  • Military and Counterinsurgency Studies.