951
Views
2
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Articles

Goodbye to all that: On small wars and big choices

Pages 685-695 | Received 13 Feb 2014, Accepted 22 Apr 2014, Published online: 01 Jul 2014
 

Abstract

This article reflects on a decade of British counterinsurgency operations. Questioning the idea that lessons have been learnt, the paper challenges the assumptions that are being used to frame future strategic choice. Suggesting that defence engagement is primarily focused on optimising overseas interventions while avoiding a deeper strategic reassessment about whether the UK should be undertaking these sorts of activities, the article calls for a proper debate on Britain's national security interests.

Notes

 1.CitationPetraeus, ‘We Must Be Coldly Realistic’; CitationPetraeus, ‘Reflections on the Counter-insurgency Era’.

 2.CitationAlderson, ‘Learn from Experience’.

 3. As Hew CitationStrachan suggests, ‘Defence Review’.

 4.CitationGentile, Wrong Turn.

 5. For the extreme case of Germany during and after World War I, and its organised mobilisation of the past to shape contemporary politics, see CitationHerwig, ‘Clio Deceived’.

 6.CitationWhite-Spunner, ‘Great Expectations’, 90; similar arguments in the same volume are made by CitationRiley, ‘NATO Operations’, 246–7.

 7.CitationTransparency International, Corruption Perceptions Index 2013, 2.

 8.CitationGraham-Harrison, ‘UK Leaves its Helmand Project’.

 9.CitationBiddle, Friedman, and Shapiro, ‘Testing the Surge’.

10.CitationKaplan, ‘The End of the Age of Petraeus’, 90.

11. For a participant's critique of the attempt to cut and paste COIN doctrine in Afghanistan, see CitationEikenberry, ‘The Limits of COIN Doctrine in Afghanistan’.

12.CitationStewart, ‘What can Afghanistan and Bosnia teach us about Libya?’. To add to that list, the commander of ‘Operation Enduring Freedom’ Major General Eric Olsen described the Taliban as a ‘force in decline’ in an article by a journalist who concluded that they were a ‘busted flush’ and that ‘nation-building’ had turned the tide (CitationMcGurk, ‘The Taliban on the Run’); Marine General Richard Mills declared in January 2010 that in Helmand province, US forces ‘have taken on the Taliban, the insurgency, right in the heartland and they've defeated them’ (‘US General: Taliban beaten in Helmand Province’, USA Today, 11 January 2010); Ahmed Wali Karzai declared in October 2010 that the Taliban were ‘defeated and broken’ after being killed in ‘industrial numbers’ (Express, 9 October 2010). For a longer discussion of over-optimistic assessments of the war, see CitationBird and Marshall, Afghanistan, 147–8.

13. See CitationTootal, Danger Close.

14. For two notably hagiographic texts, see CitationRobinson, Tell Me How This Ends and CitationBroadwell, All In.

15.CitationNagl, ‘A Better War in Iraq’; CitationNagl, ‘Unprepared’.

16.CitationJackson, ‘British Counter-insurgency in History’; CitationBennett, ‘The Other Side of the COIN’; CitationStrachan, ‘British Counter-Insurgency’, 10.

17.CitationDonnelly, ‘the Cousins' Counter-Insurgency Wars’, 4.

18.CitationRegan, ‘Third-party Interventions’; CitationWood, Kathman, and Gent, ‘Armed Intervention’.

19.CitationMonten and Downes, ‘Forced to Be Free?’.

20.CitationEtzioni, ‘The Folly of Nation Building’, 63; CitationMazarr, ‘The Rise and Fall of the State Failure Paradigm’.

21.CitationStewart Patrick makes this argument in one of the few sustained critical studies of the issue, Weak Links; see also CitationSimons and Tucker, ‘The Misleading Problem of Failed States’; CitationMazarr, ‘The Rise and Fall of the State Failure Paradigm’.

22. As he described it on the PBS programme, ‘Kill/Capture’, http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/afghanistan-pakistan/kill-capture/transcript/.

23. According to those experts who briefed them, Prime Minister Blair and President Bush did not take seriously expert warnings about the difficulties of reconstructing and politically reforming a post-Saddam Iraq. For the UK case, see the account of CitationSteele, Defeat, 18–19, 172; for the USA, see CitationPacker, The Assassin's Gate, 113–14; CitationWoodward, State of Denial, 256.

Reprints and Corporate Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

To request a reprint or corporate permissions for this article, please click on the relevant link below:

Academic Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

Obtain permissions instantly via Rightslink by clicking on the button below:

If you are unable to obtain permissions via Rightslink, please complete and submit this Permissions form. For more information, please visit our Permissions help page.