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Latest Pentagon 'roadmap' reveals serious frustration.


WHEN PENTAGON OFFICIALS ARE confronted with questions for which they lack clear answers, they turn to one of the bureaucracy's preferred stratagems: the roadmap.

At the Defense Department, there are roadmaps for just about everything--network-centric warfare, unmanned vehicles, strategic communications, hypersonic hy·per·son·ic  
adj.
Of, relating to, or capable of speed equal to or exceeding five times the speed of sound.



hy
 weapons ... The list goes on.

Roadmaps--which involve lengthy studies and exhaustive reports--can be quite useful in highly technical areas that require in-depth research. The latest Pentagon roadmap, however, seeks to address the decidedly non-technical issue of "irregular warfare."

One would assume that, five years after the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area.  went to war in Afghanistan and three years after the invasion of Iraq, the Defense Department by now would have figured out what it needs to do to win these unconventional wars. The chaos in Iraq and the sense that nobody knows what to do about it cost the administration its control of Congress and Donald Rumsfeld his job. It remains to be seen whether his replacement, Robert M. Gates, can bring an influx of fresh ideas into an uninspired bureaucracy.

It should come as no surprise that even within the Defense Department there is no agreement on what irregular warfare means exactly.

"We're working through a definition process," Navy Vice Adm. Eric Olson Eric Olson may refer to
  • Eric T. Olson, U.S. Navy Admiral
  • Eric Olson (general), U.S. Army general
  • Eric Olson (catoonist), creator of Horrorscope
  • Eric Olson (biologist), member National Academy of Sciences
, deputy commander of U.S. Special Operations Command A subordinate unified or other joint command established by a joint force commander to plan, coordinate, conduct, and support joint special operations within the joint force commander's assigned operational area. Also called SOC. See also special operations. , told a House Armed Services Committee The term Armed Services Committee could refer to:
  • U.S. House Committee on Armed Services
  • U.S. Senate Committee on Armed Services
 panel in late September. Short of a definitive answer, the Defense Department has come up with a "working definition" of irregular warfare, which is characterized as a mix of "insurgency and counterinsurgency coun·ter·in·sur·gen·cy  
n.
Political and military strategy or action intended to oppose and forcefully suppress insurgency.



coun
, guerilla warfare, unconventional warfare A broad spectrum of military and paramilitary operations, normally of long duration, predominantly conducted through, with, or by indigenous or surrogate forces who are organized, trained, equipped, supported, and directed in varying degrees by an external source. , asymmetrical warfare and much more."

Lawmakers at the hearing--somewhat startled star·tle  
v. star·tled, star·tling, star·tles

v.tr.
1. To cause to make a quick involuntary movement or start.

2. To alarm, frighten, or surprise suddenly. See Synonyms at frighten.
 by the notion that the top counter-terrorism officials at the Defense Department are still dabbling with semantics at a time of escalating violence and rising death tolls in Iraq and Afghanistan--wanted to know how this irregular warfare roadmap is going to help win these wars.

That is not the point of the roadmap, replied Mario Mancuso, who is the deputy assistant secretary of defense for special operations Operations conducted in hostile, denied, or politically sensitive environments to achieve military, diplomatic, informational, and/or economic objectives employing military capabilities for which there is no broad conventional force requirement.  and combating terrorism.

Speaking in impeccable Pentagonese, Mancuso explained that the roadmap is "about how we can get better and how we can institutionalize in·sti·tu·tion·a·lize
v.
To place a person in the care of an institution, especially one providing care for the disabled or mentally ill.



in
 some of the best practices ... So, as we think about the roadmap it is not tied to anything--it is certainly not tied to Iraq and Afghanistan directly, nor is it tied to any particular operation ... The focus of this roadmap is enhancing irregular warfare capabilities and capacity throughout the entire department."

To reassure Congress that the roadmap will lead to real changes, Mancuso highlighted five major goals: reorganize the Defense Department to support irregular warfare, rebalance general purpose forces to better support irregular warfare, increase special operations forces Those Active and Reserve Component forces of the Military Services designated by the Secretary of Defense and specifically organized, trained, and equipped to conduct and support special operations. Also called SOF.  capabilities, boost the military services' capacity to conduct counter network operations, and redesign education and training programs to conduct irregular warfare.

But Olson cautioned that the irregular warfare roadmap "is not a campaign plan or a guiding document for the global war on terror This article is about U.S. actions, and those of other states, after September 11, 2001. For other conflicts, see Terrorism.

The War on Terror (also known as the War on Terrorism
. It does not lay out the Defense Department's total approach to irregular warfare." Its real purpose, he added, is to "provide resourcing guidance to the services and the Special Operations Command" in developing their 2008-2013 budgets.

Having been enlightened on that issue, lawmakers then wanted to know if the 2008 budget proposal due to Congress next February will have some specific spending plans that reflect the irregular warfare roadmap. Those decisions are being made behind closed doors at the Pentagon, Mancuso said. "The execution roadmaps are guidance internal to the department."

The baffling baf·fle  
tr.v. baf·fled, baf·fling, baf·fles
1. To frustrate or check (a person) as by confusing or perplexing; stymie.

2. To impede the force or movement of.

n.
1.
 discourse and the mumbo-jumbo heard on Capitol Hill only leads one to conclude that the Defense Department is nowhere close to solving the irregular war puzzle--regardless of whether the enemies are called insurgents Insurgents, in U.S. history, the Republican Senators and Representatives who in 1909–10 rose against the Republican standpatters controlling Congress, to oppose the Payne-Aldrich tariff and the dictatorial power of House speaker Joseph G. Cannon. , guerilla fighters or terrorists.

As many outside experts and military scholars have pointed out, one major impediment remains the Pentagon's institutional disdain of unconventional warfare. Another hurdle is a failure to understand what is causing these irregular enemies--i.e., radical Islamists--to behave the way they do.

Military war-gaming expert and analyst Mark Herman, who is vice president of Booz Mien Hamilton, believes the Defense Department focuses too much on "tactical things" and not nearly enough on "understanding human networks."

"We are creating conditions that are causing Muslims to raise their consciousness to a global Muslim community," Herman said in an interview. Events in Iraq are helping create a global Muslim community with a political agenda. This is not good for us." Ultimately, "We need to think of a strategy to take the stimulus out of the system, fix the things that are causing this trend to continue." As ethnically diverse as Muslims are, giving them a common cause to rally around only fuels their unity and strength, Herman said. What the United States should do is "push the political agenda from the global Muslim community back to the nation states. Force is not always the answer."

One of the lawmakers at the HASC HASC House Armed Services Committee
HASC Hospital Association of Southern California
HASC Hebrew Academy for Special Children
HASC Hierarchical Administrative Subdivision Codes (international post codes) 
 hearing, Rep. Adam Smith, D-Wash., said he was hopeful that the Pentagon leadership will figure it out, regardless of what terminology is used to characterize the conflict. The roadmap outlined by the defense officials is titled "irregular warfare," Smith said, "but at this point it is pretty much 'regular warfare' for us. It is what we are doing now in Iraq and Afghanistan."

Please email your comments to SErwin@ndia.org
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Author:Erwin, Sandra I.
Publication:National Defense
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Dec 1, 2006
Words:886
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