Sunday, July 8, 2018

A Brief Look At Counter Insurgency History

By Brian Richardson


Throughout the course of history, human beings have had to contend with conflict. From the slave uprising led by Spartacus more than 2000 years ago to modern day conflicts, the world has borne witness to changing strategies and weapon technology in the war theater. Most war tacticians are of the view that insurgencies are the most complicated to overcome. This article delves into counter insurgency history, albeit from an American perspective.

There are different types of insurgencies. Today, the most common ones are guerilla warfare and terrorism. Most terror related wars are fought out in urban or semi urban environments. On the other hand, guerilla warfare mostly takes place in jungles and rural areas. Both types are mostly perpetrated by non state belligerents. Counterinsurgency is a phrase coined to refer to attempts to crush insurgencies or mitigate their effects.

Today, most insurgent warfare is based in the Middle East, South East Asia and Africa. Groups that are active in these areas include Al Qaeda, ISIL, Al Shabaab and rebel groups out to overthrow governments. A few decades ago, the FARC guerilla group was the most predominant insurgent group in South America. However, the group signed a peace deal with the Colombian government recently, bringing to an end decades of fighting that had left the locals destitute.

One aspect that has been noticeable with insurgencies across the globe is that the fact that America has been involved in mitigating many of them. Consider the example of the Taliban led insurgency in Afghanistan, one that the US has long been known to be embroiled in. The global war on terror is another case.

Insurgencies are not only confined to the post 2000 years. At the turn of the 1960s, America got embroiled in a bloody conflict to eliminate communist insurgents out to topple the Vietnamese government. The outcome of the Vietnam War has been disputed for a long time, with many experts labeling the US as pyrrhic victors. During the years that soon followed, the US government funded a militia group with the aim of having it topple the communist Fidel Castro regime in Cuba.

The operation, which was later billed the Bay of Pigs invasion, was a total loss for the US. The Cuban authorities were well aware of the planned invasion, and had thus mounted proper defenses to counter it. Historians like to bill it as one of the worst disasters in American military and foreign policy history.

Counterinsurgencies are often launched with three broad objectives. They include the achievement of political and economic stability plus security. Counterinsurgency is basically aimed at getting things back to normal. During conflict, economies suffer, there is political instability and civilians stand lose their lives at any moment.

Many authors have written works that are aimed at demystifying this type of conflict. Some of them postulate that as long as the reasons for an insurgency are genuine, it is bound to succeed. Only time will tell if this is true.




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