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Lions and Jackals-Pakistan’s Emerging Counterinsurgency Strategy

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Pakistan’s Emerging Counterinsurgency Strategy

Haider Ali Hussein Mullick

Two months ago, the Taliban were 60 miles from the capital of nuclear-armed Pakistan. Four weeks later, the Pakistani military, using helicopter gunships, fighter jets, and special forces, destroyed Taliban strongholds, pushing them north -- and nearly three million refugees south -- out of the Swat Valley. Behind the operation's success lies a new hybrid counterinsurgency strategy that is emerging in Pakistan -- the strengths and weaknesses of which will be crucial for both Islamabad and Washington over the long term.

The new approach emerged from dissatisfaction with the Pakistani army's previous half-hearted struggles against the Taliban. Up through the summer of 2008, officers had been relying on the military's typical strategy of "out-terrorizing the terrorist," but the model was flawed. The army would do an excellent job of clearing Taliban-held areas but was reluctant to maintain a presence in them afterward. Generally, it preferred to pull back to its bases and outsource post-conflict security to inept local police and politicians. But resident forces were typically unable to provide security, and the government would often negotiate with the local Taliban, granting them asylum and allowing them to return.

This usually ignited a vicious cycle of blow up, patch up, and blow up. The worst part of the cyclical violence, according to a senior army official, was "the corrosion of troop morale," especially when officers were referred to as "America's mercenaries." Junior officers were suffering from battle fatigue, unwilling to continue fighting an unpopular war against their own people with no conclusive victory.

In the fall, Major General Tariq Khan, at the time commanding a squadron of the Pakistani army's paramilitary force, the Frontier Corps, realized that his troops needed to radically change tactics. With that in mind, he launched Operation Shirdil (Lion Heart) in Bajaur, a tribal area that abuts Afghanistan and was a hub of the Taliban. With the aid of junior officers, he shifted from clearing operations to population security. He ordered troops to patrol the streets and worked with tribal lashkars (militias) and jirgas (councils) to identify and capture irreconcilable Taliban. Most importantly, he worked to build troop morale and encourage camaraderie between Punjabi officers and Pashtun soldiers. What might be called the Bajaur Experiment was a success; at the same time the Pakistani government and military were signing a peace deal with the Taliban in the Swat Valley, top Taliban commanders surrendered unconditionally to the Frontier Corps in Bajaur.

But while the Bajaur Experiment was clearly effective against the Taliban and bolstered troop morale, questions remained about its sustainability and replicability. On one hand, Pakistan's army chief, General Ashfaq Kiyani, had already initiated in 2008 a decisive shift toward this kind of counterinsurgency against domestic extremists in arms procurement and military curriculum. But on the other, the top-down approach was slow and was halted by bickering among a dysfunctional Defense Ministry, a turf-conscious Interior Ministry, and ineffective parliamentary committees for defense and national security. And in practice, Central Command still faced a lack of adequate training and equipment for troops. Further, it remained unwilling to conduct a domestically unpopular counterinsurgency program against Pakistanis and sever ties with anti-India Taliban in Afghanistan.

This would change in April, when the Taliban started to surge outward from Swat Valley toward the capital. The government -- confronted with the Taliban onslaught and international pressure -- managed to build a broad political consensus for counterinsurgency. Bolstered by popular support for the war -- a recent poll by World Public Opinion put it at 81 percent -- the military was finally willing to identify the Taliban as the biggest existential threat to Pakistan. Soon, the army kicked off a 150,000-troop campaign in the tribal badlands, of which 30,000 troops were dedicated to the Swat and Malakand areas. The high-spirited Bajaur veterans were ready to share their experiences with junior officers and asked to become part of the decision-making process. With that, a counterinsurgency strategy based on the Bajaur Experiment began to spread from the bottom up.

As in Bajaur, officers decided to execute a presence-oriented approach: troops cleared areas; established small bases inside populated areas, instead of drawing back to large bases; enforced curfews; and aided fledgling local governments. Unlike past operations, where the military failed to block escape routes during actions on the Taliban's mountain hideouts, this time they applied a "corner, choke, and contain" strategy. Junior officers also built better local intelligence networks and were careful to evacuate refugees before using heavy artillery against Taliban strongholds. Due to increasing anti-Taliban sentiment and a more positive and lasting military presence on the ground, tribal lashkars were willing to help.

Encouragingly, the culture of the military was also changing. Frontier Corps officers had often been considered incompetent and compromised because of their ethnic links to the predominantly Pashtun Taliban. But now Punjabi junior officers followed Khan's lead and began reaching out to Pashtun soldiers to foster a sense of trust and goodwill. With public support for their campaign, a new presence-oriented strategy, and a more inclusive military culture that valued innovation and dissent, troop morale was on the rise and victory followed.

Although this emerging strategy is a welcome change from the past, it is anything but complete. Without continued support from Central Command and the Pakistani people, who will be watching the fate of the three million refugees who fled Swat, this offshoot of the Bajaur Experiment will fail. Successful tactics championed by individual officers lack consistency and can go only so far. A sweeping doctrinal shift in intelligence collection and civil-military coordination is needed to institutionalize the Bajaur Experiment's innovations. What's more, the military lacks many of the material resources necessary to sustain this type of counterinsurgency and will need international support.

The United States is in a key position to help. Pakistani military officers often note the need for helicopters, gunships, and armored vehicles. One major general explained: "We have 12 operational helicopters [four more were recently added]. One hour of flying requires three hours of maintenance." He continued, observing that the "U.S. Army is flying more than 100 in Afghanistan." But Pentagon officials have been reluctant to provide the army with machinery, pointing to past financial foul play and Pakistan's long history of tolerating -- and, worse, abetting -- Taliban attacks on U.S. troops.

However, the military's emerging counterinsurgency model, which places the Taliban at the top of Pakistan's threat assessment, should shift U.S. perceptions. Additionally, it will be in the United States' interest to capitalize on Pakistan's new model as it braces for Afghan elections and a major U.S. troop surge there this winter. It is likely that turmoil after the election and increased U.S. presence in Afghanistan will push the Taliban east into Pakistan. Only with long-term U.S. support will Pakistan's counterinsurgency strategy be able to stabilize the region.

The United States can start by helping to fill gaps in training, research, and equipment. The U.S. military should continue to lead training programs and should help Pakistan build a Fort Leavenworth-type military research and lessons-learned institution to expand the Bajaur Experiment. A joint U.S.-Pakistani process should be developed to share best practices across the Afghan-Pakistani border. U.S. aid should be balanced between training and equipment; to fight this kind of counterinsurgency, the Pakistani military most needs helicopter gunships and armored vehicles.

Finally, the United States should aid Islamabad in providing relief to the three million Swat refugees and developing a robust strategic communications campaign. These efforts will ensure continued public support, which will sustain the Bajaur Experiment's improvements to the military's strategy and culture. A retired Pakistani general who commanded troops in an earlier operation summarized the new Pakistani military this way: "They were soldiers fighting their people. Now they are lions fighting jackals." The lions remain Pakistan's one hope for victory.

Lions and Jackals | Foreign Affairs
 
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its nice to see that the outside world is recognizing that the pakistani army is capable of learning from its mistake and change course. lets hope that we have more generals like general tariq coming through the pipeline.
 
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But on the other, the top-down approach was slow and was halted by bickering among a dysfunctional Defense Ministry, a turf-conscious Interior Ministry, and ineffective parliamentary committees for defense and national security. And in practice, Central Command still faced a lack of adequate training and equipment for troops. Further, it remained unwilling to conduct a domestically unpopular counterinsurgency program against Pakistanis and sever ties with anti-India Taliban in Afghanistan.

"They were soldiers fighting their people. Now they are lions fighting jackals." The lions remain Pakistan's one hope for victory.

Lions and Jackals | Foreign Affairs

So apart from dysfunctional ministries, incompetent ministers, cowardly politicians a disorganised command and lack of funding …..:hitwall: seems like armies are the same the world over.
 
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The U.S. military should continue to lead training programs and should help Pakistan build a Fort Leavenworth-type military research and lessons-learned institution to expand the Bajaur Experiment. A joint U.S.-Pakistani process should be developed to share best practices across the Afghan-Pakistani border.

Good suggestion - can anyone elaborate on whether some of the suggestions are already being worked on?

We know that a small scale training program for the FC exists - I wonder if that is more a vehicle for 'sharing best practices' rather than any comprehensive attempt to directly train Pakistani troops.
 
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With the aid of junior officers, he shifted from clearing operations to population security. He ordered troops to patrol the streets and worked with tribal lashkars (militias) and jirgas (councils) to identify and capture irreconcilable Taliban.

I think that events post-Operation Sher Dil did involve negotiating with the tribes to implement security, and it seems that local law enforcement resulted in the Taliban making a comeback of sorts.

That comeback could also be related to the fact that the post-conflict reconstruction and repatriation of refugees from Bajaur was not handled well, and that allowed for a vacuum once more filled by the Taliban.

Bajaur was successful in some ways, but not completely, and definitely not in terms of locals being counted upon to keep the Taliban at bay in the long term.

The Bajaur strategy has been tweaked in Swat, and may end up working better in the long term because the local dynamics are different from those in most parts of Swat - the people are largely anti-Taliban, and Tribal loyalties don't play as large a role as in Bajaur.

But again, its hard to draw conclusions about the efficacy of the Military's strategy in Bajaur since the reconstruction and repatriation was botched.
 
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Lions and Jackals | Foreign Affairs

Lions and Jackals
Pakistan’s Emerging Counterinsurgency Strategy

Haider Ali Hussein Mullick
July 15, 2009

The Pakistani military's new counterinsurgency strategy is propelling it to victory against the Taliban. But to consolidate its gains, Pakistan will need international support.

HAIDER ALI HUSSEIN MULLICK is Senior Fellow at the U.S. Joint Special Operations University, Research Fellow at the Institute for Social Policy and Understanding, and the author of the forthcoming book Pakistan’s Security Paradox: Countering and Fomenting Insurgencies.


Two months ago, the Taliban were 60 miles from the capital of nuclear-armed Pakistan. Four weeks later, the Pakistani military, using helicopter gunships, fighter jets, and special forces, destroyed Taliban strongholds, pushing them north -- and nearly three million refugees south -- out of the Swat Valley. Behind the operation's success lies a new hybrid counterinsurgency strategy that is emerging in Pakistan -- the strengths and weaknesses of which will be crucial for both Islamabad and Washington over the long term.

The new approach emerged from dissatisfaction with the Pakistani army's previous half-hearted struggles against the Taliban. Up through the summer of 2008, officers had been relying on the military's typical strategy of "out-terrorizing the terrorist," but the model was flawed. The army would do an excellent job of clearing Taliban-held areas but was reluctant to maintain a presence in them afterward. Generally, it preferred to pull back to its bases and outsource post-conflict security to inept local police and politicians. But resident forces were typically unable to provide security, and the government would often negotiate with the local Taliban, granting them asylum and allowing them to return.

This usually ignited a vicious cycle of blow up, patch up, and blow up.
The worst part of the cyclical violence, according to a senior army official, was "the corrosion of troop morale," especially when officers were referred to as "America's mercenaries." Junior officers were suffering from battle fatigue, unwilling to continue fighting an unpopular war against their own people with no conclusive victory.

In the fall, Major General Tariq Khan, at the time commanding a squadron of the Pakistani army's paramilitary force, the Frontier Corps, realized that his troops needed to radically change tactics. With that in mind, he launched Operation Shirdil (Lion Heart) in Bajaur, a tribal area that abuts Afghanistan and was a hub of the Taliban. With the aid of junior officers, he shifted from clearing operations to population security. He ordered troops to patrol the streets and worked with tribal lashkars (militias) and jirgas (councils) to identify and capture irreconcilable Taliban. Most importantly, he worked to build troop morale and encourage camaraderie between Punjabi officers and Pashtun soldiers. What might be called the Bajaur Experiment was a success; at the same time the Pakistani government and military were signing a peace deal with the Taliban in the Swat Valley, top Taliban commanders surrendered unconditionally to the Frontier Corps in Bajaur.
The military lacks many of the material resources necessary to sustain this type of counterinsurgency and will need international support.

But while the Bajaur Experiment was clearly effective against the Taliban and bolstered troop morale, questions remained about its sustainability and replicability. On one hand, Pakistan's army chief, General Ashfaq Kiyani, had already initiated in 2008 a decisive shift toward this kind of counterinsurgency against domestic extremists in arms procurement and military curriculum. But on the other, the top-down approach was slow and was halted by bickering among a dysfunctional Defense Ministry, a turf-conscious Interior Ministry, and ineffective parliamentary committees for defense and national security. And in practice, Central Command still faced a lack of adequate training and equipment for troops. Further, it remained unwilling to conduct a domestically unpopular counterinsurgency program against Pakistanis and sever ties with anti-India Taliban in Afghanistan.

This would change in April, when the Taliban started to surge outward from Swat Valley toward the capital. The government -- confronted with the Taliban onslaught and international pressure -- managed to build a broad political consensus for counterinsurgency. Bolstered by popular support for the war -- a recent poll by World Public Opinion put it at 81 percent -- the military was finally willing to identify the Taliban as the biggest existential threat to Pakistan. Soon, the army kicked off a 150,000-troop campaign in the tribal badlands, of which 30,000 troops were dedicated to the Swat and Malakand areas. The high-spirited Bajaur veterans were ready to share their experiences with junior officers and asked to become part of the decision-making process. With that, a counterinsurgency strategy based on the Bajaur Experiment began to spread from the bottom up.

As in Bajaur, officers decided to execute a presence-oriented approach: troops cleared areas; established small bases inside populated areas, instead of drawing back to large bases; enforced curfews; and aided fledgling local governments. Unlike past operations, where the military failed to block escape routes during actions on the Taliban's mountain hideouts, this time they applied a "corner, choke, and contain" strategy. Junior officers also built better local intelligence networks and were careful to evacuate refugees before using heavy artillery against Taliban strongholds. Due to increasing anti-Taliban sentiment and a more positive and lasting military presence on the ground, tribal lashkars were willing to help.

Encouragingly, the culture of the military was also changing. Frontier Corps officers had often been considered incompetent and compromised because of their ethnic links to the predominantly Pashtun Taliban. But now Punjabi junior officers followed Khan's lead and began reaching out to Pashtun soldiers to foster a sense of trust and goodwill. With public support for their campaign, a new presence-oriented strategy, and a more inclusive military culture that valued innovation and dissent, troop morale was on the rise and victory followed.

Although this emerging strategy is a welcome change from the past, it is anything but complete. Without continued support from Central Command and the Pakistani people, who will be watching the fate of the three million refugees who fled Swat, this offshoot of the Bajaur Experiment will fail. Successful tactics championed by individual officers lack consistency and can go only so far. A sweeping doctrinal shift in intelligence collection and civil-military coordination is needed to institutionalize the Bajaur Experiment's innovations. What's more, the military lacks many of the material resources necessary to sustain this type of counterinsurgency and will need international support.

The United States is in a key position to help. Pakistani military officers often note the need for helicopters, gunships, and armored vehicles. One major general explained: "We have 12 operational helicopters [four more were recently added]. One hour of flying requires three hours of maintenance." He continued, observing that the "U.S. Army is flying more than 100 in Afghanistan." But Pentagon officials have been reluctant to provide the army with machinery, pointing to past financial foul play and Pakistan's long history of tolerating -- and, worse, abetting -- Taliban attacks on U.S. troops.

However, the military's emerging counterinsurgency model, which places the Taliban at the top of Pakistan's threat assessment, should shift U.S. perceptions. Additionally, it will be in the United States' interest to capitalize on Pakistan's new model as it braces for Afghan elections and a major U.S. troop surge there this winter. It is likely that turmoil after the election and increased U.S. presence in Afghanistan will push the Taliban east into Pakistan. Only with long-term U.S. support will Pakistan's counterinsurgency strategy be able to stabilize the region.

The United States can start by helping to fill gaps in training, research, and equipment. The U.S. military should continue to lead training programs and should help Pakistan build a Fort Leavenworth-type military research and lessons-learned institution to expand the Bajaur Experiment. A joint U.S.-Pakistani process should be developed to share best practices across the Afghan-Pakistani border. U.S. aid should be balanced between training and equipment; to fight this kind of counterinsurgency, the Pakistani military most needs helicopter gunships and armored vehicles.

Finally, the United States should aid Islamabad in providing relief to the three million Swat refugees and developing a robust strategic communications campaign. These efforts will ensure continued public support, which will sustain the Bajaur Experiment's improvements to the military's strategy and culture. A retired Pakistani general who commanded troops in an earlier operation summarized the new Pakistani military this way: "They were soldiers fighting their people. Now they are lions fighting jackals." The lions remain Pakistan's one hope for victory.
 
.
While there is no doubt further improvements are needed, but the Army, as disadvantaged as it has been, has done a pretty good job so far. I think shortfalls in equipment must be made up, however the Army is on the right trajectory in terms of the training and the political atmosphere seems to also be very supportive. I hope the federal government realizes that the bigger job starts now and entails considerable money and projects going into the region and being realized.
 
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While there is no doubt further improvements are needed, but the Army, as disadvantaged as it has been, has done a pretty good job so far. I think shortfalls in equipment must be made up, however the Army is on the right trajectory in terms of the training and the political atmosphere seems to also be very supportive. I hope the federal government realizes that the bigger job starts now and entails considerable money and projects going into the region and being realized.

You are right, improvements would always be needed. But again there is no denying that fact that a superb job has been done by the military. Let's hope for a similar success in the South. With the Public and Political support still there and the hope that the disturbed people would get settled soon, a new ray of light would emanate and the trust that the people has bestowed over the military would strengthen. The only need that now is of the Political/Civil machinery to set in full throttle and do their part of the play and take it as a challenge, while staying in competition with the military, as soon people would start comparing the efforts of the military (Army and PAF) with the efforts/duties of civilian stake holders, and nothing would get uglier than the elected govt being bashed for not doing it right this time again.
 
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I think that events post-Operation Sher Dil did involve negotiating with the tribes to implement security, and it seems that local law enforcement resulted in the Taliban making a comeback of sorts.

That comeback could also be related to the fact that the post-conflict reconstruction and repatriation of refugees from Bajaur was not handled well, and that allowed for a vacuum once more filled by the Taliban.

Bajaur was successful in some ways, but not completely, and definitely not in terms of locals being counted upon to keep the Taliban at bay in the long term.

The Bajaur strategy has been tweaked in Swat, and may end up working better in the long term because the local dynamics are different from those in most parts of Swat - the people are largely anti-Taliban, and Tribal loyalties don't play as large a role as in Bajaur.

But again, its hard to draw conclusions about the efficacy of the Military's strategy in Bajaur since the reconstruction and repatriation was botched.

i personally would grade the success of the operation (atleast in Swat) with the number/speed of disturbed people going back to their homes. If this phase goes well victory can be claimed by all, but if there's a screw up here, there would be no second chance for doing it right. But the govt needs to be oiled up for this, if it wants to kill the evil completely.
 
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Congratulation to army , SWAT IDPs and to whole nation for this sucess but we should not forget that terrorists just moved back ward direction not fully defeated.

Their network and main leaders are still alive , they could attack again to recapture the SWAT due to its strategic location .
 
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i personally think that the greatest thing that has come out of this operation is that the doubts that were lingering in the minds of the people in the north west that the army was secretly helping the taliban have now been put to rest.
an even bigger acheivement is that the people now have confidence in the military that they cannot only defeat the taliban but can completely crush. this psychological victory of the army. should not be understated.
 
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Major General Tariq Khan is very capable and loyal commander.

In past when he had surrounded the baitullah mashood in operation and finally went to crush the evil bud. mushi got a call from arab friend at that moment and had orderd to withdraw the operation.
I hope this would not happen now InshAllah.
 
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