Journal: Yemen–Opening A New “Front” in the Long War

04 Inter-State Conflict, 05 Civil War, 08 Wild Cards, 09 Terrorism, 10 Security, Cultural Intelligence, Ethics, Military, Peace Intelligence
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Chuck Spinney

Nicht Schwerpunkt as a Prescription for Defeat by a 1000 Cuts

Operation Barbarossa

Recent events like the Fort Hood Massacre and the bungled attempt to fire bomb the airliner bound for Detroit have focused attention on and encouraged our escalating intervention in Yemen, which has been taking place quietly, as if Iraq, Afghanistan, and Pakistan were not enough to keep our strategic planners and stretched out military forces occupied.  Our reactions to events in the  so-called Long War on Terror suggest an aimless spreading of effort throughout the Middle East and Central Asia.  This aimlessness brings to mind a comment General Hermann Balck, a highly decorated German officer in WWII, made to a small group of reformers in the Pentagon in the early 1980s.  The subject was Operation Barbarossa, or Germany's invasion of the Soviet Union in June 1941.  Balck pithily dismissed the German strategy shaping that invasion with the words: “Nicht Schwerpunkt.”  Balck was saying there was no focus or main effort to the German invasion, and without a focus, there was no way to harmonize the thousands of subordinate efforts. The result was a spreading of effort that led to eventual overextension as can be seen in the following map.

Now the Eastern Front of WWII is very different from the ridiculously misleading label of a Central Front in the Long War on Terror.  But the idea of schwerpunkt is germane to both efforts, and the US is showing all the signs of spreading and over extending its efforts which accompany a nicht schwerpunkt.

This is no small thing.  As the American strategist Colonel John Boyd showed in his famous briefing, Patterns of Conflict, the idea of a schwerpunkt is central to organizing all effective military operations.  It is far more than a simple question of concentrating forces.  According to Boyd, the idea of a  “Schwerpunkt represents a unifying medium that provides a directed way to tie initiative of many subordinate actions with superior intent as a basis to diminish friction and compress time in order to generate a favorable mismatch in time/ability to shape and adapt to unfolding circumstances.”  Now this is a very compressed statement, pregnant with information, and based on a lot of research, but it nevertheless makes it self evident that there is no comparable unifying medium in America's Long War on Terror.  Our failure to form a schwerpunkt is just as much a prescription for paralysis and defeat by a thousand cuts in a guerrilla war as it is in a mechanized conventional war between standing armies.

To see why, consider please the following three attachments:

Slide 64 Full Size

Attachment #1 is slide 64 of Patterns of Conflict on which Boyd summarizes T.E. Lawrence's art of guerrilla warfare — i.e., his unifying medium (or schwerpunkt) around which he shaped his operations.  Lawrence's operations had the effect of spreading out and paralyzing the Turkish forces in Arabia, Palestine, and Syria, forcing them to defend everywhere and therefore nowhere — in other words,  Lawrence's schwerpunkt seduced the Turkish army into fighting a guerrilla army in a war of disconnected reactions without a Turkish schwerpunkt.  Many Turkish officers regarded Lawrence as a murderous terrorist inciting the Arabs to revolt against their rule and they viewed the Arabs contemptuously as an unruly mob.

Attachment #2 is a Counterpunch report by Patrick Cockburn describing the deterioration of the situation in Yemen and the escalating involvement of the US in this theater of the Long War on Terror. Cockburn paints a portrait of a hornets nest about to be poked by a US stick.

Attachment #3 is a recent note by Steve Clemmons in Talking Points Memo in which he reminds the reader that bin Laden's aim (schwerpunkt?) in bin Laden's own words (as reported by Peter Bergen) was to “draw the US deeply into the Middle East, and by its presence — destabilize the governments in the region.”

After reading and thinking about the disparate ideas in these three attachments, bring them together by returning to Boyd's slide on Lawrence and asking yourself the following questions:

  • Who is inside who's head?
  • Whose operations are more consistent an idea, floating around like a gas?
  • Who is tipping and running, striking with the smallest force at the farthest place?
  • Who is fighting a “war” of detachment and never on the defensive or affording a target, except by accident or error?

And with the answers to these questions in mind, ask yourself on final question with respect to the so-called Long War on Terror: Who is behaving more like Lawrence, or alternatively, who is being spread out like the Turks?  The United States or Al Qaeda or, for that matter, the Taliban?

Chuck Spinney

Other news: Yemen warns of hundreds more al-Qaida operatives in country and asks for help

Phi Beta Iota: We will just add our original graphic from the 2002 timeframe, predicting a six front war of our own making that we would lose.  As Ed Galbus said so famously (as we collected) at the US Army Strategy Conference in 1998, “The enemy objective is to get us spread too thin–and we insist on starting and managing every campaign spread too thin.”

Six-Front War (Original)

And the later more refined version:

Caliphate Variant 100-Year War

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