Progress Pond

More From Iraq

[I received this from a U.S. soldier with three tours in Iraq.  He’s a
thoughtful soul and has the benefit of being on the frontlines in this
madness.  Since he wants to continue with his military career I am
protecting his identity.]

I have a lot of assessments and opinions that are based on my experiences in
Iraq, so keeping this document unclassified was difficult.  I am limiting
my suggestions to broad, theoretical statements and am avoiding very specific
recommendations. To keep it unclassified, I am only using open source reporting
(PAO releases) as evidence for my assessments.  I’ve deleted any statements
that I think could be considered classified assessments.  I am sure you
understand the need for that.  If in a more appropriate forum with security
clearances, I could be more forthcoming.  Of course, all of the opinions in
this document are my own opinions and in no way reflect any official
organizations.

These are the COAs that I see in your email:

  1. Go Big (Strong):  Plus up forces and target Muqtada al Sadr (MAS) and
    Jayshi al Mahdi (JAM). 
  2. Go Home:  Just leave, phased withdrawal.  This is already off
    the table, so I won’t waste time on it.  I think this is inline with the
    ISG recommendations.
  3. Continue COIN:  Stay the course and focus on political, economic and
    security development.  This is politically unfavorable because it will
    not appear to be a change in strategy.
  4. Marginalize MAS, Co-op JAM:  My recommended COA.  MAS is only as
    important as we make him.  90% of JAM want security for their families
    and money for food.  It is gangland warfare.  The other 10% are the
    extremists that must be isolated and destroyed.

I will focus on COA’s 1 and 4 because the POTUS has already ruled out 2, and
politically 3 is simply not acceptable. 

Go Big:  Plus up US forces in Baghdad in order to target MAS and
JAM.
  This simply will not work.  We can not solve COIN with
more counter-guerilla.  According the CF spokesmen, the large “sweep, clear
and hold operations” in Baghdad in 2006 were not successful despite a
significant increase in CF and combined operations (Baghdad is not Tall Afar or
Fallujah).  We failed to sweep and clear the motivation for Iraqis to join
the insurgency and likely made more enemies.

Why are we targeting MAS and JAM? 

Our time to target MAS and JAM is passed.  For almost 2 years (Fall 04 –
Spring 06) JAM was not targeted, and the organization grew significantly not in
numbers, but in organization and capabilities.  The organization is too
entrenched and too diffuse to make viable targets.

Expected results of increased offensive operations to target JAM in Baghdad
and MAS:

The “Sadr City” problem:  We are afraid to go into Sadr City, and the
people of Iraq know it.  MAS and JAM have been claiming since early 2006
that CF were planning on going into Sadr City, despite the fact that we had no
intent or desire to do so.  This was a very smart move on MAS’s part. 

He made CF look weak, timid and scared.  The people of Sadr City believe
that we will not go into the city for fear of high casualties, therefore they
live with JAM as a reality of life.  The problem is that we really
shouldn’t go into Sadr City because no matter how many forces we throw at it, we
will never truly be able to “separate the fish from the water.”  JAM will
initially fight back (or not), and they will then fade away and disappear into
the city until we leave (which is inevitable).  Just like in 2004, JAM will
take casualties, many innocent Iraqis will be turned into anti-occupation
insurgents, and we will leave.  As a result, is it a Catch 22.  If we
go in, we will create more insurgents than we destroy, if we don’t go in, our
credibility as an effective force is at risk. 

Alternate
COA:  Marginalize MAS and Co-op JAM.

In my opinion, we have a classic chicken or the egg argument, which comes
first, security (stability) or economy. Do you need stability and security to
establish a good economy, or do you need a good economy to have stability? When
left to military leaders, the correct answer is always SECURITY! It is, after
all, a principle of patrolling. I argue that if you focus small, but effective
security on key points of infrastructure, economy and key AQ targets such as
Shia markets, holy sites (not trying to secure the entire country at once), that
as the economy improves, the reason why Iraqis become insurgents will go away.
That is our ultimate goal and that is the only way we will win.   

MAS is what we make him.  JAM is a very well organized gang-like
security force to protect Shia areas from Sunni extremists and provide
employment (even if it is illegal).  I will use DIME to organize my
thoughts:

Diplomatic:

Information:

Military:

Economics: 

Additional thought:

It is hard to assess progress because we don’t have any metrics.  It is
very hard to map our progress because we don’t have a standardized system for
reporting operational data to generate metrics.  In Iraq, PowerPoint is the
method of choice for operational reporting, however, PPT does not populate
databases and does not reach national analysts.  There is a very
standardized reporting system for intelligence information (Intelligence
Information Reports, TD’s, etc), however there is no standardized system for
reporting operational results.

For example, an analyst in DIA is studying insurgent Abu X.  He reads
every HUMINT and SIGINT report about Abu X.  What he doesn’t know is that
Abu X was captured two weeks ago.  He doesn’t know this because he didn’t
get on that unit’s OPSUM distro and didn’t see the PPT slide.  He also
doesn’t know what was found at Abu X’s house.  Hopefully, if all goes well,
the analyst later figures it out when he finds interrogation reports about Abu X
and reads DOCEX reports. 

I had DIA analysts who worked at Camp Victory tell me in Spring of 2006 that
no one patrols Sadr City anymore, that CF haven’t been there for months. 
Of course, that was completely wrong, we had several patrols a day in the city
(these patrols were published in newspapers).  The analyst is making
assessments based on partial information because there is no system for putting
operational information (patrol debriefs) into a database that the analyst can
search. 

We tried putting patrol debriefs (including raid results) into IIR formats
using the American Soldier as the source.  G2X shot us down because the
reporting was circular because it was already on a PPT slide.  This is
silly because the IIR can state that this information is also stated in a named
PPT file.

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