Air Force Irregular Warfare
Air Force Irregular Warfare
Air Force Irregular Warfare
.
BY ORDER OF THE AIR FORCE DOCTRINE DOCUMENT 2-3
SECRETARY OF THE AIR FORCE 1 AUGUST 2007
OPR: HQ AFDDEC/DD
Certified by: HQ AFDDEC/CC (Maj Gen Allen G. Peck)
Pages: 103
Accessibility: Publications are available on the e-publishing website at www.e-publishing.af.mil for
downloading
Releasability: There are no releasability restrictions on this publication
Approved by: T. MICHAEL MOSELEY, General, USAF
Chief of Staff
FOREWORD
Our nation is at war. Warriors must plan and orchestrate irregular warfare as
joint, multinational, and multi-agency campaigns, beginning with the first efforts of
strategy development and concluding with the achievement of the desired endstate.
As Airmen, we have a unique warfighting perspective shaped by a century-long quest to
gain and maintain the high ground. We must be able to articulate Air Force capabilities
and contributions to the irregular warfare fight, with its unique attributes and
requirements. Employed properly, airpower (to include air, space, and cyberspace
capabilities) produces asymmetric advantages that can be effectively leveraged by joint
force commanders in virtually every aspect of irregular warfare. Irregular warfare is
sufficiently different from traditional conflict to warrant a separate keystone doctrine
document. While the fighting experiences in Iraq and Afghanistan should weigh heavily
in the development of our doctrine, we intend this doctrine document to be broad,
enduring, and forward-looking, rather than focusing on any particular operation, current
or past.
T. MICHAEL MOSELEY
General, USAF
Chief of Staff
TABLE OF CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION ............................................................................................................vi
FOUNDATIONAL DOCTRINE STATEMENTS ............................................................. viii
CHAPTER ONEUnderstanding Irregular Warfare (IW) ............................................... 1
IW Defined .................................................................................................................. 1
IW Model ..................................................................................................................... 4
IW Truths for Airmen.................................................................................................. 8
Counterinsurgency (COIN) Truths for Airmen.......................................................... 10
Insurgency and Terrorism ......................................................................................... 11
Countering Insurgency and Terrorism ....................................................................... 12
CHAPTER TWOAir Force Applications in IW ............................................................ 14
The Value of Air Force Capabilities in IW.................................................................. 14
Minimal Intrusiveness ............................................................................................ 15
Rapid Response .................................................................................................... 15
Rapid Mobility...................................................................................................... 16
Rapid Engagement.............................................................................................. 16
Improved Strategic, Operational, and Tactical Situational Awareness................... 16
IW Activities............................................................................................................... 18
Support to Insurgencies......................................................................................... 18
COIN and Support to COIN ................................................................................... 19
Provide Security .................................................................................................. 20
Help Alleviate Root Causes................................................................................. 21
Limit an Adversarys Conventional Options and Flexibility .................................. 22
Disrupt Enemy Movement ................................................................................... 22
Target Insurgent Leaders and Active Supporters ................................................ 23
Air and Ground Coordination............................................................................... 24
Shaping and Deterring........................................................................................... 25
Counterterrorism.................................................................................................... 25
CHAPTER THREEAir Force Capabilities In IW......................................................... 27
Building Partnership Capacity (BPC)......................................................................... 27
Assess, Train, Advise, and Assist.......................................................................... 28
Combat Aviation Advisory Mission ...................................................................... 29
BPC and COIN ...................................................................................................... 30
Intelligence ................................................................................................................ 30
Analysis and Targeting .......................................................................................... 31
All Source Intelligence ......................................................................................... 32
Collection ............................................................................................................... 32
Non-traditional Intelligence, Surveillance, and Reconnaissance ......................... 33
Human Intelligence.............................................................................................. 33
Counterintelligence.............................................................................................. 34
Distributed Operations ........................................................................................... 34
Intelligence Collaboration .................................................................................... 35
Foreign Disclosure .............................................................................................. 35
Information Operations.............................................................................................. 36
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Network Warfare Operations ................................................................................. 36
Electronic Warfare ................................................................................................. 37
Influence Operations.............................................................................................. 37
Psychological Operations .................................................................................... 37
Military Deception................................................................................................ 38
Counterpropaganda ............................................................................................ 38
Public Affairs ....................................................................................................... 39
Operational Security............................................................................................ 39
Air Mobility................................................................................................................. 40
Combat Deployment .............................................................................................. 40
Combat Sustainment ............................................................................................. 41
Integrating Mobility and Special Operations .......................................................... 41
Agile Combat Support (ACS) .................................................................................... 41
ACS Operations in IW............................................................................................ 42
Civil Engineering ................................................................................................. 42
Medical Evacuation / Medical Teams .................................................................. 43
Precision Engagement .............................................................................................. 44
Command and Control (C2) ...................................................................................... 45
CHAPTER FOURStrategy and Planning................................................................... 47
Strategy Considerations ............................................................................................ 47
Strategy Differences in IW ..................................................................................... 48
Long View Versus the Quick Decisive Victory ..................................................... 48
Center of Gravity ................................................................................................. 48
Focus on Stability ................................................................................................ 49
Operational Environment........................................................................................... 49
Failed States.......................................................................................................... 51
Cooperative Governments ..................................................................................... 51
Non-Cooperative Governments ............................................................................. 52
Theater Security Cooperation Plan ........................................................................... 53
Security Assistance ............................................................................................... 53
Building Partner/Regional Capacity to Counter IW Threats ................................... 54
Persistent Presence............................................................................................... 54
Strategy Development............................................................................................... 54
Understanding the Environment and History of the Region ................................... 55
Integration With Political and Other Interagency Organizations............................. 55
Planning Considerations ........................................................................................... 56
Commanders Estimate Art .................................................................................... 56
Operational Art....................................................................................................... 56
Legal Considerations ............................................................................................. 58
Operational Phases ............................................................................................... 58
Shaping and Deterring Operations ........................................................................ 60
Counterterrorism.................................................................................................... 61
Support to COIN .................................................................................................... 61
Indirect Support ................................................................................................... 61
Direct Support not Involving Combat................................................................... 61
Direct Support Involving Combat......................................................................... 62
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COIN...................................................................................................................... 63
Support to Insurgency............................................................................................ 63
Preparation of the Operational Environment ....................................................... 64
Supporting Unconventional Warfare Activities..................................................... 64
Supporting Massed Forces.................................................................................. 64
Assessment............................................................................................................... 65
CHAPTER FIVEIW Operations ................................................................................. 66
Command and Control .............................................................................................. 66
C2 Planning ........................................................................................................... 66
Geographical Considerations................................................................................. 69
Continental United States Basing........................................................................ 69
Theater-based Forces ......................................................................................... 70
Basing Inside the Joint Operations Area ............................................................. 70
Environment for Employment .................................................................................... 71
Force Presentation ................................................................................................ 72
Supporting the Partner Nation (PN)..................................................................... 72
Supporting Insurgencies...................................................................................... 73
Force Protection in IW ......................................................................................... 73
Executing Operations ................................................................................................ 74
Airspace Control .................................................................................................... 74
Operation Cycles ................................................................................................... 75
Enabling PN Capabilities ..................................................................................... 75
Conducting Direct Operations ............................................................................. 76
Transitioning from Direct Operations................................................................... 76
Sustaining the PN................................................................................................ 76
SUGGESTED READINGS............................................................................................ 77
APPENDIXUnderstanding Insurgencies.................................................................... 79
Insurgent Motivations ................................................................................................ 79
Political .................................................................................................................. 79
Cultural .................................................................................................................. 80
Religious ................................................................................................................ 80
Economic ............................................................................................................... 80
Radical Extremism................................................................................................. 81
Organization.............................................................................................................. 81
Operations................................................................................................................. 82
Non-violent Operations .......................................................................................... 83
Violent Operations ................................................................................................. 84
Support .................................................................................................................. 84
Strategies Used By Insurgents.................................................................................. 85
Coup detat ............................................................................................................ 86
Military Focused Movement ................................................................................... 86
Popular Protracted War ......................................................................................... 86
Urban Focused ...................................................................................................... 88
Glossary........................................................................................................................ 89
v
INTRODUCTION
In this type of war you cannot you must not measure the
effectiveness of the effort by the number of bridges destroyed, buildings
damaged, vehicles burned, or any of the other standards that have been
used for regular warfare. The task is to destroy the effectiveness of the
insurgents efforts and his ability to use the population for his own ends.
PURPOSE
APPLICATION
This AFDD applies to the Total Force: all Air Force military and civilian
personnel, including regular, Air Force Reserve, and Air National Guard units and
members. Unless specifically stated otherwise, Air Force doctrine applies to the
full range of operations.
SCOPE
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COMAFFOR / JFACC / CFACC
A note on terminology
One of the cornerstones of Air Force doctrine is that the Air Force
prefers - and in fact, plans and trains - to employ through a commander, Air
Force forces (COMAFFOR) who is also dual-hatted as a joint force air and
space component commander (JFACC). (AFDD 1)
While both joint and Air Force doctrine state that one individual will
normally be dual-hatted as COMAFFOR and JFACC, the two responsibilities are
different, and should be executed through different staffs.
vii
FOUNDATIONAL DOCTRINE STATEMENTS
Foundational doctrine statements are the basic principles and beliefs upon
which AFDDs are built. Other information in the AFDDs expands on or supports
these statements.
Irregular warfare (IW) is defined as a violent struggle among state and non-
state actors for legitimacy and influence over the relevant populations. IW
favors indirect approaches, though it may employ the full range of military and
other capabilities to seek asymmetric approaches in order to erode an
adversary's power, influence, and will. (Page 1)
Traditional warfare and IW are not mutually exclusive; both forms of warfare
may be present in a given conflict. (Page 3)
The Air Force provides valuable and unique capabilities in IW. In many
cases, these capabilities provide flexible and persistent options for dealing
with IW challenges by providing a less intrusive force that can respond quickly
and improve commanders overall situational awareness. (Page 14)
In any phase of operation, the Air Force can be employed with varying
degrees of intensity and visibility. (Page 19)
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CHAPTER ONE
UNDERSTANDING IRREGULAR WARFARE
The Air Forces ability to operate in the air, space, and cyberspace
domains provides our fighting forces with a highly asymmetric advantage over IW
adversaries. Command of the air prevents adversaries from conducting
sustained operations in this domain while allowing US and coalition forces to
exploit numerous advantages.
IW DEFINED
The US has struggled to understand the threats posed by what has been
referred to at various times as IW, low-intensity conflict, insurgency, small wars,
and indirect aggression. For the purpose of this document, IW is defined as a
violent struggle among state and non-state actors for legitimacy and
influence over the relevant populations. IW favors indirect and asymmetric
approaches, though it may employ the full range of military and other
capabilities in order to erode an adversary's power, influence, and will.
Rather than seeking to impose societal change from the outside by a decisive
1
defeat of the populations military and security forces, proponents of IW seek a
change from within by delegitimizing the institutions and ideologies of the
targeted state, and eventually winning the support of the population (or at least
acquiescence) for their cause. However, because IW is a complex and nuanced
type of warfare, it does not lend itself easily to a concise universal definition.
IW is not a new concept; organizations have clashed for political control
for thousands of years. Today, changes in the international environment due to
rapid global communications, near instantaneous 24-hour world news coverage,
increasingly interdependent global commerce, and the proliferation of
technologies and weapons of mass destruction/disruption make ensuring US
security more of a challenge. Adversaries, unable to defeat the US in
conventional warfare, continue to resort to and develop new IW capabilities and
tactics. Air Force forces play an important role in IW, but just as with more
traditional operations, their most effective employment requires careful study of
the environment and appreciation for the unique characteristics of the conflict.
The following definitions highlight some key differences between IW and
traditional warfare, and conventional and unconventional warfare. Understanding
these differences allows Airmen to have a common frame of reference when
discussing these types of warfare.
Traditional warfareA confrontation between nation-states or
coalitions/alliances of nation-states (Joint Publication [JP] 1, Doctrine for the
Armed Forces of the United States). This confrontation typically involves
force-on-force military operations in which adversaries employ a variety of
conventional military capabilities against each other in the air, land, maritime,
space, and cyberspace domains. The objective may be to convince or coerce
key military or political decision makers, defeat an adversarys armed forces,
destroy an adversarys war-making capacity, or seize or retain territory in
order to force a change in an adversarys government or policies.
Irregular warfareA violent struggle among state and non-state actors for
legitimacy and influence over the relevant populations.
2
Traditional Warfare Irregular Warfare
Government Government
Focus Focus
3
evolve into an irregular war and vice versa, requiring the military force to adapt
from one form to the other.
IW MODEL
While the strategic context will be unique for any operation, the following
construct, illustrated in Figure 1.3, provides a guide for how Airmen can view IW.
The Air Force provides critical capabilities to achieve effects in IW for the
joint force commander (JFC) through the 17 Air Force functions. For more
detailed information on the Air Force functions, see AFDD 1, Air Force Basic
Doctrine. The key capabilities listed in Figure 1.3 will most likely be employed
when the military is called upon to engage in the activities at the top of the
diagram. While not listed, and often assumed, potential threats to air superiority
4
should be considered before employing airpower to conduct the activities listed in
Figure 1.3.
These activities include, but are not limited to: shaping and deterring,
counterterrorism, COIN, support to COIN, and, where permissible under
international law or United Nations (UN) mandate, support to insurgency. The
majority of operations should focus their effect on the relevant population. The
ultimate goal should be to enhance the legitimacy of the current government or
marginalize the insurgents and terrorists when conducting COIN, support to
COIN, or counterterrorist activities. When supporting an insurgency the goal is to
marginalize the occupying power and enhance the legitimacy of the insurgents in
the eyes of the population. This struggle for legitimacy requires Airmen to have a
different mindset and exploit these capabilities in innovative ways. The battle of
arms works in harmony but is surpassed in importance by the battle for influence.
5
Support to Insurgency as discussed in this document pertains to those
operations against an illegitimate or occupying power (e.g., Vichy French in
World War II) or the Taliban in Afghanistan). It is important to note that
supporting an insurgent movement against a legitimate government is
authorized when conducted for national defense (e.g., Operation ENDURING
FREEDOM [OEF] against the Taliban in Afghanistan) or when in accordance
with a United Nations Security Council mandate.
Support to COIN can include indirect support, direct support (not involving
combat) and direct support (involving combat). Using this construct, the level of
US involvement tends to increase as operations move from indirect to direct.
BPC is the primary means for providing indirect support. BPC also plays a vital
role as operations move to direct support. Direct support involves any or all of
the following:
US forces conducting operations by, through, and with the PN using the PNs
assets (these operations may or may not involve combat operations).
6
It is important to note that transitioning between these different levels of
operations require Presidential or Secretary of Defense (SecDef) approval.
When these transitions are authorized, commanders need to be aware of the
implications on C2 and force commitment. Regardless of the support provided,
when conducting support to COIN the strategic initiative must rest with the PN.
See AFDD 2-3.1, Foreign Internal Defense, for a detailed discussion on these
operations.
7
terrorist groups before they mature to the point where they pose an increased
threat or require the large introduction of US forces.
8
and multinational (JIIM) organizations. In some circumstances, Airmen
should be prepared to assume non-traditional roles until other JIIM
organizations are able to assume these roles. Providing security, basic
services, and other forms of development needs to be coordinated and
integrated.
9
working in concert with PN forces, as well as acting as liaisons to the PN, to
integrate and bring together the full range of Air Force capabilities.
The adversary may be highly complex and adaptive. The adversary often
adopts a decentralized, broadly networked organization that operates semi-
independently, taking advantage of local issues and conflicts that can be
radically different in adjacent locales. Additionally, adversaries are adept at
operating within the seams of military and political boundaries. To counter
these tactics, military operations must be timely, precise, and coordinated.
This often necessitates that military planning and intelligence processes be
conducted and aggregated at a much lower level than in traditional warfare,
but still requires operational level guidance from the JFC. Ultimately, the
management of scarce resources to generate the most appropriate effects
against a highly adaptive adversary remains critical to overall success.
The Air Force provides critical capabilities that enable joint force
operations in COIN. The COMAFFOR enables the JFC to achieve key
objectives. Often, the effects desired in COIN will directly support ground
operations (military and civilian) requiring proper integration and coordination.
In other situations, Air Force capabilities may be used to achieve effects
interdependently. Airmen should identify new and innovative ways to use
those capabilities and advocate them to the JFC.
10
Military actions are a necessary part of any COIN strategy; military
actions that affect the adversarys will or capability must be integrated
with the JFCs objective to influence the populace. In order to achieve
the JFCs strategic and operational objectives, traditional approaches to
warfare must often be reversed, first weighing the impact on the relevant
population and then determining the impact of operations on an adversarys
will and capability. There may be times when a conscious decision not to
respond to enemy provocation may be more effective toward achieving
strategic goals. In COIN, strategic success is defined by successfully
discrediting the hostile ideology rather than by achieving military tactical
victories.
11
An insurgency may extend beyond the borders of a single threatened
state. Non-state actors such as transnational terrorist and criminal organizations
often represent a security threat beyond areas they inhabit. Some pose a direct
concern for the United States and its partners. Non-state actors often team with
insurgents to profit from a conflict.
Insurgents will likely have better knowledge of the physical, cultural, religious,
and social environment, as well as the political landscape
Non-indigenous forces often do not understand the language and lack wide-
area situational awareness in a high threat environment. Additionally, air
forces may lack critical ground truth to find targets and avoid collateral
damage or unintended consequences.
12
The level of violence and the state of a governments infrastructure
(political, economic, informational, and military) will determine the type of JIIM
military force required. An effective counterinsurgency campaign will need to:
13
CHAPTER TWO
The Air Force provides a wide range of effects from minimal, discrete, and
precise effects to overwhelming power as required. Due to the dynamic nature of
IW, any of these effects may be required at any time. The ability of the Air Force
to quickly provide these effects allows JFCs to adapt to changes in the
environment and respond appropriately. The Air Force provides a critical joint
capability which offers an asymmetric advantage over our adversaries. Properly
integrating all the functions of the Air Force enables flexibility in the development
of strategy, operational plans, and employment.
14
Air Force capabilities can be employed to counter insurgencies and
terrorists, as well as support insurgencies against occupying powers. Support to
insurgencies will often involve extensive use of clandestine and covert
instruments and methods, while the Air Forces involvement in COIN may often
be overt. The following ideas and concepts apply to all operations in IW.
Minimal Intrusiveness
Air Force capabilities can deliver a variety of effects from great distance
without increasing force presence in a region or country. The ability to mobilize,
deploy, employ, and redeploy US forces and capabilities allows airpower to
deliver timely effects while minimizing our footprint and not highlighting US
involvement when required. These effects can be lethal or non-lethal. In
addition, these effects can be sustained for a long period with less risk to military
forces.
Air Force forces often present a smaller military footprint when deployed
and may reduce the total number of forces visible to local populations, thereby
reducing potential resentment. This is especially true when Air Force forces are
based outside the supported governments borders or when employing small
aviation detachments that provide the supported government valuable air, space,
and cyber capabilities.
The introduction of a large foreign force may exacerbate the local situation
while providing adversaries a new target set for attacks and propaganda. The
minimal footprint of Air Force forces allows the application of military force with
relatively little exposure to adversaries and populations. In some situations, the
visible presence of coalition forces may bolster security and reassure the
population, thus bolstering PN legitimacy; in other cases, such a visible presence
may be detrimental. By providing an ability to collect information, move and
sustain personnel, and simultaneously engage multiple targets, Air Force
capabilities allow commanders the flexibility to shift forces quickly to better exploit
fleeting opportunities.
Rapid Response
Air Force capabilities provide commanders an asymmetric advantage by
providing desired effects over great distances. Control of air and space allows
forces to reposition by air more quickly and at less risk than by ground transport.
Airpowers responsiveness can be used to transport ground forces, provide
surveillance on emerging hot spots, and simultaneously provide precise
firepower when required. This serves as an enormous force multiplier by moving
either air assets or other forces to the areas of greatest need. This presents a
constant, credible, and unpredictable threat of detection and response that can
significantly complicate the enemys planning and execution. Air- and space-
15
borne sensors can be rapidly retasked to focus on emerging targets and key
terrain. Cyberspace capabilities can often be employed in seconds.
Rapid Mobility
Because IW may not be limited by borders, the Air Force provides rapid
mobility not only by airlifting forces in a timely manner to the immediate area of
concentration, but also by resupplying those forces already in place. Air refueling
extends the distance of long-range strike missions and allows the persistence for
close air support and ISR.
Rapid repositioning of small teams through the air allows for a greater
chance of tactical surprise across great distances and difficult terrain. Air
mobility permits leaner ground-based operations, improving force protection
during transport. Aeromedical evacuation allows for the rapid transport of injured
personnel and civilians, not only shrinking the critical time between injury and
focused medical care, but also reducing the footprint of medical facilities within
the immediate area of operations (AO). Mobility decreases the insurgents
inherent tactical and strategic initiative by allowing timely government response
and multiplying the governments reach for conducting security operations.
Rapid Engagement
16
level of situational awareness needed to execute effective operations in IW often
takes time to acquire. Emerging threats may appear in areas where the US has
not invested significantly in either resources or cultural expertise. In order to
increase overall situational awareness, information should be fused from multiple
sources and disseminated to appropriate levels. Often local security forces and
the affected population are the best source of information. The air and space
operations center (AOC) often provides a robust capability that can link and
disseminate this information.
17
priorities and events. In unique cases,
offensive counterspace operations may Integrating Space-based
deny the adversary access to Capabilities
communications and other space
capabilities critical to their IO. The capabilities and effects we
provide from and through
These capabilities enable highly space are an enormous
accurate, adverse weather weapon advantage to our American
system employment and rapid operational and coalition forces. When
tempo information superiority. For you integrate space into our
example, the integration of space-based military operations on the
PNT capabilities with airborne platforms ground, in the air or on the
has expanded military precision-strike sea, you significantly increase
capabilities. Also, where communication combat effectiveness while
lines cannot be laid, or when terrain and decreasing the number of
other line-of-sight radio frequency American and coalition troops
limitations hamper terrestrial-based you put in harms way. Thanks
communications, space communications to space, our forces are able to
keep forward and rear echelons in move faster and fight smarter
contact. In denied areas of the world, and more precisely.
intelligence derived from space
capabilities often fills critical gaps. The General Lance W. Lord,
ability to pinpoint the location of friendly Commander, Air Force
forces in an unpredictable environment is Space Command, 2002-2006
also of importance. BFT reduces friendly-
fire incidents and coordination time, and
provides rapid information critical in personal recovery missions. For additional
information on space capabilities and considerations, see AFDD 2-2, Space
Operations.
IW ACTIVITIES
Support to Insurgencies
Various US government organizations are postured to recruit, organize,
train, and advise indigenous guerrilla or partisan forces. These operations
usually consist of supplying equipment, training, and advisory assistance to non-
state actors. They may also involve US direct-action operations supporting
specific campaign goals.
18
employed as force multipliers for military actions, or for tactical cover and
deception activities.
UW falls mainly within the special operations area of expertise; the skills
needed are very sophisticated and extensive. US Army Special Forces are the
principal DOD resource for conducting UW when the mission requires interaction
with friendly ground counterpart forces. While a variety of Air Force resources
can be brought into play in UW, Air Force SOF offer capabilities and resources
that are ideally suited or have distinct application in the UW realm.
Given certain risk factors and political considerations, the Air Force may
help non-US aviation assets conduct special air operations supporting
indigenous/surrogate surface forces. In some UW operations, the use of US
military aircraft may be inappropriate, tactically or politically. In those cases,
training, advising, and assisting the aviation forces of insurgent groups,
resistance organizations, or third-country nationals may be the only viable option.
While the capabilities the Air Force brings to bear in any conflict will
usually exceed the PNs capability, Airmen should ensure their employment
enhances the US and PNs long-term strategy and, most importantly, that the PN
does not become reliant on Air Force capabilities. Over-reliance on US
capabilities can be detrimental to the legitimacy of the PN and might require the
US to maintain a large or extended air presence. Therefore, BPC which
increases the PNs air force capability and reduces reliance on US capability is
19
the desired long-term strategy. BPC increases legitimacy, but is also a
precautionary and preventative activity. Even a marginal PN airpower capability
allows COIN forces to exploit its unique characteristics.
Provide Security
Airpower can help alter this equation. A sizeable ground force engaged
in protracted COIN operations can inflame the populace against the COIN forces
and can wear down the political will of the US government and the local
populace. Air Force capabilities bring many advantages, including an economy
of force that enables the US to have a smaller ground force, which reduces the
problems associated with a large footprint on the ground. These capabilities
can help provide presence and security for critical areas, lines of communication,
infrastructure, and borders.
Applied in the early stages of an insurgency, Air Force operations can help
shape the situation on the ground. There may still be scenarios in which the
general conditions on the ground have deteriorated to the point where an
increased ground presence (foreign or indigenous) is required. During these
situations, finding the right balance between directly supporting ground forces
and employing Air Force capabilities in other operational areas may be critical to
achieving the desired end state.
20
and maneuver over large distances more rapidly, and respond quickly with force
when required. When partnered effectively with a ground force, airpower can
negate many of the enemys advantages and reduce vulnerabilities to the joint
force.
In a much broader context, the use of the full range of Air Force
capabilities can significantly reduce the ability of our adversaries to overwhelm
ground forces. Acting as a force multiplier, these capabilities allow a smaller
force to have more firepower for protection, more maneuverability, and broader
situational awareness. The use of airpower may also reduce the total number of
forces deployed forward and enable forces to concentrate their military capability
quickly with minimal risk. The combination of these two factors allows ground
forces to focus their efforts where and when needed by relying on airpower to
monitor areas where fewer ground forces are available.
Combat Controller
While on patrol providing security for a bridge opening ceremony,
a small SOF team supporting a 20-man Afghan National Army force
came under heavy and accurate fire. At this time, the joint terminal attack
controller attached to the team quickly requested air assets to his
position. Employing A-10, B-1B, U-2, and Predator aircraft, the team was
able to move from contact. Additionally, the controller was able to
request, coordinate and control the medical evacuation of two team
members and an Afghan soldier wounded during the engagement. The
precise and effective employment of air capabilities provided the smaller
coalition force with the firepower advantage to successfully finish the
patrol into previously denied areas. The Afghan National Army soldiers
gained a tremendous amount of confidence and pride in the success of
the mission. This patrol, as well as subsequent patrols, opened new
villages up to communication and free commerce.
21
In addition to performing combat operations that directly counter
insurgents and provide security, the Air Force can also conduct activities that
enhance the legitimacy of the PN government. Transporting PN government
officials with humanitarian supplies to outlying regions underscores the
willingness of the PN government to provide essential services to the population.
In doing so, Airmen should remember that it is generally better for the PN to lead
such activities, with US forces playing a supporting role. This remains true as
long as the PN is capable of performing the activity even if not as effectively as
US forces.
22
enemy disperses, interdiction of the limited supplies needed to sustain these
small groups often becomes more difficult.
Airpower in Vietnam
The Air Force has unique capabilities to deliver non-kinetic effects against
insurgent leaders and sanctuaries throughout the operating environment, even
when ground forces are unavailable for integrated joint operations. These
capabilities can be used to detect and monitor insurgent activity, deliver precise
or wide area messaging, and conduct disruption or assurance operations through
shows of presence and shows of force. Combining various elements of air and
ground maneuver can keep the enemy leadership off balance and force
insurgents to concentrate more on their own security than attacking the
government or populace.
23
operations may have to focus directly on their capability. Air, space, and
cyberspace capabilities, ranging from lethal to non-lethal, can target these
groups directly and indirectly.
The Air Forces ability to conduct time sensitive targeting (TST) provides a
unique capability when targeting leadership and active participants. The ability of
the AOC to gather, combine, and disseminate intelligence to operating forces in a
timely manner provides the joint force with a quick-reaction capability critical in
engaging leadership and active supporters.
Working as a joint team, air and ground forces produce capabilities able to
achieve effects far beyond their individual strengths. Often the most effective
way to achieve the needed close coordination between air and ground forces is
through trained battlefield Airmen embedded with tactical ground teams. This
teaming requires a long-term commitment of all assets to establish the trust and
understanding both inside the team and between the team and the local
population. The situational awareness provided by long-term relationships with
the indigenous populace takes away the ability of the enemy to blend into the
population, enabling air forces to positively identify targets, and discriminate
between suitable and unsuitable targets, a distinction often impossible from the
air. The reach, speed, persistence, and lethality of airpower can then be
employed for defensive and offensive actions, including the reach necessary to
deny the adversary the ability to establish safe havens based on remote or
24
distant locations that are difficult to attack successfully with large groups of
ground forces.
Counterterrorism
Transnational terrorists with radical ideologies and tactics present a
significant threat to the US. These groups are adept at using IW to further their
cause. Countering these groups that are very adaptive and loosely organized
requires close cooperation with US partners and allies. Often these groups
objectives are extreme, thus their willingness to compromise is minimal. Military
forces should be proactive in targeting these groups. Air Force capabilities
provide effects quickly across great distances critical to countering terrorist
threats.
Terrorist organizations often find safe havens in states that either support
their cause or are unable or unwilling to conduct operations against their
25
organizations. The threat of airpower can often be used to try and coerce the
sponsor state using traditional means and methods. When coercion or
deterrence fails, the airpower presents a significant capability to the JFC to use
either for quick strikes or persistent operations. Air, space, and cyberspace
capabilities can be used to monitor and gather information on otherwise
inaccessible areas and often lead to actionable intelligence that can be used for
future operations.
26
CHAPTER THREE
The Air Force has significant air, space, and cyberspace capabilities that
are well suited for IW situations. Many of these capabilities are already
described in detail in AFDD 2-1, Air Warfare, and its sub-publications. The main
focus of this document is to describe how the Air Force re-orients these
capabilities from a focus on traditional warfare to how they may be employed
during IW.
At the same time, the resources and tactical skills needed to locate,
identify, and destroy irregular threats often do not exist or are limited in many
developing countries. This is particularly true in the case of airpower. PN law
and our own political, cultural, economic, and military considerations require that
27
PNs take a great deal of responsibility for their own security and function as
viable partners.
Working within a PNs internal defense and development (IDAD) plan, Air
Force special and general purpose forces provide a wide range of capabilities
that can be employed in indirect support, direct support not including combat,
and combat operations. Often the distinction between these operations is not
clear; however, transition between each of these requires Presidential- or
SecDef-level approval. Successful PN airpower development is a complex
undertaking that requires close integration with Department of State country
teams and other elements and agencies of the US government. The inherent
flexibility and versatility of Air Force capabilities provide unique capabilities that
can be applied in unilateral, multilateral, and joint IW operations.
Additionally, FMS programs support BPC and other activities that may
contribute to IW efforts. The FMS program is the government-to-government
method for selling US defense equipment, services, and training. Responsible
arms sales further national security and foreign policy objectives by
strengthening bilateral defense relations, supporting coalition building, and
enhancing interoperability between US
forces and militaries of friends and allies. El Salvador
28
apply airpower in IW is often by, with, and through the PNs air force, allowing
other capabilities to be applied as required in support of PN operations. Direct
application of US Air Force forces should be reserved for those instances where
employment provides the only capability to produce the desired effects, for
instance when PN efforts have been unsuccessful or lacking.
In conducting BPC activities, the Air Force and its coalition partners
should first assess the capability of an affected PN in order to develop an all-
encompassing strategy involving all the elements of indigenous power.
Assistance ranges from strategic airpower assessments that address the overall
capability of a nation to apply and sustain airpower through tacticallevel
instruction based on US tactics, techniques, and procedures (TTPs). Using this
information to identify gaps in the PNs capabilities, the Air Force can determine
the scope and level of effort required to help the PN meet its security objectives.
Airpower can promote a wide range of lethal and nonlethal solutions that
fit within the technical, financial, and professional capacity of a PN in ways that
allow PN forces to ultimately assume responsibility for air operations. In those
instances where a PN has an operational air force, the Air Force can provide the
necessary technical and professional skills to enhance operational capacity and
effectiveness. In situations where an indigenous air force does not exist or is in
decay, the Air Force, through US government channels and subject to fiscal law
restraints, can help the PN obtain the materiel and financial support it needs to
build, equip, train, and sustain a viable airpower capability. The Air Force should
maintain the ability not only to conduct IW operations, but to assist and train
partners, enabling them to resolve internal challenges at all stages of
development. The key to BPC is not finding high or low-tech answers, but the
right mix of technology, training, and support that provides a PN with affordable,
sustainable, and capable airpower.
Combat aviation advisors assess, train, advise, and assist foreign units in
airpower employment, sustainment, and force integration in three interrelated
mission areas of FID, UW, and coalition support. Air Force combat aviation
advisors operate as an integral part of foreign units. Aviation advisors influence
planning, sometimes to a great degree at very senior levels, and execute
mutually supportive operations with or without a significant US military presence.
Fundamentally, combat aviation advisors focus on accomplishing tactical and
operational level objectives to improve the combat capacity of PN forces.
29
BPC and Counterinsurgency
Airpower provides critical capabilities to a counterinsurgency which
typically entails supporting civil law enforcement agencies, military surface
forces, as well as government administrative mechanisms. The most commonly
employed functions include air mobility, ISR, personnel recovery (PR), and C2.
However, all airpower capabilities should be considered when developing
strategic, operational, and tactical objectives. Developing these objectives
requires Airmen to have an understanding of counterinsurgency doctrine and the
local social, political, legal, and economic conditions the insurgency exploits.
Direct assistance activities represent the essence of working with, by, and
through PN forces to assist them in realizing their security objectives. Such
activities, including those that involve hostile conditions, represent an indirect
approach to applying US airpower capabilities in a direct assistance role. For
example, it is often better for a PN to use 12 sorties to transport supplies and
troops in their aircraft with our assistance than use Air Force assets to do the
same mission in two sorties. In all cases, the strategic initiative must remain with
the PN. Broad analysis of PN capacities and capabilities conducted on a
regional basis that is integrated with detailed country analysis is essential in the
development of clear plans to achieve BPC objectives.
INTELLIGENCE
While often an enabler of other operations, intelligence may constitute the
primary function of air, space, and cyberspace capabilities in IW. Joint
intelligence preparation of the operational environment, which builds
understanding of political, military, economic, social, infrastructure, and
informational (PMESII) systems, as well as the cultural factors in a conflict,
enable friendly forces to target for specific effects within the operational
environment. Intelligence products should provide the commander with the
fullest possible understanding of all entities involved in the conflict. Near-real
time ISR and precision location also help build commanders situational
awareness even if they are not used directly in targeting.
30
Accurate, relevant, and timely intelligence is critical for setting the
conditions for success. ISR provides situational awareness by fusing traditional
and nontraditional sources of information. Of primary importance is cultural
intelligence which may require innovative collection and analysis methods. Thus,
operations are planned, executed, assessed, and adapted to influence or change
relevant behaviors or reduce capabilities in order to achieve desired outcomes.
Analysis requires that data from all the intelligence disciplines be brought
together to the right people on a timely basis. This has proven in the past to be a
substantial challenge because of technical problems associated with sharing
data and security requirements. This challenge needs to be overcome during IW
given the likelihood of joint, coalition, or interagency organizational integration.
All-source fusion helps overcome the inherent limitations of a single source to
provide adequate information. However, IW environments may require more
flexibility in the use of single-source intelligence given timeliness and
inaccessibility.
31
Analytical efforts should not be locked into set processes, but should
encourage creative thinking to develop competing hypotheses in regards to IW
problems. External expertise and open source material (such as a PNs
classical and popular literature) may provide invaluable insights and should be
understood. This improves intelligence efforts against foreign denial and
deception techniques and improves understanding of the situation.
Collection
ISR operations can survey areas of interest with sufficient frequency to
observe changes, deter enemy movement, validate HUMINT information, and
enable other ground and maritime operations aimed at doing the same. ISR also
has a high degree of flexibility and responsiveness to emerging IW requirements,
to include intelligence collection, C2, indications and warning, and target
acquisition. ISR provides specific advantages to theater commanders. The
presence, real or perceived, of ISR over the adversarys operational environment
may have multiple influencing effects: Instilling fear, creating perception that he
has no place to hide, or forcing him to use resources and time to improve his
denial and deception techniques.
This influencing effect may have a
very significant impact on the
outcome of IW operations and should
be a major consideration in an effects-
based approach to operations
(EBAO).
32
needs are covered. The highly distributed nature of IW can exacerbate this
problem, requiring a high degree of integration between all parts of the
joint/coalition team in the planning process. In order to reduce the gap between
demand and capacity, efficient use of assets and streamlined processes are
required. In addition, using systems and products that are compatible and
releasable to the supported PN government is essential. For more detailed
information on the intelligence process see AFDD 2-9, Intelligence, Surveillance,
and Reconnaissance Operations.
NTISR assets (fighter and other aircraft equipped with sensors but whose
primary function is not intelligence related) can be used when necessary to fill
gaps in ISR coverage, but this use should be weighed against any negative
impact on the primary mission. NTISR can increase effective ISR persistence
and coverage in the operational environment by accessing denied areas and
targets with focused surveillance. NTISR assets can fulfill intelligence
requirements or provide real-time imaging. For example, battlefield Airmen now
provide ground commanders beyond-line-of-sight awareness with a remote
operations video enhanced receiver (ROVER), which links to aircraft targeting
pods and unmanned aircraft systems. This allows NTISR assets and armed ISR
platforms to directly communicate with ground forces in order to engage high-
value targets based on this real-time intelligence. However, commanders should
ensure NTISR-provided intelligence is fused with other analytical efforts in order
to maintain the appropriate situational awareness.
Human Intelligence
Targets are often found, identified, fixed, and tracked by means other than
technical sensor systems. The nature of IWclose contact with a populace that
is often partially hostile in difficult terrain like urban settingscreates a high
degree of dependence on HUMINT. HUMINT helps provide the pulse of the local
populace and may even penetrate adversary networks. ISR collection and
intelligence analysis leverages HUMINT to neutralize enemy forces
effectiveness, while continually assessing their capabilities. These are critical
considerations in any effort to develop an accurate assessment of the operational
environment.
33
Counterintelligence
Air Force counter threat operations (CTO) are the AFOSI's capability to
find, fix, track, and neutralize the enemy in order to create a sustained permissive
environment for military forces, as well as provide a safe and secure operating
environment. CTO are critical in detecting, assessing, denying, and responding
to threats impacting Air Force operations. These operations facilitate the
identification and neutralization of enemy and terrorist threats and are critical in
providing force protection.
Distributed Operations
Distributed operations are those conducted by independent and
interdependent nodes that operate as a team. Distributed operations allow for
greater connectivity, not only between sensors and shooters, but also between
those with execution authority and more senior decision-makers at all echelons
up the chain of command. Additionally, distributed operations allow for a
reduced forward footprint of personnel minimizing intrusiveness within the PN
while providing a robust ISR capability. For further information on distributed
operations, see AFDD 2-8, Command and Control.
34
In addition, the Air Force has integrated ISR with lethal precision attack
capabilities to conduct dynamic targeting. The Air Force also has the capability
to provide broad-area persistence by networking a variety of sensors, including
SIGINT, MASINT, GEOINT, OSINT, and HUMINT. This network facilitates an
understanding of the operational environment, the adversary, and other relevant
populations and forces.
Intelligence Collaboration
Develop targets.
Assess effectiveness.
Foreign Disclosure
35
INFORMATION OPERATIONS
36
operations against adversaries. Degrading the adversarys use of cyberspace
can be detrimental to their operations. Network attack destroys, disrupts,
corrupts, denies, delays, or degrades information that resides in telephone and
data service networks. Attacking the networks will not only influence the
adversarys decision making, but can also affect the target audience of the
networked information.
Electronic Warfare
EW comprises integrated planning, employment, and assessment of
military capabilities to achieve effects across the electromagnetic spectrum
(EMS), which includes radio, visible, infrared, microwave, directed energy, and all
other frequencies. Planners and operators are responsible for coordination and
deconfliction of PN and coalition EW assets employed to control the adversarys
use of the EMS. EW can deny, disrupt, degrade, deceive, or destroy
communication nodes of the adversary by using electromagnetic, directed
energy, and high-powered microwave systems. For this reason, EW is an
important coordination element, especially as current and future uses of the EMS
multiply.
Control of the EMS can have a major impact on success across the full
ROMO. EW assists air and space forces in gaining access to and operating
without prohibitive interference from adversary systems. A joint EW coordination
cell (EWCC) should be established to centralize EW planning and coordination
efforts.
Influence Operations
Influence operations affect behaviors, protect operations, communicate
commanders intent, and project information to achieve desired effects. The
military capabilities of influence operations are PSYOP, military deception
(MILDEC), operations security (OPSEC), CI, counterpropaganda, and public
affairs (PA). For more information on CI, see the intelligence section in this
chapter.
Psychological Operations
37
Malaya (1948 1960)
Military Deception
Counterpropaganda
38
Commanders at all levels should understand the authority delegated to
them to disseminate counterpropaganda messages. However, the need to get
the story out quickly should be balanced against the need to avoid cultural faux
pas which could damage US and PN credibility.
Public Affairs
In addition to being the first line of defense against adversary propaganda
and disinformation, PA operations are also comprised to analyze and help shape
the international public information environment with proactive engagement.
Public affairs, while a component of influence operations, is predicated on its
ability to project truthful information to a variety of audiences
Integrating PA operations during the strategy development and planning
phases of an operation enhances the chance of seizing and maintaining the
information initiative for the duration of the campaign. This integration is
especially crucial as phase transitions occur in the campaign. PA operations can
define public perception and shape local reaction by clearly and properly
articulating military objectives, helping provide context for the military operations.
In the longer term, PA activities can help garner support for US efforts in nation
building or other stability operations supporting US objectives in the country or
region.
Strategic Communication
SC is a focused US government effort to understand and engage key
audiences in order to create, strengthen, or preserve conditions favorable to
the advancement of US government interests, policies, and objectives. SC
integrates programs, plans, themes, messages, and products with the actions
of all the elements of national power.
OPSEC
OPSEC should be employed to help counter any threat to operational
information and to protect forces by not allowing the adversary to gain the
information required to effective plan against deployed forces.
39
AIR MOBILITY
Air mobility is essential when conducting IW operations, supporting US
ground forces, and enabling PN capabilities. Air mobility operations may
increase the PN governments capacity to govern and administer through
presence and persistence in otherwise inaccessible regions of the country. They
also physically extend the reach of public policy and information programs. Air
mobility provides a means of rapidly transporting personnel and supplies to
forward areas. Air mobility-focused Airmen, integrated with ground forces, often
increases the effectiveness of air mobility and re-supply operations, as well as
mitigating risk in those operations.
Combat Deployment
Through mobilization and national assistance, air transportation can be
used to access remote regions and deliver resources and personnel to address a
wide variety of problems and issues. For instance, air mobility can be used to
rapidly deploy, sustain, and reinforce ground forces as part of security and
neutralization operations. Air mobility has even been used successfully to
support political goals by extending the electoral process to rural groups.
Logistics tasks are enabled through air landing, airdrop, and aerial extraction of
equipment, supplies, and personnel.
40
Combat Sustainment
Combat sustainment operations reinforce and
resupply units engaged in many aspects of IW. Once
delivered to the target area, an inserted force may be
totally dependent upon airlift for sustainment,
movement, withdrawal, redeployment, or aeromedical
evacuation of casualties. Combat sustainment planning
usually assumes that operational requirements and
assessed threats allow little or no flexibility in the
delivery times, locations, and load configurations.
Combat requirements and cargo handling limitations at
forward operating locations drive flight schedules and
load plans. Combat sustainment employs both air
landing and airdrop delivery methods. Air Drop
41
operating location. For more detailed information on ACS, see AFDD 2-4,
Combat Support.
ACS Operations in IW
ACS operations in IW may be designed to support US-only or
multinational operations, enable PN airpower capabilities against irregular
threats, or a combination thereof. ACS may transition from an Air Force support
role to the primary application of military force. The complexity and
unpredictability of IW operations and activities present challenges to
commanders, who should consider the different risks associated with employing
ACS in IW:
Communications limitations.
Civil Engineering
Air Force civil engineering forces provide design, construction, repair, and
force protection of air and space power facilities, as well as protection of Air
Force and PN personnel through explosive ordnance disposal (EOD), fire, and
emergency management functions. Civil engineers also provide Rapid Engineer
Deployable Heavy Operational Repair Squadron, Engineer (RED HORSE) teams
capable of large airfield infrastructure and base public works efforts. These
capabilities can be used in a secondary capacity to support the PN government
through repairing or establishing utility infrastructure, roads, and facilities to
support local communities such as schools, clinics, civic meeting centers, etc., as
well as during natural and manmade disaster recovery operations.
42
In IW, commanders should generally give priority to projects most in need
of a particular type of support, rather than what could be most efficient. For
example, if the PN can accomplish the same work using labor vice heavy
equipment, this might be preferable since it provides jobs and community
involvement. Conversely, if a PN project is at a standstill waiting for a special
capability (e.g., a crane), and one days RED HORSE activity will put dozens of
people back to work, such a project would be a natural priority.
Air Force medical teams are generally smaller than their counterparts in
other Services, since the Air Force units they support are smaller. Medical
evacuation of PN military or civilians can build good will among the population
and create a positive message. Such messages should emphasize the US role
as a friend and avoid emphasis on providing capabilities that the PN lacks.
43
Proper use of medical support and humanitarian relief can go a long way
in achieving the overall goal of legitimacy in the eyes of the local populace, while
failure to provide such support often opens the door to the adversary to enhance
its position with local civilians.
PRECISION ENGAGEMENT
Precision engagement includes the full spectrum of capabilities that can
be brought to bear to precisely achieve effects in support of the desired end
state. Precision engagement in IW may be conducted by the same assets and
functions used in more traditional operations. Since IW is a struggle for the
populations allegiance, the effect of any engagement operation on the
population should be carefully considered. In determining the appropriate
capability to achieve the desired effect, planners should look at effect, duration,
and consequences to ensure the not only the direct but the longer term indirect
effects that may result from use of a capability are anticipated.
44
The C2 relationships established for engagement operations should
consider both the need for flexibility and the training level of forces to be
employed. For precision engagement in IW, training and competency go beyond
basic warfighting skills; Airmen should
understand why they are accomplishing a
task before they can choose how best to
accomplish it. Commanders determining
how to conduct precision strike should
consider that a highly responsive C2
arrangement that potentially allows the
employment of the wrong weapon at the
wrong place or time may be worse for the
overall effort than a more rigid structure Strike
that causes delays.
45
capability in IW. The ability to fuse
multiple bits of information from
multiple sources in a timely manner
provides the commander options
which may otherwise not have been
presented. The ability to act on this
information quickly is also critical
due to the dynamic nature of IW. C2
is not only critical to Air Force
operations but it is also critical for
BPC. The ability of PNs to more
effectively command and control
operations both on the ground and in Using satellite communications
the air often leads to more effective
operations.
When conducting BPC it is important to note that the PN will rarely, if ever,
require the same scope and technological sophistication of C2 as the US. Some
IW operations will not use the TACS for C2 and instead rely on PN capabilities. It
is important to ensure the right level and scope of the C2 be developed based on
the requirements of the PN.
46
CHAPTER FOUR
to make war upon rebellion is messy and slow, like eating soup with a
knife.
T. E. Lawrence, The Evolution of a Revolt
Military leaders create strategy, campaigns, and plans using the entire
spectrum of military capabilities. In IW, success requires a mindset that focuses
on how these capabilities will positively influence the population to support the
indigenous leadership. Airmen should understand the nature of IW by looking at
the differences between IW and traditional warfare, as well as the operational
environments. This understanding provides the foundation for the development
and conduct of strategy and planning.
All wars are fought for political purposes, but the political element of IW
permeates its conduct down to the lowest tactical level.Influencing
governments and populations is a complexactivity. In IW, military leaders
need to think politically as well as militarilyand their civilian counterparts
need to think militarily as well as politically.
STRATEGY CONSIDERATIONS
Traditionally, strategy has been associated with the integration of the
national and military objectives (ends); national policies and military concepts
(ways); and national resources, military forces, and supplies (means) to
accomplish given objectives in a defined campaign. However, this narrow view
may mislead Airmen to believe that strategy begins and ends with the
development and oversight of a campaign plan. Airmen should look beyond the
achievement of milestones and military end state toward the ultimate political and
cultural endstate, while understanding the implications of US action on potential
future campaigns and operations.
47
Strategy Differences in IW
Airmen need to understand the differences between IW and traditional
warfare. Understanding the current operational environment not only requires
analyzing the present strategic context, but also the effect of past operations.
Campaign strategies involve more than just the use of armed forces. They must
also take into account the economic, political, diplomatic, military, and
informational instruments that might be used to promote a nations interest or
secure a state from IW adversaries. The military portion of the theater strategy is
only a part of the strategy, and should not be a sole course of action in itself, but
rather should set the conditions for the other instruments of national power to
operate. Within the context of IW, many campaigns and operations may not be
led by the military. The effect of these strategies may not be readily apparent,
requiring years and even decades before tangible results are evident.
Center of Gravity
48
The ability to find, identify, and separate targeted individual leaders from
non-targeted individuals will most likely be difficult. In addition, depending on the
location of the target, the effects desired are often soft and may require non-
lethal means. Lethal targeting opportunities, when they emerge, are fleeting, and
collateral damage restrictions will be challenging.
Focus on Stability
The Air Force, through its functions and capabilities, provides the JFC key
enablers to maintain a safe and secure environment. In providing security, the
majority of military operations should focus on stability and deterrence. This
requires early involvement in fragile states. The Air Force brings a flexible force
for such operations. Rapid mobility, ISR capabilities, as well as the ability to
deter external involvement through traditional deterrence of other state actors
provides a more conducive environment for PN governments to develop and
stabilize.
OPERATIONAL ENVIRONMENT
49
are very effective means of achieving these goals, especially when tribal, ethnic,
and religious affiliations can be leveraged or played against each other.
50
Irregular Warfare
Operating Environments
Support to Support to
COIN
COIN Insurgency
COIN
(as required) Environments can
influence each other
Failed States
Executing IW against non-state adversaries operating within failed states
is a challenge. Denied or non-governed areas may provide potential sanctuary
for transnational terrorist networks and other non-state adversaries. These areas
may be under the direct control of insurgents. In most cases, Air Force
personnel will find themselves in austere locations in developing or
underdeveloped countries. Furthermore, the locations from which they will work
and live will not likely be able to provide adequate security, health standards, and
C2 networks. Given these issues, Airmen may be responsible for their own
security, communications, and well-being. There may be a degree of
lawlessness and disorder. In such scenarios, the US may be the primary actor
and be primarily responsible for both military and political actions. Thus, a large
force may be necessary to bring security to such regions.
Cooperative Governments
Support to COIN operations occurs with PNs that either require or request
US participation. This environment enables the US to employ many different
forms of support including SA and FID. The level of US involvement will likely
depend on the capabilities and level of threat to the PN government as well as
US strategic goals. Operations in this environment may range from small unit
51
involvement to larger force requirements if a crisis deteriorates to the point that
the PN cannot maintain security on its own. Careful consideration is required
when the decision to move from support to COIN to COIN operations as this
often not only changes the commitment required but also the perception of the
people regarding the credibility and legitimacy of their government.
Non-Cooperative Governments
Executing IW against or within a non-cooperative state involves UW and
other indirect approaches applied in conjunction with other diplomatic or
economic actions such as blockades or sanctions. While UW has been a
traditional core mission of SOF, executing UW as part of a larger IW effort may
be more common in the future. UW has traditionally confined itself to operations
against a single hostile state or occupying power. Many of the activities took
place either within the hostile or occupied state or in the neighboring countries
that either directly or tacitly supported efforts against the hostile state. This
construct is changing as non-cooperative states have ever-increasing global
linkages and interests. The increasingly global nature of IW may require joint
forces to plan and execute IW against a non-cooperative states decisive points
or vital interests that may reside outside the borders of the state itself. These
interests may include offshore banking and financial assets, businesses, and
other strategic resources, production operations, and facilities. Action against
these interests provides the JFC with additional pressure points that can
indirectly influence the hostile state adversary without entering the adversarys
sovereign territory. Some of these non-cooperative states may be supporters or
sponsors of our non-state adversaries; others will be unwilling or unable to take
effective action against non-state adversaries operating within their borders.
52
THEATER SECURITY COOPERATION PLAN
The TSCP provides the direction and effort of US military forces for each
geographic CCDR. This plan combines the effort of each of the individual
Service component commanders and PNs forces. US interests are best served
when countries are internally secure, regions are stable, and other countries are
willing and their military forces are able to contribute effective capabilities to
regional, national, and international operations. Each COMAFFOR should
ensure that his/her forces capabilities are considered and incorporated into the
geographic CCDRs TSCP. Properly developed and executed TSCPs can
significantly shape the environment for future efforts against IW adversaries.
Security Assistance
SA is the provision of defense articles, military training, and other defense-
related services in furtherance of national policies and objectives. SA is an
important instrument of national security policy. Within the law and policy
considerations, Air Force personnel can train and equip friendly foreign forces.
DOD and other government agencies train foreign militaries and law enforcement
personnel through several different programs, some funded by accounts within
the Pentagon's budget and others by DOS-administered foreign aid budget. SA
fosters interoperability between United States forces and our allies.
53
Building Partner/Regional Capacity to Counter IW Threats
Insurgencies rely on IW to devalue US and other pro-democratic efforts.
Building partnerships with allied and coalition forces comprises an important
defense against adversaries using IW. Regional partnerships serve the strategic
purpose of reducing instability, preventing terrorist attacks, and reducing the
potential for expanded conflict. Forward planning in constructing partnerships
enables US forces, when the need arises, to rely on these states indigenous
forces.
In some instances, the best solution may be to work with strong allied
partners to increase their capability and capacity to work with less capable PNs.
This approach is especially important in regions where historical post-colonial
relationships and regional balance-of-power influences provide strong allied
partners who have greater access and influence than the US. This approach
may also reduce the political stigma associated with US assistance efforts in
some countries and regions. The US government may still need to make
equipment and training available to the PN and its allies. Ultimately, BPC efforts
should enable a PN to assume primary responsibility for deterring and preventing
security challenges to itself and US national interests.
Persistent Presence
Persistence is key to effective operations in IW. The joint force needs a
persistent regional presence to understand and affect the operational
environment and our adversaries. Periodic short-duration deployments to at-risk
states may be an inadequate operational approach because the short-term
results of these deployments may be reversed quickly by adversary
countermeasures and by the inertia common in failed and failing states. This
continuity of effort may depend on the ability of joint force members to establish
and maintain long-term interpersonal relationships with their counterparts in the
relevant US missions and with foreign governments, traditional political
authorities, and security forces.
STRATEGY DEVELOPMENT
54
Understanding the Environment and History of the Region
Understanding the environment and history of the region is a prerequisite
to effective strategy development in any conflict. The environment, historical
processes, and events that spawn insurgencies and counterinsurgencies shape
the goals, objectives, and strategies of regional adversaries. This in turn will
determine adversary capabilities, tactics, techniques, and procedures (e.g.,
terrorism, criminal activities, and propaganda). The environment and history also
determine the capabilities and needs of the counterinsurgent or insurgent forces
the US is supporting. Friendly forces should develop a combined strategy that
exploits the respective strengths of the friendly forces and attacks the
weaknesses of the adversaries.
55
concept, cyberspace integration should not be overlooked.
PLANNING CONSIDERATIONS
Unity of effort during the strategy development and throughout the
planning phases is instrumental to formulating a coherent achievable plan. The
role of ongoing activities such as Air Force security cooperation, theater security
cooperation, US aid to international development operations, and embassy team
initiatives is applicable and all associated elements of national power should be
integrated during the early stages of planning. Air planners should begin the
planning process with a firm understanding of the strategic context and the
mission of the JFC.
Commanders Estimate
Due to the vast differences between IW and traditional warfare as well as
the spectrum of activities within IW, some unique considerations should be
addressed. The complex nature of irregular threats presents a broad and
extensive set of interconnected problems that typically extend beyond the
political boundaries of a single state. To systematically account for and
understand the problems associated with this type of warfare, the commanders
estimate should begin with the grand strategy and account for the multitude of
different planning and participating organizations that hold a stake in the overall
operation. In IW, the initial focus of the commanders estimate is on
understanding the environment and the problem it presents. It is often harder to
define the problem than to solve it. Therefore, it is imperative for commanders to
use all available resources (time and personnel permitting) to understand the
strategic context of the current situation. Failure to comprehend the current
situation may often lead to the implementation of a COA that was developed to
solve the wrong problem. Once the crisis or problem is understood,
commanders can determine the appropriate COA.
Operational Art
Operational art represents the essential link between the overall strategy
for the operation or campaign and the tactical details of its conduct. It
encompasses the processes of planning, conducting, sustaining, assessing, and
adapting operations and campaigns to meet strategic and operational objectives.
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Operational art determines what will be accomplished in the battlespace; it is
guided by the why from the strategic level and implemented by the how at the
tactical level. (AFDD 2, Operations and Organization)
57
cyberspace capabilities and select those most appropriate to achieve the effects
required over what may be a protracted time period. In irregular operations,
commanders should understand that the application of military force is in
support of other instruments of national power, and that traditional joint
force organizational relationships may not be as effective for irregular
operational environments.
Legal Considerations
IW missions may be governed by unclear or emerging international law.
As a matter of policy, US forces comply with the LOAC during all armed conflicts,
however such conflicts are characterized, and in all other military operations.
Since IW contingencies may develop very rapidly and in locations where US
forces have not traditionally operated, arrangements that might otherwise be in
place, such as a status-of-forces agreement, may not exist. The legal constraints
on the use of US funds, equipment, and supplies to directly support non-US
personnel may be complicated. Contingency contracting and the employment of
local laborers may also present legal challenges. ROE for IW are often
constrained and sensitive to the political and social conditions surrounding the
operation.
Operational Phases
Campaign plans should typically outline the general phases of the
operation. Phasing assists the JFC to organize operations by integrating
subordinate operations and helps him/her visualize and think through the entire
operation or campaign. There are generally five planning phases: deter, seize
the initiative, dominate, stabilize, and enable civil authority. Each phase
represents a subdivision of the campaigns intermediate objectives during which
a large portion of the forces and joint/multinational capabilities are involved in
similar or mutual supporting activities. Phasing may not be as clear-cut in IW.
The JFC may find himself entering an insurgency in something other than the
shaping phase. The Air Force may find itself directly involved in phase II (seize
the initiative) and phase III (dominate). JFCs should be aware that shaping
operations may take place during all five phases and any actions taken to win
phases II and III may significantly affect subsequent phases (positively or
58
negatively). Especially in COIN operations, JFCs may also find themselves in
different phases, in different countries, with different campaigns at the same time.
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COUNTERINSURGENCY PHASES
First Phase (Defensive in nature) - Prepare and Consolidate
This initial phase consists of analysis and planning with the PN, preparation and
deployment of the COIN forces along with the commensurate FID programs and
IDAD resources to deter the insurgents. Initiatives by the PNs government require
all instruments of national power to be combined into a single, integrated IDAD
program using both military and civilian resources. The IDAD strategy needs to be
implemented early enough to prevent an insurgency but can also be employed to
counter an insurgency that has already matured. The use of indigenous forces is
fundamental to the success of this phase. This phase is typified by holding and
consolidation activities in order to deter the insurgents and allow time for the COIN
strategy to begin working.
Second Phase (Offensive in nature) - Seize the Initiative/Dominate the Battlespace
The Offensive phase includes the application of indirect military actions with the aim
of defeating the enemy by destroying his will to fight and winning the hearts and
minds of the populace. In this phase, the PNs (not the US) capability to secure and
safeguard the populace is increased while other aspects of the COIN strategy resolve
social and political grievances. The PN government must reoccupy contested areas
in order to de-legitimize the insurgents and deny them the support of the populace or
environment for their operations.
Third Phase Transition, Conciliation, and Re-integration
This phase is typified by stabilizing the situation and enabling civil authorities of the
PN government. The PN is no longer severely threatened, good government and
rule of law exist; and social grievances are resolved. This phase is similar to normal
stability operations.
Fourth and Final phase - Long-term Nation-building
Operationalizing COIN,
Joseph D. Celeski,
JSOU Report 05-2, September 2005
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basic logistical support (billeting, basing, and food) and be supported by the
COMAFFOR for those resources the PN cannot provide. Operations will tend to
be long-term in duration requiring coordination for force rotations and
sustainment.
Counterterrorism
Counterterrorism operations should also be outlined in the TSCP. In most
cases counterterrorism operations require the long-range employment of certain
Air Force assets. Conducting operations against these loosely-networked
organizations may require significant time for the level of intelligence capabilities
to mature. BPC aids in this process.
Support to COIN
Supporting PNs COIN operations may present the greatest challenge for
air planners. The maturity of the insurgency, the magnitude of operations
conducted by the PN, PN capabilities, and US policy will significantly impact US
involvement.
Indirect Support
Indirect support emphasizes Air Force efforts to develop and sustain host-
nation self-sufficiency. Security assistance, appropriately supplemented by
joint/multinational exercises and other joint initiatives, constitutes the primary Air
Force contribution to indirect support FID operations.
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funded activities that improve PN Air Force effectiveness without duplicating or
replacing SA efforts to create or maintain PN capabilities. Air Force activities
should emphasize the PNs combat role. These support activities may include:
On order, the Air Force may engage in combat operations to meet PN and
US objectives. Planners should determine requirements based on the PNs
IDAD strategy. Supporting a PNs COIN efforts will most likely present limitations
and constraints not often found in traditional warfare. In addition, the need to
maintain the PNs legitimacy and their role in COIN may result in less efficient
tactical employment of airpower, but should ultimately be more effective (e.g.,
flying more sorties using PN capability rather than one US sortie).
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COIN
COIN operations will most likely require the greatest commitment of
assets and personnel. The US will most likely conduct COIN operations when
the PN is incapable of conducting any substantial operations, the situation has
deteriorated significantly (approaching a failed state environment), or when there
is no effective government in power (failed state). When there is no legitimate
government in power, coalition partners and the US will most likely be
responsible for all aspects of the COIN strategy. Thus, some of the restrictions
and limitations on employment that occurred while providing capabilities to a
PNs COIN effort may be reduced. However, creating a legitimate government
will often be far more difficult in this situation. The Air Force will not only be
called upon to conduct military operations but also execute missions for other
agencies. Tremendous demands for Air Force capabilities may be placed on the
air component.
Support to Insurgency
UW should not be seen as merely defensive in nature. It may also include
offensive operations as well. UW operations can be used to exploit a hostile
powers political, military, economic, and psychological vulnerability by
developing and sustaining resistance forces to accomplish US and coalition
strategic objectives. UW is defined as a broad spectrum of military and
paramilitary operations, normally of long duration, predominantly conducted
through, with, or by indigenous or surrogate forces that are organized, trained,
equipped, supported, and directed in varying degrees by an external source. It
includes, but is not limited to, guerrilla warfare, subversion, sabotage, intelligence
activities, and unconventional assisted recovery. (JP 1-02)
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Planning efforts for UW are normally conducted by SOF elements. UW
may follow some of the insurgent strategies described in Appendix A. Air Force
capabilities provide unconventional forces with significant capabilities for
preparing the operational environment, supporting UW activities, and supporting
massed forces during the latter stages of an insurgency. Since the line between
lawful support for an insurgency and a use of force under the United Nations
Charter can be thin, planners should carefully coordinate these activities that
cause direct effects when integrated with indigenous forces.
UW operations may be carried out by, with, and through indigenous and
paramilitary forces to prepare a combat operating arena prior to the introduction
of main battle forces. When UW operations support conventional operations, the
focus may shift to primarily military objectives. Indigenous/surrogate forces delay
and disrupt hostile military operations, neutralize key targets, destroy enemy
lines of communication, disrupt/isolate enemy resources and C2 nets, develop
intelligence collection sources and methods, and establish networks and contacts
for unconventional assisted recovery operations. Integrating traditional Air Force
capabilities provide significant advantages to these UW forces.
The Air Force provides critical ISR, IO, and mobility capabilities for UW
forces. Low signature assets can provide timely intelligence on an adversarys
movements and forces as well as insert and extract critical liaison elements to
provide IO support.
Supporting UW Activities
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overwhelming support of unconventional forces. The incorporation of air, space,
and cyberspace capabilities will follow more traditional planning and execution
models. Using airpower with indigenous forces allows other US forces to
concentrate, reducing the need for large force requirements.
Once US or coalition forces have removed the regime and the insurgency
becomes the legitimate government, a transition from UW operations to stability
operations may take place. The failure to identify and plan for this transition may
have an adverse effect on US stabilization operations and the new PNs IDAD
strategy.
ASSESSMENT
The principal objective in IW operations must be to outthink, outperform,
and adapt faster than the enemy locally, regionally, and globally in order to deny
him the ability to set conditions favorable to his goals. Local commanders within
the IW operational area should continually assess employment and support
activities to determine the effects and implications of their actions while following
the JFCs overall intent. The ambiguities resident within IW require frequent
adjustment of operational plans to ensure desired effects are achieved while
avoiding specifically designated or unintended negative consequences.
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CHAPTER FIVE
IW OPERATIONS
C2 Planning
The determination of the capabilities required and the establishment of C2
structures and command relationships of the forces that execute missions are of
utmost importance in the planning process. Planners and leaders should
understand that command structures for IW activities will most likely be different
than our current military construct.
66
forces, specific mission objectives, the existing PN C2 infrastructure, and the
participation of multinational partners or intergovernmental organizations. At a
minimum, C2 planning should ensure that Air Force planners are integrated into
the appropriate level of planning for distributed operations and that Airmen
command Air Force forces at all appropriate levels.
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Since Air Force capabilities can transition from one operational area to
another, it is imperative that there is only one airspace control authority and one
airspace control plan per joint force operation, and ideally only one per theater.
There may be several locally executed IW engagements within a theater of
operations requiring the coordination of all distributed planning activity and
operations that may impact airspace control. By allowing some aspect of
planning to occur at these lower levels and coordinating them at the operational
level, the JFACC maintains the flexibility to better allocate his resources while still
ensuring proper airspace control is applied.
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Emerging Concept
IW will require the joint force to conduct protracted IPE and OPE
[intelligence preparation and operational preparation of the environment]
efforts, build the IW capability of state and non-state partners, and plan,
coordinate, synchronize, and integrate interagency IW activities with US
Missions around the world. The current use of Joint Task Forces reporting
directly to Geographic Combatant Commanders does not facilitate any of
these critical interagency and multinational IW activities. In the future,
combatant commanders will have alternative C2 mechanisms for conducting
and supporting IW when a JTF is not required to conduct large-scale combat
operations. Some of the alternatives will require changes to current
authorities.
IW Joint Operating Concept
Geographical Considerations
CONUS Basing
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Theater-based Forces
Basing Air Force assets within the JOA can provide unique advantages
compared to CONUS or theater basing. Almost every aspect of airpower is more
effective by being based closer to the JOA. Inside-the-JOA basing (near-basing)
should increase Airmens understanding of the operating environment and
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increase capabilities. Near-basing will increase loiter time while reducing transit
and response time. Possible negatives of basing inside the JOA include force
protection concerns due to an increased footprint and increased logistical and
communication requirements. Generally speaking, the closer airpower gets to
the JOA, the greater the risk, yet the greater the utility.
Multiple sources
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Major environmental factors affecting planning and execution include
physical and psychological pressures from hostile elements, social
fragmentation, political instability, and economic impoverishment. Difficult
terrain, physical isolation of population groups, and poorly developed
infrastructures often will impede counterinsurgency and insurgency operations.
Air Force capabilities are inherently flexible and can overcome many of these
obstacles.
Force Presentation
Although forces are presented through the AETF construct, they may be
tailored differently from traditional warfare operations. Two considerations that
should be taken into account when tailoring and sizing AETFs for IW are (1) the
overall US strategic aim, and (2) the US relationship with the PN country.
Supporting the PN
Air Force forces are tailored to provide capabilities for conducting activities
in support of the PN government to bolster its legitimacy and influence over the
relevant population. These activities include, but are not limited to, FID,
counterterrorism (CT), military civic action (MCA), civil-military operations (CMO),
and military support to PN COIN activities. Forces should be tailored to support
the PN governments IDAD plan by providing capabilities that can address
deficiencies in PN security and governance. If the security situation in the PN is
particularly dire and PN capabilities are lacking or inadequate, US forces may be
required to assume the lead for COIN operations during certain times and in
specific locations; this will most likely require a large AETF. AETFs should be
properly sized, keeping in mind that a large US military presence in the PN
creates a significant logistical, political, and cultural footprint. Basing forces in a
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neighboring cooperative country may or may not be a viable option, depending
on operational or political considerations.
Supporting Insurgencies
Force Protection in IW
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footprints may require Airmen to provide creative solutions to maintain adequate
force protection. Small elements may be deployed to many locations requiring
PN support. To the extent possible, commanders should consider using in-
country and host nation resources. If additional resources are required, they
should be assigned to centrally located positions to provide maximum benefit.
However, larger force deployments may require larger support facilities and
bases which present a more lucrative target for adversaries. Force protection
assessments should include threats from CBRN weapons as well as from
conventional means. See AFDD 2-4.1, Force Protection, for more detailed
information.
EXECUTING OPERATIONS
The most critical part of developing the planning for and employment of Air
Force forces is to correctly assess the environment. The analysis should focus
on the relevant population as well as the enemy order of battle. The analysis
should be a complete and comprehensive country PMESII study. The
culmination of the analysis should provide the CCDR or JFC with multiple options
to choose and select the correct military force structure. From those options, the
Air Force component should be ready to apply personnel, assets, processes, and
technology to provide an integrated capability to create the desired effects.
Airspace Control
As with all conflict, airspace control in IW presents the JFACC numerous
challenges in integrating military and civilian air operations. In traditional warfare
military operations will often take priority or are conducted without the presence
of civilian operations. In IW, especially when conducting BPC operations or
providing support to COIN through indirect or direct operations (not involving
combat), the JFACC should consider allowing airspace control over the operating
area to be maintained by the PN air traffic control if it is capable of doing so. As
the level of effort increases or if, upon direction, the joint force is tasked to
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conduct combat operations, the JFACC should assume airspace control
authority.
Operation Cycles
Within the context of a campaign plan or in conjunction with the combatant
commanders intent (when there is no military campaign), the goal of Air Force
operations should be directed toward the stability and security of the PN.
Assessing PN capabilities.
Enabling PN (BPC).
Sustainment.
When supporting cooperative states, executing even the most modest air
force capabilities can provide significant contributions to IW in the form of
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delivering humanitarian aid, transportation of political leaders, government
presence, ISR capabilities, and border security.
In the absence of any PN air force capability, Air Force and SOF forces
may be tasked with assisting in building this capability. A capable and competent
air force is not built overnight. Some capability requires infrastructure which
requires forethought, planning, and partnership with the PN. The Air Force is
prepared to build this capability but early identification of requirements makes the
realization of capability happen at a faster pace.
Sustaining the PN
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SUGGESTED READINGS
Joint Publications
JP 3-05, Doctrine for Joint Special Operations
JP 3-05.1, Joint Special Operations Task Force Operations
JP 3-07.1, Joint Tactics, Techniques, and Procedures for Foreign Internal
Defense
JP 3-09.3, Joint Tactics, Techniques, and Procedures for Close Air Support
JP 3-10, Joint Security Operations in Theater
JP 3-16, Multinational Operations
JP 3-17, Joint Doctrine and Joint Tactics, Techniques and Procedures for Air
Mobility Operations
JP 3-18, Joint Doctrine for Forcible Entry Operations
JP 3-53, Joint Doctrine for Psychological Operations
Fleet Marine Force Reference Publication (USMC) 12-15, Small Wars Manual
US Marine Corps. April 1987
Center for Army Lessons Learned Handbook No. 07-6, Southern Afghanistan
COIN Operations, US Army, October 2006
77
Irregular Warfare Joint Operating Concept, Version 1.0, July 2007, DOD
Other Publications
Corum, James S., and Wray R. Johnson, Airpower in Small Wars: Fighting
Insurgents and Terrorists, University Press of Kansas, 2003.
Drew, Dennis M., U.S. Theory and the Insurgent Challenge: A Short Journey to
Confusion, The Journal of Military History, Vol 62, No. 4, October 1998, pp. 809-
832.
Vick, Alan J.; Adam Grissom; William Rosenau; Beth Grill; Karl P. Mueller, Air
Power in the New Counterinsurgency Era: The Strategic Importance of USAF
Advisory and Assistance Missions, Rand Corporation Report, 2006.
78
APPENDIX
UNDERSTANDING INSURGENCIES
While not all insurgencies are the same, they share common
characteristics. Understanding the motivation, organization, and support
structure of an insurgency provides the insight needed to defeat it.
INSURGENT MOTIVATIONS
An insurgency is defined as an organized movement aimed at the
overthrow of a constituted government through use of subversion and armed
conflict. (JP 1-02) Insurgencies tend to form in situations where the local
population is suffering from relative deprivation of basic services, perceived
grievances, or outright oppression. These conditions are often cultivated from
political, cultural, or religious differences, and perpetuated by insurgents who
deliberately orchestrate an IO campaign. Unable to make significant change in
the system that has brought about these conditions, insurgents attempt to
modify, replace, or separate from the government through violent means.
Political
In general, insurgencies ultimately have political objectives. The source of
political motivation results from perceived grievances with the governments
policies. Historically, politically based insurgencies tend to use latent, underlying
social and economic grievances to incite the emotions of the population. They
highlight the governments inability or lack of desire to address or change these
grievances. As an insurgency matures, the organization postures itself as the
means to remedy these grievances. Ultimately, the insurgents offer alternatives
to the populace usually in the form of either overthrowing the government or
separating from it. Nationalist or separatist objectives normally draw upon other
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motivational factors as well as cultural and religious differences. For some
groups political and religious motivations are often the same.
Cultural
Insurgencies may spawn from cultural or ethnic differences between
groups in a state. These types of insurgencies often form because of oppressive
regimes that persecute a given group. Such insurgencies may take on
nationalist overtones if the group seeks autonomy from the PN.
Religious
Insurgent groups often employ religion as a basis to portray their
movement favorably and mobilize followers in pursuit of their political goals.
For example, the Provisional Irish Republican Army frequently used Roman
Catholic iconography in its publications and proclamations, although many of
its members were not devout Catholics. In other cases, a religious ideology
may be the source of an insurgent groups political goals. This is the case in al
Qaedas apparent quest to reestablish a worldwide Muslim Caliphate. For
many Muslims, this invokes the golden age of Islamic civilization and helps
mobilize support for al Qaeda among some of the most traditional Muslims
while concealing the fact that al Qaedas leaders envision the restored
Caliphate as a totalitarian state similar to the pre-2002 Taliban regime in
Afghanistan.
Economic
While insurgents can be motivated by economic grievances, this is usually
done under the premise of countering political policies that have created the
perceived grievance. Economic motivations discussed here result from power
and money themselves. Criminal organizations may use IW in this regard to
terrorize or influence a specific area in order to exploit it for their purpose. Not
only do these profits support the insurgency, they may also be used to
supplement and influence the local populace. The most obvious example is the
international drug trade and associated money launderers. More importantly,
other insurgencies and terrorist organizations, including radical extremists, may
depend on the funds generated from these illegal activities.
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carry out illegal activities. Being economically motivated, such organizations will
remain as long as there is a profit to be made.
Radical Extremism
Radical extremist insurgents frequently hold an all-encompassing
worldview; they are ideologically rigid and uncompromising. Radical secular and
Marxist movements have many characteristics similar to religious extremists.
Belief in an extremist ideology fortifies the will of believers. Religious extremists
think of themselves as true believers and brand those they consider to be non-
believers as enemies. Some ideologies, such as those underlying the culture of
martyrdom, maintain that dying for the cause will be rewarded.
ORGANIZATION
During early stages of development and maturation, most insurgencies
display some of the following organizational elements:
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may be subdivided into combatants and political cadre, with the former
involved in violent actions, and the latter in non-violent actions.
Active supporters. This group sympathizes with the insurgency cause and
provides valuable support. This group is largely unknown to the government
and difficult to identify. It performs such services as storing weapons and
supplies, and providing information, funding, sanctuary, and other services.
Mass Base. The mass base consists of the followers of the insurgent
movementthe supporting portion of the populace. These members may
continue in their normal positions in society. While most do not provide
specific services, their general support provides the resource base (financing
and manpower) for recruiting future active supporters and participants. (FM 3-
24)
OPERATIONS
The conflict in IW centers around two basic arenas: The first is the
struggle for political legitimacy or influence and the second violent conflict. In this
sense, insurgents have a dual advantage. Insurgents win when they prevail in
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only one of these two struggles; the government, on the other hand, must win
both struggles or they lose.
Insurgents conduct operations for generally two purposes: to influence the
population that their cause is worthy and that they will win; and to affect the
political will of the PN government and coalition support. If insurgents are
successful in garnering support, the movement continues to mature, potentially
becoming strong enough to reach its goals. Subsequently, by breaking the
coalitions will, the insurgents then only have to defeat the PN government that,
because intervention of coalition forces was required, is probably incapable of
dealing with the insurgent threat and will be forced to acquiesce unless its
capability has been increased through FID and other programs.
The methods used by each group are largely political and can take any
number of forms, including violent resistance, terrorism, guerrilla war, or
revolutionary war. For both sides, the ultimate goal in IW is to produce a positive
psychological effect on the affected population in order to obtain support and
weaken support for the opposing group.
Leaders in an insurgency generally set the strategic goals for the
organization and allow active participants the autonomy to conduct operations.
Thus, tactical level operations may not readily support other tactical operations
conducted in other areas, but all operations support the strategic goal.
Insurgents use non-violent and violent means to accomplish these goals.
Non-violent Operations
Insurgents will exploit news media and the internet for communications,
propaganda, funding, recruiting, and training. They function more like a tribal
group, crime syndicate, or extended family than like a military or paramilitary
organization. Using the internet, insurgents can now link virtually with allied
groups throughout a state, a region, and even the entire world.
Insurgents will often use any underlying grievance that the population may
have and use it to further fuel their cause. Thus, if there are widespread
grievances, the organization in local areas carries out activities to satisfy them
and attributes any solutions to the insurgency. As insurgencies mature, they tie
all sorts of problems to larger issues requiring drastic measures. They must
develop, build, and sustain an attractive message demonstrating moral
superiority over the government and justification for their actions.
The proliferation of technology and information tools increases the amount
of power available to insurgents and non-state actors. Individuals and
organizations that were once contained in a particular region now have the ability
to connect and recruit beyond state borders by collaborating and exchanging
information virtually. Information age tools can magnify the desired effects of
these groups and help propagate their message and cause.
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Violent Operations
Violent operations are performed to seek psychological effects and are
used to support IO. In most situations, an insurgency will not have developed to
the point where it can counter a governments capabilities. Early operations tend
to focus on gaining the support of the populace, furthering support, gaining
resources, and providing a base of operations from which to achieve their
objectives.
Operations often use guerilla tactics, not necessarily to win but to avoid
losing. Guerillas fight at the times and places of their choosing, attack small or
isolated elements of the government, and then disperse in order to blend back
into the population. Small units that operate in a dispersed fashion can avoid
presenting targeting opportunities to a technologically superior foe. Guerilla
tactics also involve operating close to civilians to offset surveillance and
firepower advantages of a stronger adversary. These tactics help the insurgent
organization discredit, embarrass, and frustrate the government, divert attention
away from the larger effort to garner political support, and cause the government
to divert resources to countering the attacks.
IW may also involve terrorist tactics. Terrorism and counterterrorism are
activities conducted as part of IW and are frequently elements of insurgency and
counterinsurgency. However, terrorism may also stand alone when its purpose
is to coerce or intimidate governments or societies without overthrowing them.
Insurgents often aim to deliberately create and exploit fear through violence or
the threat of violence to obtain their political goals. Terrorist tactics can create
powerful psychological effects among the target population.
Support
For either side, popular support is the source of power that provides moral
or physical strength, freedom of action, or will to act. The support of the people
ultimately determines which side prevails in IW. Thus, both attempt to convince
the population that they should fight for their cause.
Insurgencies generally receive support from two critical sources: internal
and external. Internal support is received from local active supporters and the
mass base that either directly or indirectly supports insurgent goals and
operations. Support is often linked to the perception of the organizations
legitimacy. The degree of acceptance from the mass base typically determines
the level of support that can be garnered from them. Additionally, few
insurgencies or terrorist campaigns succeed without some form of external
support from another state or non-state actor.
Internal Support. Internal support provides an insurgency with medical
assistance, supplies, intelligence updates, and training for new recruits.
Traditional lines of communication and supply are not as apparent in IW. Instead
of a flow of supplies from rear areas toward front lines, insurgent organizations
obtain supplies from within the population. The lack of a distinctive logistics tail
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along with the insurgents ability to get by with relatively few supplies when
compared to a conventional force complicates traditional attempts to isolate
insurgents.
The ability to gather and transmit accurate intelligence is a critical
characteristic of a successful IW operation. Well-placed agents functioning
within the local population bolster this intelligence network. As an organization
expands and integrates with a local population, it increases opportunities to
obtain more manpower and supplies critical for recruitment and further
operations. As the insurgents gain more influence within the population their
ideas can expand and penetrate every aspect of a society, making it very difficult
to dismantle or isolate. Because insurgents are often embedded in an existing
government, they have many opportunities to impede and discredit the conduct
of that government. Finally, the existence of a shadow government can challenge
the legitimacy of the established regime by its announced agenda and its
persistence and control of certain areas. Such an organization can also serve as
a conduit for sympathetic external support.
External Support. Access to external resources and sanctuaries
influences the effectiveness of insurgencies. While support from neighboring
states is often evident, such assistance is not limited to these countries.
Countries from outside the region seeking political or economic influence can
also support insurgencies. Insurgencies may turn to transnational criminal
elements for funding or use the internet to create a support network among
NGOs. Ethnic or religious communities in other states may also provide a form of
external support and sanctuary, particularly for transnational insurgencies.
FM 3-24, Counterinsurgency
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Governments can be overthrown in a number of ways. Additionally,
insurgents may seek first to remove or expel an occupying foreign force whether
or not this foreign force is integral to the existing governments capabilities or
acts in lieu of such government. Understanding some of the more common
strategic approaches to insurgency provides a framework for Airmen to aid in the
development of an overall strategy to counter these movements. Insurgent
strategies, or approaches, include, but are not limited to, the following:
Coup detat.
Urban focused.
Coup detat
Coup detat is characterized by the quick and violent overthrow of an
existing government. This approach usually involves a few key leaders and
military members in the existing government. These members make up the
vanguard of the movement remaining highly secretive until the time is ripe for
them to seize power. While this vanguard can often set the conditions for their
operation, they often rely on other events to provide the catalyst for action. The
results of a coup usually become apparent quickly. Either the coup is successful
or the vanguard incorrectly assessed the situation and their level of support
within the government, which quickly puts down the movement. Due to their
secretive nature and small organization, coup members typically do not have
time to rally support if the attempted coup is unsuccessful. Thus, once a coup
begins, the results have largely been predetermined. Coups typically rely on the
support of a large conventional force.
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Vietnamese and Algerians adapted it to fit their respective situations. This type
of insurgency usually progresses through an evolutionary process marked by a
series of phases corresponding to major transitions in the revolutionary
movement. Although insurgencies can take many forms, these phases are
common to many. Mao Zedongs theory of protracted war outlined a three-
phased, politico-military approach including a pre-hostility or incipient phase, a
guerrilla warfare phase, and a conventional confrontation phase.
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warfare is, however, reversible. Reversibility can work to the advantage of either
side in the conflict. If an insurgency fails militarily in one phase, it can revert to a
lower phase, thus securing its survival while generating or reinforcing combat
capabilities. The government, on the other hand, may be able to capitalize on
reduced levels of military activity to focus on solutions aimed at rooting out the
infrastructure and eliminating economic and political grievances that may fuel the
revolution. Therefore, the strategic environment may be defined by multiple
operations, operating at different phases in different areas.
Urban Focused
Urban focused insurgencies may become more prevalent and effective as
societies become more and more urbanized. This strategy uses terrorist tactics
in urban areas to accomplish the organizations goals requiring small cells with
little to no popular support operating among the urban population. Historically,
such activities have not generated much success without wider rural support, but
they remain very difficult to counter. Urban strategies may typically provide
excellent means of conducting tactical operations, but increasing public support
is often difficult.
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Glossary
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GEOINT geospatial intelligence
OA operational assessment
OPCON operational control
OPSEC operations security
OSINT open-source intelligence
PA public affairs
PMESII political, military, economic, social, infrastructure
and informational
PN partner nation
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PNT positioning, navigation, and timing
PR personnel recovery
PSYOP psychological operations
SA security assistance
SC strategic communication
SIGINT signals intelligence
SOF special operations forces
UA unmanned aircraft
UAR unconventional assisted recovery
U.S.C. United States Code
USSOCOM United States Special Operations Command
UW unconventional warfare
Definitions
administrative control. Direction or exercise of authority over subordinate or
other organizations in respect to administration and support, including
organization of Service forces, control of resources and equipment, personnel
management, unit logistics, individual and unit training, readiness, mobilization,
demobilization, discipline, and other matters not included in the operational
missions of the subordinate or other organizations. Also called ADCON. (JP 1-
02)
air and space power. The synergistic application of air, space, and information
systems to project global strategic military power. (AFDD 1)
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center of gravity. The source of power that provides moral or physical strength,
freedom of action, or will to act. Also called COG. (JP 1-02)
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insurgent. Member of a political party who rebels against established
leadership. (JP 1-02)
irregular forces. Armed individuals or groups who are not members of the
regular armed forces, police, or other internal security forces. (JP 1-02)
irregular warfare. A violent struggle among state and non-state actors for
legitimacy and influence over the relevant populations. (JP 1, page I-1;
AFDD 2-3)
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the pursuit of goals that are generally political, religious, or ideological. (JP 1-02)
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