Counterinsurgency
Efforts Leave
Al Qaeda 'Off Balance' in Iraq
By William
Selby
AFPS
Al Qaeda
terrorists and other Iraqi insurgents are "off
balance" in Iraq, an Army counterinsurgency
expert said. In a teleconference with online journalists and bloggers,
Army Col. Daniel S. Roper, director of the U.S. Army and Marine Corps Counterinsurgency
Center at Fort Leavenworth, Kan., said he welcomed the opportunity to explain
that counterinsurgency isn't just a military strategy.
"It
is not just done by soldiers and Marines," he said. "Counterinsurgency
is part of a broader effort and, therefore, we think it's
extremely important to have opportunities like this to discuss
counterinsurgency,
so maybe we reach some audiences that may believe this is just
a military operation."
Roper said coalition forces need to follow six lines of effort
to be successful fighting insurgents:
Roper, one
of the Army's top
counterinsurgency experts, recently made two trips to Iraq
to assess the situation
on the ground.
"In
August and September, I was over in Iraq, primarily looking
at operational level integration, meaning
looking at different headquarters that have some responsibility
with respect to the counterinsurgency effort," he
said. "When I went back in the months of October
and November, the focus was more on the tactical application
of the counterinsurgency."
Al Qaeda is now off balance due to the implementation of the
counterinsurgency initiatives and the surge of troops, Roper
said.
"There
was a noticeable, marked increase in momentum in coalition
operations across the force," Roper
said. "And it was due partially to the increase
in forces that were on the ground." Iraqi security
forces and local citizens stepping up to fight terrorism and
secure their neighborhoods also contributed to the shift in
momentum, he added.
"The
general Iraqi population was tired of the guys that would come
into the neighborhood and cause bad
things to happen," he said. "They
knew they couldn't trust them."
The bottom line, he said, is that collectively, coalition forces,
Iraqi security forces and concerned local citizens were working
together to secure Iraq.
While he was in Iraq, Roper said, the most astonishing development
he noticed was how increasingly focused on success coalition
forces were.
"They
weren't saying 'winning';
they were saying 'succeeding', because
ultimately, winning or losing is a political decision of all
parties involved," he explained.
Roper said he also was impressed with how junior leaders would
go from one end of the operation spectrum to the other, depending
on the needs and requirements of the mission.
"Guys
who had been kicking in doors a month prior to me getting in
their particular neighborhood were describing
how they had evolved to get into the soft-knock scenario, and
spent more time passing out candy and playing with the kids
in the street than they did firing their weapons," Roper
said.
While the military part of the counterinsurgency effort is helping
to bring about progress, more needs to happen in other aspects,
the colonel said.
"The
full integration of all elements of our national power and
our capability hasn't
made its way to the ground to the degree that's
necessary to fight and succeed, in a sustained manner, a comprehensive
(counterinsurgency) operation," Roper said.