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Low-intensity conflict
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A low-intensity conflict (LIC) is a military conflict, usually localised, between two or more state or non-state groups which is below the intensity of conventional war. It involves the state's use of military forces applied selectively and with restraint to enforce compliance with its policies or objectives.
The term can be used to describe conflicts where at least one or both of the opposing parties operate along such lines.
Official definitions
[edit]United States
[edit]Low-intensity conflict is defined by the United States Army as:
... a political-military confrontation between contending states or groups below conventional war and above the routine, peaceful competition among states. It frequently involves protracted struggles of competing principles and ideologies. Low-intensity conflict ranges from subversion to the use of the armed forces. It is waged by a combination of means, employing political, economic, informational, and military instruments. Low-intensity conflicts are often localized, generally in the Third World, but contain regional and global security implications.[3]
The manual also says:
... successful LIC operations, consistent with US interests and laws, can advance US international goals such as the growth of freedom, democratic institutions, and free market economies. ... US policy recognizes that indirect, rather than direct, applications of US military power are the most appropriate and cost-effective ways to achieve national goals in a LIC environment. The principal US military instrument in LIC is security assistance in the form of training, equipment, services and combat support. When LIC threatens friends and allies, the aim of security assistance is to ensure that their military institutions can provide security for their citizens and government. ... The United States will also employ combat operations in exceptional circumstances when it cannot protect its national interests by other means. When a US response is called for, it must be in accordance with the principles of international and domestic law. These principles affirm the inherent right of states to use force in individual or collective self-defense against armed attack.[3]
Relations with terrorism
[edit]Boaz Ganor notes that scholars once labeled terrorism as "low-intensity warfare." However, this terminology has become obsolete due to the intricate nature of multidimensional warfare and the mass impact of contemporary terrorist attacks, such as the September 11 attacks.[4]
Implementation
[edit]This section possibly contains original research. (June 2011) |
Weapons
[edit]As the name suggests, in comparison with conventional operations the armed forces involved operate at a greatly reduced tempo, with fewer soldiers, a reduced range of tactical equipment and limited scope to operate in a military manner. For example, the use of air power, pivotal in modern warfare, is often relegated to transport and surveillance, or used only by the dominant side of conflict in asymmetric warfare such as a government forces against insurgents. Artillery and multiple rocket launchers are often not used when LIC occurs in populated areas. The role of the armed forces is dependent on the stage of the insurrection, whether it has progressed to armed struggle or is in an early stage of propaganda and protests. Improvised explosive devices are commonly used by insurgents, militias and sometimes government forces such as barrel bombs[5] in low intensity conflicts.[6][7][8][9] The majority of casualties in low intensity conflicts tend to be resulting from small arms and improvised explosive devices.[8]
Intelligence
[edit]Intelligence gathering is essential to an efficient basis of LIC operation instructions. Electronic and signal gathering intelligence, ELINT and SIGINT, proves largely ineffective against low-intensity opponents. LIC generally requires more hands-on HUMINT methods of information retrieval.
Stages
[edit]In the first stages of insurrection, much of an army's work is "soft" – working in conjunction with civil authorities in psychological operations, propaganda, counter-organizing, so-called "hearts and minds." If the conflict progresses, possibly into armed clashes, the role develops with the addition of the identification and removal of the armed groups – but again, at a low level, in communities rather than throughout entire cities.
Examples
[edit]This section includes a list of references, related reading, or external links, but its sources remain unclear because it lacks inline citations. (November 2012) |
Burma
[edit]Myanmar (Burma) has regularly conducted limited low-intensity military campaigns against the independence movement of the Karen people in an area of southeast Burma (roughly corresponding to a Burmese administrative region called the Kayin State), which has actively pursued independence since January 1949. While allegedly limited and low-intensity in that the territories occupied in force by central government forces are returned (as they cannot be held permanently as yet) at the end of the offensives (with the stated, but sometimes unstated, purpose of weakening the opposition and independence movements), human rights organizations and national governments outside of Burma question the veracity of, and sometimes outright refute, these claims.
Sudan
[edit]The governments of Sudan have also engaged in limited military offensives (analogous to Burma's "annual dry season offensives") against various armed opposition and independence movements, which have often escalated into full-scale warfare, particularly in the south and Darfur, but also until recently in the east. These military actions (First Sudanese Civil War and Second Sudanese Civil War) have, over time, continued to ravage the areas in dispute and contribute greatly to the poor conditions in those regions as well as the various human rights violations that have occurred (and in some cases are still occurring) there.
German occupation of France
[edit]German occupation of Western Europe during World War II, notably the occupation of France, shared many aspects with more recent cases of LIC, such as the "Hearts and minds" stage early on, establishment of puppet governments, strong propaganda aimed at isolating resistance movements, and support to domestic friendly forces (such as the Milice in France).
German occupation of Poland
[edit]In Poland from 1939 to 1945 there was a strong partisan movement. Partisan forces (mainly AK and BCh organizations), although less numerous than the German army, organized a strong resistance movement; in the years 1941-44 a successful action was carried out against the expulsion of Poles from the Zamość region. Besides, the "Polish underground" destroyed hundreds of German transports of military supplies throughout the war. In Poland there was also a secret order and many non-military resistance organizations like "Zegota" which helped thousands of Jews save their lives. When the Red Army entered Poland in 1944, the Poles wanted to support them in the fight against the Germans, but the Soviets betrayed them, even though during Operation Tempest, the partisans significantly accelerated the Russian attack, the Russians arrested or killed thousands of members of the Polish Underground State, nor did the Soviets also help support the Warsaw Uprising. In total, throughout the war, hundreds of thousands of people (up to 700,000) served in the ranks of the Polish underground, and even every sixth Pole helped polish partizants but partizantes did not have more than 50,000 firearms.
Northern Ireland
[edit]The conflict, known as The Troubles, was a sectarian and ethno-nationalistic conflict, fuelled by historical events and longstanding oppression by the UK's military and security services. By the mid-1960s, the Northern Ireland civil rights movement began organizing Irish Catholics to protest, among other factors, disenfranchisement, abuses of power such as discrimination in the housing and job markets perpetuated by the ruling governments in the United Kingdom and its devolved subsidiary, known as Stormont. When these peaceful protests were met with brutal attacks by both the police and loyalist gangs given free rein to attack these protesters. On its face, it had a religious dimension although despite use of the terms 'Protestant' and 'Catholic' to refer to the two warring sides, it was not a religious conflict. For most, these were mostly just terms of identity. A key issue was the status of Northern Ireland. Unionists and loyalists, who descended from colonists who arrived during the Ulster Plantation, displacing all but a handful of native clans and farmers, were Ulster Protestants and wanted Northern Ireland to remain within the United Kingdom. Irish nationalists and republicans, who were mostly Irish Catholics, wanted to end the Partition of Ireland, leave the United Kingdom and reunite with the 26 counties that had formed the Republic of Ireland following partition.[10]
The main participants in the Troubles were republican paramilitaries such as the Provisional Irish Republican Army (IRA) and the Irish National Liberation Army (INLA); loyalist paramilitaries such as the Ulster Volunteer Force (UVF) and Ulster Defence Association (UDA); British state security forces such as the British Army, Royal Ulster Constabulary (RUC), Ulster Defense Regiment, MI5, and lesser known groups like the Force Research Unit; and political activists. The security forces of the Republic of Ireland played a smaller role. Republicans carried out a guerrilla campaign against British forces as well as a bombing campaign against infrastructural, commercial and political targets. Loyalists attacked occasionally republicans/nationalists, but focused primarily on the wider Catholic community in what they described as retaliation. At times, there were bouts of sectarian tit-for-tat violence, as well as feuds within and between paramilitary groups. The British security forces undertook policing and counter-insurgency, primarily against suspected republicans. This included the internment without trial of anyone accused of being, or supporting, Republicans. Investigations also revealed significant collusion between British state forces and loyalist paramilitaries, and furthermore loyalist paramilitaries such as the Glenanne gang included serving members of the Ulster Defense Regiment and Royal Ulster Constabulary.[11]
Guerrilla warfare
[edit]Low-intensity warfare's main opponent is the guerrilla, or irregular fighter. This opponent may be state sponsored, or private non-state actors driven by religious or other ideology in urban, semi-urban and rural areas. Modern guerrilla warfare at its fullest elaboration is an integrated process, complete with sophisticated doctrine, organization, specialist skills and propaganda capabilities. Guerrillas can operate as small, scattered bands of raiders, but they can also work side by side with regular forces or combine for far-ranging mobile operations in squad, platoon or battalion sizes or even form conventional units. Based on their level of sophistication and organization, they can shift between all those modes as the situation demands, as guerrilla warfare is flexible, not static.
Guerrilla tactics are based on intelligence, ambush, deception, sabotage, and espionage, undermining an authority by long, low-intensity confrontation. It can be quite successful against an unpopular foreign or local regime, as demonstrated by the Vietnam War. A guerrilla army may increase the cost of maintaining an occupation or a colonial presence above what the foreign power may wish to bear. Against a local regime, guerrillas may make governance impossible by terror strikes and sabotage or even a combination of forces to depose their local enemies in conventional battle. Those tactics are useful in demoralizing an enemy and raising the morale of the guerrillas. In many cases, guerrilla tactics allow a small force to hold off a much larger and better equipped enemy for a long time, as in Russia's Second Chechen War and the Second Seminole War fought in the swamps of Florida, United States. Guerrilla tactics and strategy are summarized below and are discussed extensively in standard reference works such as Mao's On Guerrilla Warfare.[12]
Three-phase Maoist model
[edit]Mao/Giap approach
[edit]Mao's theory of people's war divides warfare into three phases. In the first phase, the guerrillas gain the support of the population by attacking the machinery of government and distributing propaganda. In the second phase, escalating attacks are made on the government's military and vital institutions. In the third phase, conventional fighting is used to seize cities, overthrow the government, and take control of the country. Mao's seminal work On Guerrilla Warfare,[12] has been widely distributed and applied, nowhere more successfully than in Vietnam, under the military leader and theorist Võ Nguyên Giáp. Giap's People's War, People's Army[13] closely followed the Maoist three-stage approach but with greater emphasis on flexible shifting between mobile and guerrilla warfare, and opportunities for a spontaneous "general uprising" of the masses, in conjunction with guerrilla forces.
Organization
[edit]

Guerrilla organization can range from small local rebel groups with a few dozen participants to tens of thousands of fighters, deploying from tiny cells to formations of regimental strength. In most cases, there is a leadership aiming for a clear political objective. The organization is typically structured into political and military wings, sometimes allowing the political leadership plausible deniability of military attacks.[14] The most fully elaborated guerrilla warfare structure was seen by the Chinese and Vietnamese communists during the revolutionary wars of East and Southeast Asia.[15]
A simplified example of this more sophisticated organizational type, which was used by revolutionary forces during the Vietnam War, is shown below.
Types of operations
[edit]Guerrilla operations typically include a variety of attacks on transportation routes, individual groups of police or military, installations and structures, economic enterprises, and targeted civilians. Attacking in small groups and using camouflage and often captured weapons of that enemy, the guerrilla force can constantly keep pressure on its foes and diminish its numbers and still allow escape with relatively few casualties. The intention of such attacks is only military but also political in aiming to demoralize target populations or governments or by goading an overreaction that forces the population to take sides for or against the guerrillas. Examples range from chopping off limbs in various internal African rebellions to the suicide bombings of Palestine and Sri Lanka to sophisticated maneuvers by Viet Cong and NVA forces against military bases and formations.
Surprise and intelligence
[edit]
For successful operations, surprise must be achieved by guerrillas. If the operation has been betrayed or compromised, it is usually called off immediately. Intelligence is also extremely important, and detailed knowledge of the target's dispositions, weaponry, and morale is gathered before any attack. Intelligence can be harvested in several ways. Collaborators and sympathizers usually provide a steady flow of useful information. If working clandestinely, guerrilla operatives may disguise their membership in the insurgent operation and use deception to ferret out needed data. Employment or enrollment as a student may be undertaken near the target zone, community organizations may be infiltrated, and even romantic relationships struck up in intelligence gathering.[15] Public sources of information are also invaluable to the guerrilla, from the flight schedules of targeted airlines, to public announcements of visiting foreign dignitaries, to US Army Field Manuals. Modern computer access via the World Wide Web makes harvesting and collation of such data relatively easy.[16] The use of on the spot reconnaissance is integral to operational planning. Operatives will "case" or analyze a location or potential target in depth- cataloging routes of entry and exit, building structures, the location of phones and communication lines, the presence of security personnel, and a myriad of other factors. Finally, intelligence is concerned with political factors such as the occurrence of an election or the impact of the potential operation on civilian and enemy morale.
Relationships with the civil population
[edit]Relationships with civil populations are influenced by whether the guerrillas operate among a hostile or friendly population. A friendly population is of immense importance to guerrillas, providing shelter, supplies, financing, intelligence, and recruits. The "base of the people" is thus the key lifeline of the guerrilla movement. In the early stages of the Vietnam War, American officials "discovered that several thousand supposedly government-controlled 'fortified hamlets' were in fact controlled by Viet Cong guerrillas, who 'often used them for supply and rest havens.'"[17] Popular mass support in a confined local area or country, however, is not always strictly necessary. Guerrilla and revolutionary groups can still operate by using the protection of a friendly regime, drawing supplies, weapons, intelligence, local security, and diplomatic cover. The Al Qaeda organization is an example of the latter type, drawing sympathizers and support primarily from the wide-ranging Muslim world, even after American attacks eliminated the umbrella of a friendly Taliban regime in Afghanistan.[citation needed]
An apathetic or hostile population makes life difficult for guerrillas, and strenuous attempts are usually made to gain their support. They may involve not only persuasion but also a calculated policy of intimidation. Guerrilla forces may characterize a variety of operations as a liberation struggle, but that may or may not result in sufficient support from affected civilians. Other factors, including ethnic and religious hatreds, can make a simple national liberation claim untenable. Whatever the exact mix of persuasion or coercion used by guerrillas, relationships with civil populations are one of the most important factors in their success or failure.[18]
Use of terror
[edit]Terror is used to focus international attention on the guerrilla cause, liquidate opposition leaders, extort cash from targets, intimidate the general population, create economic losses, and keep followers and potential defectors in line. The widespread use of terror by guerrillas and their opponents is a common feature of modern guerrilla conflicts, with civilians attempting to mollify both sides. At times, a civil population may be the main targets of guerrilla attacks, as in Palestinian operations against Israeli civilians. Such tactics may backfire and cause the civil population to withdraw its support or to back countervailing forces against the guerrillas.[14]
Withdrawal
[edit]Guerrillas must plan carefully for withdrawal once an operation has been completed or if it is going badly. The withdrawal phase is sometimes regarded as the most important part of a planned action, as getting entangled in a lengthy struggle with superior forces is usually fatal to insurgent, terrorist or revolutionary operatives. Withdrawal is usually accomplished using a variety of different routes and methods and may include quickly the scouring of the area for loose weapons, the cleaning-up of evidence, and the disguising as peaceful civilians.[12] In the case of suicide operations, withdrawal considerations by successful attackers are moot, but such activity as eliminating traces of evidence and hiding materials and supplies must still be done.
Logistics
[edit]Guerrillas typically operate with a smaller logistical footprint than to conventional formations, but their logistical activities can be elaborately organized. A primary consideration is to avoid depending on fixed bases and depots, which are comparatively easy for conventional units to locate and destroy. Mobility and speed are the keys; wherever possible, the guerrilla must live off the land or draw support from the civil population in which it is embedded. In that sense, "the people" become the guerrilla's supply base.[12] The financing of terrorist or guerrilla activities ranges from direct individual contributions (voluntary or non-voluntary) to the actual operation of business enterprises by insurgent operatives to bank robberies and kidnappings to the complex financial networks that are based on kin, ethnic and religious affiliation used by modern jihadist/jihad organizations.
Permanent and semi-permanent bases form part of the guerrilla logistical structure, which are usually located in remote areas or in cross-border sanctuaries that are sheltered by friendly regimes.[12][15] They can be quite elaborate, such as in the tough VC/NVA fortified base camps and tunnel complexes encountered by US forces during the Vietnam War. Their importance can be seen by the hard fighting sometimes engaged in by communist forces to protect those sites. However, when it became clear that defense was untenable, communist units typically withdrew without sentiment.
Terrain
[edit]Guerrilla warfare is often associated with a rural setting, which was indeed the case with the definitive operations of Mao and Giap, and the mujahideen of Afghanistan. Guerrillas, however, have successfully operated in urban settings, such as in Argentina and Cyprus. In both cases, guerrillas rely on a friendly population to provide supplies and intelligence. Rural guerrillas prefer to operate in regions providing plenty of cover and concealment, especially heavily forested and mountainous areas. Urban guerrillas, rather than melting into the mountains and forests, blend into the population and also depend on a support base among the people. Rooting guerrillas out of both types of areas can be difficult.
Foreign support and sanctuaries
[edit]Foreign support in the form of soldiers, weapons, sanctuary, or statements of sympathy for guerrillas is not strictly necessary, but it can greatly increase the chances of an insurgent victory.[15] Foreign diplomatic support may bring the guerrilla cause to international attention, putting pressure on local opponents to make concessions or garnering sympathetic support and material assistance. Foreign sanctuaries can add heavily to guerrilla chances, furnishing weapons, supplies, materials, and training bases. Such shelter can benefit from international law, particularly if the sponsoring regime is successful in concealing its support and in claiming plausible deniability for attacks that are by operatives based in its territory.
The VC and NVA made extensive use of such international sanctuaries during their conflict, and the complex of trails, way-stations and bases snaking through Laos and Cambodia (the famous Ho Chi Minh Trail) was the logistical lifeline that sustained their forces in South Vietnam. Another case in point is the Mukti Bahini guerrillas, who fought alongside the Indian Army in the 14-day Bangladesh Liberation War in 1971 against Pakistan, which led to the independence of Bangladesh. In the post-Vietnam era, al-Qaeda also made effective use of remote territories, such as Afghanistan under the Taliban regime, to plan and execute its operations. That foreign sanctuary eventually broke down with American attacks against the Taliban and al-Qaeda after the September 11 attacks.
Guerrilla initiative and combat intensity
[edit]Since they can choose when and where to strike, guerrillas usually have the tactical initiative and the element of surprise. The planning for an operation may take weeks, months, or even years with a constant series of cancelations and restarts, as the situation changes.[15] Careful rehearsals and "dry runs" are usually conducted to work out problems and details. Many guerrilla strikes are not undertaken unless clear numerical superiority can be achieved in the target area, a pattern typical of VC/NVA and other "people's war" operations. Individual suicide bomb attacks offer another pattern, typically involving only the individual bomber and his support team, but they too are spread or metered out based on prevailing capabilities and political winds.
Whatever approach is used, the guerrilla holds the initiative and can prolong his survival by varying the intensity of combat. Attacks are spread out over quite a range of time, from weeks to years. During the interim periods, the guerrilla can rebuild, resupply, and plan. During the Vietnam War, most communist units, including mobile NVA regulars using guerrilla tactics, spent only a few days per month fighting. While they might be forced into an unwanted battle by an enemy sweep, most of the time was spent in training, intelligence gathering, political and civic infiltration, propaganda indoctrination, construction of fortifications, or foraging for supplies and food.[15] The large numbers of such groups striking at different times, however, gave the war its "around-the-clock" quality.
Low-intensity counter operations or counter-guerrilla warfare
[edit]
Principles
[edit]The low-intensity fighter or guerrilla can be difficult to beat, but certain principles of counter-insurgency warfare are well known since the 1950s and 1960s and have been successfully applied.
Classic guidelines
[edit]
The widely distributed and influential work of Sir Robert Thompson, counter-insurgency expert in Malaysia, offers several such guidelines. Thompson's underlying assumption is that of a country minimally committed to the rule of law and better governance. Numerous other regimes, however, give such considerations short shrift, and their counterguerrilla operations have involved mass murder, genocide, starvation as well as the massive spread of terror, torture and execution. The totalitarian regimes of Stalin and Hitler are classic examples, as are the lesser but comparable measures of dictatorships fighting "dirty wars" in South America. Elements of Thompson's moderate approach are adapted here:[18]
- A viable competing vision that comprehensively mobilizes popular support. There must be a clear political counter-vision, which can overshadow, match, or neutralize the guerrilla vision. That can range from granting political autonomy to economic development measures in the affected region. The vision must be integrated approach, involving political, social, and economic and media influence measures.
- Reasonable concessions where necessary. Action also must be taken at a lower level to resolve legitimate grievances. It may be tempting for the counter-insurgent side simply to declare guerrillas "terrorists" and to pursue a harsh liquidation strategy. Brute force, however, may not be successful in the long run. Action does not mean capitulation, but sincere steps, such as removing corrupt or arbitrary officials, cleaning up fraud, or collecting taxes honestly can do much to undermine the guerrillas' appeal.
- Economy of force. The counter-insurgent regime must not overreact to guerrilla provocations, which may indeed be what the guerrilla seeks to create a crisis in the civilian morale. Police level actions should guide the effort and take place in a clear framework of legality, even if under a state of emergency. Civil liberties and other customs of peacetime may have to be suspended, but again, the counter-insurgent regime must exercise restraint and cleave to orderly procedures. Clear steps must be taken to curb brutality and retaliation by the security or "freelance" forces.
- Big unit action may sometimes be necessary. If police action is not sufficient to stop insurgents, military sweeps may be necessary. Such "big battalion" operations may be needed to break up significant guerrilla concentrations and split them into small groups that can be controlled by combined civic-military action.
- Mobility. Mobility and aggressive small unit action is extremely important for the counter-insurgent regime. Heavy formations must be lightened to aggressively locate, pursue, and fix insurgent units. Huddling in static strongpoints simply concedes the field to the insurgents, who must be kept on the run constantly by aggressive patrols, raids, ambushes, sweeps, cordons, etc.
- Systematic intelligence effort. Every effort must be made to gather and organize useful intelligence. A systematic process must be set up to do so, ranging from casual questioning of civilians to structured interrogations of prisoners. Creative measures must also be used, including the use of double agents or even bogus "liberation" or sympathizer groups to help reveal insurgent personnel or operations.
- Methodical clear and hold. An "ink spot" clear and hold strategy must be used by the counter-insurgent regime, which divides the conflict area into sectors and assigns priorities between them. Control must expand outward like an ink spot on paper, systematically neutralizing and eliminating the insurgents in one sector of the grid, before proceeding to the next. It may be necessary to pursue holding or defensive actions elsewhere while priority areas are cleared and held.
- Careful deployment of mass popular forces and special units. Specialist units can be used profitably, including commando squads, long range reconnaissance, "hunter-killer" patrols, defectors who can track or persuade their former colleagues like the Kit Carson units in Vietnam, and paramilitary style groups. Strict control must be kept over specialist units to prevent the emergence of violent vigilante-style reprisal squads that undermine the government's program. Mass forces include village self-defence groups and citizen militias organized for local defence and security.
- Foreign assistance must be limited and carefully used. Such aid should be limited to material and technical support and small cadres of specialists. Unless that is done, the foreign helper may find itself "taking over" the local war and being sucked into a lengthy commitment, thus providing the guerrillas with valuable propaganda opportunities. Such a scenario occurred with the United States in Vietnam.[18]
Low-intensity operations
[edit]Low-intensity operations consist of the deployment and use of soldiers in situations other than war. For states, these operations are usually conducted against non-state actors and are given terms like counter-insurgency, anti-subversion, and peacekeeping.[19] Violent non-state actors often conduct low-intensity operations against states, often in insurgencies.
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Blank, Stephen (1991). Responding to Low-Intensity Conflict Challenges. Montgomery: Air University Press. pp. 223–236. ISBN 978-0160293320.
- ^ Steenkamp, Willem (1983). Borderstrike! South Africa into Angola. Durban: Butterworths Publishers. pp. 6–11. ISBN 0-409-10062-5.
- ^ a b United States Department of the Army (5 December 1990), Field Manual 100-20: Military Operations in Low0Intensity Conflict, GlobalSecurity.org
- ^ Ganor, Boaz (2015). Global Alert: The Rationality of Modern Islamist Terrorism and the Challenge to the Liberal Democratic World. Columbia University Press. p. 4. doi:10.7312/gano17212.5.
- ^ "Assad 'dropped 13,000 illegal barrel bombs on Syria in 2016', watchdog says". Independent.co.uk. 11 January 2017.
- ^ Smith, Andrew (May 2011). Improvised Explosive Devices in Iraq, 2003–09: A Case of Operational Surprise and Institutional Response. Lulu.com. ISBN 9781257785186.
- ^ Dheer, Ajay; Jaiprakash; Sharma, HK; Singh, Jasdeep (2003). "Evolving Medical Strategies for Low Intensity Conflicts – A Necessity". Medical Journal Armed Forces India. 59 (2): 96–9. doi:10.1016/S0377-1237(03)80047-3. PMC 4923775. PMID 27407476.
- ^ a b Saraswat, V (2009). "Injury patterns in low intensity conflict". Indian Journal of Anaesthesia. 53 (6): 672–7. PMC 2900077. PMID 20640095.
- ^ Barzilai, L; Harats, M; Wiser, I; Weissman, O; Domniz, N; Glassberg, E; Stavrou, D; Zilinsky, I; Winkler, E; Hiak, J (2015). "Characteristics of Improvised Explosive Device Trauma Casualties in the Gaza Strip and Other Combat Regions: The Israeli Experience". Wounds. 27 (8): 209–14. PMID 26284374.
- ^ "CAIN: Conflict in Northern Ireland: A Background Essay".
- ^ "CAIN: Key Events of the Northern Ireland Conflict".
- ^ a b c d e Mao, op. cit.[full citation needed]
- ^ People's War, People's Army, Võ Nguyên Giáp
- ^ a b "Insurgency & Terrorism: Inside Modern Revolutionary Warfare", Bard E. O'Neill[full citation needed]
- ^ a b c d e f Inside the VC and the NVA, Michael Lee Lanning and Dan Cragg[full citation needed]
- ^ Coll, Steve; Glasser, Susan B. (7 August 2005). "Terrorists Turn to the Web as Base of Operations" – via www.washingtonpost.com.
- ^ Encyclopædia Britannica, 14ed, "guerrilla Warfare" pp. 460–464
- ^ a b c "Defeating Communist Insurgency: The Lessons of Malaya and Vietnam", Robert Thompson[full citation needed]
- ^ G.V. Brandolini (2002). Low-intensity conflicts. CRF Press, Bergamo, 16 p.
Further reading
[edit]- Asprey, Robert. War in the Shadows, ISBN 0-595-22593-4
- British Army (ed.). Land Operations, Volume III, Counter Revolutionary Operations, 1969.
- Buffaloe, David. Conventional Forces in Low-Intensity Conflict: The 82nd Airborne at Firebase Shkin, Afghanistan [1], October 2004.
- Hammes, Thomas X.. The Sling and the Stone, Zenith Press, 2004. ISBN 0-7603-2059-4
- Mikulaschek, Christoph, Saurabh Pant, and Beza Tesfaye. 2020. "Winning Hearts and Minds in a Civil War: Governance, Leadership Change, and Support for Violent Groups in Iraq", American Journal of Political Science. doi:10.1111/ajps.12527.
- van Creveld, Martin. The Transformation of War. The Free Press, 1991. ISBN 0-02-933155-2
External links
[edit]Low-intensity conflict
View on GrokipediaDefinitions and Conceptual Framework
Core Definition and Spectrum of Intensity
Low-intensity conflict (LIC) refers to a political-military confrontation between states or between a state and non-state actors that falls below the threshold of conventional warfare, characterized by protracted struggles employing a mix of political, economic, informational, and military means, ranging from subversion to the limited use of armed force.[1] This form of conflict prioritizes achieving long-term political objectives through indirect or asymmetric methods rather than decisive battlefield engagements, often involving small-scale operations with minimal commitment of regular forces to avoid escalation.[3] U.S. military doctrine, as outlined in Field Manual 100-20 (1990), emphasizes that LIC demands integrated civil-military responses, where military actions support broader diplomatic and developmental efforts to undermine adversary cohesion without provoking full-scale war.[1] Within the broader spectrum of conflict intensity—which spans from peacetime competition through major theater wars—LIC occupies the lower to mid-range, distinguished by its controlled levels of violence, ambiguity of actors, and emphasis on endurance over rapid victory.[4] At the lower end, it manifests as non-kinetic activities like propaganda, economic sabotage, or covert support for insurgent groups, escalating potentially to guerrilla tactics, terrorism, or limited raids that employ irregular forces and exploit terrain for hit-and-run operations.[1] Higher intensities within LIC may involve peacekeeping missions or counterinsurgency campaigns with deployed special operations forces, but these remain calibrated to prevent spillover into high-intensity conventional battles involving massed armor, air superiority campaigns, or nuclear threats.[8] Empirical data from Cold War-era engagements, such as U.S. advisory roles in Vietnam (1960s) or Soviet interventions in Afghanistan (1979–1989), illustrate how LIC sustains attrition through resource asymmetry, with participating states committing fewer than 10,000 troops in many cases to maintain deniability and domestic political viability.[5] The spectrum's fluidity arises from its adaptive nature: actors can intensify or de-escalate based on operational success, as seen in the U.S. shift from advisory support to direct combat in Vietnam, which blurred LIC boundaries and contributed to over 58,000 American fatalities by 1975.[4] Doctrinal analyses note that LIC's intensity is measured not just by casualty rates—often under 100 per month in sustained phases—but by its psychological and societal impacts, aiming to erode legitimacy through persistent low-level threats rather than territorial conquest.[9] This positions LIC as a persistent feature of modern geopolitics, where non-state actors leverage globalization for hybrid tactics, contrasting sharply with the high-intensity focus of post-1991 U.S. military transformations that prioritized peer competitors over protracted irregular warfare.[5]Distinctions from Conventional Warfare and Terrorism
Low-intensity conflict (LIC) is characterized by political-military confrontations between states or groups that fall below the threshold of conventional warfare but exceed routine peacetime competition, emphasizing protracted indirect approaches over decisive engagements.[1] Unlike conventional warfare, which relies on massed regular forces, heavy weaponry, and large-scale maneuvers to achieve rapid, battlefield-determined outcomes across defined fronts, LIC employs irregular forces, limited combat, and integrated non-military instruments such as economic aid, propaganda, and civic action to erode adversary resolve over extended periods.[3] This distinction arises more from qualitative differences in strategy and execution—favoring adaptability, minimal resource commitment, and political subversion—than mere quantitative reductions in force size or violence levels.[3] For instance, U.S. doctrine in FM 100-20 (1990) highlights that LIC avoids the direct, high-casualty clashes typical of conventional operations, instead prioritizing sustainability and host-nation capacity-building to prevent escalation.[3] In contrast to terrorism, which primarily weaponizes fear through targeted, often indiscriminate violence against non-combatants to coerce political change via psychological disruption, LIC involves structured, sustained campaigns by organized groups integrating guerrilla tactics with efforts to secure territorial control and popular legitimacy.[10] While terrorism functions as an episodic tactic to amplify propaganda or punish perceived enemies—exemplified by isolated bombings or hijackings—LIC manifests as a broader spectrum of insurgency or counterinsurgency, where military actions support long-term objectives like governance reform or resource denial, often without relying on civilian victimization as the core mechanism.[8] Doctrinal frameworks, such as those in U.S. Air Force analyses, underscore that LIC demands comprehensive interagency responses beyond reactive counterterrorism measures, focusing on disrupting insurgent infrastructure and fostering stability rather than solely neutralizing terrorist cells.[8] This separation is evident in operations like U.S. support during the Cold War-era Salvadoran conflict (1981–1992), where LIC integrated advisory roles and development assistance against FMLN insurgents, distinct from pure antiterrorist raids.[8]| Aspect | Conventional Warfare | Low-Intensity Conflict | Terrorism |
|---|---|---|---|
| Primary Forces | Regular armies with heavy equipment | Irregular/guerrilla units, special operations | Clandestine cells or lone actors |
| Engagement Style | Decisive battles, front lines | Protracted attrition, ambushes, subversion | Episodic strikes for shock value |
| Targets | Military assets for territorial gains | Military/political nodes plus population influence | Civilians for psychological coercion |
| Duration/Objective | Short-term victory | Long-term political erosion | Immediate fear induction, propaganda |
| Resource Commitment | High (mass mobilization) | Low (sustainable, proxy involvement) | Minimal (asymmetric, deniable) |
Official Doctrinal Perspectives
The United States military formalized low-intensity conflict (LIC) in joint Army-Air Force doctrine through Field Manual 100-20/Air Force Pamphlet 3-20, published in 1989, defining it as "a political-military confrontation between contending states or groups below conventional war and above the routine, peaceful competition among states," often protracted and involving subversion, insurgency, terrorism, drug interdiction, and guerrilla actions.[1] [3] This perspective emphasized that LIC is inherently political, requiring the synchronized application of diplomatic, economic, informational, and military instruments of national power, with military operations supporting broader political objectives rather than seeking decisive battlefield victory.[2] Doctrinally, success hinged on host-nation leadership, interagency coordination among U.S. departments, and multinational cooperation, as unilateral combat commitments were viewed as high-risk without local legitimacy.[3] Field Manual 7-98, issued by the U.S. Army in January 1992, provided tactical-level guidance for brigade and battalion operations in LIC environments, underscoring combined arms integration tailored to irregular threats like insurgencies.[13] It portrayed LIC as dominated by political factors, where military forces must prioritize population security, intelligence-driven targeting, and civic actions to undermine insurgent support, rather than attritional engagements.[14] The manual advocated for operations under host-nation command, with U.S. units focusing on advisory roles, training indigenous forces, and precision strikes to minimize civilian disruption, reflecting empirical lessons from prior engagements where force-heavy approaches alienated locals and prolonged conflicts.[13] These doctrines positioned LIC within a spectrum requiring adaptability, with principles such as unity of effort across agencies, restraint in firepower to preserve legitimacy, and long-term commitment to counter ideological and subversive elements.[1] They explicitly rejected viewing LIC as mere "small wars," instead framing it as a strategic imperative demanding doctrinal evolution beyond conventional warfighting paradigms, informed by post-Vietnam reassessments that highlighted the pitfalls of underestimating non-state actors' resilience.[4]Historical Origins and Evolution
Pre-Cold War Precursors
Irregular warfare tactics resembling modern low-intensity conflict trace back to antiquity, where weaker forces employed hit-and-run ambushes and harassment to counter superior invaders. In 512 BCE, Scythian nomads used such methods against Persian King Darius I, retreating beyond the Danube to deny decisive engagement while inflicting attrition.[15] Similarly, during the Second Punic War in 218 BCE, tribal guerrillas in the Alps disrupted Hannibal's Carthaginian army through opportunistic raids on supply lines and isolated units.[15] The Roman dictator Quintus Fabius Maximus Verrucosus exemplified this approach in 217 BCE by adopting a strategy of attrition—avoiding pitched battles, shadowing enemy movements, and striking at vulnerabilities—which preserved Roman forces against Hannibal's invasions and gave rise to the term "Fabian strategy."[15] Medieval and early modern eras saw continued application of these tactics in asymmetric struggles. In the 13th century, Vietnamese general Tran Hung Dao repelled three Mongol invasions (1258, 1285, 1287–1288) through guerrilla ambushes in swamps and rivers, leveraging terrain to negate the invaders' numerical superiority.[15] During the Hundred Years' War (1337–1453), French commander Bertrand du Guesclin employed Fabian-style delays and skirmishes to wear down English forces, contributing to their eventual expulsion from much of France.[15] Swiss mountaineers in the 14th–15th centuries further demonstrated irregular warfare's efficacy by using crossbow ambushes and mobility against armored knights, as in the Battle of Morgarten (1315). Military theorist Henri de Jomini later classified such operations as "national war," emphasizing popular resistance through irregular means against conventional armies.[15] The 19th century formalized guerrilla concepts amid colonial expansions and national uprisings, with the term "guerrilla" (Spanish for "little war") emerging during the Peninsular War (1808–1814), where Spanish irregulars harassed Napoleon's occupation forces, disrupting logistics and tying down over 300,000 troops.[15] British officer C. E. Callwell's Small Wars: Their Principles and Practice (1896) analyzed these dynamics, drawing from campaigns like the Indian Mutiny (1857–1858), Zulu War (1879), and Sudan expeditions, advocating mobility, punitive raids, and decisive strikes to counter irregular foes' advantages in terrain knowledge and evasion.[16] Callwell stressed that regular armies must seize initiative through flying columns and fortified posts to prevent protracted attrition, as seen in Boer commando tactics during the Second Boer War (1899–1902), where mounted raiders evaded British concentrations until systematic blockhouses and drives shifted momentum.[16] Interwar developments codified these lessons into doctrine. The U.S. Marine Corps' Small Wars Manual (1940, revised from 1930s field experience) outlined operations against insurgents in Central America (e.g., Nicaragua 1927–1933, Haiti 1915–1934), emphasizing intelligence, patrolling, and minimal force to secure populations while avoiding escalation to conventional levels.[17] These pre-Cold War frameworks highlighted low-intensity conflict's reliance on political-military integration, economic disruption of adversaries, and adaptation to non-state actors, setting precedents for later doctrinal evolutions.[16]Cold War Development and U.S. Doctrine
The Cold War era (1947–1991) saw the proliferation of low-intensity conflicts as arenas for superpower proxy struggles, where the United States and Soviet Union avoided direct confrontation by supporting insurgent groups or governments in the Third World. These included U.S.-backed efforts against Soviet-aligned regimes in Afghanistan (1979–1989), where CIA-supplied Stinger missiles to mujahideen forces downed over 270 Soviet aircraft between 1986 and 1989, and in Central America, such as aid to Nicaraguan Contras totaling $100 million by 1984 to counter Sandinista rule. Such engagements emphasized limited military commitments, covert operations, and economic pressure to contain communist expansion without risking nuclear escalation, reflecting a strategic pivot after the 1950–1953 Korean War and 1955–1975 Vietnam War exposed the costs of escalation in asymmetric settings.[18][19] U.S. doctrine for low-intensity conflict (LIC) evolved post-Vietnam to prioritize indirect involvement, special operations, and host-nation capacity-building over large conventional deployments. By 1982, the Army initiated systematic LIC doctrine development, influenced by Reagan administration policies that allocated $1.5 billion annually by the mid-1980s for anti-communist insurgents under the Reagan Doctrine, formalized in National Security Decision Directive 75 (1983). This approach integrated military aid with political and economic tools, as seen in the establishment of the U.S. Southern Command in 1983 to coordinate counterinsurgency in Latin America and training programs at the School of the Americas, which instructed over 64,000 personnel from 1960 to 1990 in anti-guerrilla tactics.[4][20] The capstone document, Field Manual 100-20/Air Force Pamphlet 3-20: Military Operations in Low Intensity Conflict, published December 5, 1990, defined LIC as "a political-military confrontation between contending states or groups below conventional war and above routine peacetime government activities," encompassing counterinsurgency, foreign internal defense, antiterrorism, and support to insurgents. Superseding a 1981 precursor, it stressed synchronized application of diplomatic, economic, and informational power alongside military force, with principles like population-centric security, intelligence dominance, and minimal U.S. footprint to mitigate domestic political risks—lessons drawn empirically from Vietnam's 58,000 U.S. fatalities and Soviet setbacks in Afghanistan. Ethical guidelines addressed ambiguities in distinguishing combatants from civilians, while operational mechanics favored small-unit actions, civil affairs, and psychological operations to erode insurgent support bases.[3][21]Post-Cold War Adaptations and Proliferation
The end of the Cold War in 1991 prompted adaptations in U.S. military doctrine, replacing the framework of low-intensity conflict with "operations other than war" (OOTW) in publications such as the 1992 National Military Strategy, which prioritized peacekeeping, humanitarian interventions, and stability operations over direct counterinsurgency support.[22] This evolution addressed the decline in ideologically driven proxy wars funded by superpowers, shifting focus toward managing ethnic separatist movements, civil unrest, and post-colonial instabilities without assuming large-scale conventional threats.[23] The U.S. Center for Low Intensity Conflict, established in 1986, closed in 1996, signaling reduced institutional emphasis on specialized LIC training amid expectations of a more peaceful global order.[24] Intra-state conflicts proliferated in the 1990s, with low-intensity tactics—such as guerrilla ambushes, population control, and asymmetric engagements—becoming hallmarks of ethnic and communal violence in regions like the Balkans, the Caucasus, and sub-Saharan Africa. From 1991 to 2001, over 100 armed intra-state conflicts occurred globally, many featuring non-state actors employing LIC methods to challenge central governments or rivals, as superpower subsidies waned and local grievances fueled prolonged insurgencies.[25] Examples include the Somali civil war starting in 1991, where clan militias used hit-and-run tactics against state remnants and international forces, and the First Chechen War (1994–1996), in which rebels leveraged terrain and surprise attacks against Russian conventional units.[26] These cases demonstrated the tactic's adaptability to failed states, where external support diminished but internal dynamics sustained irregular warfare. By the early 2000s, U.S. engagements in Iraq (from 2003) and Afghanistan (intensifying post-2001) necessitated a doctrinal resurgence of low-intensity principles, culminating in the joint Army-Marine Corps Field Manual 3-24 (FM 3-24) published in December 2006, which filled a 20-year gap in counterinsurgency guidance by advocating population security, intelligence-driven operations, and host-nation capacity building.[27] This manual reframed LIC adaptations for hybrid threats, integrating LIC elements like phases of insurgency with modern tools such as networked intelligence, while critiquing prior overreliance on kinetic force in favor of causal addressing of grievances and governance failures. Globally, LIC tactics proliferated among non-state entities, including narco-insurgents in Colombia's ongoing conflict with FARC (peaking in the 1990s–2000s) and jihadist groups in Algeria's civil war (1991–2002), underscoring the strategy's endurance amid fragmented power structures.[28]Key Characteristics and Operational Mechanics
Tactical Implementation and Weapons
Tactical implementation in low-intensity conflict prioritizes irregular methods over direct engagements, leveraging mobility, surprise, and terrain familiarity to impose sustained attrition on superior conventional forces. Guerrilla forces typically organize into small, dispersed units that conduct ambushes, raids, and sabotage operations, withdrawing rapidly after brief, high-impact strikes to avoid decisive battles. These tactics, rooted in principles of deception and economy of force, aim to erode enemy morale and logistics while preserving insurgent strength.[1][29] Counterinsurgent forces adapt by emphasizing patrolling, cordon-and-search operations, and small-unit actions to deny guerrillas freedom of movement, often integrating local militias for area denial. U.S. doctrine, as outlined in FM 100-20, stresses coordinated military-civil efforts with restrained force application to minimize civilian alienation, using firepower selectively to support maneuver rather than dominate through mass. Tactics adjust dynamically to factors like weather, enemy dispositions, and communication lines, with guerrillas favoring night operations and infiltration to maximize asymmetry.[3][29] Weapons in low-intensity conflict are predominantly small arms and light weapons (SALW), selected for portability, concealability, and ease of maintenance in austere environments. Insurgents commonly employ assault rifles like the AK-47 series for their reliability and availability, supplemented by rocket-propelled grenades (RPGs) for anti-vehicle roles and improvised explosive devices (IEDs) for remote ambushes and mining routes. Machine guns and mortars provide suppressive fire, while pistols and submachine guns suit close-quarters or tunnel warfare.[8][14] Counterguerrilla units favor similar light infantry arms, including semiautomatic pistols for confined spaces and carbines for patrol versatility, avoiding heavy armor to maintain responsiveness. The proliferation of surplus SALW from Cold War stockpiles has sustained these conflicts, with low-cost, durable designs enabling prolonged operations by non-state actors. Precision-guided munitions and sniper rifles emerge in advanced phases for targeted disruption, but core reliance remains on man-portable systems to sustain irregular tempo.[8][30]Intelligence Gathering and Stages of Engagement
In low-intensity conflict (LIC), intelligence gathering prioritizes human intelligence (HUMINT) due to the irregular nature of adversaries who blend with civilian populations, rendering technical methods like signals intelligence (SIGINT) less effective in rural or urban environments with low electronic emissions.[31] HUMINT collection relies on low-level agents, local informants, tactical patrols, and debriefings of defectors or refugees to identify insurgent infrastructure, leadership, and logistics networks.[31][32] All-source integration incorporates police operations, checkpoints, and populace control measures such as curfews to generate actionable data on subversion indicators and enemy centers of gravity.[32] Challenges include heavy dependence on host-nation capabilities, where cultural and linguistic barriers can compromise source reliability, and the need to counter insurgent deception tactics that exploit civilian anonymity.[31] Doctrinal adaptations emphasize real-time, mission-tailored intelligence preparation of the battlefield (IPB), often requiring U.S. forces to supplement host-nation efforts with unilateral short-term collections during raids or strikes.[32][31] Stages of engagement in LIC align with the phased progression of insurgencies, as outlined in U.S. Army doctrine, where intelligence drives transitions from latent threats to overt combat. Phase I (latent or incipient insurgency) focuses on counterintelligence and early detection through HUMINT surveillance to preempt organizing efforts, minimizing direct engagements to preserve government legitimacy.[32] In Phase II (guerrilla warfare), engagements escalate to tactical disruptions like ambushes and raids, informed by precise intelligence on enemy movements and safe havens, with forces applying graduated force to isolate insurgents from populations.[32] Phase III (war of movement) involves conventional-style operations supported by comprehensive all-source intelligence to neutralize mobile threats, though LIC doctrine stresses avoiding escalation to high-intensity conflict.[32] Counterinsurgency operations further structure engagements into consolidation phases—preparation (intelligence buildup), offensive (targeted strikes), development (securing areas), and completion (transition to host-nation control)—ensuring intelligence synchronizes civil-military efforts to erode insurgent support bases.[32] These stages underscore causal linkages between timely intelligence and operational success, as failures in early-phase detection, observed in cases like Vietnam, prolonged engagements by allowing insurgent entrenchment.[32]Logistical and Terrain Considerations
Guerrilla forces in low-intensity conflicts preferentially operate in terrains offering natural cover and concealment, such as mountains, forests, jungles, and urban areas with broken topography, to enable ambushes, rapid evasion, and negation of conventional military advantages like armored vehicles and air superiority.[33] These environments complicate enemy surveillance and pursuit, allowing insurgents to disperse and regroup effectively.[34] However, empirical studies of 120 civil wars from 1945 to 2005 challenge the axiom that rough terrain inherently prolongs insurgencies; conflict-zone ruggedness correlates with shorter durations (hazard ratio 1.0461, p<0.05), potentially due to increased state casualties or logistical strains on rebels rather than sustained advantages.[35] Logistically, insurgents maintain austere, mobile supply systems contrasting conventional forces' heavy dependencies, relying on captured enemy materiel as a primary source—exemplified by Mao Zedong's principle of "arming from the enemy" during the Chinese Civil War (1927–1949), where guerrillas seized Japanese and Nationalist stocks.[36] Local populations provide essential sustainment through food, shelter, and labor, as seen in Fidel Castro's Cuban revolutionaries concealing small bands in villages and Francis Marion's American partisans drawing from colonists.[36] Secure base areas serve as storage depots and resupply points, enabling lean operations with minimal transport like porters or pack animals, while local production (e.g., Cuban village workshops) supplements needs.[36] Counterinsurgent forces encounter terrain-induced challenges including restricted mobility, limited visibility, and degraded communications, necessitating adaptations such as airlift resupply, fortified lines of communication, and light, high-mobility logistics to minimize forward stockpiles in vulnerable areas.[37] In jungle settings, for instance, these factors heighten vulnerability to interdiction, requiring back-to-basics approaches like decentralized caching and rapid aerial insertion to sustain operations.[37] Doctrinal emphasis in low-intensity scenarios prioritizes restricting logistics to secure rear areas and enhancing mobility to counter guerrilla dispersal, as outlined in analyses of sustainment in irregular warfare.[38]Guerrilla and Insurgent Strategies
Organizational Models and Phases
Insurgent organizations in low-intensity conflicts typically adopt structures that balance operational security with command and control, such as hierarchical, cellular, or networked models. Hierarchical structures feature a centralized leadership directing subordinate units, as seen in many conventional insurgencies transitioning to guerrilla phases, allowing for coordinated large-scale actions but vulnerable to decapitation strikes targeting commanders.[39] Cellular models compartmentalize operations into small, independent cells with limited knowledge of the broader network, enhancing resilience against infiltration and intelligence penetrations, a tactic employed by groups like the Viet Cong's infrastructure divisions.[39] Networked structures, increasingly common in modern insurgencies, rely on decentralized nodes connected through loose affiliations and technology, reducing single points of failure while complicating counterinsurgency efforts to dismantle the whole.[40] Phases of guerrilla and insurgent operations often follow doctrinal frameworks derived from historical precedents, with Mao Zedong's protracted people's war model exerting significant influence. In Phase I, insurgents focus on organization, consolidation, and preservation, establishing rural base areas, recruiting sympathizers, and conducting limited guerrilla raids to harass enemy forces while avoiding decisive engagements.[41] Phase II involves progressive consolidation, expanding controlled territory through mobile warfare, disrupting enemy logistics, and building parallel governance structures to erode state legitimacy.[41] Phase III culminates in strategic offensive, amassing conventional forces for general uprising or annihilation of weakened enemy units, as theorized for transitioning from irregular to regular warfare.[41] Variations exist, such as Che Guevara's foco theory emphasizing small vanguard groups igniting rural revolts without prolonged base-building, though this proved less adaptable in non-revolutionary contexts.[42] Urban guerrilla doctrines outline five stages: intelligence gathering, terror initiation, terror expansion, urban guerrilla warfare, and regular warfare, prioritizing sabotage and assassinations in populated areas to compensate for rural weaknesses.[43] U.S. doctrinal assessments identify common insurgent phases as incipient (pre-violence organization), guerrilla (hit-and-run tactics), and conventional (open battles), underscoring the need for phased counter-strategies.[44] These models and phases adapt to terrain, external support, and enemy responses, with cellular and networked forms gaining prevalence in information-age conflicts to exploit globalization and asymmetric advantages.[45]Operational Tactics Including Surprise and Terror
Guerrilla and insurgent forces in low-intensity conflicts employ operational tactics centered on asymmetry, leveraging small-unit mobility and initiative against larger conventional opponents. Surprise constitutes a core element, enabling attackers to inflict disproportionate casualties before disengaging, as articulated in Mao Zedong's guerrilla doctrine which prioritizes speed, deception, and unforeseen assaults to avoid decisive battles.[46] These tactics manifest in ambushes along supply routes or patrols, where insurgents use terrain for concealment, strike vulnerable points, and exploit the ensuing confusion to withdraw rapidly, minimizing their own exposure.[47] Terror tactics complement surprise by targeting not only military assets but also civilian and governmental elements to erode enemy morale and coerce population compliance. Insurgents conduct selective assassinations, bombings, and intimidation campaigns against local officials, defectors, and perceived collaborators to establish control in contested areas and deter cooperation with counterinsurgent forces. In the Vietnam War, Viet Cong units systematically applied terror, documenting over 36,000 attacks between 1960 and 1965 that killed or abducted government personnel and civilians, aiming to paralyze rural administration and foster fear as a governance mechanism.[48] This approach, distinct from indiscriminate violence, focuses on psychological impact to amplify the effects of limited physical resources. Integration of surprise and terror enhances operational efficacy by disrupting enemy routines and intelligence cycles. For instance, night raids or feigned retreats lure pursuers into prepared kill zones, combining ambush with follow-on terror to amplify disruption. Mao emphasized troop dispositions in surprise attacks that concentrate force at weak points while maintaining reserves for exploitation or evasion, a principle echoed in insurgent manuals that stress reconnaissance and timing to achieve tactical shock.[49] Such methods prolong conflicts by forcing adversaries into reactive postures, though their success hinges on sustained logistics and popular support to avoid alienating the populace through excessive brutality. Empirical analyses indicate that while terror erodes short-term opposition, overuse risks backlash, as observed in cases where insurgent atrocities galvanized counterinsurgent mobilization.[48]Population Dynamics and External Support
In guerrilla and insurgent operations within low-intensity conflicts, the local population serves as the foundational element for sustainability, supplying intelligence, recruits, food, and logistical concealment, often analogized to a "sea" in which insurgents operate as "fish."[50] Without active or passive civilian backing, such forces face inevitable attrition and exposure, as demonstrated in theoretical frameworks emphasizing popular mobilization for protracted engagements.[51] Population control is achieved through a combination of ideological appeal—leveraging grievances against incumbent regimes—and selective coercion, such as intimidation or forced taxation, to secure compliance where voluntary adherence is insufficient.[52] Recruitment dynamics reflect a spectrum from voluntary enlistment driven by shared ideology or economic incentives to outright coercion, with empirical studies of civil wars indicating that forced methods predominate in resource-scarce environments, comprising up to 70% of inflows in cases like the Democratic Republic of Congo conflicts from 1996–2003.[53] Coerced recruits often exhibit lower combat effectiveness and higher desertion rates due to lacking intrinsic motivation, yet they enable rapid force expansion during early phases; over-reliance on such tactics risks alienating neutrals, fracturing the population base into active opponents, as insurgents typically control only 10–20% of civilians outright while contesting the remainder.[52] Demographic factors, including rural-urban divides and youth bulges, amplify recruitment pools, with insurgents targeting areas of weak state presence where grievances like land disputes or ethnic marginalization foster initial sympathy.[54] External support from state sponsors, diasporas, or non-state actors critically offsets deficiencies in local population dynamics by providing arms, funding, training, and cross-border sanctuaries, historically tipping outcomes in 60–70% of analyzed insurgencies since 1945.[55] Such aid sustains operations amid government pressure, as seen in frameworks where materiel inflows enable guerrillas to endure without full popular endorsement, though it introduces vulnerabilities like dependency and propaganda exploitation portraying insurgents as foreign proxies.[56] U.S. Army doctrine notes that while isolated successes occur without external backing, modern low-intensity cases—such as those in Southeast Asia and Central America—underscore its role in prolonging conflicts by compensating for coerced or shallow domestic support.[3] This external infusion alters population interactions, allowing insurgents to project strength and extract resources more aggressively, but it can erode genuine legitimacy if perceived as undermining local agency.[57]Counterinsurgency and Defensive Strategies
Core Principles and Guidelines
Counterinsurgency (COIN) principles prioritize the population as the center of gravity, recognizing that insurgents derive strength from popular support rather than conventional military superiority. David Galula, drawing from French experiences in Algeria, articulated four laws: the population must be the primary objective, as it provides the insurgent's base; support is secured through political, economic, and social means rather than coercion; insurgents exploit an active minority to influence the passive majority, necessitating counterinsurgents to isolate and convert that minority; and the intensity of counterinsurgent efforts must match or exceed the insurgents' relative strength to achieve decisive results.[58] These laws underscore causal mechanisms where failure to address grievances fuels insurgency, while effective governance erodes it. U.S. military doctrine, as outlined in FM 3-24/MCWP 3-33.5, emphasizes paradoxes inherent to COIN: applying excessive force often alienates civilians and strengthens insurgent recruitment, whereas minimal, precise operations preserve legitimacy; some areas require more resources and attention than others to disrupt insurgent control; and counterinsurgents must outthink adaptive enemies by prioritizing learning the local environment over imposing external models. [27] The manual advocates a population-centric approach, integrating offensive actions to clear insurgents with defensive measures to hold terrain and build stability, supported by empirical lessons from operations in Iraq and Afghanistan where fragmented efforts prolonged conflicts.[59] Key guidelines include establishing political primacy, where military actions subordinate to overarching governance reforms to address root causes like corruption or economic disparity; achieving unity of effort across military, civilian, and host-nation entities to avoid contradictory policies that undermine credibility; and conducting intelligence-driven operations to separate insurgents from the populace through targeted raids, area denial, and infrastructure protection.[34] [60] Host-nation ownership is critical, as external forces cannot sustain long-term legitimacy without transferring capabilities, evidenced by British success in Malaya (1948–1960) through local forces assuming primary roles post-1952.[61] Additional principles stress adaptability to terrain and culture, avoiding static defenses that insurgents can bypass via guerrilla mobility, and measuring progress via metrics like reduced violence incidents and increased voluntary tips from civilians rather than body counts, which historically misled U.S. efforts in Vietnam (1965–1973).[62] [63] Guidelines also caution against over-reliance on technology, as human intelligence from trusted locals outperforms surveillance in asymmetric environments, per analyses of protracted conflicts where doctrinal lapses, such as ignoring local alliances, led to stalemates.[64]Offensive Counter-Guerrilla Tactics
Offensive counter-guerrilla tactics emphasize proactive disruption of guerrilla forces through initiative, mobility, and surprise, aiming to deny insurgents safe havens, interdict logistics, and inflict attrition without large-scale engagements. These operations, conducted primarily by small units at platoon to battalion levels, rely on intelligence-driven actions to exploit guerrilla vulnerabilities such as limited firepower and dependence on terrain concealment. Doctrinal guidance prioritizes speed, flexibility, and combined arms integration, including air support and reserves, to maintain momentum and prevent guerrilla recovery.[65][66] Key principles include saturation of operational areas with aggressive patrolling to gather intelligence and harass insurgents, using decentralized small teams (3-50 personnel) for reconnaissance and combat patrols that last days to weeks, often resupplied by helicopter. Units establish concealed bases for rapid deployment, employing night movements and terrain adaptation to achieve surprise, while coordinating fires from artillery or air assets to fix and destroy targets. Pursuit after initial contact exploits guerrilla disarray, with blocking positions to cut escape routes.[65][66] Raids involve swift incursions into hostile zones to destroy bases or caches, withdrawing before reinforcement, often via air assault for platoon-sized elements targeting assembly areas. Ambushes, set along likely infiltration routes, use formations like L-shaped or V-shaped kill zones with mines and machine guns, tailored to expected guerrilla group sizes of 5-20, emphasizing site selection for mutual support and rapid withdrawal. Cordon and search operations encircle suspect areas at night with company or battalion forces, using search teams and checkpoints to isolate and neutralize insurgents while minimizing civilian disruption through precise intelligence.[65] Strike operations at brigade level integrate these tactics into short campaigns (1-14 days), employing movement to contact followed by hasty attacks or encirclements to dismantle guerrilla networks, as seen in doctrinal examples of battalion-led pursuits that sever command structures. In the Rhodesian Bush War (1965-1980), Fireforce tactics exemplified this approach: upon intelligence of guerrilla presence, a helicopter-borne stopping force (typically 32 troops) air-assaulted to block avenues, supported by paratroops and ground-follower units in Alouette III or G-Car helicopters, achieving kill ratios estimated at 80:1 through rapid vertical envelopment and close air support from Hunter jets.[65][67] Historical applications underscore effectiveness when linked to population control; in Malaya (1948-1960), British forces used platoon-sized deep patrols and area ambushes (2-3 men per post, enduring 10 days) along escape routes near resettled villages, combined with operations like Nassau (1954-1955) that killed or captured 35 guerrillas via battalion-controlled strikes with artillery barrages. These tactics reduced insurgent strength by disrupting supplies and mobility, though success required sustained commitment over years. Failures, such as incomplete encirclements due to terrain gaps, highlight the need for accurate reconnaissance and adaptability.[66]Integration of Civil and Military Efforts
The integration of civil and military efforts in counterinsurgency represents a coordinated approach where military forces provide security to enable civilian agencies to implement governance reforms, economic development, and essential services, thereby addressing the root causes of insurgency and delegitimizing rebel narratives.[34] This synchronization aims to shift the population's loyalty toward the government by demonstrating tangible improvements in security and quality of life, rather than relying solely on kinetic operations.[68] Doctrines emphasize "unity of effort" over strict unity of command, allowing civilian elements to retain autonomy in non-combat roles while aligning objectives through shared intelligence and planning mechanisms. Core principles include sequencing operations to first secure areas ("clear and hold"), then build infrastructure and institutions ("build"), with military units often protecting civil teams during implementation.[69] For instance, U.S. doctrine outlines military responsibilities for population protection and intelligence support, complemented by civilian-led initiatives in rule of law, local government capacity-building, and humanitarian aid distribution.[59] NATO frameworks similarly define counterinsurgency as comprehensive efforts to defeat insurgents while mitigating grievances through parallel civil-military actions, such as joint assessments of local needs.[60] Effective integration requires interagency coordination bodies, like provincial reconstruction teams, to avoid duplication and ensure resources target high-impact areas.[69] Empirical analyses of historical counterinsurgencies reveal that balanced civil-military approaches correlate with higher success rates, as governments that combined coercive measures with efforts to reduce insurgent appeal—such as land reforms and service provision—prevailed in approximately 60% of examined cases from 1978 to 2005.[68] In contrast, over-reliance on military action without robust civilian follow-through often prolonged conflicts by failing to consolidate gains or erode popular support for insurgents.[68] Challenges persist, including bureaucratic silos between agencies, resource mismatches where militaries assume civilian tasks due to capacity gaps, and the risk of aid being perceived as coercive, which can alienate populations if not culturally attuned. Despite these hurdles, doctrines stress that political primacy must guide integration, with military efforts subordinate to long-term civil objectives.[59]Case Studies and Empirical Examples
Successful Insurgent and Counterinsurgent Outcomes
Successful insurgent outcomes in low-intensity conflicts often hinge on exploiting terrain advantages, securing external material support, and prolonging engagements to erode the resolve of superior conventional forces. In the Soviet-Afghan War (1979–1989), Afghan mujahideen fighters, backed by U.S. Stinger missiles supplied via Pakistan starting in 1986, inflicted approximately 15,000 Soviet fatalities and forced a full withdrawal by February 15, 1989, marking a strategic victory that contributed to the unraveling of Soviet influence in the region.[70][71] The mujahideen's decentralized operations in rugged mountainous terrain, combined with tribal grievances against the Soviet-backed regime, prevented effective counterinsurgency control over rural areas, despite Soviet deployment of over 100,000 troops at peak. Similarly, in the Vietnam War, the Viet Cong's guerrilla phase (1959–1972) succeeded in undermining South Vietnamese and U.S. efforts through ambushes, supply interdiction, and the 1968 Tet Offensive, which, though a tactical defeat with 45,000–58,000 communist casualties, strategically shattered U.S. public support and led to withdrawal by 1973, enabling North Vietnam's 1975 conquest.[72][73] The Irish War of Independence (1919–1921) featured Irish Republican Army flying columns conducting ambushes and assassinations against British forces, leveraging local intelligence and asymmetric tactics to inflict casualties and compel the Anglo-Irish Treaty, establishing the Irish Free State despite Britain's conventional superiority.[74][75] These cases illustrate causal factors such as foreign aid—U.S. provision of over $3 billion to mujahideen and Soviet/Chinese support to North Vietnam—enabling sustained attrition against occupiers facing domestic political constraints. Empirical analyses of post-World War II insurgencies indicate that insurgents prevail in roughly 40% of cases when they control rural populations and receive cross-border sanctuary, as in Afghanistan where Pakistan hosted training camps for up to 100,000 fighters.[68] Protracted warfare's success derives from asymmetric costs: insurgents absorb losses while conventional forces incur high manpower and economic burdens, with Soviet Afghan expenditures exceeding 4% of GDP annually by the mid-1980s.[76] Counterinsurgent successes, conversely, typically require integrated civil-military strategies emphasizing population security, intelligence dominance, and denial of insurgent logistics, often succeeding when insurgents lack broad ethnic or ideological cohesion. The British-led counterinsurgency in the Malayan Emergency (1948–1960) exemplifies this, defeating the Malayan Communist Party (MCP) through the Briggs Plan, which resettled over 500,000 ethnic Chinese squatters into fortified "new villages" to sever food and intelligence supplies, reducing MCP strength from 8,000 armed fighters in 1951 to under 500 by 1955.[77] Intelligence from surrendered insurgents and Special Branch operations enabled targeted killings and arrests, culminating in MCP leader Chin Peng's flight to China and the emergency's end in 1960, at a total cost under $800 million.[78] Political concessions, including promises of Malayan independence granted in 1957, undercut MCP appeals, as the insurgency remained ethnically confined to Chinese minorities lacking Malay support.[79] During The Troubles in Northern Ireland (1968–1998), British counterinsurgency against the Provisional IRA integrated intelligence operations, military patrols, and political reforms, containing urban guerrilla attacks and bombings through agent networks and community policing, leading to the IRA ceasefire and the 1998 Good Friday Agreement that ended sustained violence.[80][81] RAND Corporation studies of 30 counterinsurgencies identify empirically supported factors like tangible government progress (e.g., infrastructure in secured areas) and local security forces comprising at least 20–25 troops per 1,000 civilians, as in Malaya where Commonwealth forces peaked at 40,000 for a 5 million population.[82] Such outcomes contrast with failures by prioritizing coercion alongside reform: British use of food denial and collective fines on villages aiding insurgents halved MCP incidents by 1952, demonstrating that isolating guerrillas from sustenance bases causal realism in low-intensity settings.[83] These examples underscore that counterinsurgent victory demands commitment exceeding a decade, with success rates around 60% in cases of unified command and population-centric focus.[84]Notable Failures and Stalemates
The Shining Path insurgency in Peru, initiated in 1980 as a Maoist guerrilla campaign aimed at overthrowing the government, failed decisively after peaking in the late 1980s and early 1990s, with the capture of leader Abimael Guzmán on September 12, 1992, leading to the group's fragmentation and a 2011 admission of defeat by a senior commander; the conflict resulted in approximately 70,000 deaths, mostly attributed to insurgent violence.[85][86] Similarly, the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) conducted a 26-year separatist insurgency in Sri Lanka using guerrilla tactics, suicide bombings, and conventional assaults, but suffered military defeat in May 2009 when Sri Lankan forces overran their northern strongholds, killing leader Velupillai Prabhakaran and eliminating the group's command structure.[87][88] From the counterinsurgent perspective, the Soviet intervention in Afghanistan (December 1979–February 1989) exemplified failure, as the Red Army's efforts to prop up the communist government against mujahideen guerrillas incurred over 15,000 Soviet deaths and failed to secure lasting control, culminating in withdrawal and the regime's collapse in 1992 amid perceptions of quagmire that eroded Soviet morale and hastened internal reforms.[89][90] Protracted stalemates have characterized conflicts like Colombia's with the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), a 52-year guerrilla struggle (1964–2016) that devolved into mutual attrition with neither side achieving decisive victory until a 2016 peace accord following failed negotiations and voter rejection, leaving over 220,000 dead and highlighting insurgent resilience through rural taxation and state absence.[91][92] In India, the Naxalite-Maoist insurgency, rooted in 1967 peasant uprisings and persisting as low-intensity rural warfare, remains a stalemate as of 2025, with government offensives reducing rebel-held territory but sustaining annual clashes killing hundreds, including 255 fatalities recorded in the first part of the year, due to insurgents' adaptability in forested "Red Corridor" areas.[93][94]Contemporary Instances Post-2000
The Taliban insurgency in Afghanistan, initiated following the U.S.-led invasion in October 2001, exemplifies a protracted low-intensity conflict characterized by guerrilla ambushes, improvised explosive devices (IEDs), and asymmetric attacks against coalition and Afghan National Army forces. By 2005, Taliban fighters had regrouped in Pakistan's border regions, launching seasonal offensives that inflicted over 2,400 coalition fatalities by 2014 and contributed to approximately 47,000 civilian deaths from 2001 to 2021. The conflict persisted through NATO's drawdown, with insurgents controlling rural districts and using hit-and-run tactics until their 2021 offensive, which culminated in the rapid fall of Kabul on August 15, 2021, after U.S. withdrawal. In Iraq, post-2003 U.S. invasion insurgencies transitioned into low-intensity phases, including Sunni Arab guerrilla operations against occupation forces and later ISIS-affiliated attacks. From 2004 to 2007, insurgents employed roadside bombs and suicide attacks, causing over 4,000 U.S. military deaths and destabilizing urban areas like Fallujah. By 2017, after ISIS's territorial caliphate collapsed, remnants sustained a low-level insurgency with sporadic bombings and assassinations, killing hundreds annually in Baghdad and Mosul as of 2023. Jihadist insurgencies in Africa's Sahel region, escalating since 2012, involve groups like Jama'at Nasr al-Islam wal Muslimin (JNIM) and Islamic State in the Greater Sahara (ISGS) using mobile guerrilla raids and ambushes against Malian, Burkinabe, and Nigerien forces. In Mali, Tuareg rebels allied with AQIM seized northern towns in 2012, prompting French intervention; violence displaced over 400,000 by 2023 and killed more than 5,000 in Burkina Faso alone from 2019 to 2024. These conflicts feature porous borders enabling arms flows from Libya and limited state control, with insurgents taxing locals and avoiding pitched battles. India's Naxalite-Maoist insurgency, rooted in rural grievances but active post-2000, centers on central and eastern states where People's Liberation Guerrilla Army fighters conduct ambushes and extortion, killing over 10,000 since 2000 per government data. Peak violence in 2010 saw 1,000 deaths; by 2023, operations reduced active districts from 96 to 41, though insurgents retain forest strongholds. Mexico's cartel conflicts, framed as low-intensity due to state-cartel negotiations and limited military engagements, have involved Sinaloa and Jalisco New Generation cartels in territorial guerrilla-style warfare since the 2006 militarization. Over 400,000 homicides occurred by 2024, with tactics including drone bombings and assassinations of officials, yet formal war declarations are avoided to preserve economic ties. In the Philippines, Moro insurgencies by Abu Sayyaf and Maute Group affiliates persisted post-2000 with kidnappings, bombings, and jungle ambushes in Mindanao, leading to the 2017 Marawi siege that displaced 400,000. U.S. advisory support aided counteroperations, reducing group strength but sustaining low-level threats as of 2024.Effectiveness, Outcomes, and Analytical Debates
Metrics for Evaluating Success and Failure
The evaluation of success or failure in low-intensity conflicts, particularly insurgencies and counterinsurgencies, hinges on multifaceted metrics that extend beyond battlefield attrition to encompass political, social, and governance dimensions, as conventional metrics like enemy killed prove inadequate for irregular warfare.[95] Primary indicators for counterinsurgent success include the establishment of government legitimacy through popular support, measured via surveys on perceptions of security and governance efficacy, and the proportion of the population residing in government-secured areas, where insurgent influence is minimized.[96] Degradation of insurgent operational capacity is quantified by trends in attack frequency, recruitment rates, and leadership disruptions, with sustained reductions—such as a 50% drop in incidents over six months—signaling progress, as observed in empirical analyses of post-World War II cases.[68] [97] For insurgents, success metrics emphasize sustained mobilization and territorial gains, including control over rural or urban enclaves that enable logistics and recruitment, alongside erosion of state authority through propaganda and defections from government forces.[98] Failure on either side is evident when these indicators reverse: for governments, rising civilian casualties without corresponding security improvements undermine legitimacy, while for insurgents, plummeting operational tempo due to intelligence penetrations or resource shortages leads to collapse, as in cases where police-led actions outnumbered military ones in effective outcomes.[99] [100]| Metric Category | Counterinsurgent Success Indicators | Insurgent Success Indicators | Sources of Data |
|---|---|---|---|
| Population Control | >70% population in secured zones; increased tips to authorities | Expansion of safe havens; rising defections | Surveys, GIS mapping of control[68] |
| Violence Levels | Decline in insurgent attacks by 40-60% annually; low civilian deaths | Sustained high-impact operations; forced concessions | Incident logs, casualty databases[97] |
| Governance & Legitimacy | Improved service delivery (e.g., 20% rise in infrastructure access); election turnout >60% | Propaganda reach; parallel governance structures | Polls, economic indices[96] |
| Resource & Effort | High manpower commitment (20+ troops per 1,000 civilians); effective intel sharing | Logistics sustainability; external aid inflows | Force ratios, supply audits[98] |
