Targeting Taliban and al-Qaeda will be a secondary, but at times needed, task.
The initial priority would be to quickly mobilize the TSFs. They can become an effective force in a short period of time, possibly in ninety days.
Paying the TSF will automatically improve the financial situation of the village and create a stronger bond with the tribesmen who live there.
Task Organization
The following is a “shopping list” of what I, or any TET leader, would need on Day One:
Initial infill logistics package for the tribe:
One must have a true love and respect for the Afghan people (the tribes) and be willing to give a better part of his life for this strategy to work. Not everyone will be able to do this nor should they. But for those warriors who are qualified and feel the calling, it will be the adventure of a lifetime.
Someday you too could fly an American flag outside your firebase, as we did at ours here in Asadabad.
“Many so-called failed states are really failed tribes.”
-David Ronfeldt, “Tribes—The First and Forever Form”
We have to study and understand the tribes. Become their true friends and let them see us in all of our strengths and faults as well.
“In the absence of state institutions, how can a typical civil society’s service requirements be provided or administered
in an efficient manner? One way is to use traditional groups such as tribes who have experience in performing local governance roles and functions.” (Taylor 2005, 9)
In the words of Haji Mohammed Zalmay, one of the better district governors in Konar Province, “The key to success is getting tribes to come to shuras and keeping them united.”
Remember, in most cases the Taliban is not present in areas where the tribes do not want them to be.
Whether the US “wins” or “loses” in Afghanistan, the tribes will still be there. As David Ronfeldt says in “Tribes—The First and Forever Form,” “The tribe will never lose its significance or its attractiveness; it is not going away in the centuries ahead.” Therefore, we must learn to understand the tribe’s significance
now
.
There will be no large-scale “awakening” of the tribes in Afghanistan, as there was in al-Anbar Province in Iraq. It will be a much lower and more difficult process.
In an excellent paper by Carter Malkasian and Jerry Meyerle entitled, “How is Afghanistan different from al-Anbar?” the authors list nine differences and four implications of those differences:
We must learn to understand the tribe’s significance now.
Steven Pressfield’s videos/writings on tribalism are the most useful resources I have found on understanding tribalism. The author of
Gates of Fire
and
The Afghan Campaign
has a blog called “It’s the Tribes, Stupid,” which provides the historical and conceptual context for a tribal engagement strategy in Afghanistan.
See it at
http://blog.stevenpressfield.com
.
On a personal note, my gravest concern is that a Tribal Engagement Strategy in some form will indeed be adopted and implemented, but that the US may eventually again abandon Afghanistan—and the tribes to whom we have promised long-term support will be left to be massacred by a vengeful Taliban.
I will get on a helicopter tonight, armed with an AK-47 and three hundred rounds of ammunition, and put my life on the line and my strategy to the test. Will you do the same?
This is by far the worst outcome we could have.
It is immoral and unethical to ask a tribe to help us and promise them support and then leave them to defend themselves on their own. If our forces do withdraw from Afghanistan, we should decide now to arm
the tribes who support us with enough weapons and ammunition to survive after we leave.
I emphasized at the beginning of this paper that I am neither a strategist nor an academic. I know there will be many criticisms that span all levels of war, from military personnel to pundits.
But I also know this: I will get on a helicopter tonight, armed with an AK-47 and three hundred rounds of ammunition and put my life on the line and my strategy to the test. Will you do the same?
There may be dozens of reasons not to adopt this strategy. But there is only one reason to do so—we have to. Nothing else will work.
First and foremost I want to thank the great warriors of ODA 316. It seems like so long ago. No one will ever believe how much we did with so little in those early days in the Konar. We have all continued to fight and have taken it to the enemy at every opportunity. Leading you was the greatest honor of my life.
Initial members of ODA 316 (by rank):
Ron Bryant
Al Lapene
Chuck Burroughs
Mark Read
Tony Siriwardene
Scott Gross
Dan McKone
James Tierney
Travis Weitzel
Luke Murray
Brent Watson
Dave Casson
Second, my good friend Steve Pressfield. Only he knows what his words have meant to me. I would not have done this without him. He is a great author and historian. He is a better friend.
Third, my wife. She has put up with all the long deployments and all the “baggage” that comes with that. And thanks for all the hours you let me spend in front of the computer just before my upcoming deployment in Iraq.
Fourth, my dad. “The best team always wins…”
Lastly, my second “father,” friend, fellow warrior and great leader, Malik Noor Afzhal, “Sitting Bull.” It was my greatest wish in all the world that I would get to see him with my own eyes again and say, “Sitting Bull, I told you I would come back. I told you I would return.” I could have died a happy man had that happened.
Sappenfield, Mark. 2008. “To Fight Taliban, US Eyes Afghan Tribes.”
The Christian Science Monitor
, October 16.
http://www.csmonitor.com/World/Asia-South-Central/2008/1016/p01s04-wosc.html
Cowell, Alan. 2009 “US General Says Allies ‘Not Winning’ Afghan War.”
New York Times
, March 9.
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/03/10/world/asia/10afghan.html?_r=0
Pressfield, Steven. “It’s the Tribes, Stupid.”
http://www.stevenpressfield.com/vblog/
Ronfeldt, David. 2006. “Tribes—The First and Forever Form.”
RAND Corporation
, December: 5, 7, 29, 35, 39, 59, 65, 68, 72, 73, 76.
http://www.rand.org/content/dam/rand/pubs/working_papers/2007/RAND_WR433.pdf
McCallister, William. 2008. “Operations in Pakistan’s Tribal Areas,”
Small Wars Journal
, January 30: 4, 7.
http://smallwarsjournal.com/blog/operations-in-pakistans-tribal-areas
.
Malkasian, Carter, and Meyerle, Jerry. 2009. “How is Afghanistan Different from Al Anbar?”
CNA Analysis and Solutions
(February): 5-7, 11.
http://www.dtic.mil/dtic/tr/fulltext/u2/a498368.pdf
Yusufzai, Rahimullah. “Help the Pashtuns.”
Foreign Policy Magazine
. A daily newspaper in Peshawar.
Jones, Seth G. 2008 “Counterinsurgency in Afghanistan.”
RAND Counterinsurgency Study
4: xiii, xi, 7, 10, 122.
Moreau, Ron, and Yousafzai, Sami. 2009. “Obama’s Vietnam,”
Newsweek
(February): 32-33.
Kilcullen, David. 2008. “It’s still winnable, but only just,”
Interesting Times
(November 14).
Kelly, Justin. 2009. “How to Win Afghanistan,”
Quadrant
(April 1): 5.
http://www.quadrant.org.au/magazine/issue/2009/4/how-to-win-in-Afghanistan
Rosenau, William. 2008. “Low-Cost Trigger-Pullers,”
RAND National Security Research Division
(October): p.22
Giustozzi, Antonio. 2008.
Koran, Kalashnikov, and Laptop.
New York: Columbia University Press.
Tariq, Mohammad Osman. 2008. “Tribal Security System (Arbakai) in Southeast Afghanistan,” Crisis States Research Centre (December): 10.
Wilkinson, Marwat. 2008. “Tribal Chief Takes on Taliban with His Own Army,”
London Daily Telegraph
(September 23): 14.
DeYoung. 2008. “Pakistan Will Give Arms to Tribal Militias,”
Washington Post
(October 23): 1.
Roe, Major Andrew M. British Army. 2005. “To Create a Stable Afghanistan: Provincial Reconstruction Teams, Good Governance, and a Splash of History,”
Military Review
(November-December): 20.
2009. “Obama Keeps Karzai at Arm’s Length,”
The Washington Post
(May 6).
Taylor, Richard L. 2005. “Tribal Alliances: Ways, Means, and Ends to Successful Strategy,” Strategic Studies Institute (August): 9.