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Science/Tech See other Science/Tech Articles Title: Modern Warfare Symposium On War #128 August 2, 2005 Modern Warfare Symposium By William S. Lind [The views expressed in this article are those of Mr. Lind, writing in his personal capacity. They do not reflect the opinions or policy positions of the Free Congress Foundation, its officers, board or employees, or those of Kettle Creek Corporation.] I spent last week in Pittsfield, Maine, at a symposium on modern war called by Colonel Mike Wyly, USMC retired. Col. Wyly was one of the heroes of the maneuver warfare movement in the Marine Corps in the 1970s and 80s, and when he suggests its time for a new effort, people listen. My hope was that we might make some progress on Fourth Generation war theory, and while I am not sure we accomplished that, we did gain some ground on one important question: what might a state armed service designed for 4GW look like? To address that question, we first had to answer another one: what would such a forces mission be? Not being neo-Trotskyites, we derived our answer within the framework of a defensive grand strategy. The new services (and it should be a new armed service) primary mission would be to prevent outbreaks of Fourth Generation war on American soil. The focus must be on prevention, not first response, because if we are forced into a response mode the enemy has already won. And, the new service must be oriented not only to preventing imported 4GW, like that we saw on 9/11, but also the home-grown variety such as London just experienced. Butand here was the kickerthe new service has to keep us safe without pushing America further toward Big Brother, the all-powerful, centralized, national security state represented by the Department of Homeland Security, the Patriot Act and much else coming out of Washington. So what should this new 4GW armed service be? The answer of our working group at the symposium was, a militia. The militia was the basis of Americas defense through most of our history as a republic. More, there are two contemporary models. One is volunteer fire departments, which small town and rural America depend on and which almost always perform well. The other is community policing, where cops walk the same beat in the same neighborhood for a long time, long enough to understand the neighborhood and prevent crimes instead of just responding to them. Neither volunteer fire departments nor community police serve as control mechanisms for the federal government. They respond to their local communities, not to Washington. The new militias most important function would be neighborhood watch. The only way to prevent 4GW attacks is to find out about them before they happen, and that means the militia, like community police, must know what is happening in their neighborhoods. But again, we dont want to feed Big Brother. Almost all of what the militia knows should remain on the local level. How can we make this happen? Our working group decided the militia should normally report to the county sheriff, a local, elected official who has a lot of independence. Sheriffs powers, defined over centuries in common law, allow them to tell the feds to stick it. Nor are they under the thumb of local or state politicians. If they violate citizens rights, they can be unelected real fast. The militia, we also decided, would not have powers of arrest unless deputized. A separation of powers between the militia and law enforcement would also help maintain citizens rights. Another danger we wanted to avoid was allowing the First Generation culture of order, still characteristic of Americas Second Generation armed forces, to carry over to the new service. Like Third Generation militaries, the militia must be outward focused, prize initiative over obedience and depend on self-discipline, not imposed discipline. We therefore determined that there should be very little in the way of formal ranks or commands and no saluting, drill, uniforms (at least none required) etc. The largest unit would be the company, with an elected captain. The captains duties would be mostly administrative, and sub-units could elect adjutants to handle their paperwork if they wanted to. The militiamen would be free to choose leaders on a task basis, picking whoever they thought was best qualified depending on what they had to do. Yes, this means trusting ordinary citizens to show some common sense. Republics do that; if they cant or wont, they are no longer republics. Another characteristic of our anti-4GW militia is that unless mobilized, the militiamen would not be paid. Instead of pay, they would collect points toward retirement benefits andwe thought this could kill two birds with one stonethey would receive health insurance for themselves and their families. Instead of health coverage just becoming another entitlement, citizens who did something for their country would find their country doing something for them. We thought long-term benefits like pensions and health insurance would also help recruit the kind of people the militia needs, solid citizens capable of delayed gratification. Next weeks column will continue this report on the results of Colonel Wylys symposium, including the militia. And no, the fact that we met in Maine did not lead us to consider using moose as crew-served weapons carriers. Word document available upon request. To interview Mr. Lind, please contact: Phyllis Hughes (pehughes@freecongress.org) Free Congress Foundation 717 Second St., N.E. Washington, D.C. 20002 Phone 202-543-8474 The Free Congress Foundation, is a 28-year-old Washington, DC-based conservative educational foundation (think tank) that teaches people how to be effective in the political process, advocates judicial reform, promotes cultural conservatism, and works against the government encroachment of individual liberties.
Poster Comment: I think the most important part of this article that might not be emphasized enough is that this concept will work best if we adopt a defensive foreign policy instead of the offensive one we currently have. The paragraph on the First Generation culture of order is a good one, too. I keep reading all kinds of articles and posts on message boards that 9/11 changed everything, but no one wants to admit that it also needs to change how we fight. You can't fight a fourth generation enemy with a second generation military that focuses more on control than command, more on obedience than initiative. I've always believed that a commander has to trust in the abilities of his subordinates, and if their abilities are unfit for the task at hand that subordinate needs to be replaced. It's just that simple. I was an infantryman, and I was taught that mistakes mean that people die. If someone in a business makes a bad decision, money gets lost. For a soldier, incompetent leadership means people die.
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#1. To: Flintlock, Mr Nuke Buzzcut, tom007, lodwick, dakmar, robin (#0)
Latest William S. Lind article. He's talking about a decentralized defensive military force that should interest us all.
"Rivers of blood were spilled out over land that, in normal times, not ever the poorest Arab would have worried his head over"--Field Marshal Erwin Rommel
Thanks for the ping, I'm a big Lind fan. Citizen militias have been used to counter insurgents in some third world countries but how they apply to our faux WOT is beyond me. OTOH the Minuteman Project is an example of how citizen militias can do a job a hostile and treasonous central government refuses to do.
Isolate America from those who offer no benefit and protect Her.
Of course, this makes way too much sense to ever be implemented in the nwo. Thanks for the post.
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