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Fred Kaplan’s ‘The Insurgents’ takes on Petraeus and policy

Gen. David Petraeus sits with Iraqi children during a youth soccer tournament in central Baghdad on March 1, 2008.
(Dusan Vranic / Associated Press)
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The Insurgents
David Petraeus and the Plot to Change the American Way of War

Fred Kaplan
Simon & Schuster: 400 pp, $28


Everyone knows — or thinks they know — about the influence exerted by the military-industrial complex on American foreign policy.

But there is also a military-intellectual complex composed of think-tank researchers, policy theorists, academics, Pentagon bureaucrats, officers with PhDs, and even a few columnists and magazine writers. It was this complex that greatly influenced America’s military strategy in Iraq and Afghanistan.

That, at least, is the thesis of a serious and insightful new book by Pulitzer Prize-winning author Fred Kaplan: “The Insurgents: David Petraeus and the Plot to Change the American Way of War.”

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In telling detail, Kaplan explains how Petraeus and like-minded thinkers worked to shift U.S. policy in Iraq from one that primarily relied on a heavy use of force to one that combined a more nuanced use of force with an emphasis on protecting the civilian population and, yes, winning hearts and minds.

Instead of defining success by how many enemy were killed, the new policy, under the flexible description of counterinsurgency, aimed at helping the government in Baghdad and the provincial capitals win the support of their own people with jobs programs and infrastructure projects.

The policy change did not occur quickly or without opposition. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld was not a believer. He refused to even admit that an insurgency had gripped Iraq after the fall of Saddam Hussein. After Vietnam, the phrase “nation building” had become repulsive to many high-ranking officers.

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As Kaplan sees it, the counterinsurgency strategy saved the U.S. from defeat in Iraq but probably will not work in Afghanistan. He praises Petraeus for championing the change of strategy in Iraq but faults him for not warning President Obama that he was not providing enough time or troops for a similar effort to be successful in Afghanistan.

Counterinsurgency, Kaplan notes, is “the slowest, messiest kind of war.”

Beginning with his days at West Point, Petraeus was interested in counterinsurgency theory as developed by British and French military writers — which points to the irony of Kaplan’s title: Petraeus and the others were “staging an insurgency against the ‘big Army’” and its reliance on massive firepower.

“He was aware of his reputation in certain circles as a schemer, a self-promoter, and, worst of all, an intellectual,” Kaplan writes. “The Army as an institution tended to scorn officers who stood out or were too bookish, and Petraeus fit both descriptions.”

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Although he failed to get a combat assignment during the Persian Gulf War of 1991, Petraeus excelled at networking, finding mentors and conducting inter-office warfare by Power Point presentations.

Kaplan’s book was written before Petraeus resigned as director of the CIA and admitted an extramarital affair with his biographer, Paula Broadwell. But news coverage makes clear that Broadwell was a member of the military-intellectual class that Petraeus liked to have around him: a West Point graduate, a lieutenant colonel in the Army Reserves, a doctoral candidate, a big-ideas writer and, like Petraeus, ferociously physically fit.

The “who said what to whom in what meeting” approach to journalism can be stultifying. But Kaplan keeps his story moving with mini-profiles of the many laptop warriors who came to shape U.S. policy and how their paths inter-connected.

One such warrior was Conrad Crane, a classmate of Petraeus at West Point and later a fellow faculty member. His paper “Reconstructing Iraq,” published just as the U.S. prepared in 2003 to invade, predicted that the “postcombat phase” would be the most difficult.

During his first tour in Iraq in 2003-04, as commander of the 101st Airborne Division, Petraeus used a counterinsurgency in the northern city of Mosul, a strategy abandoned by his successor.

Kaplan skips over Petreaus’ second tour in Iraq in 2004-05 (exemplifying an off-putting glibness found in some parts of “The Insurgents”), when he was responsible for training the Iraqi army. “It was a thankless task…” Kaplan writes. “Petraeus had to start pretty much from scratch, and the Army was sending him second-rate soldiers to do the training.”

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Later, as commander of the Army’s Combined Arms Center at Fort Leavenworth, Kan., Petraeus was in charge of rewriting an Army Field Manual that could codify his ideas from Mosul and his decades of study. He quickly assembled his fellow insurgents for the task.

In 2007, with a manual that emphasized counterinsurgency, Petraeus left for his third tour in Iraq, this time as commander of all U.S. troops. Soon, as the U.S. fortunes in Iraq improved, Petraeus, in the words of Time magazine, became the “rock star four-star.”

Though Kaplan lists more than 100 interview subjects, he apparently did not interview any of the Marine generals from Iraq or Afghanistan. “The Insurgents” gives the impression that the Marine Corps largely exists in a parallel universe from the Army — not tied to the world of seminars, monographs and heated intellectual discussions.

Not waiting for the Army to shift its policy the Marines in 2004 went to Anbar province, the heart of the Sunni insurgency, carrying copies of their Small Wars Manual from the 1930s, which Kaplan lists as one of the early texts about counterinsurgency. By the time Petraeus and his field manual arrived in Baghdad in 2007, Anbar had gone from lost cause to virtual showpiece.

Quibbles aside, “The Insurgents” seems destined to be one of the more significant looks at how the U.S. pursued the war in Iraq and at the complex mind of the general in charge when the tide turned.

In Afghanistan the insurgency has proven to be adaptive, and the government of Hamid Karzai is not only incompetent but predatory in its corruption. Kaplan writes:

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“You can go into battle with a brilliant plan, but if the enemy adapts and shifts gears, the plan is rendered worthless after the first shots are fired.... If you send troops overseas to bolster a regime whose leaders lack legitimacy or the will to reform, the most brilliant strategy — and strategist — will have little chance of prevailing.”

tony.perry@latimes.com

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