In the fall of 2003, the new commander of American forces in Afghanistan,
Lt. Gen. David W. Barno, decided on a new strategy. Known as
counterinsurgency, the approach required coalition forces to work
closely with Afghan leaders to stabilize entire regions, rather than
simply attacking insurgent cells. But there was a major drawback, a new unpublished Army history of the war
concludes. Because the Pentagon insisted on maintaining a “small
footprint” in Afghanistan and because Iraq was drawing away resources,
General Barno commanded fewer than 20,000 troops. As a result,
battalions with 800 soldiers were trying to secure provinces the size
of Vermont. “Coalition forces remained thinly spread across
Afghanistan,” the historians write. “Much of the country remained vulnerable to enemy forces increasingly willing to reassert their power.”That
early and undermanned effort to use counterinsurgency is one of several
examples of how American forces, hamstrung by inadequate resources,
missed opportunities to stabilize Afghanistan during the early years of
the war, according to the history, “A Different Kind of War.”This year, a resurgent Taliban prompted the current American commander, Gen. Stanley A. McChrystal,
to warn that the war would be lost without an infusion of additional
troops and a more aggressive approach to counterinsurgency. President Obama agreed, ordering the deployment of 30,000 more troops, which will bring the total American force to 100,000.But as early as late 2003, the Army historians assert,
“it should have become increasingly clear to officials at Centcom and
D.O.D. that the coalition presence in Afghanistan did not provide
enough resources” for proper counterinsurgency, the historians write,
referring to the United States Central Command and the Department of
Defense.“A Different Kind of War,” which covers the period
from October 2001 until September 2005, represents the first
installment of the Army’s official history of the conflict. Written by
a team of seven historians at the Army’s Combat Studies Institute at Fort Leavenworth, Kan., and based on open source material, it is scheduled to be published by spring. CONTINUE READING...