* This paper is a compilation of several Heritage research papers; to view in entirety, please download the PDF
Contents
Foreword
Edwin J. Feulner, Ph.D.
Introduction
James Jay Carafano, Ph.D.
Winning the Peace: Principles for Post-Conflict Operations
James Jay Carafano, Ph.D., and Dana R. Dillon
Post-Conflict and Culture: Changing America's Military for 21st
Century Missions
James Jay Carafano, Ph.D.
The U.S. Role in Peace Operations: Past, Perspective, and
Prescriptions for the Future
James Jay Carafano, Ph.D.
The Pentagon and Postwar Contractor Support: Rethinking the
Future
James Jay Carafano, Ph.D.
The Impact of the Imperial Wars (1898-1907) on the U.S. Army
Brian McAllister Linn, Ph.D.
Boots on the Ground: The Impact of Stability Operations on the
Armies That Must Conduct Them
Major General Jonathan P. Riley
The Impact of Peacekeeping and Stability Operations on the Armed
Forces
Peter F. Herrly, Colonel, USA, Ret.
The Effects of Operations Other Than War-Fighting on the
Participants
Rear Admiral Richard Cobbold
Foreword
Since the end of the Cold War, the U.S. Armed Forces have been
engaged in either a peacekeeping or post-conflict operation on
average every two years. Operations in Iraq and Afghanistan have
proved to be most difficult during the post-conflict stages. And
since the United States' conventional military power is
overwhelming, future adversaries will only be more tempted to fight
insurgency-style wars in the fashion of Iraq and Afghanistan.
Consequently, America's military planners must realize this time
that post-conflict operations will be a feature of military
operations for the foreseeable future.
The stakes involved with these operations are no less serious than
those associated with combat operations. President Bush has
repeatedly explained the stakes for which the United States is
fighting in Iraq by trying to imagine an alternative to U.S.
victory there. The picture he paints is not pretty. American
failure to continue with the mission until there is a functioning,
self-sustaining security force, a legitimate, capable government,
and an economy poised to grow will likely result in a takeover by
radical Islamic groups that employ terror as their primary weapon.
Such an Iraq could then become a base from which terrorist groups
conduct global war, much like Afghanistan under the Taliban. The
stakes in Iraq are high indeed. The post-conflict phase of
operations, then, must succeed.
As a result of this strategic imperative, The Heritage Foundation
has devoted considerable time and effort to developing a set of
principles and recommendations that can be applied to post-conflict
operations. The analyses in this report present a guide for
building the kind of military America needs to secure its interests
in the 21st century.
Edwin J. Feulner, Ph.D.
President
The Heritage Foundation
Introduction
Military planners traditionally disdain conducting post-conflict
missions. Their training emphasizes warfighting and, as a result,
they tend to focus on that aspect of the job. The problem is that
post-conflict missions and warfighting missions cannot be treated
separately. "For whilst we are in full occupation of the country,"
wrote Clausewitz, the great 19th century military theorist, "the
war may break out afresh, either in the interior or through
assistance given by Allies. No doubt, this may also take place
after a peace, but that shows nothing more than that every war does
not carry in itself the elements for a complete decision and final
settlement." Post-conflict operations, then, are not optional, but
an absolutely necessary phase in the conduct of war.
Understanding the nature of these operations is essential. This
requires an understanding of the differences between peacemaking,
peacekeeping, and post-conflict missions, and how those differences
should help define strategic requirements.
Because military organizations are not designed specifically to
carry out post-conflict operations, changes will be needed not only
in force structure, but also in military culture. Planners will
need the right mix of resources to succeed, but will also have to
spend more time training and developing doctrine for post-conflict
missions. These changes should include a review of the role
contractors play in the post-conflict environment and how they can
be better utilized.
After developing all of these themes, Heritage Foundation analysts
attempted to create a set of flexible principles to help guide
future preparation for post-conflict operations. The policy changes
recommended in the following pages are, in many cases,
prescriptions for institutional change. Implementing wide-ranging
institutional reforms will not only establish better practices for
dealing with post-conflict operations, they will also force future
military leaders to address the unique challenges presented by
post-conflict missions.
The analysis and recommendations that follow are compiled from The
Heritage Foundation's work on the subject of post-conflict
operations over the past three years. In addition, four lectures
are included from a conference entitled "The Test of Terrain: The
Impact of Stability Operations Upon the Armed Forces." The Heritage
Foundation co-sponsored the conference, which was held in Paris on
June 17-18, 2005.
Our hope is that the recommendations set forth will motivate
forward-looking policies that will prevent America's military from
slipping back into old habits and disdaining the thought of
conducting post-conflict operations. Such changes will be
successful if they apply the valuable lessons learned by American
forces time and again in a way that will save lives in the
future.
James Jay Carafano, Ph.D.
Senior Research Fellow
The Douglas and Sarah Allison Center for Foreign Policy
Studies
The Heritage Foundation