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ID132235
Title ProperEnmeshed in insurgency
Other Title InformationBritain's protracted retreats from Iraq and Afghanistan
LanguageENG
AuthorBennett, Huw
Publication2014.
Summary / Abstract (Note)Ten years of counterinsurgency in Iraq and Afghanistan have produced little in Britain's national interest. This article examines the political objectives set in these wars and the reasons why they have proved elusive. The core foreign policy aim was to sustain Britain's position as a great power by assuming responsibility for global order. Alliances with the United States and NATO would be the diplomatic tool for pursuing this aim. These alliances brought obligations, in the shape of agreed common threats. Rogue regimes with weapons of mass destruction and international terrorists harboured in failed states were deemed the primary threats to British security. Military means were therefore used in Iraq and Afghanistan to attack them. Whether Tony Blair's vision of global order ever made sense is debatable, and it attracted scepticism from the outset. The article argues experience in Iraq and Afghanistan showed that a strategy to eliminate terrorism (the WMD threat turned out never to have existed) by expeditionary counterinsurgency could only fail. Therefore the attention lavished on operational-level performance by most studies is misplaced, because no amount of warfighting excellence could make up for strategic incoherence. Finally, the article proposes the more important question arising from the last ten years is why the UK pursued a futile strategy for so long. The difficulties associated with interpreting events, a malfunctioning strategic apparatus, weak political oversight, and bureaucratic self-interest are posited as the most significant explanations.
`In' analytical NoteSmall Wars and Insurgencies Vol.25, No.3;June 2014: p.501-521
Journal SourceSmall Wars and Insurgencies Vol.25, No.3; June 2014: p.501-521
Key WordsIraq ;  Afghanistan ;  Counterinsurgency ;  British strategy ;  Britain ;  War ;  NATO ;  British Foreign Policy ;  Afghan National Security Forces ;  Democracy