Thursday, January 28, 2010

Restraint the new tactic for UK troops in Afghanistan - BBC


By Caroline Wyatt
Defence correspondent, BBC News

As a key summit on the future of Afghanistan starts in London, a shift in emphasis towards protecting civilians has seen British troops employ a new strategy dubbed "courageous restraint".

British troops from the 4th Battalion the Rifles come under fire in one of the most dangerous parts of Helmand province.

One of their snipers is poised to take a shot at the Afghan who appears to be pointing out their exact position to the insurgents, a possible "dicker".

But the sniper holds fire. The man might just be a civilian caught up in the middle.

So, instead, the British soldier aims a shot close by, not to kill or wound but to warn. The man and the insurgents disappear. The threat was enough.

That story is cited by British commanders in Helmand as just one recent example of "courageous restraint".

Gen Stanley McChrystal, the overall commander in Afghanistan, has ordered this to be one of the central tenets of the current counter-insurgency strategy: Putting protecting civilians at the heart of the military operation.

Commanders are all too aware that military force alone cannot defeat the Taliban but that getting it wrong on the battlefield - and killing or injuring Afghan civilians, or damaging their homes and crop - can help fuel the insurgency.

This new restraint means dropping fewer bombs, using fewer munitions and - when fighting - using more brain-power than fire-power.

The British unit in Helmand put together specifically for counter-insurgency - 11 Light Brigade - is trying to put that doctrine into practice on the ground, in some of the most heavily-populated areas of the province.

Use of high-explosive artillery shells by British troops is down more than 60%, while the use of smoke shells to mask movement is up nearly 70%.

For the full article click here for BBC Online

10 comments:

  1. It's amazing how any criticism never gets approved & published on this site.

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  2. Might as well bring our snipers home then,as we don't need them for "courageous restraint"

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  3. i think its disgustin that he was made to shoot just close, coz know that guy will more than likely be shooting against our lads, i also think its disgustin that they treat taluban over there in the hospital with our lads on same ward why should u treat someone whose just being tryin to kill one of our lads and then make a soldier whose been injured by taliban be right next to them, it must bring there morale right down!!

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  4. Wasn't somebody commended for this approach a couple of months ago? Didn't think it was particularly a new thing, our boys doing what's best.

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  5. The thing is a dead "dicker" won't come back to "dick" another day.

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  6. You were wrong there, weren't you 'Anonymous'. A dead dicker can lead to two replacement dickers, ad infinitum. The Taliban's best recruitment weapon is dead civilians or collateral damage. Cameramanjimitv (Twitter)

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  7. Extend this and 'courage' becomes not shooting anyone at all. Extend that and it means not going anywhere where 'courageous restraint'has to be shown. From there we get "Come home Tommy Atkins, your work is done"

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  8. So two more dead "dickers", ad infinitum.
    Good riddance.

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  9. It seems clear that trying to win and hold the area thru force just doesn't work. Apologies to Alexander the Great, but even that didn't last long.

    So why not give "hearts & minds" a try? It's important to teach the youngsters there is an alternative to perpetual strife. THAT'S where stop the "dickers".

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  10. My criticism didn't get approved and published on this subjet of "courageous restraint" I said we might as well bring our snipers home. Wonder if this will be approved and published

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