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I am not a military professional hence my comments may appear to be amateurish and too bookish to the military professionals. However for whatever its worth, here is what comes to my mind.
Von Clausewitz, the famous Austrian military philosopher & a veteran of the Napoleonic wars had defined war as a tool employed in the pursuit of political or policy objectives. This has not changed except that the political/policy objectives of some countries now include dominance not only over the land & sea but also in space.
Wars have also become highly complex requiring the use of advanced technology and the scope of war has also increased. Currently a strong country needs to be able to fight the “Asymmetric & hybrid war”, Conventional war which may or may not involve nuclear weapons and the unconventional war.
I would define asymmetric war where military capabilities of the opposing forces are significantly unequal and also different, such as guerrilla warfare and terrorist activities like suicide bombing, kidnapping & hijacking, etc. The hybrid war would be cyber/informational warfare.
Conventional war is normally an armed conflict between states/nations involving organized military units aiming to seize control of territory, inhabitants, and resources from the enemy. Non-conventional war in my view includes a broad range of military /paramilitary operations conducted through indigenous /surrogate forces directly or indirectly supported by an external force.
It is the near-impossible task for a country to train, equip & educate her armed forces to fight all of the above kinds of war successfully. But, based on the evidence over the last couple of decades, except for a very few, the majority of the future wars are likely to be of asymmetrical, hybrid, and /or of the non-conventional nature.
These days nations/countries usually train their soldiers to fight a 3-dimensional conventional war; that is the combination of land, air & sea-borne operations. Hence the stress is on improving physical fitness & proficiency in the use of their hardware assets for the ranks and on the tactical/strategic planning for the officer corps. Primarily because that’s how the soldiers & the officers have been trained for hundreds of years. But this does not teach them to successfully fight asymmetric and other kinds of wars where the enemy is either hard to locate and identify or even altogether unknown.
Consequently, less powerful forces have managed to overcome/frustrate far more powerful adversaries such as Mujahedeen against Russia in Afghanistan, the Vietcong against USA in Vietnam & the Taliban against the USA in Afghanistan.
Since most non-conventional /asymmetric & hybrid wars last a long time, before anything else, a strong economy with the ability to continuously replace military hardware & personnel is a must in any modern and future war.
A 21st-century war, in any form or manner, would require the use of sophisticated weaponry & advanced technology. This means that a country should not only be able to produce/acquire state of the art weaponry, its soldiers and officers must also be able to make use of the sophisticated gadgetry to its full potential. In other words, the future war would require highly educated officers, non-commissioned officers as well as ordinary soldiers. Additionally, personnel at each level of command would need to be innovative and be able to adapt to changing situations quickly.
In my humble opinion, no army can provide such comprehensive training to every soldier. The only option is to be highly selective in recruitment at all levels, even if it means fewer numbers. Also, the officer promotion needs to be based upon a combination of merit & seniority (with stress on merit) instead of on seniority alone.
For a country like Pakistan, in addition to making the economy strong, improving the overall standard of the education of the ordinary soldier is extremely important. Since to improve the education level of the whole nation would take a long time; officers and ranks of all of the armed services should be encouraged to ‘Self educate’ and a manpower development program inculcating the ability to think on one’s feet should become an important part of the daily routine.
@jaibi , add me to your tag list, please and thanks.
@jaibi As usual great job Sir and here are my two cents. I am not expert but I have learnt few things from great people like you so I am going to share my view here.
These pictures below are for reference purpose.
- First of all those days are long gone where there was very less coordination or joint planning between three main forces of any country that is Army and Air Force and Navy. Modern warfare is all about these three components of your military might being well integrated with each other. They plan entire war together prepare for your enemy together and have single command. You can't afford a war planning where there is no coordination among them and they are fighting their own wars without other one knowing what other component is doing.
- Secondly as today's world is about cyber space it's about artificial Intelligence. These things are not only important and in fact essential not just in modern civilian life but they are indispensable part of modern warfare. This also includes strong SIGINT and COMINT and ISTAR capability. While you need planes like DA 20 and other jamming planes and SIGNIT and COMINT planes through which you can have communication with your enemies and keeping them secure from enemy attacks whether physical or technological like cyber and or jamming you also have to make sure that you destroy your enemies leadership and its Armed Forces mechanism of communicating with each other. Basically keep your communication lines open and totally destroying your enemies one leaving your enemy totally blind and dumbfounded in battle field.
- Use of drones will have to increase also other unmanned systems. Knowing where your enemy is where it is moving what are their plans before enemies implement them will be key for you ability to win wars in future. You simply have to strike before your enemy does and it has to be precision strikes on its main communication systems and its most important military installations and soldiers.
- Finally you have to invest in your soldiers get them new gadgets and guns and equipment. You should have your own future soldier program where your infantry and special forces are trained and equipped with small drones modern communication systems along with night vision sights and day time sights. They will be key to bring victory to you.
- Last but still the most important part no matter How much technologically advance you are, if you don't have the will and guts to give everything for your cause including your life and sacrifice your loved ones for your cause than you are never ever going to win the war. In other words you can't beat some ones sheer will of not giving up and not being subjugated with your technological advancements. Technology helps a lot no doubt but still and in fact for all times to come your will to fight until the end is what will get you to the victory.
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The post by @jaibi compelled some personal reflections; I find myself much in the position of @niaz Sahib, with lesser intellect to ameliorate the distance between the defence-services experience possessed and the need for direct military experience, knowledge and involvement.
These reflections are based to some extent on the practical tutorials on the higher management of military force provided by @PanzerKiel, who forced home the understanding that between the textbook and bullets fired in anger there is a lot to be learnt and reflected back in our working for the defence of our respective nations. However, the speculative element, the element that @Nilgiri reflects in his rather strange humour as the ‘C’mon, man!’ moment, is entirely the responsibility of this individual.
INTRODUCTION: WARS ARE WON – AND LOST – BY SOCIETIES, AND BY POLITICAL ORIENTATION, NOT BY THE ARMY, NAVY, AIR FORCE OR THE MARINES
1) Political leadership and a unified country are key. A divisive leadership, that leads an active campaign of hate against sections of its countrymen will not last long. The outstanding doctrinal developments of the Wehrmacht in WWII were considerably weakened by the internal fissures and rifts that made the regime kill one of its outstanding military leaders, holding the highest military rank, and distinguished by an extraordinary record in warfare, by suggesting that he should kill himself as an insurance against the persecution of his surviving family illustrates the point. There were nearly a dozen others.
2) The political and military leadership must be on the same page. It is disconcerting to find that, after decades of proclaiming loudly and clearly that it was not intended for counter-insurgency operations, a major South Asian army was compelled to accept supersession of two candidates for the position of Chief of Staff on the grounds that the successful candidate was a counter-insurgency expert. The whole point of the AFSPA was to insulate the Army, and other services, from the compromises needed in military behaviour in fighting the country’s own citizens.
a) Other countries in the region that have taken up counter-insurgency duties with an almost missionary zeal – the adjective was deliberately chosen – will find the chickens coming home to roost in future.
b) The consequences will be felt in the regard and honour paid to the military by citizens, or the regard and honour that is withheld.
c) Examples abound of other such compromises. Most respectfully, a very valid point, the use of artillery mentioned by @jaibi, becomes less significant when the use of artillery in the counter-insurgency context is considered. It will find its uses in future warfare in such terrain, and it will prove a factor that brings an edge to that military and its adaptability, but the context has a price that will be paid elsewhere.
3) The military leadership of a country must take that country’s demographic profile into account, and must think of the consequences of various characteristics of development that exist. How a citizenry is treated, in terms of health care, and the consequent health of the available volunteers, their mental abilities, founded on a minimum degree of nourishment, their physical capabilities, and the very tricky selection of weaponry keeping in view the widely differing physique of soldier candidates, are two factors that may be cited straightaway. However, other factors are equally important. An unlettered, uneducated citizenry will retard the growth of a 21st century military service, at land, sea or in the air. It will also spend a lot of time trying to figure out if they are fighting the right wars.
a) The Wehrmacht of WWII was not sprung from dragon’s teeth; those soldiers were the products of a sophisticated educational system, not just in Prussia but prominently in the Rhineland, in Bavaria, in Saxony and in other components of the German Empire.
b) So, too, the quite ferocious war-fighting ability and the technical excellence of the American soldier was honed in conditions within the USA; they were not injected in boot camp.
c) The Red Armies that crushed the Wehrmacht are a contrast. Their political leadership possessed enough compulsive power to mandate massed attacks by infantry with one weapon for every six or seven soldiers; it also possessed enough industrial power to produce very ordinary pieces of equipment in the bulk, in numbers that allowed their armour, for instance, to overwhelm perhaps more sophisticated German equipment; that allowed the development of aircraft that would lose every engagement with the Luftwaffe, but was present in sufficient numbers to offer realistic ground support to Red forces on the ground, even to develop doctrine and technologies that allowed effective use of what was ultimately very ordinary equipment.
i) One major army in the South Asian region faces such an opponent in one front, and hence these reminders are important.
4) A 21st century Army may actually lose any war it fights in the 21st century. The harsh truth that is emerging is that it is technology from the latter half of the 21st century, and technology that anticipates developments even further ahead in the 22nd century, that will prevail; a sine qua non is the absorption of technology from existing and projected technical developments by jawans.
5) This points both to the need to sharply accelerate technical innovation within a national industrial environment, and to introduce these innovations to military use on a real-time, today, here-and-now basis.
6) Such developments will destroy current military formations. The two-hundred year old concepts that were innovative in their time that saw a squad forming components of a section, that forming parts of a platoon, right through companies, battalions, brigades, divisions and Corps, on through armies and army groups, are outdated. The army that discards these most rapidly is the army that will win.
7) Unfortunately, these changes also affect the relations between services. The harsh lessons imparted by the recent exploration of the conflict between India and Pakistan in 1965 were reminders of the need for various services, in this case, the Army and the Air Force, to work closely together. That means working in the field, in a manner that is reflected in results; headline management, of the sort that the air leadership conducted with his gullible defence minister, does not count in battle.
8) Old roles are changing rapidly. Those armed forces that adapt to it most quickly, and stop fighting the last war that they had fought, will prevail.
a) The Army, as it exists today in South Asia, will have to change; originally that was phrased as ‘....will cease to exist....’ but the hidebound Galapagos-tortoise like characteristics of the military here, that is sadly a derivative of the outcome of the military revolution that took place in Europe centuries ago, make it clear that change will be incremental. Those who change fastest, and absorb the lessons of such changes before going into battle, will win.
b) The Air Force is already clearly outdated. Its division into strategic, front-shaped and tactical is already clear, and it is only a question of waiting for the screaming to subside.
c) The Navy is a victim in some countries of looking at what Big Brother does and trying to imitate it, or using a variant of past themes that have been popular against past Big Brothers.
i) The region is famous for being a-historical in character (referring to a majority cultural segment within it, without any intention of transferring that unflattering estimation to all other countries in the region). Otherwise it would have recognised and imbibed in full the lessons from Classical Greece, where Athens, faced with an invincible Spartan army, took to the sea. This focus on the sea happened a generation before, when they abandoned their city to the Persians, and took to the waters, and smashed their enemy at Salamis. What Themistocles honed into a sharp weapon was wielded by Pericles to devastating effect within a few decades of that transformation.
ii) It is important to remember the parallel lessons from our own history, from the Cholas, for instance, or from the outstanding achievements of the Marakkars in the 16th century and the Angres in the 18th century. Both those families successfully fought the naval hegemons of the Indian Ocean, the Portuguese (and, to some extent, the Dutch) in the 16th century, and the British in the 18th century.
iii) Unfortunately, the thinking about naval power and military power, and the relationship between the two, has been inherited by New Delhi from the thinking of the British colonists, who operated on land with the full backing and support of the Royal Navy, but with no control whatsoever over naval doctrine, strategy or deployment. We therefore continue to labour under the burden of the Jang-i-Lat, and there is not much time for the Navy, or any budget either.
9) This is the current situation from the perspective of one of the major nations of South Asia.
Commenting on the detailed transformation of the military, the air force and the navy is logically determined by the boundaries set down above.
@jaibi
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Sir, I do see the point in your arguments and agree with many of them; however, as you know when it comes to mil dev then the jump from the paper to the ground is one where there are a lot of potential pitfalls and unforeseen hurdles. This is exactly my point, what it all points to is a synchrony of various systems i.e. political, civil, various arms of the forces etc., however, for that to become a reality, in my opinion, first these systems need to be cohesive internally and then with each other.
INTRODUCTION: WARS ARE WON – AND LOST – BY SOCIETIES, AND BY POLITICAL ORIENTATION, NOT BY THE ARMY, NAVY, AIR FORCE OR THE MARINES
Completely agree. These systems need to be cohesive internally before even they face the larger environment.
I just put in that introduction to explain my point of view that if we confine ourselves to the internally cohesive military technology, we may still fail, due to the lack of match between that and the social, economic and political environment.
A case in point is the procurement policy of the IAF. Each system by itself is perfect; the discord between those military systems (the aircraft themselves) and the political environment led to the drawing down of the IAF to a fraction of the required number of squadrons needed to fight the PAF and the PLA AF.
A great read, Joe, thank you. Let me just add my two cents (worth 0.75 cents adjusted for inflation):
Wars, in the 21st century, will remain mainly economic, specially between relatively evenly matched rivals in military terms. Witness the increasing weaponization of the dollar, and the various ways opponents are trying to counter it. Thus, the foundations must be society-wide, as you point out, taking decades and decades of preparation to bear any kind of fruits of national interest.
Peace!
I believe that the 'Future direction of the armed forces' and the 'Military doctrines' must also take into account concepts of law and the stability the country as well. Let me expand on both.
If you're interested in this, sir, there's an a piece I remember which basically views warfare from a systems pov and postulates that it's one system trying to overcome another and therefore, as each system becomes more complicated it becomes vulnerable to collapse. I think it analyzed the success of the Mongols/Huns/Goths against much more robust adversaries as an example.
That would be an interesting angle to further explore this topic, but - as you well know - I remain inclined to limit my participation. I will read the posts here with interest, of course.
the role of recalcitrant powers like USA to impose any kind of legal framework on their own war activities.
What an amazing discussion. Let me add my two cents and hope that i do not make a fool of myself in such esteemed company. Be advised that i am neither a soldier nor have experienced soldiery. I would say i am pretty far away from that so please forgive my naivety.
I believe that the 'Future direction of the armed forces' and the 'Military doctrines' must also take into account concepts of law and the stability the country as well. Let me expand on both.
Lets first talk about the role of international law and international community in general in the future direction of the armed forces. There is a commonplace to observe that the Second World War “total” war, in which the great powers mobilized vast armies and applied the full industrial and economic resources of their nation to the defeat and occupation of enemy states, is no longer the prototype. Concepts of International law and International relations and the rise of global economic interests have not just affected the very nature of the state itself but has also affected the institution of war. Infact wars are now rarely fought between equal nations or coalitions of great industrial powers and this is true due to the absence of such warfare, which was so common in years, decades and centuries before WW2. Days of annexation of lands through absolute brutal military blitz. In the other great thread, we witnessed @PanzerKiel raise the question as to why India, in indo-pak conflicts, has been unable to completely destroy the military capability of Pakistan and has repeatedly posed the question of India's unwilling nature to utilize its quantitative edge to nullify the qualitative gaps. In layman words, he was saying that why India and Pakistan never followed the open war conflict doctrine that was so common in the world pre WW2. If we actually take into account the indo-pak conflicts, we will notice that both sides often tried to contain the engagements rather than enter into blitz armies running through cities or doing offensives after offensives. Infact both armies have often not just tried to contain conflicts to as much minimum as they could but also tried to contain deployments as well. @Indus Pakistan has repeatedly highlighted that lack of conflict of pre-WW2 standards not created the war-aversion effect we see in europe in the modern world. I myself have stated that wars have formed a more romanticized structure, as it was in pre-WW1 in the empires of europe, amongst the people of Pakistan (ofcourse the extreme war on terror has definitely contained such thoughts).
With such a thought we cannot ignore the existence of such happening post the formation of the UN and the solidification of International Law.
Modern wars are rarely fought between equivalent nations or coalitions of great industrial powers. They occur at the peripheries of the world system, among foes with wildly different institutional, economic, and military capacities. The military trains for tasks far from conventional combat: local diplomacy, intelligence gathering, humanitarian reconstruction, urban policing, or managing the routine tasks of local government. It is ever less clear where the war begins and ends or which activities are combat, which “peacebuilding.” Enemies are dispersed and decisive engagement is rare. Battle is at once intensely local and global in new ways. Violence follows patterns more familiar from epidemiology or cultural fashion than military strategy. Networks of fellow travelers exploit the infrastructures of the global economy to bring force to bear here and there. The political, cultural, and diplomatic components of warfare have become more salient and, of course, the whole thing happens in the glare of the modern media. It most classic and home-based example would be our own war on terror or the US invasion of Afghanistan. In such a scenario we must look to the evolution of modern warfare through the lens of International law and how law itself has found a place in warfare. Previously laws and rules played little to no role in a full bearing conflict and even now nobody fully agrees what the law or rules are or even what their limitations are however one thing is clear that war is no longer devoid of law. In fact it can be stated that law no longer stands on the outskirts of war making its boundaries but is part of the conflict and military operations take place under the extremely complex tapestry of local and national law. These laws shape the logistical, institutional and even the physical landscape of where these military operations take place. International law has become the metric for debating the legitimacy for initiating a conflict and we can see this repeatedly that nations justify their military actions under one legal ambit or the other. War on terrorism is in fact fought through such reasons and legitimate legal arguments provided by both parties. I am going to take the most sensitive of examples and highlight that the Baluch insurgency repeatedly highlights that their insurgent actions are in line with international law and are not in conflict with the legal doctrines of war. They try to justify it repeatedly and Pakistan does the same. Pakistan highlights their brutal actions, their usage of terrorist tactics and Pakistan offers their own legitimacy and justification for military operations and we can see how law is used to in its physical form of stating that Pakistan is combating internal conflict which is entirely Pakistan's internal matter. Why bother? why the exercise? did nations pre-WW2 bothered doing that? No but the Pree WW2 nations did not have to face the existence of law in modern conflict. I would even say that in all these ways., law now shapes the political and physical nature of war.
Now war is a legal institution as armies are now linked to the nation’s commercial life, integrated with civilian and peacetime governmental institutions, and covered by the same national and international media. some scholars on this relationship have spoken of how the modern regulation of armies and the professional and legal culture of the armies is evidence of how much law and rules have swept into the institution of war. They often equate such with the regulated military practice of soldiers in groups deployed such as in military zones or even in peacetime zones like in an aircraft carrier. The culture and regulated feel of hundreds if not thousands of men working in a regulated fashion breathes of a military social culture. The modern military being the social system which requires a complex and entrenched culture of standard practices or shared experiences which are the rules and regulations and discipline that governs them. We see this with the entire military structure of modern armies. Pakistan army is no different and now if we were to match this with say the ANA or even the Taliban military structure then we would witness the lack of discipline and lack of social structure coherence and the reason is that its existence is based without law and without regulations and thus this negatively impacts the performance of such armies. Defections, violations, treason etc. e.tc become all too common and i am not saying modern armies dont have such. They have it but it is not on such a larger scale that we witness with unregulated armies. Let me give an example, proper implementation of criminal law does not eradicate crime nor does it promise to do so but it reduces it in comparison to states that do not have such implementation of criminal law. Same is with armies. Warfare is now rules and regulations and this is a very huge topic in itself.
The relationship between modern law and modern warfare has become even more intertwined even more so. The legal regulation of war has actually created the concept of you must kill legally here and only like this and not there and not where such killing is not permitted and killing shall only be permitted when the conditions we have stated are fulfilled and this is now a legal privilege. Do it in any other way apart from sanctioned and it is indeed criminal. Now the legality of war itself is now argued where domestically it must be sanctioned through the supreme institution i.e the president aka the commander in chief or the parliament and international through the compliance of UN Charter and not through reasons of Aggression or annexation or for genocide or the other illegal reasons.
Battlefield conduct is disciplined by rules: kill soldiers, not civilians, respect the rights of neutrals. Do not use forbidden weapons. Behind the rules stand general principles like no “unnecessary” damage, any killing or injury must be “proportional” to the military objective, defend yourself. Together, these principles have become a global vernacular for assessing the legitimacy of war, down to the tactics of particular battles. Was the use of force “necessary” and “proportional” to the military objectives, were the civilian deaths truly “collateral?” Military lawyers today are often forward deployed with the troops poring over planned targets. The Judge Advocate General corps are deployed to advise the military commanders on the legality of their actions and their presence proves how much law has become a part of modern warfare. The judge advocate general branch is becoming even more complicated as the concept of war is becoming even more complicated especially in the days of WOT where human rights violations and media involvement is huge and ofcourse laws such as AFSPA for India or AACP for Pakistan which allow for great powers to military in such areas where these acts are implemented. AACP is a very good example of the legalization of warfare and how powers are allotted as such. For example you can take any person you find suspicious and not bring him to the magistrate in 24 hours in areas where AACP is in force however the same cant be done in areas where AACP is not in force. Army can take property and make checkpost on it or search any property they desire and upon refusal use force but in areas where AACP is not in force like say lahore, army cant do that. The legalization of military capability and operational capability can no longer be ignored and each day it is becoming more and more complicated as the legality of AACP in line with the Constitution of 1973. This is now part of the operational capability of the army.
The vocabulary legitimate targeting and proportionate violence has been internalized by the military complex of the world. Not every soldier not every commander follows the rules but this is less surprising than the fact that people on all sides discuss the legitimacy of battlefield violence in similar legal terms.
This common vernacular has also leached into our political life. If war remains, as Clausewitz taught us, the continuation of politics by other means, the politics continued by warfare today has itself been legalized. The sovereign no longer stands alone, deciding the fate of empire as he stands rather atop a complex bureaucracy, exercising powers delegated by a constitution, and shared out with myriad agencies, bureaucracies and private actors, knit together in complex networks that spread across borders. Even in the most powerful and well-integrated states, power today lies in the capillaries of social and economic life. The sovereigns do not decide alone. The courts resist, the bureaucracy resists.
Now coming back to the relationship of law and warfare. For a long time jurists would highlight the separation of law from politics and warfare and this was true for a long period but modern world especially post WW2 saw law become an integral part. We see military doctrines being based on legal thinking and lawful excuses such as the Cold start doctrine which speaks not of absolute warfare but small scale incursions. Now if we look into the doctrine, we will notice that it starts as a form of responsive military doctrine where India claims that in event of Pakistan's military aggression or any terrorist attack, India will mount an offensive. The doctrine ties to legalize a military response through usage of proportionate response and it does not enter into blitz warfare of racing to Islamabad but of contained warfare where India does not look the aggressor and then it speaks of returning the territory it had taken on the IB. All three of these factors find their formation in legal military code and here we see again how concept of law and legal has affected military doctrines and not just legal but international politico-legal as well. Thus modern warfare cannot dissuade itself from the limitations placed by the involvement of law. It is argued by scholars that presence of law in warfare has not restrained military conflict but justified it and the UN usage of vague terms such as 'armed response' or 'proportionate response' etc. has not helped the humanitarian cause. a few months ago i had downloaded a small handbook issued by the ICRC, the international committee of the red cross on the legal code of modern warfare. This is alongside multiple existence of such volumes that are published. The reason is to train the soldier and the commander on the legal aspects of modern warfare and to tell them where and what can they do.
This is why, for modern military operations and for successful and professional operations, we cannot ignore the existence of law and rule of law in the state. Economics plays an important role as @niaz has stated however the legal structure of the state must also be intact for the success of military operations and for this the civlian and military balance must be structured and follows a constitutional setup where both empower each other rather than undermine each other. Law plays an important role in war and its existence must be utilized as such for successful military operations. In this manner it must be mentioned that law and legal aspect must be given due and absolute significance in military doctrines, operations and deployments.
@jaibi @Joe Shearer @VCheng @Nilgiri @WAJsal @Arsalan if i look all over the place then do forgive.
Pakistan is combating internal conflict which is entirely Pakistan's internal matter.
How would a youngster straight out of the IMA (our own finishing military institution for army officers) be trained to deal with such issues and given sufficient education to balance his martial duties with the proper use of lawful force? remembering, as we do from the vivid evidence of these pages, that young soldiers (from other countries) can run forward in hot pursuit right into the target areas of an own artillery barrage, knowing the consequences but defying them?
Policing is after all avery different scope and needs its particular training and discipline compared to the stated function and role of the military (and scope and threat of its primary kind of opponent).
COIN is where that awful grey area starts between military practice (war, conflict) and policing...given policing would be the set default ROE (given area is not a declared warzone in the regular expected sense a military would prefer).
In COIN...you intend to employ a military setting in area where there is a sizeable credible unconventional armed (often heavily) opponent in a conventional setting (of larger population and society etc). There is simply no good answer there at all at the fundamental root level of the soldier himself.
An interesting take on the topic. Please allow me to ask you to develop this concept further in view of the issues related to the ICJ, UN agencies, and the role of recalcitrant powers like USA to impose any kind of legal framework on their own war activities. The military has long had its own internal review for ethical and legal conduct of its soldiers, but as we know (Abu Gharaib, as a particularly egregious example), even this discipline falls far short.
What happens, in other words, when the sole super-power prosecutes others for war crimes and inflicts capital punishment on offenders of the law, and commits war crimes itself and blandly denies those? Does anyone remember Lt. William Calley?
Taking my cue from this remark, can my country any longer legitimately plead - AFSPA taken into account - that our internal conflict resolution measures are entirely our internal matter? Is that legal? Even more important, is that equitable? my extensive reading for preparing a response to @jaibi on counter-insurgency made it necessary to look at the conflict over Nagaland's existence as an independent state; over the effort of the Mizos to follow the Naga lead, and the first and last use of the air force in independent India in a counter-insurgency role; at the massacre of Nellie; the battle for central India that the British could not finish and that is being prosecuted now, even as we speak; and Kashmir. Can these remain indefinitely our internal matter?
If, even as our internal matter, our own laws and our constitutional safeguards and restrictions are to by the political leadership, where does the mandate of the people serve as a buttress against law in all its manifestations?
What should a state do to pursue its national policy, but at all times, stay within the law?
How would a youngster straight out of the IMA (our own finishing military institution for army officers) be trained to deal with such issues and given sufficient education to balance his martial duties with the proper use of lawful force? remembering, as we do from the vivid evidence of these pages, that young soldiers (from other countries) can run forward in hot pursuit right into the target areas of an own artillery barrage, knowing the consequences but defying them?
That is why the Indian Army ALWAYS opposed being sucked into Counter-insurgency, until this latest supersession drama took place and a meat-head gentleman with no war-fighting credentials except wars fought against fellow citizens took over. That is a powerful reason for current military doctrine of the IA including COIN in its scope of work.
....and a VERY edgy Army asked for the protection of the law.
This was the origin of the AFSPA.
In 18th century England, there was actually a statute called the Riot Act. That is the origin of the English phrase, "....reading someone the Riot Act...."
The Statute said that the following wording had to be read out...oh, read for yourselves:
The act created a mechanism for certain local officials to make a proclamation ordering the dispersal of any group of more than twelve people who were "unlawfully, riotously, and tumultuously assembled together". If the group failed to disperse within one hour, then anyone remaining gathered was guilty of a felony without benefit of clergy, punishable by death.
The proclamation could be made in an incorporated town or city by the mayor, bailiff or "other head officer", or a justice of the peace. Elsewhere it could be made by a justice of the peace or the sheriff, undersheriff or parish constable. It had to be read out to the gathering concerned, and had to follow precise wording detailed in the act; several convictions were overturned because parts of the proclamation had been omitted, in particular "God save the King".
The wording that had to be read out to the assembled gathering was as follows:
Our sovereign lord the King chargeth and commandeth all persons, being assembled, immediately to disperse themselves, and peaceably to depart to their habitations, or to their lawful business, upon the pains contained in the act made in the first year of King George, for preventing tumults and riotous assemblies. God save the King.
So what happened if the crowd didn't disperse? Force could be used.
If a group of people failed to disperse within one hour of the proclamation, the act provided that the authorities could use force to disperse them. Anyone assisting with the dispersal was specifically indemnified against any legal consequences in the event of any of the crowd being injured or killed.
Because of the broad authority that the act granted, it was used both for the maintenance of civil order and for political means. A particularly notorious use of the act was the Peterloo Massacre of 1819 in Manchester.
This is what the Army sought in Nagaland; protection from prosecution for deaths that occurred in the course of pursuing their orders of restoring peace and law and order, and restoring the legal magistracy.
Without the AFSPA, the Army is powerless to intervene.
This is all off-topic, in a sense, @saiyan0321; there is a separate thread that is dying for attention, and if you find some time tomorrow to transfer your original post (and it was very, very original) to that thread (also started by @jaibi), it would keep things close together. We could ask @jaibi himself to transfer the other posts, including THIS one.
Just a word in finishing: The US has a similar doctrine, but for a wholly different reason; the reason was to prevent state law enforcement officers from co-opting federal military personnel into a posse, the posse comitatus, to pursue and apprehend criminals. So
The United States' Posse Comitatus Act, passed in 1878, prohibits any part of the Army or the Air Force (since the U.S. Air Force evolved from the U.S. Army) from engaging in domestic law enforcement activities unless they do so pursuant to lawful authority. Similar prohibitions apply to the Navy and Marine Corps by service regulation, since the actual Posse Comitatus Act does not apply to them. The Coast Guard is exempt from Posse Comitatus since it normally operates under the Department of Homeland Security versus the Department of Defense and enforces U.S. laws, even when operating as a service with the U.S. Navy.
The act is often misunderstood to prohibit any use of federal military forces in law enforcement, but this is not the case. For example, the President has explicit authority under the Constitution and federal law to use federal forces or federalized militias to enforce the laws of the United States. The act's primary purpose is to prevent local law enforcement officials from utilizing federal forces in this way by forming a "posse" consisting of federal Soldiers or Airmen.
Both our armies need laws for military operations because war itself is now a legalized institution and this cannot be ignored.