Deep Into the Insurgent's Mind:
Past the Motorcycle Diaries towards understanding Che Gueverra
by Hugues Esquerre
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The second half of the 20th century was dominated by the Cold War; however, partisan warfare, guerrilla warfare, brush-fire wars, civil wars, rebellions and insurgencies -- what British Major General Charles Callwell summarizes as "small wars" -- continued to proliferate throughout the world. Western militaries focused almost exclusively on preparing for high intensity, technologically advanced warfare. Meanwhile, the study of insurgencies and the development of counter-insurgency (COIN) doctrine essentially came to a halt. Since 2001, the protracted wars in Iraq and Afghanistan have once again brought the study and development of counter-insurgency principles and doctrine back to the forefront of Western military thought . For the most part, these "new counter-insurgency doctrines " have been based on the works of theorists like the Frenchmen Bernard Fall , David Galula and Roger Trinquier , the American John J. McCuen , or the Englishmen Frank Kitson and Robert Thompson . Although these works are valuable resources, they focus primarily on the American, English, French and even sometimes the Soviet counter-insurgency experiences and perspectives . The shortfall of these works is that they fail to examine the insurgency from the point of view of the insurgent.
As every soldier or strategist knows, one must "turn the map around" and view the situation from the enemy's perspective. One must understand and anticipate his opponent's most likely courses of action in order to defeat him. As such, it is very interesting to try to enter into the mind of an insurgent to understand how an insurgency is conceived, developed, and led on "the other side". Of even greater interest and value, given the insurgencies currently being fought in Iraq and Afghanistan, is to choose to study insurgents who won their fights within the last six decades. The number of insurgents that fit this criteria are relatively small, with the most famous being Mao Zedong, who defeated the Chinese nationalists to seize power (1949), Ví´ N'Guyen Giap, who served as Hí´ Chi Minh's strategist against the French (1954) and the Americans (1975), and finally Che Guevara, who took a prominent role in the rise to power of Fidel Castro in Cuba (1959).
In analysing the publications produced by each of these insurgents, the works of Che Guevara, and particularly his book Guerrilla Warfare , stand-out as an excellent "guidebook" to the mind of an insurgent. Indeed, after the victorious Cuban campaign of the late 1950's led by Fidel Castro and Che Guevara, it was Guevara's goal to publish and widely disseminate what he considered to be the best rules and practices to ensure victory to any insurgency. Due to the influence and impact of Guevara's book, it is now considered by counter-insurgency theorists to have an equal place of importance next to the revolutionary doctrines of Mao . As a result, the study of Che Guevara's Guerrilla Warfare is extremely pertinent because it clearly lays out the keys to weaken, discredit, and ultimately defeat - sometimes before it has really even started - an insurgency.
Before delving into Guevara's insurgency theories found in Guerrilla Warfare in the second part of this article and before identifying in a third and last part what are the weaknesses of his theories and what can be useful for a counter-insurgency force to defeat an insurgency, one must first put this book into context by remembering, without any political or ideological blindness, who Che Guevara was and what he did. This will allow the reader to avoid any preconceptions and to concentrate only on his theories and their usefulness in modern counter-insurgency warfare. That's the aim of the first part of this article.
Download the Full Article: Deep Into the Insurgent's Mind
Major (FRA MC) Hugues Esquerre is an officer in the French Marine Corps who served in tours to Kosovo, Gaboon, the Horn of Africa, and Afghanistan. He is a graduate of the Collí¨ge Interarmées de Défense in Paris.