• Thanks for stopping by. Logging in to a registered account will remove all generic ads. Please reach out with any questions or concerns.

Rewarding "Courageous Restraint"=Way to Cut Civ Cas?

The Bread Guy

Moderator
Staff member
Directing Staff
Subscriber
Donor
Reaction score
7,024
Points
1,360
Uh, am I out of whack here, but how many soldiers would hold fire or not do something just because they might get a gong?  You think they might just be, I don't know, following the rules?  Or am I missing something in the concept?

This from the Associated Press:
NATO commanders are weighing a new way to reduce civilian casualties in Afghanistan: recognizing soldiers for "courageous restraint" if they avoid using force that could endanger innocent lives.

The concept comes as the coalition continues to struggle with the problem of civilian casualties despite repeated warnings from the top NATO commander, Gen. Stanley McChrystal, that the war effort hinges on the ability to protect the population and win support away from the Taliban.

Those who back the idea hope it will provide soldiers with another incentive to think twice before calling in an airstrike or firing at an approaching vehicle if civilians could be at risk.

Most military awards in the past have been given for things like soldiers taking out a machine gun nest or saving their buddies in a firefight, said Command Sgt. Maj. Michael Hall, the senior NATO enlisted man in Afghanistan.

"We are now considering how we look at awards differently," he said.

British Maj. Gen. Nick Carter, the NATO commander of troops in southern Afghanistan, proposed the idea of awarding soldiers for "courageous restraint" during a visit by Hall to Kandahar Airfield in mid April. McChrystal is now reviewing the proposal to determine how it could be implemented, Hall said ....
 
It's a good thing we are pulling out in 2011.....next will be a medal for going potty in the correct place... ::)
 
Journeyman said:
Finally, some recognition for the French and Germans up in RC-North.  ;)

You owe me a new computer screen and Timmies.

 
So, there is a role for conscientious objectors in the military and on ops!  Let's not forget the Dutch and Romainans in RC(S).
 
While this might seem easy to poke fun at, there are plenty of examples from within our own military across various missions where soldiers have achieved good to great things through the courage to leave them selves open while exercising restraint and still not backing down.  I don't see anything wrong with recognizing this bravery in the same way we recognize bravery when bullets are flying.
 
Question is:

Is this "policy" going to put OUR soldiers lives at risk? While I do agree with MCG and our troops have exercised restraint despite being in danger, will some make the wrong decision, show that restraint, and end up dead because of it?
While I agree with this in principle, let us not forget that there are times when our troops will have to pull the trigger.

And this came from the leadership that closed various amenities on KAF because "we are at war" and these amenities caused the troops to lose focus...
 
MCG said:
While this might seem easy to poke fun at, there are plenty of examples from within our own military across various missions where soldiers have achieved good to great things through the courage to leave them selves open while exercising restraint and still not backing down.  I don't see anything wrong with recognizing this bravery in the same way we recognize bravery when bullets are flying.

And Rwanda is not one of them!  I agree with MAS, this Comd is becoming increasingly politically-correct.  How about punishing those who use excessive or inappropriate force, then they might create the balance necessary to minimize casualties.
 
I agree that there needs to be more punishment when we get it wrong and kill innocent people than rewarding when we don't.

The Oka-type scenario is what something like a Medal of Bravery would be applicable for.

There are all sorts of times when lethal force is 100% justified, but if someone says "launch a Hellfire" at a group of people who end up to have not really been that much of a threat, there needs to be more than "Well I was there and nobody can second guess me because you don't understand what it was like".

Rewarding restraint is a very dangerous slope.  Without knowing the full intent, the first situation that comes to mind is the vehicle speeding toward the convoy and ignoring the entire escalation of force spectrum to stop.  Now that soldier is potentially letting the car to within X metres instead of X+50 metres.
 
Petamocto said:
le
Rewarding restraint is a very dangerous slope.  Without knowing the full intent, the first situation that comes to mind is the vehicle speeding toward the convoy and ignoring the entire escalation of force spectrum to stop.  Now that soldier is potentially letting the car to within X metres instead of X+50 metres.
I concur.

While the motive is noble, it may put our troops lives at risk.
 
Simian Turner said:
MCG said:
... there are plenty of examples from within our own military across various missions where soldiers have achieved good to great things through the courage to leave them selves open while exercising restraint and still not backing down. 
And Rwanda is not one of them!
No.  Rwanda was not.  But that is because Rwanda was not a capable force showing restraint - Rwanda was an non-capable force showing impotence.

I am somewhat perplexed by the apparent wisdom of some that offering positive recognition for restraint will lead to more avoidable deaths and that we should instead institute greater punishment.  Nobody is going to get themselves killed in the hopes of collecting a medal for courageous restraint, but guys will hesitate if we establish cause to fear reprisals.

Also remember that we are soldiers.  That does not mean we accept risk and casualties to kill the enemy – it means we accept risk and casualties to accomplish the mission.  If greater restraint sees casualties incurred at an increased rate but an earlier achievement of the mission, then that is the cost of business – and in the long run, the earlier victory will mean fewer casualties to the coalition and non-combatants.
 
MCG said:
Also remember that we are soldiers.  That does not mean we accept risk and casualties to kill the enemy – it means we accept risk and casualties to accomplish the mission.  If greater restraint sees casualties incurred at an increased rate but an earlier achievement of the mission, then that is the cost of business – and in the long run, the earlier victory will mean fewer casualties to the coalition and non-combatants.

Yes indeed we are soldiers, that is not hard to forget, but what is the 'victory' you are expecting in Afghanistan?  So taking more early casualties to accomplish the mission is acceptable to you - I don't think our superiors, government or public would agree.  It would seem we are taking more casualties now than we were 9 years ago, so...is victory close at hand and our mission is near complete?
 
Simian Turner said:
So taking more early casualties to accomplish the mission is acceptable to you - I don't think our superiors, government or public would agree
That is not what I said.  We need to be ready to accept a higher rate of casualties for tactics that will end the war quicker – we will then see fewer aggregate casualties.

Simian Turner said:
It would seem we are taking more casualties now than we were 9 years ago, so...is victory close at hand and our mission is near complete?
Don't distorte what I've said & attack strawmen because they are easier than the argument I have actually made.  I did means the end of the war is near. 
I am saying that we should not prolong the war for the sake of risk aversion (casualty aversion).

It is not about taking more casualties to end the mission.  It is about not shying from effective tactics even if those tactics result in higher short term losses.

Our Counter insurgency doctrine tells us that that we will generate more insurgents every time we kill the wrong people.  It tells us that we win by stealing the insurgents moral support base.  It tells us we need to exercise restraint in order to win. 

We should not be punishing soldiers who could have exercised more restraint – but we should positively recognize those who do.  We should only punish recklessness – either reckless use of force or reckless restraint –  and violations of RoE & LoAC.
 
MCG said:
We should not be punishing soldiers who could have exercised more restraint – but we should positively recognize those who do.  We should only punish recklessness – either reckless use of force or reckless restraint –  and violations of RoE & LoAC.

This I can wrap my brain around. Thank you for clarifying that.
 
MCG said:
Our Counter insurgency doctrine tells us that that we will generate more insurgents every time we kill the wrong people.  It tells us that we win by stealing the insurgents moral support base.  It tells us we need to exercise restraint in order to win. 

I dont mean to nitpick, but this concept has been around a long time, and was common knowledge long before it got published in the COIN manual.  It also covers the concepts of using appropriate levels of force during a situation and at the right time, i.e. considering whether operational goals will significantly interfere with strategic or political goals. 


 
MCG said:
That is not what I said.  We need to be ready to accept a higher rate of casualties for tactics that will end the war quicker – we will then see fewer aggregate casualties.
Don't distorte what I've said & attack strawmen because they are easier than the argument I have actually made.  I did means the end of the war is near. 
I am saying that we should not prolong the war for the sake of risk aversion (casualty aversion).

It is not about taking more casualties to end the mission.  It is about not shying from effective tactics even if those tactics result in higher short term losses.

I apologize if I distorted your ideas, it is often hard to interpret the written word because we can't hear the author's intra-cranial thought process.  I agree that the end of our participation in the war is near - victory is not.  Unfortunately in counter-insurgency operations we are not ready to accept the larger number of early casualties because it is impossible to foresee that there will be a decrease later in the execution of the mission.  The only way we have found to predict the future in operations is by 'wargaming' and unfortunately the actual results (casualties and victory) are not always what we were able to predict.  Many people criticized MGen Leslie in 2005 when indicated that Afghanistan would be a 20-year venture because, "every time you kill an angry young man overseas, you’re creating 15 more who will come after you.”

Ref for quote, http://briarpatchmagazine.com/detestable-murderers-and-scumbags-making-sense-of-canadas-deployment-in-afghanistan/comment-page-1/

Regret numerous edits - I wanted to get my quote relevant and correct.
 
I was given a book by a LT called "The Warrior's Way: A treatise on Military Ethics" by Richard A. Gabriel.
I'm sure some of you have read it. It deals with the different ethical dilemmas faced by soldiers.
It's a good read.

In one of the chapters, it mentions how a PC military is a very negative thing.

In one of the chapters he quotes General Walter Kerwin:
"We face a dilemma that armies have always faced within a democratic society. The values necessary to defend that society are often at odds with the values of the society itself. To be an effective servant of the people the army must concentrate not on values of our liberal society, but on hard values of the battlefield...We must recognize that this military community differs from the civilian community from which it springs. The civilian community exists to promote the quality of life; the military community exists to fight and, if need be, to die in defense of that quality of life. We must not apologize for these differences. The people...are served by soldiers disciplined to obey the orders of their leaders, and hardened and conditioned to survive the rigors of the battlefield. We do neither our soldiers nor our people any favors if we ignore these realities"

[...]The need to separate the military from the civil society has been recognized by the society's political leaders in their willingness to create within the military a set of institutions that renders it virtually autonomous and self-governing on a day-to-day basis. Thus, military establishments have their own court, codes of law and regulations, police, trial procedures, judges, court of appeals, and even their own prisons. All these institutions exist and function quite apart from the larger society and with society's approval. To a large extent, then, the social distance between the society and the profession already exists. To insist on a congruence of all but the most basic values of society and profession runs the risk of either militarizing the state, as in totalitarian societies, or civilianizing the profession to mirror the larger society as much as possible. Neither path serves the profession or a democratic civil order well.

I don't know much, but this makes sense to me. I don't understand why those who have been in service for so long wish to impose restrictions on our soldiers, and instill doubt and hesitation in their mind; something that is extremely dangerous in a battle, where split second decisions can mean the difference between life or death.
 
bdave said:
I was given a book by a LT called "The Warrior's Way: A treatise on Military Ethics" by Richard A. Gabriel.
I'm sure some of you have read it. It deals with the different ethical dilemmas faced by soldiers.
It's a good read.

In one of the chapters, it mentions how a PC military is a very negative thing.

In one of the chapters he quotes General Walter Kerwin:
I don't know much, but this makes sense to me. I don't understand why those who have been in service for so long wish to impose restrictions on our soldiers, and instill doubt and hesitation in their mind; something that is extremely dangerous in a battle, where split second decisions can mean the difference between life or death.

It is a good book, but the quote you have doesn't really apply to the topic, nor to the statement you follow-up with regarding restrictions on soldiers.  We must have restrictions.  Those are a huge part of what makes us soldiers and not gang members. 

What the quoted General is getting at is that military culture and ethics will be distinct in some manner from society at large.  He is not saying that we should go around without restrictions. 



 
Tango2Bravo said:
It is a good book, but the quote you have doesn't really apply to the topic, nor to the statement you follow-up with regarding restrictions on soldiers.  We must have restrictions.  Those are a huge part of what makes us soldiers and not gang members. 

What the quoted General is getting at is that military culture and ethics will be distinct in some manner from society at large.  He is not saying that we should go around without restrictions.

I realize that, but found it somewhat applicable to this situation.
I am alluding to politically correctness and how some are trying to implement it into the military.
 
Back
Top