Difference between revisions of "David Kilcullen"
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− | Kilcullen has been called 'America, Britain and Australia's favourite expert on counterinsurgency methods and tactics'. <ref>Robert Fox, 'Echoes of Vietnam in Afghanistan', Guardian Unlimited, 12 May 2009</ref> ''The Spectator'' calls him 'Gordon Brown and David Miliband's favourite counter-insurgency expert' <ref>'Lions led by Labour donkeys', ''The Spectator'', 4 April 2009; p.5</ref> The original press source reporting Brown's admiration for Kilcullen appears to be an article by the British journalist Matthew D'Ancona, published in August 2007. <ref>Matthew d'Ancona, 'On the road with Gordon in the search for hearts and minds', ''The Spectator'', 4 August 2007</ref> | + | Kilcullen has been called 'America, Britain and Australia's favourite expert on counterinsurgency methods and tactics'. <ref>Robert Fox, 'Echoes of Vietnam in Afghanistan', Guardian Unlimited, 12 May 2009</ref> ''The Spectator'' calls him '[[Gordon Brown]] and [[David Miliband|David Miliband's]] favourite counter-insurgency expert' <ref>'Lions led by Labour donkeys', ''The Spectator'', 4 April 2009; p.5</ref> The original press source reporting Brown's admiration for Kilcullen appears to be an article by the British journalist Matthew D'Ancona, published in August 2007. <ref>Matthew d'Ancona, 'On the road with Gordon in the search for hearts and minds', ''The Spectator'', 4 August 2007</ref> [[David Miliband| Miliband's]] admiration for Kilcullen is confirmed by a blog entry of his made on the Foreign and Commonwealth Office website in which he wrote: 'I think that some of the best thinking about terrorism has been done by David Kilcullen.' <ref>[[Image:Milband blog screengrab.jpg|Screengrab]] created 27 May 2009, 22:52</ref> |
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In promoting Kilcullen's ''The Accidental Guerrilla'', Oxford University Press describe Kilcullen as 'the "go-to guy" for journalists when it comes to counterinsurgency'. <ref>OUP USA, [http://www.us.oup.com/us/catalog/general/subject/Politics/AmericanPolitics/ForeignDefensePolicy/~~/dmlldz11c2EmY2k9OTc4MDE5NTM2ODM0NQ== The Accidental Guerrilla], accessed 26 May 2009</ref> Kilcullen has a substantial media presence. The Lexis Nexis newspaper database lists 440 articles mentioning Kilcullen between 2005 and 2008 and 104 in its Major World Newspapers group. <ref>Searches conducted on 26 May 2009. Details of the searches used are as follows: All English Language News > (David Kilcullen ) and DATE(>=[2005]-01-01 and <=[2008]-12-31) and Major World Newspapers (English) > (David Kilcullen ) and DATE(>=[2005]-01-01 and <=[2008]-12-31)</ref> <ref>The LexisNexis Major World Newspapers group file which was used for the search contains over 40 full-text newspapers from around the world. According to LexisNexis the papers included “are generally regarded by the reading public as those giving the most comprehensive and reliable coverage”.</ref> | In promoting Kilcullen's ''The Accidental Guerrilla'', Oxford University Press describe Kilcullen as 'the "go-to guy" for journalists when it comes to counterinsurgency'. <ref>OUP USA, [http://www.us.oup.com/us/catalog/general/subject/Politics/AmericanPolitics/ForeignDefensePolicy/~~/dmlldz11c2EmY2k9OTc4MDE5NTM2ODM0NQ== The Accidental Guerrilla], accessed 26 May 2009</ref> Kilcullen has a substantial media presence. The Lexis Nexis newspaper database lists 440 articles mentioning Kilcullen between 2005 and 2008 and 104 in its Major World Newspapers group. <ref>Searches conducted on 26 May 2009. Details of the searches used are as follows: All English Language News > (David Kilcullen ) and DATE(>=[2005]-01-01 and <=[2008]-12-31) and Major World Newspapers (English) > (David Kilcullen ) and DATE(>=[2005]-01-01 and <=[2008]-12-31)</ref> <ref>The LexisNexis Major World Newspapers group file which was used for the search contains over 40 full-text newspapers from around the world. According to LexisNexis the papers included “are generally regarded by the reading public as those giving the most comprehensive and reliable coverage”.</ref> |
Revision as of 21:56, 27 May 2009
David J. Kilcullen is an adviser to the US government and a counterinsurgency writer.
Contents
Background
Kilcullen grew up on Sydney's north shore, the son of academics. He studied counterinsurgency as a cadet at Royal Military College in Duntroon, the Australian Army's officer training establishment. [1]
He served for 22 years in the Australian Army, suggesting he was commissioned in circa 1983. During his time in the army he was reportedly a military adviser to the Indonesian Special Forces in counterinsurgency, taught counterinsurgency tactics at the British School of Infantry, and served in peacekeeping operations in Cyprus and Bougainville. [2] He also commanded an Australian infantry company in counterinsurgency operations in East Timor and trained and led East Timorese forces after the independence vote in 1999. [3]
During this time Kilcullen also studied a PhD at the University of South Wales. Towards the end of his military service, Kilcullen served in Australia’s Office of National Assessments and on the writing team for Australia’s 2004 Terrorism White Paper. [4]
US Advisor
According to The New Yorker, in 2004 Kilcullen’s writings and lectures brought him to the attention of an official working for Paul Wolfowitz, who was then the Deputy Secretary of Defense. [5] Kilcullen took leave from Australia's Defence Department to help the Pentagon with the drafting of the 2005 Quadrennial Defence Review, which determines the US's global defence strategy. Working inside the Pentagon in 2004, Kilcullen founded and led the US Government's inter-agency Irregular Warfare Working Group. [6]
In July 2005, Kilcullen, as a result of his work on the Pentagon document, received an invitation to attend a conference on defense policy, in Vermont. There he met Henry Crumpton, who had supervised the CIA’s covert activities in Afghanistan during the 2001 invasion. The two men spent much of the conference talking privately. Soon afterward, Condoleezza Rice, the Secretary of State, hired Crumpton as the department’s co-ordinator for counterterrorism, and Crumpton, in turn, offered Kilcullen a job. [7] Kilcullen left the Australian Army as a lieutenant-colonel, and returned to Washington to work as the chief strategist for Crumpton. [8] His official position was 'Chief Strategist in the Office of the Coordinator for Counterterrorism, The State Department'. [9]
The Times writes that Kilcullen 'was helping Petraeus to write his now-famous text on counter-insurgency' when Petraeus was put in charge of the occupation of Iraq. [10] This is a reference to Petraeus's counterinsurgency manual FM 3-24, the preparation of which he oversaw. [11] Kilcullen then became a senior counter-insurgency advisor to David Petraeus, and was part of the small team that designed “the surge”. In promoting Kilcullen's The Accidental Guerrilla, Oxford University Press describe Kilcullen as having been 'part of General David Petraeus' brain trust in Baghdad'. [12] He was awarded the US Army Superior Civilian Service Medal “for exceptionally meritorious service to the United States as Senior Counterinsurgency Advisor, Multi-National Force-Iraq, during Operation Iraqi Freedom.” [13]
Other roles
Kilcullen is a Senior Fellow at the East West Institute [14] and a Senior Non-Resident Fellow at the Center for a New American Security. [15] He is also a partner at the Crumpton Group, [16] a strategic advisory firm based in Washington, D.C. by Henry Crumpton, the CIA man who brought Kilcullen to the Pentagon.
Views
In his research Kilcullen seeks to develop what he called a 'conflict ethnography', that is 'a deep, situation-specific understanding of the human, social and cultural dimensions of a conflict'. [17] This term was used in a presentation he gave at the RAND Corporation in May 2008. [18] In essence what the term encapsulates is Kilcullen's view that an effective counterinsurgency must be based on a culturally sensitive reading of the particular society of which the insurgents are part. In an online article, Kilcullen writes that a 'professional counterinsurgent' has a 'personal obligation to study, internalize and interpret the physical, human, informational and ideological setting in which the conflict takes place.' [19] In the context of that article Kilcullen was arguing against other commentators who believe that 'insurgents' are motivated by religious ideology. Kilcullen criticised such commentators as 'Western armchair theorists who concede the enemy’s religious arguments [and] are either unfamiliar with reality on the ground, or deceived by enemy propaganda.' [20]
Because he is seen as presenting a more nuanced, sophisticated and less ideological view (particularly in comparison with Rumsfled, Cheney and the Neoconservatives), Kilcullen is often praised by journalists and intellectuals. For example Janine di Giovanni writes in the New York Times writes that: 'After reading “The Accidental Guerrilla,” one is left to wonder why the Pentagon did not listen to his sage advice back in 2003, instead of that of all those cheery optimists who predicted the Iraqis would greet the American forces with flowers.' [21]
Tom Hayden comments on the Huffington Post that, 'The long New Yorker piece by George Packer pictured Kilcullen as a charming, eccentric, and isolated genius of sorts.' [22] Given such praise it should be noted that Kilcullen does not object to conquest and occupation, rather his objections and criticisms are purely tactical. As the New Yorker notes in its overwise flattering profile:
In his view, winning hearts and minds is not a matter of making local people like you—as some American initiates to counterinsurgency whom I met in Iraq seemed to believe—but of getting them to accept that supporting your side is in their interest, which requires an element of coercion...a willingness to show local people that supporting the enemy risks harm and hardship...[B]ecause he talks about war with an analyst’s rationalism and a practitioner’s matter-of-factness, Kilcullen can appear deceptively detached from its consequences. [23]
Kilcullen has, as Tom Hayden points out, advocated a 'global Phoenix program'. The original 'Phoenix' was a detention, torture and assassination programme in South Vietman which was denounced and disbanded by the US Congress after hearings in the 1970s. [24] Hayden also notes how Kilcullen's goal of controlling the civilian population in Iraq mimicks the 'strategic hamlets' programme in South Vietnam, originally developed by Robert Thompson in Malaya and inevitably justified as an effort to 'protect' the occupied population. [25] Kilcullen's approach, and that of 'the surge' more generally can be seen as a modern and urbanised form of the 'strategic hamlets' programme.
This is evident in a presentation Kilcullen gave at the RAND Corporation in May 2008 in which Kilcullen described the 'breaking [of] the cycle' of violence through ‘gated communities’ and ‘access controls’ to prevent the mixing of Shia and Sunni populations, ‘domination of "belts"’ (Provinces adjacent to Baghdad), ‘control of access to Baghdad’, and ‘Joint Security Operations to protect people in their homes' [27] (see diagram on the left)
Writings
Kilcullen's PhD thesis was presented in 2000 and titled Political Consequences of Military Operations in Indonesia 1945 – 99. [28] The thesis explored the history of counterinsurgency in Indonesia and drew on Kilcullen's personal experences. [29]
In 2006 Kilcullen wrote a short paper on counterinsurgency called The 28 Articles: Fundamentals of Company-Level CounterInsurgency, which used by the US, Australian, British, Canadian, Dutch, Iraqi and Afghan armies as a training document. According to an article in The Australian, Kilcullen wrote the paper after junior officers' feedback on Petraeus's counterinsurgency document FM 3-24 suggested commanders needed something more practical. [30]
According to The Australian, it has become 'the equivalent of the Lonely Planet guide for an infantry fighting asymmetrical battles: a pragmatic, blunt and at times blackly humorous tract that has revolutionised the way the so-called war on terror is being fought.' [31]
In Twenty-Eight Articles, Kilcullen writes that, 'Rob Greenway, Bruce Hoffman, Olivier Roy and Marc Sageman influenced my thinking over several months.' He also credits a 'current serving officer of the Central Intelligence Agency, and two other members of the intelligence community, also made major contributions but cannot be named. [32]
Influence in media and politics
Kilcullen has been called 'America, Britain and Australia's favourite expert on counterinsurgency methods and tactics'. [33] The Spectator calls him 'Gordon Brown and David Miliband's favourite counter-insurgency expert' [34] The original press source reporting Brown's admiration for Kilcullen appears to be an article by the British journalist Matthew D'Ancona, published in August 2007. [35] Miliband's admiration for Kilcullen is confirmed by a blog entry of his made on the Foreign and Commonwealth Office website in which he wrote: 'I think that some of the best thinking about terrorism has been done by David Kilcullen.' [36]
In promoting Kilcullen's The Accidental Guerrilla, Oxford University Press describe Kilcullen as 'the "go-to guy" for journalists when it comes to counterinsurgency'. [37] Kilcullen has a substantial media presence. The Lexis Nexis newspaper database lists 440 articles mentioning Kilcullen between 2005 and 2008 and 104 in its Major World Newspapers group. [38] [39]
According to briefings given in the US by the Prime Minister, Gordon Brown has 'been impressed by the work of' Kilcullen. [40]
References
Resources
- Wikipedia David Kilcullen
- Karina Marczuk, 'A Visionary and a Practitioner: the Bernard Kouchner vs. David Kilcullen', Defence and Strategy, Volume 2/2007
- George Packer, 'Knowing the Enemy:Can social scientists redefine the “war on terror”?' The New Yorker, 18 December 2006
Notes
- ↑ Rebecca Weisser, 'Strategist behind war gains', The Australian, 18 August 2007
- ↑ Rebecca Weisser, 'Strategist behind war gains', The Australian, 18 August 2007
- ↑ Rebecca Weisser, 'Strategist behind war gains', The Australian, 18 August 2007
- ↑ East West Institute, Staff: Dr David Kilcullen, accessed 26 May 2009
- ↑ George Packer, 'Knowing the Enemy', The New Yorker, 18 December 2006
- ↑ Patrick Walters, 'Exceptional strategist is our man in Washington', The Australian, 14 December 2006
- ↑ George Packer, 'Knowing the Enemy', The New Yorker, 18 December 2006
- ↑ Patrick Walters, 'Exceptional strategist is our man in Washington', The Australian, 14 December 2006
- ↑ David J. Kilcullen,Redux], 2006
- ↑ Bronwen Maddox, 'David Kilcullen's Iraq invasion lesson for the US: don't do it again', The Times, 12 May 2009
- ↑ Sarah Sewall, 'He Wrote the Book. Can He Follow It?', Washington Post, 25 February 2007. A copy of FM 3-24 is available online [1]
- ↑ OUP USA, The Accidental Guerrilla, accessed 26 May 2009
- ↑ East West Institute, Staff: Dr David Kilcullen, accessed 26 May 2009
- ↑ East West Institute, Staff: Dr David Kilcullen, accessed 26 May 2009
- ↑ see contributor notes for Jamestown Foundation event Pakistan's Troubled Frontier, 15 April 2009
- ↑ East West Institute, Staff: Dr David Kilcullen, accessed 26 May 2009
- ↑ Dave Kilcullen, 'Religion and Insurgency', Small Wars Journal, 12 May 2007
- ↑ David J. Kilcullen, 'Dinosaurs versus Mammals: Insurgent and Counterinsurgent Adaption in Iraq, 2007', RAND Insurgency Board, 8 May 2008
- ↑ Dave Kilcullen, 'Religion and Insurgency', Small Wars Journal, 12 May 2007
- ↑ Dave Kilcullen, 'Religion and Insurgency', Small Wars Journal, 12 May 2007
- ↑ Janine di Giovanni, 'Local Wars', New York Times, 24 April 2009
- ↑ Tom Hayden, 'Meet the New Dr. Strangelove', Huffington Post, 20 June 2008
- ↑ George Packer, 'Knowing the Enemy', The New Yorker, 18 December 2006
- ↑ Tom Hayden, 'Meet the New Dr. Strangelove', Huffington Post, 20 June 2008
- ↑ Tom Hayden, 'Meet the New Dr. Strangelove', Huffington Post, 20 June 2008
- ↑ David J. Kilcullen, 'Dinosaurs versus Mammals: Insurgent and Counterinsurgent Adaption in Iraq, 2007', RAND Insurgency Board, 8 May 2008
- ↑ David J. Kilcullen, 'Dinosaurs versus Mammals: Insurgent and Counterinsurgent Adaption in Iraq, 2007', RAND Insurgency Board, 8 May 2008
- ↑ KILCULLEN David J. Political Consequences of Military Operations in Indonesia 1945 – 99. A fieldwork analysis of the political power-diffusion effects of guerilla conflict. PhD dissertation. School of Politics, University Collage, The University of New South Wales 2000.
- ↑ Karina Marczuk, 'A Visionary and a Practitioner: the Bernard Kouchner vs. David Kilcullen', Defence and Strategy, Volume 2/2007
- ↑ Rebecca Weisser, 'Strategist behind war gains', The Australian, 18 August 2007
- ↑ Rebecca Weisser, 'Strategist behind war gains', The Australian, 18 August 2007
- ↑ David J. Kilcullen '[Media:Kilcullen - Twenty-Eight Articles.pdf|Twenty-Eight Articles: Fundamentals of Company-level Counterinsurgency]', Military Review, May/June 2006, p. 103 – 108
- ↑ Robert Fox, 'Echoes of Vietnam in Afghanistan', Guardian Unlimited, 12 May 2009
- ↑ 'Lions led by Labour donkeys', The Spectator, 4 April 2009; p.5
- ↑ Matthew d'Ancona, 'On the road with Gordon in the search for hearts and minds', The Spectator, 4 August 2007
- ↑ created 27 May 2009, 22:52
- ↑ OUP USA, The Accidental Guerrilla, accessed 26 May 2009
- ↑ Searches conducted on 26 May 2009. Details of the searches used are as follows: All English Language News > (David Kilcullen ) and DATE(>=[2005]-01-01 and <=[2008]-12-31) and Major World Newspapers (English) > (David Kilcullen ) and DATE(>=[2005]-01-01 and <=[2008]-12-31)
- ↑ The LexisNexis Major World Newspapers group file which was used for the search contains over 40 full-text newspapers from around the world. According to LexisNexis the papers included “are generally regarded by the reading public as those giving the most comprehensive and reliable coverage”.
- ↑ Matthew d'Ancona, 'Brown is leading the way in counter-terrorist thinking', Guardian, 2 August 2007