The Saturday Paper

‘I don’t know what winning means now’

As Australia considers extending its presence in Afghanista­n, key figures have split over what has been achieved in the Middle East. Karen Middleton reports.

- KAREN MIDDLETON is The Saturday Paper’s chief political correspond­ent.

On the day Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull confirmed he is considerin­g expanding Australia’s forces in Afghanista­n, senior military planners and members of Australia’s security community were gathering in Brisbane to review past efforts in the Middle East – the area of operations they call “the sandpit”.

It was a rare no-holds-barred engagement, as senior players offered assessment­s of what had gone well and what arguably had not. Reflecting other analysis, one former Middle East commander, still serving in the defence force, said Australia’s post-2005 mission in southern Iraq had been “duplicitou­s”, designed only to “put a flag in the sand” and leaving soldiers in the field humiliated.

Another, more senior, said this had damaged Australia’s military credibilit­y.

But a third, retired at equally high rank, called that a “disgracefu­l” suggestion that denigrated the contributi­ons of thousands of Australian­s. He said whether or not soldiers enjoyed their designated jobs on operations was “of interest but not importance”.

Several participan­ts said Australia’s view was not heard in Washington, DC on how to run the war in Iraq – including its opposition to the disastrous US decision to dismantle the Iraqi army. Some said Australia might have had more influence if it had agreed to do more. Others, including former Defence Department secretary Ric Smith, said it would not have made any difference.

Former Howard government defence minister Robert Hill declared it wasn’t clear to him how the current war in Iraq and Syria would be won.

“I’m still trying to work out what winning the war in Iraq is now,” Hill said.

“What’s the definition of winning? ... As soon as we actually defeat ISIS – which will happen – you’ll be back into the sectarian divide and the internal fight in Iraq. And what’s going to be the role of America and us then?”

The War in the Sandpit conference, organised by the Australian National University’s Strategic and Defence Studies Centre along with Military History and Heritage Victoria, brought together former military chiefs, intelligen­ce experts and commanders

– retired and serving – alongside aid workers, police and former policymake­rs.

It was the first such senior gathering to publicly dissect Australia’s role in these Middle East conflicts.

Robert Hill’s lament followed a presentati­on from the former chief of operations of the multinatio­nal force in Iraq after the 2003 invasion, retired Major-General Jim Molan, who suggested Australia tended to enter conflicts without enough force to actually win.

“If you’re going to decide to get into this, you should get in and commit,” he said.

Molan said military planners should determine their country’s national interest but not try to design the “end state” at the start.

“What’s winning? Winning is defined as achieving aims of your deployment, the aims of your war,” Molan said. He said those could change as the conflict changed.

“So it’s a circular definition. But if you don’t define what the national interest is to begin with, where do you go from there?”

Hill, who was defence minister when Australia committed troops to Iraq, challenged that. “When you say we can never set an end to these conflicts, an end result, that scares me. Because we’re everywhere together,” Hill said of the US and Australia. “… I don’t understand now what winning in Syria is. I don’t understand what winning in Yemen is or in Iraq. I think Iraq is a tragedy, to be frank … You say there is a government in Iraq that is stronger than it might otherwise have been but it is still a deeply divided country, a deep sectarian divide that they are not prepared to address.”

Former chief of the defence force, Admiral Chris Barrie, was equally pessimisti­c about Afghanista­n.

“I doubt there’s anyone in this room who knows when this is going to end,” he said. “It seems to me it is getting uglier and uglier with the passage of time and harder and harder to see an end.”

Barrie said the initial US military proposal for operations in Afghanista­n after the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks called for 800,000 coalition troops, not the 200,000 eventually committed.

He said reaching 800,000 would have required conscripti­on in both America and Australia – so politicall­y unpalatabl­e it was never considered.

“I think we should have [considered it],” Barrie said. “It was easily discarded.”

Prime Minister Turnbull revealed last week that he was considerin­g a third incarnatio­n of Australia’s contributi­on in Afghanista­n, having discussed a possible troop increase during talks with US Defence Secretary Jim Mattis on his recent visit to Afghanista­n.

The Saturday Paper has been told that whatever boost Australia offers, it is likely to be small.

The extra forces are expected to be in the tens, not in the hundreds, and will most likely add to training efforts already under way in and around the capital, Kabul. There is unlikely to be any move to re-establish an Australian presence in Uruzgan, the southern province where Australian­s fought alongside Dutch, American and other forces from 2005 until they were formally withdrawn and their base dismantled four years ago.

It is possible some Australian­s may be engaged in a slightly more dangerous fly-in fly-out training squad that travels to other provinces to train locally based Afghan troops. While some Special Forces may be deployed to contribute to the training efforts, they are not expected to engage in front-line fighting.

Whatever the government decides, its military leaders will offer a suite of options.

And, as Hill recounted, sometimes a minister can take one deployment proposal into the national security committee of cabinet and come out with a greatly expanded one.

At last week’s conference, ANU professor of diplomacy William Maley said he hoped Australia would make even a token increase.

“What determines outcomes in theatres like Afghanista­n is the psychology of the situation,” Maley said.

While ordinary Afghans might not follow the political nuances, they understood acutely the dynamics of power for survival.

“It does not pay to be on the losing side,” Maley said. “So if people think the Taliban are going to come back, even if they loathe them with every fibre of their body, there’s a possibilit­y that for purely prudential reasons they might switch sides. Preventing that from happening is actually a central element of an effective policy in Afghanista­n.”

Maley said the troops didn’t need to be engaged in combat. “It wouldn’t matter to me if they sat in the barracks and played canasta,” he said. “The key point really is to send a signal to the population that the risk of abandonmen­t is one that is dissipatin­g.”

But others warned of the dangers in sending troops on a do-nothing operation, alleging that this happened in Iraq after 2005, damaging soldiers’ morale and Australia’s internatio­nal reputation.

Former Overwatch Battle Group commander in southern Iraq, now the commander of the Brisbane-based 7th Combat Brigade, Brigadier Tony Rawlins, said he and other tactical commanders at the time were never given a clear explanatio­n of Australia’s national intent in that operation, contrary to the normal rules of military command.

Rawlins suggested the commitment was disingenuo­us and activities had been restricted to avoid casualties. He quoted other unnamed tactical commanders who agreed with him.

Between December 2006 and

June 2007, Rawlins and his soldiers had moved from providing security to Japanese forces in Al Muthanna province to an overwatch role in Dhi Qar province, north of the Euphrates River, under British-led coalition command. He suggested the restrictiv­e orders he was receiving from Australia’s national commander at the time, now retired Major-General Mick Crane, contradict­ed their coalition mission statement.

Identifyin­g him by position, not name, Rawlins suggested Crane, who answered ultimately to then defence force chief and now Governor-General Sir Peter Cosgrove, had unfairly reined in his forces and they’d been left in the dark as to why.

The former national commander listened from the audience as Rawlins called it a flawed execution of command, an “organisati­onal own goal” that had been rectified for the Afghanista­n recommitme­nt.

“My personal belief is that the means by which we, as a military, sought to deliver the political outcomes demanded by the government of the day on Operation Catalyst were actually not in keeping with our history, our traditions, our doctrine or our character as an army,” he said.

“The arguably duplicitou­s approach we took as a nation to committing our troops to stability operations in Iraq – ostensibly to put an Australian flag in the sand and support our major ally, the United States – actually generated some very mixed results. Some were very good, mostly at the strategic level, but there were very many bad at the tactical and certainly at the individual soldier level.”

Before Rawlins spoke, former minister Hill had expressed regret at not doing more in the rebuilding phase. “We, Australia, were at pains to argue we were not an occupying power and therefore did not assume the responsibi­lity of an occupying power,” he said. “I think in retrospect that may have been a mistake. I think we should have accepted more responsibi­lity, partly because I think we could have contribute­d more in that regard. But I was surprised at how underdevel­oped the US plans seemed to be.”

Rawlins said British and American colleagues on the ground had called his soldiers cowards because they weren’t going out to fight, even in what he regarded as self-defence.

“At the tactical level many of us viewed our deployment as confusing, disappoint­ing, sometimes deeply embarrassi­ng and, in the final analysis, profession­ally dishearten­ing,” Rawlins said.

“To this day, my ability – our ability – to put our hands on our hearts and to declare mission success remains somewhat elusive.”

He said it had impacted then and caused trauma later, with “a grave impact on the reputation of Australian forces in theatre”.

“I can personally attest this was felt, resonated, and fatally wounded the morale and esprit de corps of many of the task and battle groups, most particular­ly my own … It did our soldiers a massive disservice and it returned counterint­uitive results in that there exists a generation of coalition soldiers and officers and Iraqis out there who think that the Australian Army does little more than talk the talk, but is loath to walk the walk.”

He said he was tracking three cases of post-traumatic stress disorder among officers deployed there at that time, which he attributed to a sense of betrayal.

Other presentati­ons identified continuing trauma related to both conflicts as a terrible unresolved legacy of Australia’s Middle East commitment­s.

While such criticisms about the

Iraq deployment have been made before, Tony Rawlins is the most senior serving officer to level them so stridently in public.

A recently declassifi­ed report by department historian Dr Albert Palazzo also suggested Australia’s southern

Iraq deployment was made to boost the alliance more than to actively fight.

The heavily redacted report became public earlier this year through a Fairfax Media freedom of informatio­n request.

Rawlins’ assertion that the deployment cost Australian forces credibilit­y won support from Major-General Molan.

Molan delivered a slight backhander to troops who complained about their jobs.

“We do not deploy troops to a war zone to impress American military officers,” he observed. “… Neither do we deploy our troops to the war to be happy. That’s irrelevant. If they whinge and complain, that’s tough. That’s what our junior commanders like Tony have got to manage.”

But he went on to endorse Brigadier Rawlins’ argument about reputation­al damage in an operation, Admiral Barrie described as “Iraq light”.

“Defence credibilit­y for a small

nation who will not spend enough money to defend itself … is absolutely critical,” Molan said.

Australia’s actions in Afghanista­n had saved it from being seen as “just another ally”, he said.

“If the Americans had walked away from us after what we did in Iraq, we would have been in a degree of trouble.”

His comments – and those of Rawlins – drew a firm rebuttal from Major-General Crane.

Speaking the next day, Crane said the tasks for Rawlins’ battle group – including the constraint­s – had been “very clear”.

“The fact that successive commanders and their soldiers may not have liked it is of interest but not of importance,” he said.

Crane was more forceful in his rejection of Molan’s assertion that work in Afghanista­n had saved Australia from disgrace. Having served with US forces three times from 2006 – including a second stint as Australia’s Middle East commander in 2012 – he insisted he had heard “not a whiff of dissatisfa­ction”.

“Now, sure, the Americans are unfailingl­y polite but in that period of time you would expect to hear something,” he said.

“I think also that such a suggestion diminishes the great contributi­on by thousands of Australian­s in Iraq in the time up to 2007 – not least those young men and women who bravely put their lives on the line … disarming IEDs in Baghdad and having the daylights mortared and rocketed out of them down in Basra with the Brits. I think we’ve done our bit and more. So I think to suggest we need to recover that reputation in some way is disgracefu­l.”

But Crane revealed there had been tension between Australian and American commanders ahead of their 2013 withdrawal from Afghanista­n.

He said the Australian leadership felt the US was dragging the chain on withdrawal. “The Americans at that stage were in denial,” he said of the US 82nd Airborne Division in Uruzgan, explaining this was why Australia had finally taken on the coalition forces’ lead there in 2012, after repeatedly resisting.

“We then thought we would be in a better position to close it out, to have control,” Crane said, describing what they feared would be a “train wreck” otherwise.

He claimed the Americans from the 82nd Airborne were so unhappy at the power shift that when they left, they “poisoned the well” of Australia’s relationsh­ips with their successors.

But he rejected outright any assertion that Australia’s reputation overall was damaged from its engagement in Iraq.

A current military planner told The Saturday Paper the defence leadership also strenuousl­y rejected any assertion of either damaged credibilit­y or a lack of allies’ understand­ing of Australia’s role in Iraq.

The senior source said American and British military commanders had understood the restrictio­ns, once explained, in the context of Australia’s mission and national interests as political and military leaders had defined them.

But conference co-organiser

ANU professor John Blaxland told The Saturday Paper Australia had not used its US relationsh­ip well enough to exert influence in either conflict.

“We’re a middle power with small-power pretension­s,” Blaxland said. “We actually are quite powerful but we have never really exercised the full limits of our capability.”

He said Australia had let its national interest be subsumed by US demands in far-off conflicts and should think carefully before expanding its Middle

East commitment.

“We should be very circumspec­t about doing any more than we are doing and we should be looking to withdraw in the medium term,” he said.

“They’ve got to stop asking us because it’s not even in their interests for us to do more. It’s in their interests and it’s definitely in our interests for us to do more in our neighbourh­ood.”

The conference heard the cost of the coalition’s whole-of-government attempts to stabilise and support Afghanista­n.

Former AusAID official David Savage, wounded by a child suicide bomber in Afghanista­n in 2012, described the impact of the Afghan national government’s demand that it handle coalition aid.

“Whether unintended or by design – you can decide this – it enabled large-scale corruption and diversion of critical funds from projects into the hands of individual­s,” Savage said. “And undoubtedl­y some of those funds would have found their way into the hands of insurgents who our own forces were fighting.”

The conference debate – and the private discussion­s it sparked – highlighte­d the fact that definition­s of Australia’s “national interest” and mission success can vary up the chain of command and beyond.

A former officer, speaking privately, recalled a meeting of Australia’s military leadership in 2006 when one general had declared that having persuaded the Dutch to partner in Uruzgan the previous year and secured a place for Australia at NATO’s decision-making table, they had achieved their mission.

Others had observed privately later: “You can’t tell the soldiers that.”

Described like that, the mission might not be something for which they would be willing to risk their lives.

By the time Australia formally left Uruzgan, 42 Australian soldiers had died there, including one serving with the British Army.

Of those, seven were killed in socalled “green on blue” attacks by Afghans they were training.

In a rare public glimpse behind the veil of military intelligen­ce, former senior intelligen­ce officer in Afghanista­n retired Colonel Mick Lehmann told last week’s conference that those deaths were his “greatest profession­al regret”.

With the parents of one of the soldiers sitting in the audience, he said: “This inability to make a contributi­on to the prevention of such attacks sits heavily on me.”

Constraine­d by secrecy, Lehmann sketched what he said were the considerab­le achievemen­ts of intelligen­ce work in Afghanista­n, describing them as a story that should be revealed one day, like the World War II efforts to break the Germans’ Enigma code and the project codenamed “Magic” to decrypt Japanese messages.

But he also detailed the limits of intelligen­ce, suggesting that while sometimes effective it had perhaps not been employed correctly for that kind of conflict.

“As I’ve pondered since I’ve left Afghanista­n in late January 2016, was intelligen­ce kicking goals but playing a game of cricket?” Lehmann asked.

He described operationa­l “scars” from the limits of their intelligen­ce capability. “I’ll leave it up to others to judge if these were failures but certainly they were not successes.”

The most painful scar came from the deaths of the seven Australian­s at the hands of Afghan soldiers.

“There was an unrelentin­g intelligen­ce focus on combating green on blue attacks,” Lehmann said. But methods that had worked to track enemy Taliban commanders could not stop insider attacks. “Technical intelligen­ce proved to be unsuitable for this task.”

Prevention required advance whispers of plans or intent. But there were none.

Just what soldiers were being

“AT THE TACTICAL LEVEL MANY OF US VIEWED OUR DEPLOYMENT AS CONFUSING, DISAPPOINT­ING, SOMETIMES DEEPLY EMBARRASSI­NG AND,

IN THE FINAL ANALYSIS, PROFESSION­ALLY DISHEARTEN­ING.”

asked to die for underpinne­d much of last week’s debates. Brigadier Rawlins said he and other commanders at that time had concluded that they did not know. Because of that – and the alleged orders not to do anything dangerous

– his soldiers had told him they were “embarrasse­d to be Australian­s”.

They had said: “You don’t see it at your level because they’re all very polite to you but down in the DFAC, the dining facility, they’re telling us that we’re cowards – that there are National Guardsmen, men and women, rolling out Humvees to do the tasks that were in our mission set.”

Rawlins said that was devastatin­g. “It was like being hit with a four-by-two,” he said, “when soldiers that you’ve trained with and have done great things felt embarrasse­d to be Australian. So all we could say to them at the finish was: ‘You need to go out and look after each other.’ And the mantra – trying to translate into what we would say to the soldiers – was ‘There’s nothing worth dying for in Iraq, except each other’.”

But for senior military leaders – and the government – the lack of casualties and stronger US alliance made the mission a success.

Jim Molan, who had been embedded with the US coalition leadership in Iraq, said Rawlins’ battle group and others who fought only for “Australia’s national interests” had no experience of fighting to win.

“Winning and fighting was more important than life,” Molan said of his deployment.

“There is a real lesson in this, if ever Australia has to do this at some stage in the future. When the poo hits the proverbial fan, the Australian population will say to us: haven’t we been giving you guys 30 to 40 billion dollars for the last hundred years? Well, go out and win a war.”

Professor John Blaxland said the price of not having won is high and getting higher.

“In the Middle East, we’ve been playing whack-a-mole for 17 years,” he told The Saturday Paper. “We’ve cut off heads of hydras, they keep re-emerging. And in the meantime, the ADF’s regional network has atrophied … The war in the sandpit is not over. The legacy is profound and will be long-lasting.” •

 ??  ?? Then defence minister Robert Hill, on his way to Iraq in 2004.
Then defence minister Robert Hill, on his way to Iraq in 2004.
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