--- Page 1 --- Campaigning MCDP 1-2 U.S. Marine Corps PCN 142 000008 00 SEMPER FIDELIS --- Page 2 --- DEPARTMENT OF THE NA VY Headquarters United States Marine Corps Washington, D.C. 20350-3000 4 April 2018 CHANGE 1 to MCDP 1-2 Campaigning 1. This publication has been edited to ensure gender neutrality of all applicable and appropriate terms, except those terms governed by higher authority. No other content has been affected. 2. File this transmittal sheet in the front of this publication. Reviewed and approved this date. --- Page 3 --- BY DIRECTION OF THE COMMANDANT OF THE MARINE CORPS ROBERT S. WALSH Lieutenant General, U.S. Marine Corps Deputy Commandant for Combat Development and Integration Publication Control Numbers: Publication: 142 000008 00 Change: 142 000008 01 --- Page 4 --- DEPARTMENT OF THE NA VY Headquarters United States Marine Corps Washington, D.C. 20350-1775 1 August 1997 FOREWORD Tactical success in combat does not of itself guarantee victory in war. What matters ultimately in war is strategic success: attain- ment of our political aims and the protection of our national inter- ests. The operational level of war provides the linkage between tactics and strategy. It is the discipline of conceiving, focus ing, and exploiting a variety of tactic al actions to realize a strat egic aim. With that thought as our point of departure, this publicat ion discusses the intermediate, operational level of war and the mili- tary campaign which is the vehicle for organizing tactical actions to achieve strategic objectives. The Marine air-ground task force (MAGTF) clearly has opera- tional as well as tactical capabilities. Thus it is essential t hat Marine leaders learn to think operationally. Marine Corps Doctri- nal Publication (MCDP) 1-2, Campaigning, provides the doctrinal basis for military campaigning in the Marine Corps, particularly as it pertains to a Marine commander or a MAGTF participating in the campaign. Campaigning applies the warfighting philosophies in MCDP 1, Warfighting, specifically to the operational level of war. It is linked to the other publications of the MCDP series and is fully compatible with joint doctrine. --- Page 5 --- MCDP 1-2 supersedes Fleet Marine Force Manual (FMFM) 1-1, Campaigning, of 1990. MCDP 1-2 retains the spirit, scope, and basic concepts of its predecessor. MCDP 1-2 further develops and refines some of those concepts based on recent experiences, con - tinued thinking about war, and the evolving nature of campaign- ing in the post-Cold War world. The new version of Campaigning has three significant additions: an expanded discussion of the linkage between strategic objec- tives and the campaign, a section on conflict termination, and a section titled “Synergy” that describes how key capabilities ar e harmonized in the conduct of a c ampaign to achieve the strategic objective. These additions have been derived from the develop- ment of the other doctrinal publications in the MCDP series and joint doctrine. Chapter 1 discusses the campaign and the operational level of war, their relationship to strategy and tactics, and their relevance to the Marine Corps. Chapter 2 describes the process of campaign design: deriving a military strategic aim from political objectives and con- straints, developing a campaign concept that supports our strategic objectives, and making a campaign plan that translates the concept into a structured configuration of actions required to carry out that concept. Chapter 3 discusses the actual conduct of a campaign and the problem of adapting our plans to events as they unfold. Central to this publication is the idea that military action at any level must ultimately serve the demands of policy. Marine leaders --- Page 6 --- at all levels must understand this point and must recognize tha t we pursue tactical success not for its own sake, but for the sake of larger political goals. Military strength is only one of severa l instruments of national power, all of which must be fully coord i- nated with one another in order to achieve our strategic and oper- ational objectives. Marine lead ers must be able to integrate military operations with the other instruments of national power. This publication makes frequent use of historical examples. These examples are intended to illustra te teachings that have univers al relevance and enduring applicab ility. No matter what the scope and nature of the next mission—general war or military operations other than war—the concepts and the thought processes described in this publication will apply. As with Warfighting, this publication is descriptive rather than prescr iptive. Its concepts require j udg- ment in application. This publication is designed pr imarily for MAGTF commanders and their staffs and for officers serving on joint and combined staffs. However, commanders at all levels of any military organ i- zation require a broad perspective, an understanding of the interre- lationships among the levels of war, and knowledge of the methods for devising and executing a progressive series of actions in pursuit of a distant objective in the face of hostile resist ance. Marine officers of any grade and specialty can easily find them - selves working—either directly or indirectly—for senior leaders with strategic or operational responsibilities. Those leaders n eed subordinates who understand their problems and their intentions . --- Page 7 --- Therefore, as with MCDP 1, I expect all officers to read and reread this publication, understand its message, and apply it. C. C. KRULAK General, U.S. Marine Corps Commandant of the Marine Corps DISTRIBUTION: 142 000008 00 ©1997 United States Government as represented by the Secretary of the Navy. All rights reserved. --- Page 8 --- MCDP 1-2 Campaigning Chapter 1. The Campaign Strategy—Tactics—Operations—Strategic-Operational Connection—Tactical-Operational Connection— Interdependence of the Levels of War—Campaigns— Battles and Engagements—A Comparative Case Study: Grant Versus Lee–Policy–Military Strategy–Operations in 1864– Tactics—The Marine Corps and Campaigning Chapter 2. Designing the Campaign Supporting the Military Strategic Aim–Campaigning Under an Annihilation Strategy–Campaigning Under an Erosion Strategy—Identifying the Enemy’s Critical Vulnerabilities— The Campaign Concept–Phasing the Campaign–Conceptual, Functional, and Detailed Planning–Conflict Termination— Campaign Design: Two Examples–Case Study: The Recapture of Europe, 1944–45–Case Study: Malaysia, 1948–60—The Campaign Plan --- Page 9 --- MCDP 1-2 Campaigning Chapter 3. Conducting the Campaign Strategic Orientation—The Use of Combat—Perspective— Surprise—Tempo—Synergy–Command and Control–Maneuver–Fires– Intelligence–Logistics–Force Protection—Leadership Conclusion Notes --- Page 10 --- Chapter 1 The Campaign “Battles have been stated by some writers to be the chief and deciding features of war. This assertion is not strictly true, as armies have been destroyed by strategic operations without the occurrence of pitched battles, by a succession of inconsiderable affairs.” 1 —Henri Jomini “For even if a decisive battle be the goal, the aim of strategy must be to bring about this battle under the most advanta- geous circumstances. And the more advantageous the cir- cumstances, the less, proportionately, will be the fighting.”2 —B. H. Liddell Hart --- Page 11 --- “It is essential to relate what is strategically desirable to what is tactically possible with the forces at your disposal. To this end it is necessary to decide the development of oper- ations before the initial blow is delivered.”3 —Bernard Montgomery --- Page 12 --- The Campaign 1-3 This book is about m ilitary campaigning. A campaign is a series of related military operations aimed at accomplishing a strateg ic or operational objective with in a given time and space. 4 A cam- paign plan describes how time, space, and purpose connect these operations.5 Usually, a campaign is aimed at achieving some par- ticular strategic result within a specific geographic theater. A war or other sustained conflict some times consists of a single cam- paign, sometimes of several. If there is more than one campaign , these can run either in sequence or—if there is more than one the- ater of war—simultaneously. Cam paigning reflects the opera- tional level of war, where the results of individual tactical actions are combined to fulfill the needs of strategy. Military campaigns are not conducted in a vacuum. Military power is employed in conjunction with other instruments of na- tional power—diplomatic, econ omic, and informational—to achieve strategic objectives. Dep ending upon the nature of the operation, the military campaign may be the main effort, or it may be used to support diplomatic or economic efforts. The mili- tary campaign must be coordinated with the nonmilitary efforts to ensure that all actions work in harmony to achieve the ends of policy. Frequently, particularly in military operations other t han war, the military campaign is so closely integrated with other government operations that these nonmilitary actions can be con- sidered to be part of the campaign. In this chapter, we will describe how events at different level s of war are interrelated, focusing on the operational level as the link between strategy and tactics. W e will examine the campaign as --- Page 13 --- MCDP 1-2 Campaigning 1-4 the basic tool of commanders at the operational level and discuss its relevance to the Marine Corps. STRATEGY War grows out of political conf lict. Political policy determine s the aims of each combatant’s strategy and directs each side’s con- duct. Thus, as Liddell Hart wrote , “any study of the problem ought to begin and end with the question of policy.” 6 Strategy is the result of intellectual activ ity that strives to win the obj ectives of policy by action in peace as in war. National strategy is the art and science of developing and using the political, economic, and inf ormational powers of a nation, together with its armed forces, during peace and war, to secure national objectives. National stra tegy connotes a global perspe c- tive, but it requires coordination of all the elements of natio nal power at the regional or theater level as well. Because a campaign takes place within a designate d geographic theater and may involve nonmilitary as well as military elements, campaign design is often equivalent to theater strategy. Military strategy is the art and science of employing the armed forces of a nation to secure th e objectives of national policy by --- Page 14 --- The Campaign 1-5 the application of force or the threat of force. It involves th e establishment of military strateg ic objectives, the allocation of resources, the imposition of con ditions on the use of force, an d the development of war plans.7 Strategy is both a product and a process. That is, strategy involves both the creation of plans—specific strategies to deal with specific problems—and the process of implementing them in a dynamic, changing environment. Therefore, strategy requires both detaile d planning and energetic adaptation to evolving events. Strategic concepts describe the ways in which the elements of national power are to be used in the accomplishment of our strate- gic ends, i.e., our policy objectives. 8 U.S. military strategy is implemented by the combatant co mmanders and is always joint in nature. In practice, the execution of our military strategy in any particular region requires coordination—and often considerable compromise—with other governmental agencies, with allies, with members of coalitions forme d to meet specific contingen- cies, and with nongovernmental organizations. Military strategy must be subordi nate to national strategy and must be coordinated with the use of the nonmilitary instruments of our national power. Historically, we have sometimes found it diffi- cult to maintain those relationships correctly, and we have som e- times fought in the absence of a clear national or military strategy. --- Page 15 --- MCDP 1-2 Campaigning 1-6 TACTICS Marines are generally most familiar—and therefore most com- fortable—with the tactical domai n, which is concerned with de- feating an enemy force through fighting at a specific time and place.9 The tactical level of war is the province of combat. The means of tactics are the various elements of combat power at ou r disposal. Its ways are the concepts by which we apply that com- bat power against our adversary. These concepts are sometimes themselves called tactics—in our case, tactics founded on maneu- ver. The goal of tactics is victo ry: defeating the enemy force opposing us. In this respect, we can view tactics as the discip line of winning battles and engagements. The tactical level of war includes the maneuver of forces in co n- tact with the enemy to gain a fig hting advantage, the applicati on and coordination of fires, the sustainment of forces throughout combat, the immediate exploitation of success to seal the victo ry, the combination of different arms and weapons, the gathering and dissemination of pertinent information, and the technical applica- tion of combat power within a t actical action—all to cause the enemy’s defeat. In practice, the events of combat form a continuous fabric of activity. Nonetheless, each tactical action, large or small, can gen- erally be seen as a distinct epi sode fought within a distinct s pace and over a particular span of time. Tactical success does not of itself guarantee success in war. I n modern times, victory in a single battle is seldom sufficient t o --- Page 16 --- The Campaign 1-7 achieve strategic victory as it sometimes was in Napoleon’s time. In fact, a single battle can rarely determine the outcome of a cam- paign, much less that of an entire war. Even a succession of tacti- cal victories does not necessarily ensure strategic victory, th e obvious example being the American military experience in Viet- nam. Accordingly, we must recognize that defeating the enemy in combat cannot be viewed as an en d in itself, but rather must be considered merely a means to a larger end. OPERATIONS It follows from our discussions of the strategic and tactical l ev- els of war that there is a level of the military art above and dis- tinct from the realm of tactics and subordinate to the domain o f strategy. This level is called the operational level of war. It is the link between strategy and tactics.10 Action at the operational level aims to give meaning to tactical actions in the context of some larger design that is itself framed by strategy. Put another wa y, our aim at the operational level is to get strategically meaningful results from tactical efforts. Thus at the operational level of war we conceive, focus, and exploit a variety of tactical actions in order to attain a stra tegic goal. In its essence, the operational level involves deciding when, where, for what purposes, and under what conditions to give bat - tle—or to refuse battle—in order to fulfill the strategic goal. --- Page 17 --- MCDP 1-2 Campaigning 1-8 Operations govern the deployment of forces, their commitment to or withdrawal from combat, and the sequencing of successive tac- tical actions to achieve strategic objectives. The nature of these tasks requires that the operational commander retain a certain amount of latitude in the conception and execution of plans. “The basic concept of a campaign plan should be born in the mind of the man who has to direct that campaign.” 11 If higher authority overly prescribes the concept of operations, then the commander becomes a mere executor of tactical tasks instead of the link between those tasks and the strategic objectives. Such was the case in many U.S. air operations over North Vietnam. The term “operations” implies broader dimensions of time and space than does “tactics” because a strategic orientation force s the operational commander to consider a perspective broader than the limits of immediate combat. 12 While the tactician fights the battle, the operational commander must look beyond the battle— seeking to shape events in advanc e i n o r d e r t o c r e a t e t h e m o s t favorable conditions possible fo r future combat actions. The operational commander likewise seeks to take maximum advan- t a g e o f t h e o u t c o m e o f a n y ac t u al c o mb at ( w i n , l o se , o r d r a w ) , finding ways to exploit the resulting situation to the greatest stra- tegic advantage. Although the operational level of war is sometimes described as large-unit tactics, it is erroneou s to define the operational l evel according to echelon of command. Military actions need not be of large scale or involve extensive combat to have an important political impact.13 The distance between tactical actions and their --- Page 18 --- The Campaign 1-9 strategic effects varies greatly from conflict to conflict. In World War II, for example, strategic effects could usually be obtaine d only from the operations of whole armies or fleets. In a future very large-scale conventional conflict, a corps commander may well be the lowest-level opera tional commander. In Somalia, on the other hand, strategic (i.e ., political) effects could resul t from the actions of squads or even individuals. Regardless of the size of a military force or the scope of a tactical action, if it is being used to directly achieve a strategic objective, then it is being employed at the operational level. STRATEGIC-OPERATIONAL CONNECTION No level of war is self-contained. Strategic, operational, and tacti- cal commanders, forces, and events are continually interacting with one another. Although we may view the chain of command as a hierarchical pyramid in which directives and power flow from higher to lower, in fact the command structure is often more like a spider web: a tug at any point may have an impact through- out the structure. Information must therefore flow freely in al l directions. To use a different metaphor, the fingers have to kn ow what the brain is feeling for, and the brain has to know what t he fingers are actually touching. We must always remember that the political end state envi- sioned by policy makers determines the strategic goals of all mil- itary actions. We must also und erstand that the relationship --- Page 19 --- MCDP 1-2 Campaigning 1-10 between strategy and operations runs both ways. That is, just a s strategy shapes the design of th e campaign, so must strategy adapt to operational circumstances and events. Strategy guides operations in three basic ways: it establishes aims, allocates resources, and imposes restraints and constraints on mili- tary action. Together with the nature and actions of the enemy and the characteristics of the area of operations, strategic guidan ce defines the parameters within which we can conduct operations. First, strategy translates policy objectives into military term s by establishing the military strateg ic aim. What political effect must our military forces achieve? What enemy assets must our tactical forces seize, neutralize, threat en, or actually destroy in orde r to e i t h e r b e n d t h e e n e m y t o o u r w i l l o r b r e a k t h e e n e m y c o m - pletely? The operational commande r’s principal task is to deter - mine and pursue the sequence of actions that will most directly accomplish the military strategic mission. It is important to k eep in mind that the military strategic aim is but one part of a broader national strategy. Strategists must be prepared to modify aims in the light of act ual developments, as they reevaluate costs, capabilities, and expecta- tions. While required to pursue th e established aim, the opera- tional commander is obliged to communicate the associated risks to superiors. When aims are unclear, the commander must seek clarification and convey the i mpact—positive or negative—of continued ambiguity. Second, strategy provides resources, both tangible resources such as material and personnel and intangible resources such as political --- Page 20 --- The Campaign 1-11 and public support for military operations. When resources are insufficient despite all that sk ill, talent, dedication, and cr eativity can do, the operational commander must seek additional resources or request modification of the aims. Third, strategy, because it is i nfluenced by political and soci al concerns, places conditions on the conduct of military operations. These conditions take the form o f restraints and constraints. Restraints prohibit or restrict certain military actions such a s the prohibition imposed on MacArthur against bombing targets north of the Yalu River in Korea in 1950 or the United States’ policy not to make first use of chemical weapons in World War II. Restraints may be constant, as the laws of warfare, or situatio nal, as rules of engagement. Constraints, on the other hand, obligat e the commander to certain military courses of action such as Pres- ident Jefferson Davis’s decision that the policy of the Confede r- acy would be to hold as much territory as possible rather than employ a more flexible defense or resort to wide-scale guerrill a tactics, or the decision that th e Arab members of the Coalition should be the liberators of Kuwait City during the Gulf War. Sim- ilarly, strategy may constrain the commander to operations which gain rapid victory, such as Abraham Lincoln’s perceived need to end the American Civil War quickly lest Northern popular resolve falter. When conditions imposed by strate gy are so severe as to prevent the attainment of the establis hed aim, the commander must request relaxation of either the a ims or the limitations. Howev er, we should not be automatically c ritical of conditions imposed o n --- Page 21 --- MCDP 1-2 Campaigning 1-12 operations by higher authority, since “policy is the guiding intelli- gence”14 for the use of military force. Nonetheless, no senior commander can use the conditions imposed by higher authority as an excuse for military failure. TACTICAL-OPERATIONAL CONNECTION Just as strategy shapes the desi gn of the campaign while simul- taneously adapting to operational circumstances and events, so operations must interact with t actics. Operational plans and di - rectives that are rooted in political and strategic aims establish the necessary focus and goals for tactical actions. Operational pla n- ning provides the context for tactical decisionmaking. Without this operational coherence, warfare at the tactical level is reduced to a series of disconnected and unfocused tactical actions. Just as operations must serve strategy by combining tactical actions so as to most effectively and economi cally achieve the aim, they must also serve tactics by creating the most advantageous conditions for our tactical actions. In other words, we try to shape the s itua- tion so that the outc ome is merely a matter of course. “There- fore,” Sun Tzu said, “a skilled commander seeks victory from the situation and does not demand it of his subordinates.” 15 Just as we must continually interface with s trategy to gain our direction, we must also maintain the flexibility to adapt to tactical circum- stances as they develop, for tactical results will impact on th e conduct of the campaign. As the campaign forms the framework --- Page 22 --- The Campaign 1-13 for combat, so do tactical results shape the conduct of the cam - paign. In this regard, the task is to exploit tactical develop- ments—victories, draws, even defeats—to strategic advantage. INTERDEPENDENCE OF THE LEVELS OF WAR The levels of war form a hiera rchy. Tactical engagements are components of battle, and battles are elements of a campaign. The campaign, in turn, is itself but one phase of a strategic desig n for gaining the objectives of policy. W hile a clear hierarch y exists, there are no sharp boundaries between the levels. Rather, they merge together and form a continuum. Consequently, a particular echelon of command is not necessarily concerned with only one level of war. A theater commander’s concerns are clearly both strategic and operational. A Marine a ir- ground task force commander’s r esponsibilities will be opera- tional in some situations and lar gely tactical in others and ma y actually span the transition from tactics to operations in stil l oth- ers. A commander’s responsibilities within the hierarchy depend on the scale and nature of the conflict and may shift up and down as the war develops. Actions at one level can often influence the situation at other lev- els.16 Harmony among the various lev els tends to reinforce suc- cess, while disharmony tends to negate success. Obviously, failure at one level tends naturally to lessen success at the other levels. --- Page 23 --- MCDP 1-2 Campaigning 1-14 It is perhaps less obvious that the tactics employed to win in actual combat may prevent success at a higher level. Imagine a government whose strategy is to quell a growing insurgency by isolating the insurgents from the population but whose military tactics cause extensive collateral death and damage. The gov- ernment’s tactics alienate the p opulation and make the enemy’s cause more appealing, strengthe ning the enemy politically and therefore strategically. Brilliance at one level of war may to some extent overcome short- comings at another, but rarely can it overcome outright incompe - tence. Operational competence is meaningless without the ability to achieve results at the tactical level. Strategic incompetence can squander what operational success has gained. The natural flow of influence in the hierarchy is greatest at t he top. That is, it is much more lik ely that strategic incompetenc e will squander operational and ta ctical success tha n that tactic al and operational brilliance will ov ercome strategic incompetence or disadvantage. The Germans are widely considered to have been tactically and operationally superior in the two World Wars. Their strategic incompetence, however, proved an insurmount- able obstacle to victory. Conversely, outgunned and overmatched tactically, the Vietnamese Communists prevailed strategically. The flow can work in reverse as well: brilliance at one level c an overcome, at least in part, shortc omings at a higher level. In this way, during the American Civil War, the tactical and operationa l abilities of Confederate military l eaders in the eastern theate r of war held off the strategic advantages of the North for a time u ntil --- Page 24 --- The Campaign 1-15 President Lincoln found a commander—General Grant—who would press those advantages. Similarly, in North Africa, early in World War II, the tactical and operational flair of German Gen- eral Erwin Rommel’s Africa Corps negated Britain’s strategic advantage only for a time. What matters finally is success at the strategic level. The con - cerns of policy are the motives for war in the first place, and it is the political impact of our operations that determines our success or failure in war. It is far less important to be able to disce rn at what level a certain activity tak es place or where the transiti on between levels occurs than to ensure that from top to bottom an d bottom to top all the components of our military effort are in har- mony. We must never view the tactical domain in isolation because the results of combat beco me relevant only in the large r context of the campaign. The campaign, in turn, gains meaning only in the context of strategy. CAMPAIGNS The principal tool by which th e operational commander pursues the conditions that will achieve the strategic goal is the campaign. Campaigns tend to take place over the course of weeks or months, but they may span years. They may vary drastically in scale fro m large campaigns conceived and controlled at the theater or even National Command Authorities le vel to smaller campaigns con- ducted by joint task forces within a combatant command. Separate --- Page 25 --- MCDP 1-2 Campaigning 1-16 campaigns may be waged sequen tially within the same conflict, each pursuing intermediate objectives on the way to the final stra- tegic goal. It is also possible to pursue several campaigns simulta- neously if there are multiple theaters of war. In modern times, for each U.S. conflict or military ope ration other than war there i s normally only one campaign at a time within one geographic the- ater of war or theater of operations. 17 That campaign is always joint in character and falls under the command of either a regional commander in chief or a subordinate joint force commander. The joint force commander’s campaign is made up of a series of related major operations, some of which may be conducted by a single Service. In the past, however, the word “campaign” has been used very flexibly. Historians often refer to lesser campaigns within lar ger ones. For example, the Allied Pacific campaign in the Second World War comprised subordinate campaigns by General Doug- las MacArthur in the Southwest P acific, Admiral William Halsey in the South Pacific, and Admiral Chester Nimitz in the Central Pacific. Halsey’s campaign in the South Pacific itself included a smaller campaign in the Solomo n Islands that lasted 5 months and consisted of operations fro m Guadalcanal to Bougainville. Similarly, we often hear of “air operations” or “submarine oper a- tions” as if they constituted independent campaigns. Nonetheless, while the Desert Storm campaign had an initial phase dominated by aerial forces, we do not refer to this as an air campaign. At times, the relationships of these operations may not be read ily apparent. They may seem to be isolated tactical events such as --- Page 26 --- The Campaign 1-17 Operation Eldorado Canyon, the punative U.S. air-strike against Libya in 1986. On the surface, this operation appeared to be a sin- gle military response to a specific Libyan act, the bombing of the La Belle discotheque in Berlin in which two U.S. servicemen were killed and a number injured. In fact, this operation was p art of much larger series of actions intended to attain the strateg ic objective of reducing or eliminating Libya’s sponsorship of inter- national terrorism. Nonmilitary actions included efforts to isolate Libya diplomatically coupled with economic sanctions and infor- mation to publicize Libya’s support of terrorism. Military actions consisted of a series of freedom of navigation operations con- ducted in the Gulf of Sidra that showed U.S. military commit- ment and put more pressure on the Libyan government. 18 BATTLES AND ENGAGEMENTS A battle is a series of related tactical engagements. Battles last lon- ger than engagements and involve larger forces. They occur when adversaries commit to fight to a decision at a particular time and place for a significant objective. Consequently, battles are usually operationally significant (tho ugh not necessarily operationally decisive).19 This is not always so. The Battle of the Somme in 1916, which was actually a series of inconclusive battles over the span of 4½ months, merely moved the front some 8 miles while inflicting approximately 1 million casualties on the op- posing armies. --- Page 27 --- MCDP 1-2 Campaigning 1-18 An engagement is a small tactical conflict, usually between maneuver forces.20 Several engagements m ay compose a battle. Engagements may or may not be operationally significant, al- though our intent is to gain advantage from the results. Battles and engagements are the armed collisions that mark potential turning points in a ca mpaign. While such combat pro- vides perceptible structure, it is the campaign design that giv es combat meaning. In some campai gns, military forces play a sup- porting role and are not really the main effort, as in the camp aign to isolate Iraq following the Gulf War. In that case, tactical actions are small, infrequent, and undertaken largely to enforc e political and economic sanctions and to maintain blockades. Even in campaigns where military forces represent the main effort, sometimes small engagements are so continuous and large battles so rare that a campaign may seem to be one drawn-out combat action. For instance, we often refer to the Allies’ World War I I campaign against German submarines in the Atlantic as the “Bat- tle of the Atlantic.” Guerrilla w ars and insurgencies often fol low a similar pattern. The structure of campaigns in such cases is sometimes hard to perceive because the ebb and flow in the antagonists’ fortunes happen bit by bit rather than in sudden, dra- matic events. Even when a campaign involves distinct battles, operational and strategic advantage can be gained despite tactical defeat. Gene ral Nathaniel Greene’s campaign against the British in the Carolina s during the American Revolution provides an example. In the win- ter of 1781, Greene maneuvered h is army for almost 2 months to avoid engagement with the Br itish force commanded by Lord --- Page 28 --- The Campaign 1-19 Cornwallis. In March of 1781, reinforced by Continental soldiers, militia, and riflemen from Virginia and North Carolina, Greene decided to challenge the British in North Carolina at Guilford Courthouse. The Americans fough t well, inflicting more casual- ties than they sustained, but were forced to withdraw from the field. This engagement, defeat for Greene, proved to be a turni ng point in the campaign.21 The British, exhausted from the previous pursuit and short on supplies, were unable to exploit their tactical victory and withdrew to the coas t, leaving their scattered Sout h Carolina garrisons vulnerable.22 The point is that victory in battle is only one possible means to a larger end. The object should be to accomplish the aim of strategy with as little combat as practicable, reducing “fighting to the slen- derest possible proportions.”23 However, none of this is to say that we can—or should try to— avoid fighting on general principle. How much fighting we do varies according to the strength, skill, intentions, and determ ina- tion of the opposing sides. The ideal is to give battle only wh ere we want and when we must—when we are at an advantage and have something important to gain that we cannot gain without fighting. However, when confronting a hostile force with oppos- ing ideas, we do not always hav e this option. Sometimes we must fight at a disadvantage when forced to by a skilled enemy or when political obligations constrain us (as would have been the case had the North Atlantic Treaty Organization’s plan for the forward defense of Germany against the old Warsaw Pact been executed). --- Page 29 --- MCDP 1-2 Campaigning 1-20 A COMPARATIVE CASE STUDY: GRANT VERSUS LEE A comparative examination of the strategic, operational, and ta c- tical approaches of Generals Ulysses S. Grant and Robert E. Lee during the American Civil War offers an interesting illustration of the interaction of the levels. P opular history regards Grant as a butcher and Lee a military genius. A study of their understanding of the needs of policy and the consistency of their strategic, oper- ational, and tactical methods casts the issue in a different light. 24 Policy The North faced a demanding and complex political problem, namely “to reassert its authority over a vast territorial empir e, far too extensive to be completely occupied or thoroughly con- trolled.”25 Furthermore, President Lincoln recognized that North- ern popular resolve might be limited and established rapid victory as a condition as well. Lincoln’s original policy of conciliati on having failed, the President opted for the unconditional surren der of the South as the only acceptable aim. His search for a gener al who would devise a strategy to attain his aim ended with Grant in March 1864. By comparison, the South’s policy aim was to pre- serve its newly declared independence. The South’s strategic aim was simply to prevent the North from succeeding, to make the endeavor more costly than the North was willing to bear. --- Page 30 --- The Campaign 1-21 Military Strategy The South’s policy objectives would seem to dictate a military strategy of erosion aimed at prolonging the war as a means to breaking Northern resolve. In fact, this was the strategy preferred by Confederate President Jefferson Davis. Such a strategy would require close coordination of the Southern armies and a careful husbanding of the Confederacy’s inferior resources. In practice , however, no Southern general in chief was appointed until Lee’s appointment in early 1865. No doubt it was in part because of the Confederacy’s basic political philosophy of states’ rights that the military resources of the various Southern states were poorly dis- tributed. Campaigns in the various theaters of war were conducted almost independently. Lee’s decision to concentrate his army in northern Virginia reflected a perspective much nar rower than Grant’s and the fact that he was politically constra ined to defend Richmond. How- ever, this decision was due also to Lee’s insistence on an offe n- sive strategy—not merely an offensive defense as in the early stages of the war but eventually an ambitious offensive strateg y in 1862 and ´63 aimed at invading the North as a means to break- ing Northern will. (See figure on page 1-22.) Given the South’s relative weakness, Lee’s strategy was questionable at best 26— both as a viable means of attaining the South’s policy aims and also in regard to operational practicability, particularly the South’s logistical ability to sustain offensive campaigns. --- Page 31 --- MCDP 1-2 Campaigning 1-22 In spite of the Confederacy’s simple goal of survival, Lee adopts an ambitious offensive strategy comprising two campaigns of invasion which fail in their strategic purpose. --- Page 32 --- The Campaign 1-23 Grant’s strategy of 1864 was directly supportive of the established policy objectives. He recognized immediately that his military strategic aim must be the destruction of Lee’s army, and he devised a strategy of annihilatio n focused resolutely on that a im. Consistent with the policy objective of ending the war as rapid ly as possible, Grant initiated offensive action simultaneously on all fronts to close the ring quickly around his opponent. (See figu re on page 1-25.)  General George Meade’s Army o f t h e P o t o m a c w a s t o l o c k horns with Lee’s Army of Northern Virginia, pursuing it relent- lessly. “Lee’s army will be your objective point. Wherever he goes, there you will go also.” 27 Grant’s headquarters accompa- nied Meade.  I n t h e S h e n a n d o a h V a l l e y , G e n e r a l F r a n z S i g e l w a s t o f i x a large part of Lee’s forces in place. “In other words,” Grant said, “if Sigel can’t skin himself he can hold a leg while some one else skins.” 28  On the Peninsula, south of Richmond, General Butler was rein- forced by troops taken from occupation duties along the South- ern coast. He was to move up and threaten Richmond from a different direction than Meade.  General William T. Sherman was to sweep out of the west into Georgia, then up along the coast. “You I propose to move against Johnston’s army, to break it up and to get into the inte- rior of the enemy’s country as far as you can, inflicting all the damage you can against their war resources.” 29 After eliminat- ing Confederate forces in Georgia and the Carolinas, Sherman’s army would move north in a strategic envelopment of Lee. --- Page 33 --- MCDP 1-2 Campaigning 1-24  Union land and sea forces in the vicinity of New Orleans were to concentrate and take Mobile, Alabama, thus cutting off one of the last functioning Confederate seaports. Satisfied that he had finally found a commander who could trans- late policy into a successful military strategy, Lincoln wrote Grant in August 1864: “ ‘The par ticulars of your plans I neithe r know nor seek to know. . . . I wish not to obtrude any restraints or constraints upon you.’ ” 30 Operations in 1864 Consistent with his strategy of g rinding Lee down as quickly as possible and recognizing his ab ility to pay the numerical cost, Grant aggressively sought to for ce Lee frequently into pitched battle. He accomplished this b y moving against Richmond in such a way as to compel Lee to b lock him. Grant never fell back to lick his wounds but rather co ntinued relentlessly to press h is fundamental advantages no matter what the outcome of a particu- lar engagement. Even so, it is unfair to discount Grant, as som e have done, as an unskilled butcher: He showed himself free from the common fixation of his con- temporaries upon the Napoleonic battle as the hinge upon which warfare must turn. Instead, he developed a highly uncommon ability to rise above th e fortunes of a single battle and to master the flow of a long series of events, almost to th e point of making any outcome of a single battle, victory, draw, or even defeat, serve his eventual purpose equally well. 31 --- Page 34 --- The Campaign 1-25 Consistent with the policy objective of ending the war as rapidly as possible, Grant initiated off ensive action simultaneously on all fronts to close the ring around his opponent. --- Page 35 --- MCDP 1-2 Campaigning 1-26 Lee, on the other hand, had stated that having the weaker force , his desire was to avoid a general engagement.32 In practice, how- ever, he seemed unable to resist the temptation of a climactic Napoleonic battle whenever the enemy was within reach. Despite a number of tactical successes, Lee was eventually pinned to th e fortifications at Petersburg, where he was besieged by Grant from mid-June 1864 to early April 1865. Lee’s eventual attempt to escape from Petersburg led to his army’s capture at Appomattox on 9 April 1865. (See figure) The most important subordinate c ampaign, other than that of the Army of the Potomac itself, was Sherman’s. His initial opponent, General Joseph Johnston, in contrast to Lee, seemed to appreciate the Confederacy’s need to protract the conflict. Johnston— fought a war of defensive maneuver, seeking opportunities to fall upon enemy detachments which might expose themselves and inviting the enemy to provide him with such openings, meanwhile moving from one strong defensive position to another in order to invite the enemy to squander his resources in frontal attacks, but never remaining stationary long enough to risk being outflanked or entrapped. 33 Between Chattanooga and Atlanta, while suffering minimal casu- alties, Johnston held Sherman to an average advance of a mile a day. Of Johnston’s campaign, Grant himself wrote— For my own part, I think that Johnston’s tactics were right. Anything that could have prolonged the war a year beyond the time that it did finally close, would probably have exhausted the North to such an extent that they might have abandoned the contest and agreed to a separation. 34 --- Page 36 --- The Campaign 1-27 Grant clearly defines his aim: the destruction of Lee’s army. H e attacks relentlessly, maneuvering against Richmond to compel Lee to fight him. Grant’s instructions to Meade: “Lee’s army will be your objective point. Wherever he goes, there you will go also.” --- Page 37 --- MCDP 1-2 Campaigning 1-28 Tactics Lee’s dramatic tactical successes in battles such as Second Manassas and Chancellorsville sp eak for themselves. Neverthe- less, neither Lee nor G rant can be described as particularly in no- vative tactically. In fact, bot h were largely ignorant of the technical impact of the rifled bore on the close-order tactics of the day, and both suffered high casualties as a result. 35 However, due to the relative strategic situa tions, Grant could better absorb the losses that resulted from this t actical ignorance than could Le e, whose army was being bled to death. In this way, Grant’s strategic advantage carried down to the tactical level. Grant’s activities at all levels seem to have been mutually support- ing and focused on the objectives of policy. Lee’s strategy and operations appear to have been, at least in part, incompatible with each other, with the requirements of policy, and with the realities of combat. In the final analysis, L ee’s tactical flair could not o ver- come operational and strategic shortcomings of the Confederacy. THE MARINE CORPS AND CAMPAIGNING Having described how goals at th e different levels of war inter - a c t a n d i n t r o d u c e d t h e c a m p a i g n , w e m u s t n o w a s k o u r s e l v e s what is the relevance of this subject to the Marine Corps. We c an answer this question from several perspectives. Marine air- ground task forces (MAGTFs) will participate in campaigns, and --- Page 38 --- The Campaign 1-29 Marines will serve on joint staffs and participate in the desig n of campaigns. MAGTF commanders and their staffs may find them- selves designing major operations in support of a campaign. Organizationally, the MAGTF is uniquely equipped to perform a variety of tactical actions—amphibious, air, and land—and to sequence or combine those actions in a coherent scheme. The MAGTF’s organic aviation allows the commander to project power in depth and to shape events in time and space. The com- mand structure with separate headquarters for the tactical control of ground, air, and logistics actions frees the MAGTF command element to focus on the operational conduct of war. A MAGTF is often the first American force to arrive in an undevel- oped theater of operations. In that case, the MAGTF commander will often have operational-level responsibilities regardless of the size of the MAGTF. In some cases, the MAGTF may provide the nucleus of a joint task force headquarters. Even in a developed theater, a MAGTF may be required to conduct major operations as part of a lar ger campaign in pursuit of a strategic objectiv e. The commander of a MAGTF must be prepared to describe its most effective operational employment in a joint or multina- tional campaign. The news media, because of its g lobal reach and ability to infl u- ence popular opinion, can have operational effects—that is, it can often elevate even minor tactic al acts to political importance. Consequently, Marines must understand how tactical action impacts on politics; this is the essence of understanding war at the operational level. --- Page 39 --- MCDP 1-2 Campaigning 1-30 Finally, regardless of the echelon of command or scale of activity, even if an action rests firmly in the tactical realm, the metho dol- ogy described here—devising and executing a progressive series of actions in pursuit of a goal and deciding when and where to fight for that goal—applies. --- Page 40 --- Chapter 2 Designing the Campaign “By looking on each engagement as part of a series, at least insofar as events are predictable, the commander is always on the high road to his goal.”1 —Carl von Clausewitz “To be practical, any plan must take account of the enemy’s power to frustrate it; the b est chance of overcoming such obstruction is to have a plan that can be easily varied to fit the circumstances met; to keep such adaptability, while still keeping the initiative, the best way is to operate along a line which offers alternative objectives.”2 —B. H. Liddell Hart --- Page 42 --- Designing the Campaign 2-3 Having defined and described the operational level of war and the campaign, we will now discuss th e mental process and the most important considerations required to plan a campaign. The com- mander’s key responsibility is to provide focus. Through the cam- paign plan, the commander fuses a variety of disparate forces and tactical actions, extended ove r time and space, into a single, coherent whole.3 SUPPORTING THE MILITARY STRATEGIC AIM Campaign design begins with th e military strategic aim. The campaign design should focus all the various efforts of the cam - paign on the established strategi c aim. Effective campaign plan - ners understand the role of the c ampaign under consideration in the context of the larger conflic t. They also understand the ne ed to resolve, to the extent possibl e, any ambiguities in the role of our military forces. This focus on the military strategic aim i s the single most important element of campaign design. There are only two ways to use military force to impose our politi- cal will on an enemy. 4 The first approach is to make the enemy helpless to resist the imposition of our will through the destruction of the enemy’s military capabilitie s. Our aim is the eliminatio n (permanent or temporary) of the enemy’s military capacity— which does not necessarily mean the physical destruction of all the enemy’s forces. We call this a military strategy of annihilation.5 W e u s e f o r c e i n t h i s w a y w h e n w e s e e k an unlimited political --- Page 43 --- MCDP 1-2 Campaigning 2-4 objective—that is, when we seek to overthrow the enemy leader- ship or force its unconditional surrender. We may also use it i n pursuit of a more limited political objective if we believe that the enemy will continue to resist our demands as long as the enemy has any means to do so. The second approach is to convince the enemy that making peace on our terms will be less painful than continuing to fight. We call this a strategy of erosion—the use of our military means with the aim of wearing down the enemy leadership’s will to continue the struggle.6 In such a strategy, we use our military forces to raise the enemy’s costs higher than the enemy is willing to pay. We use force in this manner in pursuit of limited political goals that we believe the enemy leadership will ultimately be willing to accept. (See figure.) Determining military strategy. --- Page 44 --- Designing the Campaign 2-5 All military strategies fall into one of these fundamental cate go- ries. Campaign planners must understand the chosen strategy and its implications at the operational level. Failure to understand the basic strategic approach (annihilation or erosion) will prevent the development of a coherent campaign plan and may cause military and diplomatic leaders to work at cross-purposes. Campaigning Under an Annihilation Strategy If the policy aim is to destroy the enemy’s political entity—to over- throw the political structure and impose a new one—then our mili- tary aim must be annihilation.7 Even if our political goal is more limited, however, we may still seek to eliminate the enemy’s capac- ity to resist. In the Gulf War, we completely destroyed the ability of Iraqi forces to resist us in the Kuwaiti theater of operations, but we did not overthrow the enemy regime. Our political goal of liberat- ing Kuwait was limited, but our military objective, in the Kuwaiti theater of operations, was not.8 In the Falklands war, Britain had no need to attack the Argentine mainland or to overthrow its gov- ernment in order to recover the disputed islands. In the area o f operations, however, the Britis h isolated and annihilated the Argentine forces. Strategies of annihilation have the virtue of conceptual simplicity. The focus of our operational efforts is the enemy armed forces. Our intent is to render them powerless. We may choose to annihi- late those forces through battle or through destruction of the infra- structures that support them. Our main effort resides in our ow n armed forces. The other instru ments of national power—diplo- matic, economic, and informational—clearly support it. 9 Victory --- Page 45 --- MCDP 1-2 Campaigning 2-6 is easily measured: when the enemy’s fighting forces are no lon - ger able to present organized resistance, we have achieved mili - tary victory. Regardless of whether our political goal is limited or unlimited, a strategy of annihilation puts us into a position t o impose our will. Campaigning Under an Erosion Strategy Erosion strategies are appropriate when our political goal is l im- ited and does not require the destruction of the enemy leadership, government, or state. Successful examples of erosion appear in the American strategy against Britain during the American Revolution and the Vietnamese Communist s trategy against France and the United States in Indochina. Erosion strategies involve a great many more variables than anni- hilation strategies. These distinctions are important and critical to the campaign planner. In erosio n strategies, we have a much wider choice in our operational main efforts, the relationship of military force to the other inst ruments of power is much more variable, and our definition of victory is much more flexible. The means by which a campaign of erosion convinces the enemy leadership to negotiate is the infliction of unacceptable costs . Note that we mean unacceptable costs to the leadership, not to the enemy population. Our actions must have an impact on the enemy leadership. We must ask ourselves:  What does the enemy leadership value?  How can we threaten it in ways the enemy leadership will take seriously? --- Page 46 --- Designing the Campaign 2-7 Often, the most attractive objec tive for a campaign of erosion is the enemy’s military forces. Many regimes depend on their mili- tary forces for protection against their neighbors or their own people. If we substantially weaken those forces, we leave the enemy leadership vulnerable. In erosion strategies, however , we may choose a nonmilitary focus for our efforts. Instead o f threatening the enemy leader- ship’s survival by weakening them militarily, we may seize or neutralize some other asset they value—and prove that we can maintain our control. Our objective may be a piece of territory that has economic, political, cult ural, or prestige value; ship ping; trade in general; financial assets; and so on. The aim to seize and hold territory normally makes our military forces the main effort. Successful embargoes and the freezing of financial assets, on t he other hand, depend primarily on diplomacy and economic power. In the latter examples, therefore, military forces play a supporting role and may not be engaged in active combat operations at all. We may also seek to undermine the leadership’s prestige or credi- bility. Special forces and other unconventional military elements may play a role in such a campaign, but the main effort will be based on the informational and diplomatic instruments of our national power. Victory in a campaign of erosion can be more flexibly defined and/or more ambiguous than is victory in a campaign of annihila- tion. The enemy’s submission to our demands may be explicit or implicit, embodied in a formal treaty or in behind-the-scenes agreements. If we are convinced that we have made our point, --- Page 47 --- MCDP 1-2 Campaigning 2-8 changed the enemy’s mind or goals, or have so eroded the enemy’s ability to threaten us, we may simply “declare victory and go home.” Such conclusions may seem unsatisfying to mili- tary professionals, but they are acceptable if they meet the ne eds of national policy. IDENTIFYING THE ENEMY’S CRITICAL VULNERABILITIES Economy demands that we focus our efforts toward some object or factor of decisive importance in order to achieve the greatest effect at the least cost. Differing stra tegic goals may dictate differ ent kinds of operational targets. If we are pursuing an erosion strategy, we will seek objectives that raise to unacceptable levels the cost to the enemy leadership of noncompliance with our demands. Depending on the nature of the enemy leadership, our objectives may be the military forces or th eir supporting infrastructure, the internal security apparatus, territorial holdings, economic assets, or something else of value to our specific enemy. If we are pursuing a strategy of annihilation, we wi ll seek objectives that will lea d to the collapse of enemy military capabilities. In either case, we must understand both the sources of the enemy’s strength and key points of vulnerability. We call a key source of strength a center of gravity . It represents something without which the enemy cannot function. 10 --- Page 48 --- Designing the Campaign 2-9 We must distinguish between a strategic center of gravity and an operational center of gravity . The former is an objective whose seizure, destruction, or neutralization will have a profound impact on the enemy leadership’s will or ability to continue the struggle. Clausewitz put it this way— For Alexander, Gustavus Adolphus, Charles XII, and Frederick the Great, the center of gravity was their army. If the army had been destroyed, they would all have gone down in history as failures. 11 In countries subject to dome stic strife, the center of gravity is generally the capital. In small countries that rely on large ones, it is usually the army of their protector. Among alli- ances, it lies in the community of interest, and in popular upris- ings [the centers of gravity are] the personalities of the lead ers and public opinion. It is against these that our energies shoul d be directed.12 An operational center of gravity, on the other hand, is normally an element of the enemy’s armed forces. It is that concentration o f the enemy’s military power that is most dangerous to us or the one that stands between us and the accomplishment of our strate - gic mission. The degree of danger a force poses may depend on its size or particular capabilities, its location relative to ourselves, or the particular skill or enterprise of its leader. 13 The strategic and operational centers of gravity may be one and the same thing, or they may be very distinct. For example, thin k of the campaign of 1864 in the case study in chapter 1. Sherman’s strategic objectives were the de struction of the South’s warmak - ing resources and will to contin ue the war. Until Johnston’s --- Page 49 --- MCDP 1-2 Campaigning 2-10 Army of Tennessee was disposed of, Sherman’s army had to stay concentrated and could not dispe rse over a wide enough area to seriously affect the South’s economic infrastructure. For Sher- man, Johnston’s Army represented the operational, but not the strategic, center of gravity. Usually we do not wish to attack an enemy’s strengths directly because that exposes us to the enemy’s power. Rather, we seek to attack the enemy’s weaknesses in a way that avoids the enemy’s strengths and minimizes the risk to ourselves. Therefore we see k some critical vulnerability . A critical vulnerability is related to, but not the same as, a center of gravity; the concepts are comple- mentary. A vulnerability cannot be critical unless it undermines a key strength. It also must be so mething that we are capable of attacking effectively. Critical vulnerabilities may not be immediately open to attack. We may have to create vulner ability—to design a progressive sequence of actions to expose or isolate it, creating over time an opportunity to strike the decisive blow. An example would be to peel away the enemy’s air defenses in order to permit a successful attack on key command and control facilities. Just as we ruthlessly pursue our enemy’s critical vulnerabiliti es, we should expect the enemy to attack ours. We must take steps to protect or reduce our vulnerabilities over the course of the ca m- paign. This focus on the enemy’s critical vulnerabilities is central to campaign design. --- Page 50 --- Designing the Campaign 2-11 In order to identify the enemy’s center of gravity and critical vul- nerabilities, we must have a thorough understanding of the enemy. Obtaining this understanding is not simple or easy. Two of the most difficult things to do in war are to develop a realistic u nder- standing of the enemy’s true character and capabilities and to take into account the way that our forces and actions appear from th e enemy’s viewpoint. Instead, we tend to turn the enemy into a ste- reotype—a cardboard cut-out or strawman—or, conversely, to imagine the enemy is 10-feet tall. We often ascribe to the enem y attitudes and reflexes that are e ither mirror images of our own or simply fantasies—what we would like the enemy to be or to do, rather than what the particular situation and character would imply. This insufficient thought and imagination makes it very difficu lt to develop realistic enemy cours es of action, effective decepti on plans or ruses, or high-probabilit y branches and sequels to our plans. In designing our campaign, we must understand the unique characteristics of our enemy and focus our planning to exploit weaknesses derived from that understanding. THE CAMPAIGN CONCEPT After determining whether the strategic aim is erosion or anni- hilation, describing its applicat ion in the situation at hand, and identifying the enemy’s centers of gravity and critical vulnerabili- ties that we will attack to most economically effect the enemy’ s --- Page 51 --- MCDP 1-2 Campaigning 2-12 submission or collapse, we must now develop a campaign concept. This concept captures the essence of our design and provides th e foundation for the campaign plan. It expresses in clear, concis e, conceptual language a broad vision of what we plan to accomplish and how we plan to do it. Our intent, clearly and explicitly stated, is an integral component of the concept. Our concept should als o contain in general terms an idea of when, where, and under what conditions we intend to give or refuse battle. The concept should demonstrate a certain boldness, for boldness is in itself “a genuinely creative force.” 14 It should focus on the enemy’s critical vulnerabilities. It should exhibit creativity and avoid discernible conventions and patterns; make use of artific e, ambiguity, and deception; and reflect, as Churchill wrote, “an orig- inal and sinister touch, which leaves the enemy puzzled as well as beaten.”15 It should create multiple options so that we can adjust to changing events and so that the enemy cannot discern our true intentions. It should be as simple as the situation allows. It should provide for speed in execution—which is a weapon in itself. Each campaign should have a single, unifying concept. Often a simple but superior idea has provided the basis for success. Grant’s plan of fixing Lee near Richmond while loosing Sherman through the heart of the South was one such idea. The idea of bypassing Japanese strongholds in the Pacific became the basis for the Americans’ island-hopping c ampaigns in the Second World War. MacArthur’s bold, simple concept of a seaborne, operational turning movement became the Inchon landing in 1950. --- Page 52 --- Designing the Campaign 2-13 Phasing the Campaign A campaign is required whenever we pursue a strategic aim not attainable through a single tactical action at a single place a nd time. A campaign therefore incl udes several related phases that may be executed simultaneously or in sequence. A campaign may also have several aspects, each t o be executed by different forces or different kinds of forces. Phases are a way of organizing the diverse, extended, and dispersed activities of the campaign. As Eisenhower pointed out, “These phases of a plan do not comprise rigid instructions, they are mer ely guideposts. . . . Rigidity inevi- tably defeats itself, and the analysts who point to a changed detail as evidence of a plan’s weakness are completely unaware of the characteristics of the battlefield.”16 Each phase may constitute a single operation or a series of opera- tions. Our task is to devise a co mbination of actions that most effectively and quickly achieve the strategic aim. While each phase may be distinguishable from the others as an identifiable episode, each is necessarily linked to the others and gains signifi- cance only in the larger context of the campaign. The manner of distinction may be separation in time or space or a difference in aim or in forces assigned. We should view each phase as an essential component in a con- nected string of events that are related in cause and effect. L ike a chess player, we must learn to t hink beyond the next move, to look ahead several moves, and to consider the long-term effects --- Page 53 --- MCDP 1-2 Campaigning 2-14 of those moves and how to explo it them. We cannot move with- out considering the enemy’s reactions or anticipations, unlikely as well as likely. Because each phase involves one or more decision points, we must think through as far as pra cticable the possible branches or options resulting from each decis ion. Such decision points are often represented by battles, which—despite everything we can do to predetermine their outcome—can be either lost or won. Each branch from a decision poi nt will require different action s on our part and each action demands various follow-ups—sequels or potential sequels. 17 “The higher commander must constantly plan, as each operation progresses, so to direct his formations that success finds his troops in proper position and condition to under- take successive steps without pause.”18 Each phase of the campaign is aimed at some intermediate goal necessary to the accomplishment of the larger aim of the cam- paign. Each phase has its own distinct intent which contributes to the overall intent of the campai gn. Generally speaking, the pha s- ing of a campaign should be eve nt-driven rather than schedule- driven. Each phase should repres ent a natural subdivision of th e campaign; we should not break the campaign down into numerous arbitrary chunks that can lead to a plodding, incremental approach sacrificing tempo. The process of developing a sequence of phases in a campaign operates in two directions simultaneously: forward and back- ward.19 We begin our planning with both the current situation and the desired end state in mind—recognizing, of course, that the end --- Page 54 --- Designing the Campaign 2-15 state may change as the situation unfolds. We plan ahead, envi- sioning mutually supporting phas es, whose combined effects set the stage for the eventual decisive action. At the same time, how- ever, and as a check on our planning, we envision a reasonable set of phases backward from the end state toward the present. The two sets of phases, forward and backward, have to mesh. Phasing, whether sequential or s imultaneous, allows us to allo- cate resources effectively over time. Taking the long view, we must ensure that resources will be available when needed in the later stages of the campaign. Ef fective phasing must take into account the process of logistical culmination. If resources are insufficient to sustain the fo rce until the accomplishment of t he strategic aim, logistical considerations may demand that the cam- paign be organized into sequential phases. Each of these must b e supportable in turn, each phase followed by a logistical resupp ly or buildup. Moreover, logistical requirements may dictate the purpose of certain phases as well as the sequence of those phases. Resource availability depends i n large part on time schedules— such as sustainment or deploym ent rates—rather than on the events of war. Therefore, as we develop our intended phases, we must reconcile the time-oriente d phasing of resource availabili ty with the event-driven phasing of operations. Conceptual, Functional, and Detailed Planning The process of creating a broad scheme for accomplishing our goal is called conceptual planning . T o t r a n s l a t e t h e c a m p a i g n concept into a complete and pr acticable plan requires functiona l planning and detailed planning. Functional planning, as the name --- Page 55 --- MCDP 1-2 Campaigning 2-16 implies, is concerned with desi gning the functional components necessary to support the concept: the subordinate concepts for command and control, maneuver, fires, intelligence, logistics, and force protection. 20 Functional planning ensures that we work through the feasibility of the ca mpaign concept with respect to every functional area. Detailed planning encompasses the specific planning activities necessary to ensure that the plan is coordinated: specific com- mand relationships, movements, landing tables, deployment or resupply schedules, communications plans, reconnaissance plans, control measures, etc. Detailed design should not become so spe- cific, however, that it inhibits flexibility. No amount of subsequent planning can reduce the requirement for an overall concept. While conceptual planning is the foundation for functional and detailed planning, the process works in the other direction as well. Our concept must be adaptable to functional real- ities. Functional planning in turn must be sensitive to details o f execution. The operational concept (a conceptual concern) should be used to develop the deployment plan (a functional concern). However, the realities of deployment schedules sometimes dictate employment schemes. Campaign design thus becomes a two-way process aimed at harmonizing the various levels of design activity. The further ahead we project, the less certain and detailed sho uld be our design. We may plan the initial phase of a campaign with some degree of certainty, developing extensive functional and detailed plans. However, since the results of that phase will shape the phases that follow, subsequ ent plans must be increasingly --- Page 56 --- Designing the Campaign 2-17 general. The plan for future ph ases will be largely conceptual, perhaps consisting of no more than a general intent and several contingencies and options. Conflict Termination Two of the most important aspects of campaign design are defining the desired end state and planning a transition to post-conflic t operations. Every campaign and every strategic effort have a goal. Every military action eventually ends. The decisions when and under what circumstances to suspend or terminate combat operations are , of course, political decisions . Military leaders, however, are participants in the decisionmaking process. It is their responsib ility to ensure that political le aders understand both the existing s ituation and the implications— immediate and long-term, military and political—of a suspension of combat at any point in the conflict. In 1864, for example, Union commanders understood well that any armistice for the purposes of North-South negotiation woul d likely mark an end to Union hopes. Regardless of the theoretical gap between the military and the political realms, combat opera tions, once halted, would hav e been virtually impossible to restart. 21 In the 1991 Gulf War, the timing of conflict termination re flected the achievement of our political and military aims in the Kuwaiti theater of operations. Campaign designers must plan for conflict termination from the earliest possible moment and upd ate these plans as the campaign evolves. What constitutes an acceptable political and military end state, the achievement of which will justify a termination to o ur --- Page 57 --- MCDP 1-2 Campaigning 2-18 combat operations? In examining any proposed end state, we must consider whether it guarantees an end to the fundamental problems that brought on the struggle in the first place, or whether instead it leaves in place the seeds of further conflic t. If the latter, we must ask whether the chosen method of termination permits our unilateral resumption of military operations. Most practical resolutions of any conf lict involve some degree of ri sk. Military leaders must always be prepared to ask the political lead- ership whether the political ben efits of an early peace settlem ent outweigh the military risks—and t hus also the political risks—o f accepting a less-than-ideal conclusion to hostilities. When addressing conflict termination, commanders must consider a wide variety of operational issues including disengagement, force protection, transition to postconflict operations, and reconsti- tution and redeployment. Thorough campaign planning can reduce the chaos and confusion inherent in abruptly ending combat opera- tions. When we disengage and end combat operations, it is of para- mount importance to provide for the security of our forces as well as noncombatants and enemy forces under our control. The violent emotions of war cannot be quelled instantly, and various friend ly and enemy forces may attempt to continue hostile actions. Once combat operations cease, the focus will likely shift to mi li- tary operations other than war. The scope of these operations ranges from peacekeeping and refugee control to mine clearing and ordnance disposal to food dis tribution. Repairing host nation infrastructure and restoring host country control are operation al- level concerns. Commanders at a ll levels must coordinate their --- Page 58 --- Designing the Campaign 2-19 efforts with a variety of governmental, non-governmental, and host nation agencies. A final issue to be addressed in conflict termination is reconstitu- tion and redeployment. Reconstitution begins in theater. Units are brought to a state of readiness commensurate with the mission requirements and available resources. The results of combat wil l dictate whether this is done through the shifting of internal resources within a degraded unit (reorganization) or the rebuilding of a unit through large-scale replacements (regeneration).22 T h e capability to reconstitute and rede ploy is especially important to naval expeditionary forces who must be able to complete one mis- sion, reembark, and move on to t he next task without hesitation . Regardless of the methods, reconstitution and redepolyment pose a complex and demanding leadership and logistics challenge. CAMPAIGN DESIGN: TWO EXAMPLES The design of each campaign is unique. The campaign design is shaped first and foremost by the overall national strategy and the military strategic aim. The nature of the enemy, the characteri s- tics of the theater of operations, and the resources available all influence the exact nature of each design. Nevertheless, the ba sic concepts of campaign design apply in any situation. Consider the following two case studies. While the designs of these two cam- paigns are radically different, the end result is the same: suc cess- ful attainment of the strategic aim. --- Page 59 --- MCDP 1-2 Campaigning 2-20 Case Study: The Recapture of Europe, 1944–45 An excellent example of campaign design during a major con- flict is Eisenhower’s broad plan for the recapture of Europe in the Second World War. The strategy was one of annihilation with the aim of eliminating Germany’s military capacity. The design focused on the German forces as the primary center of gravity, although it recognized the impor tance of both political and eco - nomic centers such as Berlin and the Ruhr. The design employed a series of phases that were carri ed out in sequence as the cam - paign gained momentum and progressed towards the accomplish- ment of the ultimate objectiv e. Eisenhower described this campaign design as “successive m oves with possible alterna- tives.” 23 (See figure.) Land on the Normandy coast. Build up the resources needed fo r a decisive battle in the Nor- mandy-Brittany region and break out of the enemy’s encircling positions. . . . Pursue on a broad front with two army groups, emphasizing the left to gain necessary ports and reach the boundaries of Germany and threaten the Ruhr. On our right we would link up with the forces that were to invade France from the south. Build up our new base along th e western border of Germany, by securing ports in Belgium and in Brittany as well as in the Mediterranean. --- Page 60 --- Designing the Campaign 2-21 The phases of Eisenhower’s broad design for the reconquest of Europe in the Second World War, as originally conceived. His directive from the Combined Chiefs of Staff: “You will enter th e continent of Europe and, in conjunction with the other Allied N a t i o n s , u n d e r t a k e o p e r a t i o n s aimed at the heart of Germany and the destruction of her Armed Forces.”24 --- Page 61 --- MCDP 1-2 Campaigning 2-22 While building up our forces for the final battles, keep up an unrelenting offensive to the extent of our means, both to wear down the enemy and to gain advantages for the final fighting. Complete the destruction of enemy forces west of the Rhine, in the meantime constantly seeking bridgeheads across the river. Launch the final attack as a double envelopment of the Ruhr, again emphasizing the left, and follow this up by an immediate thrust through Germany, with the specific direction to be deter- mined at the time. Clean out the remainder of Germany.25 Eisenhower remarked that “this general plan, carefully outlined at staff meetings before D-Day, was never abandoned, even momen- tarily, throughout the campaign.”26 Case Study: Malaysia, 1948–60 An example of campaign design very different from Eisenhower’s can be found in the British campaign against a Communist insur- gency in Malaysia. This example demonstrates that the concepts used to design a campaign in conventional conflicts apply as well in military operations other than war. While the British strate gy was also one of annihilation, the nature of the conflict and th e characteristics of the enemy dictated that the strategy had to be carried out over a much longer period in order to be successful. The centers of gravity and critical vulnerabilities were not primar ily military in nature. Since this campaign was conducted over a num- ber of years, the phases or building blocks of the campaign had to be pursued simultaneously rather than sequentially. --- Page 62 --- Designing the Campaign 2-23 Both sides had clear goals and a clear concept for the political and military phasing of the struggle. The British had promised Malay- sia its independence. Their goal was to leave a stable, non-Com - munist government in place after their departure. The Communists’ goal was to obtain such a powerful military and political position within Malaysia that the British withdrawal would leave them dominant in t he country. The British identified the center of gravity of the Co mmunist movement as the large, impoverished Chinese minority who furnished the vast bulk of recruits for both the political and military wings of the Commu - nist Party. Overall, the movement’s critical vulnerability was its ethnic isolation in the Malay-d ominated country. Militarily, it s critical vulnerability was the dependence of Communist military units on food and other supplie s from the widely scattered Chi- nese farming population. The center of gravity of the British- backed Malaysian government, on the other hand, was its claim to legitimacy and its promise of a better life than Communism could offer. The British launched a multipro nged campaign against the Com- munists. The navy insured that external support did not reach t he Communists by sea. The army was responsible for keeping orga- nized enemy units in the jungle, away from the population base and food supplies of the settled agricultural areas. The Malaysian government forces recognized that the jungle gave the enemy strength: enemy bases were hard to find and easily relocated if discovered. Search-and-destroy efforts were counterproductive because British strike forces were easily detected as they thrashed through the bush. This permitted the enemy not only to escape but to lay ambushes. However, the enemy’s forces needed to move --- Page 63 --- MCDP 1-2 Campaigning 2-24 through the jungle as well, esp ecially to obtain food. This mad e their forces vulnerable. The B ritish knew where the food was grown and the routes the enemy supply columns had to follow to obtain it. Accordingly, the government forces themselves came to concentrate—very successfully—on the tactic of ambush. Meanwhile, the police forces (recruited from the Malaysian popu- lation to a much greater size tha n the army) concentrated on pr o- viding security in the populated areas. They did this under ver y strict rules of engagement respecting the rights of the citizen s, thus upholding the legality a nd legitimacy of constituted autho r- ity. Simultaneously, the destitute Chinese population was concen- trated in clean, secure, well-desi gned new settlements, provide d with the economic means to build homes in their own style, and given legal title to th ose homes and to adequate farmlands. Thi s resettlement policy cut the gue rrilla forces off from sources o f recruits and, perhaps more important, food. The resettlement effort was accompanied by a political program to ensure that th e Chinese minority obtained right s of citizenship equal to those of the Malay majority. In combination, these patient and thorough ly coordinated mili- tary, police, economic, and political operations isolated the Com- munists both physically and psychologically from the main population. Despite some tactical successes (which included kill- ing the first British commander in an ambush), the Malaysian Communist military forces were a nnihilated and the Party elimi- nated as a factor in Malaysian politics. 27 --- Page 64 --- Designing the Campaign 2-25 Despite the obvious differences in the designs of these two cam - paigns, they both applied the basic concepts of campaign design to achieve the desired strategic objective. While the type of c on- flict and the nature of the enem y were radically different, bot h campaign designs had a clearly identified strategic aim, both focused on the enemy’s centers of gravity and critical vulnerabili- ties, and both employed a campaign concept with appropriate phases tailored to accomplish the strategic aim. THE CAMPAIGN PLAN The campaign plan is the stateme nt of the design for prosecutin g the commander’s portion of the ove rall strategy. It flows directly from the campaign conc ept and translates the concept into a structured configuration of actions required to carry out that con- cept. The plan describes a sequence of related operations that lead to a well-defined military end s tate. The campaign plan is a mechanism that provides focus and direction to subordinates.28 The campaign plan must be built around the strategy. It should describe, to subordinates and sen iors alike, the end state whic h will attain the strategic aim. It must present the overall intent and concept of the campaign; a tentative sequence of phases and oper- ational objectives which will lead to success; and general concepts for key supporting functions, es pecially a logistical concept t hat --- Page 65 --- MCDP 1-2 Campaigning 2-26 will sustain the force throughout the campaign. The logistical con- cept is vital since logistics, perhaps more than any other functional concern, can dictate what is operationally feasible. The plan may describe the initial phases of the campaign with some certainty. However, the design for succeeding phases will become increasingly general as uncerta inty grows and the situation becomes increasingly unpredictable. We must build as much adapt- ability as we can into the design of the campaign plan. Neverth e- less, the final phase, the antic ipated decisive action which wi ll achieve final success and toward which the entire campaign builds, should be clearly envisioned an d described. The campaign plan should establish tentative milestones and provide a measure of progress. It is not, however, a schedule in any final, immutabl e sense. Until the final aim is realized, we must continually adapt our campaign plan to changing interim aims (ours and the enemy’s), results, resources, and limiting factors. Above all, the campaign plan should be concise. General MacArthur’s plan for his Southwe st Pacific theater of operation s was only four pages. 29 The campaign plan does not describe the execution of phases in tactical detail. Rather, it provides a frame- work for developing operation orders that in turn provide the tac- tical details. --- Page 66 --- Chapter 3 Conducting the Campaign “A prince or general can best demonstrate his genius by managing a campaign exactly to suit his objectives and his resources, doing neither too much nor too little.”1 —Carl von Clausewitz “We must make this campaign an exceedingly active one. Only thus can a weaker country cope with a stronger; it must make up in activity what it lacks in strength.”2 —Stonewall Jackson --- Page 68 --- Conducting the Campaign 3-3 Because campaign design is continuous, there is no point at which campaign design ceases and campaign execution begins. In fact, design and conduct are interdependent. Just as our design shape s our execution, the results of execution cause us to modify our design even in the midst of execution. Only with this thought firmly in mind can we proceed to discuss campaign execution. Reduced to its essence, the art of campaigning consists of deci d- ing who, when, and where to fight and for what purpose. Equally important, it involves deciding who, when, and where not to fight. It is, as Clausewitz descr ibed, “the use of engagements for the object of the war.”3 STRATEGIC ORIENTATION The conduct of politics and dip lomacy continues in all its com- plexity even when military opera tions are under way. Sometimes the political situation is simpl e, and military operations can pro- ceed in a straightforward fashio n. It is increasingly common, however, for commanders even at t he tactical level to find them - selves navigating on terrain as complex politically as it is ph ysi- cally—cluttered with a confusi ng array of enemies, allies, neutrals, nongovernmental organizations, private volunteer orga - nizations, United Nations forces and observers, and the press. The art of campaigning means understanding when military force is our main effort and when it is acting in support of some oth er --- Page 69 --- MCDP 1-2 Campaigning 3-4 instrument of our national power. Thus, in the conduct as well as the design of a campaign, the overriding consideration is an unwavering focus on the goals of our strategy. The aims, resources, and conditions estab lished by strategy are the filte r through which we must view all our actions. Joint force com- manders who may function anywhere from the theater to the tac- tical level must make their operational and tactical decisions with the theater strategy in mind. L ower-echelon commanders must understand the strategic context of their tactical missions if they are to provide useful feedback to higher levels on the effectiv e- ness of field operations. Consequently, our strategic goals mus t be communicated clearly to commanders at every level. THE USE OF COMBAT Because tactical success alone does not guarantee the attainmen t of strategic goals, there is an art to the way we use combat actions in pursuit of our larger objectives. We must view each envisioned action—battle, engagement, interdiction mission, feint, or refusal to give battle—as a element of a larger whole rather than as an independent, self-contained event. While combat is an integral part of war, it is by nature costly. The flames of war are fueled by money, material stocks, and human lives. As Eisenhower wrote, the word war “is synonymous with waste . . . . The problem is to determine how, in time and space, to --- Page 70 --- Conducting the Campaign 3-5 expend assets so as to achieve the maximum in results.” 4 Econ- omy dictates that we use combat actions wisely. We do this first by fighting when it is to our advantage to do so— when we are strong compared to the enemy or we have identified some exploitable vulnerability—and by avoiding battle when we are at a disadvantage. When we are at a disadvantage tactically , economy leads to refusing to en gage in battle in that particula r situation. When we are at a tac tical disadvantage theater-wide, it leads to waging a campaign based on hit-and-run tactics and a general refusal to giv e pitched battle, except when local advan - tage exists. This can be seen in countless historical examples: Rome under Fabius versus Hannibal, the Viet Cong in Vietnam, Washington and Nathanael Greene in the Revolutionary War. By the same token, given a theater-wide tactical advantage, we might want to bring the enemy to battle at every opportunity: Rome under Varro versus Hannibal, the United States in Vietnam, Eisenhower in Europe, or Grant versus Lee. Nevertheless, such an approach is generally time- consuming, and success depends on three conditions: first, and most important, there is someth ing to be gained strategically by ex ploiting this tactical advantag e as in Grant’s series of battles with Lee; second, popular support for this approach will outlast the enemy’s ability to absorb losses as was not the case with the United States in Vietnam; and third, the enemy is willing or can be compe lled to accept battle on a larg e scale as the Germans were in Europe in 1944, but the Viet Cong generally were not. --- Page 71 --- MCDP 1-2 Campaigning 3-6 It is not sufficient to give b attle simply because it is tactic ally advantageous to do so. It is more important that battle be strategi- cally advantageous or strategically necessary. That is, there should be something to gain by fighting or to lose by not fighting. Strate- gic gain or necessity can be sufficient reason even when the situa- tion is tactically disadvantageous. Consequently, it is conceivable that we might accept battle even expecting a tactical defeat if the results will serve the goals of strategy. For example, after running away from Cornwallis’ British forces in the Carolinas for 6 weeks in 1781, Nathanael Greene could decide to give battle “on the the- ory that he could hardly lose. If Cornwallis should win a tacti cal victory, he was already so far gone in exhaustion it would prob a- bly hurt him almost as much as a defeat.”5 Ideally, operational commanders fight only when and where they want to. Their ability to do this is largely a function of thei r abil- ity to maintain the initiative an d shape the events of war to t heir purposes. “In war it is all-import ant to gain and retain the in itia- tive, to make the enemy conform to your action, to dance to you r tune.”6 Retaining the initiative, in turn, is largely the product of maintaining a higher operationa l tempo, which we will discuss later in this chapter. Even so, we must realize that we may not always be able to fight on our own terms. We may be compelled to fight because of strategic --- Page 72 --- Conducting the Campaign 3-7 constraints (like Lee’s requirement to defend Richmond) or by a skillful enemy who perceives an a dvantage and seeks battle. In such cases, we have no choice but to give battle in a way that serves our strategy to the extent possible and to exploit all possible advantage of the tactical results. The conduct of a battle, once joined, is principally a tactical prob- lem, but even the tactician should keep larger aims in mind while fighting. As an example, consider General Guderian at the Battl e of Sedan in May 1940. (See figure on page 3-8.) Guderian’s XIXth Panzer corps was attacking generally south with the strate- gic aim “to win a bridgehead over the Meuse at Sedan and thus to help the infantry divisions that would be following to cross th at river. No instructions were given as to what was to be done in the event of a surprise success.” 7 By 13 May , Guderian had forced a small bridgehead. By the 14th, he had expanded the bridgehead to the south and west but had not broken through the French defenses. Lacking instructions o n how to continue the battle, Guderian opted to attack west in concert with the strategic aim of the campaign. “1st and 2nd Pan zer Divisions received orders immediately to change direction with all their forces, to cross the Ardennes Canal, and to head west with the objective of breaking clear through the French defenses.” 8 Guderian’s forces broke through and sped all the way to t he coast at the English Channe l, cutting off the Anglo-French armies to the north. --- Page 73 --- MCDP 1-2 Campaigning 3-8 Guderian’s tactical conduct of the battle of the Sedan bridgehead reflected an appreciation for th e operational and strategic sit ua- tions. In the midst of the battle he changed his direction of attack in keeping with the aim of the campaign: “1st and 2nd Panzer Divisions received orders immediately to change direction with all their forces, to cross the Ardennes Canal, and to head west with the objective of breaking clear through the French defenses.” --- Page 74 --- Conducting the Campaign 3-9 PERSPECTIVE The campaign demands a markedly different perspective than the battle. It requires us to “think big,” as Field-Marshal Slim pu t it, seeing beyond the parameters of immediate combat to the requirements of theater strategy as the basis for deciding when , where, and who to fight. We should view no tactical action in iso- lation, but always in light of the design for the theater as a whole. While the tactician looks at the immediate tactical problem and the conditions directly precedin g and following, the operationa l commander must take a broade r view. The operational com- mander must not become so involv ed in tactical activities as to lose the proper perspective. This broader perspective implies broader dimensions of time and space over which to apply the military art. The actual dimensions of the operational canvas vary with the nature of the war, the size and capabilities of availa ble forces, and the geographical characteristics of the theater. No ne- theless, all the time and space subject to the commander’s infl u- ence must be considered to create the conditions of success. In 1809, Napoleon carried with him m aps of the entire continent of Europe, thereby enabling consid eration of operations wherever they suited his purposes. Similarly, Rommel’s intervention in the North African theater of war in1942 successfully delayed Ameri- can and British efforts to open up a second front in support of their Russian allies. Based on this larger perspective, the operational commander’s concern with military geography is on a different scale than th at --- Page 75 --- MCDP 1-2 Campaigning 3-10 of the tactical commander. The operational commander is not concerned with the details of terrain that are of critical importance to the tactician in combat, such as hills, draws, fingers, clea rings or small woods, creeks, or broken trails. Rather, the operation al commander’s concern is with maj or geographical features which can bear on the campaign: rivers and major watersheds, road sys- tems, railways, mountain ranges, urban areas, airfields, ports, and natural resource areas. Patton believed that “in the higher ech e- lons, a layered map of the whole theater to a reasonable scale, showing roads, railways, streams, and towns is more useful than a large-scale map cluttered up with ground forms and a multiplicity of non-essential information.” 9 Patton’s concern was with the movement of large forces. We describe activities at the strategic level as bearing direct ly on the war overall, at th e operational level as bearing on the cam - paign, and at the tactical level as bearing on combat—that is, on the engagement or battle. Therefore, in designing and executing a campaign, we seek to focus on t he attainment of strategic and operational objectives. At the same time, we adapt to the realities of the tactical situation. SURPRISE Surprise is a state of disorientation that results from unexpec ted events and degrades the ability to react effectively. Surprise can be of decisive importance. Tactical surprise c a t c h e s t h e e n e m y --- Page 76 --- Conducting the Campaign 3-11 unprepared in such a way as to affect the outcome of combat. It is of a relatively immediate and local nature. Operational surprise catches the enemy unprepared in such a way as to impact the cam- paign. To achieve operational su rprise, we need not necessarily catch the enemy tactically unawa re. For example, at the Inchon landing in 1950, the need first t o capture Wolmido Island, which dominated the inner approaches to Inchon harbor, removed any hope of achieving tactical surprise with the main landings. Opera- tional surprise was nonetheless complete. Even though the assault on Wolmido Island was preceded by a 5-day aerial bombardment, the North Korean army, far to the south menacing Pusan, could not react in time. Wolmido was cut off and soon collapsed. Surprise may be the product of deception that misleads the enemy into acting in a way prejudicial to enemy interests.10 For example, the Normandy invasion succeeded in large part because an elabo- rate deception plan convinced the Germans that the invasion would take place at Calais. Long after Allied forces were established ashore in Normandy, vital German reserves were held back await- ing the real invasion elsewhere. A major factor in the success of the deception plan was that it was designed to exploit a known enemy belief that General George Patton—in the Germans’ opinion the best Allied operational commander—would lead the key attack.11 Surprise may also be the product of ambiguity when we generate many options and leave the enem y confounded as to which we will pursue. For example, prior to the Allied invasion of North Africa in 1942, Eisenhower’s choice of a thousand miles of coast- line from Casablanca to Tunis precluded the Axis forces from anticipating the actual landing sites. --- Page 77 --- MCDP 1-2 Campaigning 3-12 Surprise may simply be the product of stealth where the enemy is not deceived or confused as to our intentions but is ignorant o f them. Exploiting his knowledge of Japanese intentions and their total ignorance of his, Admiral Nimitz was able to strike a dec i- sive blow against the Japanese invasion fleet at the Battle of Mid- way in June 1942. Of these three sources of surprise, deception may offer the greatest potential payoff because it delu des the enemy into actions we actively desire. However, because deception means actually con- vincing the enemy of a lie rather than simply sowing confusion or ignorance, it is also the most difficult to execute. This is even truer at the operational level than at the tactical. Due to the broader per- spective of operations, operational deception must feed false infor- mation to a wider array of enemy intelligence collection means over a longer period of time than is the case with tactical dec ep- tion. This increases the complex ity of the deception effort, th e need for consistency, and the risk of compromise. TEMPO Tempo is a rhythm of activity. It is a significant weapon because it is through a faster tempo that we seize the initiative and dictate the terms of war. Tactical tempo is the pace of events within an engagement. Operational tempo is the pace of events between engagements. In other words, in seeking to control tempo, we need the ability to shift from one t actical action to another consistently --- Page 78 --- Conducting the Campaign 3-13 faster than the enemy. Thus it is not in absolute terms that te mpo matters, but in terms relative to the enemy. We create operational tempo in several ways. First, we gain tempo by undertaking multiple t actical actions simultaneously such as the German blitzes into Poland and France in 1939 and 1940 which were characterized by multiple, broadly dispersed thrusts. Second, we gain tempo by anticipating the various like ly results of tactical actions and preparing sequels for exploitin g those results without delay. Thi rd, we generate tempo by decen- tralizing decisionmaking within the framework of a unifying intent. Field-Marshal Slim reca lled his experience in Burma in the Second World War— Commanders at all levels had to act more on their own; they were given greater latitude to work out their own plans to achieve what they knew was the Army Commander’s inten- tion. In time they developed to a marked degree a flexibility of mind and a firmness of decision that enabled them to act swiftly to take advantage of sudden information or changing circumstances without reference to their superiors. 12 Finally, we maintain tempo by avoiding unnecessary combat. Any battle or engagement, even if it allows us to destroy the enemy , takes time and energy, and this saps our operational tempo. Her e we see another reason besides the desire for economy to fight only when and where necessary. Conver sely, by maintaining superior operational tempo, we can lessen the need to resort to combat. The German blitzkrieg through France in 1940 was characterized more by the calculated avoidance of pitched battle after the breakthrough than by great tactical victories. By contrast, Fre nch --- Page 79 --- MCDP 1-2 Campaigning 3-14 doctrine at the time called for deliberate, methodical battle. When the German tempo of operations rendered this approach impossi- ble to implement, the defenders were overwhelmed. The French were unable to reconstitute an organized resistance and force t he Germans to fight for their gains. 13 Liddell Hart wrote of the 1940 campaign in France— The issue turned on the time factor at stage after stage. Frenc h countermeasures were repeated ly thrown out of gear because their timing was too slow to catch up with the changing situa- tions . . . . The French commanders, train ed in the slow-motion methods of 1918, were mentally unfit to cope with the panzer pace, and it produced a spreading paralysis among them. 14 As with almost everything at the operational level of war, con- trolling the tempo of operations r equires not only speed, but a solid understanding of the operational and strategic goals of t he campaign. During Desert Storm, for instance, the Marine Corps’ drive on the main effort’s right flank rolled forward much fast er than higher commanders had anticip ated. Although this fast pace unquestionably offered tactical a dvantages within the Marines’ area of operations, from the stan dpoint of the overall Allied p lan it posed problems. Rather than f ixing the Iraqi forces in place , as planned, the Marines were routin g them. This created the possi- bility that major Iraqi forces wou ld flee the trap before other Allied forces could close the en velopment from the left. Had th e primary objective been the destruction of the Iraqi army, it mi ght have been necessary to slow the Marines’ advance even though this might have increased their casualties in the long run. The --- Page 80 --- Conducting the Campaign 3-15 main objective, however, was to free Kuwait of Iraqi occupation . Given that the Iraqis had already broken and started running, there was no guarantee that slowing the tempo on the right would have the desired effect. Therefore, the wisest course—and the one that was taken—was to let the Marines maintain their high tempo, while expediting the movements of other Allied formations.15 SYNERGY The conduct of a successful campai gn requires the integration o f many disparate efforts. Effective action in any single warfight ing function is rarely decisive in an d of itself. We obtain maximum impact when we harmonize all warfighting functions to accom- plish the desired strategic objective in the shortest time poss ible and with minimal casualties. 16 Within the context of the cam- p a i g n , w e f o c u s o n s i x m a j o r functions: command and control, maneuver, fires, intelligence, logistics, and force protection.17 Command and Control No single activity in war is m ore important than command and control. Without command and control, military units degenerate into mobs, the subordination of military force to policy is replaced by random violence, and it is impossible to conduct a campaign. Command and control encompasses all military opera- tions and functions, harmonizing them into a meaningful whole. It provides the intellectual fra m e w o r k a n d p h y s i c a l s t r u c t u r e s through which commanders transmit their intent and decisions to --- Page 81 --- MCDP 1-2 Campaigning 3-16 the force and receive feedback on the results. In short, comman d and control is the means by which a commander recognizes what needs to be done and sees to it that appropriate actions are taken.18 Command and control during the conduct of a campaign places unique requirements on the com mander, the command and con- trol organization, and the command and control support structure. The scope of activities in the cam paign (both in time and space ) will likely be vastly greater than in a battle or engagement. T he number of organizational players will also influence the effective conduct of command and control. In any modern campaign, the commander must be concerned wi th more than just the higher headquarters and subordinate elements. A wide range of partici- pants must be informed and coordinated with, both military (such as other units of a joint or mu ltinational force) and civilian (such as other governmental agencies, host nation authorities, and no n- governmental organizations). Information management is a key function since communications and information systems can gen- erate a flood of information. It is important to ensure that th is flood of information does not overwhelm us but provides mean- ingful knowledge to help reduce uncertainty. Finally, the natur e of these factors can make it difficult to ensure that the com- mander’s intent and decisions are understood throughout the force and implemented as desired. In implementing command and control during the campaign, we seek to reduce uncert ainty, facilitate decisionmaking, and help structure, we attempt to build and share situational awareness. Planning is another essential el ement of command and control. Campaign design is largely the r esult of planning, and planning --- Page 82 --- Conducting the Campaign 3-17 continues throughout the campaign as the campaign plan is modi- fied and adapted based upon the changes in the situation and th e results of campaign activities. We must prepare to function or even thrive in an environment of uncertainty and to make deci- sions despite incomplete or unclear information. A clear state- ment of intent that is understood throughout the force, flexibl e plans, an ability to adapt to unforeseen circumstances, and the ini- tiative to recognize and seize opportunities as they present th em- selves permit us to generate tempo and perform effectively despite uncertainty. Maneuver Maneuver is the movement of forces for the purpose of gaining an advantage over the enemy in order to accomplish our objectives. While tactical maneuver aims to gain an advantage in combat, operational maneuver seeks to gain an advantage bearing directly on the outcome of the campaign or in the theater as a whole. A classic example of operational maneuver was General MacAr- thur’s landing at Inchon in 1950. (See figure on page 3-18.) Th e bulk of North Korea’s army was well to the south, hemming the U.S. Eighth Army into the Pusan perimeter. Using the sea as maneuver space, MacArthur condu cted a classic turning move- ment. By landing X Corps at In chon, MacArthur threatened the enemy’s lines of comm unications and forced the overextended enemy to shift fronts. This maneuver not only cut the North Koreans’ flow of supplies and reinforcements b ut also forced them to move in a way that exposed them to a counterattack from the south. --- Page 83 --- MCDP 1-2 Campaigning 3-18 Using the sea as maneuver space, MacArthur conducted a clas- sic turning movement by landing X Corps at Inchon. This cut the North Koreans’ flow of supplies and forced them to manuever in a way that exposed them to counterattack from the south by Eighth Army. --- Page 84 --- Conducting the Campaign 3-19 Operational maneuver allows u s to create and to exploit opportunities. It affords us the opportunity to develop plans which employ multiple options, or branches. 19 A branch plan helps us to anticipate future a ctions. Operational maneuver provides the means by which we can assess the situation, determine the branch which offers the best opportunity for success, and implement the decision. By skillful use of branche s, we add to our flexibility and speed. General Sherman’s campaign in Georgia in 1864 illustrates the use of operational maneuver to retain the initiative and keep t he opposition off balance. (See fi gure on page 3-20.) During his march through Georgia, Sherman ingeniously sought to keep his opponent constantly on the ho rns of a dilemma. His line of advance kept the Confederates in doubt whether his next objec- tive was first Macon or Augusta, and then Augusta or Savannah. Sherman was ready to take whichever objective conditions favored. Campaigning through the Carolinas Sherman repeated this approach— so that his opponents could not decide whether to cover Augusta or Charleston, and thei r forces became divided. Then after he had ignored both points and swept between them to gain Columbia . . . the Confederates were kept in uncertainty as to whether Sherman was aiming for Charlotte or Fayetteville. [Finally, when] he advanced fro m Fayetteville they could not tell whether Raleigh or Golds borough was his next, and final, objective. 20 --- Page 85 --- MCDP 1-2 Campaigning 3-20 Sherman used operational maneuver to retain the initiative and keep his opposition off balance during his march through Geor- gia and the Carolinas. His line of advance kept the Confederate s constantly in doubt as to the location of his next objective. --- Page 86 --- Conducting the Campaign 3-21 If tactical maneuver takes place during and within battle, oper a- tional maneuver takes place before, after, and beyond battle. T he operational commander seeks t o secure a decisive advantage before the battle is joined by rapid, flexible, and opportunist ic maneuver. Such action allows us to gain the initiative and shap e the action to create a decisive advantage. The operational commander also u ses maneuver to exploit tacti- cal success, always seeking to achieve strategic results. The com- mander must be prepared to react to the unexpected and exploit opportunities created by conditions which develop from the ini- tial action. By exploiting opportunities, we create in increasi ng numbers more opportunities fo r exploitation. The ability and willingness to ruthlessly explo it these opportunities often gen er- ates decisive results. Our ultimate purpose in using maneuver is not to avoid battle, but to give ourselves such an advantage that the result of the batt le is a matter of course. In the words of Liddell Hart, the “true aim is not so much to seek battle as to seek a strategic situation so advantageous that if it does not of itself produce the decision, its continuation by a battle is sure to achieve this.”21 If the classic application of maneuver is movement that places the enemy at a disadvantage, then superior mobility—the capability to move from place to place faster than the enemy while retaining the ability to perform the mission—is a key ingredient of maneuver. --- Page 87 --- MCDP 1-2 Campaigning 3-22 The object is to use mobility to gain an advantage by creating superiority at the point of battle or to avoid disadvantageous bat- tle altogether. 22 Operational mobility is the ability to move between engagements and battles within the context o f the campaign. It is a functio n of range and sustained speed over distance. 23 Patton recognized the importance of distinguishing be tween tactical and operational mobility when he wrote: “Use roads to march on; fields to fight on . . . when the roads are available for use, you save time an d effort by staying on them until shot off.” 24 If the essence of the operational level is deciding when and where to fight, operational mobility is the means by which we commit the necessary forces based on that decision. An advantage in operational m obility can have a significant impact. In the Second World War in the Pacific island-hopping campaign, the Allies used operational mobility that allowed them to shift forces faster than the Japanese. The result was that Japanese forces were cut off and allowed to wither while the Allies consis- tently moved towards the Japanese home islands to bring them under direct attack. Although we typically think of shipping as an element of strategic mobility, it may be employed to operational effect as well. In many cases, an amphibious force can enjoy greater operational mobility moving along a coastline than an enemy moving along the coast by roads, particularly when the amphibious force has the ability to interfere with the enemy’s use of those roads. T he --- Page 88 --- Conducting the Campaign 3-23 same use can be made of airlift. Such an advantage in operational mobility can be decisive. Fires We employ fires to delay, disrupt, degrade, or destroy enemy capabilities, forces, or facilities as well as to affect the en emy’s will to fight. Our use of fires is not the wholesale attack of every unit, position, piece of equipment, or installation we find. Rather, it is the selective application of fires to reduce or eliminate a key element, resulting in a major dis abling of the enemy system. We use fires in harmony with maneuver against those enemy capabil- ities, the loss of which can hav e a decisive impact on the cam- paign or major operation. During the conduct of the campaign, we use fires to shape the battlespace. By shaping, we influence events in a manner which changes the general condition of war decisively to our advantage. “Shaping activities may render the enemy vulnerable to attack, facilitate maneuver of friendly forces, and dictate the time an d place for decisive battle.” 25 Through those actions, we gain the initiative, preserve momentum, and control the tempo of the cam- paign. Operation Desert Storm provides an excellent example of a successful shaping effort. Our extensive air operations destroy ed facilities, eliminated the Iraqi navy and air force, reduced th e effectiveness of ground forces wit hin Kuwait, and shattered the enemy’s cohesion. An elaborate deception plan also confused the Iraqis as to the size and location of ground attacks while inte nse psychological operations helped undermine their morale. The end --- Page 89 --- MCDP 1-2 Campaigning 3-24 result was an enemy who was both physically and mentally inca- pable of countering the maneuver of Coalition forces. Campaign planners must analyze the enemy’s situation, keeping in mind the commander’s mission , objectives, intent, and our capabilities available for employment. We seek to target those enemy vulnerabilities that, if e xploited, will deny resources c riti- cal to the enemy’s ability to resist. 26 These targets may range from military formations, weapon sys tems, or command and control nodes to the target audiences for a psychological operation. How- ever, the nature of these targets is situationally dependent an d is based on an analysis of the enemy and our mission. Intelligence Intelligence is crucial to both t he design and conduct of the c am- paign. Intelligence underpins the campaign design by providing an understanding of the enemy and the area of operations as wel l as by identifying the enemy’s centers of gravity and critical v ul- nerabilities. During the conduct of the campaign, intelligence assists us in developing and refining our understanding of the sit- uation, alerts us to new opportunities, and helps to assess the effects of actions upon the enemy. Intelligence cannot provide certainty; uncertainty is an inherent attribute of war. Rather, intel- ligence estimates the possibilities and probabilities in an effort to reduce uncertainty to a reasonable level. Because the operational level of war aims to attain a strategic objective through the conduct of tactical actions, operational intel- ligence must provide insight into both the strategic and tactical sit- uations, as well as all factors that influence them. The differences --- Page 90 --- Conducting the Campaign 3-25 among the tactical, operational, and strategic levels of intelligence lie in the scope, application, and level of detail associated with each level. Operational intelligence pertains broadly to the location, capabilities, and intentions of enemy forces that can conduct cam- paigns or major operations. It also is concerned with all operational aspects of the environment that can impact on the campaign such as geography, the national or regi onal economic and political situ a- tion, and fundamental cultural fa ctors. Operational intelligence is less concerned with individual enemy units than it is with majo r formations and groupings. Similarl y, it concentrates on general aspects of military geography such as mountain ranges or river val- leys rather than on individual p i e c e s o f k e y t e r r a i n o r a s p e c ific river-crossing site. Operational intelligence should be focused o n patterns of activity, trends, and indications of future intenti ons. It should examine the enemy as a sy stem rather than as individual components in an effort to determine how the entire enemy organi- zation functions and as a means to identify the enemy’s strengths, weakness, centers of gravity, and critical vulnerabilities. During the execution of the campaign plan, intelligence strives to provide as detailed and accurate a picture of the current situa tion as possible while updating the estimate of the enemy’s capabilities and intentions. Intelligence is a key ingredient in gaining and maintaining situational awareness and makes an essential contri - bution to the conduct of the campaign through its support to ta r- geting, force protection, and co mbat assessment. Intelligence operations are conducted throug hout the campaign. Just as cam- paign plans are based on intell igence, intelligence plans are grounded in operations. The intelligence collection, production , and dissemination efforts are integrated with planned operation s --- Page 91 --- MCDP 1-2 Campaigning 3-26 to support modification of ongoing activities, execution of branches and sequels, exploitation of success, and shaping the battlespace for future operations. The successful use of intelligence at the operational level was illustrated in the dramatic victo ry achieved by U.S. naval forc es in the Battle of Midway in June 1942. Japanese naval successes during the months following their attack on Pearl Harbor had pro- vided them enormous advantage. In particular, their significant aircraft carrier strengths provi ded them with tactical warfight ing capabilities far superior to thos e of the Allies. The questions fac- ing Admiral Nimitz, Commander- in-Chief, U.S. Pacific Fleet, were: What would the Japanese do next? Would they continue, and if so, where? Intelligence helped provide the answer. U.S. naval intelligence succeeded in breaking the codes used by the Japanese fleet to encrypt radio messages. The res ulting intelligence reports, cod e- named “Magic,” provided significant insight into Japanese opera- tions. Analysis of Magic reports combined with other intelligence uncovered the Japanese intentions to strike at Midway in early June. Using this intelligence t o obtain an operational advantag e, Nimitz concentrated his numerically inferior forces where they could ambush the main body of the Japanese invasion fleet. U.S. forces achieved complete surprise and sank four Japanese carri- ers. Their overwhelming success in defeating a numerically supe- rior enemy proved to be the major turning point in the Pacific theater of operations, dramatically altering the balance of nav al power in a single decisive engagement. 27 --- Page 92 --- Conducting the Campaign 3-27 Logistics At the operational level much mor e than at the tactical, logist ics dictates what is possible and what is not. “A campaign plan tha t cannot be logistically supported is not a plan at all, but simply an expression of fanciful wishes.”28 Logistics encompasses all activities required to move and susta in military forces.29 Strategic logistics involves the acquisition and stocking of war materials and the generation and movement of forces and materials to various theaters. At the opposite end o f the spectrum, tactical logistics is concerned with sustaining forces in combat. It deals with the feeding and care, arming, fuel- ing, maintaining, and movement of troops and equipment. In order to perform these functions, the tactical commander must be provided the necessary resources. Operational logistics links the strategic source of the means of war to its tactical employment.30 During campaign execution, the focus of the logistics effort is on the provision of resources necessary to support tactical actions and the management of resources to sustain operations throughout the course of the campaign. The provision of resources to the tactical forces requires a pr o- curement of necessary material as well as the creation and mainte- nance of an effective theater transportation system. Procurement is usually accomplished through the strategic logistics system. How- ever, when capabilities or assets cannot be obtained from strat e- gic-level sources, our logistics system must be able to obtain the necessary support from host natio n, allied, or other sources. T he --- Page 93 --- MCDP 1-2 Campaigning 3-28 transportation system must have s ufficient capacity and redun- dancy to sustain the necessary l evel of effort. Transportation requires sufficient ports of entry to receive the needed volume of resources, adequate means of s torage, and lines of communica- tions (land, sea, and air) sufficient to move those resources within the theater of operations. Managing the often limited resources necessary to implement the commander’s concept and to sustain the campaign is just as important as providing and delivering the resources to the tactical commanders. At the operational level, logistics demands an appreciation for the expenditure of resources and the timely antic- ipation of requirements. This requires both the apportioning of resources among tactical forces based on the operational plan and the rationing of resources to ens ure sustainment throughout the duration of the campaign. While f ailure to anticipate logistica l requirements at the tactical lev el can result in delays of hour s or days, the same failure at the operational level can result in delays of weeks. Such delays can be extremely costly. Finally, the provision of logistics in conduct of the campaign demands adaptability. We expect our plans to change. Flexibilit y in planning and organization coup led with the logistician’s con - tinuous situational awareness can foster the innovation and responsiveness necessary to mee t these challenges. A dramatic example of adaptability in the pr ovision of logistics occurred during Operation Desert Storm. Just before the start of offensi ve ground operations, a change in the Marine Forces’ concept of operations created the requirement to reposition a significant por- tion of the logistics support structure. Early recognition of t he --- Page 94 --- Conducting the Campaign 3-29 requirement and flexibility of organization permitted the recon - figuration of support capabilitie s and the timely movement of necessary resources. An immense hardened forward staging base covering over 11,000 acres was constructed in just 14 days. Fif - teen days of ammunition for two divisions; 5 million gallons of petroleum, oils, and lubricants; a million gallons of water; and the third largest naval hospital in t he world were positioned befor e the assault. 31 Force Protection We need to take every possible measure to conserve our forces’ fighting potential so that it can be applied at the decisive time and place. We accomplish this through properly planning and execut- ing force protection. These actions imply more than base defens e or self-protection procedures. At the operational level, force pro- tection means that we must plan to frustrate the enemy’s attempts to locate and strike our troops, equipment, capabilities, and facili- ties. Force protection actions may also extend to keeping air, land, and sea lines of communications free from enemy interference. Force protection safeguards our own centers of gravity and pro- tects, conceals, reduces, or eliminates critical vulnerabilitie s. When we are involved in military operations other than war, force protection may include the additional task of protecting the supported nation’s population, i nfrastructure, and economic or governmental institutions. Forc e protection also encompasses taking precautions against terrorist activities against our own forces and noncombatants. --- Page 95 --- MCDP 1-2 Campaigning 3-30 Successful force protection begins with the determination of indi- cators that might reveal our plans and movements to enemy intelli- gence systems. By identifying the se indicators and then taking appropriate steps to reduce or eliminate them, we can significantly decrease the potential for the enemy to disrupt our operations. Aggressive force protection planning and execution improves our ability to maneuver against the enemy and to achieve our opera- tional objectives. By safeguardin g centers of gravity, protecti ng our troops and equipment, and ensuring the security of our instal- lations and facilities, we conserve our combat power so that it can be applied at a decisive time and place. LEADERSHIP Leadership is the ability to get human beings to put forth their efforts in pursuit of a collective goal. Strong leadership creates an understanding of goals and a strong commitment to them among all members of the organization. At the higher levels of com- mand, leadership is much less a matter of direct personal example and intervention than it is a mat ter of being able to energize and unify the efforts of large group s of people, sometimes disperse d over great distances. This is not to say that personal contact is unimportant at the oper- ational level, nor that charisma and strength of personality do not matter. In fact, we might argue that an operational commander --- Page 96 --- Conducting the Campaign 3-31 who must influence more people spread over greater distances must be correspondingly more cha rismatic and stronger of per- sonality than the tactical comma nder. The commander must see and be seen by subordinates. As the Supreme Commander in Europe, Eisenhower spent a great d eal of time traveling through - out the theater partly to see and to be seen by his men. Nor do es this imply that the operational commander does not intervene in the actions of subordinates when necessary. Just as planning at the operational level requires leaders who can decide when and where to fight, campaign ex ecution requires leaders who can determine when and where to use personal influence. Leadership at the operational level requires clarity of vision, strength of will, and great moral courage. Moreover, it require s the ability to communic ate these traits clearly and powerfully through numerous layers of command, each of which adds to the friction inhibiting effective co mmunication. British Field-Mar- shal Sir William Slim, who in early 1945 retook Burma from the Japanese in a brilliant jungle campaign, noted this requirement by saying that the operational comm ander must possess “the power to make his intentions clear right through the force.” 32 Operational commanders must es tablish a climate of cohesion among the widely dispersed elements of their commands and with adjacent and higher headquarters as well. Because they can- not become overly involved in tactics, operational commanders must have confidence in their subordinate commanders. With these subordinates, commanders must develop a deep mutual trust. They must also cultivate in subordinates an implicit und er- standing of their own operating style and an explicit knowledge --- Page 97 --- MCDP 1-2 Campaigning 3-32 of their specific campaign intent . Operational commanders must train their staffs until the sta ffs become extensions of the co m- manders’ personality. The nature of campaigns places heavy demands on a leader’s com- munications skills, demands that are quite different from those experienced by tactical unit commanders. Operational command- ers must coordinate units from other services and nations. Oper a- tional commanders must mainta in effective relationships with external organizations, which is particularly difficult when ot her cultures are involved. Operati onal commanders must be able to win consensus for joint or mu ltinational concepts of operations and represent effectively to h igher headquarters the capabiliti es, limitations, and external support requirements of their forces. --- Page 98 --- Conclusion “Those who know when to fight and when not to fight are victorious. Those who discern when to use many or few troops are victorious. Those whose upper and lower ranks have the same desire are victorious. Those who face the un- prepared with preparation are victorious.” 1 —Sun Tzu --- Page 100 --- Conclusion Conclusion-3 At the risk of belaboring a point, we will repeat for the last time that tactical success itself does not necessarily bring strategic suc- cess. “It is possible to win all the battles and still lose the war. If the battles do not lead to the ac hievement of the strategic obj ec- tive, then, successful or not, they are just so much wasted effort.”2 Strategic success that attains th e objectives of policy is the mili- tary goal in war. Thus we recogn ize the need for a discipline o f the military art that synthesizes tactical results to create th e mili- tary conditions that induce str ategic success. We have discusse d the campaign as the principal vehicle by which we accomplish this synthesis. Understandably perhaps, as tactics has long been a Marine Corps strength, we tend to focus on th e tactical aspects of war to th e neglect of the operational aspects. This neglect may be also caused by the often contradictory virtues of the two levels: th e headlong tactical focus on winn ing in combat (and the spoiling- for-a-fight mentality it necessar ily promotes) compared to the operational desire to use combat sparingly. As we have seen, actions at the higher levels in the hierarchy of war tend to ov er- power actions at the lower levels, and neglect of the operation al level can prove disastrous even in the face of tactical competence. Without an operational design w hich synthesizes tactical result s into a coalescent whole, what passes for operations is simply t he accumulation of tactical victories. Tactical competence can rarely attain victory in the face of opera- tional incompetence, while ope rational ignorance can squander what tactical hard work has gaine d. As the price of war is human lives, it is therefore incumbe nt upon every commander to attain --- Page 101 --- MCDP 1-2 Campaigning Conclusion-4 the objective as economically as possible. Operational leaders must understand strate gic issues and the fundamentally politica l nature of all strategic goals. The design and conduct of a success- ful campaign results from a cl ear understanding of the relation - ship between strategic and opera tional objectives, the interact ion between the military and other instruments of national power, and the need for judicious and effective use of combat to achieve the objectives. --- Page 102 --- Notes Notes-1 The Campaign 1. Henri Jomini, The Art of War (Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1971) p. 178. What Jomini describe s as strategic would be class ified as operational by today’s construct. 2. B. H. Liddell Hart, Strategy (New York: Praeger, 1967) p. 338. 3. The Memoirs of Field-Marshal Montgomery (New York: World Publishing Co., 1958) p. 197. 4. Joint Pub 1-02, Department of Defense Dictionary of Military and Associated Terms. 5. Joint Pub 3-0, Doctrine for Joint Operations ( F e b r u a r y 1995) p. III-4. 6. Liddell Hart, Strategy, p. 351. 7. Military strategy: “The art and science of employing the armed forces of a nation to secure the objectives of national p olicy by the application of force o r the threat of force.” Strategic level of war: “The level of war at which a nation, often as a member of a group of nations, determines national or multi- national (alliance or coalition) security objectives and guidan ce, and develops and uses national res ources to accomplish these object ives. Activities at this level establish national and multinational m ilitary objectives; sequence initiatives; define limits and assess risk s for the use of military and other instruments of national power; develo p global plans or theater war plans to ach ieve these objectives; and pro vide mil- itary forces and other capabilities in accordance with strategi c plans.” (Joint Pub 1-02) --- Page 103 --- MCDP 1-2 Campaigning Notes-2 8. Strategic concept: “The course of action accepted as the result of the estimate of the strategic situation. It is a statement of what is to be done in broad terms sufficiently flexible to permit its use in frami ng the mili- tary, diplomatic, economic, psychological and other measures which stem from it.” (Joint Pub 1-02) Sometimes itself referred to as a “strategy.” 9. Tactical level of war: “The level of war at which battles and engagements are planned and executed to accomplish military obj ec- tives assigned to tactical units or task forces. Activities at this level focus on the ordered arrangement and maneuver of combat element s in relation to each other and to the enemy to achieve combat objec tives.” (Joint Pub 1-02) 10. Operational level of war: “T he level of war at whic h c am- paigns and major operations are planned, conducted, and sustain ed to accomplish strategic objectives within theaters or areas of ope rations. Activities at this level link tactics and strategy by establish ing opera- tional objectives needed to accomplish the strategic objectives , sequencing events to achieve the operational objectives, initia ting actions, and applying resources t o bring about and sustain thes e events. These activities imply a broader dimension of time or space tha n do tactics; they ensure the logistic and administrative support of tactical forces, and provide the means by which tactical successes are e xploited to achieve strategic obj ectives.” (Joint Pub 1-02) 11. Erich von Manstein, Lost Victories (Novato, CA: Presidio Press, 1982) p. 79. 12. David Jablonsky, “Strategy and the Operational Level of War, ” The Operational Art of Warfare Across the Spectrum of Conflict (Carlisle, PA: U.S. Army War College, 1987) p. 11. --- Page 104 --- Notes Notes-3 13. In fact, they can be quite sma ll. For example, consider the kill- ing of Haitian guerrilla leader Charlemagne Peralte by two Mari ne non- commissioned officers in 1919. During this period, U.S. Marines were involved in the occupation of Haiti. Peralte had raised a rebel force of as many as 5,000 in the northern part of the country. From Febr uary through October, Marine forces pursued the rebels, known as “ca cos,” fighting 131 engagements but were unable to suppress the rebel activ- ity. So, disguised as cacos, Sgt. Herman Hanneken and Cpl. Will iam Button infiltrated Peralte’s ca mp, where Hanneken shot and kill ed the caco leader. The rebellion in the north subsided. In this case, a special operation consisting of two Marines accomplished what 7 months of combat could not. 14. Carl von Clausewitz, On War, trans. and ed., Michael Howard and Peter Paret (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1984) p. 607. “No other possibility exists, then, than to subordinate the military point of view to the political.” 15. Sun Tzu, The Art of War, trans. Samuel B. Griffith (New York: Oxford University Press, 1971) p. 93. 16. Edward N. Luttwak, Strategy: The Logic of War and Peace (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1987) pp. 69–71 and 208–230 discusses this “interpenetr ation” of the levels of war. 17. Joint Pub 3-0, Doctrine for Joint Operations (February 1995) pp. III-4–III-5. 18. Col W. Hays Parks, U.S. Marine Corps Reserve, “Crossing the Line,” Proceedings (November 1986) pp. 40–52 and LCdr Joseph T. Stanik, U.S. Navy (Retired), “Welcome to El Dorado Canyon,” Pro- ceedings (April 1996) pp. 57–62. --- Page 105 --- MCDP 1-2 Campaigning Notes-4 19. Battle: “A series of related tactical engagements that last lon- ger than an engagement, involve larger forces, and could affect t h e course of the campaign. They occur when division, corps, or arm y commanders fight for significant objectives.” MCRP 5-2A, Opera- tional Terms and Graphics (June 1997). 20. E ngagement: “A small tactical conflict, usually between opposing maneuver forces.” (MCRP 5-2A) 21. For a detailed discussion of the Guilford Courthouse battle and its impact on British operations, see Thomas E. Baker, Another Such Victory: The Story of the American Defeat at Guilford Courthouse That Helped Win the War of Independence (New York: Eastern Acorn Press, 1992). 22. Russell F. Weigley, The American Way of War (Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press, 1973) pp. 32–35. 23. Liddell Hart, Strategy, p. 338. 24. See J. F. C. Fuller, Grant and Lee: A Study in Personality and Generalship (Bloomington, IN: Indiana Un iversity Press, 1982) partic- ularly pp. 242–283. 25. Weigley, p. 92. 26. Ibid., p. 118. Fuller, p. 253. 27. Ulysses S. Grant, Personal Memoirs of U.S. Grant (New York: Da Capo Press, Inc., 1982) p. 369. 28. Ibid., p. 367. Grant to Sherman, 4 April 1864. Grant repeate d this phrase directly from Lincoln. --- Page 106 --- Notes Notes-5 29. Ibid., p. 366. 30. Fuller, pp. 79–80. 31. Weigley, p. 139. 32. Ibid., p. 108. 33. Ibid., p. 123. 34. Grant, p. 384. 35. Fuller, p. 268. “In this respect there is no difference betw een Grant and Lee; neither understood the full powers of the rifle or the rifled gun; neither introduced a single tactical innovation of importa nce, and though the rifle tactics of the South were superior to those of the North, whilst the artillery tactics of the North were superior to thos e of the South, these differences were due to circumstances outside generalship.” Designing the Campaign 1. Clausewitz, p. 182. 2. Liddell Hart, Strategy, p. 343–344. 3 . J ohn F. Meehan III, “The Operational Trilogy,” Parameters (September 1986) p. 15. 4. The distinction between strategies of annihilation and er osion is discussed further in MCDP 1-1, Strategy. It originates in Clausewitz’s distinction between limited and unlimited war. See Clausewitz, On War, Book I. It was further developed in the theories of Hans Delbrü ck, whom John Keegan calls “the figure who bestrides the military h isto- rian’s landscape.” John Keegan, The Face of Battle ( N e w Y o r k : T h e --- Page 107 --- MCDP 1-2 Campaigning Notes-6 Viking Press, 1976) p. 53, see also pp. 34–35 and 54. See Hans Delbrück, History of the Art of War Within the Framework of Political History, trans. Walter J. Renfroe, Jr. (Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1985) especially vol. 3, book III, chapter IV , “Strategy,” pp. 293–318. 5. We use the terms “annihilation” and “incapacitation” more or less interchangeably, but the wo rds themselves pose some proble ms. Soldiers tend to think of annihilation as the absolute physical destruc- tion of all of the enemy’s troops and equipment. This is rarely achieved and seldom necessary. Germany still had large numbers of well-a rmed troops at the end of World War II, yet there is little argument that the Wehrmacht was strategically annihilated. Nonmilitary people tend to confuse the military goal of annihilating the enemy’s military capacity with political or ideological goals like genocide and extermina tion and may thus be shocked or horrified to hear of our plan of annihil ation. “Incapacitation,” on the other hand, is literally exactly what we mean to convey: the destruction of the enemy’s military capacity t o r e s i s t. Unfortunately, the word also connotes the use of nonlethal weap ons and other limited forms of warmaking that contradict the strate gic con- cept we seek to convey. To deal with such semantic problems, mi litary leaders must understand the underl ying concepts and, in describ ing their strategies, use words appr opriate to the particular audie nce. 6. As with annihilation and incapacitation, labels carry some pr ob- lems. Attrition has developed a negative connotation because of t h e experience of tactical attrition in Grant’s later campaigns, the Western Front in World War I, and U.S. actions in Vietnam. Erosion carr ies no such negative connotations, and that is why we use it more prom inently here. The words mean literally the same thing, however, and att rition is the traditional term used in classical military theory to descr ibe the concept we wish to convey. --- Page 108 --- Notes Notes-7 7. The United States pursued such unlimited political aims in th e American Civil War, World War I, World War II, Grenada in 1983, and Panama in 1989. Another successful example is the North Vietnam ese war against South Vietnam. Unsuccessful examples are the German inva- sion of Russia in 1940, the North Korean campaign against South Korea in 1950, and the Russian war against Chechnya in the mid-1990s. 8. Some readers will object that this could not have been a stra tegy of annihilation because we left Saddam Hussein in power. That i s con- fusing the political with the military goal. Had we wished to p ursue the overthrow of Saddam’s government, we were well positioned to do so, having eliminated Saddam’s air and naval power, thoroughly demo ral- ized his army, and completely iso lated him from external suppor t. 9. In annihilation strategies, military forces always represent the main effort—with the important exception of internal wars. Such inter- nal struggles for power are very often zero-sum events in which one side’s victory entails the other ’s elimination. Therefore, the opponents seek each other’s complete destruction, which normally cannot b e achieved until the enemy’s military protection is removed. Reme mber, however, that every government at war has to take political act ion to maintain the “home front,” as well as military action against t he enemy. In internal wars, the opponents share a common home front. Therefore, economic, diplomatic, and psycho logical programs (e.g., land re form, political reform, pacification operations, etc.) sometimes take prece- dence over purely military operations even when the military go al remains annihilation. In Vietnam, for example, the U.S. and the gov- ernment of South Vietnam waged a strategy of erosion against wh at they perceived to be an external foe, North Vietnam. Within Sou th Vietnamese borders, however, they waged a war of annihilation a gainst the Viet Cong and the North Viet namese regulars who supported t hem. --- Page 109 --- MCDP 1-2 Campaigning Notes-8 Energetic search-and-destroy and aerial bombing operations agai nst enemy military forces often conflicted with various internal na tion- building efforts which sought to create legitimacy for the gove rnment in Saigon. The failure to harmonize both military and nonmilita ry actions at the operational level often proved counterproductive . 10. The term “center of gravity,” as it is used in military doct rine, originated with Clausewitz. He used the term (Schwerpunkt in the origi- nal German) in many different ways, usually as a handy metaphor rather than a well-defined doctrinal term. Often he used it merely to mean “the main thing” or “the most important concern.” Our definition derives from a few specific discussions in On War, especially pp. 485–486 (which deals with the concept at the operational level) and 595–597 (which looks at the concept in strategic terms). The purpose of identifying centers of gravity (preferably reducing the list to one crucial item) is t o force us to think through the essential elements of a particular enemy’s po wer and thus to help us focus on what makes the enemy dangerous and wha t we need to do to defeat the enemy. Unfortunately, this sometimes l eads us into thinking that we must directly attack those strengths. The philosophy of Warfighting therefore uses the concept of the critical vulnerability, which forces us to think through creative ways of undermining t he enemy’s strength at the minimum possible cost and risk to ourselves. 1 1. Charles XII of Sweden did in fact lose his army in Russia in 1709 and is considered a failure. 12. Clausewitz, p. 596. 13. Ibid., p. 163. 14. Ibid., p. 77. --- Page 110 --- Notes Notes-9 15. Winston S. Churchill, The World Crisis , vol. 2 (New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1923) p. 5. 16. Dwight D. Eisenhower, Crusade in Europe (New York: Dou- bleday, 1990) p. 256. 17. L. D. Holder, “Operational Art in the U.S. Army: A New Vigor,” Essays on Strategy, vol. 3 (Washington, D.C.: National Defense University Press, 1986) p. 124. 18. Eisenhower, p. 176. Also: “In committing troops to battle th ere are certain minimum objectives to be attained, else the operati on is a failure. Beyond this lies the real m of reasonable expectation, while still further beyond lies the realm of hope—all that might happen if fortune persistently smiles upon us. “A battle plan normally attempts to provide guidance even in to this final area, so that no opportunity for extensive exploitat ion may be lost . . . .” p. 256. 1 9 . T h e s e t w o a p p r o a c h e s a r e also called “progressive” and “inverse.” The concept is discussed in the Advanced Amphibious Study Group’s, Planner’s Reference Manual (Draft), vol.1(Washington, D.C.: Headquarters, U.S. Marine Corps, 1983) pp. 7-1-6. 20. Chairman Joint Chiefs of Staff Manual 3500.04A, Universal Joint Task List, version 3.0 (September 1996). 21. The Confederates understood this too. James M. McPherson, Battle Cry of Freedom: The Civil War Era (New York: Ballantine Books, 1989) p. 766. --- Page 111 --- MCDP 1-2 Campaigning Notes-10 22. Reconstitution: “Those actions that commanders plan and implement to restore units to a desired level of combat effectiveness com- mensurate with mission requirements and available resources. Reconstitu- tion operations include regeneration and reorganization.” (MCRP 5-2A) 23. Eisenhower, p. 228. 24. Ibid., p. 225. 25. Ibid., pp. 228–229. 26. Ibid., p. 229. 27. The Malaysian campaign illustrates the exception noted in footnote 9 on page 105: In internal wars, even a military strat egy of annihilation may require the subordination of the military effo rt to other instruments of power. 28. Joint Pub 5-0, Doctrine for Planning Joint Operations (April 1995) pp. II-18–II-21 and MCDP 5, Planning, pp. 18–21. 29. Meehan, p. 15. Conducting the Campaign 1. Clausewitz, p. 77. 2. Quoted in Robert D. Heinl, Jr., Dictionary of Military and Naval Quotations (Annapolis, MD: U.S. Naval Academy, 1978) p. 1. 3. Clausewitz, p. 128. 4. Eisenhower, p. 119. --- Page 112 --- Notes Notes-11 5. Weigley, p. 32. Such a victory is called a “Pyrrhic victory, ” after the Greek king Pyrrhus. After meeting the Romans in battle for the first t i m e a n d w i n n i n g b u t s u f f e r i n g g r e a t l o s s e s i n t h e p r o c e s s , P y rrhus reportedly said, “ ‘One more such victory and I am lost.’ ” R. Ernest Dupuy and Trevor N. Dupuy, The Encyclopedia of Military History From 3500 B.C. to the Present (New York: Harper & Row, 1977) p. 59. 6. Sir William Slim, Defeat Into Victory (London: Cassell and Company, 1956) p. 292. 7. Heinz Guderian, Panzer Leader (New York: E. P. Dutton and Co., 1952) p. 97. 8. Ibid., pp. 105–106. 9. Gen George S. Patton Jr., War As I Knew It (New York: Bantam Books, Inc., 1979) pp. 373–374. 10. Deception: “Those measures designed to mislead the enemy by manipulation, distortion, or falsification of evidence to in duce him to react in a manner prejudicial to his interests.” (Joint Pub 1-02) 11. Ladislas Farago, Patton: Ordeal and Triumph (New York: Ivan Obolensky, Inc., 1963) pp. 399–400. 12. Slim, pp. 451–452. 13. See Robert A. Doughty, The Seeds of Disaster: The Devel- opment of French Army Doctrine 1919–1939 (Hamden, CT: Archon Books, 1985) p. 4. 14. B. H. Liddell Hart, History of the Second World War ( N e w York: G. P. Putnam’s Sons, 1970) p. 73–74. --- Page 113 --- MCDP 1-2 Campaigning Notes-12 15. The extent to which these subtleties were actually taken int o account at the time is unclear. For a good examination of the p roblem, see Michael R. Gordon and Bernard E. Trainor, The Generals’ War: The Inside Story of the Conflict in the Gulf (Boston: Little, Brown and Company, 1995) especially pp. 361–363. 16. Joint Pub 3-0, Doctrine for Joint Operations (February 1995) pp. III-9–III-10. 17. Chairman Joint Chief s of Staff Manual 3500.04. 18. For further explanation of the importance of command and control, see chapter 1, MCDP 6, Command and Control (October 1996). 19. Holder, p. 123. 20. Liddell Hart, Strategy, p. 152. 21. Ibid., p. 339. Italic s in the original. 22. Mobility: “A quality or capability of military forces which permits them to move from place to place while retaining the ab ility to fulfill their primary mission.” (Joint Pub 1-02) 23. For example, the light armored vehicle has less tactical mob ility than a main battle tank in most environments but has far superior opera- tional and strategic mobility. It can be transported in much greater num- bers by strategic lift. Its comp aratively simple automotive sys tem, fuel efficiency, and wheels give it far greater operational range and speed. 24. Patton, pp. 380–381. 25. MCDP 1, Warfighting (June 1997) p. 83. --- Page 114 --- Notes Notes-13 26. Targeting: “2. The analysis of enemy situations relative to the commander’s mission, objectives, and capabilities at the comman ders’ disposal, to identify and nominate specific vulnerabilities tha t, if expoited, will accomplish the co mmander’s purpose through delay ing, disrupting, disabling, or destroying enemy forces or resources critical to the enemy.” (Joint Pub 1-02) 27. Ronald H. Spector, Eagle Against the Sun (New York: Vintage Books, 1985) pp. 168–176, 448–451. 28. Meehan, p. 16. 29. Logistics: “The science of planning and carrying out the movement and maintenance of forces. In its most comprehensive s ense, those aspects of military operations which deal with: a. design a n d development, acquisition, storage, movement, distribution, main te- nance, evacuation, and disposition of materiel; b. movement, ev acua- tion, and hospitalization of personnel; c. acquisition or const ruction, maintenance, operation, and disposition of facilities; and d. a cquisition or furnishing of services.” (Joint Pub 1-02) 30. The distinction between strat egic, operational, and tactical logistics is outlined in Joint Pub 4-0, Doctrine for Logistic Support of Joint Operations (January 1995) p. III-3 and MCDP 4, Logistics (Febru- ary 1997) pp. 48–53. 31. Maj Charles D. Melson, Evelyn A. Englander, and Capt David A. Dawson, comps., U.S. Marines in the Persian Gulf, 1990–1991: Anthol- ogy and Annotated Bibliography (Washington, D.C.: Headquarters, U.S. Marine Corps, History and Museums Division, 1992) pp. 158–159. 32. Slim, p. 542. --- Page 115 --- MCDP 1-2 Campaigning Notes-14 Conclusion 1. Sun Tzu, The Art of War, trans. Thomas Cleary (Boston: Shambala Publications, 1988) pp. 80–81. 2. Meehan, p. 15.