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U.S. A rmy C oUnterinSUrgenCy U . S . C A And ontingenCy r om p y o d er C perAtionS oCtrine A o t U i n o t n e 1860–1941 S r din o S C U t r r g i e n n e C , 1y 8 A 6n 0d – C 1 9o 4n 1t i n g e n C y A n d r e w J . B i r t l e C e n U t n er i Sted mof tAt ilit e A S r A y r H m i Andrew J. Birtle y St PIN : 079240–000 o r y U.S. A rmy C oUnterinSUrgenCy And C ontingenCy o d perAtionS oCtrine 1860–1941 by Andrew J. Birtle CENTER OF MILITARY HISTORY UNITED STATES ARMY WASHINGTON, D.C., 2009 Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Birtle, A. J. (Andrew James) U. S. Army counterinsurgency and contingency operations doctrine, 1860–1941 / by Andrew J. Birtle. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. 1. United States. Army—Operations other than war—History. 2. Military doctrine—United States—History. I. Title. UA25.B57 1998 355.3’4’0973—dc21 97–26216 CIP First Printed 1998—CMH Pub 70–66–1 F oreword Throughout its history, the U.S. Army has conducted a wide variety of military operations in service to the nation. Over the past two centu- ries, America’s soldiers have served the Republic as governors, consta- bles, judges, diplomats, explorers, colonizers, educators, administrators, and engineers. These myriad missions have often been overlooked as soldiers and scholars alike focused their studies on major wars and on the strategic and tactical doctrines that governed them. Comparatively little attention has been paid to the underlying theories, concepts, and methods that American soldiers have employed in the conduct of their many less “conventional,” yet exceedingly traditional, missions. Over the years the Center of Military History has attempted to rec- tify this omission in military historiography. Center publications such as Soldier-Statesmen of the Constitution; Military Government in the Ryukyu Islands, 1945–1950; The U.S. Army in the Occupation of Germany, 1944–1946; United States Army Unilateral and Coalition Operations in the 1965 Dominican Republic Intervention; the multi- volume Role of Federal Military Forces in Domestic Disorders; and The Demands of Humanity: Army Medical Disaster Relief have exam- ined some of the many roles the U.S. Army has played off the conven- tional battlefield. U.S. Army Counterinsurgency and Contingency Operations Doctrine, 1860–1941, adds to this body of literature on the Army’s experience in operations other than war. It is the first of a two- volume work examining how the Army has performed two of its most important unconventional missions: the suppression of insurgent or other irregular forces and the conduct of overseas constabulary and contingency operations. The second volume will carry the story of the evolution of Army doctrine for counterinsurgency and contingency operations up through the end of the Vietnam War. Although the events discussed in this volume occurred long ago, many of the issues raised in it have enduring relevance for today’s Army. People, places, and events may change, but the fundamental questions involved in suppressing insurrections, fighting irregulars, administering civilian populations, and conducting foreign interven- tions remain surprisingly constant. By studying how American soldiers dealt with these complex issues in the past, this book offers valuable iii insights to guide current and future soldiers when called upon to con- duct similar operations. Washington, D.C. JOHN W. MOUNTCASTLE 10 October 1997 Brigadier General, USA Chief of Military History iv t A he Uthor Andrew J. Birtle received a B.A. degree in history from Saint Lawrence University in 1979 and M.A. and Ph.D. degrees in military history from Ohio State University in 1981 and 1985, respectively. He worked for the U.S. Air Force as a historian for approximately three years before joining the U.S. Army Center of Military History in 1987. He is the author of a number of articles and monographs as well as a book on American military assistance to the Federal Republic of Germany. He is currently writing the second volume in his study of the development of U.S. Army counterinsurgency and contingency opera- tions doctrine. v p reFACe It has long been accepted that the U.S. Army did not have an offi- cial, codified, written doctrine for the conduct of counterguerrilla, pacification, and nation-building activities prior to World War II. The absence of a formal, written doctrine, however, does not mean that American soldiers did not develop concepts and theories about such activities, some of which became enduring principles that guided Army operations for decades despite their meager mention in the manuals of the day. It is the contention of this book that there was a strong continuity in the manner in which the U.S. Army performed counterinsurgency and overseas constabulary missions in the century that preceded the outbreak of World War II and that some of the central principles governing the conduct of such operations were indeed incorporated into official Army doctrinal literature prior to America’s entry into that conflict. Intellectual history—the tracing of the evolution of thought and ideas over time—is a tricky business. Showing continuity and change in thought and action is difficult, but explaining how it came about is even tougher. Writers studying the evolution of military doctrine are usually aided in their endeavors by the existence of official manuals that codify the state of military thinking at a particular point in time. Unfortunately, such manuals are often silent on the less conventional aspects of the military art. Moreover, one must remember that a system of comprehensive doctrinal manuals in the modern sense did not exist in the nineteenth century and was still in its infancy during the early decades of the twentieth. Consequently, the student of military theory is forced to cast a wider net, studying not only manuals, but curricular materials, textbooks, war plans, and the less official publications of individual soldiers. Murkier still, but no less real, is the realm of per- sonal experience, folkways, and institutional norms that can be acquired and passed down over time. Anthropologists maintain that oral tradition can be a powerful force governing the conduct of human cultures and institutions. The fact that such traditions are not written down denies neither their existence nor their significance. Students of military thought, therefore, must look at deeds as well as words, because by studying the actions of past soldiers, we may gain insight into the prin- vii ciples and beliefs underlying their behavior. I examined all such sources then, official and unofficial, words as well as deeds, to gain insights into the Army’s approach to counterinsurgency and contin- gency operations. This volume covers a lot of ground—nearly a century of time and occurrences that span the globe. Although many different events are mentioned, this book is not intended to be an operational history. Similarly, while the volume touches upon subjects as diverse as mili- tary government, military law, and tactics, it does not present a compre- hensive review of each of these distinct doctrinal areas. Rather, it examines these and other subjects selectively to gain insight into what the pre–World War II Army came to call “small wars”—the interrelated fields of counterguerrilla warfare, pacification, and overseas constabu- lary and contingency operations. Though never credited with a manual of its own, during the century that preceded the outbreak of World War II a loose body of theory, doctrine, thought, and precedent gradually evolved within the U.S. Army into what one might call, to paraphrase Russell Weigley, an American way of small wars. Many people, far too many to name, assisted in the production of this volume. I would like to extend a general word of appreciation to the staffs of the National Archives and Records Administration, the Library of Congress, the U.S. Army Center of Military History (CMH), the U.S. Army Military History Institute (MHI), and the Pentagon, Infantry School, and Command and General Staff College libraries. Individuals worthy of special mention are Wilbert Mahoney of the National Archives; Richard J. Sommers, David Keough, and Pamela Cheney at MHI; and at CMH, Albert Cowdrey, James Knight, Hannah Zeidlik, Geraldine Harcarik, Catherine Heerin, W. Scott Janes, Arthur Hardyman, S. L. Dowdy, Beth MacKenzie, and indexer Florence Brodkey. I am especially grateful to Diane Arms, who edited the book. Thanks also go to the panel of scholars who reviewed the manuscript and made many helpful suggestions: Edward Coffman, Timothy Nenninger, Lawrence Yates, Allan Millett, Brian Linn, Jeffrey Clarke, and Mary Gillett. Finally, I would like to thank my parents and my wife, without whose support this work would not have been possible. Though many people contributed to this volume, the author alone is responsible for all interpretations and conclusions, as well as for any errors that may appear. Washington, D.C. ANDREW J. BIRTLE 10 October 1997 viii C ontentS Chapter Page 1. Introduction.......................................... 3 Concepts and Doctrine ............................... 3 Antebellum Antecedents .............................. 7 2. The War of the Rebellion, 1861–1865 ................... 23 Pacification, 1861–1863.............................. 24 Francis Lieber and General Orders 100 ................. 32 Pacification, 1863–1865.............................. 36 Tactics and Techniques of the Counterguerrilla War ........ 40 The Legacy of the War of the Rebellion .................. 47 3. The Constabulary Years, 1865–1898 .................... 55 Reconstruction, 1865–1877............................ 55 Constabulary Duty on the Western Frontier............... 58 Indian Warfare and Military Thought.................... 60 U.S. Army Counterguerrilla Operations on the Western Frontier ........................................ 67 The Army and Indian Pacification ...................... 76 The New Professionalism and the Legacy of the Constabulary Army ............................... 86 4. Cuba and the Philippines, 1898–1902 ................... 99 The Army’s Approach to Overseas Nation Building......... 100 The Military Government of Cuba, 1898–1902 ............ 104 The Philippine War, 1899–1902 ........................ 108 5. The Imperial Constabulary Years, 1900–1913 ............ 147 The Peking Relief Expedition, 1900–1901 ................ 147 Policing the Philippines, 1902–1907 .................... 153 Governing the Moros, 1900–1913 ...................... 159 The Second Cuban Intervention, 1906–1909 .............. 168 The Imperial Constabulary Mission and Army Doctrine . . . . . 174 ix

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