US special operations forces train, advise, and assist in at least sixty countries every day, preparing allies and partners for conflict. The SOF Truths guide these special operations units; every special operator knows them by heart. The SOF Truths reside within a unique culture set by the SOF imperatives and SOF’s core activities.
Special operations forces play a critical role as part of the joint force’s forward presence and expeditionary capability within multidomain operations. Army special operations forces advance partnerships, influence adversarial behavior, execute special operations, and respond to crisis, often before conflict begins. Leaning forward requires nuanced and critical thinking to prioritize limited special operations forces across the combatant commands.
But while the SOF Truths guide individual units and special operators, they should play a much broader role in the policymaking process. Planners should use them to provide a creative framework for special operations employment. By considering the SOF Truths during planning decisions, SOF’s tailorable, scalable, and purpose-built units will lead more irregular warfare efforts across the Department of Defense’s integrated deterrence efforts.
SOF Truth #1: Humans are more important than hardware.
Policymakers should align US SOF with partners who invest in their people. The United States maintains its strategic advantage with the right personal, institutional, or programmatic relationships among partners and allies. Partner-nation special operations forces trained by the United States are adept at weathering crises, be they assaults from the Islamic State or invasions from great powers. US SOF partners succeed during crisis because they have internalized and sustain the rigors of special operations training and culture.
Ideally, willing and able countries align with the United States against mutual adversaries like China, Russia, Iran, North Korea, or violent extremists. As documented by retired Lieutenant General Mark Hertling, former commander of US Army Europe, US Army Special Forces’ investment in Ukraine is paying strategic dividends. US special operators cannot create SOF everywhere; the key lies within a willing and able partner.
SOF Truth #2: Quality is better than quantity.
The employment of US special operations is improved when partnered forces have the right equipment at the right time with the right training. While special operators provide expertise in the human domain, foreign military sales provide the tools for partner-nation forces to deter or defeat their adversaries. Providing quality equipment requires synchronization of the security cooperation triad: SOF assistance, defense attachés, and Office of Defense Cooperation initiatives.
Foreign military sales cover a wide range of equipment, schooling, and training opportunities. Under the control of both the State Department and the Department of Defense, the best foreign military sales provide consistent delivery of what partnered nations want and need, while reinforcing that the United States is the preferred partner of choice.
Policymakers and engagement managers should compare the prioritized regions in the 2022 National Defense Strategy with current crises and adversary actions to determine multiyear investments in robust and capable partners.
SOF Truth #3: SOF cannot be mass produced.
SOF personnel are carefully selected—and then rigorously trained. The United States should apply the same scrutiny when selecting partners abroad.
Ukraine provides a perfect case of successful SOF investment. There, previous instruction from Green Berets in marksmanship and antitank gunnery is paying obvious dividends. The time for creating competent Ukrainian SOF passed when Russia invaded on February 24, 2022. Thankfully, soldiers from 1st Special Forces Command had been in Ukraine for nearly a decade, establishing training centers, initiating training cadres, and building a capability that is disrupting the much larger Russian army.
Just as SOF cannot be mass produced in the United States, policymakers should not expect SOF to be mass produced in partner nations, like the Philippines or Ukraine. Investment of security force assistance professionals and equipment, especially in a new partner, is a multiyear, possibly multidecade, effort. Policymakers should employ SOF with a long-term vision nested with the National Defense Strategy and with resources that are robust enough to weather changes in national priorities.
SOF Truth #4: Competent SOF cannot be created after emergencies occur.
Just as US special operations forces spend years honing their craft, partnered special operations forces cannot be created after an emergency.
Recent case studies show how employing SOF prior to conflict supports US national interests. For example, the Lebanese Armed Forces defeated ISIS in 2017, expelling the terrorist group from Lebanon. US security cooperation efforts, combining training, equipment, and Joint Combined Exchange Training (JCET) since 2006, played a role in Lebanon’s victory. Likewise, decades-long US Army Special Forces engagement with El Salvador, Colombia, and Thailand show the value of creating competent partner-nation SOF before emergencies occur.
However, special operations forces are not a panacea. To be effective, SOF should be deployed into a struggling country or training with that country’s armed forces well ahead of a crisis, not afterward. Wars in Iraq, Afghanistan, and Yemen highlight the risks of attempting to create competent SOF in theater after emergencies occur. While brave, courageous, and competent, Afghan National Army commandos could not overcome Afghan national policy, the inability to resupply their formations, or a determined enemy with mass and interior lines. Likewise, the Iraqi Counterterrorism Service suffered 40 percent casualties fighting the Islamic State. Effective and sustainable strategies will see special operations forces deployed ahead of crises with long-term plans supporting security cooperation and integrated country strategies.
Policymakers employing SOF should invest appropriately across potential conflict zones to set the theater for potential contingencies—before emergencies occur.
SOF Truth #5: Most special operations require non-SOF support.
Just as US special operations forces require administrative, logistics, and communications support, the same is true of our allies and partners. If US special operators aim to increase partner-nation SOF quality, the conventional forces in those militaries must be improved through comprehensive training and changes to US special operations policy.
Fortunately, conventional advisors and joint exercises can help the United States’ conventional military partners improve. Security force assistance brigades advise foreign militaries at the battalion level and above and bring dedicated sustainment advisors. Likewise, the Joint Chiefs of Staff’s Joint Exercise Program provides consistent episodic engagement for battle staff training at the brigade level and above.
Creating non-SOF support for partner-nation SOF also requires US policymakers to create flexibility in US Special Operations Command’s JCET program to deploy non–special operations specialties in support of US objectives. For example, North Korea maintains a credible chemical weapons capability but under the current construct US Army chemical specialists, even from within the Special Forces groups, are prohibited from deploying on a JCET to train alongside South Korean forces. If such niche specialties are deployed with SOF, then USSOCOM will meet one of its strategic efforts by deploying enablers to “integrate and synchronize into [SOF] operations non-lethal and other enabling capabilities.”
Call to Action: Use the SOF Truths as an Employment Framework
Special operations forces make necessary and unique contributions to national defense. Using the SOF Truths as a framework for special operations employment ensures special operators are “specially employed,” and maintains boundaries on what they should and should not do.
With the releases of the 2022 National Defense Strategy and National Security Strategy, a new framework for special operations employment can ensure flexibility and resilience in complex environments across the conflict continuum. Policymakers and engagement planners must choose capable nations to receive special operations security force assistance prior to conflict. Capable partner forces, in need of SOF assistance, enable integrated deterrence alongside the US joint force. Rigor is required to ensure SOF support has a long-term vision capable of crossing administrations, as irregular warfare is a multiyear effort.
A return to the indirect approach requires patience on the part of both policymakers and practitioners. Thoughtful use of the SOF Truths as criteria for special operations employment would ensure the quality, competency, and robustness required of USSOCOM’s vision.
Major Marshall McGurk recently served as the lead Special Forces observer-coach/trainer at the Joint Readiness Training Center, Fort Polk, Louisiana. His previous assignments include 3rd Special Forces Group, Special Operations Command Central, and 1st Special Forces Group, with operational experience in Iraq, Afghanistan, Jordan, Lebanon, and the Republic of Korea.
The views expressed are those of the author and do not reflect the official position of the United States Military Academy, Department of the Army, or Department of Defense.
Image credit: 1st Lt. Benjamin Haulenbeek, US Army
It is important to understand the strategic context — within which our security force assistance efforts (etc.) take place today. In order to do this, let's look as this paragraph from our article above:
"SOF Truth #1: Humans are more important than hardware.
Policymakers should align US SOF with partners who invest in their people. The United States maintains its strategic advantage with the right personal, institutional, or programmatic relationships among partners and allies. Partner-nation special operations forces trained by the United States are adept at weathering crises, be they assaults from the Islamic State or invasions from great powers. US SOF partners succeed during crisis because they have internalized and sustain the rigors of special operations training and culture."
Question: What do non-state entities such as the Islamic State — and great powers such as Russia — have in common today?
Answer: The fact that they are both fighting (a) to prevent (think "containment") the U.S./the West from transforming their states and societies more along "modern" western political, economic, social and/or value lines. And/or (b) to reverse (think "roll back") such unwanted changes as have already been realized.
(If you think about it, this (containment and roll back) are what the conservative elements — here in the U.S./the West also — are fighting to achieve today; this, in the face of such "modern" political, economic, social and/or value changes as are being pushed — and/or have already been realized — in the U.S./the West of late?)
These both at home and abroad modernizing "changes" — undertaken by governments today both here in the U.S./the West and elsewhere throughout the world — this is so as to provide that the states and societies of the world (to include our own) might be made to better interact with, better provide for and better benefit from such things as capitalism, globalization and the global economy.
Bottom Line Thought — Based on the Above:
In the Old Cold War of yesterday, when the Soviets/the communists, back then, were in a "transform/modernize the world" mode (in that case, so as to make the world safe for communism), U.S./Western security force assistance, back then, could be seen from a "containment" and/or a "roll back" perspective. (Thus, back then, the "liberals"/the more "pro-change" populations, both here at home and there abroad, these such were considered our worry.)
In the New/Reverse Cold War of today, however, when it is now the U.S./the West that is in a "transform/modernize the world" mode (in our case, in the name of such things as capitalism, globalization and the global economy), U.S./Western security force assistance, now, must be seen from an "achieve revolutionary change" perspective. (Thus, today, the "conservatives"/the more "no-change" and/or "reverse change" populations, both here at home and there abroad, are considered to be our worry.)
Question:
Does this effort — which describes a "strategic context" in which the political objective of one's great power opponents, one's non-state entity opponents, and even one's at home opponents might be aligned — does this help in explaining what security force assistance is up against today?
"Liberal democratic societies have, in the past few decades, undergone a series of revolutionary changes in their social and political life, which are not to the taste of all their citizens. For many of those, who might be called social conservatives, Russia has become a more agreeable society, at least in principle, than those they live in. Communist Westerners used to speak of the Soviet Union as the pioneer society of a brighter future for all. Now, the rightwing nationalists of Europe and North America admire Russia and its leader for cleaving to the past."
(See "The American Interest" article "The Reality of Russian Soft Power" by John Lloyd and Daria Litinova.)
“Compounding it all, Russia’s dictator has achieved all of this while creating sympathy in elements of the Right that mirrors the sympathy the Soviet Union achieved in elements of the Left. In other words, Putin is expanding Russian power and influence while mounting a cultural critique that resonates with some American audiences, casting himself as a defender of Christian civilization against Islam and the godless, decadent West.”
(See the “National Review” item entitled: “How Russia Wins” by David French.)
Addendum: Note that while:
a. Our opponents (our great power opponents, our non-state actor opponents and our here at home opponents) seek to work more "by, with and through" their "prevent change" natural allies today — to wit: the more-conservative/the more no-change and/or reverse change elements of the world's populations — this, so as to "contain," and/or to "roll back," the U.S./the West's efforts to "modernize" their/our states and societies;
b. Our professionals, such as LTG (ret.) Cleveland and GEN (ret.) Votel (et. al) below, seem to recommend that the U.S./the West, in the face of this such challenge, seek to work more "by, with and through" our "achieve change" natural allies — to wit: the more-liberal/the more-pro-change elements of the states and societies of the world — this, so as to overcome and defeat this such challenge:
LTG (ret.) Cleveland:
“The Achilles’ heel of our authoritarian adversaries is their inherent fear of their own people; the United States must capitalize on this fear. … An American way of irregular war will reflect who we are as a people, our diversity, our moral code, our undying belief in freedom and liberty. It must be both defensive and offensive. Developing it will take time, require support from the American people through their Congress, and is guaranteed to disrupt the status quo and draw criticism. It will take leadership, dedication, and courage. It is my hope that this study encourages, informs, and animates those with responsibility to protect the nation to act. Our adversaries have moved to dominate in the space below the threshold of war. It will be a strategy built around an American way of irregular war that defeats them.”
(See the Rand paper “The American Way of Irregular War: An Analytical Memoir; therein, see the “Conclusion” of the “Summary” Chapter, at Page xxiii.)
GEN Votel (et. al):
“Advocates of UW first recognize that, among a population of self-determination seekers, human interest in liberty trumps loyalty to a self-serving dictatorship, that those who aspire to freedom can succeed in deposing corrupt or authoritarian rulers, and that unfortunate population groups can and often do seek alternatives to a life of fear, oppression, and injustice. Second, advocates believe that there is a valid role for the U.S. Government in encouraging and empowering these freedom seekers when doing so helps to secure U.S. national security interests.”
(See the National Defense University Press paper “Unconventional Warfare in the Gray Zone” by authors Joseph L. Votel, Charles T. Cleveland, Charles T. Connett, and Will Irwin; therein, see the major section entitled “Doctrine.”)
Thus:
a. Such things as "security force assistance," today,
b. To be seen more through the "strategic context" lens that I provide above?