Category Historical Analysis Annual Conference

The First Historical Analysis Conference is in 12 Days

The first Historical Analysis Annual Conference (HAAC) starts in less than two weeks, on Tuesday the 27th, in Tysons Corner, VA, near DC. We have 32 presentations by 22 speakers and two group discussions planned. The schedule is here: Schedule for the Historical Analysis Annual Conference (HAAC), 27-29 September 2022 – update 15 | Mystics & Statistics (dupuyinstitute.org).

The background of the presenters are here: Summation of Who’s Who at HAAC (revised) | Mystics & Statistics (dupuyinstitute.org).

The conference is at 1934 Old Gallows Road, Suite 350, Vienna, VA 22182. This is basically across the street by Tysons Corner Shopping mall and the Marriot Hotel on Route 7. It is right off the Route 7 exit from 495 (the Beltway). It is at the corner of Route 7 (Leesburg Pike) and Old Gallows Road. It is in the building above the restaurant called Rangos. Parking is in the parking garage next door to it.

Conference description is here: The First Historical Analysis Annual Conference (HAAC), 27-29 September 2022 in Tysons Corner, VA – update 3 | Mystics & Statistics (dupuyinstitute.org)

Costs, Hotels and Call for Papers: The Costs, Hotels and Call for Papers – update 3 | Mystics & Statistics (dupuyinstitute.org)

The cost of the conference is $150 for entire conference or $60 a day. Please pay through paypal (www.paypal.com) to SRichTDI@aol.com. I really think that is better than everyone standing in line of Tuesday morning while we collect payments for the conference. The conference is priced to cover the costs of the conference facility.

We are also now set up to take credit card payments by phone. Call The Dupuy Institute during working hours at (703) 289-0007.

Look forward to seeing you all there.

Historical Analysis Conference in Two Weeks

The first Historical Analysis Annual Conference (HAAC) starts in two weeks, on Tuesday the 27th, in Tysons Corner, VA, near DC. We have 32 presentations by 22 speakers and two group discussions planned. The schedule is here: Schedule for the Historical Analysis Annual Conference (HAAC), 27-29 September 2022 – update 15 | Mystics & Statistics (dupuyinstitute.org).

The conference is at 1934 Old Gallows Road, Suite 350, Vienna, VA 22182. This is basically across the street by Tysons Corner Shopping mall and the Marriot Hotel on Route 7. It is right off the Route 7 exit from 495 (the Beltway). It is at the corner of Route 7 (Leesburg Pike) and Old Gallows Road. It is in the building above the restaurant called Rangos. Parking is in the parking garage next door to it.

Conference description is here: The First Historical Analysis Annual Conference (HAAC), 27-29 September 2022 in Tysons Corner, VA – update 3 | Mystics & Statistics (dupuyinstitute.org)

Costs, Hotels and Call for Papers: The Costs, Hotels and Call for Papers – update 3 | Mystics & Statistics (dupuyinstitute.org)

The cost of the conference is $150 for entire conference or $60 a day. Please pay through paypal (www.paypal.com) to SRichTDI@aol.com. I really think that is better than everyone standing in line of Tuesday morning while we collect payment for the conference. The conference is priced to cover the costs of the conference facility.

We are also now set up to take credit card payments by phone. Call The Dupuy Institute during working hours at (703) 289-0007.

Look forward to seeing you all there.

Schedule for the Historical Analysis Annual Conference (HAAC), 27-29 September 2022 – update 15

Latest update to the provisional schedule for the first Historical Analysis Annual Conference (HAAC). We have 32 presentations scheduled by 22 speakers and 2 group discussions planned. We have slots available for at least another half-dozen more presentations. Each slot is an hour long, so planning for a 45-minute presentation and 15 minutes of discussion.

We are looking to add to presentations on Georgia in 2008, Ukraine in 2014 and Ukraine in 2022. Looking for volunteers for those, or for any other conflicts worth looking at. We have set up two group discussions: 1) Could We Have Won the War in Afghanistan 2001-2021?, and 2) Russo-Ukrainian War of 2022. I would prefer a presentation on these subjects, but I do think they need to be addressed regardless.

The conference is at 1934 Old Gallows Road, Suite 350, Vienna, VA 22182. This is basically across the street by Tysons Corner Shopping mall and the Marriot Hotel on Route 7. It is right off the Route 7 exit from 495 (the Beltway). It is at the corner of Route 7 (Leesburg Pike) and Old Gallows Road. It is in the building above the restaurant called Rangos. Parking is in the parking garage next door to it.

Conference description is here: The First Historical Analysis Annual Conference (HAAC), 27-29 September 2022 in Tysons Corner, VA – update 3 | Mystics & Statistics (dupuyinstitute.org)

Costs, Hotels and Call for Papers: The Costs, Hotels and Call for Papers – update 3 | Mystics & Statistics (dupuyinstitute.org)

The cost of the conference is $150 for entire conference or $60 a day. Please pay through paypal (www.paypal.com) to SRichTDI@aol.com. I really think that is better than everyone standing in line of Tuesday morning while we collect payment for the conference. The conference is priced to cover the costs of the conference facility.

We are also now set up to take credit card payments by phone. Call The Dupuy Institute during working hours at (703) 289-0007.

We do have five virtual presentations and we are set up for virtual attendees. To date, we have one person who will be attending the first day as a virtual attendeeWe do have the option to record the presentations. I am not sure this is something we should do, but open to debating this. It does tend to suppress discussion.

 

Schedule: Pike and Gallows Conference Center

Updated: 8 September 2022

 

 

Day 1: Analysis of Conventional Combat

0900 – 0930    Introductory remarks (new)                Christopher A. Lawrence (TDI)

0930 – 1030    Studying Combat (old)                       Dr. Shawn Woodford (TDI)

1030 – 1130    Data for Wargames (recent version) – Christopher A. Lawrence (TDI)

1130 – 1230    Research fitting Lanchester Models to Battle Data

                                                                                    Dr. Tom Lucas (NPS)

1230 – 1400    Lunch

1400 – 1500    How Important are Superior Numbers?                     

Dr. David Kirkpatrick (University College London) – virtual

1500 – 1600    Killing Captain Hindsight: Quantifying Chance in Military History

Dr. Niall MacKay (University of York)

1600 – 1700    TND’s Theory of Combat                  Dr. Shawn Woodford (TDI)

 

Evening (1900):          Group Dinner – Rangos

 

 

Day 2: Analysis of Unconventional Warfare

0900 – 1000    Iraq, Data, Hypotheses and Afghanistan (old)

                                                                              Christopher A. Lawrence (TDI)

1000 – 1100    History as an Enemy and an Instructor: Lessons Learned from Haiti 1915-1934                                                                      Dr. Christopher Davis (UNCG)

1100 – 1200    Estimating War Deaths (in Iraq)

Dr. Michael Spagat (Royal Holloway University of London)

1200 – 1300    Lunch

1300 – 1400    Group Discussion: Could We Have Won the War in Afghanistan 2001-2021?

1400 – 1500    Close Combat Overmatch Weapons               Joe Follansbee (Col., USA, ret.)

1500 – 1600    Contentious Issues in Syria:  A Discussion about the Alawi Religion, their Political Struggles, Chemical Warfare in Syria and a Hypothesized Religicide of the Alawis                                                                       Jennifer Schlacht, M.A.

1600 – 1700    The Silent Killers: A Quick Historical Review of Biological Threats.

                                                                    Dr. Douglas A. Samuelson (InfoLogix, Inc.) 

 

Evening (1900):          Group Dinner – BJs

 

 

Day 3: Other Analysis of Warfare

0900 – 1000    The Application of the Scientific Method to Military History

Clinton Reilly (Computer Strategies. Australia)

1000 – 1100    Quantitative Analysis of History of Direct Fire Weapons

                                                                      Dr. Alexander Kott (ARL)

1100 – 1200    Quantitative Risk Assessment in Military Decisions

                                                                      Dr. Douglas A. Samuelson (InfoLogix, Inc.)

1200 – 1300    Lunch

1300 – 1400    The Criticality of Resurrecting TDI & TNDM

                                                                       Joe Follansbee (Col., USA, ret.)

1400 – 1500    The Future of TDI and work of the conference (new)

                                                                       Christopher A. Lawrence (TDI)

1500 – 1600    open

1600 – 1700    open

 

Evening:          Happy hour  – Rangos and/or Hawk and Griffin 

 

 

Schedule: Einstein Conference Room

 

Day 1: Poster and Book Room

Opened at 0800

 

Afternoon Day 1: Other Analysis of Warfare

1400 – 1500    open

1500 – 1600    Midway and the Aleutians                  Dr. Michael Johnson (CNA)

1600 – 1700    Air Combat Analysis on the Eastern Front in 1944-45

                                                                                      Daniel Horvath – virtual

 

 

Day 2: Analysis of Conventional Combat

0900 – 1000    A Statistical Analysis of Land Battles: What is Associated with Winning?

                                                                                                Dr. Tom Lucas (NPS)

1000 – 1100    The Combat Assessment Technique               William Sayers

1100 – 1200    Machine Learning the Lessons of History      Dr. Robert Helmbold – virtual

1200 – 1300    Lunch

1300 – 1400    Penetration Division: Theory, History, Concept

                                                                                    LtC. Nathan A Jennings, PhD

1400 – 1500    Learning from History: The Army’s Future Study Program

                                                                                    LtC. Adam. L. Taliaferro

1500 – 1600    Artillery Suppression: New Analysis of Core Data – virtual

                                    Dermot Rooney (Wapentakes)

1600 – 1700    Urban Warfare (old)                           Christopher A. Lawrence (TDI)

 

 

Day 3: Researching Operations

0900 – 1000    The AEF and Consolidation of Gains Operations during the Meuse-Argonne Offensive, 1918                                         Dr. Christopher Davis (UNCG)

1000 – 1100    Evaluating German Aerial Photography at the Battle of Kursk, 1943

                                                                                    Eugene Matyukhin

1100 – 1200    The Red Army’s War in Ukraine 1943-44

                                                                                    Dr. Richard Harrison

1200 – 1300    Lunch

1300 – 1400    The Decline of War Since 1950        

Dr. Michael Spagat (Royal Holloway University of London)

1400 – 1500    Patterns of Explosive Violence Harm in Ukraine Before and After the 24 Feb. Invasion

                                                                                    Chiara Torelli (AOAV) – virtual

1500 – 1600    Drone Warfare and the Nagorno-Karabakh War of 2020

                                                                                    Dr. Alexander Kotts (ARL)

1600 – 1700    Group Discussion: Russo-Ukrainian War of 2022

 

Schedule of the Historical Analysis Annual Conference (HAAC), 27-29 September 2022 – update 14

Latest update to the provisional schedule for the first Historical Analysis Annual Conference (HAAC). We now have 33 presentations scheduled by 23 speakers and 2 group discussions planned. We have slots available for at least another half-dozen more presentations. Each slot is an hour long, so planning for a 45-minute presentation and 15 minutes of discussion.

We are looking to add to presentations on Georgia in 2008, Ukraine in 2014 and Ukraine in 2022. Looking for volunteers for those, or for any other conflicts worth looking at. We have set up two potential group discussions: 1) Could We Have Won the War in Afghanistan 2001-2021?, and 2) Russo-Ukrainian War of 2022. I would prefer a presentation on these subjects, but I do think they need to be addressed regardless.

The conference is at 1934 Old Gallows Road, Suite 350, Vienna, VA 22182. This is basically across the street by Tysons Corner Shopping mall and the Marriot Hotel on Route 7. It is right off the Route 7 exit from 495 (the Beltway). It is at the corner of Route 7 (Leesburg Pike) and Old Gallows Road. It is in the building above the restaurant called Rangos. Parking is in the parking garage next door to it.

Conference description is here: The First Historical Analysis Annual Conference (HAAC), 27-29 September 2022 in Tysons Corner, VA – update 3 | Mystics & Statistics (dupuyinstitute.org)

Costs, Hotels and Call for Papers: The Costs, Hotels and Call for Papers – update 3 | Mystics & Statistics (dupuyinstitute.org)

The cost of the conference is $150 for entire conference or $60 a day. Please pay through paypal (www.paypal.com) to SRichTDI@aol.com. I really think that is better than everyone standing in line of Tuesday morning while we collect payment for the conference. The conference is priced to cover the costs of the conference facility.

We do have five virtual presentations and we are set up for virtual attendees. To date, we have one person who will be attending the first day as a virtual attendeeWe do have the option to record the presentations. I am not sure this is something we should do, but open to debating this. It does tend to suppress discussion.

 

Schedule: Pike and Gallows Conference Center

Updated: 28 August 2022

 

 

Day 1: Analysis of Conventional Combat

0900 – 0930    Introductory remarks (new)                Christopher A. Lawrence (TDI)

0930 – 1030    Studying Combat (old)                       Dr. Shawn Woodford (TDI)

1030 – 1130    Data for Wargames (recent version) – Christopher A. Lawrence (TDI)

1130 – 1230    Research fitting Lanchester Models to Battle Data

                                                                                    Dr. Tom Lucas (NPS)

1230 – 1400    Lunch

1400 – 1500    How Important are Superior Numbers?                     

Dr. David Kirkpatrick (University College London) – virtual

1500 – 1600    Killing Captain Hindsight: Quantifying Chance in Military History

Dr. Niall MacKay (University of York)

1600 – 1700    TND’s Theory of Combat                  Dr. Shawn Woodford (TDI)

 

Evening (1900):          Group Dinner – Rangos

 

 

Day 2: Analysis of Unconventional Warfare

0900 – 1000    Iraq, Data, Hypotheses and Afghanistan (old)

Christopher A. Lawrence (TDI)

1000 – 1100    History as an Enemy and an Instructor: Lessons Learned from Haiti 1915-1934                             Dr. Christopher Davis (UNCG)

1100 – 1200    Estimating War Deaths (in Iraq)

Dr. Michael Spagat (Royal Holloway University of London)

1200 – 1300    Lunch

1300 – 1400    Group Discussion: Could We Have Won the War in Afghanistan 2001-2021?

1400 – 1500    Close Combat Overmatch Weapons               Joe Follansbee (Col., USA, ret.)

1500 – 1600    Contentious Issues in Syria:  A Discussion about the Alawi Religion, their Political Struggles, Chemical Warfare in Syria and a Hypothesized Religicide of the Alawis                                                                                          Jennifer Schlacht, M.A.

1600 – 1700    The Silent Killers: A Quick Historical Review of Biological Threats.

                                                                        Dr. Douglas A. Samuelson (InfoLogix, Inc.) 

 

Evening (1900):          Group Dinner – BJs

 

 

Day 3: Other Analysis of Warfare

0900 – 1000    The Application of the Scientific Method to Military History

Clinton Reilly (Computer Strategies. Australia)

1000 – 1100    Quantitative Analysis of History of Direct Fire Weapons

                                                                                    Dr. Alexander Kott (ARL)

1100 – 1200    Quantitative Risk Assessment in Military Decisions

                                                                           Dr. Douglas A. Samuelson (InfoLogix, Inc.)

1200 – 1300    Lunch

1300 – 1400    The Criticality of Resurrecting TDI & TNDM

                                                                                    Joe Follansbee (Col., USA, ret.)

1400 – 1500    The Future of TDI and work of the conference (new)

Christopher A. Lawrence (TDI)

1500 – 1600    open

1600 – 1700    open

 

Evening:          Happy hour  – Rangos and/or Hawk and Griffin 

 

 

Schedule: Einstein Conference Room

 

Day 1: Poster and Book Room

Opened at 0800

 

Afternoon Day 1: Other Analysis of Warfare

1400 – 1500    Air Combat Analysis on the Eastern Front in 1944-45

            Daniel Horvath – virtual

1500 – 1600    Midway and the Aleutians                  Dr. Michael Johnson (CNA)

1600 – 1700    Simulation-Based Historical Analysis: a France 1940 Concept

                                                Timothy J. Smith, ONI

 

 

Day 2: Analysis of Conventional Combat

0900 – 1000    A Statistical Analysis of Land Battles: What is Associated with Winning?

                                                                                                Dr. Tom Lucas (NPS)

1000 – 1100    The Combat Assessment Technique               William Sayers

1100 – 1200    Machine Learning the Lessons of History      Dr. Robert Helmbold – virtual

1200 – 1300    Lunch

1300 – 1400    Penetration Division: Theory, History, Concept

                                                                                    LtC. Nathan A Jennings, PhD

1400 – 1500    Learning from History: The Army’s Future Study Program

                                                                                    LtC. Adam. L. Taliaferro

1500 – 1600    Artillery Suppression: New Analysis of Core Data – virtual

                                    Dermot Rooney (Wapentakes)

1600 – 1700    Urban Warfare (old)                           Christopher A. Lawrence (TDI)

 

 

Day 3: Researching Operations

0900 – 1000    The AEF and Consolidation of Gains Operations during the Meuse-Argonne Offensive, 1918                                                            Dr. Christopher Davis (UNCG)

1000 – 1100    Evaluating German Aerial Photography at the Battle of Kursk, 1943

                                                                                    Eugene Matyukhin

1100 – 1200    The Red Army’s War in Ukraine 1943-44

                                                                                    Dr. Richard Harrison

1200 – 1300    Lunch

1300 – 1400    The Decline of War Since 1950        

Dr. Michael Spagat (Royal Holloway University of London)

1400 – 1500    Patterns of Explosive Violence Harm in Ukraine Before and After the 24 Feb. Invasion

                                                                                    Chiara Torelli (AOAV) – virtual

1500 – 1600    Drone Warfare and the Nagorno-Karabakh War of 2020

                                                                                    Dr. Alexander Kotts (ARL)

1600 – 1700    Group Discussion: Russo-Ukrainian War of 2022

 

 

Body Counts – What Can They Tell Us?

A new posting from William (Chip) Sayers. This is his tenth post here. He will be presenting at our Historical Analysis conference: Who’s Who at HAAC – part 1 | Mystics & Statistics (dupuyinstitute.org) and Schedule of the Historical Analysis Annual Conference (HAAC), 27-29 September 2022 – update 13 | Mystics & Statistics (dupuyinstitute.org).

——————-William (Chip) Sayers————————–

Body Counts – What Can They Tell Us?

There has been a lot of back and forth on the web lately about how many casualties Russia has taken in Ukraine, how much equipment they’ve lost and how they are going to replace those troops and weapons. I’ve decided it’s time to look into this subject and bring my own experiences to the table. 

In Vietnam, these kind of metrics seemed to have no utility other than to corrupt the officer corps with fake and exaggerated body counts, or worse, counting dead civilians as combatants. Or so the legends say. Gen. Westmorland demanded a high body count, so that’s what he got. And while the numbers looked impressive, it eventually became apparent that the numbers weren’t tied to anything concrete. Would another 50,000 North Vietnamese dead cause Ho Chi Minh to capitulate? Another 100,000? In the end, Hanoi admitted they had lost a million men in their bid to take over the South. Clearly, Uncle Ho was ready to fight to the last North Vietnamese soldier. When your opponent’s pain threshold is that high, the body count really doesn’t tell you anything. Or so it would seem.

In the aftermath of Operation DESERT STORM in 1991, various interested parties were pushing the Pentagon for a casualty count on the Iraqi side. I’m sure some wanted to thump their chests over the “kill ratio” between Iraqi casualties and the ludicrously low figures on the Allied side; while others apparently wanted to use the presumably large number of Iraqi losses to highlight the wanton brutality of the campaign we had pursued. The obvious source, Gen. Norman Schwarzkopf, commander of Coalition Forces, wasn’t interested in sharing numbers. Schwarzkopf was a field-grade infantry officer during the Vietnam War and he had seen the dark side of body counts and wanted no part of them. While there would be little of the corrosive effect on the officer corps after a short, victorious war, he also knew how badly the US Army’s credibility had suffered over the issue in Vietnam. There would be no body count from Operation DESERT STORM.

The question, then, got punted over to Defense Intelligence Agency where I was working at the time. I know the analyst who had to respond and I know that he basically made up a number out of whole cloth to get the action off his desk during a very busy time. If I recall correctly, that number was 100,000, with no distinction between killed or wounded, or if they were all KIA, as reported by some in the media. I had Col Dupuy’s model in hand and had used it to support my team’s effort during the war, so I could have come up with a far more reasonable estimate, but no one asked me. Some months later, another analyst I knew wrote an article for Foreign Affairs on the Iraqi casualty account. He rightly derided the 100,000 estimate. However, he made his estimate by counting vehicles destroyed and multiplying by crew capacity—certainly more reasonable than a complete WAG, but unlikely to be very accurate—particularly as most destroyed Iraqi vehicles had already been abandoned by their crews. So far as I’m aware, no one has ever done a serious, forensic study of the question since then and basically, nothing has been learned or understood about Iraqi casualties from ODS.

Flash forward 12 years: A few months after the invasion of Iraq in 2003, a couple of colleagues and I were asked to do a study of the nascent Sunni insurgency and come up with tips the U.S. Army could use to protect its personnel from ambushes. For my part, I went back to a series of “How we did it” monographs the Army put out in 1971-1974 in that brief period of time when we were looking at our efforts in Vietnam as a victory. After 1975, no one in the Army wanted to hear anything about Vietnam, and this series of monographs went into dusty archives, presumably never to see the light of day. In large measure, I was simply feeding the Army its own forgotten history, and they were very happy to receive it. 

Over the course of the project, I created a database from the Army’s information about various incidents they were involved in. In particular, I was interested in incidents which resulted in casualties to either side. For the U.S. side, I counted those personnel who were listed as KIA and those who were listed as Seriously Wounded in Action, or SWIA. I considered those personnel who did not return to duty within 72 hours as being WIA. I did not count those soldiers who put a band-aid on it and returned to duty within that 72-hour window. To count as an insurgent casualty, I only included those whose body was in our possession. i.e., enemy KIA where we actually had possession of the body and those who were captured and in custody. Some of the Enemy Prisoners of War (EPWs) may have been wounded, but there was no information with which to break that out. Any insurgent who was believed to have been killed or wounded but was not in our possession was not counted.

Eventually, I ended up with a database of some 27,000 incidents evaluated for 80 different conditions over a period of a year and a half of operations. Some of the conditions I tested for included things like what kind of attack it was: small arms, Improvised Explosive Device (IED), mortar, complex, etc. The Army counted an attack as “complex” if two different types of weapons were used, e.g., small arms and Rocket Propelled Grenades (RPGs). I believed the Army’s definition was not helpful, as the purpose of that categorization was to indicate a higher level of training and tactical competence. So, I only counted an attack as being in the complex category that actually required integration of differing elements, such as small arms and mortars or a vehicular IED and coordinated sniper fire, etc.

In analyzing these incidents, certain trends seemed to fall out. The Iraqi insurgents were never able to successfully stand up to Allied troops in an infantry fight. Insurgent mortarmen were hopelessly inept. Even IED attacks rapidly dropped in effectiveness. Some of these things were due to the quick adaptation by Allied troops. They got better defensive armor and tactics, but experience was the key. It was difficult to watch Allied casualties spike with the rotation of a new unit into combat, but this was followed rapidly by a drop in losses. Often, the final rate was lower than that of the previous unit, indicating an effective process of disseminating lessons learned through the force. In contrast, there was no sign whatsoever of a similar process on the insurgent side. Their casualty rates increased incessantly to the point that something had to give. That something was the “Sunni Awakening,” when they realized that it would be better to seek our protection from the Shia militias than to fight us.

One of the things that convinced me that this result was inevitable was what happened with casualty rates on both sides with regard to IEDs. In the first months of the insurgency, it took only three IED emplacements to cause a U.S. KIA or SWIA. By the end of my study, this was up to over 30 to 1 and the insurgents were actually losing more personnel involved with IEDs than we were (not all of insurgent losses were IED trigger-men scooped up during an attack, or from emplacement teams who were caught in the act—some were from raids on IED factories, or from the movement of bombs where careless insurgents blew themselves up, etc.). Much of this data was collected before our realization of the extent our troops were suffering from traumatic brain injuries, so the real cost to our personnel was not completely captured. However, the enemy did not know this, either, so it didn’t influence their decision to change sides.

One of the most important findings I made was of a major inflection point in insurgent combat effectiveness in November, 2004. It appeared quite clear that many of their best people—if not the very heart of the insurgency—died in the fight for Fallujah. This should come as a surprise to no one, given the fight they put up, and the lack of escape routes we afforded them. From that point on, insurgent effectiveness dropped and continued a literal death spiral as moderately experienced insurgents were killed or captured only to be replaced by personnel with less experience and a lower life expectancy on the battlefield.

Ironically, the insurgency didn’t recognize what was happening and intensified its attacks. While the burnout of the Sunni insurgency was predictable by the end of 2005, it took another year for it to fully manifest itself. In the meantime, the increasing numbers of attacks—resulting in increasing Allied casualties, despite plummeting insurgent effectiveness—caused U.S. analysts to believe Iraq was a lost cause when, in fact, Allied forces were on the cusp of victory. Eventually, Sunni insurgents were forced to face the inevitable truth that that they could not win in a two-front war against both us and the Shia militias and to continue was tantamount to sect suicide. They knew that they would never be able to return to their position of domination over Iraq and would suffer mightily at the hands of the Shia they had previously oppressed. So, they took the only reasonable option available: they sought our protection from the Shia majority. This startling outcome was entirely predictable, if one paid close attention to the data.

A further myth I was able to disprove was the threat of “bleed out.” Counter-terrorism analysts were highly concerned that trained Iraqi military personnel turned insurgents would begin to exit Iraq with their skills and perpetrate acts of terrorism around the world. However, their bombmaking skills had no application anywhere outside of Iraq as it was almost entirely based on the use of artillery shells—not something you would find lying around Western Europe. Their small arms skills were almost non-existent, the vast majority of their “sniper” attacks were almost certainly lucky shots (I was able to identify the work of only one or two actual snipers from the data), fewer than one in ten of their RPG attacks hit anything, and they seemed completely baffled by the mortars they employed, often failing to put rounds inside the fence at a sprawling logistics base or walking their rounds off a target they came close to hitting with the first shot. Either their former soldiers didn’t join the insurgency, or they were completely incompetent. Either way, the “bleed out” threat never materialized.

Certainly, I would never advocate for a simple body count. If you ask for bodies, that’s exactly what you will get. And as we saw in Vietnam, that sometimes became problematic. However, the careful collection and analysis of combat loss statistics can be of great value.

To bring this back home, can body counts and other loss statistics be of value in analyzing the war in Ukraine? Yes, but with this caveat: those of us operating in the unclassified realm have very little access to good, useful information necessary for such analysis. Furthermore, the Ukrainian government not only recognizes the utility of good propaganda, they are masterful in its employment. And that’s a complement. However, it makes our job more difficult in sorting out truth from fiction. 

One final vignette: When the U.S. gave Stinger missiles to the Mujahideen insurgents to fight the Soviets in Afghanistan, a coworker of mine was the point-man on watching the results. After a week of successful action, he wrote a piece saying that the Soviets had lost seven aircraft, or about one per day. That evening, Dan Rather read his report, verbatim on the CBS evening news, and in the succeeding months, the media and other analysts based their estimates of Russian aircraft losses on the “one per day” comment. In fact, you can find claims of Soviet losses to this day, based on that report. In reality, the Soviets took quick action, lowering their losses significantly, albeit at a high cost to the effectiveness of their Air Force. However, I have often wondered if perhaps Mr. Gorbachev trusted the Western news media more than his own generals on this issue (a not entirely unreasonable position), and eventually came to the determination that Afghanistan wasn’t worth it based on a little piece of unintentional propaganda.

—————————————–

 

My comment: Chip Sayer’s postings are completely independent of The Dupuy Institute. He emailed this to me last week and I did not get around to reading it until this morning, as I was copying and pasting it to the blog. There is a lot of significant statements in this posting, which I was tempted to place in bold. Some of these reinforce statements I have made in my books, in particular Modern American Wars. This is definitely a blog post worth reading slowly twice.

Phalanx Article: What We Have Learned from Doing Historical Analysis

The Phalanx is the quarterly journal for the Military Operations Research Society (MORS). I did have an article in the Summer issue of the journal called “What We Have Learned from Doing Historical Analysis.” This originally was just an aside in an email exchange between Dr. Dean Hartley, Dr. Robert Helmbold and I that Dean Hartley recommend I dress it up and turn it into an article. He arranged for it to be published by the Phalanx. I minimized the clean-up so that the tone of the article remained the same as what I said in my original email rant. I did go through and make nine observations based upon years of doing this work.

The issue is here (Volume 55, Number 2): Phalanx-Current-Volume.pdf (mors.org). It is at the end of the issue in the section called “Last Word.” I think you can access the entire issue even if you are not a member of MORS. The article by itself is here: What We Have Learned from Doing Historical Analysis on JSTOR.

Schedule of the Historical Analysis Annual Conference (HAAC), 27-29 September 2022 – update 13

Below is the provisional schedule for the first Historical Analysis Annual Conference (HAAC). We now have 33 presentations scheduled by 23 speakers and 2 group discussions planned. We have slots available for at least another half-dozen more presentations. Each slot is an hour long, so planning for a 45-minute presentation and 15 minutes of discussion.

If we get more requests than that, my bias is to either rent a third conference room at the facility or to reduce some presentations to 20 minutes with 10 minutes of discussion. This would allow us to do two presentations in an hour slot. We are probably not going to turn away any quality presentations.

We are looking to add to presentations on Georgia in 2008, Ukraine in 2014 and Ukraine in 2022. Looking for volunteers for those, or for any other conflicts worth looking at. We have set up two potential group discussions: 1) Could We Have Won the War in Afghanistan 2001-2021?, and 2) Russo-Ukrainian War of 2022. I would prefer a presentation on these subjects, but I do think they need to be addressed regardless.

The conference is at 1934 Old Gallows Road, Suite 350, Vienna, VA 22182. This is basically across the street by Tysons Corner Shopping mall and the Marriot Hotel on Route 7. It is right off the Route 7 exit from 495 (the Beltway). It is at the corner of Route 7 (Leesburg Pike) and Old Gallows Road. It is in the building above the restaurant called Rangos. Parking is in the parking garage next door to it.

Conference description is here: The First Historical Analysis Annual Conference (HAAC), 27-29 September 2022 in Tysons Corner, VA – update 3 | Mystics & Statistics (dupuyinstitute.org)

Costs, Hotels and Call for Papers: The Costs, Hotels and Call for Papers – update 3 | Mystics & Statistics (dupuyinstitute.org)

The cost of the conference is $150 for entire conference or $60 a day. Please pay through paypal (www.paypal.com) to SRichTDI@aol.com. I really think that is better than everyone standing in line of Tuesday morning while we collect payment for the conference. The conference is priced to cover the costs of the conference facility.

We do have five virtual presentations and we are set up for virtual attendees. To date, we have one person who will be attending the first day as a virtual attendee. We do have the option to record the presentations. I am not sure this is something we should do, but open to debating this. It does tend to suppress discussion.

 

Schedule: Pike and Gallows Conference Center

Updated: 23 August 2022

 

 

Day 1: Analysis of Conventional Combat

0900 – 0930    Introductory remarks (new)                Christopher A. Lawrence (TDI)

0930 – 1030    Studying Combat (old)                       Dr. Shawn Woodford (TDI)

1030 – 1130    Data for Wargames (recent version) – Christopher A. Lawrence (TDI)

1130 – 1230    Research fitting Lanchester Models to Battle Data

                                                                                    Dr. Tom Lucas (NPS)

1230 – 1400    Lunch

1400 – 1500    How Important are Superior Numbers?                     

Dr. David Kirkpatrick (University College London) – virtual

1500 – 1600    Killing Captain Hindsight: Quantifying Chance in Military History

Dr. Niall MacKay (University of York)

1600 – 1700    TND’s Theory of Combat                  Dr. Shawn Woodford (TDI)

 

 

Evening (1900):          Group Dinner – Rangos

 

 

Day 2: Analysis of Unconventional Warfare

0900 – 1000    Iraq, Data, Hypotheses and Afghanistan (old)

Christopher A. Lawrence (TDI)

1000 – 1100    History as an Enemy and an Instructor: Lessons Learned from Haiti 1915-1934                             Dr. Christopher Davis (UNCG)

1100 – 1200    Estimating War Deaths (in Iraq)

Dr. Michael Spagat (Royal Holloway University of London)

1200 – 1300    Lunch

1300 – 1400    Group Discussion: Could We Have Won the War in Afghanistan 2001-2021?

1400 – 1500    Close Combat Overmatch Weapons               Joe Follansbee (Col., USA, ret.)

1500 – 1600   Contentious Issues in Syria:  A Discussion about the Alawi Religion, their Political Struggles, Chemical Warfare in Syria and a Hypothesized Religicide of the Alawis                                                                                   Jennifer Schlacht, M.A.

1600 – 1700    The Silent Killers: A Quick Historical Review of Biological Threats.

                                                                        Dr. Douglas A. Samuelson (InfoLogix, Inc.) 

 

Evening (1900):          Group Dinner – BJs

 

 

Day 3: Other Analysis of Warfare

0900 – 1000    The Application of the Scientific Method to Military History

Clinton Reilly (Computer Strategies. Australia)

1000 – 1100    Quantitative Analysis of History of Direct Fire Weapons

                                                                                    Dr. Alexander Kott (ARL)

1100 – 1200    Risk Tolerance in Combat Decision Making             Matt Tompkins

1200 – 1300    Lunch

1300 – 1400    Quantitative Risk Assessment in Military Decisions

                                                                           Dr. Douglas A. Samuelson (InfoLogix, Inc.)

1400 – 1500    The Criticality of Resurrecting TDI & TNDM

                                                                                    Joe Follansbee (Col., USA, ret.)

1500 – 1600    The Future of TDI and work of the conference (new)

Christopher A. Lawrence (TDI)

1600 – 1700    open

 

Evening:          Happy hour  – Rangos and/or Hawk and Griffin 

 

 

Schedule: Einstein Conference Room

 

Day 1: Poster and Book Room

Opened at 0800

 

Afternoon Day 1: Other Analysis of Warfare

1400 – 1500    Air Combat Analysis on the Eastern Front in 1944-45

            Daniel Horvath – virtual

1500 – 1600    Midway and the Aleutians                  Dr. Michael Johnson (CNA)

1600 – 1700    Simulation-Based Historical Analysis: a France 1940 Concept

                                                Timothy J. Smith, ONI

 

 

Day 2: Analysis of Conventional Combat

0900 – 1000    A Statistical Analysis of Land Battles: What is Associated with Winning?

                                                                                                Dr. Tom Lucas (NPS)

1000 – 1100    The Combat Assessment Technique               William Sayers

1100 – 1200    Machine Learning the Lessons of History      Dr. Robert Helmbold – virtual

1200 – 1300    Lunch

1300 – 1400    Penetration Division: Theory, History, Concept

                                                                                    LtC. Nathan A Jennings, PhD

1400 – 1500    Learning from History: The Army’s Future Study Program

                                                                                    LtC. Adam. L. Taliaferro

1500 – 1600    Artillery Suppression: New Analysis of Core Data – virtual

                                    Dermot Rooney (Wapentakes)

1600 – 1700    Urban Warfare (old)                           Christopher A. Lawrence (TDI)

 

 

Day 3: Researching Operations

0900 – 1000    The AEF and Consolidation of Gains Operations during the Meuse-Argonne Offensive, 1918                                                            Dr. Christopher Davis (UNCG)

1000 – 1100    Evaluating German Aerial Photography at the Battle of Kursk, 1943

                                                                                    Eugene Matyukhin

1100 – 1200    The Red Army’s War in Ukraine 1943-44

                                                                                    Dr. Richard Harrison

1200 – 1300    Lunch

1300 – 1400    The Decline of War Since 1950        

Dr. Michael Spagat (Royal Holloway University of London)

1400 – 1500    Drone Warfare and the Nagorno-Karabakh War of 2020

                                                                                    Dr. Alexander Kotts (ARL)

1500 – 1600    Patterns of Explosive Violence Harm in Ukraine Before and After the 24 Feb. Invasion

                                                                                    Chiara Torelli (AOAV) – virtual

1600 – 1700    Group Discussion: Russo-Ukrainian War of 2022

 

 

Possible additional sessions:

Or Day 2 or 3: Combat Modeling

Or Day 2 or 3: Urban Warfare

Or Day 2 or 3: Air Combat Analysis

Or Day 2 or 3: Naval Combat Analysis

 

Schedule of the Historical Analysis Annual Conference (HAAC), 27-29 September 2022 – update 12

Below is the provisional schedule for the first Historical Analysis Annual Conference (HAAC). We currently have set up two conference rooms and are issuing out a call for presentations. We now have 35 presentations scheduled by 24 speakers and 2 group discussions planned. We have slots available for at least another half-dozen presentations. Each slot is an hour long, so planning for a 45-minute presentation and 15 minutes of discussion.

If we get more requests than that, my bias is to either rent a third conference room at the facility or to reduce some presentations to 20 minutes with 10 minutes of discussion. This would allow us to do two presentations in an hour slot. We are probably not going to turn away any quality presentations.

We have created a new section called “Researching Operations,” which is somewhat related to but not quite the same as Operations Research. We are looking to add to that section presentations on Georgia in 2008, Ukraine in 2014 and Ukraine in 2022. Looking for volunteers for those, or for any other conflicts worth looking at.

In the meantime, we have set up two potential group discussions: 1) Could We Have Won the War in Afghanistan 2001-2021?, and 2) Russo-Ukrainian War of 2022. I would prefer a presentation on these subjects, but I do think they need to be addressed regardless.

The conference is at 1934 Old Gallows Road, Suite 350, Vienna, VA 22182. This is basically across the street by Tysons Corner Shopping mall and the Marriot Hotel on Route 7. It is right off the Route 7 exit from 495 (the Beltway). It is at the corner of Route 7 (Leesburg Pike) and Old Gallows Road.

Conference description is here: The First Historical Analysis Annual Conference (HAAC), 27-29 September 2022 in Tysons Corner, VA – update 3 | Mystics & Statistics (dupuyinstitute.org)

Costs, Hotels and Call for Papers: The Costs, Hotels and Call for Papers – update 3 | Mystics & Statistics (dupuyinstitute.org)

The cost of the conference is $150 for entire conference or $60 a day. Please pay through paypal (www.paypal.com) to SRichTDI@aol.com. I really think that is better than everyone standing in line of Tuesday morning while we collect payment for the conference. The conference is priced to cover the costs of the conference facility.

 

We now have five virtual presentations, and we are set up for virtual attendees. To date we have not had anyone commit to being a virtual attendee.

 

Schedule: Pike and Gallows Conference Center

Updated: 18 August 2022

 

 

Day 1: Analysis of Conventional Combat

0900 – 0930    Introductory remarks (new)                Christopher A. Lawrence (TDI)

0930 – 1030    Studying Combat (old)                       Dr. Shawn Woodford (TDI)

1030 – 1130    Data for Wargames (recent version) – Christopher A. Lawrence (TDI)

1130 – 1230    How Lanchester modelling fits the historical data

                                                                                    Dr. Paul R. Syms (Dstl)

1230 – 1400    Lunch

1400 – 1500    Research fitting Lanchester Models to Battle Data

                                                                                    Dr. Tom Lucas (NPS)

1500 – 1600    How Important are Superior Numbers?                     

Dr. David Kirkpatrick (University College London) – virtual

1600 – 1700    Killing Captain Hindsight: Quantifying Chance in Military History

Dr. Niall MacKay (University of York)        

1700 – 1800     TND’s Theory of Combat                  Dr. Shawn Woodford (TDI) – ?

 

 

Evening (1900):          Group Dinner – Rangos

 

 

Day 2: Analysis of Unconventional Warfare

0900 – 1000    Iraq, Data, Hypotheses and Afghanistan (old)

Christopher A. Lawrence (TDI)

1000 – 1100    History as an Enemy and an Instructor: Lessons Learned from Haiti 1915-1934                             Dr. Christopher Davis (UNCG)

1100 – 1200    Estimating War Deaths (in Iraq)

Dr. Michael Spagat (Royal Holloway University of London)

1200 – 1300    Lunch

1300 – 1400    Group Discussion: Could We Have Won the War in Afghanistan 2001-2021?

1400 – 1500    Close Combat Overmatch Weapons               Joe Follansbee (Col., USA, ret.) – ?

1500 – 1600    open

1600 – 1700    The Silent Killers: A Quick Historical Review of Biological Threats.

                                                                      Dr. Douglas A. Samuelson (InfoLogix, Inc.) 

 

Evening (1900):          Group Dinner – BJs

 

 

Day 3: Other Analysis of Warfare

0900 – 1000    The Application of the Scientific Method to Military History

Clinton Reilly (Computer Strategies. Australia)

1000 – 1100    Quantitative Analysis of History of Direct Fire Weapons

                                                                                    Dr. Alexander Kott (ARL)

1100 – 1200    HA support for our Directorate of Land Warfare

Dr. Paul L. Syms (Dstl)

1200 – 1300    Lunch

1300 – 1400    Risk Tolerance in Combat Decision Making             Matt Tompkins

1400 – 1500    Quantitative Risk Assessment in Military Decisions

                                                                Dr. Douglas A. Samuelson (InfoLogix, Inc.)

1500 – 1600    The Criticality of Resurrecting TDI & TNDM

                                                                                    Joe Follansbee (Col., USA, ret.)

1600 – 1700    The Future of TDI and work of the conference (new)

Christopher A. Lawrence (TDI)

 

Evening:          Happy hour  – Rangos and/or Hawk and Griffin 

 

 

Schedule: Einstein Conference Room

 

Day 1: Poster and Book Room

Opened at 0800

 

Afternoon Day 1: Other Analysis of Warfare

1400 – 1500    Air Combat Analysis on the Eastern Front in 1944-45

            Daniel Horvath – virtual

1500 – 1600    Midway and the Aleutians                  Dr. Michael Johnson (CNA)

1600 – 1700    Simulation-Based Historical Analysis: a France 1940 Concept

                                                Timothy J. Smith, ONI

 

 

Day 2: Analysis of Conventional Combat

0900 – 1000    A Statistical Analysis of Land Battles: What is Associated with Winning?

                                                                                                Dr. Tom Lucas (NPS)

1000 – 1100    The Combat Assessment Technique               William Sayers

1100 – 1200    Machine Learning the Lessons of History      Dr. Robert Helmbold – virtual

1200 – 1300    Lunch

1300 – 1400    Penetration Division: Theory, History, Concept

                                                                                    LtC. Nathan A Jennings, PhD

1400 – 1500    Learning from History: The Army’s Future Study Program

                                                                                    LtC. Adam. L. Taliaferro

1500 – 1600    Artillery Suppression: New Analysis of Core Data – virtual

                                    Dermot Rooney (Wapentakes)

1600 – 1700    Urban Warfare (old)                           Christopher A. Lawrence (TDI) – ?

 

 

Day 3: Researching Operations

0900 – 1000    The AEF and Consolidation of Gains Operations during the Meuse-Argonne Offensive, 1918                                             Dr. Christopher Davis (UNCG)

1000 – 1100    Evaluating German Aerial Photography at the Battle of Kursk, 1943

                                                                                    Eugene Matyukhin

1100 – 1200    The Red Army’s War in Ukraine 1943-44

                                                                                    Dr. Richard Harrison

1200 – 1300    Lunch

1300 – 1400    The Decline of War Since 1950        

Dr. Michael Spagat (Royal Holloway University of London)

1400 – 1500    Drone Warfare and the Nagorno-Karabakh War of 2020

                                                                                    Dr. Alexander Kotts (ARL)

1500 – 1600    Patterns of Explosive Violence Harm in Ukraine Before and After the 24 Feb. Invasion                                                            Chiara Torelli (AOAV) – virtual

1600 – 1700    Group Discussion: Russo-Ukrainian War of 2022

 

 

 

Or Day 2 or 3: Combat Modeling

Or Day 2 or 3: Urban Warfare

Or Day 2 or 3: Air Combat Analysis

Or Day 2 or 3: Naval Combat Analysis

Summation of Who’s Who at HAAC (revised)

Our first Historical Analysis conference is occurring 27-29 September 2022. It is open invitation. The schedule is here: Schedule for the Historical Analysis Annual Conference (HAAC), 27-29 September 2022 – update 11 | Mystics & Statistics (dupuyinstitute.org).

We have 36 presentations scheduled by 25 speakers and 2 group discussions planned. We still have slots open for any volunteers who would like to present, just email me at LawrenceTDI@aol.com.

Four posts giving the background of some of the presenters are here. I have revised some of the bios on them as of today:

Who’s Who at HAAC – part 1 | Mystics & Statistics (dupuyinstitute.org)

Who’s Who at HAAC – part 2 | Mystics & Statistics (dupuyinstitute.org)

Who’s Who at HAAC – part 3 | Mystics & Statistics (dupuyinstitute.org)

Who’s Who at HAAC – part 4 | Mystics & Statistics (dupuyinstitute.org)

The conference is at 1934 Old Gallows Road, Suite 350, Vienna, VA 22182. This is basically across the street by Tysons Corner Shopping mall and the Marriot Hotel on Route 7. It is right off the Route 7 exit from 495 (the Beltway). It is at the corner of Route 7 (Leesburg Pike) and Old Gallows Road.

The cost of the conference is $150 for entire conference or $60 a day. Please pay through paypal (www.paypal.com) to SRichTDI@aol.com. I really think that is better than everyone standing in line of Tuesday morning while we collect payment for the conference. The conference is priced to cover the costs of the conference facility.

Who’s Who at HAAC – part 4

We have blogged about the work of a few of our presenters at HAAC. The schedule is here: Schedule for the Historical Analysis Annual Conference (HAAC), 27-29 September 2022 – update 11 | Mystics & Statistics (dupuyinstitute.org). Let me flag a few our most recent additions. This is our fourth post on this.

1. Matt Tompkins is Director of Intelligence Coordination at the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission. He has previously served as a Foreign Service Officer with the U.S. Department of State in Honduras, the Dominican Republic, and Guatemala, as well as intelligence, policy, and WMD assignments with the Federal Bureau of Investigation at headquarters and the San Francisco Field Office. He began his career in the U.S. Army, with service in Kosovo (2001-2) and Iraq (2003, 2004-5, 2007-8). He has a MA in Asia Pacific Studies from the University of San Francisco, a BA in Diplomacy and World Affairs from Occidental College, and was a Henry Luce Scholar at Fudan University in Shanghai, PRC. His writing and research is done as an independent researcher and PhD drop-out, and the views he expresses are his own and do not reflect those of his agency or the U.S. government. His publications are listed on his Linked in page: https://www.linkedin.com/in/mattvtom/details/publications/. He lives in Virginia with his wife, Zenia, and three children. 

2. Daniel Horvath: He is the author of Verified Victores: Top JG 52 Aces over Hungary: Verified Victories: Top JG 52 Aces over Hungary 1944-45: Horvath, Daniel, Horvath, Gabor: 9781915070876: Amazon.com: Books.

3. Dermot Rooney: With a background in psychology and defense, he has led Wapentake Systems in the UK for 19 years.

4. LtC. Adam Taliaferro: He is an Armor officer who served combat tours in Afghanistan and Iraq. He holds a MA in Defense and Strategic Studies from the Naval War College. Articles by him include: ADP 3-0: A Theory of War Disconnected from Operational Art | Small Wars Journal and he is referenced in our posts: Active Defense, Forward Defense, and A2/AD in Eastern Europe | Mystics & Statistics (dupuyinstitute.org) and U.S. Army Doctrine and Future Warfare | Mystics & Statistics (dupuyinstitute.org) and

 

Previous posts:

Who’s Who at HAAC – part 1 | Mystics & Statistics (dupuyinstitute.org)

Who’s Who at HAAC – part 2 | Mystics & Statistics (dupuyinstitute.org)

Who’s Who at HAAC – part 3 | Mystics & Statistics (dupuyinstitute.org)