The
Katyn massacre by the
Soviet Union against Polish military officers. As Polish law required every university graduate to be a reserve officer, executing the officers among the Polish
POWs allowed
Lavrentiy Beria to stunt Polish science, culture and leadership.[citation needed]
In
nuclear warfare theory, a decapitation strike is a
pre-emptive first strike attack that aims to destabilize an opponent's military and civil leadership structure[5] in the hope that it will severely degrade or destroy its capacity for
nuclear retaliation. It is essentially a subset of a
counterforce strike but whereas a counterforce strike seeks to destroy weapons directly, a decapitation strike is designed to remove an enemy's ability to use its weapons.
Strategies against decapitation strikes include the following:
Distributed command and control structures.
Dispersal of political leadership and military leadership in times of tension.
Delegation of
ICBM/
SLBM launch capability to local commanders in the event of a decapitation strike.[6]
Distributed and diverse launch mechanisms.
A failed decapitation strike carries the risk of immediate,
massive retaliation by the targeted opponent. Many countries with nuclear weapons specifically plan to prevent decapitation strikes by employing
second-strike capabilities. Such countries may have mobile land-based launch, sea launch, air launch, and underground ballistic missile launch facilities so that a nuclear attack on one area of the country will not totally negate its ability to retaliate.
Other nuclear warfare doctrines explicitly exclude decapitation strikes on the basis that it is better to preserve the adversary's command and control structures so that a single authority remains that is capable of negotiating a
surrender or
ceasefire. Implementing
fail-deadly mechanisms can be a way to deter decapitation strikes and respond to successful decapitation strikes.
Conventional warfare, assassination and terrorist acts
Decapitation strikes have been employed in as a strategy in
conventional warfare. The term has been used to describe the
assassination of a government's entire leadership group or a nation's
royal family.
The U.S. and its
NATO allies have, and continue to pursue this strategy in its efforts to dismantle militant
Islamic fundamentalist networks, such as
Al-Qaeda and
ISIL, that threaten the United States and allies.[10]
November 9, 1939: Attempt on German Führer
Adolf Hitler's life in the
Burgerbräukeller in
Munich by Swabian carpenter
Georg Elser, using a
time bomb in order to cripple the Third Reich and its war effort. Several died, but Hitler escaped due to a change in schedule, leaving the rostrum 13 minutes before detonation.
July 20, 1944:
Claus von Stauffenberg attempted to
assassinate Hitler and his inner circle of advisers by a suitcase bomb as part of a broader military coup d'état against the
Nazi government, which ultimately failed.
In recent warfare,
unmanned aerial vehicles, or drones, are popularly used for decapitation strikes against terrorist and insurgent groups. Drones are most effective in areas with inadequate air defense. There are mixed scholarly opinions whether or not decapitation strikes via drones effectively degrade the capabilities of these groups.[11]
Some military strategists, like
General Michael Flynn, have argued that the experience gained by the American and
Coalition military experience from fighting the
Taliban insurgency in Afghanistan was in support of kill or capture operations, but that they would be ineffective without a full understanding of how they would affect the local political landscape in the country.[12]
Robert Pape has argued that decapitation is a relatively ineffective strategy. He writes that decapitation is a seductive strategy as it promises "to solve conflicts quickly and cheaply with... little collateral damage, and minimal or no friendly casualties", but decapitation strikes frequently fail or are not likely to produce the intended consequences even if successful.[13]
Counterterrorism theorists
Max Abrahms and Jochen Mierau argue that leadership decapitation in a terrorist or rebel group has the tendency to create disorder within the group, but find decapitation ineffective because group disorder can often lead to politically ineffective, unfocused attacks on civilians. The two conclude that "[t]his change in the internal composition of militant groups may affect the quality and hence selectivity of their violence." [14]
One tactic that is sometimes used to inform the target selection for decapitation strikes is
social network analysis. This tactic involves identifying and eliminating higher ranked members in a hierarchically arranged rebel or terrorist group by targeting lower members first, and using intel gained in initial strikes to identify an organization's leadership. Some strategists, like Generals
David Petraeus and
Stanley McChrystal, have also called for dedicated task units that are non-hierarchical and can be reorganized, in order to face similar distributed or decentralized terrorist groups.[15] Others, however, argue that decapitation strikes combined with social network analysis are more than unproductive, but can prolong a conflict due to their habit of eliminating rebel or terrorist leaders who are the most capable peace negotiators or have the potential to advance communities hardest hit by terror campaigns after the cessation of hostilities.[16]
^Blinka, David S. (2008). Re-creating Armenia: America and the memory of the Armenian genocide. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press. p. 31. In what scholars commonly refer to as the decapitation strike on April 24, 1915...
^Knoke, David (2013). ""It Takes a Network": The Rise and Fall of Social Network Analysis in U.S. Army Counterinsurgency Doctrine". Connections. 33: 2–10.
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