GUERILLA
WARFARE
by
Che Guevara
Chapter
I: General Principles of Guerrilla Warfare
1. Essence of Guerrilla
Warfare
The armed victory of the Cuban people over the Batista
dictatorship was not only the triumph of heroism as reported by the newspapers
of the world; it also forced a change in the old dogmas concerning the
conduct of the popular masses of Latin America. It showed plainly the
capacity of the people to free themselves by means of guerrilla warfare
from a government that oppresses them.
We consider that the Cuban
Revolution contributed three fundamental lessons to the conduct of revolutionary
movements in America. They are:
1. Popular forces can win a
war against the army.
2. It is not necessary to wait until all conditions for making revolution
exist; the insurrection can create them.
3. In underdeveloped America the countryside is the basic area for armed
fighting.
Of these three propositions
the first two contradict the defeatist attitude of revolutionaries or
pseudo-revolutionaries who remain inactive and take refuge in the pretext
that against a professional army nothing can be done, who sit down to
wait until in some mechanical way all necessary objective and subjective
conditions are given without working to accelerate them. As these problems
were formerly a subject of discussion in Cuba, until facts settled the
question, they are probably still much discussed in America.
Naturally, it is not to be
thought that all conditions for revolution are going to be created through
the impulse given to them by guerrilla activity. It must always be kept
in mind that there is a necessary minimum without which the establishment
and consolidation of the first center is not practicable. People must
see clearly the futility of maintaining the fight for social goals within
the framework of civil debate. When the forces of oppression come to maintain
themselves in power against established law, peace is considered already
broken.
In these conditions popular
discontent expresses itself in more active forms. An attitude of resistance
finally crystallizes in an outbreak of fighting, provoked initially by
the conduct of the authorities.
Where a government has come
into power through some form of popular vote, fraudulent or not, and maintains
at least an appearance of constitutional legality, the guerrilla outbreak
cannot be promoted, since the possibilities of peaceful struggle have
not yet been exhausted.
The third proposition is a
fundamental of strategy. It ought to be noted by those who maintain dogmatically
that the struggle of the masses is centered in city movements, entirely
forgetting the immense participation of the country people in the life
of all the underdeveloped parts of America. Of course, the struggles of
the city masses of organized workers should not be underrated; but their
real possibilities of engaging in armed struggle must be carefully analyzed
where the guarantees which customarily adorn our constitutions are suspended
or ignored. In these conditions the illegal workers' movements face enormous
dangers. They must function secretly without arms. The situation in the
open country is not so difficult. There, in places beyond the reach of
the repressive forces, the inhabitants can be supported by the armed guerrillas.
We will later make a careful
analysis of these three conclusions that stand out in the Cuban revolutionary
experience. We empha- size them now at the beginning of this work as our
fundamental contribution.
Guerrilla warfare, the basis
of the struggle of a people to redeem itself, has diverse characteristics,
different facets, even though the essential will for liberation remains
the same. It is obvious-and writers on the theme have said it many times-that
war responds to a certain series of scientific laws; whoever ignores them
will go down to defeat. Guerrilla warfare as a phase of war must be ruled
by all of these; but besides, because of its special aspects, a series
of corollary laws must also be recognized in order to carry it forward.
Though geographical and social conditions in each country determine the
mode and particular forms that guerrilla warfare will take, there are
general laws that hold for all fighting of this type.
Our task at the moment is to
find the basic principles of this kind of fighting and the rules to be
followed by peoples seeking liberation; to develop theory from facts;
to generalize and give structure to our experience for the profit of others.
Let us first consider the question:
Who are the combatants in guerrilla warfare? On one side we have a group
composed of the oppressor and his agents, the professional army, well
armed and disciplined, in many cases receiving foreign help as well as
the help of the bureaucracy in the employ of the oppressor. On the other
side are the people of the nation or region involved. It is important
to emphasize that guerrilla warfare is a war of the masses, a war of the
people. The guerrilla band is an armed nucleus, the fighting vanguard
of the people. It draws its great force from the mass of the people themselves.
The guerrilla band is not to be considered inferior to the army against
which it fights simply because it is inferior in firepower. Guerrilla
warfare is used by the side which is supported by a majority but which
possesses a much smaller number of arms for use in defense against oppression.
The guerrilla fighter needs
full help from the people of the area. This is an indispensable condition.
This is clearly seen by considering the case of bandit gangs that operate
in a region. They have all the characteristics of a guerrilla army: homogeneity,
respect for the leader, valor, knowledge of the ground, and, often, even
good understanding of the tactics to be employed. The only thing missing
is support of the people; and, inevitably, these gangs are captured and
exterminated by the public force.
Analyzing the mode of operation
of the guerrilla band, seeing its form of struggle, and understanding
its base in the masses, we can answer the question: Why does the guerrilla
fighter fight? We must come to the inevitable conclusion that the guerrilla
fighter is a social reformer, that he takes up arms responding to the
angry protest of the people against their oppressors, and that he fights
in order to change the social system that keeps all his unarmed brothers
in ignominy and misery. He launches himself against the conditions of
the reigning institutions at a particular moment and dedicates himself
with all the vigor that circumstances permit to breaking the mold of these
institutions.
When we analyze more fully
the tactic of guerrilla warfare, we will see that the guerrilla fighter
needs to have a good knowledge of the surrounding countryside, the paths
of entry and escape, the possibilities of speedy maneuver, good hiding
places; naturally, also, he must count on the support of the people. All
this indicates that the guerrilla fighter will carry out his action in
wild places of small population. Since in these places the struggle of
the people for reforms is aimed primarily and almost exclusively at changing
the social form of land ownership, the guerrilla fighter is above all
an agrarian revolutionary. He interprets the desires of the great peasant
mass to be owners of land, owners of their means of production, of their
animals, of all that which they have long yearned to call their own, of
that which constitutes their life and will also serve as their cemetery.
It should be noted that in
current interpretations there are two different types of guerrilla warfare,
one of which-a struggle complementing great regular armies such as was
the case of the Ukrainian fighters in the Soviet Union-does not enter
into this analysis. We are interested in the other type, the case of an
armed group engaged in struggle against the constituted power, whether
colonial or not, which establishes itself as the only base and which builds
itself up in rural areas. In all such cases, whatever the ideological
aims that may inspire the fight, the economic aim is determined by the
aspiration toward ownership of land.
The China of Mao begins as
an outbreak of worker groups in the South, which is defeated and almost
annihilated. It succeeds in establishing itself and begins its advance
only when, after the long march from Yenan, it takes up its base in rural
territories and makes agrarian reform its fundamental goal. The struggle
of Ho Chi Minh is based in the rice-growing peasants, who are oppressed
by the French colonial yoke; with this force it is going forward to the
defeat of the colonialists. In both cases there is a framework of patriotic
war against the Japanese invader, but the economic basis of a fight for
the land has not disappeared. In the case of Algeria, the grand idea of
Arab nationalism has its economic counterpart in the fact that nearly
all of the arable land of Algeria is utilized by a million French settlers.
In some countries, such as Puerto Rico, where the special conditions of
the island have not permitted a guerrilla outbreak, the nationalist spirit,
deeply wounded by the discrimination that is daily practiced, has as its
basis the aspiration of the peasants (even though many of them are already
a proletariat) to recover the land that the Yankee invader seized from
them. This same central idea, though in different forms, inspired the
small farmers, peasants, and slaves of the eastern estates of Cuba to
close ranks and defend together the right to possess land during the thirty-year
war of liberation.
Taking account of the possibilities
of development of guerrilla warfare, which is transformed with the increase
in the operating potential of the guerrilla band into a war of positions,
this type of warfare, despite its special character, is to be considered
as an embryo, a prelude, of the other. The possibilities of growth of
the guerrilla band and of changes in the mode of fight, until conventional
warfare is reached, are as great as the possibilities of defeating the
enemy in each of the different battles, combats, or skirmishes that take
place. Therefore, the fundamental principle is that no battle, combat,
or skirmish is to be fought unless it will be won. There is a malevolent
definition that says: "The guerrilla fighter is the Jesuit of warfare."
By this is indicated a quality of secretiveness, of treachery, of surprise
that is obviously an essential element of guerrilla warfare. It is a special
kind of Jesuitism, naturally prompted by circumstances, which necessitates
acting at certain moments in ways different from the romantic and sporting
conceptions with which we are taught to believe war is fought.
War is always a struggle in
which each contender tries to annihilate the other. Besides using force,
they will have recourse to all possible tricks and stratagems in order
to achieve the goal. Military strategy and tactics are a representation
by analysis of the objectives of the groups and of the means of achieving
these objectives. These means contemplate taking advantage of all the
weak points of the enemy. The fighting action of each individual platoon
in a large army in a war of positions will present the same characteristics
as those of the guerrilla band. It uses secretiveness, treachery, and
surprise; and when these are not present, it is because vigilance on the
other side prevents surprise. But since the guerrilla band is a division
unto itself, and since there are large zones of territory not controlled
by the enemy, it is always possible to carry out guerrilla attacks in
such a way as to assure surprise; and it is the duty of the guerrilla
fighter to do so.
"Hit and run," some
call this scornfully, and this is accurate. Hit and run, wait, lie in
ambush, again hit and run, and thus repeatedly, without giving any rest
to the enemy.
There is in all this, it would appear, a negative quality, an attitude
of retreat, of avoiding frontal fights. However, this is consequent upon
the general strategy of guerrilla warfare, which is the same in its ultimate
end as is any warfare: to win, to annihilate the enemy. Thus, it is clear
that guerrilla warfare is a phase that does not afford in itself opportunities
to arrive at complete victory. It is one of the initial phases of warfare
and will develop continuously until the guerrilla army in its steady growth
acquires the characteristics of a regular army.
At that moment it will be ready
to deal final blows to the enemy and to achieve victory. Triumph will
always be the product of a regular army, even though its origins are in
a guerrilla army. Just as the general of a division in a modern war does
not have to die in front of his soldiers, the guerrilla fighter, who is
general of himself, need not die in every battle. He is ready to give
his life, but the positive quality of this guerrilla warfare is precisely
that each one of the guerrilla fighters is ready to die, not to defend
an ideal, but rather to convert it into reality. This is the basis, the
essence of guerrilla fighting. Miraculously, a small band of men, the
armed vanguard of the great popular force that supports them, goes beyond
the immediate tactical objective, goes on decisively to achieve an ideal,
to establish a new society, to break the old molds of the outdated, and
to achieve, finally, the social justice for which they fight.
Considered thus, all these
disparaged qualities acquire a true nobility, the nobility of the end
at which they aim; and it becomes clear that we are not speaking of distorted
means of reaching an end. This fighting attitude, this attitude of not
being dismayed at any time, this inflexibility when confronting the great
problems in the final objective is also the nobility of the guerrilla
fighter.
2. Guerrilla Strategy
In guerrilla terminology, strategy is understood as the analysis of the
objectives to be achieved in light of the total military situation and
the overall ways of reaching these objectives.
To have a correct strategic
appreciation from the point of view of the guerrilla band, it is necessary
to analyze fundamentally what will be the enemy's mode of action. If the
final objective is always the complete destruction of the opposite force,
the enemy is confronted in the case of a civil war of this kind with the
standard task: he will have to achieve the total destruction of each one
of the components of the guerrilla band. The guerrilla fighter, on the
other hand, must analyze the resources which the enemy has for trying
to achieve that outcome: the means in men, in mobility, in popular support,
in armaments, in capacity of leadership on which he can count. We must
make our own strategy adequate on the basis of these studies, keeping
in mind always the final objective of defeating the enemy army.
There are fundamental aspects
to be studied: the armament, for example, and the manner of using this
armament. The value of a tank, of an airplane, in a fight of this type
must be weighed. The arms of the enemy, his ammunition, his habits must
be considered; because the principal source of provision for the guerrilla
force is precisely in enemy armaments. If there is a possibility of choice,
we should prefer the same type as that used by the enemy, since the greatest
problem of the guerrilla band is the lack of ammunition, which the opponent
must provide.
After the objectives have been
fixed and analyzed, it is necessary to study the order of the steps leading
to the achievement of the final objective. This should be planned in advance,
even though it will be modified and adjusted as the fighting develops
and unforeseen circumstances arise.
At the outset, the essential
task of the guerrilla fighter is to keep himself from being destroyed.
Little by little it will be easier for the members of the guerrilla band
or bands to adapt themselves to their form of life and to make flight
and escape from the forces that are on the offensive an easy task, because
it is performed daily. When this condition is reached, the guerrilla,
having taken up inaccessible positions out of reach of the enemy, or having
assembled forces that deter the enemy from attacking, ought to proceed
to the gradual weakening of the enemy. This will be carried out at first
at those points nearest to the points of active warfare against the guerrilla
band and later will be taken deeper into enemy territory, attacking his
communications, later attacking or harassing his bases of operations and
his central bases, tormenting him on all sides to the full extent of the
capabilities of the guerrilla forces.
The blows should be continuous.
The enemy soldier in a zone of operations ought not to be allowed to sleep;
his outposts ought to be attacked and liquidated systematically. At every
moment the impression ought to be created that he is surrounded by a complete
circle. In wooded and broken areas this effort should be maintained both
day and night; in open zones that are easily penetrated by enemy patrols,
at night only. In order to do all this the absolute cooperation of the
people and a perfect knowledge of the ground are necessary. These two
necessities affect every minute of the life of the guerrilla fighter.
Therefore, along with centers for study of present and future zones of
operations, intensive popular work must be undertaken to explain the motives
of the revolution, its ends, and to spread the incontrovertible truth
that victory of the enemy against the people is finally impossible. Whoever
does not feel this undoubted truth cannot be a guerrilla fighter.
This popular work should at
first be aimed at securing secrecy; that is, each peasant, each member
of the society in which action is taking place, will be asked not to mention
what he sees and hears; later, help will be sought from inhabitants whose
loyalty to the revolution offers greater guarantees; still later, use
will be made of these persons in missions of contact, for transporting
goods or arms, as guides in the zones familiar to them; still later, it
is possible to arrive at organized mass action in the centers of work,
of which the final result will be the general strike.
The strike is a most important
factor in civil war, but in order to reach it a series of complementary
conditions are necessary which do not always exist and which very rarely
come to exist spontaneously. It is necessary to create these essential
conditions, basically by explaining the purposes of the revolution and
by demonstrating the forces of the people and their possibilities.
It is also possible to have
recourse to certain very homogeneous groups, which must have shown their
efficacy previously in less dangerous tasks, in order to make use of another
of the terrible arms of the guerrilla band, sabotage. It is possible to
paralyze entire armies, to suspend the industrial life of a zone, leaving
the inhabitants of a city without factories, without light, without water,
without communications of any kind, without being able to risk travel
by highway except at certain hours. If all this is achieved, the morale
of the enemy falls, the morale of his combatant units weakens, and the
fruit ripens for plucking at a precise moment.
All this presupposes an increase
in the territory included within the guerrilla action, but an excessive
increase of this territory is to be avoided. It is essential always to
preserve a strong base of operations and to continue strengthening it
during the course of the war. Within this territory, measures of indoctrination
of the inhabitants of the zone should be utilized; measures of quarantine
should be taken against the irreconcilable enemies of the revolution;
all the purely defensive measures, such as trenches, mines, and communications,
should be perfected.
When the guerrilla band has
reached a respectable power in arms and in number of combatants, it ought
to proceed to the formation of new columns. This is an act similar to
that of the beehive when at a given moment it releases a new queen, who
goes to another region with a part of the swarm. The mother hive with
the most notable guerrilla chief will stay in the less dangerous places,
while the new columns will penetrate other enemy territories following
the cycle already described.
A moment will arrive in which
the territory occupied by the columns is too small for them; and in the
advance toward regions solidly defended by the enemy, it will be necessary
to confront powerful forces. At that instant the columns join, they offer
a compact fighting front, and a war of positions is reached, a war carried
on by regular armies. However, the former guerrilla army cannot cut itself
off from its base, and it should create new guerrilla bands behind the
enemy acting in the same way as the original bands operated earlier, proceeding
thus to penetrate enemy territory until it is dominated.
It is thus that guerrillas
reach the stage of attack, of the encirclement of fortified bases, of
the defeat of reinforcements, of mass action, ever more ardent, in the
whole national territory, arriving finally at the objective of the war:
victory.
3. Guerrilla Tactics
In military language, tactics are the practical methods of achieving the
grand strategic objectives.
In one sense they complement strategy and in another they are more specific
rules within it. As means, tactics are much more variable, much more flexible
than the final objectives, and they should be adjusted continually during
the struggle. There are tactical objectives that remain constant throughout
a war and others that vary. The first thing to be considered is the adjusting
of guerrilla action to the action of the enemy.
The fundamental characteristic
of a guerrilla band is mobility. This permits it in a few minutes to move
far from a specific theatre and in a few hours far even from the region,
if that becomes necessary; permits it constantly to change front and avoid
any type of encirclement. As the circumstances of the war require, the
guerrilla band can dedicate itself exclusively to fleeing from an encirclement
which is the enemy's only way of forcing the band into a decisive fight
that could be unfavorable; it can also change the battle into a counter-
encirclement (small bands of men are presumably surrounded by the enemy
when suddenly the enemy is surrounded by stronger contingents; or men
located in a safe place serve as a lure, leading to the encirclement and
annihilation of the entire troops and supply of an attacking force). Characteristic
of this war of mobility is the so-called minuet, named from the analogy
with the dance: the guerrilla bands encircle an enemy position, an advancing
column, for example; they encircle it completely from the four points
of the compass, with five or six men in each place, far enough away to
avoid being encircled themselves; the fight is started at any one of the
points, and the army moves toward it; the guerrilla band then retreats,
always maintaining visual contact, and initiates its attack from another
point. The army will repeat its action and the guerrilla band, the same.
Thus, successively, it is possible to keep an enemy column immobilized,
forcing it to expend large quantities of ammunition and weakening the
morale of its troops without incurring great dangers.
This same tactic can be applied
at nighttime, closing in more and showing greater aggressiveness, because
in these conditions counter- encirclement is much more difficult. Movement
by night is another important characteristic of the guerrilla band, enabling
it to advance into position for an attack and, where the danger of betrayal
exists, to mobilize in new territory. The numerical inferiority of the
guerrilla makes it necessary that attacks always be carried out by surprise;
this great advantage is what permits the guerrilla fighter to inflict
losses on the enemy without suffering losses. In a fight between a hundred
men on one side and ten on the other, losses are not equal where there
is one casualty on each side. The enemy loss is always reparable; it amounts
to only one percent of his effectives. The loss of the guerrilla band
requires more time to be repaired because it involves a soldier of high
specialization and is ten percent of the operating forces.
A dead soldier of the guerrillas
ought never to be left with his arms and his ammunition. The duty of every
guerrilla soldier whenever a companion falls is to recover immediately
these extremely precious elements of the fight. In fact, the care which
must be taken of ammunition and the method of using it are further characteristics
of guerrilla warfare. In any combat between a regular force and a guerrilla
band it is always possible to know one from the other by their different
manner of fire: a great amount of firing on the part of the regular army,
sporadic and accurate shots on the part of the guerrillas.
Once one of our heroes, now
dead, had to employ his machine guns for nearly five minutes, burst after
burst, in order to slow up the advance of enemy soldiers. This fact caused
considerable confusion in our forces, because they assumed from the rhythm
of fire that that key position must have been taken by the enemy, since
this was one of the rare occasions where departure from the rule of saving
fire had been called for because of the importance of the point being
defended.
Another fundamental characteristic
of the guerrilla soldier is his flexibility, his ability to adapt himself
to all circumstances, and to convert to his service all of the accidents
of the action. Against the rigidity of classical methods of fighting,
the guerrilla fighter invents his own tactics at every minute
of the fight and constanly surprises the enemy. In the first place, there
are only elastic positions, specific places that the enemy cannot pass,
and places of diverting him. Frequently, the enemy, after easily overcoming
difficulties in a gradual advance, is surprised to find himself suddenly
and solidly detained without possibilities of moving forward. This is due
to the fact that the guerrilla-defended positions, when they have been selected
on the basis of a careful study of the ground, are invulnerable. It is not
the number of attacking soldiers that counts, but the number of defending
soldiers. Once that number has been placed there, it can nearly always hold
off a battalion with success. It is a major task of the chiefs to choose
well the moment and the place for defending a position without retreat.
The form of attack of a guerrilla
army is also different; starting with surprise and fury, irresistible,
it suddenly converts itself into total passivity.
The surviving enemy, resting,
believes that the attacker has departed; he begins to relax, to return
to the routine life of the camp or of the fortress, when suddenly a new
attack bursts forth in another place, with the same characteristics, while
the main body of the guerrilla band lies in wait to intercept reinforcements.
At other times an outpost defending the camp will be suddenly attacked
by the guerrilla, dominated, and captured. The fundamental thing is surprise
and rapidity of attack.
Acts of sabotage are very important.
It is necessary to distinguish clearly between sabotage, a revolutionary
and highly effective method of warfare, and terrorism, a measure that
is generally ineffective and indiscriminate in its results, since it often
makes victims of innocent people and destroys a large number of lives
that would be valuable to the revolution. Terrorism should be considered
a valuable tactic when it is used to put to death some noted leader of
the oppressing forces well known for his cruelty, his efficiency in repression,
or other quality that makes his elimination useful. But the killing of
persons of small importance is never advisable, since it brings on an
increase of reprisals, including deaths.
There is one point very much
in controversy in opinions about terrorism. Many consider that its use,
by provoking police oppression, hinders all more or less legal or semiclandestine
contact with the masses and makes impossible unification for actions that
will be necessary at a critical moment. This is correct; but it also happens
that in a civil war the repression by the governmental power in certain
towns is already so great that, in fact, every type of legal action is
suppressed already, and any action of the masses that is not supported
by arms is impossible. It is therefore necessary to be circumspect in
adopting methods of this type and to consider the consequences that they
may bring for the revolution. At any rate, well-managed sabotage is always
a very effective arm, though it should not be employed to put means of
production out of action, leaving a sector of the population paralyzed
(and thus without work) unless this paralysis affects the normal life
of the society. It is ridiculous to carry out sabotage against a soft-drink
factory, but it is absolutely correct and advisable to carry out sabotage
against a power plant. In the first case, a certain number of workers
are put out of a job but nothing is done to modify the rhythm of industrial
life; in the second case, there will again be displaced workers, but this
is entirely justified by the paralysis of the life of the region. We will
return to the technique of sabotage later.
One of the favorite arms of
the enemy army, supposed to be decisive in modern times, is aviation.
Nevertheless, this has no use whatsoever during the period that guerrilla
warfare is in its first stages, with small concentrations of men in rugged
places. The utility of aviation lies in the systematic destruction of
visible and organized defenses; and for this there must be large concentrations
of men who construct these defenses, something that does not exist in
this type of warfare. Planes are also potent against marches by columns
through level places or places without cover; however, this latter danger
is easily avoided by carrying out the marches at night.
One of the weakest points of
the enemy is transportation by road and railroad. It is virtually impossible
to maintain a vigil yard by yard over a transport line, a road, or a railroad.
At any point a considerable amount of explosive charge can be planted
that will make the road impassable; or by exploding it at the moment that
a vehicle passes, a considerable loss in lives and materiel to the enemy
is caused at the same time that the road is cut.
The sources of explosives are
varied. They can be brought from other zones; or use can be made of bombs
seized from the dictatorship, though these do not always work; or they
can be manufactured in secret laboratories within the guerrilla zone.
The technique of setting them off is quite varied; their manufacture also
depends upon the conditions of the guerrilla band.
In our laboratory we made powder
which we used as a cap, and we invented various devices for exploding
the mines at the desired moment. The ones that gave the best results were
electric. The first mine that we exploded was a bomb dropped from an aircraft
of the dictatorship. We adapted it by inserting various caps and adding
a gun with the trigger pulled by a cord. At the moment that an enemy truck
passed, the weapon was fired to set off the explosion.
These techniques can be developed
to a high degree. We have information that in Algeria, for example, tele-explosive
mines, that is, mines exploded by radio at great distances from the point
where they are located, are being used today against the French colonial
power.
The technique of lying in ambush
along roads in order to explode mines and annihilate survivors is one
of the most remunerative in point of ammunition and arms. The surprised
enemy does not use his ammunition and has no time to flee, so with a small
expenditure of ammunition large results are achieved.
As blows are dealt the enemy,
he also changes his tactics, and in place of isolated trucks, veritable
motorized columns move. However, by choosing the ground well, the same
result can be produced by breaking the column and concentrating forces
on one vehicle. In these cases the essential elements of guerrilla tactics
must always be kept in mind. These are: perfect knowledge of the ground;
surveillance and foresight as to the lines of escape; vigilance over all
the secondary roads that can bring support to the point of attack; intimacy
with people in the zone so as to have sure help from them in respect to
supplies, transport, and temporary or permanent hiding places if it becomes
necessary to leave wounded companions behind; numerical superiority at
a chosen point of action; total mobility; and the possibility of counting
on reserves.
If all these tactical requisites
are fulfilled, surprise attack along the lines of communication of the
enemy yields notable dividends.
A fundamental part of guerrilla
tactics is the treatment accorded the people of the zone. Even the treatment
accorded the enemy is important; the norm to be followed should be an
absolute inflexibility at the time of attack, an absolute inflexibility
toward all the despicable elements that resort to informing and assassination,
and clemency as absolute as possible toward the enemy soldiers who go
into the fight performing or believing that they perform a military duty.
It is a good policy, so long as there are no considerable bases of operations
and invulnerable places, to take no prisoners. Survivors ought to be set
free. The wounded should be cared for with all possible resources at the
time of the action. Conduct toward the civil population ought to be regulated
by a large respect for all the rules and traditions of the people of the
zone, in order to demonstrate effectively, with deeds, the moral superiority
of the guerrilla fighter over the oppressing soldier. Except in special
situations, there ought to be no execution of justice without giving the
criminal an opportunity to clear himself.
4. Warfare on Favorable
Ground
As we have already said, guerrilla fighting will not always take place
in country most favorable to the employment of its tactics; but when it
does, that is, when the guerrilla band is located in zones difficult to
reach, either because of dense forests, steep mountains, impassable deserts
or marshes, the general tactics, based on the fundamental postulates of
guerrilla warfare, must always be the same.
An important point to consider
is the moment for making contact with the enemy. If the zone is so thick,
so difficult that an organized army can never reach it, the guerrilla
band should advance to the regions where the army can arrive and where
there will be a possibility of combat.
As soon as the survival of
the guerrilla band has been assured, it should fight; it must constantly
go out from its refuge to fight. Its mobility does not have to be as great
as in those cases where the ground is unfavorable; it must adjust itself
to the capabilities of the enemy, but it is not necessary to be able to
move as quickly as in places where the enemy can concentrate a large number
of men in a few minutes. Neither is the nocturnal character of this warfare
so important; it will be possible in many cases to carry out daytime operations,
especially mobilizations by day, though subjected to enemy observation
by land and air. It is also possible to persist in a military action for
a much longer time, above all in the mountains; it is possible to undertake
battles of long duration with very few men, and it is very probable that
the arrival of enemy reinforcements at the scene of the fight can be prevented.
A close watch over the points
of access is, however, an axiom never to be forgotten by the guerrilla
fighter. His aggressiveness (on account of the difficulties that the enemy
faces in bringing up reinforcements) can be greater, he can approach the
enemy more closely, fight much more directly, more frontally, and for
a longer time, though these rules may be qualified by various circumstances,
such, for example, as the amount of ammunition.
Fighting on favorable ground
and particularly in the mountains presents many advantages but also the
inconvenience that it is difficult to capture in a single operation a
considerable quantity of arms and ammunition, owing to the precautions
that the enemy takes in these regions. (The guerrilla soldier must never
forget the fact that it is the enemy that must serve as his source of
supply of ammunition and arms.) But much more rapidly than in unfavorable
ground the guerrilla band will here be able to "dig in," that
is, to form a base capable of engaging in a war of positions, where small
industries may be installed as they are needed, as well as hospitals,
centers for education and training, storage facilities, organs of propaganda,
etc., adequately protected from aviation or from long-range artillery.
The guerrilla band in these
conditions can number many more personnel; there will be noncombatants
and perhaps even a system of training in the use of the arms that eventually
are to fall into the power of the guerrilla army.
The number of men that a guerrilla
band can have is a matter of extremely flexible calculation adapted to
the territory, to the means available of acquiring supplies, to the mass
flights of oppressed people from other zones, to the arms available, to
the necessities of organization. But, in any case, it is much more practicable
to establish a base and expand with the support of new combatant elements.
The radius of action of a guerrilla
band of this type can be as wide as conditions or the operations of other
bands in adjacent territory permit. The range will be limited by the time
that it takes to arrive at a zone of security from the zone of operation;
assuming that marches must be made at night, it will not be possible to
operate more than five or six hours away from a point of maximum security.
Small guerrilla bands that work constantly at weakening a territory can
go farther away from the zone of security.
The arms preferable for this
type of warfare are long-range weapons requiring a small expenditure of
bullets, supported by a group of automatic or semiautomatic arms. Of the
rifles and machine guns that exist in the markets of the United States,
one of the best is the M-1 rifle, called the Garand. However, this should
be used only by people with some experience, since it has the disadvantage
of expending too much ammunition. Medium-heavy arms, such as tripod machine
guns, can be used on favorable ground, affording a greater margin of security
for the weapon and its personnel, but they ought always to be a means
of repelling an enemy and not for attack.
An ideal composition for a
guerrilla band of 25 men would be: 10 to 15 single-shot rifles and about
10 automatic arms between Garands and hand machine guns, including light
and easily portable automatic arms, such as the Browning or the more modern
Belgian FAL and M-14 automatic rifles. Among the hand machine guns the
best are those of nine millimeters, which permit a larger transport of
ammunition. The simpler its construction the better, because this increases
the ease of switching parts. All this must be adjusted to the armament
that the enemy uses, since the ammunition that he employs is what we are
going to use when his arms fall into our hands. It is practically impossible
for heavy arms to be used. Aircraft cannot see anything and cease to operate;
tanks and cannons cannot do much owing to the difficulties of advancing
in these zones.
A very important consideration
is supply. In general, the zones of difficult access for this very reason
present special problems, since there are few peasants, and therefore
animal and food supplies are scarce. It is necessary to maintain stable
lines of communication in order to be able always to count on a minimum
of food, stockpiled, in the event of any disagreeable development.
In this kind of zone of operations
the possibilities of sabotage on a large scale are generally not present;
with the inaccessibility goes a lack of constructions, telephone lines,
aqueducts, etc., that could be damaged by direct action.
For supply purposes it is important
to have animals, among which the mule is the best in rough country. Adequate
pasturage permitting good nutrition is essential. The mule can pass through
extremely hilly country impossible for other animals. In the most difficult
situations it is necessary to resort to transport by men. Each individual
can carry twenty-five kilograms for many hours daily and for many days.
The lines of communication
with the exterior should include a series of intermediate points manned
by people of complete reliability, where products can be stored and where
contacts can go to hide themselves at critical times. Internal lines of
communication can also be created. Their extension will be determined
by the stage of development reached by the guerrilla band. In some zones
of operations in the recent Cuban war, telephone lines of many kilometers
of length were established, roads were built, and a messenger service
maintained sufficient to cover all zones in a minimum of time.
There are also other possible
means of communication, not used in the Cuban war but perfectly applicable,
such as smoke signals, signals with sunshine reflected by mirrors, and
carrier pigeons.
The vital necessities of the
guerrillas are to maintain their arms in good condition, to capture ammunition,
and, above everything else, to have adequate shoes. The first manufacturing
efforts should therefore be directed toward these objectives. Shoe factories
can initially be cobbler installations that replace half soles on old
shoes, expanding afterwards into a series of organized factories with
a good average daily production of
shoes. The manufacture of powder is fairly simple; and much can be accomplished
by having a small laboratory and bringing in the necessary materials from
outside. Mined areas constitute a grave danger for the enemy; large areas
can be mined for simultaneous explosion, destroying up to hundreds of men.
5. Warfare on Unfavorable
Ground
In order to carry on warfare in country that is not very hilly, lacks
forests, and has many roads, all the fundamental requisites of guerrilla
warfare must be observed; only the forms will be altered. The quantity,
not the quality, of guerrilla warfare will change. For example, following
the same order as before, the mobility of this type of guerrilla should
be extraordinary; strikes should be made preferably at night; they should
be extremely rapid, but the guerrilla should move to places different
from the starting point, the farthest possible from the scene of action,
assuming that there is no place secure from the repressive forces that
the guerrilla can use as its garrison.
A man can walk between 30 and
50 kilometers during the night hours; it is possible also to march during
the first hours of daylight, unless the zones of operation are closely
watched or there is danger that people in the vicinity, seeing the passing
troops, will notify the pursuing army of the location of the guerrilla
band and its route. It is always preferable in these cases to operate
at night with the greatest possible silence both before and after the
action; the first hours of night are best. Here, too, there are exceptions
to the general rule, since at times the dawn hours will be preferable.
It is never wise to habituate the enemy to a certain form of warfare;
it is necessary to vary constantly the places, the hours, and the forms
of operation.
We have already said that the
action cannot endure for long, but must be rapid; it must be of a high
degree of effectiveness, last a few minutes, and be followed by an immediate
withdrawal. The arms employed here will not be the same as in the case
of actions on favorable ground; a large quantity of automatic weapons
is to be preferred. In night attacks, marksmanship is not the determining
factor, but rather concentration of fire; the more automatic arms firing
at short distance, the more possibilities there are of annihilating the
enemy.
Also, the use of mines in roads
and the destruction of bridges are tactics of great importance. Attacks
by the guerrilla will be less aggressive so far as the persistence and
continuation are concerned, but they can be very violent, and they can
utilize different arms, such as mines and the shotgun. Against open vehicles
heavily loaded with men, which is the usual method of transporting troops,
and even against closed vehicles that do not have special defenses-against
buses, for example-the shotgun is a tremendous weapon. A shotgun loaded
with large shot is the most effective. This is not a secret of guerrilla
fighters; it is used also in big wars. The Americans used shotgun platoons
armed with high-quality weapons and bayonets for assaulting machine-gun
nests.
There is an important problem
to explain, that of ammunition; this will almost always be taken from
the enemy. It is therefore necessary to strike blows where there will
be the absolute assurance of restoring the ammunition expended, unless
there are large reserves in secure places. In other words, an annihilating
attack against a group of men is not to be undertaken at the risk of expending
all the ammunition without being able to replace it. Always in guerrilla
tactics it is necessary to keep in mind the grave problem of procuring
the war materiel necessary for continuing the fight. For this reason,
guerrilla arms ought to be the same as those used by the enemy, except
for weapons such as revolvers and shotguns, for which the ammunition can
be obtained in the zone itself or in the cities.
The number of men that a guerrilla
band of this type should include does not exceed ten to fifteen. In forming
a single combat unit it is of great importance always to consider the
limitations on numbers: ten, twelve, fifteen men can hide anywhere and
at the same time can help each other in putting up a powerful resistance
to the enemy. Four or five would perhaps be too small a number, but when
the number exceeds ten, the possibility that the enemy will discover them
in their camp or on the march is much greater.
Remember that the velocity
of the guerrilla band on the march is equal to the velocity of its slowest
man. It is more difficult to find uniformity of marching speed with twenty,
thirty, or forty men than with ten. And the guerrilla fighter on the plain
must be fundamentally a runner. Here the practice of hitting and running
acquires its maximum use. The guerrilla bands on the plain suffer the
enormous inconvenience of being subject to a rapid encirclement and of
not having sure places where they can set up a firm resistance; therefore,
they must live in conditions of absolute secrecy for a long time, since
it would be dangerous to trust any neighbor whose fidelity is not perfectly
established. The reprisals of the enemy are so violent, usually so brutal,
inflicted not only on the head of the family but frequently on the women
and children as well, that pressure on individuals lacking firmness may
result at any moment in their giving way and revealing information as
to where the guerrilla band is located and how it is operating. This would
immediately produce an encirclement with consequences always disagreeable,
although not necessarily fatal. When conditions, the quantity of arms,
and the state of insurrection of the people call for an increase in the
number of men, the guerrilla band should be divided. If it is necessary,
all can rejoin at a given moment to deal a blow, but in such a way that
immediately afterwards they can disperse toward separate zones, again
divided into small groups of ten, twelve, or fifteen men.
It is entirely feasible to
organize whole armies under a single command and to assure respect and
obedience to this command without the necessity of being in a single group.
Therefore, the election of the guerrilla chiefs and the certainty that
they coordinate ideologically and personally with the overall chief of
the zone are very important.
The bazooka is a heavy weapon
that can be used by the guerrilla band because of its easy portability
and operation. Today the rifle- fired anti-tank grenade can replace it.
Naturally, it will be a weapon taken from the enemy. The bazooka is ideal
for firing on armored vehicles, and even on unarmored vehicles that are
loaded with troops, and for taking small military bases of few men in
a short time; but it is important to point out that not more than three
shells per man can be carried, and this only with considerable exertion.
As for the utilization of heavy
arms taken from the enemy, naturally, nothing is to be scorned. But there
are weapons such as the tripod machine gun, the heavy fifty-millimeter
machine gun, etc., that, when captured, can be utilized with a willingness
to lose them again. In other words, in the unfavorable conditions that
we are now analyzing, a battle to defend a heavy machine gun or other
weapon of this type cannot be allowed; they are simply to be used until
the tactical moment when they must be abandoned. In our Cuban war of liberation,
to abandon a weapon constituted a grave offense, and there was never any
case where the necessity arose. Nevertheless, we mention this case in
order to explain clearly the only situation in which abandonment would
not constitute an occasion for reproaches. On unfavorable ground, the
guerrilla weapon is the personal weapon of rapid fire.
Easy access to the zone usually
means that it will be habitable and that there will be a peasant population
in these places. This facilitates supply enormously. Having trustworthy
people and making contact with establishments that provide supplies to
the population, it is possible to maintain a guerrilla band perfectly
well without having to devote time or money to long and dangerous lines
of communication. Also, it is well to reiterate that the smaller the number
of men, the easier it will be to procure food for them. Essential supplies
such as bedding, waterproof material, mosquito netting, shoes, medicines,
and food will be found directly in the zone, since they are things of
daily use by its inhabitants.
Communications will be much
easier in the sense of being able to count on a larger number of men and
more roads; but they will be more difficult as a problem of security for
messages between distant points, since it will be necessary to rely on
a series of contacts that have to be trusted. There will be the danger
of an eventual capture of one of the messengers, who are constantly crossing
enemy zones. If the messages are of small importance, they should be oral;
if of great importance, code writing should be used. Experience shows
that transmission by word of mouth greatly distorts any communication.
For these same reasons, manufacture
will have much less importance, at the same time that it would be much
more difficult to carry it out. It will not be possible to have factories
making shoes or arms. Practically speaking, manufacture will have to be
limited to small shops, carefully hidden, where shotgun shells can be
recharged and mines, simple grenades, and other minimum necessities of
the moment manufactured. On the other hand, it is possible to make use
of all the friendly shops of the zone for such work as is necessary.
This brings us to two consequences
that flow logically from what has been said. One of them is that the favorable
conditions for establishing a permanent camp in guerrilla warfare are
inverse to the degree of productive development of a place. All favorable
conditions, all facilities of life normally induce men to settle; but
for the guerrilla band the opposite is the case. The more facilities there
are for social life, the more nomadic, the more uncertain the life of
the guerrilla fighter. These really are the results of one and the same
principle. The title of this section is "Warfare on Unfavorable Ground,"
because everything that is favorable to human life, communications, urban
and semiurban concentrations of large numbers of people, land easily worked
by machine: all these place the guerrilla fighter in a disadvantageous
situation.
The second conclusion is that
if guerrilla fighting must include the extremely important factor of work
on the masses, this work is even more important in the unfavorable zones,
where a single enemy attack can produce a catastrophe. Indoctrination
should be continuous, and so should be the struggle for unity of the workers,
of the peasants, and of other social classes that live in the zone, in
order to achieve toward the guerrilla fighters a maximum homogeneity of
attitude. This task with the masses, this constant work at the huge problem
of relations of the guerrilla band with the inhabitants of the zone, must
also govern the attitude to be taken toward the case of an individual
recalcitrant enemy soldier: he should be eliminated without hesitation
when he is dangerous. In this respect the guerrilla band must be drastic.
Enemies cannot be permitted to exist within the zone of operations in
places that offer no security.
6. Suburban Warfare
If during the war the guerrilla bands close in on cities and penetrate
the surrounding country in such a way as to be able to esta-blish themselves
in conditions of some security, it will be necessary to give these suburban
bands a special education, or rather, a special organization.
It is fundamental to recognize
that a suburban guerrilla band can never spring up of its own accord.
It will be born only after certain conditions necessary for its survival
have been created. Therefore, the suburban guerrilla will always be under
the direct orders of chiefs located in another zone. The function of this
guerrilla band will not be to carry out independent actions but to coordinate
its activities with overall strategic plans in such a way as to support
the action of larger groups situated in another area, contributing specifically
to the success of a fixed tactical objective, without the operational
freedom of guerrilla bands of the other types. For example, a suburban
band will not be able to choose among the operations of destroying telephone
lines, moving to make attacks in another locality, and surprising a patrol
of soldiers on a distant road; it will do exactly what it is told. If
its function is to cut down telephone poles or electric wires, to destroy
sewers, railroads, or water mains, it will limit itself to carrying out
these tasks efficiently.
It ought not to number more
than four or five men. The limitation on numbers is important, because
the suburban guerrilla must be considered as situated in exceptionally
unfavorable ground, where the vigilance of the enemy will be much greater
and the possibilities of reprisals as well as of betrayal are increased
enormously. Another aggravating circumstance is that the suburban guerrilla
band cannot depart far from the places where it is going to operate. To
speed of action and withdrawal there must be added a limitation on the
distance of withdrawal from the scene of action and the need to remain
totally hidden during the daytime. This is a nocturnal guerrilla band
in the extreme, without possibilities of changing its manner of operating
until the insurrection is so far advanced that it can take part as an
active combatant in the siege of the city.
The essential qualities of
the guerrilla fighter in this situation are discipline (perhaps in the
highest degree of all) and discretion. He cannot count on more than two
or three friendly houses that will provide food; it is almost certain
that an encirclement in these conditions will be equivalent to death.
Weapons, furthermore, will not be of the same kind as those of the other
groups. They will be for personal defense, of the type that do not hinder
a rapid flight or betray a secure hiding place. As their armament the
band ought to have not more than one carbine or one sawed-off shotgun,
or perhaps two, with pistols for the other members.
They will concentrate their
action on prescribed sabotage and never carry out armed attacks, except
by surprising one or two members or agents of the enemy troops.
For sabotage they need a full
set of instruments. The guerrilla fighter must have good saws, large quantities
of dynamite, picks and shovels, apparatus for lifting rails, and, in general,
adequate mechanical equipment for the work to be carried out. This should
be hidden in places that are secure but easily accessible to the hands
that will need to use it.
If there is more than one guerrilla
band, they will all be under a single chief who will give orders as to
the necessary tasks through contacts of proven trustworthiness who live
openly as ordinary citizens. In certain cases the guerrilla fighter will
be able to maintain his peacetime work, but this is very difficult. Practically
speaking, the suburban guerrilla band is a group of men who are already
outside the law, in a condition of war, situated as unfavorably as we
have described.
The importance of a suburban
struggle has usually been under-estimated; it is really very great. A
good operation of this type extended over a wide area paralyzes almost
completely the commercial and industrial life of the sector and places
the entire population in a situation of unrest, of anguish, almost of
impatience for the development of violent events that will relieve the
period of suspense. If, from the first moment of the war, thought is taken
for the future possibility of this type of fight and an organization of
specialists started, a much more rapid action will be assured, and with
it a saving of lives and of the priceless time of the nation.
Thanx to Toni
Moyer of Scholarly Resources.
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