Look my strategy clearly distinguishes between
- the 3-man guard posts a.k.a. fortified machine-gun nests a.k.a. pillboxes, every 333 meters along the perimeter defence-lines, either side of the route
- 40-man mobile reaction depots, every 2 kilometers along the supply road
Those are two quite different kinds of structures and so you really ought to mention which structure you are talking about when you say "forts" - guard posts or depots?
It's the guard posts along the perimeter defence lines, along with the barbed wire, minefields etc. which do the prevention of enemy infiltration towards the roads.
The mobile reaction depots are just really barracks for the troops, yes they probably will be fortified, but even describing them as 40-man forts they don't stop anything! The mobile reaction troops have to deploy
from the depots to go do the stopping, for example either routinely to go on their shift to the guard posts or in emergencies to reinforce points on the perimeter defences when they get attacked.
That's the whole idea of a perimeter defensive line. You stop the enemy there. You keep the enemy out and behind the perimeter line. That's how it is supposed to work.
Oh no, not "throughout the countryside"! Only along the main highways. Most of the countryside is outside of the perimeter defences of the main supply routes.
Yes the main highways give you a base within easy helicopter travel of any part of Afghanistan so you can mount airborne raids or any other type of aerial attack from your main bases which will be situated along the main supply routes.
Not really. Not in the case of my plan anyway. My plan can win.
Well like I said, the depots are not the stopping points and you can't just "bypass" guard posts which are 333 metres apart, even if only 1 in 3 is manned 24/7. It's a defensive line which has eyes-on every part of it the whole length of the perimeter defences, either side of the road. If the enemy starts cutting barbed wire and de-mining they are going to get noticed and attract defensive fire from the guards and their reinforcements if necessary.
Now outside the perimeter defences, which is maybe 95% of the country, "bandit country" I call it, yes the enemy will have a degree of freedom to move about, but we don't fuss too much about that. If they are annoying us, or we get good intelligence about where to hit them we call in air power. Otherwise no worries for us though I can see why Afghans might not want to live in that 95% bandit country and might prefer to live in our safe zones beside the road, but live by our security rules if they do so.
I am not sure how helicopters tie anyone down? They do the reverse - they give your raiding forces excellent mobility. They have a somewhat limited range so you need to have a base in range of the area of operations but if you do, then they are ideal for air-mobile raids - 1000 times better than parachute-dropped forces because with helicopters you can withdraw the same way you come in - with a helicopter borne force.
Look these Vietnam examples are all very interesting but I don't think I am applying a repeat of the strategy used though certain features may at first glance seem similar to you, this is purely by chance. This strategy is mine and I didn't copy it from Vietnam!
Isolated Forward Operating Bases, for example along the international Afghan / Pakistan border, hard to supply, the roads to them were not secured, they got bombed supplying them, had to supply by air drops eventually.
Yes I know that strategy was all wrong, but for the reason I am pointing out, not for the reasons you are pointing out!
Look if the population want to live in bandit country with the Taliban that is their choice. If they want shelter from the Taliban, my plan offers that in safe zones next to the secure roads.
We won't defeat the Taliban by separating them from an Afghan population which already hates their guts. We defeat them by separating the Taliban from their state sponsors - Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, UAE and Iran.
We win by the offensive part of my strategy by for example targeting Pakistani Taliban sponsoring headquarters, such as the University of Jihad and the ISI HQ. We stop aid payments to Pakistan. We also increase pressure on other state sponsors but Pakistan is the most important.
Pretty soon the state sponsors will disown those in their ranks who are supporting the Taliban and arrest them, hand them over, then the Taliban will run out of supporters and be unable to continue the fight without supplies, without new recruits etc.
But the only thing "cleared" in Afghanistan is our own military bases. Cleared but not defended particularly well considering the attacks on our air bases.
Even the supply routes we use have not been cleared. "Cleared" means "secure" means the enemy is not able to sneak onto the road and plant a road-side bomb! So all those road-side bombs are proof positive that even the supply routes we use have not been cleared!
You can't get on to building and holding until you clear and we haven't cleared, hardly at all.
Well my plan doesn't make "sweeps" into bandit country. My plan lives with up to 95% of the country being infested with enemy, but that's OK meantime.
My plan is that we
don't rely on being able to clear out the Taliban from the Afghan countryside - that's not my plan - my plan is we beat them in the capital cities of Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, UAE and Iran by taking the fight to the Taliban's state sponsors.