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06-04-2004, 01:27 PM
The Art of Naming Operations
GREGORY C. SIEMINSKI
Shortly after word spread among key military leaders that President Bush had
ordered the invasion of Panama, Lieutenant General Thomas Kelly, Operations
Officer on the Joint Staff, received a call from General James Lindsay,
Commander-in-Chief (CINC), Special Operations Command. His call did not concern
some last-minute change in the invasion plan; rather, it concerned a seemingly
insignificant detail of the operation: its name. "Do you want your grandchildren
to say you were in Blue Spoon?" he asked.[1] Lieutenant General Kelly agreed
that the name should be changed. After hanging up the phone, General Kelly
discussed alternatives with his deputy for current operations, Brigadier General
Joe Lopez.
"How about Just Action?" Kelly offered.
"How about Just Cause?" Lopez shot back.[2]
So was born the recent trend in nicknaming operations. Since 1989, major US
military operations have been nicknamed with an eye toward shaping domestic and
international perceptions about the activities they describe.[3] Operation Just
Cause is only the most obvious example of this phenomenon. From names that
stress an operation's humanitarian focus, like Operation Provide Comfort in
Turkey, to ones that stress an operation's restoration of democratic authority,
like Operation Uphold Democracy in Haiti, it is evident that the military has
begun to recognize the power of names in waging a public relations campaign, and
the significance of winning that campaign to the overall effort. As Major
General Charles McClain, Chief of Public Affairs for the Army, has recently
written, "the perception of an operation can be as important to success as the
execution of that operation."[4] Professor Ray Eldon Hiebert, in a piece titled,
"Public Relations as a Weapon of Modern War," elaborates on that view: "The
effective use of words and media today . . . is just as important as the
effective use of bullets and bombs. In the end, it is no longer enough just to
be strong. Now it is necessary to communicate. To win a war today government not
only has to win on the battlefield, it must also win the minds of its
public."[5]
Like any aspect of operational planning, the job of naming operations initially
falls to mid-level staff officers in Defense Department components, agencies,
and unified and specified commands, to which the Joint Chiefs of Staff have
delegated considerable freedom in the naming of operations. Because nicknames
help determine the way operations are perceived, joint staff officers must
develop not only their skill as operational artists but also their art as
operation namers.
An appreciation for the art of doing anything is best gained from practitioners,
both good and bad. By way of offering a sort of historical apprenticeship, this
article reviews the origins and development of the practice of naming
operations, with particular emphasis upon the American tradition which emerged
from World War II. This heretofore unchronicled story contains useful lessons
for officers who must recommend or approve an operation name.
Operations in the World Wars
Naming operations seems to have originated with the German General Staff during
the last two years of World War I. The Germans used code names primarily to
preserve operational security, though the names were also a convenient way of
referring to subordinate and successive operations. Thus, it is probably no
accident that operational names came into use at the same time as the rise of
operational art. It was simply easier to get a handle on the complexities of
operational sequencing and synchronization by naming each operation something
that the staff could remember. The Germans chose names that were not only
memorable but also inspiring. Plans for the great Western Front offensive in the
spring of 1918, which saw the most extensive use of operational code names,
borrowed from religious, medieval, and mythological sources: Archangel, St.
Michael, St. George, Roland, Mars, Achilles, Castor, Pollux, and Valkyrie.[6]
The selection of these names was perhaps an adjunct to Ludendorff's patriotic
education program, designed to stir a demoralized and weary army into making one
final push.[7] The original, stirring vision conjured by these names was lost,
however, when several of the planned operations had to be scaled back. St.
George, for example, devolved to the uninspiring diminutive Georgette.[8]
The American military adopted code names during the World War II era, primarily
for security reasons.[9] Its use of code names for operations grew out of the
practice of color-coding war plans during the interwar period.[10] Even before
America entered the war, the War Department had executed Operation Indigo,[11]
the reinforcement of Iceland, and had dubbed plans to occupy the Azores and
Dakar as Operations Gray[12] and Black[13] respectively.
With the outbreak of the war, the practice of using colors as code names was
overcome by the need to code-name not only a growing number of operations, but
also numerous locations and projects. The War Department adopted a code word
list similar in principle to one already in use by the British. In early 1942,
members of the War Plans Division culled words from an unabridged dictionary to
come up with a list of 10,000 common nouns and adjectives that were not
suggestive of operational activities or locations. They avoided proper nouns,
geographical terms, and names of ships.[14] Since so many operations would
involve the British, they made sure the list did not conflict with the one
developed and managed by their counterparts on the British Inter-Services
Security Board.[15] In March 1942, the Joint Chiefs of Staff approved the
classified Inter-Services Code-Word Index[16] and gave the War Plans Division
the duty of assigning code words.[17] Accordingly, the War Plans Division
(shortly afterward renamed the Operations Division)[18] assigned blocks of code
words to each theater; the European Theater got such names as Market and Garden,
while the Pacific Theater got names like Olympic and Flintlock.[19]
Although the words listed in the British and American code indexes were randomly
chosen, the names of significant operations were thoughtfully selected from the
lists, at least those Winston Churchill had anything to do with. Churchill was
fascinated with code names and personally selected them for all major
operations.[20] He had clear ideas about what constituted appropriate names.
After coming across several that he considered inappropriate, he went so far as
to instruct an aide to submit all future code names to him for approval; he
dropped his demand when he learned the magnitude of the task,[21] but he did
take the precaution of writing down some principles to guide his subordinates:
[1.] Operations in which large numbers of men may lose their lives ought not to
be described by code words which imply a boastful or overconfident sentiment,. .
. or, conversely, which are calculated to invest the plan with an air of
despondency. . . . They ought not to be names of a frivolous character. . . .
They should not be ordinary words often used in other connections. . . . Names
of living people--Ministers and Commanders--should be avoided. . . .
2. After all, the world is wide, and intelligent thought will readily supply an
unlimited number of well-sounding names which do not suggest the character of
the operation or disparage it in any way and do not enable some widow or mother
to say that her son was killed in an operation called "Bunnyhug" or
"Ballyhoo."[22]
Borrowing a page from the Germans of World War I, whose code-naming practices he
knew well from writing his four-volume history of that war,[23] Churchill saw
the names of culturally significant figures as useful sources of operational
code words:
3. Proper names are good in this field. The heroes of antiquity, figures from
Greek and Roman mythology, the constellations and stars, famous racehorses,
names of British and American war heroes, could be used, provided they fall
within the rules above.[24]
Churchill's commonsense principles for naming operations influenced American as
well as British practice. For example, he objected to the code name for the
American bomber raid on the Romanian oil fields in Ploesti because he thought
the name "Soapsuds" was "inappropriate for an operation in which so many brave
Americans would risk or lose their lives."[25] He aired his objections through
the British Chiefs of Staff, who persuaded the Joint Chiefs of Staff to change
the name to the more appropriate and inspirational Tidal Wave.[26] Churchill's
hand also is evident in the naming of many combined US-British operations,
including the American-led invasion of Normandy. The plan for the 1944 invasion
was originally Roundhammer, a combination of the code names for invasions
planned for previous years, Sledgehammer (1942) and Roundup (1943).[27] While
Churchill's personal response to the name Roundhammer is not recorded, the
British official history of the war calls the name a "revolting neologism."[28]
Whether this strong reaction was shared by Churchill or not, he changed the name
to Overlord,[29] deservedly the best-known operational code name to emerge from
World War II.[30] The name suggests, as David Kahn has noted, "a sense of
majesty and patriarchal vengeance and irresistible power."[31] Whether or not
Churchill violated his own advice about avoiding names which imply
overconfidence, the name Overlord may well have strengthened the resolve of
those who planned the assault on fortress Europe.
The Axis powers also recognized the inspirational value of code names. Although
the Japanese typically numbered or alphabetically designated their
operations,[32] they resorted to inspirational names as their strategic
situation worsened, not unlike the Germans during World War I. The Japanese
offensive designed to thwart the Allied landings at Leyte Gulf, for example, was
optimistically dubbed Operation Victory.[33]
The Germans made extensive use of code names for plans and operations and
usually chose names at random; however, major operations often got special
consideration by the German leadership.[34] Perhaps the most well-known example
of this is the code name for the 1941 invasion of the Soviet Union. Initially,
the operation was christened Fritz, after the son of the plan's author, Colonel
Bernhard Von Lossberg.[35] But Hitler would not have his grand project named
something so pedestrian, Lossberg's sentimental attachment notwithstanding. On
11 December 1940 he renamed the operation Barbarossa, the folk name of the 12th-century
Holy Roman Emperor Frederick I, who had extended German authority over the Slavs
in the east and who, legend said, would rise again to establish a new German
Empire.[36] In selecting a name with these inspirational associations, Hitler
risked revealing his intentions--the very thing code names are designed to
conceal. In the case of Barbarossa, Hitler seems to have been lucky; in the case
of Operation Sealion, his planned invasion of Britain, he was not. British
intelligence divined Sealion's target from its telltale name.[37]
Using Nicknames to Shape Perceptions
The efforts of Hitler and Churchill notwithstanding, World War II operation
names had limited effect on shaping attitudes because they were classified until
after the war ended.[38] Thus, their effect on troop morale was limited to those
with clearances, and their effect on public perception was delayed until after
the war, at which point the names were merely historical curiosities.
But in America, shortly after the war ended, the War Department decided to use
operation names for public information purposes in connection with atomic bomb
testing. To this end, the War Department created a new category of unclassified
operation names, which are known as nicknames to distinguish them from
classified code words. Code words are assigned a classified meaning and are used
to safeguard classified plans and operations, while nicknames are assigned
unclassified meanings and are used for administrative, morale, and public
information purposes.[39]
Nicknames offered new possibilities for shaping attitudes about operations, and
the first person to make use of one took full advantage of the potential. Vice
Admiral W. H. P. Blandy, the commander of the joint task force conducting the
1946 atomic bomb tests on Bikini Atoll, selected the nickname Operation
Crossroads with great care. He chose it, he told a Senate committee, because of
the test's possible significance--"that seapower, airpower, and perhaps humanity
itself . . . were at the crossroads."[40] Admiral Blandy was especially proud of
the name, and when he discovered that the word was already assigned to another
activity, he pulled strings to get it assigned to the Bikini tests.[41]
The press publicized not only the name, but also Blandy's rationale for
selecting it, and did so with general approbation.[42] Commenting on Blandy's
public relations savvy, one historian wrote: "The choice of names was brilliant,
implying to some that the military was unsure of its direction and was truly in
awe of the atomic bomb."[43] However, some in the press were not so enamored
with Blandy or his choice of name. In an article lampooning Blandy, The New
Yorker commented with unmistakable sarcasm that the name "has been greatly
admired in literary and non-violent circles."[44] The sarcasm seems to suggest
that while the general public might admire the name, literary and non-violent
audiences were not taken in by Blandy's public relations methods. This would not
be the last time members of the media would resent the military's success in
popularizing a carefully chosen nickname.
Operations in Korea
Although the military had learned the value of well-chosen nicknames during the
peacetime atomic bomb tests, it continued to use meaningless code names during
wartime to protect operational security. At least this was true early in the
Korean War. In planning the Inchon landing, General Douglas MacArthur and his
subordinates followed the World War II practice of selecting operation names
from an established code word list. The earliest plan was dubbed Operation
Bluehearts, and the one actually executed was Operation Chromite.[45]
MacArthur did depart from World War II practice in one important respect: he
permitted code names to be declassified and disseminated to the press once
operations had begun, rather than waiting until the end of the war.[46] Thus,
combat operation names were, for the first time, public knowledge as operations
unfolded. Curiously, MacArthur, with all his public relations savvy, failed to
see the opportunities this offered for shaping perceptions.
China's intervention in the Korean War helped Lieutenant General Matthew Ridgway
see what MacArthur had not. Ridgway took command of the Eighth Army as it was
reeling southward under relentless Chinese attack. His first task, he realized,
was to restore the fighting spirit of his badly demoralized command.[47] One way
he did this was by giving decidedly aggressive nicknames to the series of
counteroffensives undertaken from February to April 1951: Thunderbolt, Roundup,
Killer, Ripper, Courageous, Audacious, and Dauntless. Because these names were
not classified once operations began, they were widely disseminated among Eighth
Army soldiers to boost morale.[48] Ridgway's unprecedented use of meaningful
combat operation names set the tone for one of the most remarkable
transformations of any military organization in history. The reinvigorated
Eighth Army pushed the Chinese back to the 38th parallel.
If Ridgway's names contributed to success on the battlefield, they were not
nearly so successful on the home front. Ridgway had publicly announced not only
the start of his first major counteroffensive, but also its nickname: Operation
Killer.[49] In doing so, he may have imagined that he could boost the morale of
the public in the same way he hoped to inspire his troops. After all, the news
from the front had been bad for months--so bad, in fact, that the US Far East
Command had suspended communiques dealing with operational matters the previous
fall.[50] It was probably no coincidence that the communiques resumed the day
after the start of Operation Killer.[51] Certainly some of Ridgway's troops
thought that Killer and other names had been chosen with the media in mind.[52]
In any event, more than a few observers objected to Ridgway's operation name,
which was prominently displayed in many newspaper and magazine articles.[53] One
critic was the Army Chief of Staff, General J. Lawton Collins, who informed
Ridgway that "the word `killer' . . . struck an unpleasant note as far as public
relations was concerned."[54] Certainly public relations suffered: several
writers criticized the name directly or implicitly in letters to The New York
Times;[55] the International Longshoremen's and Warehousemen's Union issued a
report in which the name served as the rubric for the entire conflict, which it
called a "phony" war emergency;[56] Republicans pointed to the term as evidence
that the Truman Administration had no other aim in Korea but to kill
Chinese;[57] and the State Department objected that the name had soured
negotiations with the People's Republic of China.[58]
While the incident taught Ridgway "how varied . . . the political pressures [can
be in waging] . . . a major war,"[59] he remained unrepentant about his
selection of the name: "I am not convinced that the country should not be told
that war means killing. I am by nature opposed to any effort to `sell' war to
people as an only mildly unpleasant business that requires very little in the
way of blood."[60] However opposed his nature may have been to soft-pedaling the
realities of war, operations after Killer and its immediate successor, Ripper,
were given less bloody names.
Operations in Vietnam
Early in the Vietnam War, operations were often given nicknames descriptive of
the missions they designated. For example, a combined US Marine and South
Vietnamese operation designed to increase the area of control of the Marine
enclave at Da Nang was dubbed Blastout.[61] The names of air operations in early
1966 suggest the widening of the air war against North Vietnam. The two
retaliatory air strikes against carefully selected North Vietnamese
installations were known as Flaming Dart I and II, while the gradually
escalating strategic bombing effort begun shortly thereafter was known as
Rolling Thunder.[62]
The penchant for giving descriptive names to operations in Vietnam caused the
military to relearn the lesson of Operation Killer. On 25 January 1966, the 1st
Cavalry Division began a sweep operation through the Bong Son Plain which it had
dubbed Masher,[63] presumably because the operation envisioned the enemy being
mashed against a second force comprised of Marines.[64] Owing to the media's
free access to military units and the lack of censorship during the war,
nicknames like Masher were frequently reported by the media as operations
progressed. And because Masher was a major operation conducted by the novel
"airmobile cavalry" division, it attracted a fair degree of media attention,
causing the name to be widely circulated on television and in the print
media.[65] When President Johnson heard it, he angrily protested that it did not
reflect "pacification emphasis."[66] General William Westmoreland put it more
bluntly when he speculated that "President Johnson . . . objected . . . because
the connotation of violence provided a focus for carping war critics."[67] To
remove their focus, the division commander quickly renamed the operation White
Wing.[68]
The lesson of the Masher incident was not lost on Westmoreland: "We later used
names of American cities, battles, or historic figures [for operations]."[69]
Indeed, reading the names of operations mounted in Vietnam after February 1966
is like reading a cross between a gazetteer and a history book.[70] Names such
as Junction City, Bastogne, and Nathan Hale were imbued with American
associations and values, and thus were politically safe, as well as potentially
inspirational.
Like Ridgway, Westmoreland tried his own hand at the art of operational naming.
Also like Ridgway, he did so to inspire demoralized soldiers. In early 1968, the
garrison of 6000 US and South Vietnamese troops at Khe Sanh found itself
surrounded by an estimated 15,000 to 20,000 North Vietnamese regulars. Many
critics saw a Dien Bien Phu in the making, and the beleaguered troops could not
but be infected by the prevailing sense of doom. To combat their dispiriting
mood, Westmoreland named the round-the-clock bombing and shelling of enemy
positions Operation Niagara. He selected the name, he said, "to invoke an image
of cascading shells and bombs," an image obviously designed to reassure the Khe
Sanh garrison.[71]
As the Vietnam War drew to a close, the Department of Defense for the first time
issued guidelines concerning nicknaming operations.[72] It is clear from reading
the guidelines--which remain in force today[73]--that its authors learned well
the lessons of Operations Killer and Masher. Noting that improperly selected
nicknames "can be counterproductive," the regulation specifies that nicknames
must not: "express a degree of bellicosity inconsistent with traditional
American ideals or current foreign policy"; "convey connotations offensive to
good taste or derogatory to a particular group, sect, or creed"; "convey
connotations offensive to [US] allies or other Free World nations"; or employ
"exotic words, trite expressions, or well-known commercial trademarks."[74] The
regulation further stipulates that a nickname must consist of two words (which
helps distinguish it from a code word, which consists of only one) and requires
the JCS to establish procedures for DOD components to nominate and report
nicknames.[75]
Post-Vietnam Automation
In 1975, the JCS implemented these guidelines by establishing a computer system
to fully automate the maintenance and reconciliation of nicknames, code words,
and exercise terms.[76] The computer system, called the Code Word, Nickname, and
Exercise Term System (an unwieldy name shortened to NICKA), is still in
operation today and can be accessed through the Worldwide Military Command and
Control System. The NICKA system is not, as some assume, a random word generator
for nicknames; it is, in fact, merely an automated means for submitting,
validating, and storing them. The authority to create nicknames rests not with
those who manage the NICKA system, but with 24 DOD components, agencies, and
unified and specified commands.[77] JCS assigns each of these organizations a
series of two-letter alphabetic sequences and requires that the first word of
each two-word nickname begin with a letter pair from one of the sequences.[78]
For example, the US Atlantic Command (USACOM) is assigned six two-letter
alphabetic sequences: AG-AL, ES-EZ, JG-JL, QA-QF, SM-SR, and UM-UR.[79]
Selecting the letter pair UR from the last of these sequences, a staff officer
recommended the nickname Urgent Fury for the 1983 invasion of Grenada.
Clearly, staff officers in DOD components, agencies, and unified and specified
commands have considerable freedom in creating nicknames, certainly far more
than their Vietnam-era predecessors. There is, and has been for 20 years, plenty
of room for artistry in naming operations.
In the first 15 years of the new system's existence, however, there was little
attempt to exploit the power of nicknaming to improve either troop morale or
public and international relations. Nicknames used from 1975 through 1988 were
generally meaningless word pairs similar to the operation names used during
World War II: Eldorado Canyon (the 1986 Libya raid), Praying Mantis (the 1988
air strikes targeting Iranian naval vessels and oil platforms), and Golden
Pheasant (a 1988 show of force to deter Nicaraguan violations of Honduran
territory). When nicknames were chosen purposefully, as in the case of Urgent
Fury, the effect was overdone.[80] Undoubtedly, the staff officer who came up
with "Urgent Fury" was intent on inspiring the troops executing the mission, but
he failed to consider the reaction of the media and general public. The name,
which was divulged to the press shortly after the invasion,[81] only fueled the
arguments of critics who accused the military of excess in committing so much
combat power to the operation[82]--which, one wag suggested, "the New York
Police Department could have won."[83] Another critic implied that the name
belied the rationale for the invasion. Urgent Fury sounded "too militant," he
suggested; if we had really been provoked into invading the tiny island nation,
then why not "Reluctant Necessity"?[84]
Undoubtedly one reason for the military's failure to use operation names to
improve public relations was the strained relationship that existed between the
military and the media during this 15-year period. Many in the military blamed
the loss of the Vietnam War on the media's critical reporting, which, it was
argued, soured the American public's will to continue the fight. Nowhere is this
attitude toward the media more evident than in Urgent Fury, where Vice Admiral
Metcalf initially refused to allow the media access to the combat zone. The
motive for this restriction was transparent:
Shutting the press out of Grenada was . . . based on a fear that an unrestrained
press might muck things up again as many senior leaders believed they had done
in Vietnam. If the press [was] not present, then there [was] no need to be
concerned about . . . media spin.[85]
Given such prevailing attitudes, it is small wonder that the staff officer who
came up with the name Urgent Fury failed to consider the media's response to the
nickname, much less use a name calculated to create a positive response to the
event. That the media could be used to develop public support for operations was
a notion foreign to many in the military at the time.
Just Cause--or High Hokum?
Just Cause was the first US combat operation since the Korean War whose nickname
was designed to shape domestic and international perceptions about the mission
it designated. And it is perhaps unsurprising that the man who helped formulate
the name, Lieutenant General Kelly, held an undergraduate degree in
journalism.[86] His background equipped him to appreciate what others could not:
that naming an operation is tantamount to seizing the high ground in waging a
public relations campaign. By declaring the Panama invasion a just cause, the
nickname sought to contrast US motives with the injustices of the Noriega
regime, which included election fraud, drug trafficking, harassment of US
service members and their dependents, and the murder of a Marine officer. The
gambit largely succeeded. The name, prominently mentioned in Pentagon press
releases, was widely circulated by the media, which generally accepted the term
without protest.
Network news anchors adopted the phrase "Operation Just Cause" to refer to the
invasion as if they had invented the phrase. In less than an hour after the Bush
administration started using the phrase "Operation Just Cause," the network news
anchors were asking questions like "How is Operation Just Cause going?"[87]
At least two editorials adopted the phrase by way of endorsing the invasion.[88]
Naming the operation Just Cause was risky, however, not only because it was an
obvious public relations ploy, but also because it apparently sought to preempt
judgment about whether, in fact, the invasion really was moral, legal, and
righteous. Some saw this as overreaching. A New York Times editorial entitled
"Operation High Hokum" noted how different the nickname was from previous
nonsense names and criticized it as an "overreach of sentiment."[89] Several
years later, a more spirited critic wrote:
It was an extremely cynical gambit to name a blatantly unjust invasion Operation
Just Cause. It betrayed the administration's insecurity about an illegal
invasion of a sovereign country. The label was, therefore, very important . . .
in creating the impression among the general population that the US government
was pursuing a morally righteous cause. [It was] blatant propaganda.[90]
"Just Cause" illustrates both the power and the limits of nicknames in shaping
perceptions about military operations. Few would object to the Defense
Department engaging in what some have called "public diplomacy"[91]--the attempt
to portray its activities in a positive light to bolster troop morale and to
garner domestic and international support. Commercial firms carefully consider
product names to ensure success in the marketplace; why should the government's
approach to naming military operations be any different? But there is a point at
which aggressive marketing turns public relations into propaganda. Going beyond
this point breeds cynicism rather than support. Precisely where this point is
may be ill-defined, but the nickname Just Cause probably came close to it.
Operation Just Cause ushered in a new era in the nicknaming of US military
operations, one in which operations are given names carefully selected to shape
perceptions about them. To fully understand what spawned this new era, one must
look beyond the immediate influence of Operation Just Cause. While the Panama
invasion certainly helped military leaders recognize how powerful nicknames
could be in shaping attitudes, two other important trends were at work.
The first trend was the growing recognition among the military leadership that
the media could be an ally rather than an opponent in the public relations
effort. Articles arguing for cooperation with the media abound in professional
military journals after 1989.[92] If nicknames were to contain a message, then
the media would be a useful means of communicating it.
The second trend was the growing relative importance of nicknames in relation to
the shrinking scale of military action. During previous wars like Korea and
Vietnam, individual operations were but a small piece of a much larger effort,
so operation nicknames attracted relatively little attention. In recent times,
when wars are fought with unprecedented speed and when circumscribed
peacekeeping, humanitarian, and relief missions proliferate, a single operation
usually encompasses the entire event. The Persian Gulf War is an exception, but
even in that case the confrontation consisted of only two operations. Nicknames
have become synonyms for entire conflicts; "Desert Storm," for example, is
frequently used in place of "Gulf War."[93]
Desert Shield to Sea Angel
In August 1990, the Central Command (CENTCOM) staff expended considerable effort
in selecting the best name for the operation designed to defend Saudi Arabia
from Iraqi invasion. The fact that so much effort went into naming Desert Shield
suggests the radical change in attitude which had occurred in the nine months
since the invasion of Panama, when the transformation of the name Blue Spoon
into Just Cause occurred as an afterthought shortly before the operation began.
The naming of Operation Desert Shield and its successor, Desert Storm, also
illustrates the critical role of artistry in the process.
During the hectic days of planning the deployment to the Gulf, CENTCOM staff
officers managed to compile a list of candidate nicknames three pages long,[94]
from which General H. Norman Schwarzkopf initially selected the name Peninsula
Shield. The first two letters of the first word, PE, are not assigned to
CENTCOM, so it is clear that CENTCOM felt that selecting the right name was more
important than sticking to its assigned alphabetic sequences. However, the JCS
rejected the name,[95] perhaps because the mission called for defending only
portions rather than the entirety of the Arabian Peninsula, or because
"peninsula" was not thought to be characteristic enough of the region. Other
names were considered, including Crescent Shield--a name intended to appeal to
the Saudis and other Arab allies--but this too was rejected.[96] In the end,
CENTCOM proposed and JCS accepted Desert Shield,[97] a name which suggested both
the region's characteristic geography and CENTCOM's defensive mission.[98] The
metaphor of the shield was well chosen because it emphasized not only US
deterrence but also Iraqi aggression, for a shield is only necessary when a
sword has been unsheathed. In the context of the metaphor, the deployment of US
troops was necessary to deter an Iraqi sword that had already bloodied itself in
Kuwait. Such careful and effective wordsmithing played well with domestic and
international observers, setting a context conducive to garnering support for
the operation.
The naming of the offensive phase of the Gulf campaign was no less effective.
Recognizing the success of the nickname Desert Shield, General Schwarzkopf
played off the name in coming up with Desert Storm,[99] establishing a thematic
linkage which would later be employed in subsequent and subordinate operations
as well: the name of the ground offensive was Desert Saber; the redeployment was
called Desert Farewell; the distribution of leftover food to the US poor was
Desert Share. This family of operation names drew grudging admiration from The
Nation: "You have to admire the Defense Department P.R. people who thought up
the names for the various phases of the war, each carefully calibrated to send
the correct propaganda message."[100] Characterizing the names as propaganda is
a cynical label which could be applied to any government-sponsored public
relations effort, but, for all its cynicism, the comment does suggest how
successful CENTCOM's operation names were in developing public support for its
various missions.
General Schwarzkopf was probably inspired to use the storm metaphor by the name
of the air operation, which Air Force planners had dubbed Instant Thunder.[101]
The storm metaphor associated the offensive with the unleashing of overwhelming
natural forces, an association which was as politically astute as it was
inspirational, cloaking the military offensive in the garb of natural phenomena.
When the long-awaited offensive began, General Schwarzkopf played upon the
metaphor's inspirational power in his message to his troops: "You must be the
thunder and lightning of Desert Storm," he told them.[102] The General's
statement was widely publicized and admired; one writer commented that
Schwarzkopf's rhetoric "sounded positively Churchillian."[103] Thus, the name
served to inspire the nation as well as the troops.
Not all post-Just Cause nicknames have been as successful as Desert Shield and
Desert Storm. For example, the name for the US Marine operation to aid victims
of the 1991 typhoon which devastated Bangladesh was originally Operation
Productive Effort, a name that General Colin Powell admitted he never liked and
which neither he nor his staff could remember. "After a day of struggling with
Productive Effort, I said to my staff, `We've just got to get a better name.'"
When the following day's newspaper reported that the Bangladeshis who saw the
Marines coming in from the sea by helicopter and landing craft said, "Look!
Look! Angels! From the sea!" the operation was rechristened Sea Angel.[104]
Guidelines for Naming Operations
The Productive Effort incident demonstrates that the military still has some
learning to do about the art of naming operations. Rules for helping staff
officers through the process would be of little value because nicknaming is an
art rather than a science. Yet four general suggestions emerge from the last 45
years of nicknaming operations: make it meaningful, target the key audiences, be
wary of fashions, and make it memorable. These suggestions and the prudent
guidelines already published in DOD Regulation 5200.1-R may prevent another
"(non)Productive Effort."
First, make it meaningful. Don't waste a public relations opportunity,
particularly where highly visible operations are involved. If the Gulf War has
taught us anything, it has shown us how powerful words and images can be in
shaping perceptions. But in the pursuit of a meaningful name, avoid those that
border on the propagandistic. It is one thing to name an operation with a view
to gaining public support first; it is quite another to put a label on an
operation that insists upon its morality. However righteous an operation might
appear to be, a name like Just Cause can be distasteful to the media and general
public, not necessarily because they disagree with the justness of the cause,
but because they resent having such words put (literally) in their mouths. The
more prudent course is to find names that reinforce policy objectives by
emphasizing the mission and its rationale. Such an approach is likely to satisfy
all critics except those who view any government public relations effort as
propaganda.
Second, identify and target the critical audiences. While it has been pointed
out that "in the global media environment, the information provided to one
audience must be considered available to all audiences,"[105] it is seldom
possible to effectively target all potential audiences using a two-word
nickname. Thus, one must chose one's target carefully. The first impulse might
be to consider only the morale of the troops and the support of the American
public, but two other audiences should be considered as well: the international
community, including allies and coalition partners; and the enemy.
The importance of these audiences varies with the situation. Where an operation
poses safety concerns to a foreign population, the operation name should be
designed to allay those concerns. For example, the operation to remove chemical
weapons from Europe was named Steel Box, "a solid, positive name" which "implied
leakproof execution, thus reassuring our allies."[106] Where US forces operate
with coalition partners or allies, the operation may benefit from a name that
emphasizes solidarity. We routinely use such a strategy in naming combined
exercises like Team Spirit, and we sometimes elect to downplay US participation
by employing the language of the partner nations, like Fuertes Unitas (United
Forces).
In certain situations, even the enemy can be the critical audience, since
operation and exercise names can send clear signals of US intentions. For
example, Earnest Will was the name of the operation to escort reflagged oil
tankers through the Persian Gulf, a name which conveyed to the Iranians the
firmness of US resolve in defending the vessels. An amphibious exercise mounted
before the Gulf War was dubbed Imminent Thunder, a name clearly designed to
intimidate the Iraqis.
Third, be cautious of fashions. Operation nicknames enjoy periods of popularity
just like personal names. The current fashion in nicknaming operations is to
make the names sound like mission statements by using a verb-noun sequence:
Promote Liberty, Restore Hope, Uphold Democracy, Provide Promise. ("Provide" is
the most popular verb, having been used in the names of six different operations
during the 1989-1993 period.[107]) There is value in this approach because it
tends to keep the mission foremost in the minds of the troops executing it, and
it reminds domestic and international audiences why the mission was undertaken.
But there is also a certain formulaic monotony about such names which makes them
less memorable than they might otherwise be. Like having a 1950s classroom full
of ****s and Janes, it's hard to tell the Provide Hopes and Comforts apart.
Finally, make it memorable. To shape perceptions, nicknames must gain currency,
something that can happen only if they cling to the cobwebs of the mind. This
was one failing of the name Productive Effort; if the Joint Staff couldn't even
remember it, how would it affect the general public? The name had three strikes
against it: it lacked uniqueness (all operations are efforts, and one hopes that
all are productive); it was abstract (what is a productive effort anyway?); and
it was too long (five syllables).
To avoid these failings, start by identifying unique attributes of the
operation. Try to capture those characteristics in specific terms with a
metaphor or with words that evoke an image. Try to keep each word to two
syllables or less. Sea Angel, the name that replaced Productive Effort, has all
the traits of a memorable name: it is unique and specific; it evokes a clear
image in more than one culture; and it has only three syllables. Desert Shield
and Desert Storm share those traits. It is no accident that the latter name is
so frequently substituted for the name Gulf War. People remember it.
Applying the four guidelines will result in an effectively nicknamed operation,
an outcome that can help win the war of images. In that war, the operation name
is the first--and quite possibly the decisive--bullet to be fired. Mold and aim
it with care.
NOTES
1. I have discarded the American typographic convention of capitalizing
operation names in the their entirety on the assumption that this would be
distracting in a paper full of such names. (As a general rule, it is likewise
the typographic house style of Parameters to capitalize only the first letter of
operation names. In addition to being "distracting," the practice of setting
operation names in all capitals--while historically accurate--can be confusing,
making them appear as acronyms. Our choice in this matter has been for clarity
over strict historical accuracy, despite the objection of some of our historian
advisors.--Editor)
2. Bob Woodward, The Commanders (New York: Pocket Star Books, 1991), pp. 149-50.
3. For a comprehensive listing of nicknamed operations over the five-year period
starting in 1989, see Francis M. Doyle, Karen J. Lewis, and Leslie A. Williams,
Named Military Operations from January 1989 to December 1993 (Fort Monroe, Va.:
TRADOC Technical Library, 1994). Nicknames and code words are not the same. As
noted later in this article, code words are assigned a classified meaning and
are used to safeguard classified plans and operations, while nicknames are
assigned unclassified meanings and are used for administrative, morale, and
public information purposes.
4. Charles W. McClain, Jr., and Garry D. Levin, "Public Affairs in America's
21st Century," Military Review, 74 (November 1994), 11.
5. Ray Eldon Hiebert, "Public Relations as a Weapon of Modern Warfare," in
Desert Storm and the Mass Media, ed. Bradley S. Greenberg and Walter Gantz
(Cresskill, N.J.: Hampton Press, 1993), p. 36.
6. Barrie Pitt, 1918: The Last Act (New York: W. W. Norton, 1962), pp. 47-50.
7. Robert B. Asprey, The German High Command at War: Hindenburg and Ludendorff
Conduct World War I (New York: William Morrow, 1991), pp. 340-41.
8. Ibid., pp. 392-93.
9. Memorandum from Dwight D. Eisenhower to the Adjutant General, Subject: Code
Words to Designate Plans, Projects, Localities, etc., 10 March 1942, National
Archives Record Group Number 407, p. 1.
10. Ray S. Cline, United States Army in World War II: Vol. IV, The War
Department: Part 2, Washington Command Post: The Operations Division
(Washington: GPO, 1951), p. 65, n. 59.
11. Mark Skinner Watson, United States Army in World War II: Vol. IV, The War
Department: Part 1, Chief of Staff: Prewar Plans and Preparations (Washington:
GPO, 1950), pp. 487-90.
12. Maurice Matloff and Edwin M. Snell, United States Army in World War II: Vol
IV, The War Department: Part 3, Strategic Planning for Coalition Warfare, 1941-1942
(Washington: GPO, 1953), p. 50, n. 67.
13. Ibid., p. 103, n. 22.
14. Bill Hines, "Operation CODENAME," Infantry Journal, March 1947, p. 42.
15. Ibid.; on the code-naming functions of the Inter-Services Security Board,
see the following sources: Ewen Montagu, Beyond Top Secret Ultra (New York:
Coward, McCann, and Geoghegan, 1978), p. 52; F. H. Hinsley and C. A. G. Simkins,
British Intelligence in the Second World War: Vol. IV, Security and Counter-Intelligence
(New York: Cambridge Univ. Press), p. 247.
16. Minutes of the Sixth JCS Meeting, 18 March 1942, p. 3; available on
microfilm, Records of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, 1942-45 (Frederick, Md.:
University Publications of America, 1983).
17. Eisenhower.
18. When the War Plans Division was renamed the Operations Division on 23 March
1942, the newly reconstituted Current Section was assigned code management
responsibilities, a function it performed for the duration of the war; see Ray
S. Cline, United States Army in World War II: Vol. IV, The War Department: Part
2, Washington Command Post: The Operations Division (Washington: GPO, 1951), pp.
106, 131.
19. Hines, p. 42.
20. Warren F. Kimball, ed., Churchill and Roosevelt: The Complete
Correspondence: Vol. I, Alliance Emerging, October 1933-November 1942
(Princeton, N.J.: Princeton Univ. Press, 1984), p. 280; also Vol. II, Alliance
Forged, November 1942-February 1944, pp. 491-92.
21. Ibid.
22. Winston S. Churchill, The Second World War: Vol. V, Closing the Ring
(Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1951), p. 662.
23. Churchill, The World Crisis: 1916-1918 (New York: Scribners, 1927), I, 279;
also II, 125ff.
24. Churchill, Closing the Ring, p. 662.
25. Kimball, I, 280.
26. Ibid.
27. Michael Howard, History of the Second World War: United Kingdom Military
Series: Vol. IV, Grand Strategy, August 1942-September 1943 (London: HMSO,
1972), p. 430.
28. Ibid.
29. W. G. F. Jackson, "Overlord": Normandy 1944 (London: Davis-Poynter, 1978),
p. 89; Omar N. Bradley, A Soldier's Story (New York: Henry Holt, 1951), p. 172.
30. Churchill may have sought an alternative to Roundhammer as much for security
reasons as aesthetics. This name, in conjunction with the name of the planned
invasion of southern France, dubbed Anvil, gave a pretty clear hint as to the
Allies' hammer-and-anvil strategy. While the foregoing is my own speculation, it
is known that Anvil was renamed Dragoon precisely because the Allies feared that
"the enemy might finally light on the significance of the word." See Forrest C.
Pogue, George C. Marshall, Vol. II, Organizer of Victory (New York: Viking
Press, 1973), p. 413.
31. David Kahn, The Codebreakers: The Story of Secret Writing (New York:
Macmillan, 1967), p. 503.
32. Hines, p. 43.
33. E. B. Potter, Sea Power: A Naval History (Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall,
1960), p. 777.
34. Barton Whaley, Codeword Barbarossa (Cambridge, Mass.: Massachusetts
Institute of Technology Press, 1973), p. 16, note.
35. David Irving, Hitler's War (New York: Viking Press, 1977), p. 142.
36. Whaley, p. 18.
37. Montagu, p. 53.
38. The first World War II operation names were made public on 10 October 1945,
upon release of: US War Dept., General Staff, Biennial Report of the Chief of
the United States Army, July 1, 1943 to June 30, 1945, to the Secretary of War
(Washington: GPO, 1945). See "Code Names of Big Operations Revealed; Invasion of
Kyushu Was to Be `Olympic,'" The New York Times, 10 October 1945, p. 13.
39. US Dept. of Defense, Joint Publication 1-02, Department of Defense
Dictionary of Military and Associated Terms (Washington: GPO, 23 March 1994),
pp. 72, 261.
40. David Sidney Shalett, "Test Atomic Bombs to Blast 100 Ships at Marshalls
Atoll," The New York Times, 25 January 1946, p. 1.
41. Jonathan M. Weisgall, Operation Crossroads: The Atomic Tests at Bikini Atoll
(Annapolis, Md.: Naval Institute Press, 1994), p. 32.
42. See, for example, "Operation Crossroads," The New York Times Magazine, 17
February 1946, p. 8.
43. Weisgall, p. 32.
44. "Notes and Comment," The New Yorker, 27 July 1946, p. 12.
45. D. Clayton James, The Years of MacArthur: Vol. III, Triumph and Disaster,
1945-1964 (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1985), p. 465.
46. For example, the name Operation Chromite appeared in Time only ten days
after the landing took place. Because the name was meaningless, it received only
passing attention. See "Battle of Korea," Time, 25 September 1950, p. 26.
47. Matthew B. Ridgway, The Korean War: How We Met the Challenge (Garden City,
N.Y.: Doubleday, 1967), 85ff.
48. For one Marine's reaction to the name Ripper, see Henry Berry, Hey, Mac,
Where Ya Been? Living Memories of the U.S. Marines in the Korean War (New York:
St. Martin's Press, 1988), p. 209.
49. Ridgway actually told reporters about Operation Killer before it commenced
but requested that they not report the information until the attack had begun.
See James F. Schnabel, United States Army in the Korean War: Vol. III, Policy
and Direction: The First Year (Washington: GPO, 1972), p. 340.
50. Lindesay Parrott, "U.N. Units Advance More Than 8 Miles in Drive in Center,"
The New York Times, 22 February 1951, p. 1.
51. Ibid.
52. Berry, pp. 26, 209.
53. Parrott; "Operation Killer," The New York Times, 25 February 1951, sec. IV,
p. 1; Lindesay Parrott, "U.S. Forces Launch 2 Attacks on Reds; Main Push Goes
On," The New York Times, 1 March 1951, p. 1; "Gen. Matt and Gen. Mud:
Waterlogged Marines Join U.N.'s Operation Killer," Life, 12 March 1951, p. 39.
The writer of a letter published in The New York Times noted that he had seen
"frequent references in the newspapers, including The Times, to `Operation
Killer'"; see Hugh Gallaher, letter to the editor, printed as "Military
Designation Criticized," The New York Times, 6 March 1951, p. 26.
54. The words are Ridgway's, paraphrasing Collins; see Ridgway, p. 110.
55. Gallaher; Jacob Herzfeld, letter to the editor, 28 February 1951, printed as
"Korea's Holocaust," The New York Times, 3 March 1951, p. 12.
56. "Union Gains Cited by Harry Bridges," The New York Times, 3 April 1951, p.
55.
57. Ridgway, p. 110.
58. Harry G. Summers, Korean War Almanac (New York: Facts on File, 1990), p.
156.
59. Ridgway, p. 110.
60. Ibid., p. 111.
61. Gregory R. Clark, Words of the Vietnam War: The Slang, Jargon, etc.
(Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland, 1990), p. 365.
62. Ibid, pp. 369, 379.
63. Shelby L. Stanton, Anatomy of a Division: The 1st Cavalry in Vietnam
(Novato, Calif.: Presidio Press, 1987), p. 70.
64. Clark, p. 374.
65. Daniel C. Hallin, The "Uncensored War": The Media and Vietnam (New York:
Oxford Univ. Press, 1986), p. 145; see also the series of stories in The New
York Times written by R. W. Apple, Jr., which appeared 28 January (p. 12), 31
January (p. 12), 2 February (p. 15), and 3 February (p. 15) 1966.
66. Stanton, p. 72.
67. William C. Westmoreland, A Soldier Reports (Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday,
1976), p. 164.
68. Ibid.; Stanton, p. 72.
69. Westmoreland, p. 164.
70. For a comprehensive listing of operation names used during the Vietnam War,
see Clark, pp. 363-83.
71. Westmoreland, p. 164.
72. "DoD Information Security Program," DOD Directive 5200.1, 1 June 1972;
reprinted in Federal Register, 3 August 1972, Vol. 37, No. 150, pp. 15655-15686.
The guidelines concerning nicknames which appear on page 15685 do not appear in
the previous version of DOD Directive 5200.1, entitled "Safeguarding Official
Information in the Interests of the Defense of the United States," 8 July 1957;
rpt. in US Dept. of Defense, Implementation of Recommendations of Coolidge
Committee on Classified Information (Washington: July 1957), Pt. 2, App. 4,
Encl. 1, p. 1.
73. The same guidelines appear in the newest version of this regulation: US
Dept. of Defense, Information Security Program Regulation, 5200.1-R (Washington:
June 1986), p. C-2.
74. Ibid.
75. Ibid., pp. C-1 to C-3.
76. US Dept. of Defense, Code Name, Nickname, and Exercise Term (NICKA) WWMCCS
System: Project Manual (Washington: 20 February 1975), p. 1.
77. US Dept. of Defense, Joint Chiefs of Staff, Joint Reporting Structure: Vol.
II, Joint Reports: Part 14, General Use/Miscellaneous: Chapter 4, Code Word,
Nickname, and Exercise Term Report, Change 11, JCS Pub 1-03.19 (Washington: 13
March 1990), p. 14-4-9.
78. Ibid., p. 14-4-6.
79. Ibid., pp. 14-4-14 and 14-4-16.
80. The one exception to the poorly named operations of the period was Operation
Eagle Claw, the effort to free US hostages held in Iran. But the name never
gained currency because the mission was aborted. Instead, the mission has become
known as the "Iranian hostage rescue attempt" or simply as Desert One, the
designation of the staging area where the mission was scrubbed.
81. David Hoffman and Fred Hiatt, "Weinberger Says U.S. May Stay for Weeks," The
Washington Post, 4 November 1983, p. B2.
82. Representative Byron raised this criticism in a congressional post-mortem of
Urgent Fury when she questioned whether the military hadn't "[gone] to overkill"
in the operation; see US Congress, House, Committee on the Armed Services,
Lessons Learned as a Result of the U.S. Military Operations in Grenada, Hearings
(Washington: GPO, 1984), p. 45.
83. William S. Lind, quoted in Robert J. Beck, The Grenada Invasion: Politics,
Law, and Foreign Policy Decisionmaking (Boulder, Colo.: Westview Press, 1993),
p. 17.
84. Jack Eisen, "`Lede of the Week' Award," The Washington Post, 4 November
1983, p. B2.
85. Marc D. Felman, The Military/Media Clash and the New Principle of War: Media
Spin (Maxwell AFB, Ala.: Air Univ. Press, June 1993), p. 15.
86. Hiebert, p. 32.
87. Christina Jacqueline Johns and P. Ward Johnson, State Crime, the Media, and
the Invasion of Panama (Westport, Conn.: Praeger, 1994), p. 64.
88. See Houston Post editorial, 21 December 1989; rpt. in Editorials on File
(16-31 December 1989), Vol. 20, No. 24, p. 1487; and Daily Oklahoman editorial,
22 December 1989; rpt. in the same edition of Editorials on File, p. 1483.
89. "Operation High Hokum," The New York Times, 23 December 1989, p. 30.
90. Johns and Johnson, p. 64.
91. Jonathan Alter et al., "The Propaganda War," Newsweek, 25 February 1991, p.
38.
92. See for example: McClain and Levin, pp. 6-15; Felman; Brent Baker, "Desert
Shield/Storm: The War of Words and Images," Naval War College Review, 44 (Autumn
1991), 59-65; William M. Hammond, "The Army and Public Affairs: Enduring
Principles," Parameters, 19 (June 1989), 57-74.
93. A LEXIS/NEXIS word search of major newspapers and magazines for the three-year
period January 1990 to December 1994 revealed that the name "Desert Storm"
appeared in 8276 newspaper and 4466 magazine articles, while the name "Gulf
War"--or a variant, like "Persian Gulf War"--appeared in 86,652 newspaper and
13,642 magazine articles. Clearly Gulf War and its variants are more popular
than Desert Storm, but the frequency with which Desert Storm appears (roughly 10
percent of the newspaper citations and one-third of the magazine articles) is
significant.
94. "Military Makes Every Word Count, Picking Code Names, Like Desert Shield, A
Matter of Pride," Orlando Sentinel Tribune, 19 August 1990, p. A17.
95. H. Norman Schwarzkopf and Peter Petre, It Doesn't Take a Hero (New York:
Bantam Books, 1992), p. 309.
96. Telephone conversation with Dr. Ronald Cole, Historian, Joint Office of
History, Office of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Washington, D.C., 12 January 1995.
97. Like the first two letters of "peninsula," the first two letters of "desert"
do not fall into the alphabetic sequences assigned to CENTCOM.
98. Schwarzkopf, pp. 309-10.
99. On the CINC's personal role in naming Desert Storm, see Schwarzkopf, p. 320.
100. "Words of War," The Nation, 12 August 1991, p. 177.
101. Instant Thunder was a deliberate allusion to Rolling Thunder, the name of
the two-and-one-half-year bombing operation over North Vietnam, which many Air
Force officers believed failed because of its gradual strategy. See Rick
Atkinson, Crusade: The Untold Story of the Persian Gulf War (Boston: Houghton
Mifflin, 1993), p. 59. Instant Thunder seems to be the first instance where a
nickname purposefully (and critically) alluded to a previously named operation.
102. Schwarzkopf, p. 413.
103. Joshua Hammer et al., "You Must Be the Thunder and the Lightning," Newsweek,
28 January 1991, p. 31.
104. Donna Miles and Patrick Swan, "What's in a Name?" Soldiers, February 1992,
p. 40.
105. McClain and Levin, p. 11.
106. Miles and Swan, p. 48.
107. Doyle et al., p. 2.
Lieutenant Colonel Gregory C. Sieminski, USA, is a 1995 graduate of the Naval
War College in Newport, Rhode Island, whose next assignment is at Headquarters,
Allied Forces Central Europe (AFCENT), the Netherlands. A military intelligence
officer, he has held a variety of intelligence command and staff positions in
Panama, Hawaii, and the United States. From 1987 to 1991 he taught at the US
Military Academy in the Department of English. This article is a derivative of
his student paper which won the Naval War College President's Essay Competition
for 1994-95.
GREGORY C. SIEMINSKI
Shortly after word spread among key military leaders that President Bush had
ordered the invasion of Panama, Lieutenant General Thomas Kelly, Operations
Officer on the Joint Staff, received a call from General James Lindsay,
Commander-in-Chief (CINC), Special Operations Command. His call did not concern
some last-minute change in the invasion plan; rather, it concerned a seemingly
insignificant detail of the operation: its name. "Do you want your grandchildren
to say you were in Blue Spoon?" he asked.[1] Lieutenant General Kelly agreed
that the name should be changed. After hanging up the phone, General Kelly
discussed alternatives with his deputy for current operations, Brigadier General
Joe Lopez.
"How about Just Action?" Kelly offered.
"How about Just Cause?" Lopez shot back.[2]
So was born the recent trend in nicknaming operations. Since 1989, major US
military operations have been nicknamed with an eye toward shaping domestic and
international perceptions about the activities they describe.[3] Operation Just
Cause is only the most obvious example of this phenomenon. From names that
stress an operation's humanitarian focus, like Operation Provide Comfort in
Turkey, to ones that stress an operation's restoration of democratic authority,
like Operation Uphold Democracy in Haiti, it is evident that the military has
begun to recognize the power of names in waging a public relations campaign, and
the significance of winning that campaign to the overall effort. As Major
General Charles McClain, Chief of Public Affairs for the Army, has recently
written, "the perception of an operation can be as important to success as the
execution of that operation."[4] Professor Ray Eldon Hiebert, in a piece titled,
"Public Relations as a Weapon of Modern War," elaborates on that view: "The
effective use of words and media today . . . is just as important as the
effective use of bullets and bombs. In the end, it is no longer enough just to
be strong. Now it is necessary to communicate. To win a war today government not
only has to win on the battlefield, it must also win the minds of its
public."[5]
Like any aspect of operational planning, the job of naming operations initially
falls to mid-level staff officers in Defense Department components, agencies,
and unified and specified commands, to which the Joint Chiefs of Staff have
delegated considerable freedom in the naming of operations. Because nicknames
help determine the way operations are perceived, joint staff officers must
develop not only their skill as operational artists but also their art as
operation namers.
An appreciation for the art of doing anything is best gained from practitioners,
both good and bad. By way of offering a sort of historical apprenticeship, this
article reviews the origins and development of the practice of naming
operations, with particular emphasis upon the American tradition which emerged
from World War II. This heretofore unchronicled story contains useful lessons
for officers who must recommend or approve an operation name.
Operations in the World Wars
Naming operations seems to have originated with the German General Staff during
the last two years of World War I. The Germans used code names primarily to
preserve operational security, though the names were also a convenient way of
referring to subordinate and successive operations. Thus, it is probably no
accident that operational names came into use at the same time as the rise of
operational art. It was simply easier to get a handle on the complexities of
operational sequencing and synchronization by naming each operation something
that the staff could remember. The Germans chose names that were not only
memorable but also inspiring. Plans for the great Western Front offensive in the
spring of 1918, which saw the most extensive use of operational code names,
borrowed from religious, medieval, and mythological sources: Archangel, St.
Michael, St. George, Roland, Mars, Achilles, Castor, Pollux, and Valkyrie.[6]
The selection of these names was perhaps an adjunct to Ludendorff's patriotic
education program, designed to stir a demoralized and weary army into making one
final push.[7] The original, stirring vision conjured by these names was lost,
however, when several of the planned operations had to be scaled back. St.
George, for example, devolved to the uninspiring diminutive Georgette.[8]
The American military adopted code names during the World War II era, primarily
for security reasons.[9] Its use of code names for operations grew out of the
practice of color-coding war plans during the interwar period.[10] Even before
America entered the war, the War Department had executed Operation Indigo,[11]
the reinforcement of Iceland, and had dubbed plans to occupy the Azores and
Dakar as Operations Gray[12] and Black[13] respectively.
With the outbreak of the war, the practice of using colors as code names was
overcome by the need to code-name not only a growing number of operations, but
also numerous locations and projects. The War Department adopted a code word
list similar in principle to one already in use by the British. In early 1942,
members of the War Plans Division culled words from an unabridged dictionary to
come up with a list of 10,000 common nouns and adjectives that were not
suggestive of operational activities or locations. They avoided proper nouns,
geographical terms, and names of ships.[14] Since so many operations would
involve the British, they made sure the list did not conflict with the one
developed and managed by their counterparts on the British Inter-Services
Security Board.[15] In March 1942, the Joint Chiefs of Staff approved the
classified Inter-Services Code-Word Index[16] and gave the War Plans Division
the duty of assigning code words.[17] Accordingly, the War Plans Division
(shortly afterward renamed the Operations Division)[18] assigned blocks of code
words to each theater; the European Theater got such names as Market and Garden,
while the Pacific Theater got names like Olympic and Flintlock.[19]
Although the words listed in the British and American code indexes were randomly
chosen, the names of significant operations were thoughtfully selected from the
lists, at least those Winston Churchill had anything to do with. Churchill was
fascinated with code names and personally selected them for all major
operations.[20] He had clear ideas about what constituted appropriate names.
After coming across several that he considered inappropriate, he went so far as
to instruct an aide to submit all future code names to him for approval; he
dropped his demand when he learned the magnitude of the task,[21] but he did
take the precaution of writing down some principles to guide his subordinates:
[1.] Operations in which large numbers of men may lose their lives ought not to
be described by code words which imply a boastful or overconfident sentiment,. .
. or, conversely, which are calculated to invest the plan with an air of
despondency. . . . They ought not to be names of a frivolous character. . . .
They should not be ordinary words often used in other connections. . . . Names
of living people--Ministers and Commanders--should be avoided. . . .
2. After all, the world is wide, and intelligent thought will readily supply an
unlimited number of well-sounding names which do not suggest the character of
the operation or disparage it in any way and do not enable some widow or mother
to say that her son was killed in an operation called "Bunnyhug" or
"Ballyhoo."[22]
Borrowing a page from the Germans of World War I, whose code-naming practices he
knew well from writing his four-volume history of that war,[23] Churchill saw
the names of culturally significant figures as useful sources of operational
code words:
3. Proper names are good in this field. The heroes of antiquity, figures from
Greek and Roman mythology, the constellations and stars, famous racehorses,
names of British and American war heroes, could be used, provided they fall
within the rules above.[24]
Churchill's commonsense principles for naming operations influenced American as
well as British practice. For example, he objected to the code name for the
American bomber raid on the Romanian oil fields in Ploesti because he thought
the name "Soapsuds" was "inappropriate for an operation in which so many brave
Americans would risk or lose their lives."[25] He aired his objections through
the British Chiefs of Staff, who persuaded the Joint Chiefs of Staff to change
the name to the more appropriate and inspirational Tidal Wave.[26] Churchill's
hand also is evident in the naming of many combined US-British operations,
including the American-led invasion of Normandy. The plan for the 1944 invasion
was originally Roundhammer, a combination of the code names for invasions
planned for previous years, Sledgehammer (1942) and Roundup (1943).[27] While
Churchill's personal response to the name Roundhammer is not recorded, the
British official history of the war calls the name a "revolting neologism."[28]
Whether this strong reaction was shared by Churchill or not, he changed the name
to Overlord,[29] deservedly the best-known operational code name to emerge from
World War II.[30] The name suggests, as David Kahn has noted, "a sense of
majesty and patriarchal vengeance and irresistible power."[31] Whether or not
Churchill violated his own advice about avoiding names which imply
overconfidence, the name Overlord may well have strengthened the resolve of
those who planned the assault on fortress Europe.
The Axis powers also recognized the inspirational value of code names. Although
the Japanese typically numbered or alphabetically designated their
operations,[32] they resorted to inspirational names as their strategic
situation worsened, not unlike the Germans during World War I. The Japanese
offensive designed to thwart the Allied landings at Leyte Gulf, for example, was
optimistically dubbed Operation Victory.[33]
The Germans made extensive use of code names for plans and operations and
usually chose names at random; however, major operations often got special
consideration by the German leadership.[34] Perhaps the most well-known example
of this is the code name for the 1941 invasion of the Soviet Union. Initially,
the operation was christened Fritz, after the son of the plan's author, Colonel
Bernhard Von Lossberg.[35] But Hitler would not have his grand project named
something so pedestrian, Lossberg's sentimental attachment notwithstanding. On
11 December 1940 he renamed the operation Barbarossa, the folk name of the 12th-century
Holy Roman Emperor Frederick I, who had extended German authority over the Slavs
in the east and who, legend said, would rise again to establish a new German
Empire.[36] In selecting a name with these inspirational associations, Hitler
risked revealing his intentions--the very thing code names are designed to
conceal. In the case of Barbarossa, Hitler seems to have been lucky; in the case
of Operation Sealion, his planned invasion of Britain, he was not. British
intelligence divined Sealion's target from its telltale name.[37]
Using Nicknames to Shape Perceptions
The efforts of Hitler and Churchill notwithstanding, World War II operation
names had limited effect on shaping attitudes because they were classified until
after the war ended.[38] Thus, their effect on troop morale was limited to those
with clearances, and their effect on public perception was delayed until after
the war, at which point the names were merely historical curiosities.
But in America, shortly after the war ended, the War Department decided to use
operation names for public information purposes in connection with atomic bomb
testing. To this end, the War Department created a new category of unclassified
operation names, which are known as nicknames to distinguish them from
classified code words. Code words are assigned a classified meaning and are used
to safeguard classified plans and operations, while nicknames are assigned
unclassified meanings and are used for administrative, morale, and public
information purposes.[39]
Nicknames offered new possibilities for shaping attitudes about operations, and
the first person to make use of one took full advantage of the potential. Vice
Admiral W. H. P. Blandy, the commander of the joint task force conducting the
1946 atomic bomb tests on Bikini Atoll, selected the nickname Operation
Crossroads with great care. He chose it, he told a Senate committee, because of
the test's possible significance--"that seapower, airpower, and perhaps humanity
itself . . . were at the crossroads."[40] Admiral Blandy was especially proud of
the name, and when he discovered that the word was already assigned to another
activity, he pulled strings to get it assigned to the Bikini tests.[41]
The press publicized not only the name, but also Blandy's rationale for
selecting it, and did so with general approbation.[42] Commenting on Blandy's
public relations savvy, one historian wrote: "The choice of names was brilliant,
implying to some that the military was unsure of its direction and was truly in
awe of the atomic bomb."[43] However, some in the press were not so enamored
with Blandy or his choice of name. In an article lampooning Blandy, The New
Yorker commented with unmistakable sarcasm that the name "has been greatly
admired in literary and non-violent circles."[44] The sarcasm seems to suggest
that while the general public might admire the name, literary and non-violent
audiences were not taken in by Blandy's public relations methods. This would not
be the last time members of the media would resent the military's success in
popularizing a carefully chosen nickname.
Operations in Korea
Although the military had learned the value of well-chosen nicknames during the
peacetime atomic bomb tests, it continued to use meaningless code names during
wartime to protect operational security. At least this was true early in the
Korean War. In planning the Inchon landing, General Douglas MacArthur and his
subordinates followed the World War II practice of selecting operation names
from an established code word list. The earliest plan was dubbed Operation
Bluehearts, and the one actually executed was Operation Chromite.[45]
MacArthur did depart from World War II practice in one important respect: he
permitted code names to be declassified and disseminated to the press once
operations had begun, rather than waiting until the end of the war.[46] Thus,
combat operation names were, for the first time, public knowledge as operations
unfolded. Curiously, MacArthur, with all his public relations savvy, failed to
see the opportunities this offered for shaping perceptions.
China's intervention in the Korean War helped Lieutenant General Matthew Ridgway
see what MacArthur had not. Ridgway took command of the Eighth Army as it was
reeling southward under relentless Chinese attack. His first task, he realized,
was to restore the fighting spirit of his badly demoralized command.[47] One way
he did this was by giving decidedly aggressive nicknames to the series of
counteroffensives undertaken from February to April 1951: Thunderbolt, Roundup,
Killer, Ripper, Courageous, Audacious, and Dauntless. Because these names were
not classified once operations began, they were widely disseminated among Eighth
Army soldiers to boost morale.[48] Ridgway's unprecedented use of meaningful
combat operation names set the tone for one of the most remarkable
transformations of any military organization in history. The reinvigorated
Eighth Army pushed the Chinese back to the 38th parallel.
If Ridgway's names contributed to success on the battlefield, they were not
nearly so successful on the home front. Ridgway had publicly announced not only
the start of his first major counteroffensive, but also its nickname: Operation
Killer.[49] In doing so, he may have imagined that he could boost the morale of
the public in the same way he hoped to inspire his troops. After all, the news
from the front had been bad for months--so bad, in fact, that the US Far East
Command had suspended communiques dealing with operational matters the previous
fall.[50] It was probably no coincidence that the communiques resumed the day
after the start of Operation Killer.[51] Certainly some of Ridgway's troops
thought that Killer and other names had been chosen with the media in mind.[52]
In any event, more than a few observers objected to Ridgway's operation name,
which was prominently displayed in many newspaper and magazine articles.[53] One
critic was the Army Chief of Staff, General J. Lawton Collins, who informed
Ridgway that "the word `killer' . . . struck an unpleasant note as far as public
relations was concerned."[54] Certainly public relations suffered: several
writers criticized the name directly or implicitly in letters to The New York
Times;[55] the International Longshoremen's and Warehousemen's Union issued a
report in which the name served as the rubric for the entire conflict, which it
called a "phony" war emergency;[56] Republicans pointed to the term as evidence
that the Truman Administration had no other aim in Korea but to kill
Chinese;[57] and the State Department objected that the name had soured
negotiations with the People's Republic of China.[58]
While the incident taught Ridgway "how varied . . . the political pressures [can
be in waging] . . . a major war,"[59] he remained unrepentant about his
selection of the name: "I am not convinced that the country should not be told
that war means killing. I am by nature opposed to any effort to `sell' war to
people as an only mildly unpleasant business that requires very little in the
way of blood."[60] However opposed his nature may have been to soft-pedaling the
realities of war, operations after Killer and its immediate successor, Ripper,
were given less bloody names.
Operations in Vietnam
Early in the Vietnam War, operations were often given nicknames descriptive of
the missions they designated. For example, a combined US Marine and South
Vietnamese operation designed to increase the area of control of the Marine
enclave at Da Nang was dubbed Blastout.[61] The names of air operations in early
1966 suggest the widening of the air war against North Vietnam. The two
retaliatory air strikes against carefully selected North Vietnamese
installations were known as Flaming Dart I and II, while the gradually
escalating strategic bombing effort begun shortly thereafter was known as
Rolling Thunder.[62]
The penchant for giving descriptive names to operations in Vietnam caused the
military to relearn the lesson of Operation Killer. On 25 January 1966, the 1st
Cavalry Division began a sweep operation through the Bong Son Plain which it had
dubbed Masher,[63] presumably because the operation envisioned the enemy being
mashed against a second force comprised of Marines.[64] Owing to the media's
free access to military units and the lack of censorship during the war,
nicknames like Masher were frequently reported by the media as operations
progressed. And because Masher was a major operation conducted by the novel
"airmobile cavalry" division, it attracted a fair degree of media attention,
causing the name to be widely circulated on television and in the print
media.[65] When President Johnson heard it, he angrily protested that it did not
reflect "pacification emphasis."[66] General William Westmoreland put it more
bluntly when he speculated that "President Johnson . . . objected . . . because
the connotation of violence provided a focus for carping war critics."[67] To
remove their focus, the division commander quickly renamed the operation White
Wing.[68]
The lesson of the Masher incident was not lost on Westmoreland: "We later used
names of American cities, battles, or historic figures [for operations]."[69]
Indeed, reading the names of operations mounted in Vietnam after February 1966
is like reading a cross between a gazetteer and a history book.[70] Names such
as Junction City, Bastogne, and Nathan Hale were imbued with American
associations and values, and thus were politically safe, as well as potentially
inspirational.
Like Ridgway, Westmoreland tried his own hand at the art of operational naming.
Also like Ridgway, he did so to inspire demoralized soldiers. In early 1968, the
garrison of 6000 US and South Vietnamese troops at Khe Sanh found itself
surrounded by an estimated 15,000 to 20,000 North Vietnamese regulars. Many
critics saw a Dien Bien Phu in the making, and the beleaguered troops could not
but be infected by the prevailing sense of doom. To combat their dispiriting
mood, Westmoreland named the round-the-clock bombing and shelling of enemy
positions Operation Niagara. He selected the name, he said, "to invoke an image
of cascading shells and bombs," an image obviously designed to reassure the Khe
Sanh garrison.[71]
As the Vietnam War drew to a close, the Department of Defense for the first time
issued guidelines concerning nicknaming operations.[72] It is clear from reading
the guidelines--which remain in force today[73]--that its authors learned well
the lessons of Operations Killer and Masher. Noting that improperly selected
nicknames "can be counterproductive," the regulation specifies that nicknames
must not: "express a degree of bellicosity inconsistent with traditional
American ideals or current foreign policy"; "convey connotations offensive to
good taste or derogatory to a particular group, sect, or creed"; "convey
connotations offensive to [US] allies or other Free World nations"; or employ
"exotic words, trite expressions, or well-known commercial trademarks."[74] The
regulation further stipulates that a nickname must consist of two words (which
helps distinguish it from a code word, which consists of only one) and requires
the JCS to establish procedures for DOD components to nominate and report
nicknames.[75]
Post-Vietnam Automation
In 1975, the JCS implemented these guidelines by establishing a computer system
to fully automate the maintenance and reconciliation of nicknames, code words,
and exercise terms.[76] The computer system, called the Code Word, Nickname, and
Exercise Term System (an unwieldy name shortened to NICKA), is still in
operation today and can be accessed through the Worldwide Military Command and
Control System. The NICKA system is not, as some assume, a random word generator
for nicknames; it is, in fact, merely an automated means for submitting,
validating, and storing them. The authority to create nicknames rests not with
those who manage the NICKA system, but with 24 DOD components, agencies, and
unified and specified commands.[77] JCS assigns each of these organizations a
series of two-letter alphabetic sequences and requires that the first word of
each two-word nickname begin with a letter pair from one of the sequences.[78]
For example, the US Atlantic Command (USACOM) is assigned six two-letter
alphabetic sequences: AG-AL, ES-EZ, JG-JL, QA-QF, SM-SR, and UM-UR.[79]
Selecting the letter pair UR from the last of these sequences, a staff officer
recommended the nickname Urgent Fury for the 1983 invasion of Grenada.
Clearly, staff officers in DOD components, agencies, and unified and specified
commands have considerable freedom in creating nicknames, certainly far more
than their Vietnam-era predecessors. There is, and has been for 20 years, plenty
of room for artistry in naming operations.
In the first 15 years of the new system's existence, however, there was little
attempt to exploit the power of nicknaming to improve either troop morale or
public and international relations. Nicknames used from 1975 through 1988 were
generally meaningless word pairs similar to the operation names used during
World War II: Eldorado Canyon (the 1986 Libya raid), Praying Mantis (the 1988
air strikes targeting Iranian naval vessels and oil platforms), and Golden
Pheasant (a 1988 show of force to deter Nicaraguan violations of Honduran
territory). When nicknames were chosen purposefully, as in the case of Urgent
Fury, the effect was overdone.[80] Undoubtedly, the staff officer who came up
with "Urgent Fury" was intent on inspiring the troops executing the mission, but
he failed to consider the reaction of the media and general public. The name,
which was divulged to the press shortly after the invasion,[81] only fueled the
arguments of critics who accused the military of excess in committing so much
combat power to the operation[82]--which, one wag suggested, "the New York
Police Department could have won."[83] Another critic implied that the name
belied the rationale for the invasion. Urgent Fury sounded "too militant," he
suggested; if we had really been provoked into invading the tiny island nation,
then why not "Reluctant Necessity"?[84]
Undoubtedly one reason for the military's failure to use operation names to
improve public relations was the strained relationship that existed between the
military and the media during this 15-year period. Many in the military blamed
the loss of the Vietnam War on the media's critical reporting, which, it was
argued, soured the American public's will to continue the fight. Nowhere is this
attitude toward the media more evident than in Urgent Fury, where Vice Admiral
Metcalf initially refused to allow the media access to the combat zone. The
motive for this restriction was transparent:
Shutting the press out of Grenada was . . . based on a fear that an unrestrained
press might muck things up again as many senior leaders believed they had done
in Vietnam. If the press [was] not present, then there [was] no need to be
concerned about . . . media spin.[85]
Given such prevailing attitudes, it is small wonder that the staff officer who
came up with the name Urgent Fury failed to consider the media's response to the
nickname, much less use a name calculated to create a positive response to the
event. That the media could be used to develop public support for operations was
a notion foreign to many in the military at the time.
Just Cause--or High Hokum?
Just Cause was the first US combat operation since the Korean War whose nickname
was designed to shape domestic and international perceptions about the mission
it designated. And it is perhaps unsurprising that the man who helped formulate
the name, Lieutenant General Kelly, held an undergraduate degree in
journalism.[86] His background equipped him to appreciate what others could not:
that naming an operation is tantamount to seizing the high ground in waging a
public relations campaign. By declaring the Panama invasion a just cause, the
nickname sought to contrast US motives with the injustices of the Noriega
regime, which included election fraud, drug trafficking, harassment of US
service members and their dependents, and the murder of a Marine officer. The
gambit largely succeeded. The name, prominently mentioned in Pentagon press
releases, was widely circulated by the media, which generally accepted the term
without protest.
Network news anchors adopted the phrase "Operation Just Cause" to refer to the
invasion as if they had invented the phrase. In less than an hour after the Bush
administration started using the phrase "Operation Just Cause," the network news
anchors were asking questions like "How is Operation Just Cause going?"[87]
At least two editorials adopted the phrase by way of endorsing the invasion.[88]
Naming the operation Just Cause was risky, however, not only because it was an
obvious public relations ploy, but also because it apparently sought to preempt
judgment about whether, in fact, the invasion really was moral, legal, and
righteous. Some saw this as overreaching. A New York Times editorial entitled
"Operation High Hokum" noted how different the nickname was from previous
nonsense names and criticized it as an "overreach of sentiment."[89] Several
years later, a more spirited critic wrote:
It was an extremely cynical gambit to name a blatantly unjust invasion Operation
Just Cause. It betrayed the administration's insecurity about an illegal
invasion of a sovereign country. The label was, therefore, very important . . .
in creating the impression among the general population that the US government
was pursuing a morally righteous cause. [It was] blatant propaganda.[90]
"Just Cause" illustrates both the power and the limits of nicknames in shaping
perceptions about military operations. Few would object to the Defense
Department engaging in what some have called "public diplomacy"[91]--the attempt
to portray its activities in a positive light to bolster troop morale and to
garner domestic and international support. Commercial firms carefully consider
product names to ensure success in the marketplace; why should the government's
approach to naming military operations be any different? But there is a point at
which aggressive marketing turns public relations into propaganda. Going beyond
this point breeds cynicism rather than support. Precisely where this point is
may be ill-defined, but the nickname Just Cause probably came close to it.
Operation Just Cause ushered in a new era in the nicknaming of US military
operations, one in which operations are given names carefully selected to shape
perceptions about them. To fully understand what spawned this new era, one must
look beyond the immediate influence of Operation Just Cause. While the Panama
invasion certainly helped military leaders recognize how powerful nicknames
could be in shaping attitudes, two other important trends were at work.
The first trend was the growing recognition among the military leadership that
the media could be an ally rather than an opponent in the public relations
effort. Articles arguing for cooperation with the media abound in professional
military journals after 1989.[92] If nicknames were to contain a message, then
the media would be a useful means of communicating it.
The second trend was the growing relative importance of nicknames in relation to
the shrinking scale of military action. During previous wars like Korea and
Vietnam, individual operations were but a small piece of a much larger effort,
so operation nicknames attracted relatively little attention. In recent times,
when wars are fought with unprecedented speed and when circumscribed
peacekeeping, humanitarian, and relief missions proliferate, a single operation
usually encompasses the entire event. The Persian Gulf War is an exception, but
even in that case the confrontation consisted of only two operations. Nicknames
have become synonyms for entire conflicts; "Desert Storm," for example, is
frequently used in place of "Gulf War."[93]
Desert Shield to Sea Angel
In August 1990, the Central Command (CENTCOM) staff expended considerable effort
in selecting the best name for the operation designed to defend Saudi Arabia
from Iraqi invasion. The fact that so much effort went into naming Desert Shield
suggests the radical change in attitude which had occurred in the nine months
since the invasion of Panama, when the transformation of the name Blue Spoon
into Just Cause occurred as an afterthought shortly before the operation began.
The naming of Operation Desert Shield and its successor, Desert Storm, also
illustrates the critical role of artistry in the process.
During the hectic days of planning the deployment to the Gulf, CENTCOM staff
officers managed to compile a list of candidate nicknames three pages long,[94]
from which General H. Norman Schwarzkopf initially selected the name Peninsula
Shield. The first two letters of the first word, PE, are not assigned to
CENTCOM, so it is clear that CENTCOM felt that selecting the right name was more
important than sticking to its assigned alphabetic sequences. However, the JCS
rejected the name,[95] perhaps because the mission called for defending only
portions rather than the entirety of the Arabian Peninsula, or because
"peninsula" was not thought to be characteristic enough of the region. Other
names were considered, including Crescent Shield--a name intended to appeal to
the Saudis and other Arab allies--but this too was rejected.[96] In the end,
CENTCOM proposed and JCS accepted Desert Shield,[97] a name which suggested both
the region's characteristic geography and CENTCOM's defensive mission.[98] The
metaphor of the shield was well chosen because it emphasized not only US
deterrence but also Iraqi aggression, for a shield is only necessary when a
sword has been unsheathed. In the context of the metaphor, the deployment of US
troops was necessary to deter an Iraqi sword that had already bloodied itself in
Kuwait. Such careful and effective wordsmithing played well with domestic and
international observers, setting a context conducive to garnering support for
the operation.
The naming of the offensive phase of the Gulf campaign was no less effective.
Recognizing the success of the nickname Desert Shield, General Schwarzkopf
played off the name in coming up with Desert Storm,[99] establishing a thematic
linkage which would later be employed in subsequent and subordinate operations
as well: the name of the ground offensive was Desert Saber; the redeployment was
called Desert Farewell; the distribution of leftover food to the US poor was
Desert Share. This family of operation names drew grudging admiration from The
Nation: "You have to admire the Defense Department P.R. people who thought up
the names for the various phases of the war, each carefully calibrated to send
the correct propaganda message."[100] Characterizing the names as propaganda is
a cynical label which could be applied to any government-sponsored public
relations effort, but, for all its cynicism, the comment does suggest how
successful CENTCOM's operation names were in developing public support for its
various missions.
General Schwarzkopf was probably inspired to use the storm metaphor by the name
of the air operation, which Air Force planners had dubbed Instant Thunder.[101]
The storm metaphor associated the offensive with the unleashing of overwhelming
natural forces, an association which was as politically astute as it was
inspirational, cloaking the military offensive in the garb of natural phenomena.
When the long-awaited offensive began, General Schwarzkopf played upon the
metaphor's inspirational power in his message to his troops: "You must be the
thunder and lightning of Desert Storm," he told them.[102] The General's
statement was widely publicized and admired; one writer commented that
Schwarzkopf's rhetoric "sounded positively Churchillian."[103] Thus, the name
served to inspire the nation as well as the troops.
Not all post-Just Cause nicknames have been as successful as Desert Shield and
Desert Storm. For example, the name for the US Marine operation to aid victims
of the 1991 typhoon which devastated Bangladesh was originally Operation
Productive Effort, a name that General Colin Powell admitted he never liked and
which neither he nor his staff could remember. "After a day of struggling with
Productive Effort, I said to my staff, `We've just got to get a better name.'"
When the following day's newspaper reported that the Bangladeshis who saw the
Marines coming in from the sea by helicopter and landing craft said, "Look!
Look! Angels! From the sea!" the operation was rechristened Sea Angel.[104]
Guidelines for Naming Operations
The Productive Effort incident demonstrates that the military still has some
learning to do about the art of naming operations. Rules for helping staff
officers through the process would be of little value because nicknaming is an
art rather than a science. Yet four general suggestions emerge from the last 45
years of nicknaming operations: make it meaningful, target the key audiences, be
wary of fashions, and make it memorable. These suggestions and the prudent
guidelines already published in DOD Regulation 5200.1-R may prevent another
"(non)Productive Effort."
First, make it meaningful. Don't waste a public relations opportunity,
particularly where highly visible operations are involved. If the Gulf War has
taught us anything, it has shown us how powerful words and images can be in
shaping perceptions. But in the pursuit of a meaningful name, avoid those that
border on the propagandistic. It is one thing to name an operation with a view
to gaining public support first; it is quite another to put a label on an
operation that insists upon its morality. However righteous an operation might
appear to be, a name like Just Cause can be distasteful to the media and general
public, not necessarily because they disagree with the justness of the cause,
but because they resent having such words put (literally) in their mouths. The
more prudent course is to find names that reinforce policy objectives by
emphasizing the mission and its rationale. Such an approach is likely to satisfy
all critics except those who view any government public relations effort as
propaganda.
Second, identify and target the critical audiences. While it has been pointed
out that "in the global media environment, the information provided to one
audience must be considered available to all audiences,"[105] it is seldom
possible to effectively target all potential audiences using a two-word
nickname. Thus, one must chose one's target carefully. The first impulse might
be to consider only the morale of the troops and the support of the American
public, but two other audiences should be considered as well: the international
community, including allies and coalition partners; and the enemy.
The importance of these audiences varies with the situation. Where an operation
poses safety concerns to a foreign population, the operation name should be
designed to allay those concerns. For example, the operation to remove chemical
weapons from Europe was named Steel Box, "a solid, positive name" which "implied
leakproof execution, thus reassuring our allies."[106] Where US forces operate
with coalition partners or allies, the operation may benefit from a name that
emphasizes solidarity. We routinely use such a strategy in naming combined
exercises like Team Spirit, and we sometimes elect to downplay US participation
by employing the language of the partner nations, like Fuertes Unitas (United
Forces).
In certain situations, even the enemy can be the critical audience, since
operation and exercise names can send clear signals of US intentions. For
example, Earnest Will was the name of the operation to escort reflagged oil
tankers through the Persian Gulf, a name which conveyed to the Iranians the
firmness of US resolve in defending the vessels. An amphibious exercise mounted
before the Gulf War was dubbed Imminent Thunder, a name clearly designed to
intimidate the Iraqis.
Third, be cautious of fashions. Operation nicknames enjoy periods of popularity
just like personal names. The current fashion in nicknaming operations is to
make the names sound like mission statements by using a verb-noun sequence:
Promote Liberty, Restore Hope, Uphold Democracy, Provide Promise. ("Provide" is
the most popular verb, having been used in the names of six different operations
during the 1989-1993 period.[107]) There is value in this approach because it
tends to keep the mission foremost in the minds of the troops executing it, and
it reminds domestic and international audiences why the mission was undertaken.
But there is also a certain formulaic monotony about such names which makes them
less memorable than they might otherwise be. Like having a 1950s classroom full
of ****s and Janes, it's hard to tell the Provide Hopes and Comforts apart.
Finally, make it memorable. To shape perceptions, nicknames must gain currency,
something that can happen only if they cling to the cobwebs of the mind. This
was one failing of the name Productive Effort; if the Joint Staff couldn't even
remember it, how would it affect the general public? The name had three strikes
against it: it lacked uniqueness (all operations are efforts, and one hopes that
all are productive); it was abstract (what is a productive effort anyway?); and
it was too long (five syllables).
To avoid these failings, start by identifying unique attributes of the
operation. Try to capture those characteristics in specific terms with a
metaphor or with words that evoke an image. Try to keep each word to two
syllables or less. Sea Angel, the name that replaced Productive Effort, has all
the traits of a memorable name: it is unique and specific; it evokes a clear
image in more than one culture; and it has only three syllables. Desert Shield
and Desert Storm share those traits. It is no accident that the latter name is
so frequently substituted for the name Gulf War. People remember it.
Applying the four guidelines will result in an effectively nicknamed operation,
an outcome that can help win the war of images. In that war, the operation name
is the first--and quite possibly the decisive--bullet to be fired. Mold and aim
it with care.
NOTES
1. I have discarded the American typographic convention of capitalizing
operation names in the their entirety on the assumption that this would be
distracting in a paper full of such names. (As a general rule, it is likewise
the typographic house style of Parameters to capitalize only the first letter of
operation names. In addition to being "distracting," the practice of setting
operation names in all capitals--while historically accurate--can be confusing,
making them appear as acronyms. Our choice in this matter has been for clarity
over strict historical accuracy, despite the objection of some of our historian
advisors.--Editor)
2. Bob Woodward, The Commanders (New York: Pocket Star Books, 1991), pp. 149-50.
3. For a comprehensive listing of nicknamed operations over the five-year period
starting in 1989, see Francis M. Doyle, Karen J. Lewis, and Leslie A. Williams,
Named Military Operations from January 1989 to December 1993 (Fort Monroe, Va.:
TRADOC Technical Library, 1994). Nicknames and code words are not the same. As
noted later in this article, code words are assigned a classified meaning and
are used to safeguard classified plans and operations, while nicknames are
assigned unclassified meanings and are used for administrative, morale, and
public information purposes.
4. Charles W. McClain, Jr., and Garry D. Levin, "Public Affairs in America's
21st Century," Military Review, 74 (November 1994), 11.
5. Ray Eldon Hiebert, "Public Relations as a Weapon of Modern Warfare," in
Desert Storm and the Mass Media, ed. Bradley S. Greenberg and Walter Gantz
(Cresskill, N.J.: Hampton Press, 1993), p. 36.
6. Barrie Pitt, 1918: The Last Act (New York: W. W. Norton, 1962), pp. 47-50.
7. Robert B. Asprey, The German High Command at War: Hindenburg and Ludendorff
Conduct World War I (New York: William Morrow, 1991), pp. 340-41.
8. Ibid., pp. 392-93.
9. Memorandum from Dwight D. Eisenhower to the Adjutant General, Subject: Code
Words to Designate Plans, Projects, Localities, etc., 10 March 1942, National
Archives Record Group Number 407, p. 1.
10. Ray S. Cline, United States Army in World War II: Vol. IV, The War
Department: Part 2, Washington Command Post: The Operations Division
(Washington: GPO, 1951), p. 65, n. 59.
11. Mark Skinner Watson, United States Army in World War II: Vol. IV, The War
Department: Part 1, Chief of Staff: Prewar Plans and Preparations (Washington:
GPO, 1950), pp. 487-90.
12. Maurice Matloff and Edwin M. Snell, United States Army in World War II: Vol
IV, The War Department: Part 3, Strategic Planning for Coalition Warfare, 1941-1942
(Washington: GPO, 1953), p. 50, n. 67.
13. Ibid., p. 103, n. 22.
14. Bill Hines, "Operation CODENAME," Infantry Journal, March 1947, p. 42.
15. Ibid.; on the code-naming functions of the Inter-Services Security Board,
see the following sources: Ewen Montagu, Beyond Top Secret Ultra (New York:
Coward, McCann, and Geoghegan, 1978), p. 52; F. H. Hinsley and C. A. G. Simkins,
British Intelligence in the Second World War: Vol. IV, Security and Counter-Intelligence
(New York: Cambridge Univ. Press), p. 247.
16. Minutes of the Sixth JCS Meeting, 18 March 1942, p. 3; available on
microfilm, Records of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, 1942-45 (Frederick, Md.:
University Publications of America, 1983).
17. Eisenhower.
18. When the War Plans Division was renamed the Operations Division on 23 March
1942, the newly reconstituted Current Section was assigned code management
responsibilities, a function it performed for the duration of the war; see Ray
S. Cline, United States Army in World War II: Vol. IV, The War Department: Part
2, Washington Command Post: The Operations Division (Washington: GPO, 1951), pp.
106, 131.
19. Hines, p. 42.
20. Warren F. Kimball, ed., Churchill and Roosevelt: The Complete
Correspondence: Vol. I, Alliance Emerging, October 1933-November 1942
(Princeton, N.J.: Princeton Univ. Press, 1984), p. 280; also Vol. II, Alliance
Forged, November 1942-February 1944, pp. 491-92.
21. Ibid.
22. Winston S. Churchill, The Second World War: Vol. V, Closing the Ring
(Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1951), p. 662.
23. Churchill, The World Crisis: 1916-1918 (New York: Scribners, 1927), I, 279;
also II, 125ff.
24. Churchill, Closing the Ring, p. 662.
25. Kimball, I, 280.
26. Ibid.
27. Michael Howard, History of the Second World War: United Kingdom Military
Series: Vol. IV, Grand Strategy, August 1942-September 1943 (London: HMSO,
1972), p. 430.
28. Ibid.
29. W. G. F. Jackson, "Overlord": Normandy 1944 (London: Davis-Poynter, 1978),
p. 89; Omar N. Bradley, A Soldier's Story (New York: Henry Holt, 1951), p. 172.
30. Churchill may have sought an alternative to Roundhammer as much for security
reasons as aesthetics. This name, in conjunction with the name of the planned
invasion of southern France, dubbed Anvil, gave a pretty clear hint as to the
Allies' hammer-and-anvil strategy. While the foregoing is my own speculation, it
is known that Anvil was renamed Dragoon precisely because the Allies feared that
"the enemy might finally light on the significance of the word." See Forrest C.
Pogue, George C. Marshall, Vol. II, Organizer of Victory (New York: Viking
Press, 1973), p. 413.
31. David Kahn, The Codebreakers: The Story of Secret Writing (New York:
Macmillan, 1967), p. 503.
32. Hines, p. 43.
33. E. B. Potter, Sea Power: A Naval History (Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall,
1960), p. 777.
34. Barton Whaley, Codeword Barbarossa (Cambridge, Mass.: Massachusetts
Institute of Technology Press, 1973), p. 16, note.
35. David Irving, Hitler's War (New York: Viking Press, 1977), p. 142.
36. Whaley, p. 18.
37. Montagu, p. 53.
38. The first World War II operation names were made public on 10 October 1945,
upon release of: US War Dept., General Staff, Biennial Report of the Chief of
the United States Army, July 1, 1943 to June 30, 1945, to the Secretary of War
(Washington: GPO, 1945). See "Code Names of Big Operations Revealed; Invasion of
Kyushu Was to Be `Olympic,'" The New York Times, 10 October 1945, p. 13.
39. US Dept. of Defense, Joint Publication 1-02, Department of Defense
Dictionary of Military and Associated Terms (Washington: GPO, 23 March 1994),
pp. 72, 261.
40. David Sidney Shalett, "Test Atomic Bombs to Blast 100 Ships at Marshalls
Atoll," The New York Times, 25 January 1946, p. 1.
41. Jonathan M. Weisgall, Operation Crossroads: The Atomic Tests at Bikini Atoll
(Annapolis, Md.: Naval Institute Press, 1994), p. 32.
42. See, for example, "Operation Crossroads," The New York Times Magazine, 17
February 1946, p. 8.
43. Weisgall, p. 32.
44. "Notes and Comment," The New Yorker, 27 July 1946, p. 12.
45. D. Clayton James, The Years of MacArthur: Vol. III, Triumph and Disaster,
1945-1964 (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1985), p. 465.
46. For example, the name Operation Chromite appeared in Time only ten days
after the landing took place. Because the name was meaningless, it received only
passing attention. See "Battle of Korea," Time, 25 September 1950, p. 26.
47. Matthew B. Ridgway, The Korean War: How We Met the Challenge (Garden City,
N.Y.: Doubleday, 1967), 85ff.
48. For one Marine's reaction to the name Ripper, see Henry Berry, Hey, Mac,
Where Ya Been? Living Memories of the U.S. Marines in the Korean War (New York:
St. Martin's Press, 1988), p. 209.
49. Ridgway actually told reporters about Operation Killer before it commenced
but requested that they not report the information until the attack had begun.
See James F. Schnabel, United States Army in the Korean War: Vol. III, Policy
and Direction: The First Year (Washington: GPO, 1972), p. 340.
50. Lindesay Parrott, "U.N. Units Advance More Than 8 Miles in Drive in Center,"
The New York Times, 22 February 1951, p. 1.
51. Ibid.
52. Berry, pp. 26, 209.
53. Parrott; "Operation Killer," The New York Times, 25 February 1951, sec. IV,
p. 1; Lindesay Parrott, "U.S. Forces Launch 2 Attacks on Reds; Main Push Goes
On," The New York Times, 1 March 1951, p. 1; "Gen. Matt and Gen. Mud:
Waterlogged Marines Join U.N.'s Operation Killer," Life, 12 March 1951, p. 39.
The writer of a letter published in The New York Times noted that he had seen
"frequent references in the newspapers, including The Times, to `Operation
Killer'"; see Hugh Gallaher, letter to the editor, printed as "Military
Designation Criticized," The New York Times, 6 March 1951, p. 26.
54. The words are Ridgway's, paraphrasing Collins; see Ridgway, p. 110.
55. Gallaher; Jacob Herzfeld, letter to the editor, 28 February 1951, printed as
"Korea's Holocaust," The New York Times, 3 March 1951, p. 12.
56. "Union Gains Cited by Harry Bridges," The New York Times, 3 April 1951, p.
55.
57. Ridgway, p. 110.
58. Harry G. Summers, Korean War Almanac (New York: Facts on File, 1990), p.
156.
59. Ridgway, p. 110.
60. Ibid., p. 111.
61. Gregory R. Clark, Words of the Vietnam War: The Slang, Jargon, etc.
(Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland, 1990), p. 365.
62. Ibid, pp. 369, 379.
63. Shelby L. Stanton, Anatomy of a Division: The 1st Cavalry in Vietnam
(Novato, Calif.: Presidio Press, 1987), p. 70.
64. Clark, p. 374.
65. Daniel C. Hallin, The "Uncensored War": The Media and Vietnam (New York:
Oxford Univ. Press, 1986), p. 145; see also the series of stories in The New
York Times written by R. W. Apple, Jr., which appeared 28 January (p. 12), 31
January (p. 12), 2 February (p. 15), and 3 February (p. 15) 1966.
66. Stanton, p. 72.
67. William C. Westmoreland, A Soldier Reports (Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday,
1976), p. 164.
68. Ibid.; Stanton, p. 72.
69. Westmoreland, p. 164.
70. For a comprehensive listing of operation names used during the Vietnam War,
see Clark, pp. 363-83.
71. Westmoreland, p. 164.
72. "DoD Information Security Program," DOD Directive 5200.1, 1 June 1972;
reprinted in Federal Register, 3 August 1972, Vol. 37, No. 150, pp. 15655-15686.
The guidelines concerning nicknames which appear on page 15685 do not appear in
the previous version of DOD Directive 5200.1, entitled "Safeguarding Official
Information in the Interests of the Defense of the United States," 8 July 1957;
rpt. in US Dept. of Defense, Implementation of Recommendations of Coolidge
Committee on Classified Information (Washington: July 1957), Pt. 2, App. 4,
Encl. 1, p. 1.
73. The same guidelines appear in the newest version of this regulation: US
Dept. of Defense, Information Security Program Regulation, 5200.1-R (Washington:
June 1986), p. C-2.
74. Ibid.
75. Ibid., pp. C-1 to C-3.
76. US Dept. of Defense, Code Name, Nickname, and Exercise Term (NICKA) WWMCCS
System: Project Manual (Washington: 20 February 1975), p. 1.
77. US Dept. of Defense, Joint Chiefs of Staff, Joint Reporting Structure: Vol.
II, Joint Reports: Part 14, General Use/Miscellaneous: Chapter 4, Code Word,
Nickname, and Exercise Term Report, Change 11, JCS Pub 1-03.19 (Washington: 13
March 1990), p. 14-4-9.
78. Ibid., p. 14-4-6.
79. Ibid., pp. 14-4-14 and 14-4-16.
80. The one exception to the poorly named operations of the period was Operation
Eagle Claw, the effort to free US hostages held in Iran. But the name never
gained currency because the mission was aborted. Instead, the mission has become
known as the "Iranian hostage rescue attempt" or simply as Desert One, the
designation of the staging area where the mission was scrubbed.
81. David Hoffman and Fred Hiatt, "Weinberger Says U.S. May Stay for Weeks," The
Washington Post, 4 November 1983, p. B2.
82. Representative Byron raised this criticism in a congressional post-mortem of
Urgent Fury when she questioned whether the military hadn't "[gone] to overkill"
in the operation; see US Congress, House, Committee on the Armed Services,
Lessons Learned as a Result of the U.S. Military Operations in Grenada, Hearings
(Washington: GPO, 1984), p. 45.
83. William S. Lind, quoted in Robert J. Beck, The Grenada Invasion: Politics,
Law, and Foreign Policy Decisionmaking (Boulder, Colo.: Westview Press, 1993),
p. 17.
84. Jack Eisen, "`Lede of the Week' Award," The Washington Post, 4 November
1983, p. B2.
85. Marc D. Felman, The Military/Media Clash and the New Principle of War: Media
Spin (Maxwell AFB, Ala.: Air Univ. Press, June 1993), p. 15.
86. Hiebert, p. 32.
87. Christina Jacqueline Johns and P. Ward Johnson, State Crime, the Media, and
the Invasion of Panama (Westport, Conn.: Praeger, 1994), p. 64.
88. See Houston Post editorial, 21 December 1989; rpt. in Editorials on File
(16-31 December 1989), Vol. 20, No. 24, p. 1487; and Daily Oklahoman editorial,
22 December 1989; rpt. in the same edition of Editorials on File, p. 1483.
89. "Operation High Hokum," The New York Times, 23 December 1989, p. 30.
90. Johns and Johnson, p. 64.
91. Jonathan Alter et al., "The Propaganda War," Newsweek, 25 February 1991, p.
38.
92. See for example: McClain and Levin, pp. 6-15; Felman; Brent Baker, "Desert
Shield/Storm: The War of Words and Images," Naval War College Review, 44 (Autumn
1991), 59-65; William M. Hammond, "The Army and Public Affairs: Enduring
Principles," Parameters, 19 (June 1989), 57-74.
93. A LEXIS/NEXIS word search of major newspapers and magazines for the three-year
period January 1990 to December 1994 revealed that the name "Desert Storm"
appeared in 8276 newspaper and 4466 magazine articles, while the name "Gulf
War"--or a variant, like "Persian Gulf War"--appeared in 86,652 newspaper and
13,642 magazine articles. Clearly Gulf War and its variants are more popular
than Desert Storm, but the frequency with which Desert Storm appears (roughly 10
percent of the newspaper citations and one-third of the magazine articles) is
significant.
94. "Military Makes Every Word Count, Picking Code Names, Like Desert Shield, A
Matter of Pride," Orlando Sentinel Tribune, 19 August 1990, p. A17.
95. H. Norman Schwarzkopf and Peter Petre, It Doesn't Take a Hero (New York:
Bantam Books, 1992), p. 309.
96. Telephone conversation with Dr. Ronald Cole, Historian, Joint Office of
History, Office of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Washington, D.C., 12 January 1995.
97. Like the first two letters of "peninsula," the first two letters of "desert"
do not fall into the alphabetic sequences assigned to CENTCOM.
98. Schwarzkopf, pp. 309-10.
99. On the CINC's personal role in naming Desert Storm, see Schwarzkopf, p. 320.
100. "Words of War," The Nation, 12 August 1991, p. 177.
101. Instant Thunder was a deliberate allusion to Rolling Thunder, the name of
the two-and-one-half-year bombing operation over North Vietnam, which many Air
Force officers believed failed because of its gradual strategy. See Rick
Atkinson, Crusade: The Untold Story of the Persian Gulf War (Boston: Houghton
Mifflin, 1993), p. 59. Instant Thunder seems to be the first instance where a
nickname purposefully (and critically) alluded to a previously named operation.
102. Schwarzkopf, p. 413.
103. Joshua Hammer et al., "You Must Be the Thunder and the Lightning," Newsweek,
28 January 1991, p. 31.
104. Donna Miles and Patrick Swan, "What's in a Name?" Soldiers, February 1992,
p. 40.
105. McClain and Levin, p. 11.
106. Miles and Swan, p. 48.
107. Doyle et al., p. 2.
Lieutenant Colonel Gregory C. Sieminski, USA, is a 1995 graduate of the Naval
War College in Newport, Rhode Island, whose next assignment is at Headquarters,
Allied Forces Central Europe (AFCENT), the Netherlands. A military intelligence
officer, he has held a variety of intelligence command and staff positions in
Panama, Hawaii, and the United States. From 1987 to 1991 he taught at the US
Military Academy in the Department of English. This article is a derivative of
his student paper which won the Naval War College President's Essay Competition
for 1994-95.