Bookmark and Share
Support your
friendly 501(c)(3)


« The SWORD Model of Counterinsurgency | Main | A Multilateral Solution to Somali Piracy »

Afghanistan: Special Ops ‘Surge’ Sparks Debate

Special Ops ‘Surge’ Sparks Debate - Sean Naylor, Army Times

Defense Secretary Robert Gates’ plan to deploy three additional combat brigades to Afghanistan by the summer has superseded a contentious debate that pitted the Bush administration’s “war czar” against the special operations hierarchy over a proposed near-term “surge” of spec ops forces to Afghanistan, a Pentagon military official said.
The National Security Council’s surge proposal, which grew out of its Afghan strategy review, recommended an increase of “about another battalion’s worth” of troops to the Combined and Joint Special Operations Task Force-Afghanistan, or CJSOTF-A, said a field-grade Special Forces officer, who added that this would enlarge the task force by about a third.
Several sources said that the “SOF surge” proposal originated with Lt. Gen. Doug Lute, the so-called “war czar”...
...the proposal sparked a fierce high-level debate, with special operations officers charging that Lute and his colleagues were trying to micromanage the movement of individual Special Forces A-teams from inside the Beltway, and countercharges that Special Forces has strayed from its traditional mission of raising and training indigenous forces and become too focused on direct-action missions to kill or capture enemies.

Much more at The Army Times.

Comments (1)

Zorro [TypeKey Profile Page]:

I don't think it is relevant how many more brigades the US sends, but rather if or how it is going to tackle the core of the Afghan problem: Pakistan

Post a comment


After pressing Post, it will probably take a while (15-30 sec?) for your comment to register and pages to rebuild. Please be patient.

About

This page contains a single entry posted on December 20, 2008 11:54 AM.

The previous post was The SWORD Model of Counterinsurgency.

The next post is A Multilateral Solution to Somali Piracy.

Subscribe
Subscribe
Creative Commons License
This weblog is licensed under a Creative Commons License.
Powered by
Movable Type 3.33