Small Wars Journal

Carte Blanche for New U.S. Commander in Afghanistan

Wed, 06/10/2009 - 8:13pm
Carte Blanche for New US Commander in Afghanistan - Thom Shanker and Eric Schmitt, New York Times.

The new American commander in Afghanistan has been given carte blanche to hand pick a dream team of subordinates, including many Special Operations veterans, as he moves to carry out an ambitious new strategy that envisions stepped-up attacks on Taliban fighters and narcotics networks.

The extraordinary leeway granted the commander, Gen. Stanley A. McChrystal, underscores a view within the administration that the war in Afghanistan has for too long been given low priority, and needs to be the focus of a sustained, high-level effort.

General McChrystal is assembling a corps of 400 officers and soldiers who will rotate between the United States and Afghanistan for a minimum of three years. That kind of commitment to one theater of combat is unknown in the military today outside the Special Operations community, but reflects an approach being imported by General McChrystal, who spent five years in charge of secret commando teams in Iraq and Afghanistan.

With his promotion approved by the Senate late on Wednesday, General McChrystal and senior members of his command team were scheduled to fly from Washington within hours of the vote, stopping in two European capitals to confer with allies before landing in Kabul...

More at The New York Times.

Comments

I wonder how many of the 400 will be "crossed arrow" wearers?

Schmedlap

Thu, 06/11/2009 - 12:49am

<I>"General McChrystal is assembling a corps of 400 officers and soldiers who will rotate between the United States and Afghanistan for a minimum of three years. That kind of commitment to one theater of combat is unknown in the military today..."</I>

Wow. 8 years later, is it possible that we will finally recognize the importance of maintaining continuity and having units rotate back to the same AO? That would be sweet if we could extend that policy throughout the military, rather than to just 400 individuals and some SOF units.