Small Wars Journal

Gentile: Realities of a Syrian Intervention

Sat, 03/03/2012 - 9:37am

Writing at The National Interest, Gian Gentile warns those who would imagine that there is an easy way to repair the universe in Syria.

The idea that stopping the civil war in Syria and protecting its population can be done on the cheap—via drones policing enclaves and humanitarian corridors—is military dilettantism gone wild.

The epigraph of my book on Iraq contains the following quotes, which we might heed as well.

I have not lived so long without having had the experience of many wars, and I see those among you of the same age as myself, who will not fall into the common misfortune of longing for war from inexperience or from a belief in its advantage and its safety. . . . Let us never be elated by the fatal hope of the war being quickly ended by the devastation of their lands. I fear rather that we may leave it as a legacy to our children.

—Archidamus, Spartan king, 432 BC

 

Kind-hearted people might of course think there was some ingenious way to disarm or defeat an enemy without too much bloodshed, and might imagine this is the true goal of the art of war. Pleasant as it sounds, it is a fallacy.

—Carl von Clausewitz, Prussian strategist, ca. 1830

 

The first lesson the student of international politics must learn and never forget  is that the complexities of international affairs make simple solutions and trustworthy prophecies impossible.

—Hans Morgenthau, professor of international relations

 

3 March SWJ Roundup

Sat, 03/03/2012 - 5:04am

US Naval Institute Daily - USNI

Real Clear World - RCP

Afghanistan

Ambassador: US will Not Accelerate Removal of Troops - S&S

US Probe of Koran Burning Finds 5 Troops Responsible - WP

5 Soldiers Responsible for Koran Burnings, US Investigation Finds - LAT

Chain of Avoidable Errors Cited in Koran Burning - NYT

Official: Mistakes Led to Afghan Quran Burnings - AP

Afghan Clerics Deem US Quran Burning Unforgivable - VOA

Afghan Clerics Demand Punishment for Koran Burners - Reuters

Afghan Army Says Taliban Infiltration Very Sophisticated - Reuters

How to Rebuild Trust in Afghanistan - WP opinion

 

Pakistan

Suicide Bomber Targets Rival Militants in Pakistan - VOA

Bomber Kills Rival 'Pakistan Militants' - BBC

Bomber Kills Rival Militants in Pakistan - AP

Zardari Party Leads Pakistan Poll - BBC

Pakistan Builds Web Wall Out in the Open - NYT

 

Syria

Humanitarian Aid Stopped From Reaching Syrian Flashpoint Area - VOA

Syria Blocks Aid Convoy from Entering Devastated Homs District - LAT

Syria Blocks Red Cross Aid to Bab Amr - WP

Red Cross Blocked by Syria from Ex-rebel Enclave - AP

UN Chief Demands Access to Battered Syrian District - VOA

UN Chief Speaks of 'Grisly Reports' From Syria - Reuters

Syrian Authorities 'Committed Crimes' Against Civilians - BBC

Rights Group Says Photos of Homs Reveal Brutality of Shelling - LAT

Syria's Opposition Wants More Arms - VOA

Russia: Arming Syria Rebels Could Violate International Law - LAT

Q&A: Understanding Syria's Uprising - AP

Crushing Homs - NYT editorial

Staying out of Syria's Conflict - LAT editorial

Assad's Hidden Strength in Syria - LAT opinion

Six Ways the U.S. Has Faltered in Syria - CNN opinion

Satellite Images From Syria - NYT opinion

Libya's Lesson for Syria - KOW opinion

 

Iran

Obama Says Iran Strike Is an Option, but Warns Israel - NYT

Obama Says US Serious About Using Force Against a Nuclear Iran - LAT

Obama to Warn Netanyahu Against Military Strikes on Iran - WP

Obama Warns Against Iran Strike - BBC

Israeli PM Warns Against Renewed Talks with Iran - AP

Netanyahu Warns Against Diplomatic Path With Iran - Reuters

Voting Ends in Iran's Parliamentary Elections - VOA

Iran’s Government Declares Huge Turnout in National Vote - NYT

Ahmadinejad Rivals Leading in Parliament Vote - AP

Iran Parliament Vote Seen Bolstering Supreme Leader - Reuters

Iran Conservatives Contest Poll - BBC

Iranian Elections Not Free and Fair, Britain Says - Reuters

Iranian Parliamentary Elections - WP images

Should Israel Strike Iran? - WP opinion

Decoding Obama's Message on Iran - WP opinion

Starving Iran Won’t Free It - NYT opinion

Only Crippling Sanctions Will Stop Iran - NYT opinion

 

Egypt

Egypt: Officials Target of Wrath as Foreign NGO Workers Leave - WP

US Government Ultimately Paid Bail for Egypt NGOs - Reuters

Spain to Extradite Egypt Tycoon - BBC

Egypt: Spain Orders Extradition of Mubarak Associate - AP

 

Libya

UN Report: Human Rights Abuses Continue in Libya - WP

UN Panel: Both Sides Committed War Crimes in Libya - AP

Libya's Muslim Brotherhood Sets Up Political Party - Reuters

 

Middle East / North Africa

Israel Guards Against Increased Terror Peril From Sinai - NYT

US Security Team Attacked in Yemen, Bomb Injures 22 - Reuters

Lebanon: Prosecutors Propose New Charge for Hariri Suspects - BBC

Bahrain Promises Weekday Visas to Rights Group - AP

Half a Loaf in the Middle East - WP opinion

 

US Department of Defense

SUVs of Death: Commandos Want Missiles in Their Trucks - DR

Dover Air Base Mortuary Supervisor Resigns - S&S

Ombudsman: Don’t Put Stripes with Military Media at Fort Meade - S&S

 

United States

International Smuggling Rings Busted, Says US Officials - BBC

Massive, Deadly Storms Strike Midwest, South - WP

US Negotiates Northern Route Deal - WP

 

Africa

East African Leaders Kick Off Major Infrastructure Project - VOA

East Africa Port Project Launched - BBC

Nigerian Militants Say They Attacked Marine Police - VOA

Key Somali Militant Base Captured - BBC

Report Shines Rare Light on Somali Gov't Finances - AP

 

Americas

Brazil Lashes Out after US Military Contract Canceled - LAT

Colombia Chief Prosecutor Quits - BBC

Bolivians Fight Over Quinoa Land - AP

 

Asia Pacific

A Chinese Voice of Dissent That Took Its Time - NYT

China Protest Village Holds Polls - BBC

Japan: Operation Tomodachi Could be Model for Disaster Planning - S&S

Japan Leader Points to Disaster Response Failures - AP

N. Korea Finds Purpose for ‘Friends’ Abroad - WP

 

Europe

EU Leaders Focus on Jobs, Economic Growth - VOA

Russia Offers Resumption of Relations With Georgia - NYT

Russia: Putin Confident About Presidential Win - VOA

Russia: Putin Sure of His Victory in Presidential Vote - AP

Russia: Putin Might Seek 4th Term in 2018 - NYT

Ireland Faces Long Road Back to Strong Economic Footing - WP

 

South Asia

Talks Reaffirm Growing US-India Partnership - AFPS

India: Activists See Gandhi as Congress Party’s ‘Star Campaigner’ - WP

This Week at War: Persian Poker

Fri, 03/02/2012 - 5:26pm

To compel Iran to fold, President Obama may have to back Israel's play. Will Obama go all in or cash out? I also highlight a debate at El Centro, Small Wars Journal's new Latin America venture.

 

Persian Poker

On March 5, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu will meet with President Barack Obama at the White House. The Iranian nuclear program will undoubtedly be the prime subject of the meeting, the outcome of which could decide for the Israeli leader whether to send Israel's air force to bomb Iran.

In a recent column, I discussed the time pressure weighing on Netanyahu and his military advisers, and why the sanctions effort organized by Obama and European leaders is not working fast enough for Israel. At next week's meeting, Netanyahu may ask that Obama publicly issue an ultimatum threatening U.S. military action unless Iran lays itself bare to international nuclear inspectors. Without such a dramatic escalation, Netanyahu and his colleagues may conclude that Israel will have to attack Iran alone, and soon.

Obama will be loath to commit the United States to such a drastic step to resolve a problem it sees as having much less urgency. With an Israeli strike imminent, Obama must select between two courses of action. First, he can attempt to forestall war by joining and reinforcing the Israeli military threat against Iran, in the hope that such a strong commitment will convince Iranian leaders to open their nuclear program to full inspections, or risk losing it to bombing. A March 1 Bloomberg article hinted at 11th-hour support from some officials inside the Obama administration for this course of action. And recent suggestions by unnamed Pentagon officials that Iran's Fordow mountain uranium enrichment site might not be impregnable after all, as previously suggested, could be a late-arriving signal of U.S. resolve.

However, such a late conversion to a hawkish stance would be a great gamble for Obama. Although the president has declared his opposition to an Iranian nuclear weapon and noted that he is considering "all options," he and administration officials have refrained from publicly committing to "red lines" that would convince Iran to open its program or reassure Israel that Iran will not become a nuclear threat. Opposition to a U.S. military strike on Iran seems to be the overwhelming majority view inside Washington, a view affirmed at a recent presentation by retired Adm. William Fallon -- former commander of both the Central and Pacific Commands -- and retired Marine Gen. James Cartwright, recently vice-chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Iranian leaders would thus likely view a sudden U.S. ultimatum as a bluff. And given the paramount importance of the nuclear program to the Iranian regime, it would likely be a bluff they see as worth calling.

For Obama, that leaves the alternative of accepting an Israeli strike on Iran and minimizing the consequences to the United States. Obama will want the Strait of Hormuz to remain open, for oil markets to remain calm, and for U.S. allies in the region to feel secure. He will attempt to accomplish this goal by having U.S. air and naval forces around the Persian Gulf make an ostentatious display, by sending reinforcements to the region, by calling on Saudi Arabia to increase its oil production, and by releasing crude oil from the U.S. Strategic Petroleum Reserve. Obama will also seek to avoid Iranian retaliation against the United States by disavowing the Israeli strike, but also threatening severe retaliation against Iran should it attempt terror attacks against U.S. targets.

Obama will thus hope to keep the United States out of the conflict and minimize damage to the U.S. economy. But subsequent events may complicate this aspiration. For example, it is highly likely that Israeli strike aircraft would fly through undefended Iraqi airspace en route to their targets in Iran. Israeli pilots may even conduct aerial refueling over Iraq in order to maximize their range and time over Iran. Indeed, the Israeli air force may need several nights over Iran to complete mission objectives and respond to Iranian retaliation against Israel.

White House officials will need to plan for a request from Baghdad for assistance defending Iraqi air space. Obama will naturally be highly reluctant to send U.S. forces back into Iraq or set up a confrontation with Israeli jets. Then there's the possibility that Iran might volunteer or be invited to defend Iraq against Israeli encroachment. Should the United States still decline to get involved, Saudi or Turkish intervention into Iraq, in response to an Iranian move, would then seem possible. At that point, the likelihood of regional conflict would increase, with unpredictable consequences for U.S. interests.

As I discussed in my Feb. 10 column, Israel can only delay Iran's nuclear progress. Israel will have to plan for the certainty that after an attack, Iran's leaders will restart the program and move toward nuclear weapons capability as rapidly as possible. Israel will then have to sporadically re-strike Iran and expand its targeting to include Iran's electrical grid, telecommunications system, oil industry, and over time the wider Iranian economy. Iran will naturally attempt to defend itself in every way it can.

Such an open-ended conflict would represent a failure of the international security system. Statesmen will have to ponder why modern international security institutions were not able to prevent a conflict that has long been foreseen.

 

Small Wars Journal launches its Latin America research center

This week, Small Wars Journal launched El Centro, a new website dedicated to researching small wars in the Americas. El Centro begins its work with 17 fellows, researchers and contributors, an introductory reading list, and will later add a Spanish-language version of the site.

El Centro will publish scholarship and essays on the hemisphere's criminal, cartel, and gang threats, as well as the drug market, migration, and the challenges these forces present to societies and governments on both continents.

Do the struggles between the region's legitimate security forces and the gangs and cartels they are fighting constitute an insurgency, like those U.S. policymakers have become familiar with over the past decade? And if so, are counterinsurgency (COIN) tactics and principles a wise response?

Two recent essays at El Centro argue both sides of this debate. Michael Burgoyne, a major in the U.S. Army and a foreign area officer assigned to U.S. Southern Command, asserts that some of the principles found in the U.S. Army's counterinsurgency field manual were effective against Colombia's Medellin and Cali drug cartels. According to Burgoyne, the Brazilian government's fight against Rio de Janeiro's favela gangs provided an even better test for the U.S. military's counterinsurgency doctrine. With these examples, Burgoyne asserts that U.S. COIN doctrine may be useful against criminal insurgencies elsewhere in the region, including in Mexico.

Burgoyne first establishes that the Colombian and Brazilian cases were in fact insurgencies by explaining how these criminal enterprises grew to become true national security threats in the eyes of local legitimate authorities. According to Burgoyne, the Colombian case showed that when security forces applied U.S. COIN principles such as intelligence-driven targeted operations, small unit empowerment, and support for host nation forces, they could make progress against the cartels. However, the paramount COIN principle of protecting the civilian population in order to win it over to the government's side did not apply in Colombia. Financial targeting of the cartels' assets and direct action operations against cartel leaders were more useful.

In Rio, by contrast, Burgoyne finds that broad U.S. COIN principles such as population security, improved services, economic development, and better governance were tools Brazilian authorities effectively employed against the favela gangs. He infers that with a few adjustments, policymakers should consider applying U.S. COIN doctrine to other criminal insurgencies in the region, including Mexico's drug war.

Brad Freden, a veteran U.S. Foreign Service Officer with experience in Mexico, dissents from Burgoyne's conclusions. Freden does not agree that Mexico faces an insurgency, and instead asserts that Mexico's cartels are simply criminal organizations with no interest in political control or public support -- they just want to be left alone to run their enterprises. Nor is Mexico a failed state; according to Freden, its security forces are capable of quickly asserting their power anywhere within Mexico on short notice. Freden concludes that since Mexico's cartels are apolitical and don't threaten the state, there is no insurgency.

While rejecting the COIN model, Freden does allow for the possibility of applying some COIN principles in Mexico on an a la carte basis. In fact, the Mexican government has applied COIN a la carte for some time. For example, it has used military forces for policing, while corrupt local police forces have been disbanded and rebuilt. With U.S. assistance, Mexico has established intelligence fusion centers, a technique the U.S. military learned in Iraq and Afghanistan, in order to improve collaboration across agencies and to speed up decision-making among security forces. Finally, Mexico is increasingly employing a "whole of government" approach to improve security and intelligence-gathering against the cartels.

It's an ongoing debate, and one that that will continue at El Centro.

 

What the Pentagon should learn from the Syrian rebellion

Fri, 03/02/2012 - 9:12am

Writing for the U.S. Army's Peacekeeping and Stability Operations Institute (PKSOI) "Flash Points" blog, Nathan Freier explains why policymakers and planners should keep the Syrian crisis in mind as they make decisions about rebalancing U.S. military forces.

An excerpt:

Indeed, Syria provides a frightening archetype for future conflicts that have the potential to go viral and could under the most grave circumstances call for U.S. intervention.  Consider these facts.  Syria sits in the middle of an enormously important region that for decades has been at the center of U.S. security strategy.  It is ruled by an authoritarian minority regime.  The ruling elite and its legitimacy are increasingly undermined by a capable but fractious majority opposition.  Syrian forces boast substantial military capabilities, including relatively modern ground and air combat capabilities, air defenses, ballistic missiles, and chemical weapons.   With increasing defections from the Syrian military, centralized control of these capabilities would undoubtedly collapse, leaving Syria (and its neighbors) vulnerable to the predations of a number of exceedingly well-armed factions; not to mention opening the prospect for proliferation of the most dangerous among these capabilities to hostile third parties.  Some form of horizontal conflict escalation is not only possible but probable.

Freier does not call for intervention. But he wonders whether force structure planners in the Pentagon are taking such scenarios seriously. If not, much-reduced U.S. ground forces may pay the price when policymakers throw them at a wicked problem for which they are not sized or prepared.

Please read the whole thing, and watch for future chapters at PKSOI Flash Points.

 

2 March SWJ Roundup

Fri, 03/02/2012 - 5:54am

US Naval Institute Daily - USNI

Real Clear World - RCP

Afghanistan

In Afghanistan, 2 More US Troops Killed over Koran Burning - LAT

Two American Soldiers Die in Shooting at Afghan Base - NYT

2 American Troops Killed in Afghan Shooting - AP

‘Green on Blue’ Deaths Won’t Derail Strategy, DOD Spokesman Says - AFPS

Experts: Advisory Mission Must Go On Despite Afghan Violence - S&S

US NATO Ambassador Says Afghan Policy Intact - Reuters

US House Chairman Wants New Rules on Afghan Security - AP

Europe Remains Committed to Afghan Mission, Commander Says - AFPS

UN Wants Disciplinary Action Against Quran Burners - VOA

UN in Afghanistan Says Koran Burners Should Be Punished - Reuters

For Afghans Who Didn't Protest, a Feeling of Helplessness - S&S

Afghanistan Burning - WP opinion

 

Pakistan

US Congressional Resolution on Baluchistan Creates Uproar in Pakistan - VOA

Cricket Legend Imran Khan's Political Cachet Grows - LAT

Pakistan Troops in Outpost Clash - BBC

Clash Between Pakistani Troops, Militants Kills 27 - AP

Pakistan Khyber Clash Kills at Least 33, Officials Say - Reuters

Senate Election Held in Pakistan - BBC

 

Syria

Syrian Rebels Retreat From Besieged Stronghold - VOA

Syrian Forces Overwhelm Stronghold of Rebels in Homs - NYT

Syrian Forces Overrun Opposition in Rebel Stronghold of Homs - WP

Syria Says Troops Overrun Rebel Enclave in Homs - LAT

Red Cross to Enter Homs District - BBC

Red Cross Says Aid Convoy Heading to Syria's Homs - AP

Saudi, Qatari Plans to Arm Rebels Risk Overtaking Cautious Approach - WP

Russia, China Join UN Council in Syria Rebuke - Reuters

Arming the Syrian Resistance - WP opinion

 

Iran

Peres Says US Must Put All Iran Options on Table - NYT

Polls Open In Iran’s Parliamentary Election - VOA

Iranians Vote to Choose New Parliament - NYT

Iran Votes in Parliamentary Elections - WP

Iran's Top Leader Urges Election Turnout - AP

Iran Conservatives Contest Poll - BBC

Iran Elections Pose Challenge Amid Economic Crisis - VOA

Iran Elections Seen as Bolstering Clerics - WP

Parliamentary Elections Seen as Contest of Hard-liners - LAT

Khamenei's Outlook Dims Hope for Iran Nuclear Deal - Reuters

Little Support in Israel for Solo Strike on Iran - Reuters

Why Iran’s Election Is a Farce - NYT opinion

 

Egypt

Egypt Travel Ban Lifted, US NGO Workers Leave - VOA

US Defendants Leave Egypt Amid Growing Backlash - NYT

Accused NGO Workers Leave Egypt - BBC

NGOs Under Investigation Leave Egypt After Bail is Paid - WP

 

Middle East / North Africa

Iran Concerns Will Dominate Netanyahu and Obama Talks - NYT

Israel Plans Interceptor Missile Test, Gives Neighbors Early Notice - NYT

Oil Above $110 on Pipeline Explosion Report Denied by Saudis - Bloomberg

Bahrain Delays UN Investigator, Limits Rights Group Visits - Reuters

Move Over, Egypt, Iraq and Syria - LAT opinion

 

Al Qaeda / Detainees

Al-Qaida Magazine Didn’t Reach Detainees, Prison Commander Says - McClatchy

Terror Suspect’s Plea Deal Sparks Debate - WP

 

US Department of Defense

US Must Maintain Military Might, Secretary Says - AFPS

Risk of Major Cyberattack Worries Secretary - AFPS

Congress Asks DOD for Probe of Information Ops Program - USAT

Strategic Guidance Drives DOD Science Enterprise, Officials Say - AFPS

Lawmakers Say New Evidence Shows Marine Deserves Medal of Honor - S&S

New Army Guidelines Making it Tougher for NCOs to Reenlist - S&S

 

United States

More Problems at VA Cemeteries Discovered - WP

Coast Guard Beefs Up Deployment in the US Arctic - LAT

 

United Kingdom

Clegg and Miliband Challenge SNP - BBC

PM Says EU Summit Ignoring Him - BBC

Ex-Police Official Admits Links to Hack Suspects - AP

 

Australia

Bob Carr Named Australia’s New Foreign Minister - VOA

Australia's Gillard Names New FM - BBC

Australian PM Axes Rival's Supporter From Ministry - AP

Australia 'Needs Media Watchdog' - BBC

 

Africa

US Condemns Bombing of Oil Wells in South Sudan - VOA

Sudanese Troops Massing Near Disputed Border, S. Sudan Says - AP

South Sudan to Disarm Cattle Men - BBC

ICC Issues Sudan Minister Warrant - BBC

Somali Militants in Surprise Raid - BBC

More Nigerians Slip Into Poverty, Particularly in North - VOA

Kenya Terror Suspect May be London Bomber's Widow - VOA

South Africa's ANC Expels Youth League Leader - VOA

S. Africa: Malema Defiant at ANC Expulsion - BBC

 

Americas

OAS: Drug Cartels Threaten Latin American Democracy - BBC

Polls: Mexico's Presidential Race Tightens - AP

Argentina Eyes Falklands Flights - BBC

Venezuela: Chavez Says Recovering Well - BBC

Haitians Flee to Dominican Sugar Cane Plantations - WP

 

Asia Pacific

Biden: China Represses Citizens, Don’t Think Freely or Innovate - WP

Japan, US: 10,000 Marines Would Remain Under New Okinawa Plan - S&S

Japan Says Possible All Reactors Shut this Summer - Reuters

In North Korea Deal, Son Inherits Father’s Framework - NYT

US Troops Tread Carefully Amid Korea Tensions - AP

Residents' Fears on S. Korean Island Grow Amid Military Drills - S&S

 

Europe

EU Faces Growing Opposition to Austerity Measures - WP

Most EU Leaders Sign Treaty Aimed at Ending Debt Crisis - LAT

EU Leaders Sign New Fiscal Treaty - BBC

Greece Bailout Waits Another Week - BBC

Russians Gear Up for Presidential Vote - VOA

Germany Finds Itself Back in Power in Europe - LAT

EU Grants Serbia Candidate Status - BBC

Abu Nidal Members Jailed in France over 1988 Attack - BBC

Russia: Pressing the Putin Regime - WP editorial

Russia: Putin’s Hollow Victory-to-Be - WP opinion

 

South Asia

US Says Special Forces in India - BBC

US Army COIN Center Webcast

Fri, 03/02/2012 - 4:42am

The US Army COIN Center is pleased to host Dr. Tom Marks for a Counterinsurgency Center Webcast.  Dr. Marks is a professor and head of the Department of War and Conflict Studies, National Defense University. Dr. Marks has analyzed numerous conflicts, to include Nepal, Sri Lanka, Colombia, Peru, Papua New Guinea, Laos, the Philippines, and Northern Ireland and his scholarly and journalistic works number in the hundreds.

In this insightful presentation, Dr. Marks will discuss the use of framing and narrative (among others) to push insurgencies where tangible power cannot.  He will use his extensive knowledge of insurgencies worldwide and Nepal in particular to draw out logical conclusions and point towards lessons and application for the current force.  Audience members are invited to join the dialogue by using the chat-box tool during the presentation.

This brief is this Wednesday, 7 March 2012 at 1300 CST (1400 EST, 19:00 ZULU)

Those interested in attending may view the meeting online at https://connect.dco.dod.mil/coinweb and participate via Defense Connect Online (DCO) as a guest. Remote attendees will be able to ask questions and view the slides through the software.

Al Qaeda in its Third Decade

Thu, 03/01/2012 - 8:18pm

A new RAND occasional paper by Brian Michael Jenkins takes a look at Al Qaeda and what it means to different people. Note - you can click on the read online link to download a free PDF version.

More than ten years after 9/11, there is still remarkable lack of consensus among analysts' assessments of al Qaeda's current condition and future capabilities. Almost every issue is debated: Whether America has won the operational battle but lost the ideological contest; whether homegrown terrorism is a growing threat; whether maintaining American troops in Afghanistan is essential; whether the United States ought to declare on its own an end to the war on al Qaeda. Part of the debate is driven by political agendas, but the arguments derive from the fact that al Qaeda is many things at once and must be viewed in all of its various dimensions. This essay examines a number of these issues in light of recent developments — the death of Osama bin Laden, the Arab Spring, and the American withdrawal from Iraq. In each case, it drives toward a bottom line. In the final analysis, it is a personal view.

1 March SWJ Roundup

Thu, 03/01/2012 - 2:28am

US Naval Institute Daily - USNI

Real Clear World - RCP

Afghanistan

Koran Burning in Afghanistan Prompts 3 Parallel Inquiries - NYT

Obama Says Afghan Apology Calmed anti-US Violence - AP

NATO 'Can Overcome Koran Setback' - BBC

Afghan Fantasy vs. Reality - WP opinion

Afghans Don't Hate America - WSJ opinion

 

Syria

Elite Syrian Army Units Besiege Rebel Districts, Activists Say - VOA

Syrian Forces Tighten Grip in Rebel City Under Siege - NYT

Syria Forces Attack Besieged Homs - BBC

Syrian Troops Launch Ground Assault - WP

Syria Threatens to 'Cleanse' Rebel Area in Homs - AP

Syrian Rebels Say They Face 7,000 Government Troops - Reuters

Israeli Lawmaker: Syrian Rebels Want Peace with Israel - AP

Focus on Syria’s Future - WP opinion

Beware of the Syrian Quagmire - TNI opinion

To Avoid Proxy War, Offer Assad an Exit - TG opinion

 

Iran

Israeli Leader to US to Talk About Iran Tensions - AP

Iran Nuclear Dispute Enters New Phase - VOA

Experts: Iran Nuclear Site Vulnerable - WP

IAEA Worried About 'Activities' at Iran Site - Reuters

Western Sanctions Tighten Squeeze on Iran Oil Exports - Reuters

Pakistan Studying Iranian Oil Supply Offer - VOA

Dubai Bank Says It Cut Ties With Iranian Institutions - NYT

Iran Invokes the West to Motivate Voters - NYT

Iranians in Isfahan Say Economic Worries Key to Vote - Reuters

Israel’s Last Chance to Strike Iran - NYT opinion

Diplomacy Will Seal Iran's Fate - AT opinion

 

Egypt

Egypt Will Lift Travel Ban, Allowing American Defendants to Leave - NYT

Egypt Allows 7 American Pro-Democracy Workers to Leave Country - LAT

Egypt to Allow US Democracy Group Employees to Leave - AP

Egypt to Hold 1st Post-Mubarak Presidential Election May 23-24 - VOA

Egypt Presidential Poll Date Set - BBC

Egypt’s Elections to Begin May 23 - WP

Loans to Egypt Hinge on Democracy Issues - NYT

 

Middle East / North Africa

China Wages Diplomatic Offensive With Arab Countries - VOA

Saudi Arabia May Be Tied to 9/11, 2 Ex-Senators Say - NYT

Israel Raids Palestinian TV Stations - WP

Palestinian Leader Condemns Israeli Raid on TV Stations - LAT

Israel Unveils Sophisticated Shelters in Tel Aviv - AP

Iraq: Clinton Urges Iranian Group to Complete Move - NYT

UN Says Up to 6,000 Libyans Held by Brigades - AP

Yemen’s Peaceful Transition - WP opinion

Do Syria, Iran Fit US's Intervention Pattern? - NR opinion

 

Al Qaeda / Guantanamo

Guantanamo Detainee Pleads Guilty, Promises Cooperation - WP

High-value Guantanamo Detainee Pleads Guilty in Deal - AFPS

Guantanamo Inmate Pleads Guilty - BBC

Testimony on Al Qaeda Is Required in Plea Deal - NYT

Former US Resident Pleads Guilty at Guantanamo - AP

Key Dates in the Life of Gitmo Prisoner Majid Khan - AP

 

Anonymous

Anonymous Hackers Claim They Were Infiltrated - AP

 

US Department of Defense

Lots to Learn at Defense Budget Hearings for Those Who Pay Attention - WP

Schwartz: Smaller Air Force Will Concentrate on Key Capabilities - AFPS

Schwartz: Personnel Cuts necessary to Meet Budget Demands - S&S

EUCOM Boss Calls Troop Reductions ‘Manageable, Appropriate’ - AFPS

Cuts in Europe are 'Manageable' Risk, EUCOM Commander Says - S&S

Commander: Countering Extremists Tops AFRICOM’s Priorities - AFPS

TRANSCOM Continues Mission Despite Challenges, Commander Says - AFPS

Air Force Says 2002 Pentagon Memo Guided Disposal of 9/11 Remains - S&S

Pentagon Contradicts Findings on Dover - NYT

Directors Create Hollywood Movie Around Active-duty SEALs - S&S

Sailor Found Not Guilty in Peace Corps Rape Trial - AP

 

United States

US Mosques Increase in Number Despite Post-9/11 Suspicions - VOA

Man Indicted on Terror Charges in NYC Bomb Case - AP

New Round of Immigration Battles Set in the South - LAT

‘Active Defense’ at Center of Debate on Cyberattacks - WP

Iraq Vets Share Experiences Before White House Dinner - AFPS

Obama Salutes Iraq War Veterans at White House Dinner - S&S

Troops from Iraq, Afghanistan to be Honored on National Mall - S&S

Online Hyperbole Doesn’t Honor the Dead - NYT opinion

Empty Politics Pose Biggest Threat to U.S. Power - Bloomberg opinion

 

Africa

Somali Journalist Killing Is Latest in Violent Trend - VOA

'7/7 Widow' Link to Kenya Terror Probe - BBC

Pirates Kidnap Crew Off Nigeria - BBC

Senegal Confirms Election Runoff - BBC

Senegal's Wade Expected to Face Tough Run-off Vote - VOA

S. Africa: ANC Youth Leader Malema Expelled - BBC

How to Prevent Another Darfur - NYT opinion

 

Americas

UK: Argentina Pursuing Policy of Confrontation - BBC

UK Warns Argentina Regarding the Falklands - AP

Chavez's Health Key to Venezuela Political Future - AP

Thousands of Aristide Supporters Demonstrate in Haiti - Reuters

Haiti Protest Signals Political Tension for Future - AP

Victory, and Defeat, in the War on Drugs - LAT opinion

 

Asia Pacific

N. Korea to End Nuclear Tests for Food Aid - VOA

North Koreans to Halt Nuclear Work; US to Give Aid - NYT

North Korea will Suspend Nuclear, Missile Tests - WP

Surprise N. Korea Nuclear Deal with US Seen as First Step - LAT

N. Korea Agrees to Nuclear Pause in Exchange for Food - McClatchy

N. Korea Takes ‘Positive First Step’ on Nukes, Official Says - AFPS

Cautious Welcome for N. Korea Deal - BBC

China Welcomes US-North Korean Nuclear Agreement - AP

N. Korea Nuclear Deal: Five Ideas About What it Means - LAT

N. Korea: What Does 240,000 Metric Tons of Food Mean? - LAT

Factbox: Key Political Risks to Watch on the Korean Peninsula - Reuters

Deadly Clashes Erupt in Western China - NYT

Hong Kong Leader Is Investigated Over Ethics, Official Says - NYT

Taiwanese Officer Accused of Spying for China - AP

Under Lockdown: Life Inside Dissident Tibetan Town - AP

China Blocks Tibetan Writer From Receiving Award - NYT

In Protest, Vietnam Says China Assaulted Fishermen - AP

Japan Says May Cancel Lockheed F-35 if Price Rises - Reuters

Burmese Focus on Aung San Suu Kyi's Campaign Trail - VOA

China’s Choices - WP editorial

Talking to North Korea, Again - NYT editorial

Moratorium Means Nothing to Pyongyang - Fox opinion

 

Europe

Thousands Protest Cuts in Europe - BBC

If Elected Russian President, Putin Faces Tough Choices - VOA

Russia: Putin Produces New Plot Twist - WP

Russia Tycoon Prokhorov Makes Western-Style Run for President - LAT

Struggling France Re-embraces Napoleon - LAT

Ahead of Summit, Greece Rushes to Approve New Cuts - NYT

Belarus Warns European Union Over Withdrawal of Envoys - NYT

 

South Asia

Increased Tensions in India-China Border Dispute Raise Concerns - WP

Pakistan’s High Court Resurrects Election Tampering Case - NYT

Face of Hope Reflects Calm in Kashmir - NYT