Small Wars Journal

New Unit of Measure: The Lance Corporal Equivalent (LCE)

Wed, 12/07/2011 - 6:14pm

New Unit of Measure: The Lance Corporal Equivalent (LCE)

by Zacchaeus

I just read a sobering blog post  over at the USNI.  While some in the business may look at the forthcoming budget reduction efforts as academically stimulating, it’s important to keep in mind the toll end strength reductions will have on the young men and women who’ve done nothing wrong except wanting to serve their country. The navy’s approach to personnel reduction says a great deal about leadership priorities.

During the height of the Cold War smart folks in the defense analysis industry came up with the concept of a standardized unit of measure – the Armor Division Equivalent –  as a useful tool to run through sophisticated models to predict  the results of attrition warfare engagements that never occurred.

We now face a different form of attrition warfare – attrition of end strength and force structure due to the inevitable reality of budget reduction efforts.  Today, a useful tool to make comparisons is to use the Lance Corporal Equivalent.  The Lance Corporal is a highly adaptable weapon system used successfully across the full spectrum of military operations from HA/DR to MTW and everything in between.

The LCE is a great tool when examining the budget trade space. Some tradeoffs are acceptable.  In many cases it makes perfect operational and fiscal sense to commit funds to an effective weapon system. However, all too often, senior leaders in DoD accept inefficiency at the expense of operational capabilities.

The LCE equates to $25K.  It takes into consideration annual salary and incidentals such as chow and living expenses for a single leatherneck living in the barracks. This does not consider ammo, personal weapons,  training, etc.  It is not a perfect model but it is effective to bring to light the tradeoffs for accepting status quo programs and processes. Here are a few examples:

1 Senior Program Analyst on OSD Staff : 6.2 LCE

1 Graduate of Army War College : 6.6 LCE

1 Schedule C SES at the Pentagon : 7.6 LCE

1 Married set of 0-5s working on acquisition programs at the Pentagon : 10.6 LCE

1 Naval Academy Graduate : 14.6 LCE

Graduating Class at USMA : 16,800 LCE

1 COCOM HQ Staff : 64,000 LCE

Military Personnel doing civilian work – 2.24M LCE

This is a very short list generated with the level of analysis that could be conducted on the back of an MRE box.  I am not advocating eliminating any of the above items so need to go into the D, I am simply attempting to place the tradespace in perspective. By accepting inefficiency in whatever form within the DoD we are eliminating  valuable operational capacity.  Framing the issue in LCEs may help reinforce this fact.

Zacchaeus was a Greek tax collector hated by his peers for perceived collaboration with the enemy.  It is the pseudonym of a retired Marine, working at the Pentagon.  He lives in fear for his children, family pet and automobile should his real identity fall into the hands of status quo thinkers in the Marine Corps.

7 December SWJ Roundup

Wed, 12/07/2011 - 2:47am

US Naval Institute Daily - USNI

Real Clear World - RCP

Afghanistan

Afghans Uneasy Despite Security Gains Made by US Troop Buildup - LAT

Twin Bombings Tear Through Afghan Shi'ite Holy Day - VOA

Rare Attacks on Shiites Kill Scores in Afghanistan - NYT

Dozens Dead in Suicide Bombing of Shiite Mosque in Kabul - WP

Fears of New Afghan Sectarian War as Shrine Attacks Kill 59 - TT

Attacks on Afghan Shiites Raise Specter of Iraq-like Violence - CSM

Death Toll Rises: Nearly 60 Killed in Rare Attacks on Afghan Shiites - AP

Carnage in Kabul Sparks Fear of Sectarian Strife - AP

Karzai Flies Home after Deadly Blast - BBC

Afghan President Cuts Short Trip After Bombing - AP

Five Key Afghan Security Forces Officers Visit California - LAT

ISAF Operations Summary - AFPS

Not Just Afghans' Shame - LAT opinion

Bonn II: Seeking a Secure Afghanistan - WT opinion

Afghanistan Field Guide: Nine Essential Tips - CSM opinion

 

Pakistan

Mission Impossible for Pakistani Progressives? - Reuters

Pakistani President Travels to Dubai for Tests - AP

 

Iraq

Despite Deadly Attacks, Pilgrims in Iraq Mark Holy Day  - AP

Cav Troops Help Ensure Security as US Winds Down Mission - S&S

 

Iran

Iran Explosions Prompt Speculation of Secret Attacks - McClatchy

Wary US Uncertain of Israel's Iran Plans - Reuters

Drone Belonged to CIA, Officials Say - WP

Malfunction Likely Put US Drone in Iranian Hands - Reuters

Experts: Iran Capture of Stealth Drone No Worry - AP

After Drone Went Down, CIA Tried a Head Fake - WP

US Opens ‘Virtual Embassy’ in Tehran - WP

US Launches 'Virtual' Embassy for Iran - AP

'Virtual' US Iranian Embassy Open - BBC

 

Egypt

Egypt's Islamists Compete for Votes in Runoff Elections - VOA

Muslim Brotherhood Says Does Not Seek Struggle with Military - AP

Egypt's New PM Says Army to Give Him Extra Powers - Reuters

Hard-Line Islamist Gains Surprise in Egypt Vote - AP

Egypt, the Beginning or the End? - NYT opinion

Egypt’s Christians Deserve a Democratic Future Too - TT opinion

 

Syria

Sharp Spate of Killings Traumatizes a Syrian City - NYT

Reported Killings in Homs Spread Fear of Sectarian War - LAT

Turkey Border Clashes Push Syria Towards Open Warfare - TT

As US Ambassador Ford Returns, Syria Deteriorates - CSM

Hezbollah Leader Backs Syrian President in Public - NYT

Clinton Meets Syrian Opposition as US Ambassador Returns - VOA

US Says Opposition Must Build 'Free, Tolerant' Syria - Reuters

Ambassador Robert Ford Heads Back to Syria - WP

US Ambassador to Return to Syria - BBC

 

Middle East / North Africa

IMF Chief: ‘Arab Spring’ Is at Critical Juncture - Reuters

Nervous Gulf Stresses Unity Amid Iran Tensions - AP

Prince Hints Saudi Arabia May Join Nuclear Arms Race - AP

Australian Sentenced to 500 Lashes in Saudi Arabia - AP

Hezbollah Chief in Rare Appearance - BBC

Hezbollah Leader Backs Syrian President in Public - NYT

UN Condemns Civilian Toll in Yemen Fighting - VOA

Yemen PM Says Gov’t Imminent, UN Warns on Civilians - Reuters

Hamas MP Expelled from Jerusalem - BBC

UN Constructing Green Schools in Gaza - VOA

Israel Raid 'Kills Gaza Militant' - BBC

Gaza Militant Killed in Clash With Israel - AP

Libya: Tripoli Militia 'to be Disarmed' - BBC

Arab Spring Tops Twitter's 2011 Top Stories - BBC

 

US Department of Defense

Pentagon's Budget War Games - WT

Hotspots: You Might Deploy Here Next - MCT

 

United States

Pearl Harbor Still a Day for the Ages, But a Memory Almost Gone - NYT

Pearl Harbor Veterans Remember Paradise Suddenly Turned Into Hell - WT

Republican Candidates Aim at Obama Foreign Policy - NYT

Director of Federal Drone Program Targeted in Ethics Inquiry - LAT

Senators Want Investigation into VA Wait Data - S&S

US Will Use Foreign Aid to Push Gay Rights - NYT

US Speaks Out on Global Gay Rights - WP

FAA Chief Leaves Job After DUI Arrest - NYT

Remembering Pearl Harbor - NYT editorial

Remembering Pearl Harbor - WT editorial

Bipartisan Angst over Obama Foreign Policy - WP opinion

National Security Lessons Never Learned - WT opinion

 

Africa

Congo Residents Apprehensive While Awaiting Election Results - VOA

Congo President Wins in Kind of 'Coup d'Etat' - WT

Congolese Protesters Say Election Fraudulent, Clash with Police - WP

DR Congo Election Results Delayed by 48 Hours - BBC

Congo Delays Election Results by 48 Hours - AP

Nigerian Militant Islamist Jailed - BBC

After a Break to Run Somalia, Back at His Cubicle - NYT

Somalia Car Blast 'Kills Police' - BBC

Swedish Journalists Deny Supporting Ethiopia Rebels  - VOA

South Africa Under Fire For 'Dirty Energy' - VOA

UN Toughens Sanctions on Eritrea - BBC

 

Americas

Despite Army Takeover, Fear Strong in Mexican Town - AP

Colombia Stages anti-FARC Rallies - BBC

Colombians March Against Rebels for Hostage-Taking - AP

Venezuela: China May Surpass US as No.1 Trade Partner - AP

Dip in Consumer Spending Slows Growth in Brazil - NYT

Brazil's Economic Growth Stalls - BBC

Honduran Journalist Shot, Killed Outside Her Home - AP

A Western Hemisphere, Minus the US - LAT editorial

Falklands Warning for the UK - TT editorial

 

Asia Pacific

Economic Troubles in Europe and US Start to Affect Asia - NYT

China Navy in 'Warfare' Warning - BBC

Chinese, US Defense Officials Meet in Beijing - AP

US, China Defense Officials Meet Despite Tensions - Reuters

Outrage Grows Over Air Pollution and China’s Response - NYT

Amnesty Protests Pending Chinese Execution - VOA

US and S. Korea Renew Talks on Nuclear Technology - NYT

Japan Split on Hope for Vast Radiation Cleanup - NYT

Japan: Tsunami Fund 'Used for Whaling' - BBC

Philippines, Rebels Renew Truce Monitors' Stay - AP

Using Islam to Counter Jihad in Southern Thailand - CSM

Thais Test Taboos as War on Royal Slurs Heats Up - Reuters

Villagers Become Refugees in Burma as Rebels Clash With Troops - NYT

Will China Become the Next Major Global Power?  - CSM opinion

 

Europe

Troops Patrol Moscow to Prevent Election Protests - VOA

Russia Cracks Down on Antigovernment Protests - NYT

Protests Erupt in Moscow, Activists Arrested - VOA

Opposition Leader Held as Russia Beats Back Protests - TT

Moscow Protesters Defy Rally Ban - BBC

Russian Police Crack Down on Anti-Putin Protests - Reuters

Protests over Russian Elections Spread to More Cities - VOA

In Protests, Two Russias Face Off - WP

Clinton Raises Russian Election Concerns at OSCE - VOA

US Works Quietly to Help Europe with Crisis - WP

Euro Rules Could Change without Treaty - BBC

S&P Threatens Downgrade for Europe Bailout Fund - VOA

Germany: Merkel’s Path Brinkmanship for Debt Crisis - NYT

France: Sarkozy Faces Criticism at Home - WP

Greece Passes New Austerity Plans - BBC

Plan for Online Freedoms Stalls at European Meeting - NYT

Europe's Radical Right Focuses on Fighting Islam - AP

Three Charged in Sweden With Conspiring to Kill Cartoonist - Reuters

The Wrong Fix - NYT editorial

 

South Asia

Violence Wanes in Kashmir, India Maintains Tight Military Grip - WP

India Targets 'Blasphemous' Web - BBC

Online Uproar as India Seeks Social Media Screening - Reuters

Sri Lanka Under Fire Over PR Firm - BBC

Bringing the State to the Slum

Tue, 12/06/2011 - 2:21pm

Bringing the State to the Slum: Confronting Organized Crime and Urban Violence in Latin America by Vanda Felbab-Brown, The Brookings Institution.

Public safety is increasingly determined by crime and security in urban spaces. How the public safety problem in urban spaces is dealt with in the 21st century as urbanization intensifies will determine citizens’ perceptions of the accountability and effectiveness of the state in upholding the social contract between the citizens and the state. Major cities of the world, and the provision of security and order within them, will increasingly play a major role in the 21st century distribution of global power. In many of the world’s major cities, law enforcement and social development have not caught up with the pace of urbanization, and there is a deep and growing bifurcation between developed and reasonably safe sectors of economic growth and social advancement and slums stuck in a trap of poverty, marginalization, and violence. Addressing the violence and lifting the slums from this trap will be among the major challenges for many governments.

There are many forms of urban violence. This article presents some of the key law enforcement and socioeconomic policy lessons from one type of response to urban slums controlled by non-state actors: namely, when the government resorts to physically retaking urban spaces that had been ruled by criminal or insurgent groups and where the state’s presence had been inadequate or sometimes altogether nonexistent. Its focus is on Latin America—specifically Brazil, Mexico, Colombia, and Jamaica; but its findings apply more broadly and are informed by similar dynamics between non-state actors and state policies in places like Karachi, Pakistan, and Johannesburg, South Africa...

Rethinking Revolution: Introduction

Tue, 12/06/2011 - 10:05am

When is a revolution over, completed, fulfilled?  Traditionally, we prefer to quantify revolutions as ending in a win, loss, or negotiated settlement.[1]  While this framework is helpful for shaping theory, it neglects that reality is often much more complicated and messy.  As John Maynard Keynes said, “it is a method rather than a doctrine, an apparatus of the mind, a technique for thinking, which helps the possessor to draw correct conclusions.”  Simply put, it is only a guide towards understanding history and human nature.

For instance, the American Revolution did not end with an American colonist’s win over the British Empire.  Rather, the conflict was the beginning of a long, arduous process that continues today.   As Richard Edens notes, “the American Revolution created an imperfect union.  In addition to legalized and racialized enslavement in a land of equality and freedom, the limited power state of the 18th century was inadequate for the dynamism of 19th century industrial capitalism rather than an economy dominated by agriculture.  These unresolved and irresolvable tensions led to the Civil War.”[2]

 James McPherson in the conclusion of his book on the Civil War, Battle Cry of Freedom, writes,

. . . when secessionists protested that they were acting to preserve traditional rights and values, they were correct. . . .  The South’s concept of republicanism had not changed in three-quarters of a century; the North’s had.  With complete sincerity the South fought to preserve its version of the republic of the founding fathers – a government of limited powers that protected the rights of property and whose constituency comprised an independent gentry and yeomanry of the white race undistributed by large cities, heartless factories, restless free workers, and class conflict. …  Their secession was a pre-emptive counterrevolution.  …  ‘We are not revolutionists,’ insisted James B.D. DeBow and Jefferson Davis during the Civil War, ‘We are resisting revolution . . . .  We are conservative.[3] 

The tensions of an imperfect union continue to this day with a re-revolution and a counter-revolution, an on-going revolution for a changing context and resistance to revolution and a changing context.[4]   

In his seminal work, Rethinking Insurgency, Steven Metz challenged our community to rethink the existing assumptions and relearn how to counter insurgencies.[5]  Moreover, over the past decade, scholars challenged the accepted military definition that an insurgency is “an organized movement aimed at the overthrow of a constituted government through use of subversion and armed conflict.”  

Yet, with all the evidence, scholarship, theories, and analysis, we continue to muddle through small wars.  Why?  Perhaps, we often choose mass over maneuver and speed over subtle influence in attempts to control the problem.  Small wars are wicked problems.  If we continue to plug and play the latest "new" idea to tame a problem, then we will just muddle along and only make the problem worse.

In the last decade, we jumped from pre-emptive war to counterinsurgency, and we are now moving to Foreign Internal Defense (FID)/Security Force Assistance (SFA) without a serious debate, informed discussion, or collaborative endeavor.  There is no imagination.  There is no fully formed, holistic, comprehensive strategy.  We continue to muddle in tactics bypassing strategy.

Today, we are in a time of unprecedented economic, environmental, technological, and political change.  “The Agricultural Revolution was a roughly 3,000-year transition, the Industrial Revolution lasted 300 years, and this technology-led Global Revolution will take only 30-odd years. No single generation has witnessed so much change in a single lifetime.”[6]  We could be facing a generation of revolution as changes occur in the Americas, the Middle East, Europe, and Asia.

Before we can hope to distill any lessons learned from this past bloody decade of war and rewrite the existing counterinsurgency manual[7][8] and find a suitable foreign policy for this new century, perhaps we should first seek to better understand the nature of revolution. 

We need to start rethinking how we see revolution.  One place to start is with the great contributors at Small Wars Journal.

For instance, Col (Ret.) Robert C. Jones’s proposes that we relook our definition and consider,

Insurgency is an illegal political challenge to government, rising from a base of support within some significant and distinct segment, or segments, of the populace; and employing any mix of violent and non-violent tactics.[9]

This is just a primer to help us move past the COIN, CT, FID, and SFA debate in order to start thinking about strategy.  Perhaps, if we look at our own history, see that the United States is still a revolution in process, an imperfect union; it can help guide us towards better understanding the world around us.  Before we try to change the world around us, perhaps we should first seek self-awareness.

In the upcoming weeks, we will examine recent scholarship that argues that we should consider the Civil Rights Movement as an insurgency.



[1] See Ben Connable and Martin C. Libicki’s Rand Study How Insurgencies End,  Gordon McCormick and the Naval Postgraduate School’s Defense Analysis Department internal databases, and Mark Safranski’s Do Oligarchies Create Insurgencies? among other notable scholars.

[2] Richard Edens, Second Sunday of Advent Sermon, United Church of Chapel Hill, NC. 4 Dec 2011.  

[3] James McPherson, Battle Cry of Freedom, pp. 880-861,

[4] Ibid, Edens.

[5] Steven Metz, Rethinking Insurgency, June 2007, Available at http://www.strategicstudiesinstitute.army.mil/pubs/display.cfm?pubID=790

[6] Andy Stern, China's Superior Economic, Wall Street Journal, Accessed on 6 December 2011, Available at http://professional.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052970204630904577056490023451980.html?mod=WSJ_hp_mostpop_read#articleTabs%3Darticle   

[7]Carl Prine, Crispin Burke, James Few, Evolving the Coin Field Manual: A Case for Reform.   Available at http://smallwarsjournal.com/jrnl/art/evolving-the-coin-field-manual-a-case-for-reform

[8] Frank Hoffman, Counterinsurgency Doctrine In Context, Small Wars Journal, Available at http://smallwarsjournal.com/blog/counterinsurgency-doctrine-in-context

[9] Robert C. Jones, “Understanding Insurgency: The Condition behind the Conflict” Small Wars Journal. 1 October 2011.  Accessed on 4 December 2011.  Available at http://smallwarsjournal.com/jrnl/art/understanding-insurgency-the-condition-behind-the-conflict

 

COIN – Now we see that it failed. But that was obvious before we started (when will we learn?)

Tue, 12/06/2011 - 8:07am

COIN – Now we see that it failed. But that was obvious before we started (when will we learn?)

by Fabius Maximus

Summary:  Now that the enthusiasm has passed for COIN as the tool by which foreign armies can defeat local insurgencies, we can look back for lessons.  They key insight is not that COIN failed to live up to the claims of its advocates.  It’s that the claims were obviously false when made, disproved by both history and logic.

Contents

  1. Introduction:  the rise of COIN
  2. The Fall of COIN
  3. Reason #1:  COIN seldom works when used by foreign armies against local insurgents
  4. Reason #2:  the intellectual foundation of COIN is largely bogus
  5. Other posts about COIN

6 December SWJ Roundup

Tue, 12/06/2011 - 5:35am

US Naval Institute Daily - USNI

Real Clear World - RCP

Afghanistan

Aid Agencies in Afghanistan Fear Reversals After US Exit - NYT

Nations Vow Continued Support after Troops Leave - S&S

Afghanistan's Allies Pledge to Stay for Long Haul - Reuters

At Conference, Afghans Say They’ll Need Aid for Years - NYT

Afghanistan to Need Financial Support Until 2024 - AP

Analysts: Time to Switch US Troops to Advisory Mission - S&S

Clinton to Afghans: ‘More Work to Do’ - WP

Bonn Conference Focuses on Afghan Transformation - VOA

Official: Sustainment Skills Key in Iraq, Afghanistan - AFPS

Afghanistan Opens Bids on Gold, Copper Deposits - AP

Explosion Rocks Shrine in Kabul - BBC

Kabul Blast Kills 48, More Than 100 Injured - Reuters

Roadside Bomb Kills at Least 5 Afghan Civilians - AP

Afghan Policemen Killed in Fight With Taliban - AP

ISAF Operations Summary - AFPS

 

Pakistan

Pakistan PM Sees Progress in US Ties - AP

Pakistan Holds Firm to Afghanistan Conference Boycott - VOA

US Officials Say Pakistan Leaving Liaison Centers - AP

US Forces Begin Leaving Pakistan Drone Base - Reuters

Pakistan Fans the Flames - NYT editorial

 

Iraq

Americans Face Kidnapping Risk in Iraq - WP

Iraq Bombings Kill 28 Shiite Pilgrims - VOA

Multiple Bomb Attacks in Iraq on a Day Holy to Shiites - NYT

Iraq Attacks Target Shia Pilgrims - BBC

Attacks Kill 21 Shiite Pilgrims in Iraq - AP

Turf Battle Forms Over Hussein's Palaces - WSJ

 

Iran

Iran, Facing New Sanctions, Warns of Oil at $250 a Barrel - NYT

Congress Sees Shipping Certification Firms as Tool to Tighten Noose - WP

US Ramps Up Warnings on Iran Strike Risks - Reuters

'Cold War' With Iran Heats Up Across Mideast - Reuters

US Official Says Iran Becoming a Pariah State - Reuters

Australia Expands Sanctions Against Iran  - AP

CIA Drone's Crash in Iran Could Give Away US Secrets - LAT

Iran Says its Military has US Drone in its Possession - LAT

US Officials: Drone Belonged to CIA - WP

 

Egypt

Runoff Vote in Cairo, Alexandria for Egypt's Parliament - VOA

Egyptians Vote in Run-off Polls - BBC

Turnout Falls as Egypt Casts Runoff Ballots - NYT

Islamist Rivals in Egypt Election Stand-Off - Reuters

Egypt Runoff Exposes Tensions Between Islamists - AP

Short-lived Shibboleth of a Moderate Egypt - WT opinion

 

Syria

Violence Flares as Damascus 'Positive' Towards Observers - VOA

Syrian Activists Report Killing of 34 Civilians by Assad’s Loyalists - VOA

'Bodies Dumped' in Syria's City - BBC

Syria Offers to Allow Observers, With Strings - NYT

Syria Agrees to Arab Observers Under Conditions - AP

Syria Says 'Would Like' to Accept Arab Deal - Reuters

Clinton to Meet With Syrian Exiles - AP

 

Middle East / North Africa

Hezbollah Leader Makes Rare Public Appearance - Reuters

New Violence Erupts in Yemeni City - NYT

Yemen: Protester Shot Dead as Snipers Stay in Taiz, Tanks Quit - Reuters

Russia Downgrades Ties With Qatar - AP

Come Home to Israel - NYT opinion

 

WikiLeaks

Assange Can Appeal Extradition Again - WP

WikiLeaks Founder Can Make Final Bid to Avoid Extradition - NYT

Manning WikiLeaks Defense Focuses on Mental State - AP

 

US Department of Defense

Will the Military Force Out Troops with Criminal Convictions?  - S&S

Suspected Frankfurt Airport Shooter Described as Quiet, Not Violent - S&S

Defense Contractors Preach Caution, Not Panic - WP

Senate to Navy: Study Keeping Frigates - NT

Navy to Demonstrate Biofuel Use During Exercise - AFPS

Navy, USDA Tout Largest Government Biofuel Purchase - S&S

Component of Unarmed Ballistic Missile Damaged in Accident - WP

 

United States

Critics Target Cost of Troops on Mexico Border - WP

Mich. Man Pleads to Firearm Charge in Militia Case - AP

Past Due on Handling Finances of War - WP opinion

 

United Kingdom

UK Auditors Warn Olympic Budget is On the Edge - AP

 

World

Report: Rich, Poor Gap Widens in Most Countries - VOA

 

Africa

Tensions Rise in Congo’s Capital as Ballots Pile Up - NYT

DR Congo Election: Joseph Kabila Ahead of Tshisekedi - BBC

Clashes Erupt in Congo Ahead of Vote Results - Reuters

Ivory Coast’s Gbagbo Before International Court - VOA

Ivory Coast's Gbagbo in The Hague - BBC

Former Ivory Coast Strongman Appears at Hague Court - NYT

UN Toughens Sanctions on Eritrea - BBC

UN Council Expands Eritrea Sanctions Over Somalia - Reuters

 

Americas

Mexican Contender in 'Name-Book Gaffe' - BBC

Uruguay Army: No Crimes Cover-up - BBC

 

Asia Pacific

North Korea Making Missile Able to Hit US - WT

US Envoy to North Korea to Visit South Korea, China, Japan - AP

Filipino Cops Find Blood in Search for Kidnapped Australian - AP

Indonesia Ratifies Global Ban on Nuclear Tests - AP

UN Expert Urges Vietnam to Close Rehab Centers - AP

 

Europe

Europe at Crossroads - WSJ

Ratings Agency Warns Euro Nations - BBC

Sarkozy, Merkel Agree on Steps to Save Euro Currency Union - VOA

Sarkozy and Merkel Push for Changes to Europe Treaty - NYT

Merkel, Sarkozy Call for New Euro-Zone Treaty - WP

Majority Narrows for Putin's Party in Russia, Violations Mar Vote - VOA

Voters Watch Polls in Russia, and Fraud Is What They See - NYT

Monitors Find Russian Elections Flawed - WP

Clinton Cites Serious Concerns in Russia Voting - AP

US Voices 'Serious Concerns' About Russia Vote - Reuters

Thousands Protest Russian Election - LAT

Thousands Protest Against Putin After Russia Vote - AP

Russian Protesters Accuse Putin's Party of Rigging Vote - AP

Russia: Party’s Losses Raise Concerns About Putin’s Bid - NYT

Putin's Dilemma: How to Win Back Russian Voters? - Reuters

Spring in the Russian Air? - WP editorial

France to Test Nuclear Plant Security After Greenpeace Occupation - VOA

World Court Rules Against Greece in Macedonia Case - AP

Voters Oust Governments In Croatia, Slovenia - VOA

Belgium Finally Appoints Cabinet - BBC

Belgium's Government to Be Sworn in After 541 Days - AP

 

South Asia

India Urges Screening of Internet - BBC

The Next Fight: Time for a Change of Mission in Afghanistan

Mon, 12/05/2011 - 4:43pm

I really don't know what to say about this because I asked Exum to study FID, Colombia, Phillipines, and El Salvador back in 2008-09 when he was advising on the A'stan Surge.  Now, I guess he finally studied these conflicts.

The Next Fight: Time for a Change of Mission in Afghanistan

by Lieutenant General David W. Barno, USA (Ret.), Dr. Andrew M. Exum, Matthew Irvine

With a 2014 transition looming in Afghanistan, U.S. and allied military leaders must recognize that U.S. and coalition forces will not defeat the Taliban and its allies in the next three years. "The Next Fight: Time for a Change of Mission in Afghanistan," a report authored by Lieutenant General David W. Barno, USA (Ret.), Dr. Andrew Exum and Matthew Irvine, calls for a change of mission in Afghanistan and offers policy recommendations for the Obama Administration, the ISAF/U.S. Forces Commander, the U.S. Army and Marine Corps and the U.S. Special Operations Command.

The authors write, "U.S. and coalition forces must shift away from directly conducting counterinsurgency operations and move toward a new mission of "security force assistance:" advising and enabling Afghan forces totake the lead in the counterinsurgency fight." They conclude that by continuing to place its forces in the lead in counterinsurgency operations in Afghanistan, the United States is ultimately working against its long-term security interests. Because U.S. units can execute counterinsurgency operations better and faster than their Afghan counterparts, they are continuing to do so despite the looming transition. Afghan forces must move more rapidly to take the lead in Afghanistan while the United States and its coalition allies still have significant numbers of troops and enablers in the country. U.S. commanders need to assume greater risk in the near-term if the Afghan forces are to succeed in this task.

 

COIN Center seeks input on FM 3-24 Rewrite

Mon, 12/05/2011 - 10:50am

The U.S. Army Counterinsurgency Center has begun the revision process of Army Field Manual 3-24, “Counterinsurgency.” First published in December 2006, it is perhaps one of the most widely read and followed field manuals in history.

FM 3-24 has its critics and its apologists, but nevertheless, U.S. Army forces depend on it to guide planning and operations for on-going deployments worldwide. At the core of the manual are enduring principles and fundamentals based on history and lessons from contemporary operations. This revision will attempt to adapt applicable lessons from Afghanistan, Iraq, the Philippines and other counterinsurgency and irregular conflicts worldwide to inform the writing team and contributing agencies and stakeholders.

How to improve it?

The Counterinsurgency Center has constructed an analytical framework that seeks to include not only a thorough review of lessons and contemporary literature, but also voices and opinions of counterinsurgency theorists, academicians and practitioners, wherever they are and regardless of their opinion.  

The resulting manual will be constructed so that Soldiers will want to read it because it is relevant to them at the tactical and operational level. It will serve to inform the activities of men and women in uniform into the foreseeable future. It will consider the range of irregular threats U.S. ground forces will confront in the future operational environment. It will contain tactics and procedures and principles, underpinned by analysis and theory.

The Counterinsurgency Center wants your input.  

This is a U.S. Army and Marine Corps field manual, so decisions on content, writing style, and format are made by both services. However, the Counterinsurgency Center will engender a collaborative environment that capitalizes on the collective intellect, expertise, and vested interests of critical stakeholders.

The Counterinsurgency Center asks qualified persons to submit input. The first preference is for contributors to complete a questionnaire; however, any input is desirable that is substantiated both by personal qualification and research. See the Counterinsurgency Center public website to access a copy of the questionnaire at http://coin.army.mil (FM3-24 Revision tab). The questionnaire and any additional input will focus on doctrinal gaps which include:

  • Gaps in what is not in the current FM.
  • Duplicative material in the current manual that is covered in other doctrinal pubs.
  • Information in the FM that is too narrowly focused, i.e., Iraq and Afghanistan.
  • Incorrect information in the current FM that does not meet guidelines of the Doctrine 2015 construct.

Respondents need not answer all the questions found in the questionnaire. Many questions were posed to ensure adequate depth was provided to stimulate thinking and discourse. Thanks for your interest and we look forward to your contribution. E-mail responses to coin@conus.army.mil.

Lt. Col. John Paganini is the director of the Counterinsurgency Center.

See Also

Evolving the COIN Field Manual: A Case for Reform

by Carl Prine, Crispin Burke, and Michael Few

FM 3-24 COIN Manual Critique

by Braden Civins

Beyond FM 3-24

by Joshua Thiel, Bryan Martin, William Marm, Christopher O'Gwin, Christopher Young, Gabriel Szody, and Douglas Borer

Mexican Cartel Strategic Note No. 9

Mon, 12/05/2011 - 8:13am

Mexican Cartel Strategic Note No. 9:

 Why Does Napolitano Focus on Al Qaeda Lone Wolves

and Ignore the Mexican Cartels?

Via The Associated Press, 2 December 2011. Circulated in major newspapers including the Washington Post, Miami Herald, and the Denver Post:

Napolitano says lone wolf terror threat growing

PARIS (AP) — U.S. Homeland Security Director Janet Napolitano says the risk of “lone wolf” attackers is on the rise as the global terrorist threat has shifted in recent years.

Napolitano is also warning about the need to keep dangerous travelers from reaching the United States and urging European partners to finalize a deal on sharing passenger data.

Napolitano, in an interview with The Associated Press, said the agreement is needed to “make sure these global networks and global systems that we all rely on remain safe.” She spoke on a visit to Paris focused on international security cooperation.

Noting current threats to the United States, she singled out al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula and “the growth of the lone wolf,” a single attacker not part of a larger conspiracy or network [1].

Analysis:  While the above statements—some might even say political “sound bytes”— uttered by US Homeland Security Director Janet Napolitano were directed at America’s European allies, they convey the ongoing Washington obsession with Al Qaeda to the exclusion of other non-state threat entities. The memory of the 9/11 attacks is still a visceral experience for most of our nation’s financial and political elites.

Napolitano now equates lone wolf (Al Qaeda inspired) attackers, who need to take commercial aircraft to reach the US, as a significant threat to our nation [2]. Such terrorists have extremely limited combat capabilities, both destructive and disruptive, and suffer from lack of training, equipment, and finances. They represent nodal criminal-soldiers (devoid of network support) who at best can engage in sporadic active aggressor (shooter) or IED (improvised explosive device) attacks. Such attackers are not the most pressing US national security threat; even if a few got through, the damage inflicted will be inconsequential to the integrity of American society and the functioning of its governmental system [3]. Yes—even a suicide bomber or two detonating in the Mall of the Americas, on Wall Street, or in a high-end bistro in N.W. DC is a survivable attack for our nation, though the media would replay newscasts of the incident ad infinitum and make quite a bit of money off of the ad revenue in the process.

What is most amazing about Napolitano’s statements is that they ignore a far more significant threat derived from geographic proximity, mass of numbers, training and organization, wealth, and corruptive capability. Mexican cartel operatives do not have to take commercial flights to get to the US and hundreds-of-thousands of personnel exist running the gamut from foot-soldiers through lookouts into narcotics production and distribution, street extortion, human trafficking, kidnapping, and bulk thefts. Tens-of-thousands of these cartel members operate in the US in conjunction with US street, prison, and motorcycle gangs which number well in excess of 1 million individuals. The Mexican cartels control more wealth than Al Qaeda ever had at its disposal—even at Osama bin Laden’s high point— and have specialized commando units on par, if not surpassing, the best Al Qaeda could ever field. Further, the Mexican cartels have taken corruption to an art form and have compromised entire regions of the Mexican state. This corruption is now being used in a targeted manner on the US border— hundreds of documented incidents exist— a capability with which Al Qaeda has never possessed to threaten the US homeland. 

Common sense dictates that we address the real threat next door and already over the border— in excess of 1,000 US cities have Mexican cartel operatives in them. While the Mexican cartel threat to the US is subtler than that of Al Qaeda— the 9/11 attacks were indeed fierce and bloody— it is also in many ways more threatening, especially now that Al Qaeda central is a former shell of itself. While ‘border spillover’ attacks and corruption have been downplayed and wide swaths of Mexico resemble a war zone (with well over 45,000 deaths), we continually hear DHS rhetoric about Al Qaeda being the #1 threat to the United States.

Napolitano’s January 2011 statements concerning the cartels have been half-hearted at best:

"So today I say to the cartels: Don’t even think about bringing your violence and tactics across this border," Napolitano told an audience at the University of Texas at El Paso.

“You will be met by an overwhelming response. And we’re going to continue to work with our partners in Mexico to dismantle and defeat you,” she said [4].

Further, in March 2011:

The perception of Mexican drug cartel violence spilling into U.S. border towns is flat-out inaccurate, U.S. Homeland Security boss Janet Napolitano insisted Friday.

Napolitano, speaking in El Paso, Texas, declared that security along the southern U.S. border is at an all-time high.

“There is a perception that the border is worse now than it has ever been,” Napolitano said Friday in El Paso, Texas. “That is wrong. The border is better now than it ever has been.”

As for crime, the image of Mexican drug violence contaminating U.S. border cities is “wrong again,” she said [5].

This statement is in variance with documents such as 2011 National Gang Threat Assessment [6] and Texas Border Security: A Strategic Military Assessment [7] which analyze Mexican cartel penetration throughout the US and increasing incidents of border violence taking place, respectively.

Napolitano’s rhetoric is derived from a myopic focus on the “T” (terrorism) designated threat facilitated by her wearing ‘DHS bureaucratic blinders’. Since the Mexican cartel groups are not accorded the same prestige bestowed upon Al Qaeda, they are considered lesser organized crime, gang, and criminal entities. This is somewhat strange given that Napolitano in September 2010 appeared to support the use of the “T” word to describe the cartels while providing US Senate testimony:

Napolitano’s concession that Mexican drug cartels pose a terrorist threat to the United States came while she was testifying beside FBI Director Robert Mueller who told McCain that violence on the Mexican side of the border increased the “national security threat” to the United States, an assessment Napolitano shared.

“Would you agree that the violence in Mexico has dramatically escalated in, say, the last three or four years?” McCain asked.

“Yes,” said Mueller.

“And would you say that, then, increases the national security threat on the other side of our border?” asked McCain.

“Yes,” said Mueller.

When McCain asked Napolitano if she agree with that, Napolitano said, “I think that’s right. Particularly in some of the state of northern Mexico—Chihuahua, Tamaulipas, for example, homicide rates are up dramatically, attacks on government, and, of course, we saw the paper in Juarez just a few days ago, on a front page editorial saying, ‘What do we need to do?’” [8].

Still, the Mexican cartels have not been elevated to a terrorist designation, so Napolitano has since backed away from any “T” word mention. Further, Obama administration policies also appear to be at work [9]. While such bureaucratic, and possibly executive, logic plays well in Washington, it makes little sense to the rest of the nation. We, the people, need to inject some common sense into Washington threat perceptions— if not, Napolitano, or her successor, will be fixating solely on Al Qaeda for years to come and in the process continue to be preoccupied with what has become the second tier national security threat to our nation [10]. 

Note(s):

1. Longer reports also exist re these statements. See Angela Charlton (AP), “Napolitano Says Lone Wolf Terror Threat Growing.” ABC News. 2 December 2011, http://abcnews.go.com/International/wireStory/napolitano-lone-wolf-terror-threat-growing-15074453.

2. To be fair, Napolitano also mentions affinity terrorists radicalized within the US. Such terrorists could immediately engage in terrorist attacks against the US homeland. While a long list of ‘lone wolf’, and even ‘gang of guys’, Al Qaeda influenced terrorist incidents (both successful and interdicted) exist, they are still the second tier threat vis-à-vis that of the Mexican cartels.

3. The author has done extensive work on the radical Islamic use of suicide bombing (including that of projecting body cavity bomb use against high value targets and writing law enforcement suicide bomber response guidance) and has been involved in projects related to active aggressor (active shooter) response. Further, he has worked on projects related to early Al Qaeda doctrine and the early characterization of the Al Qaeda network. During the Summer of 2001 a graduate student, Hakim Hazim, worked with him on a special research project pertaining to the growing Al Qaeda threat.

4. Alejandro Martinez-Cabrera. “U.S. warns Mexican cartels on cross-border violence.” Reuters. Monday 31 January 2011, http://mobile.reuters.com/article/idUKTRE70U5TB20110131?irpc=932.

5. Larry McShane, “Mexico drug violence not spilling into U.S.; security ‘better than ever’: Napolitano.” New York Daily News. Friday 25 March 2011, http://articles.nydailynews.com/2011-03-25/news/29363229_1_mexican-drug-drug-violence-border-agents.

6. 2011 National Gang Threat Assessment. National Gang Intelligence Center (NGIC): Washington DC, October 2011, http://www.fbi.gov/stats-services/publications/2011-national-gang-threat-assessment.

7. Barry R. McCaffrey and Robert H. Scales, Texas Border Security: A Strategic Military Assessment. Alexandria VA: COLGEN, September 2011, www.texasagriculture.gov/.../46982_Final%20Report-Texas%20Border%20Security.pdf.

8. Edwin Mora, “Napolitano to McCain: Yes, Mexican Cartels Pose Terror Threat to U.S.” CNS News.  24 September  2010, http://cnsnews.com/news/article/napolitano-mccain-yes-mexican-cartels-pose-terror-threat-us.

9. This is reminiscent of US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton who stated in September 2010 that the conflict in Mexico was looking much like of what took place in Colombia with its battles against the Medellin and Cali cartels in the 1980s and 1990s. President Obama apologized and retracted her usage of the “I” (insurgency) word to describe the situation in Mexico. See Kevin Spak, “Obama Takes Back Clinton’s Comments on Mexico.” Newser. 10 September 2010, www.newser.com/.../obama-takes-back-clintons-comments-on-mexico.html.

10. Radicalized Islam, Al Qaeda inspired or otherwise, is recognized as the first tier threat to our allies in Europe. This threat goes beyond that of terrorism and includes the potentials for socio-cultural modification of the laws and norms of European society. For example 2,823 honor attacks took place in the United Kingdom last year. See “‘Honour’ attack numbers revealed by UK police forces.” BBC News. 3 December 2011, http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-16014368.

 

 

 

 

5 December SWJ Roundup

Mon, 12/05/2011 - 2:03am

US Naval Institute Daily - USNI

Real Clear World - RCP

Afghanistan

Afghanistan Says it Needs Outside Aid Until 2025 - WP

West's Afghan Resolve Tested by Economy, Crises - Reuters

Afghans Press US to Stop Night Raids - NYT

Afghan Conference to Open in Bonn - BBC

Delegates Arrive For Conference on Future of Afghanistan - VOA

Afghans weary of yet another summit ahead of Bonn Conference - CSM

Planning Afghanistan's Future Beyond 2014 - AP

US-Iran Row Overshadows Afghan Conference - Reuters

Concern Over Women's Rights Ahead of Conference - S&S

Afghan Women Still in Prisons for 'Moral Crimes' - TT

Only 'Talk' Can Save Afghanistan - FT opinion

 

Pakistan

US-Pakistan Breach: Imbalance Between Diplomatic, Security Goals - WP

McCain: Billions in US Aid to Pakistan in Jeopardy - AP

US Ready for Eviction of Drones in Pakistan - WT

Obama Expresses Condolences Over Pakistan Troop Deaths - VOA

Obama Offers ‘Condolences’ in Deaths of Pakistanis - NYT

Pakistani Taliban Splintering into Factions - AP

A US Citizen Stirs Up Pakistani 'Memo-Gate' - CSM

 

Iraq

US Embassy in Iraq Limits Movement, Cites Terror Threats - S&S

US Tightens Its Security in Baghdad - NYT

Father, Son Making Bomb Among Dead in Iraq Blasts - AP

Building a Stable Iraq - WP opinion

Fragile Iraq Still Threatened by Civil War - Independent opinion

 

Iran

Mysterious Blasts, Slayings Suggest Covert Acts in Iran - LAT

Explosion Seen as Big Setback to Iran’s Missile Program - NYT

Iran Says it Shot Down US Spy Drone - VOA

Iran Says Downed US Spyplane; Pentagon Admits Drone Lost - WP

Iranians Claim to Down US Drone - BBC

Iran Says it Shot Down Unmanned US Spy Plane - AP

US Drone 'Downed' by Iran May Have Been Lost over Afghanistan - LAT

US-Iran Row Overshadows Afghan Conference - Reuters

Argentina Flirts With Iran as West Watches Nervously - Reuters

UK to Seek Embassy Compensation from Iran - TT

Germany Says Iran Sorry for Attack on UK Embassy - AP

Why Iran Lashes Out at West - CSM

How to Avoid War with Iran - CSM editorial

The Real War With Iran - JP opinion

Don't Ignore Iran's Latin Influence - HC opinion

 

Egypt

Egypt's Islamists Take Commanding Lead in Elections - VOA

Islamists Confirm Gains in Egypt’s Marathon Election - WP

New Egypt Election Results Show Islamists Dominant - AP

Islamists Seek to Extend Gains in Egypt Run-Off Vote - Reuters

Egypt's ElBaradei: Liberals 'Decimated' in Vote - AP

Egypt's Young Facebook Revolutionaries Fail to Inspire Voters - LAT

Egyptian Election Results Deepen Israeli Fears - AP

 

Syria

Fall of Assad 'Will Bring War to Middle East' - TT

Syria Faces Arab League Deadline - VOA

Syria Faces Fresh Arab Ultimatum - BBC

Syria Says It's Still Open to Arab Observer Plan - AP

Syrian Secret Police Defect, Arab Deadline Passes - Reuters

Syrian Authorities Arrest Woman Blogger - Reuters

How Assad Will Try to Hang On - FA opinion

 

Israel / Palestinians

Clinton: Israel Democracy Concern - BBC

Israelis Reject Clinton Remarks on Their Democracy - AP

Israel to get German Sub after Unfreezing Palestinian Funds - WT

Israel PM Suspends Ad Campaign That Upset US Jews - AP

Israel Has Responsibilities as a US Ally - Haaretz opinion

 

Middle East / North Africa

Biden, in Middle East, Tries to Reassure Allies of US Support - NYT

Fall of Assad 'Will Bring War to Middle East' - TT

Blast Near UK Embassy in Bahrain - BBC

Blast in Bahrain Near British Post - NYT

Yemen: 28 Killed in 3 Days of Fighting in Taiz - AP

Yemen Sets Up Military Oversight, Fighting Continues - Reuters

Libyan Defense Minister: New Army Top Priority - AP

Can Islamists Actually Govern? - FP opinion

 

US Department of Defense

White House Unveils 2013 Defense Budget Plan - AT

Postwar Marines Shift to Smaller, Less Focused on Land War - AP

Softening the Impact of War with Pillows - S&S

 

United States

Insiders Side With White House on Senate's Detainee Provisions - NJ

Massive Declassification Backlog at National Archives - WP

Occupy DC Standoff Marks Change in Protest - WP

31 Arrested at Occupy DC Building Site - NYT

Immigration: A Broken, Dangerous System - NYT editorial

 

Africa

DRC Election Commission Expects Presidential Results This Week - VOA

Dread Permeates Congo Ahead of Election Results - AP

Catholic Church in Congo Issues Poll Warning - Reuters

Radical Sect Stages More Attacks in Northern Nigeria - VOA

Police: 6 Die When Town Attacked in North Nigeria - AP

Sudan 'Takes Rebel Border Camp' - BBC

Africa AIDS Conference Opens in Ethiopia - VOA

Former US President Bush in Ethiopia for AIDS Conference - VOA

Protests at Climate Change Summit - BBC

 

Americas

Mexico's President Says Drug Cartels Threaten Democracy - LAT

Mexico's Calderon Notes Cartel Threat to Democracy - AP

Mexico Drug War Refugees Escape to More Bloodshed - AP

Taking Apart Colombia’s Spy Agency - WP

Argentina Flirts With Iran as West Watches Nervously - Reuters

Peru Declares State of Emergency over Disputed Mine - BBC

Brazilian Labor Minister Resigns - BBC

Haiti Leader Says Venezuela Aid Key - AP

 

Asia Pacific

Alarmed by Independent Candidates, China Cracks Down - NYT

China 'Ill-Prepared' for Unrest - BBC

Japan Poll Finds Record Good Will for US - NYT

More Radioactive Water Leaks at Japanese Plant - NYT

Vietnam: 42,000 People Killed by Leftover Weapons - AP

Cambodian Court to Question Ex-Khmer Rouge Leaders - AP

 

Europe

Biden, in Europe, Tries to Reassure Allies of US Support - NYT

Leaders Piece Together an Effort to Keep the Euro Intact - NYT

Sarkozy and Merkel Meet on Euro - BBC

Sarkozy, Merkel Kick Off Week of Crisis Talks in Paris - Reuters

Germany’s Merkel Faces Growing Criticism - WP

China Signals Reluctance to Rescue EU - NYT

Italy’s Leader Unveils Radical Austerity Measures - NYT

Russians Vote For Parliament While Hackers Shut Down Observer Site - VOA

Russian Ruling Party Weakened as Voters Choose New Parliament - VOA

Majority for Putin’s Party Narrows in Rebuke From Voters - NYT

Russia Voters Turn from Putin Party - WP

Russia Election Results Look to be Blow to Putin's Party -LAT

Russia: Polls Setback for Putin's Party - BBC

Russia Elections: Putin Party Support Falls - TT

Exit Polls: Putin's Party Losing Support - AP

Free Trade vs. Democratic Reforms in Russia - WT

For Turkey, Lure of Tie to Europe Is Fading - NYT

Biden Arrives in Greece for 2-day Visit - AP

Spanish Police Foil Possible Galicia Separatist Bomb Plot - AP

Slovenia Looks to Center-Right in Snap Polls - VOA

Slovenia Center-Left Party Surprise Election Victor - AP

Croatia Left Bloc 'Wins Election' - BBC

Opposition Wins Croatian Vote Over Incumbents - AP

 

South Asia

India Welcomes Uranium Ban Lift - BBC