Small Wars Journal

COIN Monthly Webcast Invitation 3 Nov 2011

Wed, 10/26/2011 - 8:50pm

COIN Monthly Webcast Invitation 3 Nov 2011

LTC John Paganini, Director of the US Army COIN Center, will discuss the way-ahead for the revision process of FM 3-24 and how the "new" manual will fit within the Army Doctrine 2015 construct. In addition, he will discuss examples of the doctrinal gaps found within the current manual. LTC Paganini's brief is Thursday, 3 Nov 2011 at 10:00 CDT (1100 EDT, 15:00 ZULU).

LTC John Paganini is an Infantry officer who has served in a variety of command and staff positions in Light Infantry, Air Assault, Airborne, Mechanized, and Ranger units. Prior to becoming the Director of the US Army COIN Center in August 2011, he commanded 1-71 Cavalry Regiment, 1st Brigade, 10th Mountain Division (Light), for 24 months, to include a 12-month deployment to Kandahar in Afghanistan.

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.

26 October SWJ Roundup

Wed, 10/26/2011 - 7:34am

US Naval Institute Daily - USNI

Real Clear World - RCP

-----

Effort Under Way to Bring Back US Sailors Buried in Libya - Philadelphia Inquirer

Remains of ‘First Navy SEALS’ Lie in Tripoli - Washington Post

War Dead from 1804 Could be Repatriated - Washington Times

Why Are 13 US Navy Commandos In Libyan Mass Graves? - The Intrepid Project

13 US Sailors Remain Buried in Libya - American Legion

Bring Home 13 American Heroes - Sign the Petition

Senators of the 112th Congress - Contact Them Please

 

Afghanistan

Afghan Peace Talk Hopes Show Modest Signs of Revival - Reuters

EU to Keep Afghan Presence Beyond 2014 - Reuters

Govt. Urges Religious Leaders to Participate in Anti-Drug Campaign - VOA

Afghanistan Tanker Blast Kills 12 - BBC

Bomb Hidden in Fuel Truck Kills 5 in Afghanistan - AP

‘Bomb Patrol: Afghanistan’ Brings Bomb Disposal to the Small Screen - WP

 

Pakistan

Swiss Hostages in Pakistan Appear in Video - VOA

Pakistani Judge 'Flees Death Threats' - BBC

 

Iraq

US Says IED Parts Smuggled to Iran, then Iraq - NYT

US Components Found in IEDs in Iraq - WP

Iraq Rounds Up Baathists Ahead of US Pullout - Reuters

Car Bombs in Northern Iraqi City Kill 5 People - AP

Bombs in Iraq's Mosul Kill Five, Injure 22 - Reuters

For Saddam Hussein, Iraq’s Foes Were Everywhere - NYT

 

Libya

Panetta Says Ties With Libya Depend on Allies - NYT

NATO Delays Meeting on Ending Libya Mission - Reuters

Gaddafi Begged Italy's Help in Letter - Reuters

Gadhafi Buried in Secret Grave - VOA

Gaddafi 'Buried in Libya Desert' - BBC

Qaddafi and His Son Are Buried in a Secret Location - NYT

Gaddafi Buried in Secret Location - WP

Moammar Kadafi Buried in Secret Grave - LAT

Gadhafi Buried in Secret Site in Libyan Desert - AP

Libya Gives Gaddafi Inglorious Secret Burial - Reuters

Display of Qaddafi's Body Recalls Mussolini and Ceausescu - NYT

Insider Describes Gaddafi Son's Escape From Town - Reuters

Libya Fuel Tank Blast 'Kills 50 - BBC

Qatar Hosts Libyan Conference After Gadhafi Death - AP

 

Tunisia

Islamic Party Claims Victory in Tunisia Election - VOA

Tunisia Liberals See a Vote for Change, Not Religion - NYT

Tunisia Islamists Set for Victory - BBC

Tunisia's Islamist Victors Promise Unity Government - LAT

Islamists Head for Win in Tunisia's Arab Spring Vote - Reuters

Tunisia Islamist Party Seeking Coalition Partners - AP

 

Syria

Syrian Opposition Calls for Protection from Crackdown - NYT

Security Forces, Deserters Clash in Syria - VOA

Syrian Army Deserters Kill 7 Troops in Revolt - Reuters

Homs, Northwest Syria Strike to Protest Crackdown - Reuters

Poll: Syria’s Assad Losing Support in Arab World - WP

Abuse Reported at Syrian Hospitals - NYT

Syrians Stage Pro-Assad Rally Ahead of Arab Visit - AP

US Ambassador to Syria a Frank, Outspoken Critic - AP

 

Iran

Top Iranian Proposes Axing Presidency - WP

US Says IED Parts Smuggled to Iran, then Iraq - NYT

US Components Found in IEDs in Iraq - WP

New Arrests and Interrogations in Iran Fraud Case - NYT

 

Israel / Palestinians

Mideast 'Quartet' New Approach with Israel, Palestinians - LAT

International Envoys Seek to Restart Mideast Talks - AP

Israel Envoy: Outlook for Peace Talks Not ‘Particularly Bright’ - WT

Israel Government Approves Prisoner Swap With Egypt - Reuters

Peres Defends Abbas After Israeli Foreign Minister's Attack - Reuters

 

Yemen

Gunfire, Explosions Heard After Ceasefire - VOA

Embattled Government Calls Cease-Fire That So Far Fails - NYT

Yemen Calls Truce, Sporadic Blasts Heard - Reuters

Yemen President Calls in US Ambassador - AP

Yemeni Women Burn Their Veils to Protest Crackdown - AP

 

Middle East / North Africa

US Labor Team Probes Job Purges in Bahrain - AP

Saudi Crown Prince Funeral Held - BBC

World Waits for Saudi King to Announce New Heir - Reuters

Activists Fear Egyptian Military Crushing Revolution Hopes - WT

Posters Back Egypt's Military Ruler for President - AP

From Arab Spring to Islamist Winter - WT editorial

The Mideast Path Forward - WP opinion

Obama’s Arab Winter - WT opinion

 

US Department of Defense

Congress Works to Avert Defense Budget Cuts - LAT

Demand Grows for Squad-level Linguist Program - AFPS

Army Considering Tighter Grooming Guidelines - S&S

 

United States

New Poll Finds a Deep Distrust of Government - NYT

Senate Aims to Expand FBI Authority - WP

New York Police Officers Accused of Smuggling Guns - NYT

State Department Buys $70,000 Worth of Obama Books - WT

US Is Set to Charge Major Executive in Trading Case - NYT

Executive Action Creates Jobs for Veterans - AFPS

Barack Kissinger Obama - NYT opinion

 

Canada

Canada's Gun Registry Under Fire - BBC

Canada's Conservative Government to Ease Gun Laws - AP

 

Africa

Official: Troops in Central Africa for Months, Not Years - AFPS

US Mission in Africa Not ‘Open-ended’ - WP

Officials Address Skepticism on Africa Deployment - LAT

France to Aid Kenya's Incursion into Somalia - BBC

US, Danish Aid Workers in Somalia Seized by Gunmen - AP

Aid Workers Abducted in Somalia - BBC

Kenyan Lawmaker Defends Somalia Incursion - VOA

Kenyan Police Arrest Man With Grenades, Guns - AP

Kenya Makes Terror Suspect Arrest - BBC

Somalis and Muslims Fear Backlash After Kenya Blasts - Reuters

Kenyan Military Action Slows Famine Refugee Flow - AP

Final Election Results Confirm Runoff Poll in Liberia - VOA

In Sudan, Peace Remains Elusive - LAT opinion

 

Americas

Mexican Army Raids Drug Gang Bulletproofing Auto Shop - AP

Amnesty: Dominican Republic Police Torture, Kill People - AP

Dominican Republic Police 'Using Violence' - BBC

Venezuelan Inmates Release Hostages at Prison - AP

UN Condemns US Embargo of Cuba, Again - AP

Haitians Train for a Future With a Military - NYT

 

Asia Pacific

Panetta Says North Korea Remains a ‘Serious Threat’ - NYT

US Will Boost Presence Against N. Korea, Panetta Says - AP

N. Korea Rents Out Its Resources to Stave Off Reform - NYT

Progress in US-N. Korea Talks But No Deal - AP

China: Tibetan Activists Adopt Self-Immolation As Political Tool - VOA

Another Tibetan Monk Sets Himself on Fire in China - AP

China Rejects US Praise, Arms Sales to Taiwan - Reuters

Panetta Discusses Okinawa Issues During Japan Visit - AFPS

Thousands Flee Philippine Bombing - BBC

Pentagon Monitors Thailand Flood Situation - AFPS

Floods Threaten Bangkok, PM Warns - BBC

Flood Waters in Bangkok Shut Domestic Airport - NYT

Floodwaters Enter Bangkok's Airport - AP

Bombings in Thai South Kill 3, Wound Dozens - AP

Indonesian Court Slashes Radical Cleric's Sentence - AP

US Special Envoy Quiet on Results of Burma Visit - AP

 

Europe

EU Leaders to Tackle Debt Crisis - BBC

Bigger Losses Sought From Banks as Part of Euro Deal - NYT

Europe Struggles Toward Rescue Plan - NYT

Italian Government on the Brink as EU Plan Stalls - AP

ECB Row, Italy Flare on Eve of Euro Rescue Summit - Reuters

Top US Republican Assails Obama 'Reset' With Russia - Reuters

NATO Hopes to Get Russia Involved in Missile Shield - AP

Germany to Shut 31 Military Facilities - Reuters

Spain: Basque Independence Group Cleared for Vote - AP

France: Carlos the Jackal on Hunger Strike - AP

Police in Belarus Arrest 5 at Opposition Protest - AP

Death Toll Rises in Turkey Quake as Search Continues - NYT

Turkey to Take Foreign Quake Aid - BBC

Israel Sending Aid to Turkey After Earthquake - AP

Tremor 'Sparks Turkey Jail Riot' - BBC

Turkish Court Sentences General for Insulting Erdogan - Reuters

 

South Asia

India Launches Manufacturing Push - BBC

A Tale of New Cities: India's Push to Industrialize - Reuters

Truth in Advertising

Tue, 10/25/2011 - 6:17pm

Well since Spence at DR had to bring up “Air Force’s ‘Not Science Fiction’ Commercial Totally Is” here is an oldie but goodie rebuttal from Sweden. That said, and in defense of the USAF, one DR commenter had this to say: “What do you expect them to show? A room full of Airmen sleeping through some PowerPoint briefing?” And to be honest, the "It's not science fiction" referred to the mission, not the futuristic a/c shown in the opening.

CCO Lessons Learned Conference

Tue, 10/25/2011 - 5:59pm

The Center for Complex Operations is pleased to invite you to the 7th International Lessons Learned Conference: For Practitioners and Policy Makers: Sharing Lessons on the Conduct and Design of Stability Operations

Where: The National Defense University, Washington, D.C. 20319

When: 30 November - 2 December 2011

Conference Objectives:

Identify lessons and develop guidelines for the conduct and design of stability operations in conflict environments in the following areas:

  • Political transitions;
  • Local security;
  • Population-focused intelligence; and
  • Economic engagement.

Identify lessons and guidelines for the conduct of disaster relief and humanitarian crises.

Assess planning and training practices for stability operations with a view toward identifying best practices in promoting civil-military integration, international collaboration, and public-private partnerships.

Share methods and tools for the identification and dissemination of lessons, and discuss ways to improve integration of lessons into doctrine, training, and policy.

The cost of this event is $170.00 USD to cover meals for three days.

If you have any questions, please email International_Lessons_Learned_Conference@bah.com, or by clicking on the contact link above.

ANGLICO – A Test of Diversity

Tue, 10/25/2011 - 5:55pm

ANGLICO – A Test of Diversity

by Zacchaeus

There is a great deal of debate underway as to what the Marine Corps will look like as it emerges from our current conflicts and navigates its way through an era of fiscal austerity.  In 2010 General Conway commissioned the Force Structure Review Group to evaluate this issue and one of the key takeaways from the group was the realization of the USMC’s “sweet spot” -the Marine Corps provides the nation a primarily maritime, fully expeditionary, capability between special operations teams and conventional army units. 

In a recent hearing of the House Armed Services Committee, Jim Thomas, Vice President and Director of Studies at the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments, noted the importance of examining service roles and missions during the current budget reduction process.  He notes that rather than having all services equally prepared for all contingencies across the spectrum of conflict, the DoD should explore greater differentiation between the services. He then provides an interesting vision for the Marine Corps:

The Marine Corps might reinvigorate its role providing forward presence and optimize itself as the Nation’s premiere on-call crisis response force on a day-today basis. In a state of general war, the Marine Corps might perform two main roles: first, small teams of highly distributed / highly mobile Marines could conduct low-signature amphibious landings and designate targets ashore for bombers and submarines as a vanguard force in the early stages of a blinding campaign; and second, the Marines could play an instrumental role seizing key bases and maritime chokepoints, particularly in peripheral theaters, to enable follow-on operations of the joint force.

The concept that Mr. Thomas, a former naval reserve officer and Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense, outlines is thematically aligned with the recommendations of the FSRG and other operational concepts, such as Distributed Operations. The capability he describes is resident, in part, in the current Marine Corps’ Air Naval Gunfire Liaison Companies (ANGLICO). Unfortunately this recommendation also duplicates similar capabilities of another service – The USAF Combat Control Teams.

United States Air Force Combat Controllers are ground combat forces specializing in a traditional pathfinder role while having a heavy emphasis on simultaneous air traffic control, fire support and command, control, and communications in covert or austere environments. Since their inception, USAF CCTs have performed admirably in a variety of operations and provided key support to SOCOM over the past decade.  Taking Mr. Thomas’ recommendation into consideration, it appears as though this ground combat role is more aligned to the Marine Corps than to the Air Force. Historically, the USAF may have retained this mission because the USMC was not integrated into SOCOM.  However it appears the USMC – SOCOM relationship will be an enduring one.

While the Marine Corps doesn’t organize for this specific mission, it does maintain those critical skills in a variety of MOSs. As the Marine Corps considers how to reorganize its forces to meet the recommendations of the FSRG, it must evaluate how to transition organizations designed to counter a Cold War adversary to a more agile and distributed one, capable of countering the full spectrum of hybrid threats.  The Marine Corps could create the type of capability Mr. Thomas describes by expanding the ANGLICO concept.

This evolution of USMC forces can be accomplished during this era of downsizing but would involve several tradeoffs. There are approximately 2,500 Marines (Officer and Enlisted) assigned to Marine Aviation Command and Control units.  MACCS units provide procedural control of aircraft, air traffic control and robust expeditionary C4I support among other functions. A significant percentage of these Marines are supporting Low Altitude Air Defense and Air Defense Control Missions. The Marine Corps should be willing to accept risk in these two mission areas and rely on the army and air force to provide mission support in the joint environment. Those Marines with CCT-like skills can be shifted to ANGLICO units resulting in increased capacity for the Joint an Special Forces with no growth in end strength.

For the sake of argument, let’s assume that to this point I’ve persuaded you of three things: 1) The Defense of the nation will benefit from shifting the current CCTs roles and missions to the Marine Corps, by creating an increased number of expeditionary teams with no loss of capability and eliminating duplication across the services; 2) The Marine Corps will benefit by transforming some out dated organizations into a capability that supports more palatable amphibious missions and is better aligned to the recommendations of the FSRG; and 3) The Air Force will benefit by getting out of the ground combat mission, thus allowing the service to focus on much needed cyber, space and air capabilities.

Unfortunately Mr. Thomas’ vision of celebrating the diversity of capabilities among the services will likely never be achieved.  In recent history senior leadership within DOD has done poorly in prioritizing missions and eliminating or realigning capabilities across services. In order to accomplish this, the Joint Staff and services must cooperate and leadership needs to breach some of the parochial obstacles emplaced along this avenue of efficiency. Hopefully the realities of the fiscal environment will force leaders to rethink existing programs and missions in order to optimize capabilities across the services.

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.

Mexican Cartel Strategic Note No. 6

Tue, 10/25/2011 - 3:24pm

Key Information:

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

Gangs are expanding, evolving and posing an increasing threat to US communities nationwide. Many gangs are sophisticated criminal networks with members who are violent, distribute wholesale quantities of drugs, and develop and maintain close working relationships with members and associates of transnational criminal/drug trafficking organizations. Gangs are becoming more violent while engaging in less typical and lower-risk crime, such as prostitution and white-collar crime. Gangs are more adaptable, organized, sophisticated, and opportunistic, exploiting new and advanced technology as a means to recruit, communicate discretely, target their rivals, and perpetuate their criminal activity… 

Gang Membership and Expansion

Approximately 1.4 million active street, OMG [outlaw motorcycle gang], and prison gang members, comprising more than 33,000 gangs, are criminally active within all 50 US states, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico (see Appendix A). This represents a 40 percent increase from an estimated 1 million gang members in 2009. The NGIC attributes this increase in gang membership primarily to improved reporting, more aggressive recruitment efforts by gangs, the formation of new gangs, new opportunities for drug trafficking, and collaboration with rival gangs and drug trafficking organizations (DTOs). Law enforcement in several jurisdictions also attribute the increase in gang membership in their region to the gangster rap culture, the facilitation of communication and recruitment through the Internet and social media, the proliferation of generational gang members, and a shortage of resources to combat gangs.

Source: NGIC and NDIC 2010 National Drug Survey Data (For Public Release)

Analysis: The recently released 2011 National Gang Threat Assessment – Emerging Trends is published as a 104 page document in PDF and HTML forms.  This sobering document represents an update to the 2009 assessment. Of specific concern is the increase in active gang membership from 1 million to 1.4 million over a two-year period. This increase is primarily attributed to better reporting procedures, increased gang recruitment and acceptance in some sectors of society, and the illicit economic benefits of gang membership. While not all the gangs profiled in the assessment have links to the Mexican cartels, identified as Mexican Drug Trafficking Organizations [MDTOs], six of these cartels have linkages to the following gangs on both sides of the US-Mexican border [pp. 84-85]:

  • Arizona Mexican Mafia (Old & New)
  • Barrio Azteca
  • Border Brothers (California)
  • Hermanos de Pistoleros Latinos
  • Latin Kings
  • Los Carnales
  • Los Negros
  • Mexican Mafia (California)
  • Mexikanemi
  • MS-13
  • New Mexico Syndicate
  • Partido Revolutionary Mexicano
  • Raza Unida
  • Sureños
  • Texas Chicano Brotherhood
  • Texas Syndicate
  • West Texas Tangos
  • Wet Back Power

These linkages are even more inclusive on a local level according to the 2010 California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation (CDCR) open source report [See p. 26]. The dominant areas of gang presence in the US, by county, also have some correlation with the South Western region per the attached map, though much of the information for the State of Texas was not included in the assessment.

Further trends (selected) were identified in the key findings section of the assessment and should be noted. These are:

• An average of 48 percent of violent crime in most jurisdictions can be attributed to gang members.

• Some gang members have gone beyond simple involvement with illicit trafficking and are working for the Mexican cartel as enforcers.  

• Gang members, relatives, and associates, are encouraged to join law enforcement and other public agencies for information gathering purposes

• The members of over 50 gangs have been identified in domestic and foreign US military bases. Concern exists regarding such members “…learning advance weaponry and combat techniques.” 

• Gang members are acquiring high-powered military weaponry and equipment including bullet proof vests and various forms of police and official identification.

While gangs are recognized as an increasing threat to US communities, they are viewed as solely a law enforcement problem within the assessment. The growing military-like capabilities of gangs, however, has been noted in the outlook section of the document:

Gang members armed with high-powered weapons and knowledge and expertise acquired from employment in law enforcement, corrections, or the military may pose an increasing nationwide threat, as they employ these tactics and weapons against law enforcement officials, rival gang members, and civilians (p. 45).

This concern appears to be active-aggressor and tactical-unit focused. It is also projected in the assessment that either gang expansion or displacement into new areas will take place as criminal opportunities are identified.

Suggestions: Further analytical development of this assessment is warranted in two particular areas of concern. The first is the use of the term ‘gang evolution’. While the term is utilized, it is not grounded to any form of modal analysis—such as gang generational studies (3GEN Gangs) [1]. The evolution of the gangs stated to be taking place in the assessment is thus left open ended—something is happening but what it is is unknown. Gangs are simply said to be becoming more collaborative with rivals and criminal organizations, sophisticated, profit focused, and technologically savvy. Attempts to provide early warning and trends and threats analysis is therefore very basic in its execution. The second area of concern is the publication of this assessment and the publication of the 2011 National Drug Threat Assessment document (www.justice.gov/ndic/pubs44/44849/44849p.pdf). These documents are becoming increasingly intertwined, even blurred, yet the illicit drug market and the Mexican cartels discussed in one document and the various forms of gangs (street, prison, and OMG) discussed in the other are separated by an artificial ‘institutional firebreak’ within US law enforcement response. With 1.4 million active street, OMG, and prison gang members in the United States, and Mexican cartel operations now taking place in over 1,000 US cities [2], this information and response seam is unacceptable. It represents a dysfunctional bureaucratic barrier— the old Federal stovepipes and rice bowls approach— to an evolving and increasingly networked national security threat. Serious consideration should be given to blending these two documents together into a future strategic assessment in order to present a more comprehensive picture of the larger threat we as a nation are facing. 

Notes:

1. The original document concerning this area of studies is John P. Sullivan, “Third Generation Street Gangs; Turf, Cartels, and Net Warriors.” Transnational Organized Crime. Vol. 3. No. 3. Autumn 1997: 95-108. Numerous documents have since been published on this area of gang studies. For an initial primer, see John P. Sullivan and Robert J. Bunker, “Third Generation Gang Studies: An Introduction.” Journal of Gang Research. Vol. 14. No. 4. Summer 2007: 1-10.

2. See Robert Bunker, “Mexican Cartel Strategic Note: Mexican Cartels (Transnational Criminal Organizations) Now Operating in Over 1,000 US Cities; Up From 195 US Cities.” Small Wars Journal. 25 September 2011, http://smallwarsjournal.com/blog/mexican-cartel-strategic-note.

25 October SWJ Roundup

Tue, 10/25/2011 - 6:05am

US Naval Institute Daily - USNI

Real Clear World - RCP

Afghanistan

Afghan Leader's Office Says Pakistan Remarks Misinterpreted - LAT

Afghans Find Little to Praise in New US-led Offensive - McClatchy

NATO: 200 Afghan Militants Killed or Captured - VOA

Afghans Rally Behind Policeman's Rare Act of Bravery - Reuters

Full Story of SEAL Mission in Question - WT

ISAF Operations Summary - AFPS

 

Pakistan

US Military Tries to Repair Pakistan Ties - WP

Bomb Blast Kills Four in Pakistan - BBC

 

Iraq

In Iraq, Diplomatic Perspectives on a Deal Not Made - NYT

US, Iraq Move Toward Normal Military Relations - AFPS

US Iraqi Police Funding Condemned - BBC

Baghdad Bombs Target Traffic Police, 1Killed - AP

Obama’s Pyrrhic Iraq Victory - WT editorial

Killing Iraq Softly with Her Song - WT opinion

 

Libya

Libya to Use Islamic Law as Source of Legislation - AP

Rights Group to NTC: Probe Apparent Mass Execution - VOA

In Libya, Massacre Site Cleaned Up, Not Investigated - NYT

Gaddafi Loyalists 'Were Executed' - BBC

Gadhafi Remains Popular in Much of Africa's Sahel Region - VOA

Libya to Investigate Gaddafi’s Death - WP

Gaddafi 'Buried in Libya Desert' - BBC

Libyan Official Says Gadhafi Buried at Dawn - AP

Before Qaddafi’s Death, US Debated His Future - NYT

 

Tunisia

Moderate Islamist Party Claims Victory in Tunisia - NYT

Moderate Islamists Lead in Early Counting of Tunisian Votes - WP

Islamists Lead in First Arab Spring Vote in Tunisia - WT

Islamist Party Claims Victory in Tunisia’s Election - VOA

Moderate Islamist Party Declares Victory in Elections - LAT

Tunisian Islamists Claim Victory - BBC

Tunisia Points the Way - WP editorial

The Tunisian Model - LAT editorial

 

Syria

US Pulls Ambassador from Syria - VOA

US Ambassador Leaves Damascus Amid Threats to Safety - NYT

US Pulls Ambassador Out of Syria - WP

US Pulls Ambassador from Syria - LAT

China Sends Envoy to Syria Amid Pressure to Reform - AP

Syrians 'Tortured' in Hospitals - BBC

 

Iran

Note Shows Big Power Split over Iran - AP

Saudi Envoy 'Plotter' in US Court - BBC

US Man Pleads Not Guilty in Saudi Ambassador Plot - AP

 

Israel / Palestinians

From Israeli Prison to the Lap of Luxury - WP

Israel Reaches Deal for Release Of an American Held in Egypt - NYT

American Israeli to be Freed in Israel-Egypt Prisoner Swap - LAT

Egypt to Free Alleged Israeli Spy - BBC

In Jerusalem, Textbooks are a War of Words - LAT

 

Middle East / North Africa

Saudi Arabia to Bury Crown Prince Sultan, Name Heir - Reuters

Official: Yemeni Military Plane Crashes; 4 Killed - AP

 

WikiLeaks

Wikileaks Suspends Publishing to Fight Financial Blockade - VOA

Wikileaks Halts File Publishing - BBC

Founder Says WikiLeaks, Starved of Cash, May Close - NYT

WikiLeaks: Scaling Back to Focus on Raising Funds - WP

Assange: Financial Blockade May Close WikiLeaks - AP

 

Cyberwarfare

New Cyberweapon ‘Duqu’ Threatens Vital Infrastructure - WT

 

US Department of Defense

White House Endorses 2012 Defense Spending Freeze - DN

The Osprey: Good Reviews, But A Costly Program - NPR

With Spotty Security, Many Had Access to Anthrax at Army Lab - McClatchy

Missing Evidence Among Military Crime Lab’s New Problems - McClatchy

US Airman Testifies Frankfurt Shooter Had 'Hate' in His Eyes - S&S

Lawyer: Gitmo Trial in Cole Attack Could Be Moot - AP

Cyberwarfare Joins the Curriculum at Service Academies - S&S

 

United States

Another Look at DNI Clapper’s Efforts - WP

Detention Legislation Divides Democrats - WP

Top Dems Oppose Detention Policy in Defense Bill - AP

While Veterans Wait - NYT editorial

American Imperialism? Please - LAT opinion

 

United Kingdom

Cameron Faces Internal Revolt Over European Policy - NYT

UK Rebels Lose Vote on EU Referendum - BBC

 

United Nations

Azerbaijan Elected to UN Security Council - VOA

Azerbaijan on UN Council After Slovenia Drops Bid - AP

 

Africa

US Increases Food Aid to Horn of Africa - Reuters

Kenyan Offensive Is Not Welcome, Somalia’s President Says - NYT

What are Kenya's Long-term Goals in Somalia? - CSM

Grenade Attack in Kenya Follows Threats From al-Shabab - VOA

Kenya Hit by Explosions after Sending Troops into Somalia - LAT

Second Blast in Kenya's Capital - BBC

Kenya: Two Grenade Blasts Rattle Nairobi - AP

Nigerian Sect Says Killed Journalist for Spying - Reuters

South Africa’s Zuma Announces Anti-Corruption Steps - VOA

South Africa Leader Fires Top Ministers - BBC

 

Americas

US Agencies Infiltrating Drug Cartels Across Mexico - NYT

UN: Mexico Dangerous for Journalists - AP

Venezuelan Inmates Hold 12 Hostages at Prison - AP

Haiti Plan to Restore Army Faces UN Hurdle - AP

 

Asia Pacific

US Pivots Eastward to Address Uneasy Allies - NYT

Panetta: Budget Cuts Won't Come at Expense of US Power in Pacific - S&S

Panetta: US at 'Turning Point,' to Refocus on Asia - AP

Panetta: US-Japan Alliance Vital to Regional Security - AFPS

Panetta Lauds Growing US-Indonesia Partnership - AFPS

US-North Korea Begin Talks on Nuclear Disarmament - VOA

US and North Korea Begin Groundwork for Talks - NYT

N. Korea's Kim Calls for Nuclear Talks, Doubts on Uranium - Reuters

UN Calls for Increased Funding to Feed North Korea's Hungry - VOA

Attempted Visits to Chinese Dissident Surge - NYT

China Paper Warns of 'Sound of Cannons' in Sea Disputes - Reuters

China Considers New Law Better Defining Terrorism - AP

Looming China Fosters Taiwan Identity - Reuters

Philippine Military Bombs Muslim Rebels - BBC

16,000 People Flee From South Philippine Clashes - AP

Floodwaters Enter Thai Capital's Second Airport - AP

Flood-hit Thailand Declines US Navy Offer of Help - AFP

Asia Pays Watery Price for Overdevelopment - AP

 

Europe

After Talks, Aides Try to Iron Out Euro Rescue Details - NYT

EU Rushes to Finalize Financial Plan - WP

Pressed, Italy’s Cabinet Fails to Act on Debt Crisis - NYT

NATO Delegation on Goodwill Mission in Moscow - AP

Clashes With Kurdish Rebels Push Turkey Back Toward Conflict - NYT

The Hazards in Turkey's New Strategy - NYT

Death Toll Could Soar in Turkey Quake - LAT

In Turkey, Desperate Race to Find Trapped Survivors - NYT

Death Toll Rises to 366 in Turkish Quake - AP

Turkey Quake Area to Get More Aid - BBC

In Balkans, Smuggling Forges a Rare Unity - NYT

Bulgarian Presidential Runoff Set for Next Week - VOA

 

South Asia

India Cuts Forecast as Rates Rise - BBC

Foreign Travel Alerts upset India - BBC

Australia Mounts Pressure on Sri Lanka Over War Crimes - Reuters

Golden Seconds

Mon, 10/24/2011 - 6:51pm

Golden Seconds: Open Letter to Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta

and President Barack Obama.

Gentlemen,

For the last seven years I have written about the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.  I have covered the US Army, Marines, Air Force and Navy.  I’ve also covered the British, Lithuanian, Afghan and Iraqi forces, among others, in places ranging from Iraq to the Philippines and beyond.  My most recent embed in Afghanistan was at personal invitation from then-General David Petraeus.  It is said that I have spent more time with American combat forces than any writer in US history.  I do not know if this is true, but it’s got to be close.  I’ve written three books and probably a thousand articles.  My work is known worldwide.

On 12 October, I published a dispatch called “Red Air,” detailing policy shortcomings with US Army Dustoff MEDEVAC procedures.  The kernel of the matter is that under the Geneva Conventions, when our Army “Dustoff” MEDEVAC helicopters wear red crosses, they are forbidden to be armed.  If they do not wear red crosses, they can be armed.

The Taliban and other enemies in Afghanistan regularly fire upon and hit our helicopters.  In Afghanistan, a red cross means “Shoot me; I’m defenseless.”  We’d have a better chance warding off vampires with crucifixes.

This battlefield reality causes commanders to send Apache attack helicopters as top cover for the Army Dustoff MEDEVAC helicopters. Yet with perpetual shortages of helicopters in Afghanistan, this leads to delays in evacuating terribly wounded troopers.  Importantly, US Air Force, Marines, and the British flying in the same areas do not wear red crosses and are armed.  Only the US Army, not the Geneva Conventions, is preventing Dustoffs from using machine guns.  Meanwhile, we require yet more helicopters to perform top cover, adding to helicopter stresses, causing delays, and pulling the Apaches away from other fights.

When I exposed this travesty in “Red Air,” military HQ in Kabul responded with a statement addressing alleged discrepancies in my work, requesting that I publish their letter.  Sadly for them, they must not have realized that I made high-resolution video/audio of a recent MEDEVAC failure.  The reply from HQ was anonymous, and so I responded to the ISAF HQ Press Office: “Put a General's name on this and I'll publish ASAP.”

If the Army, in particular, believes in the veracity of its position, a high-ranking person should stand behind the assertions and allegations.  Otherwise, as one Air Force Pedro pilot with 420 missions in Afghanistan would write to me a few days ago, it’s just “chaff.”

With nobody supporting the statement, let’s forget about the bulk of the orphaned missive and go straight to the salient points:

“Yon's point that the Army should arm and remove the red cross from its MEDEVAC aircraft fails to acknowledge larger issues.  Doing so would place the US outside its commitment to conducting MEDEVACs under the guidelines of the Geneva Conventions and moral norm for how Western nations identify their aircraft dedicated to medical evacuation.”

The so-called “moral norm” has nothing to do with the realities of our decade-long war in Afghanistan.  This statement is prima facie asinine and demonstrates a complete break with realities in Afghanistan.

Key point: Army medics do not wear red crosses.  They carry rifles.  Separately, we have military medical staff in Kabul who are wearing weapons while in the operating rooms.  None wear crosses.  Down in Kandahar Province, I recently sat alone on guard duty with a medic in an excellent unit known as 4-4 Cav.  There were several machine guns in front of him.  This inconsistency alone is enough to unravel the Army argument.

Army policy makers are not upholding the Geneva Conventions, but hiding behind them.  There is a power struggle within the Army about who controls those helicopters.  The red crosses are being used as crucifixes to ward off change.

As mentioned, the US Air Force, Marines, and British all fly without the red crosses, and nothing precludes the US Army—in this helicopter-deprived war—from removing its crosses.  In the event that we go to war with a more reasonable country, such as Canada, we can repaint the crosses, though there is no obligation.  In Afghanistan, the Marines perform helicopter evacuations with assets available.  Guaranteed they will have machine guns.  Likewise, Air Force helicopters come in with hot guns.  Nothing is stopping the Army but the Army itself, and the internal politics of who controls the Dustoff helicopters.  Secondarily, those who sell or control Apache helicopters have a vested interest in keeping Dustoffs unarmed.

Former Secretary of Defense Robert Gates told me personally that he instituted a 60-minute time limit to get wounded troopers from the battlefield to a hospital. It is noteworthy that the military required a directive from Secretary Gates before meeting these standards.  One might erroneously assume that the US military would act in the best interest of its own troops without being ordered.  This was not the case.

Remember Walter Reed

Major cover-ups are too numerous to track.  Earlier in the war, gross negligence at Army medical facilities was revealed by the press, leading to a purge of leadership, including the resignation of Army Secretary Francis J. Harvey.

Many people will remember the cover-ups revolving around Pat Tillman, Jessica Lynch, and Abu Ghraib.  We should not expect a more honest Army when it comes to Dustoffs.  To admit the mistake now would be to admit the mistake was not corrected for ten years.

On the whole, the military has met Secretary Gates’ MEDEVAC directive with exemplary performance, yet a small number of informed observers can sense hocus pocus with the numbers.

For instance, after an attack requiring medical evacuation, the unit in combat must transmit a “9-line” report to HQ.  Only then does the clock start running for the 60-minute directive.  If fire departments waited for specific details for every call, their response times would look more impressive, but many people would die.

In combat, actions on the ground can be stressful, causing a delay in the 9-line even though the unit in contact may have immediately radioed that there is a triple amputation.  We also have extreme issues with communications at times.  I’ve watched people attempt for hours to establish comms with elements just a few miles away.  But that’s another story.  There should be no need to wait for paperwork to launch distant helicopters when it’s already confirmed that a 9-line is forthcoming.  During the attack described herein, to which I was witness, the 9-line went up quickly due to the calm and quick actions of men of 4-4 Cav, and in particular one Lieutenant Jonathan Flores who did an excellent job.  Flores transmitted the 9-line in about six minutes.  In reality, the helicopters could have been dispatched immediately upon confirmation of the nature of the wounds.  Our location was known.  Other times, 9-lines can take much longer due to firefights or other distractions, and so the helicopters will sit on the runway “hot cocked” and ready to spin up.  The clock is not yet ticking because the 9-line has not arrived.

Golden Seconds

The enemies in Afghanistan often conduct “complex attacks” with multiple, simultaneous raids or ambushes.  When the enemy senses they have created Coalition casualties—often easy to observe with IED strikes—they try to predict where our helicopters will land.  For years now, they have tried to predict and prepare the landing zones before the attack unfolds.

During the IED ambush in which Chazray Clark was wounded (see Red Air), the enemy could easily have predicted and then positively ascertained our LZ by simple observation.  We had arrived under darkness via helicopters, then moved into the village where Chazray triggered the first bomb. The loud explosion would have been audible for miles.

The enemy is courageous, tactically nimble, and skilled at developing and exploiting advantages.  They understand our tactics and we understand theirs.  After our helicopter insertion and the bomb strike on Chazray, the enemy would be operating in a heightened state of alert.

The Golden Hour is crucial to survival of the seriously wounded.  There also are Golden Minutes.  The already-bleeding wounded are not the only ones in danger.  The casualties provide a golden opportunity for the enemy to shoot down a helicopter and attack the preoccupied ground force.  For the incoming helicopters, and ground forces in combat, minutes are crucial.  Delay provides opportunity for the enemy to prepare to attack the helicopter, or in the case of Chazray Clark, ground forces waited on an open LZ for close to half an hour believing the helicopter would arrive quickly.

In that area, known as Zhari District, the enemy employs numerous weapons that can take down a helicopter.  The powerful 82mm recoilless rifles regularly destroy our heavily armored vehicles.  One shot from an 82 and the helicopter is finished.  The far-less-powerful RPG will also do the job.

The failure I videotaped occurred in September 2011.  The month before, 38 people including a SEAL team died when an RPG downed their helicopter.  The investigation led by Brigadier General Jeffrey Colt would conclude, “The shoot down was not the result of a baited ambush, but rather the result of the enemy being at a heightened state of alert…”

In regard to MEDEVAC, the Army contends that top cover from Apache attack helicopters can replace, or are superior to, machine guns on Dustoffs.  Veterans of ground combat will scoff at the notion.  Furthermore, putting machine guns on Dustoffs does not exclude piling on Apache top cover.  But waiting for that top cover can prove lethal to the patients, Dustoff crews, and ground forces in contact.

Apache helicopters and other assets were providing top cover when the shoot down occurred that killed 38 people.  The enemy can fire from cover or concealment that an Apache, UAV, AC-130, or jets cannot see or even hit.  Even when the enemy is visible to the Apache, there will be endless tactical variants when the pilot cannot possibly react quickly enough to provide preemptive or interruptive covering fire.  Other times, the enemy may be too close (or at a bad angle) to the landing helicopter for response from top cover.  Dustoffs have landed in towns, cities, or in depressed areas such as valleys where the enemy can fire down or peer-to-peer in such a way that Apache cover can be mitigated or irrelevant.  The enemy often comes from holes, such as a karez entrance, or from under foliage where they are invisible even to our superior optics until the moment they use hot weapons.  When they fire machineguns or grenades from inside of buildings, they may remain invisible from above even while firing.  The helicopter roaring in for a landing will often be in a dueling situation with a hidden enemy wherein the result may bear true the maxim: “There are the quick, and the dead.”

When a helicopter is coming into a hot LZ, the idea of Golden Hours or Golden Minutes as measurement would be like using miles and hours to measure the distance and duration of a cobra strike.  The strike will be close with sudden results.  A man in the bush would not wear a crucifix to fend off cobras, and he would not use Apache helicopters to defend against the fangs; he would carry a shotgun.  The cobra is drawn to the red cross.  He knows that if he can stay hidden, he will get at least one strike – probably more – before the Apache can fire.

As the helicopter lands on a hot LZ, it’s literally down to the speed of the trigger fingers, the skills of the fighters, and luck.  The enemy often uses PKM machine guns—every wasted second can mean roughly ten enemy bullets from a single machine gun.

According to the investigation into the August shoot down,

“…as [the helicopter] neared the landing zone from the northwest.  A previously undetected group of suspected Taliban fired two or three RPGs in rapid succession from the tower of a two story mud-brick building approximately 220 meters south of the CH-47D.  The first RPG missed the helicopter, but the second RPG struck one of the blades of the aft rotor assembly and exploded…”  The report continues: “The destruction of the CH-47D rotor system from the rocket propelled grenade until the helicopter crash into the creek bed, likely lasted less than 5 seconds.”

And that was it: Mission failure.  38 people dead.  Helicopter destroyed.

Neither the AC-130, the surveillance aircraft, the Apaches, or machine guns on the destroyed aircraft were able to prevent the RPG shots.  The enemy got off at least two rocket shots, possibly three, and the Apache did not fire until everyone was down in flames.  With burning wreckage on the deck, an Apache comes into action.  According to the investigation:

“Fire support and surveillance assets immediately shifted focus to the crash site, and one AH-64 Apache helicopter fired 30mm rounds just west of the suspected RPG point of origin to suppress any potential enemy activity in the vicinity of the crash site.”

The idea that crosses and Apaches can protect Dustoffs is a US Army-manufactured fallacy.  This policy grinds down our battle tempo and creates a need for more helicopters.  Of course, those people who sell helicopters and helicopter parts, or who get to command all those extra forces and assets, will be tempted to proselytize the need for crosses.  Purists who only want to win battles will be called heretics.

Combat troops vociferously complain about the delay between the casualty, the 9-line, and wheels-down at the LZ.  Meanwhile, the Army haggles over accounting, and advertises 60 minutes as a success.  Any minute longer than the minimum required to land and get out is one minute tempting fate with an enemy who moves fast, and in Zhari District the enemy also shoots straight.  During one ambush on 4-4 Cav, the enemy took out three armored vehicles in about thirty seconds using recoilless rifles.

While waiting on a Dustoff to pick up Chazray Clark, an officer can be heard on my video asking about the bird, saying it’s been 45 minutes since the first call.  A lieutenant next to me said this is the second time this has happened.

In Zhari, the enemy often fires grenades, and after they know the LZ, every minute we waited there was an invitation for grenades to begin falling.  In addition to the reality that Chazray was wide awake and dying, and that the enemy could be preparing to attack the helicopter, they were using the time to prepare to attack us as we left the LZ.  Later in the morning, I would photograph what was almost certainly an IED position that the enemy did not quite get into place in time.  Our EOD and other troops found myriad bombs in the abandoned village.  Chazray died at Kandahar Airfield, landing approximately 65 minutes after the attack.  Pedros or armed Dustoffs could have had Chazray to the hospital in about 35 minutes, which also would have unlocked the unit from the LZ to wrestle initiative back from the enemy.

The Army’s next fallback will be that arming the Dustoffs reduces their load capacity.  This is true.  But again, experienced pilots with hundreds of combat missions will say—and I know from being there—that loads are not the problem.  Speed and machine guns are the problem.

After the Dustoff picked up Chazray, we headed into the village.  It was rigged so fully with bombs that we didn’t get far.  There were minor small-arms fights.  Though we never made it far from the LZ due to all the bombs, the next afternoon there was another BOOM.  An Afghan Soldier tripped another bomb that took off an arm and his head.  No helicopter was needed and so he was taken out in a body bag that night when other helicopters picked us up.

The points made by the Army that Geneva Conventions obligations exist for the Army—but not for the Air Force and Marines or British—are so silly that they do not need to be explained, merely exposed.  One must wonder if we’ve lost Dustoff helicopters or crewmembers because Golden Minutes were wasted, or when they came under direct fire they were defenseless.

An accurate appraisal of the situation can be obtained by bypassing the Army Generals.  Better to anonymously poll the pilots and crews who collectively have flown thousands of evacuation missions in Afghanistan.

The Army has demonstrated a lack of institutional will and common sense.  After ten years they have not fixed the problem.

The Secretary of Defense or the President of the United States should intervene.  I will provide my unedited video of the MEDEVAC failure to the Pentagon and White House upon request.  I prefer to keep the unedited video “in house” due to the graphic nature.  I kindly request that this video be safeguarded from release.

Thank you for your time and consideration in this matter.

Sincerely,

Michael Yon