Small Wars Journal

Counterinsurgency in Afghanistan: Is It Working?

Mon, 10/10/2011 - 5:20pm

Counterinsurgency in Afghanistan: Is It Working? By Kristina Wong, ABC News.

Counterinsurgency may not be the buzzword it was in 2009, when President Obama was deliberating strategy for the war in Afghanistan -- but it is still the Army's prevailing strategy in the war that passed the 10-year mark this weekend, a military official said.

So how are we doing with our latest strategy?

It's not so easy to tell, according to the official, Lt. Col. John Paganini, the director of the U.S. Army Counterinsurgency Center, because there's no easy way to measure its success and no specific end date on the books, though officials are aware U.S. war resources may be limited...

In an interview with ABC News, Lt. Col. John Paganini, director of the U.S. Army’s Counterinsurgency Center, explained how the counterinsurgency strategy being employed in Afghanistan is still the Army’s strategy there, despite having no concrete end date, no measurable metric of success and awareness that resources are limited.

Rooting Out Toxic Leaders (360 Degree Army Evaluations)

Mon, 10/10/2011 - 4:49pm

Rooting Out Toxic Leaders by Michelle Tan, Army Times.

Effective Oct. 1, officers will be required to assert that they have completed a 360-degree evaluation - where the officer is graded by his subordinates, peers, subordinates and superiors - within the past three years.

Requiring officers to complete 360-degree evaluations should encourage them to grow and, at the same time, weed out potential toxic habits among officers, officials said.

A recent survey of more than 22,630 soldiers from the rank of E-5 through O-6 and Army civilians showed that roughly one in five sees his superior as “toxic and unethical,” while 27 percent said they believe their organization allows the frank and free flow of ideas...

It's Time for a Scholarly Truce With Military Academies

Mon, 10/10/2011 - 12:27pm

It's Time for a Scholarly Truce With Military Academies by Melissa Matthes, The Chronicle Review.

… I have been teaching at the Coast Guard Academy for only two years, but so far, at least, I have not once been asked to modify what I teach, what I say, or what I study in response to military protocol. Indeed, when I was first hired, the dean of academics said at faculty orientation: "In my opinion, if you're not making cadets uncomfortable ... you're not doing your job." I suppose he thinks of the classroom as academic boot camp. I think of it more like Michel Foucault did, teaching undergraduates how to think the unthinkable, to ask themselves: What are the borders beyond which they cannot imagine?

I'd ask my fellow academics who are reflexively hostile to the service academies the very same thing. And then I'd ask them to come teach cadets. The possibilities for democratic action abound.

10 October SWJ Roundup

Mon, 10/10/2011 - 5:36am

US Naval Institute Daily - USNI

Afghanistan

US Troops Work to Open Schools in Remote Villages  - S&S

Special Ops and CIA First Into, Last Out of Afghanistan - AP

Afghan Lawmaker's Hunger Strike Extends Dispute - AP

Lens: Photographs From a Decade in Afghanistan - NYT

 

Syria

Syria's Foreign Minister Warns Against Recognizing Opposition - VOA

Syria Warns Countries Not to Recognize Opposition - NYT

Syria Warns Nations Not to Recognize Opposition Leadership - WP

Syria Warns Nations Against Recognizing Opposition Group - LAT

'Dozens Killed' in Syria Clashes - BBC

Thousands of Kurds Could Awaken Against Regime - TT

Protesters Storm 3 of Syria's Diplomatic Missions - AP

 

Iraq

Iraq's Maliki Says US Military Trainers Might Stay - Reuters

WikiLeaks Shakes Security of Iraq’s Jewish Community  - McClatchy

Iraq, Mideast Model? - WP opinion

 

Libya

NTC Fighters Capture Parts of Gadhafi Stronghold of Sirte - VOA

Libyan Government Says It’s Advancing on Center of Sirte - NYT

Fighters Make Gains as Battle Continues for Sirte - WP

Libyan Forces on Brink of Controlling Sirte - TT

Gaddafi Town 'Close to Falling' - BBC

Anti-Gadhafi Fighters Make Gains in Sirte - AP

Government Forces Attack Gaddafi Security HQ in Sirte - Reuters

Britain's Fox Says NATO to Keep Up Libya Mission - AFP

 

Egypt

Christian Protesters, Military Clash in Cairo - WP

22 Killed in Egypt as Christians Clash with Troops - LAT

Cairo Clashes Leave 23 Dead after Coptic Church Protest - BBC

Church Protests in Cairo Turn Deadly - NYT

Egypt Cabinet to Meet Over Violence That Kills 23 - Reuters

Dozens Arrested After Egypt's Deadly Clashes - AP

Egypt Holds Crisis Talks after Dozens Killed in Riots - TT

Egypt PM Urges Calm after Clashes - BBC

 

Israel / Palestinians

Mideast Quartet Discusses Way Forward on Peace Process - VOA

Quartet Tries to Restart Israeli-Palestinian Talks - AP

EU Asks Israel, Palestinians to Meet Soon - Reuters

Israel Copes with Bout of Extremist Violence - AP

Anti-Arab Vandalism Mars Jewish High Holy Day - VOA

Israel Arrests Second Mosque Arson Suspect - Reuters

Israeli Cabinet Backs Outline for Social Change - NYT

 

Middle East / North Africa

Arab Spring Activists Observe Polish Elections - AP

Iran Calls Wall Street Protests 'American Spring' - AP

Iran Nuclear Site Draws Defiant Aura From Namesake - AP

Standoff Persists in Yemen as President Hangs On - NYT

Tunisia: Islamists Attack Tunis TV Station - BBC

Tunisian Police Stop Hardline Attack on TV Station - AP

 

US Department of Defense

US Warriors in Midst of Equipment Revolution - AFP

 

United States

Recession Officially Over, US Incomes Kept Falling - NYT

Private Sector Might Need to Do More to Ease Vet Joblessness - S&S

Scientists’ Analysis Disputes FBI Closing of Anthrax Case - NYT

Postal Service to Continue Post-Anthrax Safeguards - WT

US Order Targets WikiLeaks Supporter's Google Mail - Reuters

Underwear-bomb Trial Begins Tuesday - WP

Trade Agreements: A Deal for the Deals - NYT editorial

Celebrate America on Columbus Day - WT editorial

 

World

Food Prices to Be Even More Volatile, UN Says - Reuters

 

Africa

In Rare Rally, Somalis Aim At Militants - NYT

Somalis Rally to Denounce Recent Truck Bombing - AP

Leaders of Sudan and South Sudan Agree to End Disputes - VOA

Sudans Agree to Resolve Disputes - BBC

Nobel Award Adds to Turmoil of Vote in Liberia - WT

Liberia Nobel-Winning President Faces Competition - AP

Presidential Voting Off to Slow Start in Cameroon - VOA

Cameroon Polls Face Setbacks, Incumbent Seeks Win - AP

Archbishop of Canterbury Preaches to Zimbabweans - BBC

Archbishop Attacks 'Godless' Zimbabwe Assaults - TT

Terreblanche 'Murderers' on Trial in S. Africa - BBC

 

Americas

Mexico: City's Entire Police Force Held for Investigation - AP

Chile Education Dispute Deepens - BBC

Cuba Won't Unilaterally Free US Citizen - AP

Guyana President Sets National Vote for Nov. 28 - AP

 

Asia Pacific

China's Military Buildup-How Far Along Is It? - Reuters

China Marks Centennial End of Dynasty With Call for Reunification - VOA

Taiwan Urges China to Respect Freedom on Centenary - AP

As Economy Sprints Ahead, China’s People Are Left Behind - NYT

Ex-President of China, Said to Be Ill, Appears in Beijing - NYT

13 Chinese Sailors Killed Near Golden Triangle - AP

North Korea Suspected in Poison-needle Attacks - LAT

Support for Japan PM Dips After 1 Month in Office - Reuters

2 Blasts Wound at Least 11 in Southern Philippines - AP

Mao Cap-Wearing Philippine Communist Rebel Is Dead - AP

Thailand Scrambles to Prevent Humanitarian Disaster - Reuters

US Man Pleads Guilty to Royal Insult in Thailand - AP

Malaysia Muslims Get Counseling After Church Meet - AP

How to Disarm N. Korea - WP opinion

 

Europe

French, German Leaders Agree on European Debt Plans - VOA

Euro Crisis Talks 'End in Accord' - BBC

Russian Political Life Far from Kremlin - WP

Polish PM Wins New Term, Markets Buoyant - Reuters

Moderate Leftist Tops French Presidential Primary - AP

Pope Denounces 'Inhuman' Mafia in Southern Italy - AP

Georgia on Mr. Putin’s Mind - WP editorial

 

South Asia

At India-Bangladesh Border, Living in Both, and Neither - NYT

Where is India's Steve Jobs? - NYT

India Ex-Minister Homes Searched - BBC

Bangladesh Opposition Holds Anti-Gov't Caravan - AP

Sri Lanka Ruling Party Wins Polls - BBC

9 October SWJ Roundup

Sun, 10/09/2011 - 5:05am

US Naval Institute Daily - USNI

Afghanistan

Special Ops Troops, CIA First In, Likely Last Out of Afghanistan - AP

Afghanistan Seeks Pakistan’s Help - WP

Lawmakers End Boycott of Parliament in Afghanistan - NYT

Suspect in Plot to Kill Karzai Not a Bodyguard - AP

Afghan Guard in Murder Plot Was Not Close to Karzai - Reuters

NATO: 2 Service Members Die in Afghanistan - AP

 

Pakistan

WFP Urges Pakistan to Enact Disaster Prevention Strategies - VOA

Pakistan Must Choose: Halt Terror, or Else - PI opinion

 

Syria

Democracy Activists Say Committed to Nonviolence - LAT

Iraq, Siding with Iran, Sends Essential Aid to Syria - WP

Syrian Forces Kill 5 During Funeral of Kurdish Leader - VOA

Syrian Forces 'Fire on Mourners' - BBC

At Least Nine Protesters Reported Killed - LAT

Tens of Thousands Mourn Kurd Opposition Figure - Reuters

Killing of Syrian Kurdish Leader Sparks Anger - AP

 

Iraq

Vacuum Feared as US Quits Iraq - NYT

US Revisits Iraq Training Plan - WP

State Dept. Readies Iraq Operation - WP

Iraq Army Delays Pullout From Cities Over Security - AP

Iraq Postpones Handover of City Security to Police - Reuters

 

Libya

Libyan Government Forces Continue Assault on Sirte - VOA

Libya NTC Fight Gaddafi Forces in Streets of Sirte - BBC

Fighters Make Gains in Gaddafi's Hometown - LAT

Resistance Weakens in Gaddafi's Hometown - TG

Snipers Defend Gaddafi’s Hometown - WP

Suicide Tank Driver Leads Charge for Gaddafi's Sirte - TT

Libyans Claim Gains in Gadhafi Hometown Offensive - AP

Libya’s Interest, and Ours - WS opinion

 

Yemen

Yemen's President Vows to Step Down Soon - VOA

Saleh Says He Wants to Resign - WP

Yemen's President Again Promises to Step Down - LAT

Yemen Leader to Resign 'in Days' - BBC

Yemen President Says Wants to Leave Power - AP

Saleh Keeps Yemenis Guessing With Talk of Step-Down - Reuters

 

Middle East / North Africa

Obama Holds First White House Meeting With Arab Spring Leader - VOA

Iran Tells Turkey: Change Tack or Face Trouble - Reuters

Iran Says Radar Can Detect Small Unmanned Drones - AP

Muslim, Christian Graves Desecrated in Israeli City - Reuters

Activists Attack Saudi Executions - BBC

Christians Fear Islamist Pressure in Egypt - AP

Tunisia Islamists Storm University Over Veil Ban - Reuters

 

US Department of Defense

Rumsfeld Meets His Fans, Signs Books at Navy Base in Japan - S&S

 

United States

Secret US Memo Made Legal Case to Kill a Citizen - NYT

The Secrets of Government Killing - NYT opinion

 

United Kingdom

UK PM Seeks Report on Defence Chief - AP

Defence Chief: I Have Nothing to Hide - TT

 

World

Coming Soon: The Drone Arms Race - NYT

 

Africa

British Police to Hunt Seychelles Pirates - TT

Hundreds Attend State Funeral of African Nobel Peace Laureate - VOA

South Sudan’s President Visits Khartoum - VOA

Archbishop Warned over Meeting with Zimbabwe's Mugabe - TT

Cameroon President Polls Open, Incumbent Seeks Win - AP

Zambia Leader Wants Malawi Apology for Deportation - AP

 

Americas

Fast and Furious Weapons Found in Mexico Enforcer's Home - LAT

Bitter Price to Pay for Mexico's Bloody Drugs War - TT

10 More Dead Found in Mexican Port of Veracruz - AP

Colombian City Demands Protection from Gangsters - LAT

Colombia Troops Seek Kidnap Girl - BBC

Leader of Cuban Dissident Group in Intensive Care - AP

Cuban Official: Let Spy Ring Member Come Home - AP

 

Asia Pacific

China's Hu Urges Unification With Rival Taiwan - AP

China Marks Century-Old Revolution Amid Controversy - Reuters

Protests in China over Local Grievances Surge - LAT

Dalai Lama Criticizes ‘Immoral’ Chinese Censorship - VOA

Dalai Lama in China Video Attack - BBC

Japan’s PM Says Will Visit N. Korea to Discuss Kidnappings - VOA

Japan Grounds Jet Fighter Fleet - BBC

South Korea Aims to Ratify Trade Deal - WP

2 Blasts Wound at Least 8 in Southern Philippines - AP

Philippines Row With US Amb. over Sex Tourism - BBC

Burma Shows Signs of Change - WP

 

Europe

France’s Sarkozy Meets IMF Chief on Debt - BBC

Putin Presidency Unlikely to Derail US-Russia Relations - VOA

Russia's Medvedev Echoes Stalin in Party Exhortation - Reuters

Russian Anger Grows Over Chechnya Subsidies - NYT

Russia's WTO Bid Threatened as Georgia Talks Fail - Reuters

100 Detained in Moscow Amid Nationalist Rally Call - AP

Poland Votes in General Election - BBC

Polish PM's Party Expected to Win Sunday Election - Reuters

Polish Ties With Germany, Russia at Stake in Vote - AP

Poland Arrests Ikea Bomb Suspects - BBC

 

South Asia

Three Killed In Political Violence in Sri Lanka - VOA

Poll Violence Erupts in Sri Lanka - BBC

Hard Choices: Responsible Defense in an Age of Austerity

Sun, 10/09/2011 - 4:08am

Authors of the newly released report by the Center for a New American Security (CNAS), Hard Choices: Responsible Defense in an Age of Austerity, judge that "the U.S. military’s ability to execute America’s global engagement strategy, as it is currently articulated, will be placed at high risk if total national defense cuts exceed $500-550 billion over 10 years. This judgment could change if policymakers recalibrate America’s global engagement strategy and/or generate savings by reforming military pay and benefits for future service members."

This Week at War: Corporate Downsizing Comes to the Pentagon

Sat, 10/08/2011 - 4:41pm

My column at Foreign Policy discusses the Pentagon's labor cost problems. I also discuss the Mexican government's attempts to squash rumors of paramilitaries in Veracruz.

Corporate downsizing comes to the Pentagon

Last weekend, Scott Shane and Thom Shanker of the New York Times revealed just how much the White House has fallen in love with its fleet of Predator drones. "Disillusioned by huge costs and uncertain outcomes in Iraq and Afghanistan, the Obama administration has decisively embraced the drone, along with small-scale lightning raids like the one that killed Osama bin Laden in May, as the future of the fight against terrorist networks," the article explains.

The drones and special operations raiders seem able to go anywhere and produce clean and spectacular results. Meanwhile, costly counterinsurgency (COIN) patrolling in Iraq arguably ruined George W. Bush's presidency and few of this year's crop of Republican presidential candidates seems eager to defend the COIN mission in Afghanistan or criticize Obama's decision to get out by 2014. For a Washington policymaker, the choice seems clear: machines are good, boots-on-the-ground are bad.

But this is only one reason why the logic of downsizing -- so effectively and ruthlessly used by corporate managers in the private sector to boost efficiency -- will soon be coming to the Pentagon. Just like General Motors and many other previously labor-intensive businesses, the Pentagon has a labor cost problem. And just like Corporate America, the solution to the Pentagon's labor cost problem will be the substitution of new weapons for soldiers, in an attempt to get more national security output per troop. The Army and the Marine Corps, the most labor intensive of the services, should brace for the bad news to come.

Recent defense think-tank reports explain how large the Pentagon's personnel costs have become and, if unaddressed, what a barrier they will be to the Pentagon's ability to adapt in the period ahead. According to the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments (CSBA), the Pentagon's personnel costs (military and civilian and including fringe benefits) are now 45 percent of the department's "base" (non war-related) spending. With defense spending now scheduled to drop, perhaps dramatically, over the next decade, policymakers will have to take an ax to this 45 percent of the budget if there is to be a reasonable amount of funding remaining for equipment modernization and realistic military training.

The CSBA report also notes an impending explosion in the cost of veteran benefits, even as the number of living veterans is due to decline sharply over the next decade. Recently expanded educational, medical, and disability benefits are ballooning the VA's budget. Pentagon budget planners just received an order from the White House to transfer an additional $25 billion over the next ten years to the Veterans Administration in order to protect VA medical funding from cuts, one more consequence of personnel costs.

A report on Pentagon budget options released this week from the Center for a New American Security discussed how the United States might attempt to fulfill its traditional global security strategy under four increasingly onerous funding scenarios. All of the options presented relied heavily on manpower cuts to ground forces, reductions in the Pentagon's civilian workforce, and other cuts in support services. The report noted the huge savings the department could capture through reforms to retiree pensions and health care spending -- another parallel with General Motors and other old, struggling labor-intensive industries.

Even if the Pentagon didn't have a labor cost problem, policymakers would be loath to engage in more labor-intensive and costly ground campaigns. Military and industry leaders who can present seemingly attractive alternatives such as drones, special forces raids, and related procurement programs stand to be rewarded by Washington. Policymakers will view soon-to-be redundant ground forces as the logical targets for savings. Whether this turns out well remains to be seen. But for now, it is the budgetary path of least resistance.

The soldiers and civilians in the budget crosshairs will rightfully resent the unjust reward they will soon receive for their service. Their feelings will match those of their predecessors elsewhere in the private sector who received similar rough treatment. But just like Corporate America, the Pentagon is under great pressure to step up its productivity. And just like everywhere else, that will mean a boost to plans that replace soldiers with machines.

Mexico battles cartels -- and rumors of paramilitaries -- in Veracruz

This week, the Los Angeles Times reported that the Mexican government is sending the army and federal police to stamp out an outbreak of cartel-on-cartel violence in the coastal state of Veracruz. In addition to suppressing the violence, the government seems equally eager to smother the perception that Mexico's drug war, which has killed 40,000 people over the past five years, may now be entering a new phase marked by paramilitary vigilantism.

On Sept. 20, 35 dead bodies, most linked to the militarized and very violent Zeta drug cartel, were dumped on a road near Veracruz's port. A new group, the "Zeta Killers," released a video in which the hooded speakers promised more attacks on the Zeta organization. In announcing the security operation in Veracruz, Interior Secretary Jose Francisco Blake Mora declared, "Those who seek justice by their own hand, or invade the state in its intransferable duties, become delinquents, and the government will apply to them the full force of the law."

It is too soon to know whether paramilitary vigilantism, which plagued Colombia during the 1990s, has arrived in Mexico. More likely, the Zeta Killer group is an affiliate of one of the Zeta's rivals along the Gulf of Mexico coast, such as the Sinaloa or Gulf cartels. The Zeta Killer video, with its effort to explain why the group is purportedly on the side of the people, is in keeping with the attention the cartels now give to media and message control. The Zetas' method of message control comes with its own brutality: in Nuevo Laredo, an editor at a local newspaper who used social networking sites to report on cartel crimes was found decapitated, accompanied by a note left by the Zetas.

With the Mexican government seemingly helpless to stem the violence, it would not be a surprise to find a noticeable increase in vigilantism. However, this is not the case. According to George Grayson, a professor and Mexico expert at William and Mary, scattered incidents of vigilantism in Mexico are not correlated with either the recent jump in Mexico's violence or with the focal points of the cartel wars. Such acts of vigilantism that do occur seem to crop up sporadically in mostly rural areas and in response to lawlessness unrelated to the drug trade.

Today's Mexico is still far from Colombia in the 1990s. But the Colombian story provides the indicators that analysts can look for to gauge whether Mexico might enter its own period of paramilitary vigilantism. As I discussed in a recent column, President Felipe Calderon's war against the cartels was sparked by what he viewed as a national security imperative, namely preventing any of the drug cartels from threatening the authority of the state. In the late 1980s, Colombia faced this menace, with Medellin drug leader Pablo Escobar the most notable threat. Colombia's security forces were too weak and corrupt to bring down Escobar by themselves. In what became an essentially unrestricted military campaign, Colombia's policymakers subcontracted the dirty work of destroying Escobar's organization to a paramilitary organization, with the state very likely supplying this group with the intelligence it needed to complete the task, which it did in an efficient manner.

Are the Zeta or Sinaloa cartels as menacing to the Mexican state as Escobar was to Colombia? And will the Mexican government have to clandestinely associate with groups like the Zeta Killers to preserve its authority? This week, Mexican officials attempted to squash such perceptions. But should there be more body-dumps, accompanied by more videos produced by hooded "friends of the people," the comparisons to Colombia's dark days will only multiply.

 

Population-Centric Counterinsurgency: A False Idol?

Sat, 10/08/2011 - 1:10pm

U.S. Army SAMS Monograph Series: Population-Centric Counterinsurgency: A False Idol? Three Monographs from the School of Advanced Military Studies edited and introduced by Dan G. Cox and Thomas Bruscino.

Failed State: A New (Old) Definition by Major Kenneth D. Mitchell.

Toward Development of Afghanistan National Stability: Analyses in Historical, Military, and Cultural Contexts by Lieutenant Colonel Christopher D. Dessaso.

Algerian Perspectives of Counterinsurgencies by Major Jose R. Laguna.

The War Over the Vietnam War

Sat, 10/08/2011 - 8:01am

The War Over the Vietnam War - Wall Street Journal book review by Max Boot of Westmoreland: The General Who Lost Vietnam by Lewis Sorley.

A new biography puts an end to the idea that we could not win… Among historians, the biggest division has pitted those who think that the Vietnam War was immoral and unwinnable against those who think it was a worthy effort that could have been won with different tactics and strategy…

It was Westmoreland—not Lyndon Johnson or even Robert McNamara—who decided to fight a "war of attrition," sending large and cumbersome American formations to thrash through the jungle and rice paddies in search of elusive enemy units. It was Westmoreland who kept demanding more American troops and who encouraged them to fire as many artillery rounds as possible—even if they lacked specific targets. It was Westmoreland who made "body counts" the key metric of the entire war effort in the futile hope that the United States could inflict enough casualties on the Communists to make them cry "Uncle!" He did not seem to realize or care that in the process he was inflicting lesser but still considerable casualties on American forces—and that a democracy like the United States was much more casualty-averse than a one-party dictatorship like North Vietnam…