Small Wars Journal

Connie Mack: “State Department Not Closely Tracking Threat Of Mexican Drug Cartels.”

Thu, 09/22/2011 - 1:36pm

Connie Mack: “State Department Not Closely Tracking Threat Of Mexican Drug Cartels.”

Last week, Congressman Connie Mack (R - FL) chaired the Western Hemisphere Subcommittee hearing regarding the evolution of drug cartels and the threat they pose to the Mexican government. Noting the close bond and 2,000 mile border our country shares with Mexico, Congressman Mack wrote a letter to the State Department in order to highlight the growing threat of insurgency in the region and its effects on the U.S. economy and security. Specifically, Mack addresses the Mérida Initiative and its need to adapt to quell the threat of transnational criminal organizations. The letter follows:

September 16, 2011

David S. Adams

Assistant Secretary for Legislative Affairs

U.S. Department of State

Bureau of Legislative Affairs

Washington, DC 20520

Dear Assistant Secretary Adams:

As a result of the State Department’s Press Briefing on September 14, 2011, I am concerned that State Department Officials are not closely following the debate on US-Mexico policy. Given that we share a 2,000 mile border and the largest export relationship with Mexico, the expanding threat to the governance of Mexico is, undoubtedly, the largest threat to U.S. security and the U.S. economy. The U.S. Congress and Department of State should be working hand in hand to address this growing threat.

Towards this end, I ask that you please share with the relevant officials within the State Department this recap of the joint Subcommittee hearing of the Subcommittees on the Western Hemisphere and Oversight and Investigation on Tuesday, September 13, 2011 entitled “Has Mérida Evolved? Part One: The Evolution of Drug Cartels and the Threat to Mexico’s Governance.”

The hearing addressed the effectiveness of the Mérida Initiative in response to the transformation of drug cartels into transnational criminal organizations (TCOs) and their attempts to undermine the Mexican government through tactics labeled as characteristics of an insurgency. The hearing highlighted the need to develop an approach, moving forward from the Mérida Initiative, to face the threat of an insurgency. Through expert testimony and questioning, it was made clear that the situation has evolved dramatically since 2007, and that violence in Mexico is a well-funded criminal insurgency raging along our southern border, threatening the lives of U.S. citizens and harming the U.S. economy by undermining legal business.

Dr. Gary M. Shiffman, the Managing Director of Chertoff Group, identified the drug cartels as businesses that must utilize political manipulation to ensure profit: this in an insurgency. Dr. Robert Bunker, a Senior Fellow of Small Wars Journal El Centro, advised that the situation in Mexico must be the top national security priority for the United States due to its alarming increase in violence, especially in several regions near the U.S. border. Both Andrew Selee with the Woodrow Wilson Institute and Pamela Starr, professor at USC, outlined the need for the Mérida Initiative to evolve with the threats of the TCOs.

While I, and many Members of Congress, have supported the Mérida Initiative, and acknowledge its success in training and establishing deeper cooperation between U.S. and Mexican officials, the situation in Mexico has progressed beyond Mérida’s scope.  The failure of this Administration to set performance measures, target dates or tangible goals to measure the success of U.S. programs has made it impossible to claim ‘success’ on the initiative itself. Meanwhile, the Mexican drug cartels have capitalized on the United States’ sluggish assistance to actively undermine the Mexican state through insurgent activities such as violence, corruption, and propaganda.

The hearing advanced the ball on outlining new and improved goals that are gaining support in the United States Congress.  While some details were identified, the Subcommittee looks forward to deliberating the specifics of a counterinsurgency strategy in coordination with all involved agencies. I look forward to hearing from relevant State Department officials on their suggested next steps to developing a strategy that effectively allocates funding to decrease the insurgent activity that currently exists in Mexico and along our border.

Sincerely,

Connie Mack

Member of Congress

22 September SWJ Roundup

Thu, 09/22/2011 - 5:45am

US Naval Institute Daily - USNI

Israel / Palestinians

PA to Delay Call for Fast UN Vote on Statehood Bid - Bloomberg

Obama: 'No Shortcut' to Israel-Palestinian Peace - VOA

Obama, at UN, Defends Stance on Palestinian Bid - NYT

Obama Speech Rejects Palestinians’ UN Bid - WP

Obama Leads UN Sparring Over Mideast - WSJ

Obama: Palestinians Deserve State, Must Achieve it with Israel - TT

Obama Warns on Palestinian UN Bid - BBC

Obama Makes UN Plea to Delay Palestinian Statehood Bid - VOA

Obama Calls US Commitment to Israel's Security 'Unshakable' - LAT

Obama Tells Israelis What They’ve Been Waiting to Hear - JP

France Breaks With Obama on Palestinian Statehood Issue - NYT

Sarkozy Seeks 1-year Timetable for Creating Palestinian State - WT

Obama, Europeans Press Palestinians to Drop UN Bid - AP

US Confirms Palestinian UN Veto - BBC

Obama Rebuffed as Palestinians Pursue UN Seat - NYT

'Palestinians Still Pushing for Full UN Membership' - JP

US Senate Threatens to Cut Aid to Palestinians - WP

UN Chief Urges Israel 'Restraint' over Palestinian Bid - AFP

Possible US Veto Against Palestinian Statehood Bid at UN Debated - VOA

US 'Would Veto Palestinian UN Statehood Bid' - TT

Israelis, Palestinians Brace for UN Statehood Debate - VOA

Palestinians Rally to Back UN Statehood Bid - WP

Palestinians Show Support for Abbas' Statehood Bid - AP

Taking a Stand, and Shedding Arafat’s Shadow - NYT

Experts: Palestinian State Effort Result of Failed Policy - USAT

Israeli Army Readies Twitter Arsenal - Politico

Peace Now, or Never - NYT opinion

Palestinians' UN Gamble Could Backfire - LAT opinion

Nations United in Annual Israel Mugging - WT opinion

Palestinian State is Wishful Thinking - WT opinion

 

Afghanistan

Pessimism Fills Kabul During Mourning for Rabbani - NYT

After Afghan Slaying, a Sense of Helplessness - WP

Slaying of Peace Negotiator Rabbani Remains a Mystery - LAT

Afghan Assassination Dashes Peace Hopes - AP

Afghans Mourn Peace Envoy Rabbani - BBC

Rabbani Death May Hint at Divisions within Taliban - S&S

NATO: Taliban Chief Linked to Chinook Crash Killed - BBC

US Planning Major Expansion at Detainee Facility - WP

ISAF Operations Roundup - AFPS

 

Pakistan

US Aid Tied to Haqqani Crackdown - BBC

FBI Head Visits Pakistan Amid Tensions - AP

Pakistan ISI Urged Attacks on US Targets - Reuters

Pakistani Army Major General Injured in Militant Attack - BBC

Pickup Truck Hits Bomb in Pakistan, 5 Dead - AP

 

Libya

NATO Extends Operations in Libya - AFPS

NATO Extends Libya Bombing Campaign - NYT

NATO Authorizes Extending Libya Mission 90 Days - LAT

US Ambassador Returns to Libya - AP

Libya's NTC Says Forces Control Most of Sabha - VOA

Gaddafi 'Losing Control of Sabha' - BBC

Libya Rulers Say They Seize Gaddafi Desert Outposts - Reuters

 

Iraq

Radical Cleric’s Path, at a Crossroads, Could Turn Iraq, Too - NYT

Iraqi Foreign Minister Sees Country on 'Right Path' - VOA

Iraqi Budget Crunch Slowing US Troops Decision  - AP

FM Zebari: Iraq Needs US Trainers After Troops Leave - Reuters

Mullen Misstep: US Down to 40K by End of Month, Not 30K - S&S

US Court Dismisses Iraq Contractor Torture Cases - Reuters

Iraq, Minus US Troops - LAT editorial

 

Yemen

Gulf Mediator Leaves Yemen; Violence Continues - VOA

8 Months After First Protests, Dangerous New Phase - NYT

Fresh Clashes Break Yemen Truce - BBC

Yemeni Truce Breached by Shelling, 16 Dead - AP

Snipers, Shelling in Yemen Break Uneasy Truce - Reuters

 

Iran

Iran Releases US Hikers - VOA

For $1 Million Bail, Iran Releases Two Americans - USAT

Iran Frees American Hikers - LAT

US Hikers Released from Iran Jail - WP

American Hikers Leave Iran After Prison Release - NYT

Iran Frees Jailed American Hikers - BBC

Americans Freed from Iran Prison Begin Trek Home - AP

Iranian Leader Warns Panetta - Politico

Venezuela, Cuba Defend Iran - AP

Key Cleric Calls for More Prayer, Less Web Surfing - LAT

Interview With Mahmoud Ahmadinejad - NYT video

Iran’s Phony Reformer - WP editorial

A Few Words With Iran’s President - NYT opinion

 

Middle East / North Africa

Report: US Building Drone Bases in Africa, Arabian Peninsula - VOA

Secret Drone Bases: Avoiding Past Mistakes - WP

UN Chief Urges Support for Arab Spring Nations - AP

Syrians 'Shot in Homs Crackdown' - BBC

Bahrain Activists May Be Charged for Web Postings - AP

Corruption Inquiry Rocks Kuwait - NYT

Oman Editors Jailed for 'Insulting' Justice Minister - BBC

Rights Groups Urge UAE to Release Activists - AP

In Egypt, Islamists Reach Out to Wary Secularists - NYT

Egypt's Army Says Emergency Law in Place Till June - Reuters

Tunisian Army Clashes With Militants in Desert - AP

Latest Developments in Arab World's Unrest - AP

 

Al Qaeda

US, Partners Continue to Pursue al-Qaida - AFPS

 

WikiLeaks

WikiLeaks Chief Memoir Published, Against His Will - AP

Assange Can't Block Autobiography - Politico

Unauthorized Assange Autobiography Due Out - BBC

Assange Angry Over Memoir Release - BBC

 

US Department of Defense

Armed Services Chairman: Cuts Could Mean Draft - AP

Air Force Faced with 'New Reality': Fewer Pilots - S&S

Air Force's F-22 Raptors Return to Service Wednesday - S&S

Small Satellite Could Pay Big Dividends on Battlefield - S&S

McHugh Cites Major Improvements at Arlington National Cemetery - AFPS

Drones Can't Change War - Politico opinion

Addicted to Drones - WP opinion

 

United States

Obama: Tide of War Receding at ‘Crossroads of History’ - AFPS

Court Allows Challenge of US Surveillance Law - WP

NC Trial Focuses on Plot to Kill Service Personnel - AP

Public Said to Be Misled on Use of the Patriot Act - NYT

 

United Nations

Palestinians, Economic Crisis Dominate UNGA - VOA

UK PM: World Must be Quicker with Military Action - TT

 

Africa

African 'Land Rush' Warning - BBC

Sudanese Govt Forces Defy Withdrawal Schedule for Abyei - CSM

Is Ivory Coast Really a Model for International Intervention?  - CSM

Has UN Congo Mission Tried Too Hard to be Impartial?  - CSM

AU's Slow Recognition of NTC Prompts Calls for Reform - VOA

Diseases to Hit Somalia Famine Victims, Groups Warn - WP

Food Aid Driver Abducted in Kenya, Relief Effort Reduced - BBC

 

Americas

Mexican Families Struggle to Find Drug War's 'Disappeared'  - CSM

35 Dead in Mexican Tourist Town - WP

Mexico: Dumping of 35 Bodies Seen as Challenge to Zetas - AP

Fallout from Deadly Mexico Casino Fire Sparks Political Brawl - LAT

Mexico 'Twitter Terrorism' Charges Dropped - BBC

Venezuela Proposes $1 Billion Compensation for Exxon - Reuters

Venezuela: Chavez Finishing 4th Round of Chemotherapy - AP

Guatemala Judge Reschedules Ex-General's Hearing - AP

Arrests in Slaying of Dominican Anti-Drug Official - AP

 

Asia Pacific

US Expresses Concern About New Cyberattacks in Japan - NYT

Rival Koreas Met, No Progress on Nuclear Talks - AP

North Korea and US Look to Another Round of Talks - Reuters

SE Asia Risks China's Ire to Discuss Sea Dispute - AP

US Details $6B Arms Deal for Taiwan - WP

US Selling JDAM Guided Bombs to Taiwan - WT

US Offers $5.8B F-16 Fighter Upgrades to Taiwan - AP

US 'No' on Taiwan Arms Seen as Sign of China Clout - AP

China Hits Out at US-Taiwan Deal - BBC

China Curbs Military Ties After US Arms Sale to Taiwan - Reuters

Little Fallout Seen From US Arms Sale to Taiwan - AP

 

Europe

Russian Nationalist Urges Support for Putin - NYT

Russia: 1 Dead, 60 Wounded in Dagestan Bombings - AP

Germany Bans Large Neo-Nazi Group - BBC

Germany Bans Neo-Nazi Organization - AP

Papal Homecoming to a Combative Germany - NYT

Italian Police, Migrants Clash in Asylum Dispute - AP

IFM Quantifies Cost of EU Debt Crisis - WP

Greece Says it Will Cut More - WP

Greece Accelerates Austerity Cuts - BBC

Greeks Strike Over New Austerity - BBC

Turkey-N. Cyprus Gas Deal Set to Raise Regional Tensions - Reuters

 

South Asia

Bangladesh Hit by General Strike - BBC

Bangladesh Opposition-Led Strike Paralyses Daily Life - Reuters

Sri Lanka Refugee Camp 'to Close' - BBC

Sri Lanka's Survivors Tormented by Horrors of War - Reuters

Addicted to Drones

Thu, 09/22/2011 - 4:58am

The Price of Becoming Addicted to Drones by David Ignatius, Washington Post. Bluf:

These weapons, which project power without risking “boots on the ground,” can become addictive. According to a report last year by a U.N. special rapporteur, more than 40 countries now have drone technology, and nations seeking to arm drones with missiles include Israel, Russia, Turkey, China, India, Iran, Britain and France.

Book Review: The Triple Agent: The al-Qaeda Mole Who Infiltrated the CIA

Wed, 09/21/2011 - 11:09am

Joby Warrick. The Triple Agent: The al-Qaeda Mole Who Infiltrated the CIA (New York: Doubleday, 2011), 235 PP. $27.95

On December 30, 2009, a team of CIA operatives gathered at a remote base along the Afghanistan-Pakistan border to meet the first lead in the years in the hunt for al Qaeda’s senior leaders. The source, a Jordanian doctor named Humam Khalil al-Bilawi, was thought to have infiltrated the senior ranks of al Qaeda in Pakistan. Tragically, the lead turned into disaster when Bilawi, in fact an al Qaeda operative, detonated a suicide vest killing ten people, including eight CIA operatives and guards, a senior Jordanian intelligence officer and an Afghan employee of the CIA.

In The Triple Agent: The al-Qaeda Mole Who Infiltrated the CIA, Joby Warrick untangles the complicated web of CIA operations in Pakistan and tells the story of how Humam al-Bilawi mounted the deadliest attack against the CIA since 9/11. The book illuminates the closed world of U.S. counterterrorism operations and the bloody fight against al Qaeda and its associated movements in the tribal badlands of western Pakistan.

The circuitous route that carried Humam al-Bilawi to Forward Operating Base Chapman is indicative of the nature of the transnational threat posed by al Qaeda and associated movements (AQAM) today. Bilawi began as a fiery online agitator, writing from his home in Amman, Jordan under the pseudonym, Abu Dujanah al-Khorasani. His comments caught the eye of Jordan’s intelligence service, the Mukhabarat, leading to his arrest. Within three days, the Mukhabarat released Bilawi, but only after coaxing him into agreeing to work for the intelligence service in its counterterrorism efforts.

Just a few months later, the lonely doctor from Amman was on his way to Pakistan to infiltrate the al Qaeda network. Bilawi’s online record served as his jihadist passport through the murky world of violent extremism in western Pakistan. He was able to use his online persona to gain credibility amongst not only al Qaeda, but the Pakistani Taliban and local fighters in Pakistan. Within months, the agent began sending detailed information to his Jordanian handler, which was immediately shared with American agents from the Central Intelligence Agency. Substantive leads, such as those being produced by Bilawi triggered alarm bells inside the U.S. government, gaining the immediate attention of senior leaders and pushing for an expedited operation to meet with Bilawi to prepare him to paint senior al Qaeda figures for targeted strikes from drones and other aircraft in the CIA’s expanding war in Pakistan.

Beyond the rich reporting in Warrick’s book detailing the inner workings of Bilawi’s case management, The Triple Agent highlights the unprecedented operational nature of the Central Intelligence Agency. Warrick quotes former director of the CIA in describing his tenure as director of the CIA as being the “combatant commander in the global war on terror.” The story itself, that of secret CIA bases along the Afghanistan-Pakistan border, paramilitary operations against al Qaeda and targeting officers working hand in hand with drone pilots and lawyers denotes an organization on a war footing. Both the Bush and Obama administrations have repeatedly turned to the CIA as their first choice in counterterrorism.

The CIA and the Jordanian Mukhabarat pressed Bilawi to meet in the secret CIA base at FOB Chapman due to the primacy of human intelligence in modern counterterrorism. As we’ve learned in the aftermath of the bin Laden raid, al Qaeda and its allies rely on networks of trusted intermediaries to pass messages, coordinate activities and hide from the prying eyes of outsiders. To break these closed circles, trusted agents, such as Bilawi are extremely valuable. CIA officers justifiably showed extreme interest in Bilawi as the first intelligence reports trickled back from him, providing clear eyes-on-target data of drone strikes and senior terrorist leaders operating in the FATA. This information was deemed so vital that the President of the United States was updated as to the status of the case.

As the deaths of eight Americans tragically remind us, the war in Afghanistan and Pakistan is costly to both sides. The enormous sacrifices made by the men and women of the CIA, U.S. military and the civilians there to support them serve as testament to the costs of the continuing war against AQAM. The officers running this campaign on the ground are not immune to the dangers of this war and are rather the prime targets as AQAM seeks to strike back against U.S. intelligence agencies.

The sophistication of the Bilawi operation highlights the dangers and adaptability of al Qaeda and its allies. Despite enormous amounts of pressure mounted by drone strikes, Pakistani military operations and the U.S. presence in Afghanistan, al Qaeda and its allies, specifically the Pakistani Taliban were able secretly turn a foreign operative against his handlers. The deception crossed multiple groups, including al Qaeda and the Pakistani Taliban and actively manipulated the American interest in gathering intelligence on militant leaders and the on-the-ground impact of drone strikes. The operational art and security of the December 30, 2009 attack indicate that the organization had a deep bench of well practiced operatives to plan and carry out the operation.

Al Qaeda does not operate in a vacuum in western Pakistan. Instead, the group functions as part of a broader insurgent system made up of local, national and international jihadist groups. The primary backbone of this system is the local Haqqani Network, a powerful group responsible for the most deadly attacks on the U.S. in Afghanistan. Another large component of the jihad milieu in Pakistan’s Federally Administered Tribal Areas is the Pakistani Taliban, formally called the Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan, a confederation of 27 militant groups intent on waging war against the Pakistani state and promoting much of al Qaeda’s violent extremist ideology. Within this arena, al Qaeda shelters its fighters and plots its continued war against the west. These groups are intermixed and interpersonal connections allow fighters to circulate within the same space. Bilawi was astonishingly successful in navigating the wilds of this insurgent system, capitalizing on his online credentials, medicinal knowledge and guile to accomplish what no genuine American spy (that we know of) has done: infiltrate the senior-most ranks of al Qaeda.

Coming away from The Triple Agent the reader is left with an immense appreciation for the courage and sacrifice of our intelligence operatives at the front line in the fight against al Qaeda. However, the book raises serious questions regarding the role and scope of the CIA’s operational arm at the forefront of our counterrorism effort. Since 2001, the CIA has been the tip of the spear for operations in Pakistan, taking aim at al Qaeda’s most senior leaders with drone strikes and other operations. What is the end game for this campaign and how can American officials and the public hold an open discourse about such a highly sensitive program? Additionally, what is the correct balance between pursuing our enemies wherever they may lie and avoiding alienating the Pakistani leadership and public through the use of unilateral strikes?

Lastly, Joby Warrick does a tremendous public service by shining a light on the nature of the current war in Pakistan and shatters the illusion that the drone campaign is a clean way to wage war. In fact, just as in any conflict, the stakes are high and the foe is constantly adapting. Following the December 30, 2009 attack at FOB Chapman, the CIA conducted an extensive investigation into its tradecraft leading up to the calamity. That investigation found that many traditional precautions were skipped over in anticipation of the most promising lead against al Qaeda in years. The tragedy that day serves as a reminder of the stakes at hand as the United States and especially the CIA enter its second decade pursuing those who perpetrated the 9/11 attacks and their allies throughout the world.

21 September SWJ Roundup

Wed, 09/21/2011 - 5:12am

US Naval Institute Daily - USNI

Afghanistan

Bomber Kills Former Afghan President and Peace Council Chief - VOA

Rabbani Killed in Attack on Home, Blow to Peace Process - NYT

Former President Assassinated in Kabul - WP

Former Afghan President Rabbani Assassinated - LAT

Top Afghan Peace Negotiator, a Former President, Killed - WSJ

Ex-Afghan President Killed in Bomb Attack - WT

Afghan Peace Talks Head 'Killed' - BBC

Turban Bomber Kills Former President - TT

Head of Peace Negotiations Killed by Suicide Bomber - S&S

Ex-Afghan President Rabbani Killed - AP

Afghan Peace Council Head Killed in Kabul - Reuters

Killing of Former Afghan President Imperils Peace Talks - CSM

Rabbani Killing Plunges Peace Effort into Crisis - TG

Ex-Afghan Leader's Assassin Waited Days to See Him - AP

Slain Afghan Ex-President Sought Peace - AP

Obama, Karzai Vow Undeterred Effort in Afghanistan - AFPS

Obama, Karzai Say Undeterred by Killing of Rabbani - Reuters

On Peace Day, Afghans Bury Murdered Peace Broker - Reuters

Afghans Mourn Peace Envoy Rabbani - BBC

Mullen: US, Afghans Must Adjust to Taliban Shift - AP

US, Other Donors Supported 90% of Afghan Budget - WP

The Private Worry of US Marines in Afghanistan - AP

ISAF Operations Roundup - AFPS

 

Pakistan

US Issues Sharp Warning to Pakistan - WP

Mullen, Days From Retirement, Still Pressing Pakistan to Fight - S&S

US Says Pakistan's ISI Using Group for 'Proxy War' - Reuters

US, Pakistan Agree to Limit American Troops - AP

Dozens of Pilgrims On Bus Are Killed In Pakistan Attack - NYT

Gunmen Attack Shiite Pilgrims in Pakistan; 26 Dead - AP

Deadly Gun Attack on Pakistan Bus - BBC

Pakistan Group Admits Bus Attack - BBC

Pakistani Killer Mob Members Get Death Sentence  - AP

Death Penalty for Seven Who Killed Teenagers - BBC

Changing Direction of US-Pakistan Relations - LAT opinion

 

Israel / Palestinians

Abbas Pushes Ahead With UN Bid for Palestinian State - VOA

Palestinians Relentless in Push for UN Membership - AP

Palestinians Claim Close to Votes Needed - TT

Palestinians Confident on UN Vote, but Veto Looms - Reuters

Palestinians Take to Streets Ahead of UN Statehood Bid - JP

Palestinians Show Support for Abbas' Statehood Bid - AP

UN May Delay Vote on Palestinian Statehood Application - LAT

Obama to Address Conflict at UN - WP

Obama to Meet Palestinian Leader Amid UN Crisis - Reuters

US Tries to Keep Peace Process alive - CSM

Palestinians, US at Odds Over UN Bid for Statehood - Reuters

Perry: Obama ‘Appeasement’ Hurts Israel in Palestinian Clash - WY

Israel Presses Palestinians to Resume Talks, Warns of Funds Cut - Bloomberg

Israel Says May Hold Palestinian Taxes on UN Bid - Reuters

Israel PM Not Expecting 'Warm Welcome' - Haaretz

French Want Palestinians to Drop UN Membership Bid - AP

Long-Shot Scenario to Avoid Mideast Diplomatic Clash - Reuters

Palestinian UN Bid: Key Moves to Watch For - CSM

Obama’s Palestine - WT editorial

The Coming UN Debacle - LAT opinion

 

Libya

At UN, Nations Pledge Support to Libya's Transitional Leaders -VOA

Obama Praises Libya’s Post-Qaddafi Leaders at UN - NYT

Obama: Libya an International Model - WT

Obama Anoints New Libyan Government - WP

AU, S. Africa Recognize Libya's NTC - Reuters

Council Head Vows New Libya Will Work for Peace - AP

US Calls Libya 'Lesson' in International Unity - VOA

Libya to Name New Government Within 10 Days - Reuters

Panetta: 12 More US Troops Sent to Libya - AP

Rebels Offer Assurances to Kadafi Stronghold - LAT

Gaddafi Bastion Sabha Falls to Interim Forces - Reuters

Qaddafi Assails New Libya Government - NYT

Libyans Flee Siege in Gadhafi's Hometown of Sirte - AP

Children of the Revolution - WP

 

Syria

Iraq Joins Calls for Assad to Step Down in Syria - NYT

Syrian Activists Defiant but Frustrated - Reuters

Syrian Forces Kill Three in Raids, Two Police Shot - Reuters

 

Iraq

Mullen: US Down to 30,000 by End of Month - S&S

Twin Suicide Bombings Kill 4 in West Iraq - AP

Four Killed in Ramadi Attack - WP

 

Yemen

Latest Violence Stems from Three-way Power Struggle - LAT

Prospect of Civil War Draws Closer in Yemen - AP

In Bid to Revive Protests, Yemenis Rush to Martyrdom - Reuters

Yemen Scrambles for Ceasefire as Death Toll Rises - Reuters

Mortars Fall on Yemeni Capital as Battles Continue - NYT

Yemen VP Calls for Cease-fire Amid Deadly Unrest - CNN

'Ceasefire' Halts Yemen Fighting - BBC

 

Iran

Iran to Release US Hikers on Wednesday - Reuters

Iran Won't 'Retaliate' for Nuclear Scientist Killings - Reuters

 

Middle East / North Africa

Obama to Meet Middle East Leaders - BBC

G8 Meets to Cement Arab Spring Transition Plan - Reuters

Rulers Secure in 1st Post-Spring Votes - AP

Bahrain Protesters Clog Roads in Pre-election Act - AP

WikiLeaks: Al-Jazeera Director Stepping Down - AP

WikiLeaks: Head of Arab Broadcaster Al Jazeera Resigns - Reuters

Latest Developments in Arab World's Unrest - AP

 

Al Qaeda

US Assembling Ring of Secret Drone Bases - WP

 

US Department of Defense

Panetta: Budget Cuts Will Boost Risk to Nation at War - AFPS

Donley: Air Force Must Strike Balance in Budget - AFPS

Okinawa Governor Insists Futenma Must Relocate Off Island - S&S

Naval Postgraduate School Explores Next-level Telemedicine - AFPS

Pentagon Ends ‘Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell’ - WP

Repeal Ends Decades-long Fight Against DADT - S&S

Military Warned Not to Harass Openly Homosexual Troops - WT

 

United States

Obama Administration Insists on Guantanamo Closure - AP

How Many Security Clearances Have Been Issued? - WP

Plummeting US Satellite to Hit Earth Friday - VOA

 

United Nations

Libya, Palestinian Statehood to Top UN General Assembly Agenda - VOA

 

International Monetary Fund

IMF: World Economy Entering 'Dangerous New Phase' - VOA

IMF: World Economy in 'Dangerous Phase' - BBC

 

Africa

Somali Pirates Appeal Conviction in US Court - AP

From the Shabab in Somalia, Unusual Prizes for Children - NYT

Cell Phones May Be New Tool vs. Somalia Famine - Reuters

Nigeria Plans to Build Nuclear Power Plants - CSM

For Zimbabwe Premier, Optimism and Caution - NYT

Zimbabwe Nuns, Priests Evicted, Orphanage Seized - AP

Kenya Violence Case at The Hague - BBC

Some Violence Mars Voting in Parts of Zambia - AP

 

Americas

Pena Nieto Announces Run for Mexico Presidency - AP

Mexico Says Top Criminal Gang Figure Captured - LAT

Mexico Says Key Drug Cartel Figure Arrested - AP

35 Bodies Dumped on Busy Street in Mexico - LAT

Bodies of 35 People Abandoned in Trucks in Mexico - BBC

Bulk of Mexican Crimes Never Reported - Reuters

Mexico to Lessen Terrorism Charge in Twitter Case - AP

Venezuela Attorney General Criticizes Rights Court - AP

Chavez Foe: Venezuela Must Accept Court Ruling - AP

 

Asia Pacific

Outgoing 2ID Commander Recalls Tensions over N. Korea - S&S

N. Korea Escapees Tell of Atrocities in Labor Camps - WT

New Hopes for Resumption of N. Korea Nuclear Talks - AP

S. Korean Religious Leaders Heading to N. Korea - AP

US Urges China to Lower Trade Barriers - VOA

US Envoy Urges China to Relax Business Restrictions - NYT

Japan Says No Loss of Key Defense Data in Cyberattack - AP

Powerful Typhoon Roke Hits Japan - BBC

US-Taiwan F-16 Sale Sims at Compromise - AP

White House Bickering and Taiwan’s F-16s - WT opinion

 

Europe

Europe’s Defense Chief Echoes Gates’ Speech - WT

UK Police Get More Time to Quiz 6 Terror Suspects - AP

Turkey's Tough Foreign Policy Talk May Backfire - Reuters

Turkish Bomb Blast in Ankara Kills 3, Injures 15 - VOA

Explosions in Turkish Capital Believed to Be Terrorism - NYT

Car Bomb Kills 3, Wounds 34 in Turkey's Capital - AP

Obama Talks With Erdogan, Condemns Bombing in Turkey - Reuters

Turkey’s Leadership - NYT editorial

 

South Asia

Death Toll at 81 for Quake in India, Nepal, China - AP

India Struggles over Quake Relief  - BBC

Sri Lanka's Half Million Mines Will Take a Decade to Clear - Reuters

Former AF President Burhanuddin Rabbani Assassinated

Tue, 09/20/2011 - 12:28pm

Afghan Peace Council Chief Killed in Attack on His Home by Alissa Rubin and Rick Gladstone, New York Times. Bluf:

An unidentified attacker on Tuesday killed the leader of Afghanistan’s High Peace Council, a former president of the country whose main responsibility was negotiating a political end to the war with the Taliban. The assassination was a serious blow to any notion of reconciliation with the Taliban.

Also See:

Afghan Former President and Peace Council Chief Killed - VOA

Former Afghan President Burhanuddin Rabbani Assassinated - LAT

Top Afghan Peace Negotiator, a Former President, Killed - WSJ

Afghan Peace Talks Head 'killed' - BBC

Ex-Afghan President Rabbani Killed - AP

Afghan Peace Council Head Killed in Kabul - Reuters

Rabbani Killing Plunges Peace Effort into Crisis - TG

R2P is the New COIN?

Tue, 09/20/2011 - 9:16am

R2P is the New COIN by Mark Safranski at Zenpundit. Bluf:

The weirdly astrategic NATO campaign in Libya intervening on the side of ill-defined rebels against the tyrannical rule of Libyan strongman Colonel Moammar Gaddafi brought to general public attention the idea of “Responsibility to Protect” as a putative doctrine for US foreign policy and an alleged aspect of international law. The most vocal public face of R2P, an idea that has floated among liberal internationalist IL academics and NGO activists since the 90’s, was Anne-Marie Slaughter, former Policy Planning Director of the US State Department and an advisor to the Obama administration. Slaughter, writing in The Atlantic, was a passionate advocate of R2P as a “redefinition of sovereignty“ and debated her position and underlying IR theory assumptions with critics such as Dan Drezner, Joshua Foust, and Dan Trombly.

20 September SWJ Roundup

Tue, 09/20/2011 - 7:48am

US Naval Institute Daily - USNI

Afghanistan

ISAF Operations Update - AFPS

 

Pakistan

Taliban Claim Attack on Pakistani Police - NYT

Eight Killed in Pakistan Attack - WP

Deadly Karachi Bomb Targets Police - BBC

 

Israel / Palestinians

Israeli, Palestinian Officials Meet - VOA

Netanyahu Calls for Direct Talks - WP

Israel Offers Palestinians Talks - BBC

Palestinians Will Submit UN Membership Letter - AP

Abbas Presses Palestinian UN Bid Despite Warnings - Reuters

In UN Week, Saudi Says to Ease Palestinian Crisis - Reuters

New Challenges for Obama and Turkey’s Premier - NYT

US Urges Turkey Not to Worsen Israel Ties - Reuters

Abbas’s Heedless Push - WP editorial

Face-off at the UN - LAT editorial

 

Libya

Libyans Fail to Agree on New Government - Reuters

Libyan Militias Amass Weapons - WP

Civilians Flee Struggle Over a Qaddafi Stronghold -NYT

Libyan Fighters Take Airport Near Pro-Gadhafi City - AP

Libyan Forces Say They Captured Part of Sabha - Reuters

Anti-Gaddafi Forces Move on Sabha - BBC

Gadhafi Says His Regime Still Alive in Libya - AP

Libya 'Mercenary' Claim Turns Spotlight on Special Ops - Reuters

Amnesty International: EU 'Failed' on Libya's Refugees - BBC

 

Syria

US Quietly Getting Ready for Syria Without Assad - NYT

UN: At Least 100 Killed in Syria During Past Week - AP

Syrian Activists Say 5 Killed in Homs Province - VOA

Syrian Dissidents 'Killed in Raids' in Homs - BBC

Activists Say Security Forces Kill 5 in Syria - AP

 

Egypt

Egypt Bars Islamist Hard-Line Political Party - AP

Israel Reoccupies Embassy in Cairo - NYT

'Random' Egypt Arrests After Israel Embassy Attack - Reuters

 

Yemen

Yemen Clashes Intensify as Political Mediation Teeters - VOA

Fierce Fighting in Yemen as Political Talks Stall - WP

Clashes Continue in Yemeni Capital as Rockets Hit Protest Camp - NYT

Yemen Death Toll Grows as Fighting Spreads - LAT

Yemen Unrest Death Toll Tops 50 - BBC

Yemen Protesters Storm Elite Military Base; 50 Die - AP

Yemen Street Battles Escalate, Killing 9 People - AP

 

Iran

Ahmadinejad Looks to Gain from US Hikers Case - WP

Lawyer for 2 Americans Held in Iran Back in Court - AP

US Men's Release Awaits Return of Iran Judge - Reuters

Police Investigate Iran Nuke Expert - AP

Iran Arrests Six over 'BBC Links' - BBC

Iran Arrests Filmmakers Accused of Working for BBC - NYT

Iran Arrests Contributors to BBC Channel - Reuters

The End of an Era in Iran - WP opinion

 

Middle East / North Africa

1st Arab Spring Votes More About Stalling Change - AP

Bombers Strike Government Offices in Iraq's Ramadi - Reuters

Thousands Revive Protests in Morocco - AP

Latest Developments in Arab World's Unrest - AP

 

US Department of Defense

Future for Military Drones: Automated Killing - WP

Obama Deficit Plan Would Reexamine Military Retirement - S&S

Buzzkilling Air Force Secretary Warns Cuts are Coming - S&S

Celebrities Push Transcendental Meditation to Treat PTSD - S&S

Army Resumes Competitive Grading on Junior Officer OERs - S&S

Judge: No Death Penalty for Camp Liberty Shooting - S&S

DOD Set for ‘Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell’ Repeal - AFPS

Pentagon Downplays Ending of ‘Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell’ - WT

Eve of DADT Repeal: Business as Usual for Military - S&S

 

United States

Obama Draws New Hard Line on Long-Term Debt Reduction - NYT

Firm Completes Spacecraft Factory in Mojave - LAT

Sentence for Terrorist Is Too Short, Court Rules - NYT

 

United Kingdom

Morale in Armed Forces Plunges to New Low - TT

 

Australia

The Rising East: US, Australia Firm Allies in War and Peace - HCB

Australia’s Military Capabilities Up in the Air - ISN

 

United Nations

UN Chief: Work Together Against Terrorism - AP

 

Africa

Gunmen From Congo Kill 36 at Pub in Burundi - AP

Fatal Bar Shooting Exposes Burundi’s Instability - NYT

Somalia: Fear Remains in Mogadishu - WP

Somali Kids Win Weapons in Quran Contest - AP

Zambians to Head to Polls in Close Presidential Race - Reuters

Heavy Security for Zambia Polls - BBC

Old Rivals Meet Again as Zambians Elect President - AP

 

Americas

Mexico President Hints Legalizing Drugs May Be Needed - Reuters

Mexico Still Waiting for ‘Fast and Furious’ Sting Answers - LAT

Multiple Prison Breaks in Mexico - BBC

Mexico: Party Members Demand Probe in Congressman Slaying - AP

Court Convicts Colombia Warlord in Absentia - AP

Colombian Rebels Attack Police - BBC

Colombia: Ex-Bogota Mayor Charged With Corruption - AP

Venezuela Deports 6 Suspected Drug Traffickers - AP

Aide to Top Dominican Drug Official Shot to Death - AP

Bolivia's Morales Asks Bloc to Condemn US on Drugs - AP

Guatemala Seeks Genocide Trial for Former General - AP

Chinese Delegation Signs Grants With Jamaica - AP

Building a Safer Haiti - NYT editorial

 

Asia Pacific

Arms Sale to Taiwan May Fray China Ties - WT

Taiwan Renews F-16 Request as US Defends Upgrade - Reuters

China Gives Muted Response to US-Taiwan Arms Deal - WP

China Criticizes US Deal to Upgrade Taiwan F-16s - AP

Taiwan Portrays Obama as Yielding to China - Reuters

China Shuts Solar Panel Factory After Antipollution Protests - NYT

Japan Defense Hit by Cyber Attack - BBC

Japan Cyber Attack Silence May Breach Arms Contracts - Reuters

S. Korea Nuclear Envoy Arrives in Beijing - AP

Philippine Troops Kill 3 Militants, Rescue Trader - AP

Philippines Declares 1-Day Truce With Rebels - AP

Watchdog: Burma Media Restrictions Among Worst - AP

 

Europe

Moscow’s Ousted Mayor Criticizes Russian Politics - NYT

Ex-IRA Leader to Seek Irish Presidency - NYT

Blast Shakes Turkish Capital - NYT

Suspected Bomb Rocks Turkish Capital, 15 Wounded - AP

Drilling Off Cyprus Will Proceed Despite Turkey Warnings - NYT

Cyprus Drills Offshore Despite Turkish Warning - AP

Greece Nears the Precipice, Raising Fear of Default - NYT

Italy Debt Rating Cut by S&P - BBC

Document Dispute Prolongs Kosovo-Serbia Trade Row - Reuters

 

South Asia

Death Toll Rises in Aftermath of Himalayan Quake - VOA

Death Toll in Himalayan Earthquake Exceeds 50 - NYT

Death Toll at 81 for Quake in India, Nepal, China - AP

Bangladesh: Dhaka Police Clash with Islamists - BBC

Caveat Venditor: Think Twice Before Cutting Ground Forces

Mon, 09/19/2011 - 6:59pm

Pentagon Should Think Twice Before It Cuts Ground Forces, Historians Warn by Sandra Erwin, National Defense. BLUF:

In the wake of every conflict since World War II, ground troops have been declared obsolete. And each time, the prognosticators have been wrong, says military historian John C. McManus.

After a decade of grinding wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, the conventional wisdom is that America will have no tolerance for any more ground fights. Policy makers will take that as a cue that it is now time to shift defense dollars from infantry to high-tech weaponry that can be fired from aircraft or ships, far away from the battlefield.

That would be a huge mistake, says McManus, the author of “Grunts: Inside the American Infantry Combat Experience, World War II Through Iraq.” In the book, which examines in detail 10 major conflicts over six decades, he concludes that “foot soldiers,” regardless of technological advances in weaponry, end up carrying the day every time the United States goes to war.

Red, White, and Few

Mon, 09/19/2011 - 3:22pm

We're going to keep our connections separate as I am now affiliated with the movement, but I will interview Mike Erwin (founder) shortly on this grassroots organization.

Team Red, White, and Few at Carl Prine's Line of Departure

BLUFIn an era of the All Volunteer Force, the wars of the 9/11 generation invoked little to no national commitment.  Beyond the small donations given to our volunteers, the summer-season patriotism requested by our government, and the yellow ribbons on our minivans moving to our gated communities, what can we do to help reintegrate those that fought for us when they never had to do so?