Small Wars Journal

This Week at War: What if the Surge Didn't Work?

Fri, 04/15/2011 - 3:25pm
A new study asks some troubling questions about what really caused Iraq's reduction in violence.

Here is the latest edition of my column at Foreign Policy:

Topics include:

1) Do troop surges really work?

2) NATO looks for a new strategy in Libya

Do troop surges really work?

As springtime arrives in Afghanistan, the coalition's soldiers and commanders are bracing for the annual acceleration of combat against the Taliban. The "surge" of over 33,000 additional U.S. soldiers, ordered by President Barack Obama in December 2009, has been in place since last fall. Everyone expects another violent summer, just as occurred after "surge" reinforcements arrived in Iraq in 2007. But the Iraq surge appeared to work; in 2008 and thereafter, violence declined dramatically. The Iraqi government and its security forces are now fully in charge, and the last U.S. troops should be gone by the end of the year. Advised by Defense Secretary Robert Gates, Joint Chiefs Chairman Adm. Mike Mullen, and Gen. David Petraeus, Obama is hoping that the success these surge proponents brought to Iraq will occur similarly in Afghanistan.

But did the U.S. troop surge in Iraq really win the war? Maj. Joshua Thiel, a U.S. Army Special Forces officer, thinks not. In a study written for Small Wars Journal, Thiel performs a statistical analysis that correlates the arrival of the surge reinforcements into Iraq in 2006 and 2007 with subsequent levels of combat incidents in 2007 and 2008. Using data gathered from each of Iraq's 18 provinces and incorporating lags to account for the time required for new combat units to become effective in the field, Thiel concluded that there was no significant correlation between the arrival of U.S. reinforcements and subsequent changes in the level of violence in Iraq's provinces. Some provinces received reinforcements; others did not. Combat incidents went up in some provinces and down in others. But the connection between surge troops and the change in the level of incidents seems entirely random.

Overall violence in Iraq declined steeply in 2008. But Thiel attributes this to other factors besides the arrival of U.S. combat reinforcements. These factors include the Sunni Awakening against al Qaeda in Anbar province, the completion by 2008 of sectarian ethnic cleansing in the Baghdad area, the erection of security barriers between neighborhoods in Baghdad, a unilateral cease-fire by some Shiite militias, the increased dispersion of joint U.S. and Iraqi combat outposts in Iraq's cities, and perhaps most important, the maturation of Iraq's security forces. These factors could all have occurred without the arrival of additional U.S. forces.

What does Thiel's study portend for Afghanistan this summer? Much more important than the number of U.S. reinforcements added in 2010 is how they are employed. Thiel seems hopeful that various local Afghan militia programs sponsored by coalition special operations forces will successfully blunt Taliban efforts to reintegrate their cadres into areas that were recently cleared.

According to the Brookings Institution's monthly report on Afghan security, violence of all kinds continues to climb. A combination of disparate events, some catalyzed by coalition actions and others not, brought Iraq back from the abyss in 2008. If Afghanistan is similarly salvaged, the reasons will likely be as varied and complex as they were in Iraq.

NATO looks for a new strategy in Libya

At a two-day meeting of NATO officials in Berlin, representatives from Britain and France -- the leaders of NATO's air campaign against Col. Muammar al-Qaddafi's regime -- called for other NATO countries to do more to help win the war. Frustration with the military stalemate is mounting. European political leaders may fear that public support for the drifting military campaign -- now in its 28th day -- will crack before Qaddafi does. An unstated purpose of the Berlin conference was to find a politically realistic way to break the military deadlock. No new strategy emerged.

Success for NATO now requires the exit of Qaddafi and his sons from Libya. NATO and its partners have, thus far, been unable to assemble enough coercion to make this happen. The rebel army is stuck in Ajdabiya, attempting to fend off pro-Qaddafi attacks from Ras Lanuf. Further to the west, rebels in Misrata are under siege. NATO aircraft are succeeding in their attacks against Qaddafi's tanks. But pro-Qaddafi infantry long ago abandoned their military vehicles and NATO attempts to target the civilian vehicles in which they now move have occasionally ended up killing rebels instead.

NATO leaders hope that political and economic isolation will eventually compel Qaddafi to fold. But if playing for time is the strategy, it is not clear that NATO has the advantage. Squabbles over political strategy within NATO, combined with a looming humanitarian crisis in Libya's west, may pressure Britain and France to relent well before the Qaddafis feel any real pressure to back down.

When in a stalemate, the first instinct is to simply intensify the effort in the hope of achieving a breakthrough. Thus the call by British and French leaders at the Berlin conference for more strike aircraft over Libya. But Qaddafi's undestroyed tanks aren't the problem. The real issue is that NATO has reached the limit of what its strike aircraft can accomplish, given the understandably cautious rules under which they operate.

Several ideas for improving the effectiveness of coalition air power have been discussed. In contrast with the high-flying, fast jets the British and French are flying on strike missions over Libya, the U.S. Air Force could deploy the highly effective, low-flying, and much more vulnerable A-10 and AC-130 ground attack aircraft. President Barack Obama has, so far, shown no inclination to risk the crews of these aircraft over Libya. Alternatively, France, Britain, and other countries could opt to embed forward air control teams with the rebels to improve target identification for NATO airstrikes. But given the undisciplined rebel infantry and the chaotic and fluid nature of Libya's battlefields, these NATO teams would be under significant risk of capture, an outcome that would only improve Qaddafi's bargaining position.

There is no discussion yet of NATO employing an amphibious assault to either lift the siege of Misrata or directly depose Qaddafi in Tripoli. But even if this option were to somehow become politically realistic, Britain's recent Strategic Defense and Security Review, released in October 2010, would seem to have already ruled it out. As I discussed at that time, in that review the British government chose to emphasize its ground combat power and its interoperability with the United States at the expense of its Navy, amphibious capability, and air power. British policymakers assumed that their forces would most frequently operate within a coalition led by the United States, an assumption that must sting as Obama backs further away from the Libya problem.

With air power having reached its limit and ground intervention ruled out, NATO has no choice but to wait until the ground combat power of Libya's rebels improves to the point where they will become a threat to Qaddafi's hold in Tripoli. But that could take years, which may be exactly what Qaddafi is counting on.

Integrating Civilian and Military Concepts of Strategy

Fri, 04/15/2011 - 1:29pm
Towards a Comprehensive Approach: Integrating Civilian and Military Concepts of Strategy edited by Christopher M. Schnaubelt, NATO Defense College Forum Paper, March 2011.

Towards a Comprehensive Approach presents a wide range of ideas regarding the elements of strategy, its purpose, and how it should be developed. It is not intended to be a primer on strategy nor a comprehensive review of the topic. There is an extensive literature on military strategy and planning that is not duplicated or reviewed here. Instead, this volume highlights the differences and similarities between the approaches typically used by civilian organizations and the doctrinal methods of NATO and the militaries of its member states and partners, while presenting some ideas on how to bridge the gaps.

There is no single "best" way to address the complex security problems that NATO faces in the contemporary operational environment. Instead, developing mutual understanding to recognize where approaches overlap and where actors simply need to "agree to disagree" is the route most likely to produce practical improvements in the integration of civilian and military efforts. Appreciating the range of views and methods is the first step towards achieving a workable synthesis of them.

Integrating Civilian and Military Approaches to Strategy by Christopher M. Schnaubelt

The Persistent Problem of Civil Military Integration in War by Nadia Schadlow

The Illusions and Delusions of Smart Power by Christopher M. Schnaubelt

NATO's New Strategic Concept: An Integration of Civil and Military Approaches by Karl-Heinz Kamp

Strategy, Segmentation and Incrementalism: A Corporate Approach by Allen Burch

All for One and One for All?: Forging Development, Diplomatic and Defense Partnerships Under NATO's New Strategic Concept by Christopher A. Jennings

Interagency Challenges in Strategic Assessments by Kirk A. Johnson

Joint Strategic Planning in Iraq: Optimism is Not a Plan: Needed Changes for a Long War by Bradford R. Higgins

Towards a Comprehensive Approach: Integrating Civilian and Military Concepts of Strategy.

The War on Soft Power

Fri, 04/15/2011 - 12:58pm
The War on Soft Power by Joseph S. Nye Jr., Foreign Policy. BLUF: "Even the U.S. military doesn't want to cut the State Department and foreign aid budget. So why is Congress playing a dangerous game with America's global influence?" Or as Doctrine Man succinctly puts it: "It doesn't take a rocket scientist to understand the need to build 'smart power' capability to face the challenges of an evolving global community. Separate hard and soft power efforts don't work much better than a tag-team midget wrestling match . . . those efforts need to be thoroughly integrated to be successful. We get it. We all get it. Okay, maybe Congress doesn't get it."

Lies, Damn Lies, and Metrics in Small Wars

Fri, 04/15/2011 - 9:05am
Lies, Damn Lies, and Metrics in Small Wars

Can We Measure Progress or Failure in War?

U.S. Army Major Josh Thiel's recent article The Statistical Irrelevance of American SIGACT Data: Iraq Surge Analysis Reveals Reality challenges the contemporary notion that you can "add more (forces) and then you win" in a protracted insurgency. Josh, an Army Special Forces officer assigned to 1st SFG, studied economics at USMA and defense analysis at NPS. His concise work illustrates what is known in econometrics as a red flag. A simple linear regression of two variables showing substantial deviation is enough to suggest that the problem is much more complicated than simply adhering to the tested independent variable.

So what? Josh's work is the first part of extensive research being conducted at the CORE Lab in Monterey, CA to determine if we can ever accurately measure causation in war. This type of research is funded throughout the country by grants such as the Minerva Initiative, an investment endorsed by the SECDEF as a 21st century effort to promote collaboration between the military and social sciences to find better solutions in modern conflict.

Rigorous analysis and collaboration into quantifying war goes back as far as 1948. British scientist Lewis Fry Richardson sought to find patterns in conflict, and RAND's game theorist developed the concept of Mutually Assured Destruction (MAD) that eventually translated into a foreign policy of nuclear deterrence. In the 21st century, we have yet to find a definitive model to gain a broader understanding. To date, it remains undetermined if such a model is possible.

As Josh noted, it is naí¯ve to blindly look at collected metrics from the occupying force, counterinsurgent force, or host nation in order to gleam the current situation. For example, as I noted in the Break Point, from November 2006 to February 2007, over 126 SIGACTS occurred in the small village of Zaganiyah; however, this data will not be found in the SIGACT database because there was no coalition observer there to collect the information at the time of occurrence. Instead, if you looked at the data available, it would show only a small amount of violence in the area. This finding led me to conclude,

Control, while hard to quantify, is often "you know it when you see it," but it can be somewhat measured by the strength of the counterinsurgent security force OR the absence of violence in areas with significant government presence. The absence of violence in areas outside the reach of the government OR outside external monitor observation (press, peacekeepers) should be assumed to be under the insurgent's control.

Several other qualitative measures must be addressed when testing or collecting data.

What is the interest of the reporting officer? There is usually a political, economic, or personal interest involved. For instance, in Iraq, Shia would often minimize Shia on Sunni violence while exaggerating Sunni on Shia violence.

How accurate is the data? While many of us call it Iraqi math, exaggeration extends to many small wars. Often, a partnering Army officer or frightened civilian would report 100 armed men attacked a patrol or a village. Upon investigation, no evidence supported this report. Over time we learned to drop a zero so 100 meant 10. How do we input this data into the SIGACT database? It remains a tough judgment call. In a perfect world, the higher command will serve as the referee, but that does not make the information necessarily accurate.

When analyzing the data, one must consider the following,

What was the coalition forces mission? What were they actually doing? Were they constrained to Advisory missions in a large forward operating base? Were they conducting primarily direct action raids? Were they living in patrol bases in contested areas?

What was the enemy's mission? Were they actively massing to attack coalition forces? Have they temporarily laid down their arms to wait for the coalition to move elsewhere? Were they conducting selective assassinations of key leaders, acts of intimidation of the populace, or overt population control measures to pacify the populace into not supporting the host nation government?

How did the people react? What is the number of intelligence tips to coalition forces? Is the information valid? How many local leaders publically support the coalition force mission? How many religious leaders actively preach resistance in Friday prayers? How active are the local markets when coalition are present?

Again, we have merely begun to dig into studying the quantifiable aspects of small wars. There remains many more unknowns than known facts. Major Thiel's paper should serve as a caution that there are no bumper sticker solutions, and hopefully, his work will encourage others to collaborate to help find better answers.

15 April SWJ Roundup

Fri, 04/15/2011 - 7:38am
Afghanistan

Clinton Predicts Violent Spring in Afghanistan - Washington Post

Spring Fighting Season to Test Gains in Afghan War - Associated Press

Suicide Bombers in Kill 3 Police Officers - Los Angeles Times

Suicide Bombers Kill Police - BBC News

Iran's Cash for Karzai Buys Years of Loyalty - Washington Times

Soldier Integrates Afghan Operations - AFPS

U.S., Afghan Forces Hold Former Insurgent Havens - AFPS

Combined Force in Jowzjan Kills, Captures Insurgents - AFPS

Motley Consensus on the Afghanistan Line Item - New York Times

Condolence Payments for Afghan Civilians - Los Angeles Times editorial

Pakistan

Pakistan Militants Killed 2,500 in 2010, Report Says - BBC News

Pakistani City is Hit by New Round of Targeted Killings - BBC News

Militant's Road Ends in Pakistan - Associated Press

2 French Militants Arrested in Pakistan - Associated Press

Two Suspected French Militants Arrested in Pakistan - Reuters

Libya / Operation Odyssey Dawn

NATO Nations Commit to Ending Gadhafi Rule - Voice of America

U.S., Allies Raise Ante on Gadhafi Ouster - Wall Street Journal

NATO Showing Strain Over Approach to Libya - New York Times

U.S. Resists Calls for Greater Engagement - Washington Post

U.S., Allies Say Remain Firm on Libya Mission - Los Angeles Times

Allies Say Future with Gaddafi Unthinkable - BBC News

NATO Ministers Meet Amid Libya Dispute - Associated Press

NATO States Buck French, British Call Over Libya - Reuters

U.S., Britain, France Vow to Push Ahead in Libya - Associated Press

Allies Say Libya Campaign on Until Gaddafi Goes - Reuters

NATO Says Gadhafi Must Go but Won't Force Him Out - Associated Press

U.S., Allies See Libyan Rebels in Hopeless Disarray - Reuters

BRICS Nations Oppose Use of Force in Libya - Voice of America

Air Strikes Hit Libya As Diplomats Consider Options - Voice of America

Kadafi Forces Kill 20 in Key Libyan City - Los Angeles Times

Port City Filled With Migrants Desperate to Exit - New York Times

Amateur Videos from Libya Show Frustration - Voice of America

Libyan Opposition Gives War Lessons to Youth - Voice of America

Operation Libyan Freedom - United Press International opinion

NATO Made Right Call on Helping Libya - Washington Post opinion

Libya's Pathway to Peace - New York Times opinion

The NATO Coalition Is Failing in Libya - Daily Telegraph opinion

Gaddafi Wasn't Poised for Genocide - Boston Globe opinion

Egypt

Military to Review Cases of Jailed Protesters - New York Times

Egypt Army Reconsiders Cases of Jailed Protesters - Associated Press

Press Welcomes Mubarak Arrest - BBC News

Tunisia

Former Tunisian Leader Faces Legal Charges - New York Times

Yemen

Yemen Religious, Tribal Leaders: Saleh Must Go Now - Reuters

Syria

White House Rebuffs Syrian Opposition - Washington Times

Syrian Govt Offers Mixed Message to Protesters - New York Times

Syria's Assad Seeks to Curb Prayer Protests - Reuters

President Bashar al-Assad Forms New Government - BBC News

Rights Group: Syria Tortures Detained Protesters - Associated Press

Protest Erupts in Syria's Druze Heartland - Reuters

Iraq

Iraqi Youths Long for 'Arab Spring' Moment - New York Times

Iraq Raid on Iranian Exiles' Camp Ashraf 'Killed 34' - BBC News

U.N.: 34 Killed in Iraqi Raid on Iranian Exile Camp - Associated Press

Roadside Bombs Kill 3 South of Baghdad - Associated Press

Iran

U.S. Says Iran Helping Syria Quell Protests - Voice of America

Iran Secretly Aiding Repression of Protests in Syria - Daily Telegraph

Iran Said to Help Syria Track Protesters' Web Use - Reuters

European Airlines Face Refueling Issues In Iran - Wall Street Journal

Iranian Winter Could Chill Arab Spring - Wall Street Journal opinion

Bahrain

Bahrain Government Moves to Disband Shia Opposition - BBC News

U.S. Response in Bahrain Criticized - Washington Post

Bahrainis Wonder What Went Wrong - Los Angeles Times

Bahrain Backs Off on Closure of Opposition Groups - Associated Press

Bahrain Seeks to Dissolve Main Opposition Group - Reuters

Israel / Palestinians

Hamas Says It Found Body of Italian Activist - New York Times

Hamas: Abducted Italian Activist Killed in Gaza - Reuters

Colleagues Rebuke Gaza Report's Author - New York Times

Back to the Peace Talks - Washington Post editorial

Palestinians' Mistake in Seeking Statehood - Washington Post opinion

Middle East / North Africa Unrest

U.S. Groups Helped Nurture Arab Uprisings - New York Times

Latest Developments in Arab World's Unrest - Associated Press

U.S. Department of Defense

Gates: America Must Balance Idealism, Realism - AFPS

Carter Outlines Military Acquisition Improvements - AFPS

Carter Seeks Process to Fund Urgent Needs - AFPS

DoD Asking Congress For Urgent-Needs Account - Defense News

Dempsey Discusses Range of Army Issues - AFPS

Marine's Memoir Details Two Kinds of Service - Stars and Stripes

Arlington Cemetery Acknowledges More Burial Errors - Washington Post

Arlington Adds Staff, New Rules after Grave Mix-up - Associated Press

United States

Congress Decides 2011 Federal Budget - Voice of America

Congress OKs Big Budget Cuts, Bigger Fights Await - Associated Press

Ill. Man Denies Taking Military Data to China - Associated Press

FBI Closes in on Zombie PC Gang - BBC News

Official in Charge of Air Traffic Control Resigns - New York Times

Arizona Sheriff Won't Yield the Spotlight - New York Times

Africa

Ivory Coast: Abidjan Food Stocks Looted - Voice of America

Kenya Faces Criticism Over Nationals Detained in Uganda - VOA

Ugandan Opposition Leader Wounded During Protest - New York Times

Gunfire at Burkina Faso Presidential Compound - Associated Press

Disgruntled Soldiers Fire in Burkina's Capital - Reuters

Somalia Seeks Control of Its Airspace - New York Times

Americas

Mexico: Violence Ups Pressure on Calderon - Washington Post

16 Mexico Police Officers Held, Aided Cartels - Los Angeles Times

16 Officers Arrested in Mexico Deaths - New York Times

Another 23 Corpses Found in Northern Mexican Pits - Associated Press

Cuba Gears Up for Key Communist Summit - Associated Press

Worst Drought for 50 Years in Cuba - BBC News

Asia Pacific

Japan: Nuclear Cleanup Plans Hinge on Unknowns - New York Times

A Wary Drive up to the Gate of Fukushima - Los Angeles Times

Japan Opposition Leader Urges Premier to Resign - New York Times

China Detains Rights Lawyer, Sends Man to Labour Camp - Reuters

N. Korea Says Detained American Has Confessed to Crime - VOA

North Korea Prepares to Indict American - New York Times

North Korea's Six-party Trap - Washington Post opinion

Suicide Bomber Hits Indonesian Mosque - Associated Press

Suicide Bomber Attacks Indonesian Police - Reuters

Europe

Belarus Officials' Details on Bombing Raise Questions - New York Times

Hungary Urges Balkan E.U. Entry - New York Times

British Prime Minister Calls for Immigration Curbs - Associated Press

Immigration Fractured Britain - Daily Telegraph opinion

Spanish Police Confiscate Record Quantity of ETA Explosives - VOA

U.N. Judgments Due in Croatian War Crimes Case - Associated Press

Defining U.S. National Security Interests in Afghanistan

Fri, 04/15/2011 - 7:31am
Defining U.S. National Security Interests in Afghanistan

by T.J. Buonomo

On 15 March 2011, General Petraeus testified at length on the situation in Afghanistan before the Senate Armed Services Committee. While the majority of the four-hour hearing can be summarized as the general's cautious but optimistic assessment of progress on the security and political fronts, two of his comments in particular are deserving of serious scrutiny.

Starting at 203:00, Senator John Cornyn, questions General Petraeus about the Taliban's aspirations for acquisition of nuclear weapons and regime change in Pakistan. General Petraeus responds, "With respect to the Afghan Taliban, Senator, I think that their aspirations truly are within Afghanistan. In particular it would be to reestablish the kind of state that they had established there in the wake of the [post-Soviet era] Afghan civil war." He then states that while extremist groups might value access to them, "There is quite considerable security for the Pakistani nuclear weapons."

At 234:00, in response to comments from Senator Mark Udall on liberalization of trade ties between India and Pakistan as a path to more amicable diplomatic relations, General Petraeus expresses his support for Afghan President Hamid Karzai's aspiration to position Afghanistan as an energy resource transit route between Central Asia and the "very rapidly growing economy of the Subcontinent" [referring here to India via Pakistan].

Beginning at 176:15, Senator Joe Manchin III (D-WV) expresses dissatisfaction with the thought that while the U.S. is "paying for the security" in Afghanistan, China appears to be reaping the economic rewards. He notes that China is making an investment of $3.5 billion and "it looks like there will be a return of $88 billion." Under Secretary of Defense for Policy Michele Flournoy responds that the U.S. is also working to invest in the strategic mineral resources of Afghanistan through the Task Force for Business and Stability Operations (TFBSO) and is encouraging other Western nations to do the same.

These three points raise several important questions, the first of which is, how is the Obama administration defining vital U.S. national security interests in Afghanistan? If General Petraeus believes that the Afghan Taliban's aspirations are limited to Afghanistan, as he clearly states in his testimony, it logically follows that there should be room for negotiation with them on their relationship with Al Qaeda, which is the core- and perhaps only --threat to the security of the American public.

Americans should be asking our congressional intelligence committee members if there is a consensus view within the intelligence community on the Afghan Taliban's potential responsiveness to high level diplomatic overtures in exchange for their leaders' abandonment of Al Qaeda. They should further request declassification of documents pertaining to such assessments. NATO may not win over Mullah Omar but such a diplomatic thrust might be enough to splinter the Afghan Taliban leadership and isolate the irreconcilable elements.

Thus far U.S. policy has required the Taliban to accept the Afghan Constitution as a quid-pro-quo for seats in the government, a prerequisite the Taliban have rejected ostensibly because it violates Sharia law. While it may not be pleasant to think of abandoning Afghans to the Taliban's ultraconservative legal code, the use of force is a dubious way of addressing widespread societal problems such as disregard for the rights of women that are rooted in Afghanistan's patriarchal tribal culture. A patient long-term focus on social evolution through education and exposure to Western media is more likely to fundamentally change this culture than forced social engineering experiments.

The second question General Petraeus's testimony raises is, Can the U.S. "drain the swamp" of potential terrorist recruits in Afghanistan by playing a role in developing its economy, to include positioning Afghanistan to serve as an energy resource transit route from Central Asia to Pakistan and India?

Senator Scott Brown (R-MA) notes that there are potentially trillions of dollars worth of resources in Afghanistan and that revenue raised from the extraction of these resources must be injected into the Afghan economy to enable it to become self-sustaining. But are U.S. officials prepared to ensure that what is injected is not largely siphoned off by corrupt Afghan officials? Past experience gives reason for skepticism. The U.S. depends on these officials as much as they depend on the U.S. This mutual dependence constrains anti-corruption efforts to a significant degree when that corruption is systemic and institutionalized at the highest levels of the Afghan government.

As we learned in Vietnam far too late, finding the right balance between sovereignty and accountability is a difficult thing for an occupying power. Afghans will only tolerate so much corruption and economic oppression before their loyalties quietly shift, reinforced by propaganda- accurate or not -that foreign designs over their resources are to blame for their misery. Given the current deplorable state of the Afghan government and Pakistani intelligence service's continued support for the Afghan Taliban, it might be worth considering cutting a deal with the senior Afghan Taliban leadership in exchange for a guarantee that they will disavow any pan-Islamist ambitions and enable a permissive operating environment for our special operations forces to hunt down what remains of Al Qaeda within territory under their control.

Such a solution, however imperfect, is not inconceivable. As Afghanistan expert Ahmed Rashid has noted in his book "Taliban", prior to September 11th, 2011 the moderate wing of the Afghan Taliban's leadership "despised the Arabs [referring here to Al Qaeda]" and "was opposed to international terrorism". Rashid further notes that although Mullah Omar's decision to continue to harbor Osama bin Laden after September 11th ultimately prevailed amongst the Afghan Taliban leadership, Omar "knew the Taliban leaders were deeply divided on the issue, and he faced the possibility of a revolt from within his own ranks. Omar was also bolstered by the reassurance from his supporters in Pakistan and Al Qaeda that the USA might launch a bombing campaign- which the Taliban could survive --but it would never send ground troops into Afghanistan." (218-219)

U.S. overtures to the Afghan Taliban leadership would reduce the possibility of various militant groups with safe havens on the Pakistani side of the border from coalescing into a single ideological force as an unintended consequence of U.S. interventionist policies in the region. Even if they fail, they would at the very least have one advantageous political effect- they would demonstrate to the American public, whose support for the Obama administration's current counterinsurgency strategy is waning, that the nation must renew its determination to see the mission to completion after 10 years of war. The Afghan Taliban leadership would be given a final opportunity to come to the negotiating table with only one pre-condition and if they refused, the only future they could look forward to would be as hunted men living in a perpetual state of fear.

T.J. Buonomo is a former Military Intelligence Officer and graduate of the U.S. Air Force Academy with a degree in Political Science and Middle East Studies.

SECDEF Speech: "Realistic" vs. "Idealistic"

Thu, 04/14/2011 - 7:24pm
As Delivered by Secretary of Defense Robert M. Gates, Mt. Vernon, VA, Thursday, April 14, 2011

National Library for the Study of George Washington Groundbreaking Ceremony

Thank you, Senator Warner, for that most kind introduction. Senator Warner has introduced me to the United States Senate for confirmation four different times. The first time was almost exactly 25 years ago. That dates us both. He is a great Virginian, a great statesman, and a great American -- someone for whom the term "distinguished gentleman" can be used without a hint of irony.

It is a singular honor to speak on these grounds at another important moment in its storied history. I'd like to thank the Mount Vernon Ladies Association for extending this invitation to me, and for your tireless efforts not only to preserve the mansion, but to sustain and strengthen the legacy of George Washington.

Seventy years ago this summer, one of Washington's successors, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, dedicated the first modern presidential library at his upstate New York residence, Hyde Park. At that ceremony, Roosevelt said that it reflected the nation's belief "in the capacity of its own people to learn from the past so that they can gain in judgment in creating their own future."

Today at Mount Vernon, we begin construction of the new National Library for the Study of George Washington. No American president deserves the honor of a presidential library more than George Washington. As an avid reader of history, I have found Washington to be a source of strength, wisdom, and inspiration throughout my life.

In my current position as Secretary of Defense, I take heart in George Washington's belief that to preserve the peace, we must be prepared for war. I can even relate to some of the challenges faced by his Secretary of War, Henry Knox. In response to the threat of piracy off the North African coast, Knox sought to build the first American naval fleet. To get the necessary support from the Congress, Knox eventually ended up with six frigates being built in six different shipyards in six different states. Some things never change.

Another example of this. Last December, I read Ron Chernow's new biography of Washington. And I so enjoyed it, I gave a copy to President Obama, singling out one passage I thought might cheer him up because of the perspective it provided on our current budget travails. In 1778, General and future President Washington wrote the following about Congress: "Party disputes and personal quarrels are the great business of the day," while "great and accumulated debt, ruined finances, depreciated money, and want of credit," were "postponed from day to day, from week to week, as if our affairs wore the most promising aspect."

Now all that said, Washington had great respect for the Congress and for civilian control of our military. The Chevalier de Chastellux wrote of Washington in 1782, "this is the seventh year that he has commanded the army and he has obeyed Congress: more need not be said."

I'm moved by the examples Washington set as a military leader at every rank -- lessons I have often shared with aspiring military officers over the past four and a half years. Washington recognized early on that his success was built on the shoulders of the men under his command. When Washington -- then only 26 -- resigned his commission as leader of the Virginia regiment during the French and Indian War, his officers composed a tribute to him. And Washington's response was to say: "if I have acquired any reputation, it is from you I derive it."

As commander of the continental army during the revolutionary war, Washington held frequent war councils to hear all sides of an issue, and did not seek to quiet contrary opinions or criticism. As he told one of his closest aides, "I can bear to hear of imputed or real errors...The man who wishes to stand well in the opinion of others must do this, because he is thereby enabled to correct his faults."

Washington also counseled his officers to lead by example, as he did. During the war, a man in civilian clothes rode past a small fortification being repaired by a group of exhausted-looking soldiers. The commander was shouting orders but not helping. When the rider asked why, the supervisor of the work said he didn't work because, "Sir, I am a corporal!" The stranger apologized, dismounted, and went about helping the soldiers himself. When he was done, he turned toward the supervisor and said, "Mr. Corporal, the next time you have a job like this and not enough men to do it, go to your Commander-in-Chief and I will come and help you again." Too late, the corporal recognized George Washington.

Yet we are not coming together here today simply to extol George Washington's virtues as a military leader and the foremost of our founding fathers. Recalling Roosevelt's words at Hyde Park, the construction of this library affirms the continued relevance of Washington to the dilemmas facing our nation and its leaders, now and in the future. And since my interest is in national security, I'd like to briefly discuss one of the central foreign policy challenges and dilemmas Washington faced as the first American president, a dilemma that we have faced all through our history, to the present day.

Not long after ascending the highest office, George Washington was confronted with the consequences of the French Revolution. The issue was whether to support the revolutionary government and its war against an alliance of European monarchies led by Great Britain. To many, like Thomas Jefferson, the French Revolution, with its stated ideals of liberty, equality, and fraternity, seemed a natural successor to our own revolution.

John Adams and the Federalists, however, were just as adamantly opposed. They were appalled by the revolution's excesses and feared the spread of violent French radicalism to our shores. The Federalists mocked Jefferson for his rhetorical defense of freedom and equality across the Atlantic while he continued to own slaves. Adams and Alexander Hamilton were, in turn, accused of being crypto-monarchists.

So it was left to Washington to resolve the matter. He had said: "My best wishes are irresistibly excited whensoever, in any country, I see an oppressed nation unfurl the banners of freedom." But the European wars and, in particular, our estrangement from the British, had begun to disrupt the lives of ordinary Americans by impeding trade and causing riots and refugees. Washington, understanding the fragility of America's position at the time, adopted a neutrality policy toward France and would go on to make a peace treaty with Great Britain -- sparking massive protests and accusations of selling out the spirit of 1776.

But consider the historic irony: The United States had recently broken free of the British monarchy only with the help of an absolutist French king. Yet when France itself turned in the direction of popular rule and was confronted by Europe's monarchies, the United States took a pass and made amends with our old British foe.

In this episode, Washington was confronting a question, a dilemma, that has been persistent throughout our history: how should we incorporate America's democratic ideals and aspirations into our relations with the rest of the world?

What Washington's experience shows is that, from our earliest days, American leaders have struggled with "realistic" versus "idealistic" approaches to international challenges facing us. The most successful leaders, starting with Washington, have steadfastly encouraged the spread of liberty, democracy, and human rights. At the same time, however, they have fashioned policies blending different approaches with different emphases in different places and different times.

We have at times made human rights the centerpiece of our national strategy even as we did business with some of the worst violators of human rights. We have worked with authoritarian governments to advance our own security interests even while urging them to reform. And we have also used our military against governments seen as a threat to our national security, to undo aggression, to end ethnic slaughter, and to prevent chaos.

In just the past few months begun to witness an extraordinary story unfolding across the Middle East and North Africa. People across the region have come together to demand change, and in many cases, a more democratic, responsive government. Yet many of the regimes affected have been longstanding, close allies of the United States, ones we continue to work with as critical partners in the face of common security challenges like Al Qaeda and Iran, even as we urge them to reform and respond to the needs of their people.

An underlying theme of American history going back to Washington is that we are compelled to defend our security and our interests in ways that, in the long run, lead to the spread of democratic values and institutions. As President Obama said last month: "for generations, we have done the hard work of protecting our own people, as well as millions around the globe. We have done so because we know that our own future is safer, our own future is brighter, if more of mankind can live with the bright light of freedom and dignity."

When we discuss openly our desire for democratic values to take hold across the globe, we are describing a world that may be many years or decades off. Though achievement of the ideal may be limited by time, space, resources, or human nature, we must not allow ourselves to discard or disparage the ideal itself. It is vital that we speak out about what we believe and let the world know where we stand, even as we do what we must to protect our interests and our security.

And when we look at the challenges facing contemporary fledgling democracies, or societies and governments facing great pressures for change, before we criticize too harshly we would do well to be modestly mindful of the turbulence of our own early history, what historian Joe Ellis called "improvising on the edge of catastrophe." And to remember our own long journey from a political system of, by, and for property-owning white men to an inclusive nation with an African American president.

I close by returning to these grounds, and an event that transpired here at Mt. Vernon on this precise day in 1789, when the hopes of a republican government were pinned on George Washington. Although he had known it would happen for some time, it was on April 14th of that year Washington received official word here at Mt. Vernon that he had been elected our nation's first President. His response, in typical self-effacing fashion: "All I can promise is only that which can be accomplished by an honest zeal."

Thanks to Washington's integrity, character, and judgment, the values we represent as Americans could take hold -- emanating from this corner of Virginia and spreading across the continent and beyond. The work of this library will further solidify those roots, and by anchoring them in his beloved estate, ensure that his singular legacy will endure. Thank you to all who have helped and worked so hard to make this day happen. Thank you.

AfPak Border Enemy Counter-Attack

Thu, 04/14/2011 - 11:09am
AfPak Border Enemy Counter-Attack

The AfPak border areas of Kunar and Nuristan Provinces continue to remain significant challenges to the ISAF effort in Afghanistan providing both safehavens for Taliban training areas and gateways into Pakistan's tribal areas for resupply, shelter, and lifeline support to al Qaeda. SWJ contributors Jim Gant and Nathan Springer have written extensively on their experiences in the region. Additionally, this area was documented in the film Restrepo and the devastating Battle of Wanat.

Over the past several weeks, we provided coalition updates as TF No Slack and the Bastogne Brigade led Operation Strong Eagle III as the spring fighting season begins. ABC News provided extensive coverage of these deliberate raids to disrupt Taliban and al Qaeda influence in the region killing over 100 fighters at a cost of six U.S. soldiers. During Operation Strong Eagle III, TF No Slack Soldiers return fire during a firefight with Taliban forces in Barawala Kalay Valley in Kunar province, Afghanistan, March 31.

Firefight

After the initial operation ended, the Taliban quickly responded with a dual counter-attack: 1. Select assassinations of pro-government tribal leaders. 2. Psychological Warfare Operations to influence morale and attempt to show resilience and control of the terrain.

First, Bill Rogio of The Long War Journal reports that a suicide bomber kills pro-government tribal leader, 9 Afghans in Kunar.

"The suicide bomber attacked Haji Malik Zarin as he left a meeting of tribal elders in the village of Chaji in Kunar's Asmar district. Among the nine additional victims of the attack were Zarin's son, his grandson, and several other tribal elders.

"The suicide attacker approached them, hugged Malik Zarin and then detonated the explosives strapped to his body," the district police chief told AFP."

Second, Taliban leaders conduct interviews with Al Jazeera in abandoned American patrol bases to show resilience in spite of the coalition attacks.

Whether the interview should be taken at face value remains undetermined. What is known is that the spring fighting season is heating up. ISAF soldiers are in tough fights, and the outcome of these valleys will certainly impact decisions in Kabul and Washington DC.

Will Gates fight Obama on defense cuts?

Thu, 04/14/2011 - 10:30am
In his speech yesterday on the U.S. government's debt problem, President Barack Obama called on the Defense Department to make a bigger contribution to the solution. The president said,

Over the last two years, Secretary Bob Gates has courageously taken on wasteful spending, saving $400 billion in current and future spending. I believe we can do that again. We need to not only eliminate waste and improve efficiency and effectiveness, but we're going to have to conduct a fundamental review of America's missions, capabilities, and our role in a changing world. I intend to work with Secretary Gates and the Joint Chiefs on this review, and I will make specific decisions about spending after it's complete.

When the President of the United States announces a major cut in defense spending and "a fundamental review ... of our role in a changing world" in consecutive sentences, other heads of government around the world will certainly take notice. They will then make adjustments to their own security strategies, adjustments which are bound to produce cascading consequences.

In a press release from yesterday, the House Armed Services Committee conveniently listed six occasions over the past year when Gates explicitly warned against making arbitrary cuts to the defense budget without considering the potential strategic consequences. According to VOA, Gates was notified on Tuesday, without prior consultation, that Obama would call for a $400 billion defense chop the next day. Gates's press secretary immediately tossed a brush-back pitch at the White House; his press release from the Pentagon repeated Gates's previous warning:

[T]he secretary has been clear that further significant defense cuts cannot be accomplished without reducing forces structure and military capabilities," Morrell continued. "The comprehensive review of missions, capabilities and America's role in the world will identify alternatives for the president's consideration."

Accomplishing the president's goal, Morrell added, will "must be about managing risks associated with future threats and national security challenges and identifying missions that the country is —to forego."

Over the past two years, Gates has already terminated a long list of weapons programs, wrung out $178 billion in management efficiencies, and agreed to significant headcount reductions in the Army and Marine Corps as the U.S. withdraws from Afghanistan. Obama has asked Gates to "do that again." But Gates won't be able to "do that again" without substantial cuts to the force structure - the law of diminishing marginal returns regarding "easy" savings has now set in.

Cutting force structure unavoidably means diminishing America's global security presence. Just as a body suffering from hypothermia abandons the extremities to maintain temperature in the core organs, both Obama and Gates seem to recognize that a shrunken U.S. military will have to pull back to protect top priorities such as the Indo-Pacific region, while leaving partners elsewhere in the world to manage for themselves as best as they can. The result will be regional arms races, increased nuclear and missile proliferation, and the establishment of new outposts around the world by America's rising rivals.

With his speech yesterday, Obama implied that he is —to accept these consequences. With his speeches over the past year, Gates has stated that he is not. What remains to be seen is what Gates will do next. In the little time he has remaining in office, Gates will no doubt attempt to school Obama about the risks and consequences the president seems —to create. Should Gates ultimately turn on Obama, it would be politically devastating for the president. That is another risk Obama seems —to take.