Small Wars Journal

SWJ Quotable

Mon, 03/14/2011 - 10:37pm
We have been remiss in offering up our SWJ quote of the week. As a bit of remedial action, we offer up this potential SWJ quote of the year by Metin Turcan in his Small Wars Journal article Seeing the Other Side of the COIN: A Critique of the Current Counterinsurgency (COIN) Strategies in Afghanistan.

If the numbers of the COIN soldiers who are watching the war from their screens are more than the numbers of soldiers who see the pupils of the insurgents with their own eyes, COIN cannot disrupt this insurgency. Stated another way, the more soldiers you have fighting the insurgency from behind their screens in their hi-tech bubbles, instead of fighting on the ground in the theater of war, the more easily you fall into this trap. If COIN soldiers are not able to see, smell, taste, and, more importantly, feel the theater (by saying feeling the theater I mean to fully understand the terrain and weather conditions, and the agonies, perceptions, motivations, hatred, happiness of the local people who live in it) they experience a sort of alienation from the reality on the ground.

14 March SWJ Roundup

Mon, 03/14/2011 - 8:30am
Japan Earthquake / Tsunami

A Nuclear Tragedy, But How Big? - Washington Post

Radioactive Releases in Japan Could Last Months - New York Times

2nd Blast Heightens Japan Nuclear Fear - Los Angeles Times

Japan Nuclear Plant's Troubles Deepen - Wall Street Journal

Ravaged Japan Faces Nuclear-power Crisis - Washington Times

New Blast at Japan Nuclear Plant - BBC News

Authorities Race to Contain Meltdowns - Washington Post

Quake Death Toll in Japan Soars - New York Times

Rescuers Dig for Survivors, Thousands Feared Dead - Wall Street Journal

Grim Recovery Effort Along Japan's Coast - Los Angeles Times

Coastal Towns Lack Supplies, Food - Washington Post

Much Searching but Few Are Rescued - New York Times

U.S. Pulls Ships, Aircraft From Japan Nuke Plant - Associated Press

Afghanistan

Afghanistan 'Suicide Bombing' Kills 33 at Army Center - BBC News

Pakistan

Assassinations Highlight Sway of Radical Clerics - Washington Post

Shooting in Pakistan Reveals Fraying Alliance - New York Times

Pakistan Court Declines Ruling on CIA Case - Associated Press

Raymond Davis: Pakistan Court Avoids Immunity Ruling - BBC News

Pakistan Court Dodges Decision on CIA Contractor's Immunity - Reuters

Officials: U.S. Missile Strike Kills 4 in Pakistan - Associated Press

Ambush in NW Kills 9, Threatens Peace Deal - Associated Press

U.K. 'Gave Torture Tacit Approval' - BBC News

Pervez Musharraf: U.K. Never Told Me Not to Torture - Associated Press

Middle East / North Africa Unrest

Libyan Forces Gaining Ground on Rebel-held Territory - Washington Post

At Crossroads, Libya Rebels Vow to Stand or Die - New York Times

Libya's Diverse Rebel Forces - Washington Post

Gadhafi Forces Drive Rebels From Key Oil Town - Associated Press

Libya Rebels Say Brega Re-taken - BBC News

U.K.'s Hague: Arming Libyan Rebels an Option - Reuters

Milestone Referendum in Egypt Just Days Away - New York Times

Egypt Christians Halt Protests Over Church Burning - Reuters

Violence in Bahrain, Yemen - Los Angeles Times

Protesters Seal Off Bahrain's Financial Center - New York Times

Police, Protesters Clash in Bahrain - Washington Post

Bahrain Lawmakers Ask King to Impose Martial Law - Associated Press

Bahrain Calls for Gulf Help After Violent Protests - Reuters

Clashes Erupt as Protests Continue in Yemen's Capital - New York Times

Yemen President Sacks Minister Amid Growing Unrest - Associated Press

Gunfire, Military Deployment as Yemen Tensions Rise - Reuters

Libya's Domino Effect - Washington Post opinion

Iraq Then, Libya Now - New York Times opinion

Fiddling While Libya Burns - New York Times opinion

Iraq

Suicide Bomber Hits Iraqi Troops - BBC News

Suicide Bomber Kills 10 Soldiers at Iraq Army Post - Associated Press

Mr. Maliki's Power Grab - New York Times editorial

Iran

Iran Launched Cyber Attack on 'Enemies' of State - Associated Press

Israel / Palestinians

Israel to Expand West Bank Settlements - Washington Post

Israel to Step Up Pace of Construction in West Bank - New York Times

U.S. Criticizes Israeli Settlement Construction Plan - Associated Press

Lebanon

Thousands in Lebanon Demand Hezbollah Be Disarmed - Associated Press

Piracy

Indian Navy Captures 61 Pirates - BBC News

Indian Navy Captures 61 Pirates in Arabian Sea - Associated Press

Somali Pirates Free Bangladesh Ship With Crew - Reuters

"New Media"

When Unrest Stirs, Bloggers Are Already in Place - New York Times

United States

Manning Comment: Crowley Out at State Department - Washington Post

Official Exits State Dept. After Jabs at Pentagon - New York Times

Texas Farmers Say Drug War Making Job Dangerous - Associated Press

Africa

More Than 42 Fighters Dead in Raid on S. Sudan Town - Reuters

South Sudan Accuses North of Plot - BBC News

More Flee as Violence Worsens in Ivory Coast - New York Times

Nonviolent Muslim Cleric Killed in Nigeria - Associated Press

Americas

Mexico: Ciudad Juarez 'Safe Corridors' Plagued by Killings - Associated Press

Chavez: Foes Seek Libya-Like Uprising in Venezuela - Associated Press

White House Demands Cuba Free U.S. Worker - Associated Press

Aristide's Return to Haiti 'Imminent' - Associated Press

Asia Pacific

Chinese Premier Calls for Reforms - BBC News

China Rejects Comparison With N. Africa Uprisings - Associated Press

China's Gradual Revolution - New York Times opinion

More Thai 'Red-shirts' Released - BBC News

Europe

Ruling Party Is Accused of Fraud in Russian Vote - New York Times

Russia's Ruling Party Wins Local Elections - Associated Press

Greek Anti-terrorist Police Seize Weapons Cache - Washington Post

Turkey: Thousands Protest Crackdown on Press Freedom - New York Times

South Asia

India 'Largest Importer' of Arms - BBC News

Technology and Training

Sun, 03/13/2011 - 11:07am
Technology and Training

With advances in technology in the advent of the information age, IPhones and IPads can now assist us in land and aerial navigation, survey and census collection, and basic communication via text and email.

One the one hand, these innovations are combat multipliers because they can make our jobs easier. On the other hand, they come with two significant drawbacks: 1. Apps are open source and provide our enemies access to their utility, 2. The ease of function can diminish our military's understanding and comprehension of basic military techniques.

In reference to training and education, these problems are easily resolved- train your troops with the basics first. New platoon leaders and young sergeants should learn the basics of using compass and a map. Once these tasks are mastered, the technology becomes an additional asset but not mission essential.

As the military continues to evolve and improve, Jeff Schogol, The Stars and Stripes' Rumor Doctor, weighs in to answer Has the Army eliminated bayonet training?

Warfare has evolved since Joshua Lawrence Chamberlin led the bayonet charge down Little Round Top to save the Union army at Gettysburg, so it wasn't a surprise when media outlets reported the Army had dropped bayonet training as part of the sweeping changes to basic training that went into effect in July.

But the Army insists it has not abandoned the bayonet. While soldiers may no longer be learning how to fix a bayonet to the end of a rifle and stab an enemy, they are still learning to use the bayonet, just in a different way.

Times are a changing, but with an emphasis of getting back to the basics, our military will maintain combat effectiveness. All this requires is good leadership.

13 March SWJ Roundup

Sun, 03/13/2011 - 4:21am
Japan Earthquake / Tsunami

Scramble to Avert Meltdowns at 2 Nuclear Reactors - New York Times

Nuclear Crisis Escalates at Damaged Reactors - Washington Post

Nuclear Crisis Intensifies in Japan - Los Angeles Times

Problems for Second Japan Reactor - BBC News

Japan Tries Using Seawater to Cool Damaged Reactor - Wall Street Journal

Nuclear Emergency Is Worst in Decades - New York Times

Thousands Missing as Horror of 'Superquake' Emerges - Daily Telegraph

Japan Pushes to Rescue Survivors as Toll Rises - New York Times

Japan Quake Efforts a Race Against Time - Los Angeles Times

Some Towns Feared to be Wiped Off the Map - Washington Post

U.S. Military Aid Arrives in Japan - Stars and Stripes

Japan Earthquake Shifted Earth on its Axis - Los Angeles Times

Heartbreak in Japan - Washington Post editorial

Afghanistan

Afghan Leader Questions U.S. Military Operations - New York Times

Karzai Questions U.S. Military Operations - Stars and Stripes

Karzai Again Condemns NATO Operations - Washington Post

Pakistan

A Shooting in Pakistan Reveals Fraying Alliance - New York Times

Pakistan Spy Chief to Stay on as Key CIA Partner - Associated Press

Middle East / North Africa Unrest

Gaddafi Forces Push Deeper Into Rebel Territory - Washington Post

Gaddafi's Tanks Roll East as Rebels Fear Revenge - Daily Telegraph

Libyan Rebels' Ragtag Army Left in Disarray - Los Angeles Times

Libya's Youth Revolt Turns Toward Chaos - New York Times

Libyan Rebels Building Civil Society From Scratch - Associated Press

Subterranean Jail a Sign of Gaddafi's Grip - Washington Post

Gadhafi Pushes Ahead as Arab League Calls for Help - Associated Press

Libyan Troops Defect Near Rebel-Held Misrata - Reuters

Arab League Backs No-Fly Zone Over Libya - Washington Post

Arab League Endorses No-Flight Zone Over Libya - New York Times

Arab States Support No-Fly Zone - BBC News

Arab League Asks for No-Fly Zone Over Libya - Associated Press

U.S. Backs Arab States' Call for Libya No-Fly Zone - Reuters

Gates Says U.S. Military Could Enforce No-Fly Zone - Washington Post

Egypt to Lift Restrictions on Political Parties - Associated Press

Tunisia Refuses to Legalize 5 Political Parties - Associated Press

Yemen: Security Forces Attack Protest Encampment - New York Times

Clashes in Yemen Turn Violent, Deadly - Washington Post

Yemen Protest Attacked by Police - BBC News

Yemen Police Fire on Protests, 6 Killed - Associated Press

Bahrain Negotiations Allowing Greater Iran Influence - Stars and Stripes

Gates Tells Bahrain's King 'Baby Steps' Aren't Enough - New York Times

Gates Calls for Mideast Reform, Recaps Message to NATO - AFPS

Gates: Arab Nations Must Enact Democratic Reforms - Associated Press

U.S. Training Quietly Nurtured Young Arab Democrats - Associated Press

China Says Middle East Should Solve Problems Itself - Reuters

Building a Culture of Tolerance in the Mideast - Washington Post opinion

Egypt's Would-be President - Washington Post opinion

U.S. Should Stay Out of Libya - Washington Post opinion

Five Myths About Gaddafi - Washington Post

Hope in the Mideast - Washington Post opinion

Iraq

Iraqi Women Feel Shunted Despite Election Quota - New York Times

PM: Protesters are Out of Step with Iraq's Will - Associated Press

Israel / Palestinians

IDF Scours West Bank for Killers of 5 Settlers - Washington Post

IDF Hunts for Killers of 5 West Bank Settlers - New York Times

Israel Hunts for Killers of Sleeping Settlers - Associated Press

U.S. Department of Defense

Draft Memo Outlines DoD Shutdown Plans - Stars and Stripes

Arlington Burial Planned for Last 'Doughboy' Frank Buckles - AFPS

DOD Takes Steps to Secure Classified Data - AFPS

Pentagon Cancer Research Budget Under Scrutiny - Washington Post

The Pentagon's Biggest Boondoggles - New York Times Op-Chart

United States

Blackwater Duo Convicted of Involuntary Manslaughter - Virginian-Pilot

Africa

South Sudan Accuses President Bashir of Plot - BBC News

S. Sudanese Rebels Attempt Attack on State Capital - Associated Press

Pro-Gbagbo Ivorian Forces Launch Assault in Abidjan - Reuters

Niger Votes a Year After Military-Led Coup - Associated Press

Niger Vote 'Example for Africa' - BBC News

Americas

Wanted: Officers to Retake Mexico - New York Times

Cartel Greets New Juarez Police Chief With Threat - Associated Press

Maryland Contractor Draws 15-year Sentence in Cuba - Washington Post

Cuba Gives 15-Year Prison Term to American - New York Times

U.S. 'Deplores' Cuba Verdict on Contractor Gross - Associated Press

Asia Pacific

2 Chinese Dissidents Freed After 10 Years in Jail - Associated Press

N. Korea Pushes Ahead with Succession Plan - Washington Post

Europe

Protest Over German Nuclear Power - BBC News

The Time Is Now: Building an ANP Force, "Shohna ba Shohna," that will stand the test of time

Sat, 03/12/2011 - 8:45am
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

NATO Training Mission-Afghanistan

Combined Joint Public Affairs Office

Camp Eggers -- Kabul

Mar. 5, 2011

Release # 2011-03-04

Feature - The Time Is Now: Building an ANP Force, "Shohna ba Shohna," that will stand the test of time

by 1st Lt. Steven Comerford, Aide-de-Camp

KABUL, Afghanistan -- Since the creation of conflict and resolution involving state actors, one main question has beleaguered the states involved. The question is simple in wording but not in meaning. The question is "How and when do you enable a war stricken people to perpetuate ownership in their country again?" The question is valid, for when is the right time to facilitate the rebuilding of the "soul" of a country? It has become apparent throughout the history of time that not one country can accomplish such a monumental task on its own. So how do you begin to address such a seemingly insurmountable task? The answer is simple; it is the dynamic that has to be changed.

At NATO Training Mission-Afghanistan and Combined Security Transition Command-Afghanistan, the dynamic has been changed. The new approach is a multinational effort to assist the people of Afghanistan in developing cohesion and self-ownership. This line of thinking can best be captured by Immanuel Kant's second formulation of his famous Categorical Imperative:

"Act so that you treat humanity, whether in your own person or in that of another, always as an end and never as a means only."

On the surface, it may be presumed utopian to believe that this type of philosophical sentiment could be transformed into practice, policy or programs at this time in history. However, the Human Terrain Team was fortunate enough to see the seeds of such noble actions. Representing Dr. Jack Kem, the Deputy to the NTM-A Commanding General, the HTT went on a fact finding mission to the Afghan National Civil Order Police Academy in Mazar-e-Sharif. There they witnessed the seeds germinate, grow and begin to bloom into a future free of discrimination, religious persecution and selfish ambition. What the team saw was a new generation of Afghans. Working side by side were once rival groups of Tajiks, Pashtuns, Hazaras, Farsiwans, and Uzbeks striving to become the best police officers for their country Afghanistan.

Leading the way for change for the Afghans was Col. Abdul Shakur Mohmand, Commander of the Mazar-e-Sharif training facility. He is a man of integrity, honor, professionalism, courage and vision. In a symbiotic relationship with his international counterparts, he assists in infusing morals, ethics and professional values. This is readily apparent in the actions and behavior of the cadets. Col. Shakur treats each cadet with respect and they return it with extremely genuine enthusiasm.

While visiting the academy, a U.S. Army Officer would immediately be reminded of their time at Army Officer Candidate School. Pride! Honor! Integrity! Those words reverberated throughout the camp. The environment was similar and encapsulated the esprit de corps that is within OCS.

In this positive environment, the HTT was able to ask the cadets candid questions about the present situation in Afghanistan and the future they envision for their country. The answers were astounding. One cadet said "I want to teach the importance of community and the protection of it. In order to do this we, the people, must be brothers in a nation without discrimination. We need to rebuild a sense of pride within our people. We must do this through education and literacy within our communities. Once we do all of this, we will be united as one. First we must take the first step and that is why I am here, to lead the next generation." This deep emotion and sense of nationalism, exemplified the thoughts of a majority of the cadets in multiple sessions.

In the world's eye this may be a small accomplishment. It could even be explained away as an anomaly by some individuals. However, it only takes one person to change the destiny of a country or even the world. At ANCOP cadets voices are being heard. As Martin Luther King Jr. once said "In the end, we will remember not the words of our enemies, but the silence of our friends." Now NTM-A/CSTC-A has planted the seeds and they are taking root within ANCOP. So, let us never be silent, so that our friends will rejoice in the "soul" of a new nation called "Afghanistan" -- shohna ba shohna!

12 March SWJ Roundup

Sat, 03/12/2011 - 3:47am
Afghanistan

Pentagon's Quiet Shift on Afghanistan War - Christian Science Monitor

Gates Warns NATO Allies About 'Precipitous' Exit - Los Angeles Times

NATO Endorses Afghan Forces Plan - Washington Post

Gates Warns Coalition Not to Abandon Afghanistan - Voice of America

Winning Hearts While Flattening Vineyards Is Tricky - New York Times

Pakistan

Pakistan Says Drone Strikes Have Been Effective - Voice of America

Pakistani Intel: U.S. Missiles Kill 5 Militants - Associated Press

Pakistan Court Ruling Sparks Karachi Violence - BBC News

Middle East / North Africa Unrest

Gaddafi Forces Recapture Strategic Western Town - Washington Post

Rebels Struggle to Regroup Against Confident Regime - Wall Street Journal

Libyan Rebels Defiant but in Disarray - New York Times

Battered Libyan Rebels Try to Keep Spirits Up - Los Angeles Times

Libyan Rebels Put Responsibility on U.S. - Washington Times

Gadhafi Forces Show Growing Confidence - Associated Press

E.U. No Longer Recognizes Gaddafi as Libya's Leader - Washington Post

U.S. and E.U. Call for Gaddafi to Go - BBC News

European Leaders Don't Rule Out Armed Intervention - New York Times

E.U.: Military Action Would Need U.N., Arab Support - Associated Press

Libya: Cameron Warns 'We Cannot Stand By' - Daily Telegraph

Obama Says Noose is Tightening on Gaddafi - Washington Post

U.S. Will Keep Working for Kadafi Ouster - Los Angeles Times

Obama Says Gaddafi Squeezed, Libyan Rebels Want More - Reuters

U.S. to Name a Liaison to Libyan Rebels - New York Times

Obama Offers Tempered Support for Libya Rebels - Washington Post

In Libya Revolt, Youth Will Serve, or at Least Try - New York Times

Protesters Stage Huge Rally in Yemen's Capital - Los Angeles Times

Yemen Protesters Demand President's Ouster - Washington Post

Yemen Police Storm Protest Camp, One Dead - Reuters

Gates Visits Bahrain Amid Huge Protests - New York Times

Gates' Bahrain Stop Signals Importance of Gulf Nation - Stars and Stripes

U.S. Defense Chief Urging Reforms in Ally Bahrain - Associated Press

Gates Visits Bahrain to Urge Reform Dialogue - AFPS

Police, Protesters Clash Near Bahrain Palace - Associated Press

Bahrain Protesters 'Facing Death Threats' - BBC News

Saudi Arabia Calm on Planned 'Day of Rage' - Washington Post

Saudi Arabia 'Day of Rage' Protest Fizzles - Los Angeles Times

As Protests Roil Neighbors, Saudis Quash Rallies - Associated Press

War, What is it Meant For? - Los Angeles Times editorial

No War on Libya - Washington Post opinion

Culture of Tolerance - Washington Post opinion

Backlash Against Democracy - Washington Post opinion

Israel / Palestinians

Palestinian 'Kills Five Israelis' in West Bank Attack - BBC News

5 in West Bank Family Fatally Stabbed - Associated Press

Gaza Engineer Being Held in Israeli Prison - Washington Post

Lebanon

Lebanon: Hariri Indictment Grows - New York Times

Prosecutor Expands Secret Hariri Murder Indictment - Associated Press

Prosecutor Files Expanded Indictment in Hariri Probe - Agence France-Presse

Iraq

Iraqi Prime Minister Softens Tone On Protests - NPR

Iraq Protesters Call for Jobs, Better Services - Agence France-Presse

Iraq Kurds Protest, Man Tries to Set Himself Ablaze - Reuters

Iraq Protesters Accuse Security Troops of Beatings - Associated Press

Iran

Iran's Battered Opposition: A Leadership Neutered - The Economist

Ayatollahs Battle 'Jasmine Revolution' Infection - Vancouver Sun

Rafsanjani May Have Fought His Last Battle - Radio Free Europe

London Olympics: Cameron Says Iran Would Not Be Missed - BBC News

Iran Expels AFP Journalist - Agence France-Presse

Japan Earthquake / Tsunami

Maps: Reach of the Japanese Quake and Tsunami - New York Times

Japan Quake Damage Mounts; Reactor Watched - Wall Street Journal

Japan Reeling After Quake - Washington Post

Japan Struggles to Reach Survivors - New York Times

Quake Leaves Apocalyptic Scene in Japan - Los Angeles Times

5 Nuclear Reactors in Peril - Washington Post

Japan Orders Evacuation Near 2nd Nuclear Plant - New York Times

Huge Quake, Tsunami Kill Hundreds in Japan - Voice of America

Japan Begins Quake Relief Mission - BBC News

Japan Quake, Tsunami Said to Kill Hundreds - Washington Post

U.S. Offers Japan 'Immediate' Earthquake Aid - Voice of America

U.S. Military, Aid Groups Prepare to Assist - Washington Post

Gates Pledges U.S. Help for Japan - AFPS

Military Gears Up to Help Japan - AFPS

Piracy

Federal Judge Won't Acquit Convicted Pirates - Associated Press

WikiLeaks

Government Can Get Records from Twitter for Probe - Washington Post

Demand for Twitter Details in Wikileaks Probe Upheld - BBC News

U.S. Official: Manning'sTreatment 'Stupid' - Washington Post

DoS Spokesman Crowley: Manning's Treatment 'Stupid' - BBC News

Obama Defends Manning's Detention Conditions - New York Times

Obama: Treatment of WikiLeaks Suspect Appropriate - Associated Press

U.S. Department of Defense

DOD, Governors Bridge Gaps in Disaster Response - AFPS

Retired General to Review Religion at AF Academy - Associated Press

United States

U.S. Mayor, Police Chief Charged with Smuggling - Washington Post

Blackwater Contractors Convictedin Va. Trial - Washington Post

U.S. Approved $40 Billion in 2009 Private Arms Sales - Associated Press

U.S. Inquiry on Military Family Foreclosures - New York Times

Iraq, Afghanistan Veterans Struggle to Find Jobs - Associated Press

Muslim Hearing: Much Drama, Little Substance - Washington Post

Africa

Ivory Coast Government Criticizes A.U. For Recognizing Ouattara - VOA

Ouattara Scores A.U. Victory but Faces Death Threats - Associated Press

Ivory Coast Crisis: 'Nearly 450,000 Refugees' - BBC News

Militia Fighters Attack South Sudan Oil Town - Reuters

Zimbabwe PM Morgan Tsvangirai Wants Mugabe 'Divorce' - BBC News

Charles Taylor's Sierra Leone War Crimes Trial Closes - BBC News

Americas

Honduras: Mexican Cartel May Be Behind Cocaine Lab - Associated Press

Mexico's Drug War Intrudes on Monterrey - Washington Post

Mexican Army Raid Drug Camp, 8 Gunmen Killed - Associated Press

Cuba Frees Well-known Dissident - BBC News

Aristide Returning to Haiti in Days - Associated Press

Asia Pacific

Human Rights Advocates Vanish, China's Crackdown - New York Times

China Cyber-warfare Capability a 'Formidable Concern' - BBC News

How N. Korea Skillfully Exploited Defector Standoff - Christian Science Monitor

Bomb Blast Kills 3, Wounds 9 in South Philippines - Associated Press

Europe

European Leaders Agree on Closer Economic Coordination - Associated Press

French Police Arrest 4 Basque ETA Suspects - Associated Press

Vice President Biden's Moscow Visit - Washington Post editorial

South Asia

Sri Lanka PM Retracts India Rebel Training Camp Claim - BBC News

Jailed Nepal TV Chief Mohammed Ansari 'Shot by Hitman' - BBC News

This Week at War: Libya's Endgame

Fri, 03/11/2011 - 8:15pm
Here is the latest edition of my column at Foreign Policy:

Topics include:

1) Libya's rebels scramble to hold out

2) Think grand strategy is too hard? It's really not, say Kaplan and Kaplan.

Libya's rebels scramble to hold out

The armed uprising against Libyan strongman Muammar al-Qaddafi appears to be cracking, and it may collapse before U.S. President Barack Obama and other Western leaders have sorted out their policies toward the rebellion. Qaddafi, the rebels, and Obama will each have to quickly consider their political and military strategies as what may be the endgame approaches in Libya.

According to the BBC, military forces loyal to Qaddafi have broken through the rebel's defenses outside Ras Lanuf, the oil town that was the western perimeter of the rebel's stronghold over the eastern half of Libya. A few days earlier, rebels were ejected from Bin Jawad, the next town further to the west along the coast road. The risk now is that rebel morale and cohesion will shatter and that they will be unable to establish another defensive line before loyalist mechanized forces advance down the coast road toward Benghazi, the capital of the rebellion. Further complicating the rebel's task is the apparent collapse of rebel resistance in the western town of Zawiya, near Tripoli. Pacification of Zawiya would allow Qaddafi to redeploy reinforcements for the push on Benghazi.

Qaddafi's key vulnerability at this moment is the ability of his forces to maintain his advantage in mobility. The combatants are fighting down the coast road and the adjoining open terrain between towns. The military advantage will go to the side that keeps its tanks and infantry fighting vehicles -- all highly susceptible to breakdowns -- repaired and in the fight. Should Qaddafi ultimately win the war, those most deserving of credit might be those contractor mechanics he has undoubtedly hired to keep his armored vehicles running.

Knocked back on its heels and perhaps with its time nearly up, the Libyan resistance has belatedly launched the political element of its strategy. The Libyan National Council, the rebel leadership group, rolled out its members to a Wall Street Journal reporter covering the war from Benghazi. The rebels were careful to put a moderate and technocratic face on their movement. The rebellion scored a success when it convinced the French government to officially recognize it. And in a trip next week to Egypt, U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has agreed to meet with representatives of Libya's resistance.

President Barack Obama's administration has maintained its own resistance to getting involved in the Libyan civil war. According to the Washington Post, the Obama administration has decided to take action in Libya only as a member of a much broader international coalition, for example after intervention has been approved by the Arab League, NATO, or the U.N. Security Council. Approval by these organizations typically requires consensus, which is bad news for the rebels holding out against Qaddafi's counterattacks.

Obama undoubtedly knows that he will face intense criticism if he stands by while Qaddafi ruthlessly crushes the rebellion. Knowing this, we must presume that outcome, assuming Obama allows it to occur, is part of a larger calculation of risks. What might those calculations be? Topping the list might be that Obama and his advisors have decided that they want to encourage no more rebellions in the Arab world, particularly in Saudi Arabia or elsewhere on the Sunni side of the Persian Gulf. Egypt's Tahrir Square may have been exhilarating, but Obama and his advisors may now have had enough of that kind of excitement. If it will incentivize tranquility in Riyadh, Obama may be —to let Qaddafi win this one.

Think grand strategy is too hard? It's really not, say Kaplan and Kaplan

The latest issue of the National Interest features an essay on America's grand strategy by Robert D. Kaplan (recent author of Monsoon and many other books on current history) and Stephen S. Kaplan, who recently retired after a 30-year career at the CIA. Titled America Primed, Kaplan and Kaplan puncture the myth that an effective grand strategy is a puzzle too difficult for Washington's statesmen to solve. In fact, the Kaplans argue that the grand-strategy puzzle practically solves itself -- as long as future U.S. presidents exercise some restraint, prudently tend to their military power, and can finesse a few straightforward dilemmas.

The United States' paramount geostrategic objective should be to ensure that no one power or alliance of powers effectively dominates Eurasia. What will make grand strategy so easy, they suggest, is that all of the other consequential powers -- they mention China, Russia, and India -- have problems of their own and possess few of the advantages held by the United States. And competition among Russia, China, and India should ensure that Eurasian power remains divided.

Kaplan and Kaplan explain those strategic advantages the United States enjoys that will keep it on top for many more decades. None of the three aforementioned consequential powers has the global alliance system that the United States has throughout the "Anglosphere," Europe, and East Asia. Compared with the United States, China, Russia, and India lack the soft-power stature and skills to build such alliances, at least for many years into the future. Best of all, according to the Kaplans, a bit of a growing military menace in China and Russia is actually a good thing from Washington's perspective; it focuses minds among America's allies in Asia and Europe and makes them more eager and cooperative partners. For the same reasons, they argue, there is little to fear from Iran's nuclear and ballistic missile programs -- the reaction by America's Sunni-Arab allies will boost Washington's influence in the region and may even lead to a rapprochement between Israel and the Arabs.

The Kaplans' advice for Central Asia is two-fold: Get tough with a misbehaving Pakistan, and get out of Afghanistan, without leaving a mess behind. Here, the Kaplans haven't figured out the Catch-22 that Afghanistan has become any better than anyone else. The United States can't get tough with Pakistan while it still has a large army in Afghanistan. But neither do policymakers in Washington seem —to take the risk of a collapse in Afghanistan even though it is clear they desperately need the $100 billion spent annually in Afghanistan for air and naval modernization in the western Pacific. The Kaplans argue, "[T]he United States can only start to withdraw from Afghanistan, without its current regime being toppled shortly thereafter, if Islamabad fundamentally alters its policy. Pakistan's military and ISI will not do that without the application of more political and economic pressure." But Washington cannot apply that pressure while Islamabad controls the supply routes, and thus the war, in Afghanistan. The Kaplans don't have a convincing answer to this dilemma.

In the Kaplans' tour of the globe, many of the world's most significant geopolitical problems, apparently governed by the forces of regional self-interest, seem to practically balance themselves, at least from Washington's perspective. It would be comforting to think that the American electorate won't have to reliably elect a succession of Bismarckian geniuses in order to maintain global stability. Unfortunately, it won't be that easy.

The Kaplans describe what could be an effective operating principle for American grand strategy, namely regional balances around the Eurasian periphery, backstopped by U.S. security agreements with allies in each region.

To make such a system work, U.S. statesmen will have to display wisdom along three dimensions. First, they will have to ensure that the United States will continue to be able to afford the required military power. Second, they will have to convince allies that the United States still has the will to use its military power while at the same time not squandering that power fruitlessly. Third, U.S. statesmen will have to avoid the problem of "moral hazard" with its allies, convincing them to make significant contributions to the regional balancing system while those allies simultaneously know that the United States will be their backstop (or "bailout").

These are timeless dilemmas for which neither the Kaplans nor anyone else has written a formula. Future U.S. presidents might not have to all be Bismarcks. But neither can they count on grand strategy taking care of itself.

Once-Secret Iraqi Documents Offer Lesson for Libya

Fri, 03/11/2011 - 4:14pm
Once-Secret Iraqi Documents Offer Lesson for Libya by Yochi J. Dreazen, National Journal. BLUF: "An analysis of the documents by the U.S. Military Academy's Combating Terrorism Center found that Libya sent more fighters to Iraq on a per-capita basis than any other Muslim country, including Saudi Arabia. Perhaps more alarmingly for Western policymakers, most of the fighters came from eastern Libya, the center of the current uprising against Muammar el-Qaddafi."

Events Update

Fri, 03/11/2011 - 12:49pm
COIN Center: Monthly Webcast

The US Army Counterinsurgency Center is pleased to host Dr. John A. Bonin, Professor of Concepts and Doctrine at the U.S. Army War College, Carlisle Barracks, Pennsylvania. Previously, he was the Scholar in Residence for the Army Heritage Center Foundation. He will be presenting from the U.S. Army War College on Thursday, 17 March 2011 at 1000 CST, 1100 EST, 1500 ZULU. His briefing is entitled Building the Security Capacity of Partners. Please see this slide for additional details.

Those interested in attending may view the meeting online at https://connect.dco.dod.mil/coinweb and participate via Defense Connect Online (DCO) as a guest. Remote attendees will be able to ask questions and view the slides through the software.

Certificate Errors: Anytime you have problems connecting to DCO meetings and get "certificate" or "security" errors pop up, go the main DCO website and click on "DoD Certificates Download" link on the left-hand side. It will bring up a pop-up window and click on the first link "InstallRoot 3.13.msi" and run this installer to install the DoD Root Certificates. That should fix any certificate/security errors from then on when connecting to DCO.

Army War College: America and Its Profession of Arms

The Commandant of the U.S. Army War College cordially invites you to join this critical conversation at the U.S. Army War College's XXII Annual Strategy Conference to be held at Carlisle Barracks, Pennsylvania from April 5-7, 2011. Join over 20 leading experts, the U.S. Army War College Class of 2011, and 200 other strategists, academics, journalists, government officials, business leaders, and other members of the public as they examine and debate the critical relationship between the U.S. military and the American society. The conference will include panels discussing the changing role of the military; the possible divergence of the cultural perspectives of the U.S. military and American society in general; and the potential impact such cultural divergence could have on various groups, including those representing both the profession and the larger society--such as military families and veterans. The conference agenda can be found here.

Marine Corps University: Emerald Express

Marine Corps University, in partnership with the DoD Minerva Research Initiative and the Marine Corps University Foundation, is proud to announce its 2011 Emerald Express Strategic Symposium, entitled Al-Qaida after Ten Years of War: A Global Perspective of Successes, Failures and Prospects. The one-day conference will be held 26 April 2011 at the Gaylord National Resort and Conference Center, National Harbor, MD.

The conference will examine the multidimensional aspects of the Al-Qaida threat in various theaters where it currently operates or may do so in the future. The symposium will bring together authorities on Al-Qaida from academia, government (both military and civilian), think tanks, and media from both the United States and from the regions under discussion. We are proud to feature Gen Michael V. Hayden (USAF, Ret), the former Director of the CIA, former Director of the NSA, and former Principal Deputy Director of National Intelligence, as our morning keynote speaker.

To see the agenda and/or register, please visit the symposium website.

11 March SWJ Roundup

Fri, 03/11/2011 - 1:01am
Afghanistan

Petraeus to be Succeeded by Marine Gen. John Allen - Best Defense

Afghan Forces to Start Taking Over - Associated Press

Troops Expand Security in Eastern Afghanistan - AFPS

Clinton: U.S. Will Keep Helping Afghan Women - Washington Post

Cousin of Afghan President Is Killed in NATO Raid - New York Times

NATO Troops Kill Karzai's Cousin in Botched Raid - Washington Post

NATO 'Kills Cousin of Afghan President Hamid Karzai' - BBC News

Report Lists Afghan Civilian Deaths - New York Times

Afghan Suicide Blast Kills Kunduz Police Chief - BBC News

Gaining on the Taliban - Washington Post opinion

Pakistan

Pakistan anti-Taliban Militia 'Ends Government Support' - BBC News

Middle East / North Africa Unrest

U.S. Officials at Odds over Libya Outcome - Los Angeles Times

DNI Clapper Says Gaddafi Likely to Prevail - Washington Post

U.S. Spy Chief Says Gaddafi Forces to Prevail - Reuters

Qaddafi Forces Gain Momentum; Rebels Flee Town - New York Times

'They Just Kept Bombing and Bombing' - Wall Street Journal

U.S. Escalates Pressure on Libya Amid Mixed Signals - New York Times

Libyan Rebels Gain Diplomatic Advance, but Retreat on Battlefield - VOA

Clinton to Meet with Libyan Rebels - Washington Times

Advance by Gaddafi Forces Sends Rebels Fleeing - Washington Post

Rebels Forced from Libyan Oil Port - BBC News

Rebels Retreat from Libyan Oil Port Amid Barrage - Associated Press

Gaddafi Threatens Offensive, Ignores Diplomatic Moves - Reuters

Threat of Trial Keeps Gadhafi Fighting - Wall Street Journal

France Recognizes Libyan Opposition as EU Toughens Sanctions - VOA

Libya: France Recognises Rebels as Government - BBC News

U.S., Europe Pressure Libya But Ease Off Militarily - Associated Press

White House Defends Libya Response - Voice of America

NATO: No Desire to Lead Military Action in Libya - Stars and Stripes

Gates: NATO's Libya Plans to Include Military Options - AFPS

NATO to Send Ships Closer to Libya to Enforce Arms Embargo - VOA

U.S. to Send Aid Teams to Rebel-held Eastern Libya - NBC News

Clinton to Meet Libya Opposition, Warns on Next Steps - Reuters

ICRC Seeks Access to All of Libya as Conflict Intensifies - VOA

3 BBC Journalists Report Being Tortured in Libya - New York Times

Egypt Apologizes for Security Police 'Violations' - Reuters

Egypt Rulers Order 2 Sadat Plotters Freed - Associated Press

Yemeni President Pledges New Constitution - Voice of America

Yemeni President Offers Plan to Amend Constitution - Washington Post

Yemen's Leader Proposes Shifting Powers - New York Times

Yemen: President Saleh Announces 'Parliamentary System' - BBC News

Signs of Dissent More Cisible Among Saudi Youths - Washington Post

'Day of Rage' Planned for Saudi Arabia - Voice of America

Saudi Arabia Police Open Fire at Protest in Qatif - BBC News

Saudi Police Open Fire at Protest - Washington Post

Saudi Police Open Fire To Break Up A Protest - New York Times

Saudi Police Open Fire During Protest - Associated Press

Bahrain Rifts Deepen as Protests Forge Ahead - Associated Press

A No-Fly Zone for Libya - Washington Post opinion

Wrongs to Right on Libya - Washington Post opinion

Iraq

Factbox: Security Developments in Iraq - Reuters

Iraqi PM Defends Performance in Face of Protests - Reuters

Iran

Iran's Response to Middle East Protests is Muted - Washington Post

China May Be Aiding Iran Nuclear Weapon Effort - Bloomberg

Piracy

Somali Islamists Could Grab Tankers for Attacks - Reuters

14 Indicted in Fatal Hijacking of American Yacht - Washington Post

U.S. Jury Indicts 14 in Fatal Pirate Attack on Yacht - Associated Press

U.S. Yacht Killings: 14 'Pirates' Indicted in Virginia - BBC News

Bid to Rescue Danish Hostages from Somali Pirates Fails - BBC News

Somali Pirates Free Indian Crew - BBC News

WikiLeaks

Amnesty Int'l Urges Support for WikiLeaks Suspect - Associated Press

U.S. Department of Defense

Schwartz, Stavridis Tops For JCS Chairman - DOD Buzz

Lawmaker Concerned Navy Fleet isn't Ready for Combat - The Hill

Army Wasting Millions on Untested, Unneeded Gear - Stars and Stripes

Army Disciplines 9 for Not Flagging Fort Hood Suspect - CNN News

United States

Congress Holds Hearing on Radicalization of U.S. Muslims - VOA

Domestic Terrorism Hearing Opens, Contrasting Views - New York Times

Hearings: Key Moment in an Angry Conversation - Washington Post

King Stands by Hearing on Islamic Radicals - Washington Times

Peter King Warns al-Qaeda Recruiting U.S. Muslims - BBC News

Hearing on Islamic Extremism Touches Nerves - USA Today

Terror Hearing Puts Lawmakers in Harsh Light - New York Times

American Muslims: The Problem or the Solution? - Christian Science Monitor

DOD, State Department Present Budgets to Senate - AFPS

Africa

Somali Islamists Could Grab Tankers for Attacks - Reuters

Ivory Coast's Gbagbo Rejects A.U. Mediation Proposal - Voice of America

Ivory Coast's Gbagbo Bans U.N. and French Flights - BBC News

450,000 Flee Ivory Coast Conflict, Aid Agencies Say - Reuters

Zimbabwe Energy Minister Mangoma Arrested - BBC News

Arrest Imperils Power-Sharing Government in Zimbabwe - New York Times

Guinea Junta Army Recruits in Kissidougou Riot - BBC News

Madagascar's Interim President to Form New Transitional Government - VOA

Charles Taylor's Attorneys Question Credibility of Prosecution Witnesses - VOA

Americas

Mexico Lawmakers Demand Answers About Guns - Los Angeles Times

Mexico: Former Tijuana Top Cop Takes on Troubled Juarez - Associated Press

Signs Announce New Gang in Western Mexico State - Associated Press

Colombia Threatens Companies Who Pay Ransom to Rebels - BBC News

First Honduras Cocaine Laboratory Discovered - BBC News

11 Sentenced in El Salvador in Filmmaker's Killing - Associated Press

Bolivia President Morales Attacks Drug Reports - BBC News

Bolivia Seeks Wife of Jailed Former Drug Chief - Associated Press

Chile's Leader Ends First Year With Mixed Results - Associated Press

Cuba: Church Says Dissident, 9 Others to Be Freed - Associated Press

Clinton Calls on Cuba to Release Gross - Associated Press

Asia Pacific

China Deemed Biggest Threat to U.S. - Washington Times

Dalai Lama Gives Up Political Role - New York Times

Dalai Lama Will Relinquish Political Role - Washington Post

Tibet's Exiled Dalai Lama to Devolve Political Role - BBC News

Finding a Soul Mate for North Korea's Kim Jong-Un - New York Times

Activist Preparing Another Balloon Launch in S. Korea - Stars and Stripes

Japan PM Says Won't Resign Over Foreign Donations - Associated Press

Europe

In Moscow, Biden Gets Specific on Corruption - Washington Post

Biden Backs Russia for Spot in WTO - Associated Press

'ETA Military Chief' Arriola Arrested in France - BBC News

Turkey's Bad Example on Democracy - Washington Post editorial

South Asia

India: Arrests Before Telangana 'Million-man' Rally - BBC News