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Archive for the 'Foreign Policy' Category

McChrystal’s blueprint for nation-building

September 23rd, 2009, 3:08 pm by by Alan Bock, Register editorial writer

I have finished reading Afghan Gen.-in-charge Stanley McChrystal’s “assessment” on the Afghan war and am somewhat blown away by how thoroughly nation-building it is. I probably shouldn’t be surprised. McChrystal was chosen because he’s supposed to be an expert on counterinsurgency, and this assessment basically consists of plugging what can be garnered from the facts on the ground into classic counterinsurgency doctrine. The trouble is that while the doctrine is well-established among military intellectuals (if that isn’t an oxymoron) it has hardly ever worked in the real world. Basically, it involves winning the “hearts and minds” of the populace first by protecting them and offering economic development (roads, infrastructure projects, etc.) and effective, credible governance, thus neutralizing the appeal of the insurgents — as opposed to seeking out and killing the insurgents. The traditional doctrine, however, dictates force levels that would transfer to something like 500,000 foreign troops in Afghanistan (there are 68,000 now) and at least 10 years of patient nation-building.

Herewith a few key excerpts:

“To execute the strategy we must grow and improve the effectiveness of the Afghan National Security Forces (ANSF) and elevate the importance of governance.”

“Our strategy cannot be focused on seizing terrain or destroying ninsurgent forces; our objective must be the population.” [an admission that neither the government nor the coalition forces "have" the population now]

“the objective is the will of the people, our conventional warfare culture is part of the problem”

“resources will not win this war, but under-resourcing could lose it.”

“the international community must provide substantial assistance to Afghanistan until the ASfghan people make the decision to support their government and are capable of providing for their own security.”

“The second threat [the first is the existence of the insurgency] … is the crisi8s of popular confidence that springs from the weakness of GIRoA [Afghan govt.] institutions, the unpunished abuse of power by corrupt officials and power brokers, a widespread sense of political disenfranchisement, and a longstanding lack of economic opportunity.” In McChrystal’s view, the US must fix all this — good luck — for success to be achieved.

“There are no clear lines separating insurgent groups, criminal networks (including the narcotics networks) and corrupt GIRoA officials. Malign actors within GIRoA support insurgent groups directly, support criminal networks that are linked to insurgents, and support corruption that helps feed the insurgency.”“Hard-earned credibility and face-to-face relationships, rather than close combat, will achieve success. This requires enabling Afghan counterparts to meet the needs of the people at the community level thrugh dynamic partnership, engaged leadership, de-centralized decisin-making, and a fundamental shift in priorities.

“Success will be achieved when GIRoA has earned the support of the powerful Aghan people and effectively controls its own territory. This will not come easily or quickly. It is realistic to expect that Afghan and coalition casualties will increase until GIRoA and ISAF [international forces] regain the initiative.”

“GIRoA cannot fund its operations because of its inability to raise revenue, a situation made worse by the illicit economy. Poorly paid officials may resort to petty corruption, contributing to the peoples’ crisis in confidence. The international community [us taxpayers] must appropriately supplerment revenues until these problems are addressed.” The fact that foreign aid usually increases corruption rather than reduces it isn’t addressed.

And so on. It’s a heck of commitment. No wonder Obama is trying to buy time before he makes a decision. I’m guessing it will be a commitment to 2-3 years to make Obama appear serious before starting to withdrawal. If McChrystal is right, that’s just a half-hearted commitment enough to guarantee failure, with serious loss of U.S. lives and treasure.

Why not abolish headless agencies?

August 24th, 2009, 4:14 pm by by Alan Bock, Register editorial writer

The NYT today has a tut-tutting story noting that 7 months into his administration Obama still doesn’t have most of his key players in place. Only 43% of the 500 senior policymaking positions have been filled. Obama has more national-security people in place then Bush did at this point, but there’s no Secretary of the Army while fighting two wars, no head of the Agency for International Development, etc. There’s still no Obama head of the Transportation Security Administration, the Customs & Border Protection Agency, the DEA, the Department of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, no intelligence chief at Homeland Security. And the person charged with filling empty posts has already left to become ambassador to South Africa.

Here’s a modest proposal: If a new administration doesn’t have a top dog in place after six months, abolish the agency. Would anyone really miss the Truly Superfluous Agency? The Drug Enforcement Agency and BATFE enforce laws that shouldn’t be on the books at all and may be unconstitutional. Foreign aid tends to entrench despots more than help poor people. And on and on.

Unfortunately, being lax or over-careful about filling top posts leaves permanent bureaucrats or Bush-era holdovers in charge of various agencies rather than raising questions about whether they should be filled at all.

‘That’s Not Torture’ — Song Parody

August 15th, 2009, 12:07 pm by Thomas J. Lucente Jr.

YouTube Preview Image

The latest parody from Versus.

Very funny. Enjoy!

Record Deficits, Yet U.S. Giving Money to Congo

August 12th, 2009, 7:08 pm by Thomas J. Lucente Jr.

South Africa Clinton Africa

What is wrong with this picture?

With unemployment soaring and the economy in shambles, U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton pledged $17 million to Congo to fight sexual abuse.

Are you kidding me?

The government is taking our money and giving it to Congo to fight sexual abuse.

Unbelievable.

By no stretch of the imagination can you say fighting sexual abuse in Congo is a matter of U.S. national security. In fact, there is absolutely zero U.S. interest in the level of sexual abuse in Congo.

All this while the United States in July recorded its 10th straight month of deficit spending and is on track to end the fiscal year with a $1.84 trillion deficit, more than three times last year’s record $454.8 billion deficit.

While you might say $17 million is just a drop in the bucket, it adds up. This is but one example of how the federal government is spending the money it takes from you, money that you could be spending on yourself. Besides, tell the person who just lost his or her job that $17 million taken from U.S. citizens by their government is heading to the Congo to fight sexual abuse in that African country and see where that gets you.

(AP Photo/Schalk van Zuydam)

An uncertain future in Iraq should not sway U.S. departure

June 30th, 2009, 7:43 pm by Thomas J. Lucente Jr.

APTOPIX Iraq US Troops

This photograph by Khalid Mohammed of The Associated Press shows a jubilant crowd in the streets of Baghdad, Iraq, on Monday, celebrating the U.S. military’s departure from the nation’s major urban centers. In addition, fireworks colored Baghdad’s skyline and thousands of people attended a party in a city park where singers performed patriotic songs.

The departure of U.S. forces is a small step toward the ultimate goal of leaving Iraq by the end of 2011, which is still a longtime away.

The reaction by Iraqis, however, is telling. It shatters the Bush administration’s contention that the Iraqis wanted us there and saw the Americans as liberators.

In fact, they wanted us so there so badly that the day we left their major cities, they created a national holiday. If we were truly liberators rather than invaders and occupiers, would they have not made a national holiday for the day Saddam Hussein was deposed?

Still, the move is a good one, though the schedule for complete withdrawal is excessively slow.

I am not completely confident, however, that this is a permanent withdrawal. It is easy to see how a few bombings could be an excuse by the United States to move back into the cities, especially if the current regime is threatened.

However, that should not be our concern. The United States has done all it can and more than it should have to prop up the Iraqi government. Time to let the bird fly the coop, so to speak.

If Iraq falls into civil war, then so be it. Let the people of Iraq determine the nation’s destiny. It is not for us to enforce peace in Iraq.

As Christopher A. Preble of the Cato Institute said, “For decades, the United States has been in the business of doing for other governments what they should be doing for themselves. Now would be a good time to start to change this pattern.

“Iraq is a test case for this change. Nothing that happens there should divert us from a new course.”

Waging Private Wars on Iran

June 17th, 2009, 10:02 am by Bill Goodwin

While Twitter and similar services enable Iranian protesters to evade the government’s media bans, some of the state’s opponents are using the web more proactively. Noah Schactman reports on the increasing use of “distributed denial-of-service” (DDOS) attacks on pro-government and state-owned news sites:

More and more of Iran’s pro-government websites are under assault, as opposition forces launch web attacks on the Tehran regime’s online propaganda arms.

What started out as an attempt to overload a small set of official sites has now expanded, network security consultant Dancho Danchev notes. News outlets like Raja News are being attacked, too. The semi-official Fars News site is currently unavailable.

“We turned our collective power and outrage into a serious weapon that we could use at our will, without ever having to feel the consequences. We practiced distributed, citizen-based warfare,” writes Matthew Burton, a former U.S. intelligence analyst who joined in the online assaults, thanks to a “push-button tool that would, upon your click, immediately start bombarding 10 Web sites with requests.”

The phenomenon raises a raft of issues: not surprisingly, not everyone is comfortable with using the same tactics authoritarian states have long used to crush dissenting voices on the web. Matthew Burton’s take, though, makes the most sense:

I don’t think the idea of disabling your enemy’s communications is right or wrong. That judgment hinges on a few factors. First, “sticking it to The Man” is not a standard philosophical justification, but there is something about it that feels so right. There were reports that the Iranian government disabled SMS on election day and attacked Moussavi’s campaign site. Giving a citizenry the ability to turn the tables on its own government is, I think, what governance is all about. The public’s ability to strike back is something that every government should be reminded of from time to time.

Describing DDOS attacks as disrupting communications puts the act in a much more intelligible light. Certainly no one would argue against members of the Resistance clipping German phone lines. Similarly, the act of shutting down state propaganda organs is neither inherently right or wrong. It depends on the circumstances. In this case, until the government stops shooting protesters and blocking their ability to communicate, the DDOS attacks should continue (unless, of course, they are also inadvertently harming the ability of democratic activists to communicate).

There’s another element that has received less commentary: these attacks seem to represent private acts of war. Returning again to the Resistance example, if pro-democracy types from around the globe were slipping into Iran to cut telephone lines (or fiber-optic cables), they would be labeled terrorist saboteurs. In the digital age, some of the same results can be accomplished from a desk half a world away. I can’t help but wonder about the implications for international conflicts. Is this another example of the monopoly on war slipping away from nation-states or must we accept battles of communication disruption as a fact of life in a digital age?

Bush and administrative evil

April 23rd, 2009, 4:01 pm by Steven Greenhut

Finally, the horrible Obama administration has done something worth applauding. I am glad for the release of the CIA memos, which provide insight into the concept of administrative evil — how normal, decent-seeming people (Are Republican lawyers working for Bush normal?) could end up doing evil things. Government and ideology explains a lot of this. When people work for governments, they feel safe doing things that they would never try on their own. Ideologies help people explain away evil behavior. The Los Angeles Times article today, which reports that prosecutions of mid-level administration lawyers would be a stretch, includes an interesting discussion that sheds light on the way most people see the world. One of the law professors the Times interviewed argued against the prosecutions, but said: “I admit I feel hypocritical about that. If one of our soldiers or CIA agents had been captured by Saddam [Hussein], waterboarded and put in box, and we found out who authorized it, we would insist on prosecuting that person for war crimes.” A Human Rights Watch official ”said there would be a legal consensus in favor of a war crimes prosecution if a American had been waterboarded by Iran, Iraq or North Korea. ‘There would be no controversy, no debate,’ he said. ‘We would seek to prosecute any foreign official who authorized the commission of those acts on an American. And no one would buy the excuse that one of those dictators was relying on the advice of his legal counsel.’”

They are right. Americans would be demanding prosecutions if our troops were on the receiving end of the torture. The rule of law should apply no matter which side our officials are on.

Are We Always Wrong?

April 20th, 2009, 9:23 am by Bill Goodwin

I don’t tend to buy conservative complaints of the left perpetually “blaming America.” I tend to like dissent, and I’m a fan of criticizing America myself, or rather, the politicians who tend to speak on behalf of the nation. The more folks believe government is the problem (and not just one party or another), the better.

That being said, what the hell is wrong with Obama? His first 100 days in office have been characterized by an astonishing number of admissions of guilt.

Expounding on his campaign promise to promote equality, Obama assured America’s foes that the United States is no better than any third world country. “I pledge to you that we seek an equal partnership,” Obama said to Venezuela dictator Chavez. “There is no senior partner and junior partner in our relations.” He then proceeded to, once again, apologize for America’s arrogance.

Obama’s much vaunted tolerance was proudly on display as he politely endured a 50 minute anti-US diatribe from Nicaragua dictator Daniel Ortega. He then graciously, and publicly accepted a book from his new buddy, Venezuela dictator Chavez. Open Veins of Latin America: Five Centuries of the Pillage of a Continent, a virulently anti-American book, instantly skyrocketed to #6 on Amazon.

Mea culpa is now official U.S. policy. In Mexico earlier last week, Obama took the occasion to blame America for all the gun violence in Mexico. Despite the fact that the report he was echoing has been thoroughly discredited, Obama stoically echoed the ‘fake but accurate’, theme made popular by the likes of (discredited) Dan Rather, (discredited Nobel prize winning author) Rigoberta Menchu, (discredited sex researcher) Kinsey…, well, you get the idea.

Is this naivete? Does the President honestly have no idea of the effects of this kind of groveling? And of all the people he should apologize to, he apologizes to statist would-be dictators?

How about an apology for the African farmers crushed by American and European subsidies? How about an apology to Mexico for backtracking on our free trade pledges? How about an apology to South and Central America for the massive harm caused by the drug war?

Of course, those apologies won’t be forthcoming any time soon.

Anti-taxers need to end support for empire

April 16th, 2009, 9:35 am by Steven Greenhut

The lewrockwell.com blog has made some great points about the tax protests. This is a useful movement in highlighting excessive government, but, unfortunately, Lew’s writers are right to note that many of the leaders and attendees at these events were defiantly pro-war and empire. Such things cost a fortune, which is one of a number of reasons Americans pay so much taxes and why government continues to expand. The limited-government movement cannot succeed, in my view, unless it gets back to its roots on foreign policy as well as domestic policy. What good is limited government at home if the national security state has endless powers and the president continues to send troops hither and yon to (don’t laugh too loud) “protect our freedoms”?

Pirate Economist on Ending Piracy

April 15th, 2009, 7:19 am by Bill Goodwin

Peter Leeson, author of the intriguing book, The Invisible Hook, has some ideas as to how we should combat the scourge of Somali (and sundry) piracy, so recently a prevalent issue in the news. His idea? Privatize the oceans.

Rather than trying its hand at Somali state building, the international community should try auctioning off Somali’s coastal waters. According to some Somali pirates, greedy foreign corporations are exploiting valuable resources in these waters, which is allegedly why they’ve resorted to piracy (the large ransoms earned from pirating are a happy but unexpected byproduct of pursuing social justice, I suppose). If this is right, Somalia’s coastal waters should be able to fetch a handsome price. The international community can use the proceeds of the auction for humanitarian assistance in Somalia, or put it in a trust for Somalia’s future government, if one ever emerges. The “high seas” should be similarly sold. It’s not so important where the proceeds go. The important thing is that the un-owned becomes owned.

Without a doubt, the best line:

Establishing private property rights where they don’t currently exist is the solution to about 90 percent of world’s economic problems. Piracy is no exception.

Check it out here.