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Archive for August, 2004

Wednesday, August 4th, 2004

ZARQAWRI IN IRAN ?

Middle East Newsline, which I believe is Israeli sourced, is reporting that Islamist terrorist Abu Mussib al Zarqawri is operating from the Iranian side of the Iran-Iraq border. I find this somewhat unlikely, given Zarqawri’s noted hostility toward Iraqi Shiites, that Iran, even the hardliners, would select him in particular as their Sunni catspaw of choice. Unlike Juan Cole I don’t find prospects of Iranian cooperation with Sunni terrorists impossible; in fact in the case of the Palestinians there is good evidence that this has been going on for years. Iran itself admits to having senior al Qaida figures in some kind of vague custody, though not to helping them directly.

This is difficult to decipher. Iran’s government is much like that of a schizophrenic with multiple personalities – while the hardline Shiite Islamists under Khameini, Rafsanjani and the Security services are dominant, the decision-making process of the leadership is convoluted.

Tuesday, August 3rd, 2004

THOSE WHO SEEK DISCONNECTION – COMBATTING THEIR STRATEGY

Just as statesmen craft strategies to deal with other states and advance national interests, would-be revolutionaries have occasionally put down their objectives in pursuing the destruction of the established order. In Iraq, we seen insurgents using one of the oldest techniques of terror, organizing through a leaderless network of interdependent ” cells” that become self-sustaining systems of recruitment, action and mythic political propaganda. Some examples of strategists of disconnection:

Catechism of a Revolutionary

The Al Qaeda Documents

The al Zarqawri Letter

Mao’s Red Book

Mein Kampf

The Modern Prince

God and the State

The Possessed ( Dostoyevskii, fiction)

The Turner Diaries ( fiction, inspired several Neo-Nazi terrorist groups)

In many historical cases, once these networks have proliferated to a certain point of critical mass the revolution either succeeds or they are thwarted by the advent of equally lawless, competing, self-sustaining, systems, usually referred to by supporters of revolutionary causes as ” death squads”, ” white terror ” or ” war lords “. In reality, these private paramilitaries are more or less morally identical to the revolutionary terrorists in terms of operational practices and organization – they eschew any traditional constraints of the laws of war or the Geneva Convention and commit atrocities against the supporters of revolution( real and imagined) in hopes of disrupting the terrorist movement itself. They are often quite successful in putting a serious dent in the aspirations of revolutionary movements.

While the government gains an advantage in sponsoring a competing network of terror by leveling the playing field it assumes a number of risks. First is that the atrocities committed by the paramilitaries will be attributed to the government by citizens and foreign states causing the terrorists to gain political support and sympathy. Secondly, this practice marks an escalation from a stage of conflict of limited insurgency to that of a general civil war with a rapid increase in human and economic costs and increasing risk of foreign intervention. Thirdly, is the problem of ” Blowback ” where the paramilitaries and terrorist movements alike evolve out of all control, mutate into new and more violent manifestations and the nation descends into a generalized chaos of a failed state.

Alternatively, the state can also opt to fund peaceful but political self-sustaining systems like political parties, trade unions, civic associations, newspapers, charitable groups in an effort to strengthen and immunize civil society against the forces of disconnection and terror. In the meantime, the state continues to wage war on the insurgency, retaining the legal monopoly over the use of force. This is what the CPA should have pursued during the past year in Iraq but failed to do so, among many other important tasks left undone.

At the moment, Iraq seems to be teetering on the brink of sliding into a generalized civil war. Counter-terror groups have made shadowy but minor appearances first against the Sadr militia then in a videotaped threat against the Islamist terror-master al Zarqawri but a commitment to taking that route in earnest has not yet been made. It’s apparently a possibility and one that would be instantly formidible if a deal is cut with the Kurdish Peshmergas and moderate ex-Baathist security personnel. If the U.S. were to pull out of Iraq preciptously in the near future it’s highly likely that Iraq’s interim government will be forced to take this step, lacking any other credible military options.

Tuesday, August 3rd, 2004

CAERDROIA TALKS STRATEGY

Jeff at Caerdroia has a hard-hitting post on strategy and why the Democrats do not have one for the War on Terror. It’s excellent.

I’m hoping that, eventually, the Democrats return to being the party of Truman and JFK because it’s not good for one of the two parties to be in the grip of declinist, defeatist, transnational progressive doves. The convention in Boston was, in terms of style at least, a nod away from that direction and toward political reality but I’m under no illusion that having camera shots of Democrats in military uniforms makes the Democratic Party eager to win this war ( or any war) than having Black faces at the GOP convention makes the Republican Party a booster of the NAACP agenda. It’s going to take a generational change of guard, when the Boomers ease out of power positions, for the Democrats to return to the center again.

Tuesday, August 3rd, 2004

RAND ON PROMOTING THIRD WORLD MILITARY REFORM – A ” GAP SHRINKING ” POLICY

RAND draws on the example of Eastern Europe retooling their old, Warsaw Pact, military establishments to meet the technological and political requirements of NATO and the EU.

Monday, August 2nd, 2004

WHAT IS STRATEGIC THINKING ? HOW CAN WE CULTIVATE IT ?

The general himself ought to be such as one as can at the same time see both forward and backward– Plutarch

I’ve been discussing Dr. Barnett’s book extensively for the reason I think it will be influential – it’s a relatively rare example of in-depth American strategic thinking, a culminating result of many years of briefing and seminar work for Dr. Barnett. Most of the time, whether we are discussing business trends or foreign affairs or education reform we are really discussing tactics, movements to seize an advantage in the near term. Americans are very, very good at tactical thinking – partly I suspect as a result of our liberty centered culture. There are simply relatively fewer obstacles in our lives compared to other societies impeding us from our goals that would require long-term planning to overcome. We’re freer to concentrate on seizing the moment than say an Indian untouchable or a Saudi woman.

Unfortunately, starting with the War on Terror, our preference for tactical maneuver is not going to resolve a conflict with an amorphous, Islamist foe that is imbued with what Reinhold Neibhur once termed ” the demonic fury of fascism”. We need a strategic approach to the war and the related troubles of ” the Gap” that Dr. Barnett outlines in PNM.

I’d like to start with a good article on what constitutes strategic thinking in a cognitive sense. If you don’t have time to read it in full then I suggest you skip down to the diagrams which gives a gist of the author’s point. My definition of strategic thinking would be “ the ability to determine potential goals by understanding how to alter the interconnections of constituent parts within a systemic whole “. Edward De Bono is a good source of information for techniques to change one’s mental perspective and look at problems creatively from new points of view

I also have a suggested reading list of books, besides Dr. Barnett’s, that exemplify, discuss or engage in strategic thinking. Sometimes examples are better than an explanation:

The Art of War (i)

The Art of War (ii)

On War

The Prince

Discourses on Livy

Book of Five Rings

The Persian Expedition

The Muqaddimah

The Peloponnesian War (i)

The Peloponnesian War (ii)

Greek Lives

The Influence of Sea Power on History

The Conquest of Gaul

America’s Economic Supremacy


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