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Monday, November 7th, 2005

MISCELLANEOUS FOREIGN POLICY BLOGGER RESOURCES

Personally, I tend to read more think tank and related specialty site output than daily blog aggregator collections, mostly because I want to read things that are not yet on the radar screen. I thought I would share a few that I have come across recently ( last 3 months +).

No particular endorsement other than check these out and see if they suit your needs. I visit some them sporadically and a few regularly. A few of them are superb for scholarly purposes as well:

The Combined Arms Research Library ( U.S. Army Command & General Staff College)

The SITE Institute ( International Terrorism, heavy Islamist focus)

AccessToLaw ( International Law, Treaties and Covenants)

Power & Interest News Report ( Analysis – high quality summative type)

WorldSecurityNetwork (Global opinion leaders)

Europe’s World ( new Eurocentric policy journal – hat tip to Marc Schulman)

Terrorism Central ( self-explanatory)

OpenCRS ( Congressional Research Service)

Foreign Service Journal ( self-explanatory)

Strategic Intelligence ( Loyola University)

Law, Terrorism and Homeland Security ( News Aggregator)

MIPT Terrorism Data Base ( Statistical & Reference Database)

Sunday, November 6th, 2005

FRANCE’S URBAN INSURGENCY: CAN WE STOP CALLING THEM “YOUTHS” NOW?[ UPDATED]

The French government is having an inordinately difficult time suppressing riots and arson which are spreading like inkblots of disorder throughout French urban areas. Organization, coordination and pre-planning have been suspected in the rioting that began in predominantly Arab-Muslim and North African suburban ghettos but not concretely proven until the discovery today of a gasoline bomb making safe house in Paris. At this point, it is now time to set aside the comforting conceit of out of control “youths”. Amidst the far more numerous opportunistic rioters, France has its own urban, Islamist, insurgency. One that is well-disciplined, experienced, ideologically committed and highly mobile.

France has a tradition of providing asylum to foreign political dissidents that reaches back two centuries. Today that open door includes Islamist extremists the way the doors of the Republic once opened for Eastern European anarchists, antifascist refugees fleeing Hitler and Franco and 1960’s Third World revolutionaries who lionized Franz Fanon. Ayatollah Khomeini directed his 1979 revolution from Paris and his regime’s agents assassinated Shahpour Bakhtiar there in 1991 the way Stalin’s OGPU once iced White Russian emigres in cafes and coffee houses. In the French Muslim community, there exist those with ties to the GIA, Call to Combat, the Muslim Brotherhood, Hizb ut-Tahrir, Hezbollah, various Palestinian factions and other groups more obscure (Chirac has been particularly ingratiating in terms of policy toward Arab-Muslim extremists in Lebanon and among the Palestinians). If these organizations are there, then so is al Qaida.

I think it would be a serious error to conclude that such a movement is very large in terms of numbers. One byproduct of sheltering the planet’s political misfits is that French counterintelligence, both police and state security, is very, very, good . Moreover, with 10 % of the French population coming from Muslim ethnic groups in former French colonies, the language skills and cultural intelligence capabilities are there for French security services in a way the United States can only envy. If these insurgents were numerous they would have been penetrated already. So their elusiveness speaks to the insurgents being a small, tightly-compartmentalized but decentralized network of cells, quite possibly less than 100 people.

The reason the hard core of insurgents directing the rioting in French cities do not need to be numerous is that mob psychology is such that they can rely on being just a spark, rather than a flame:

“Conversely, a crowd is not an incipient riot merely because it assembles a great many people with the predisposing demographic characteristics. For example, every Fourth of July in Chicago’s Grant Park there is a fireworks display that usually attracts about a million spectators. In certain parts of the grounds, people are packed together like sardines, so that individuals substantially lose their ability to decide where to go. One goes where the crowd goes. Going against it is impossible, and even leaving it (unless one is near the edge) may be difficult. Some people dislike the experience, but whatever its discomforts, the Fourth of July crowd at Grant Park is not a riot in the making. The crowd is big, it is loud, it is unmanageable, it is filled with people who have suffered from racial discrimination and economic deprivation, it has, in aggregate, drunk a lot of beer (which is legally for sale at dozens of kiosks at the event); but it is only a crowd, not an incipient riot.

…For a riot to begin, it is necessary but not sufficient that there be many people who want to riot and who believe that others want to riot too. One more hurdle has to be overcome. Even in an unstable gathering, the first perpetrator of a misdemeanor is at risk if the police are willing and able to zero in on him. Thus, someone has to serve as a catalyst–a sort of entrepreneur to get things going–in Buford’s account usually by breaking a window (a signal that can be heard by many who do not see it).

…The entrepreneur will throw the first stone when he calculates that the risk that he will be apprehended for doing so has diminished to an acceptable level. The risk of arrest declines as a function of two variables–the size of the crowd relative to the police force available to control it, and the probability that others will follow if somebody leads. This latter point could potentially be tricky, because as we have noted, crowds will generally be inhospitable to the commission of violent acts. But it is possible for a crowd to telegraph its willingness to riot. Buford’s account (1991: 81n-dash85) of a soccer hooligan rampage in Turin furnishes an example. Members of the crowd marched themselves around in a spontaneous formation with a stilted, unnatural gait, chanting the name of their team. This unmistakable token of cohesion stopped well short of anything that the Italian police could plausibly charge as solicitation or incitement, but served to assure the members of the crowd that a critical mass had formed.

Sometimes a crowd will not clearly commit itself to riot, and in such instances an entrepreneur will take more of a risk getting things started. But if he has done his implicit calculations properly, once the first plate-glass window is broken, the looting will begin and will spread and continue until the civil authorities muster enough force to make the rioters believe that they once again face a realistic prospect of arrest.”

Why is this happening in France today ? Counterpressure. The French government has asserted itself against Islamist ideological encroachment by banning headscarves, attempting to root Salafi radical imams from the mosques, it has squeezed Syria over Lebanon ( and thus Hezbollah) and is ” siding” with the U.S. over the Iranian nuclear program. Both Sunni and Shiite radicals have reasons to see a humiliating French retreat on issues of French internal security as a strategic victory for radical Islamism – another ” 3-11″, as it were.

These Islamist insurgents probably do not have the goal, as did the ’68 leftist radicals, of topping the government itself; with only 10 % of the French population being Muslim, and few of these being Islamist, the backlash from causing a serious systemic disruption would be severe. Too many Frenchmen are veterans of Algeria, are descended from Pied Noirs or subscribe to a culturally conservative Gallic nationalism that looks with loathing at Islam. As John Robb wrote yesterday regarding 4GW forces that overreach:

Complete collapse would create total war (via a bloody civil war). A complete urban/country takedown would prompt the state to launch a total war. This is a type of warfare that global guerrillas are not prepared or able to fight (in contrast, states are well suited to this). By keeping the level of damage below what would be considered fatal to the state, total war is avoided.

( Note: Robb has his own analysis of the insurgency in France up this morning and a further explanation why insurgents have, so far, minimized loss of life)

What the insurgents are trying to accomplish, in my view, is to demonstrate their potential strength to the key decision-making officials in Chirac’s administration and ” punish” them for policies they view as anti-Islam. In the short and medium term, the insurgents would like to secure a modus vivendi that allows the radicals a free hand in the ghettos to oppress their own and a further distancing between France and the United States on Mideast questions. After the LePen phenomenon, it is questionable how much political room Chirac, Sarkozy and Villepin have for such concessions, even if they wanted to make them – which would also run into fierce resistance from top level civil servants in the police and security services.

ADDENDUM:

More analysis on rioting in France is being offered by Dave at The Glittering Eye ( also here and here), the now semi-ubiquitous praktike at Liberals Against Terrorism and
Armed Liberal at Winds of Change.

COUNTERPOINT UPDATE:

Collounsbury thinks I’m a blithering idiot. Dr. Barnett sees the solution in a French Islamist Party.

Friday, November 4th, 2005

COUNTERVAILING ARGUMENTS

Myke Cole in the new feature article “ Meet The New War, Same as The Old War” in U.S. Cavalry On Point counsels caution that revolutionary new forms of warfare may end up being more familiar than we expect. An excerpt:

“When Microsoft exploded onto the scene in the early 90’s, it sparked a new epoch of computing in which processing power was moved to desktop “personal computers” (PCs) and off of the large back-end servers to which most users connected via terminals. Technology analysts and pundits alike heralded this as a new and unchangeable computing paradigm. The past was dead, PCs were the future.

New advents in web technology began to change all that before the ink was dry on those predictions. Sophisticated Cold-Fusion and Java development made a lot of applications easier and cheaper to run on large web servers, making it far easier for users to simply connect to the web through a less powerful computer and have their work done on the back end. Companies like Austin based ClearCube have in some cases already eliminated the PC altogether in several universities, county court systems and two Air Force bases.[9] Seattle based PopCap Games has long replaced Minesweeper and Solitaire as the ultimate waster of productive worker hours through a product line of sophisticated games playable entirely via the web.[10] All any user needs to do most functions, from email to video games to data mining, is have a dumb terminal with internet access.

In less than ten years, the IT of the future looks largely like the IT of the past.

Open source reporting indicates our present major conventional threats; China, Iran and North Korea showing signs of military buildup. Worse, such reporting is proving more accurate than the assessments delivered by our own intelligence services.

…The Times article cited above points out where China’s expenditures have gone, and the list is hardly an indicator of a 4GW strategy: New long-range cruise missiles, hi-tech warships, attack submarines, precision guided munitions and surface-to-surface missile technology.[14]

North Korea’s recent media blitz is due not to 4GW methods of message warfare (Kim Jong-Il appears like a madman uniformly in the press), but rather to the possibility of good old-fashioned nuclear détente.”

Go read the whole thing.

Friday, November 4th, 2005

RESILIENCY GAINS SOME TRACTION – SPURS FURTHER CONTEMPLATION

The State Resiliency post was linked to yesterday by both Dr. Barnett and John Robb – a very good blogospheric sign for the validity of the concept – and they each made some complimentary remarks which I appreciate and encouraged me to develop this idea further. Myke Cole’s suggestions and criticism via email have also been very helpful as were the remarks of Dan, Curtis and Nadezhda (the last of which still requires a reply from me).

Related links: Take a look at John Robb’s post on Evo Morales ( I don’t claim to be an expert on Bolivia but the historical governmental instability of that state is matched only by its unchanging social stratification). A new commenter, Valdis hails from a commercial site – Orgnet.com / InFlow – that nevertheless has a large file of network theory related papers. Finally, Dr. Chet Richards recent ” Beyond Patterns of Conflict” at DNI particularly his reference to John Boyd’s slide “ Theme for Vitality and Growth “(PDF). For the latter note:

  • Boyd’s concept of grand strategy as “constructive” rather than “destructive” like the OODA loop. Recall in Boyd’s Destruction and Creation that destruction-creation is a dialectical engine of change. I see Barnett’s PNM Theory fulfilling the ” constructive” role in the process at the grand strategy level ( but Sys Admin also at tactical) even as 4GW/5GW and Global Guerillaism represent the “destructive” aspect of the dynamic at the tactical -operational and possibly theater/regional strategic level. Very yin-yang, very Schumpeter.
  • Moral strength is composed of what exactly ? Collective vs. individual. Moral (ethical value system) vs. Morale (confidence and cognitive integration of values). Conceptual/Memetic Attraction – winning over neutrals, countering the moral strength of adversaries. State Resiliency would indicate the existence of moral harmony between leaders and the society.
  • Clashes between two equally Resilient forces in the moral sphere would be likely to be the most destructive kind of warfare, even if the combatants were otherwise asymmetrical oponents. Examples of this would be ” epochal wars” like the religiously energized Thirty Years War, the Jews facing Titus at Masada or the modern secular ideological crusade against Nazism or many civil wars, notably the American or China’s Taiping rebellion.

Comments, criticism, thoughts are welcome. I’m still thinking through these concepts myself ( and incidentally doing an excellent job of procrastinating on my actual work!).

Thursday, November 3rd, 2005

THE U.S. CONGRESS LETS DOWN THE FIRST AMENDMENT – AGAIN

Bruce Kesler has the details. I am in complete agreement and share a sense of disgust and outrage.

What this country needs is a political party that supports the idea of limited government and individual liberty.


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