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Archive for August, 2009

Recommended Reading

Wednesday, August 5th, 2009

Top Billing! Chicago Boyz (James McCormick) – Book Review – Part 1 of 2 – Nisbett, Intelligence and How to Get It  and Book Review – Part 2 of 2 – Nisbett, Intelligence and How to Get It ( and also, as a bonus, Mini-Book Review: Stanton – Horse Soldiers)

After reading this mighty, 10,000 word essay by James McCormick, I ordered Richard Nisbett’s INTELLIGENCE AND HOW TO GET IT from Amazon, which arrived yesterday. It’s a solid book.

SWJ BlogPentagon Weighs Social Networking Benefits, Vulnerabilities

This is an error on the part of DoD – and the effect will be compounded by the idiocy of the Left-wing Democrats in Congress trying to kill funding for public diplomacy, IO, EW while bloviating about nonexistent propaganda being directed at US citizens. A perfect example of risk averse bureaucrats opting for a closed information system that will retard our already lethargic and obtuse message capabilities. Here is more commentary on this or related topics:

Stars & Stripes (Megan McCloskey) –When it comes to social media, military is anything but uniform NEW!

Danger RoomPentagon Wrestles with Possible Twitter, Facebook Ban (Updated)

IntelFusionI thought Marines improvise, adapt, overcome… and never quit.

Selil BlogCyber warfare: Call in the generals march out the peons

Threatswatch (Tanji)Who Needs a Cyber Czar?

Washington Post (Ellen Nakashima)Top Cybersecurity Aide At White House Resigns

Other matters…….

Fabius MaximusHow will the Long War affect America? Will it make us stronger or weaker? Crazy? Unleash our dark side?

FM asks what effect a Long war will have on the American character, society and government.

Coming Anarchy –  How Is America Going To End?

Curzon looks at theories about America’s future fall.

David AxeMeet the “New” U.S. Air Force

In agreement with Axe.

John HagelDefining the Big Shift

Hey, as we all know…shift happens. Just kidding, John has important principles here.

National Security ArchiveSaddam Hussein Talks to the FBI

Primary source docs.

Information DisseminationPirates! In the Baltic Sea?

Return of the Vikings

That’s it!

COIN in the Land of Light

Monday, August 3rd, 2009

Nuristan, “The land of Light” (formerly Kafirstan), was the last pagan region of Afghanistan to accept Islam, only in 1895 after a long struggle with “the Iron Emir” Abdur Rahman Khan. It was also one of the first provinces to rebel against the Soviet invasion. The Taliban fared no better there than did the Russians. More or less, Nuristan and the Korengal valley in Kunar province are “Afghanistan’s Afghanistan”.

The Institute for the Study of War has a recent PDF on American COIN operations in this difficult region. They pick up on Frank Hoffman’shybrid war” concept:

Kunar and Nuristan Report: Rethinking U.S. Counterinsurgency Operations (PDF) by Michael Moore and Maj. James Fussell

Excerpted findngs:

In the Korengal, the presence of U.S. forces exacerbates tensions resulting in hostility and facilitates violence in the region, negating the U.S. efforts to bring stability and security.

A type of hybrid warfare should be implemented in Kunar and Nuristan; a combination of counterinsurgency warfare, with its focus on the populations, and mountain warfare, whereby the U.S. forces seize and hold the high ground.

Additional emphasis must be placed on U.S. forces demonstrating the immediate and tangible benefits of their presence in the region. Short term humanitarian assistance such as medical and dental aid, radios, and blankets must be paired with long term economic development projects.

  • Although counterinsurgency doctrine was successfully implemented in urban Iraq, it has proved more difficult to apply in the sparsely-populated mountains of Kunar and Nuristan.
  • U.S. forces are disproportionately committed to defending marginally significant areas in these remote provinces.
  • U.S missions in eastern Afghanistan, specifically places like the Korengal and Pech River Valley, must be re-examined and forces must be re-deployed to areas where they will have greater effect.
  • The Korengal Valley in Kunar province is the deadliest place in Afghanistan. The population is historically hostile to any outside influence, including any Afghans from outside the valley.
    • The Korengalis have successfully fought off every attempt to subdue their valley, including the Soviets in the 80s, the Taliban rule in the 90s, and currently, the U.S. military. 
  • The presence of U.S. forces in the Korengal generates violence and undermines U.S. efforts to bring stability and security.   
    • The current U.S. force disposition in the inhospitable valleys, like the Korengal, relies too heavily on isolated outposts that require massive amounts of artillery and airpower to defend
    • U.S. forces are not denying the enemy the high ground, allowing insurgents to attack and terrorize the population.  
    • Artillery and airpower are counterproductive in dealing with the insurgency in this part of the country because their use alienates the very population the U.S. is trying to secure.
    • Committing additional forces in order to hold this remote terrain would be tactically and operationally imprudent. The resistance in this area is confined to locals in the valley.  It does not accelerate the insurgency beyond the valley.
  • Counterinsurgency in Afghanistan requires less interdiction on the borders and greater security in the population centers.  Resources must flow to areas that are strategic priorities in order to allow force densities high enough to practice counterinsurgency effectively.      
    • Rather than maintaining positions in the Korengal and many of the small, ineffective posts that dot the Pech river valley, U.S. forces should conduct active patrols in the populated areas of the lower Kunar River Valley.
    • U.S. forces must protect the specific populations that oppose the enemy and support the government, rather than fighting populations that historically resist the government.  U.S. forces in Kunar should concentrate efforts in places like Mara Wara, Sarkani and Khas Konar Districts where the population actually desires U.S. support and presence, unlike the Korengalis. 
  • Counterinsurgency requires short-term economic support, as well as a dense and mobile force presence.  U.S. forces must pair long-term development projects, such as building roads, with short-term, immediate humanitarian assistance and quick-impact projects.

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