Monday, November 30, 2009

November 30th Morning Readbook

(AP Photo/ al-Lafeta)

Mysterious 'Saddam Channel' hits Iraq TV
Turning on their TVs during the long holiday weekend, Iraqis were greeted by a familiar if unexpected face from their brutal past: Saddam Hussein. The late Iraqi dictator is lauded on a mysterious satellite channel that began broadcasting on the Islamic calendar's anniversary of his 2006 execution. No one seems to know who is bankrolling the so-called Saddam Channel, although the Iraqi government suspects it's Baathists whose political party Saddam once led. The Associated Press tracked down a man in Damascus, Syria named Mohammed Jarboua, who claimed to be its chairman.


Can the Taliban Be Wooed to Switch Sides?
While much of the focus on Tuesday's unveiling of President Obama's revamped Afghanistan strategy will be on the number of U.S. troops he's expected to send, that decision is really a sideshow to the critical battle now under way on the ground. Far more important to prospects of victory in Afghanistan is jump-starting a moribund effort to woo nonideological Taliban fighters to switch sides in exchange for paying jobs. Pentagon officials are hoping to repeat the success of similar tactics in Iraq.


U.S. Cool to Surge in Afghanistan's Own Force
The Obama administration has soured on a call from its top commander to double the size of the Afghan police and army, reflecting the White House's continued skepticism about the Afghan government even as the U.S. prepares a surge of troops into the country, people familiar with the matter say.


Obama’s Speech on Afghanistan to Envision Exit
President Obama plans to lay out a timeframe for ultimately winding down the American involvement in the war in Afghanistan when he announces his decision this week to send more forces, senior administration officials said Sunday.


U.S. offers new role for Pakistan
President Obama has offered Pakistan an expanded strategic partnership, including additional military and economic cooperation, while warning with unusual bluntness that its use of insurgent groups to pursue policy goals "cannot continue." The offer, including an effort to help reduce tensions between Pakistan and India, was contained in a two-page letter delivered to President Asif Ali Zardari this month by Obama national security adviser James L. Jones.


Zardari Cedes Power to Pakistani Premier
Pakistan's beleaguered president, Asif Ali Zardari, is under increasing pressure to step down or to relinquish most of his sweeping powers immediately, as growing political tension threatens the stability of the Muslim nation in the midst of a critical battle with Taliban militants.


The latest news from Al Jazeera

Sunday, November 29, 2009

November 29th Morning Readbook

(AFP/Kirill Kudryavtsev)

Russia hunts bombers of inter-city express
Russian police yesterday hunted for the bombers behind an attack that killed at least 26 people on an elite passenger train, while relatives began the grim task of identifying bodies.


Remains Identified After Russian Train Bombing
A day after investigators determined that the deadly crash of a luxury train was caused by a homemade bomb, relatives of victims arrived in this regional capital on Sunday to carry out the tearful process of identifying the remains.


Bomb pieces steer Russian inquiry toward terror plot
Russian investigators discovered traces of an improvised bomb Saturday on the rail line between Moscow and St. Petersburg, where a train derailment killed at least 26 people in what appeared to be the nation's worst terrorist attack in years outside the volatile North Caucasus.


Pakistan opposition urges prez to give up powers
Pakistan's main opposition party demanded Sunday that the president immediately relinquish much of his power amid calls for the unpopular leader to assume a ceremonial role or resign. The political turmoil threatens to distract the U.S.-allied country from its fight against the Taliban and al-Qaida near the Afghan border.


Pakistan must step up action against al Qaeda-Brown
British Prime Minister Gordon Brown has called on Pakistan to take tougher action against al Qaeda and step up its efforts to track down the group's leader Osama bin Laden.


The Afghan decision
PRESIDENT OBAMA is expected to announce on Tuesday a substantial escalation of the U.S. mission in Afghanistan: more training for the Afghan army, more support for Afghan governance and tens of thousands more American troops. It is a difficult choice but also the right one. While there is no guarantee that the new measures will reverse what is now a losing effort, the alternatives under consideration -- from a more limited counterterrorism strategy to maintaining the current force -- have been tried and have failed. While sending more Americans to war will entail a painful cost in lives, abandoning Afghanistan to civil war or rule by the Taliban would be immoral -- and would endanger key American interests.


Saddam was telling truth in missing Gulf War pilot
Saddam Hussein was telling the truth, this time. The United States just didn't believe him. So it took the most powerful military in the world 18 years to find the remains of the only U.S. Navy pilot shot down in an aerial battle in the 1991 Gulf War.


U.S. hopeful of breakthrough in Iraq vote deadlock
Vice President Joe Biden pressed Iraq's leaders in a series of telephone calls on Saturday to break a deadlock that has stalled preparations for an election seen as critical for U.S. troops to withdraw, officials said.


The latest news from Al Jazeera

Saturday, November 28, 2009

November 28th Morning Readbook

(AFP/File/Aamir Qureshi)


Pakistan: Anti-Taliban Leader Is Assassinated
Shahfur Khan, an anti-Taliban tribal leader, was killed Friday in a roadside bombing, the latest attack against pro-government militias near the Afghan border in northwestern Pakistan.


U.S. Tries New Tack Against Taliban
The U.S.-led coalition and the Afghan government are launching an initiative to persuade Taliban insurgents to lay down their weapons, offering jobs and protection to the militants who choose to abandon their fight.


John Burns Q. and A. on Obama’s Options in Afghanistan
John Burns, the chief foreign correspondent for The New York Times, is answering questions about a New York Times primer on some possible force options available to President Obama as he considers bolstering the 68,000 American troops already in Afghanistan.


Iraqi leaders press ahead on tentative election deal
Iraqi politicians pushed ahead Friday with a compromise on a contested election measure, awaiting approval from Kurdish officials on a deal that would increase the number of seats in parliament as a way to mute criticism and allow a vote crucial to U.S. withdrawal plans.


Suicide attacks down, extortion up in Iraq's Mosul
Drive-by shootings, murders and extortion are the new calling cards of a weakened insurgency in Mosul, replacing suicide bombings as the worst nightmare for residents of the northern Iraqi city.


Al-Qaeda group holds Frenchman abducted in Mali: security official
A Frenchman kidnapped in lawless northern Mali is being held by Al-Qaeda's north African branch, a Malian security official said Friday. Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) is the group which killed a Briton in May, the first time the Islamists had executed a Western hostage, according to observers.


The latest news from Al Jazeera

Friday, November 27, 2009

November 27th Afternoon Readbook

(AFGHANISTAN MILITARY SOCIETY)


US allies may offer up to 5,000 troops for Afghanistan
US allies are expected to announce reinforcements of 4,000 to 5,000 troops for Afghanistan once President Barack Obama commits to deploying extra soldiers there, a NATO officer said Friday.


Karzai reaches out to Afghan Taliban on holiday
Afghan President Hamid Karzai reached out to the Taliban on Friday, part of a call for reconciliation that the palace says will be the main focus of his second term that began last week.


Governor of Afghanistan's Kandahar survives bomb
The governor of Afghanistan's southern Kandahar province survived a bomb strike on his motorcade while heading to prayers for the Muslim Eid al-Adha holiday on Friday, a spokesman said.


Key anti-Taliban figure assassinated in Pakistan
A key anti-Taliban tribal leader was assassinated Friday in a roadside bombing, the latest in a series of attacks against pro-government militias in the Afghan border area of northwestern Pakistan.


Iraq's postmen put their lives in God's hands
At 10:20 am on October 25, postman Mussa Sallus delivered letters to a bank at the ministry of justice in Baghdad. Five minutes after leaving the building, a shock wave blew him off his feet.


Iraqis reach tentative compromise on amended election measure
Iraq's factions pulled the country back from crisis Thursday, reaching a tentative compromise on contested legislation to organize elections next year and potentially avoiding a second veto that could have delayed the vote for months.


The latest news from Al Jazeera

Thursday, November 26, 2009

When Insurgents are Right

(AFP/File/Abdurashid Abikar)

Would we listen? What if they were tied to al Qaeda? In Africa, donated food can destroy struggling local economies since farmers cannot compete with free goods. Fearing for their livelihood, disenfranchised farmers may explore other options typically involving violence.
Islamist insurgents in Somalia have told the United Nations' World Food Program to stop importing food aid into the country.

The group al-Shabab said in a statement Wednesday that the massive importing of food is ruining Somalia's agriculture sector.

The rebels said the WFP must start buying food from local farmers for distribution to the needy.

Al-Shabab warned Somali businesses to stop working with the U.N. agency by January 1, and said the WFP must empty its warehouses of food aid by that date.
You can read the full article here.

Al Shabab released a video
in late September this year proclaiming their allegiance to Osama bin Laden. Unfortunately this legitimate issue of foreign aid ravaging local economies cannot be addressed since it now will be viewed as a concession to terrorists.

This is a perfect example demonstrating a self-sustaining cycle of political violence. The political issue (food aid) cannot be remedied since the opposition group is a terrorist faction. Governments and other authoritative bodies cannot negotiate with terrorists and terrorists cannot recognize the legitimacy of governments and other authoritative bodies. If this were to occur both lose political credibility while the population potentially benefits...or suffers more.

November 26th Morning Readbook

U.S. Ambassador to Afghanistan Karl W. Eikenberry, right, shakes hands with a U.S. soldier, while wishing the group a happy Thanksgiving during a lunch at the U.S. base of Bagram north of Kabul, Afghanistan, Thursday, Nov. 26, 2009. (AP Photo/Musadeq Sadeq)

U.S. Seeks 10,000 Troops From Its Allies in Afghanistan
The United States is scrambling to coax NATO allies to send 10,000 additional troops to Afghanistan as part of President Obama’s strategy for the region. Those countries appear willing to provide fewer than half that number, American and allied officials said Wednesday.


U.S. will be out of Afghanistan by 2017: White House
The United States will not be in Afghanistan eight years from now, the White House said on Wednesday, as President Barack Obama prepared to explain to Americans next week why he is expanding the war effort.


Afghanistan: A Taliban Message
The reclusive leader of Afghanistan’s Taliban has ruled out talks with President Hamid Karzai and called on Afghans to break off relations with his “stooge” administration.


Pakistan Taliban regrouping outside Waziristan
Reporting from Islamabad, Pakistan - Since the Pakistani army launched a long-awaited offensive last month to destroy the Taliban in South Waziristan, many militants have fled to nearby districts and begun to establish new strongholds, a strategy that suggests they will regroup and remain a potent threat to the country's weak, U.S.-backed government.


Singh: India Will Not Let Hatched in Pakistan Mumbai Terror Attacks Happen Again
Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh says he welcomes Pakistani steps to rein in extremists. But he says Pakistan must do everything it can to punish those who planned and carried out the Mumbai attacks last year.


Bombs shake Iraq before Muslim holiday
A series of bombings in Iraq, just before a major Muslim holiday, killed at least five people and wounded 41 others on Thursday. The two deadliest attacks Thursday were in the towns of Iskandariya and Yousifiya, south of Baghdad, an Interior Ministry official said.


Deal near on Iraq vote law, second veto less likely
A preliminary agreement has been reached over Iraq's election law which the country's Sunni Arab vice president is now less likely to veto for a second time, his office said on Thursday.


Analysis: Election debacle in Iraq
The repeated failure of Iraqi politicians to agree on an electoral law is casting doubt on whether crucial elections can be held in January, writes the BBC's Middle East analyst Roger Hardy.


Iraq to counter "lies", show successes via YouTube
Iraq's government launched its first channel on Google Inc's video website YouTube on Wednesday, which the prime minister said would allow the country to counter media "lies" and showcase its successes.




The latest news from Al Jazeera

Tuesday, November 24, 2009

November 25th Morning Readbook

US President Barack Obama stands alongside Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh during a State Arrival in the East Room of the White House. (AFP/Saul Loeb)


Obama seeks to reassure Singh on U.S.-India ties
President Barack Obama sought to reassure Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh on Tuesday of his commitment to boosting U.S. ties with India even as his administration has set its rivals, China and Pakistan, as top priorities.


Obama says will "finish the job" in Afghanistan
President Barack Obama said on Tuesday he will announce his decision soon to send more U.S. troops to Afghanistan in an effort to "finish the job" of an unpopular and costly eight-year war.


U.S. Strategy on Afghanistan Will Contain Many Messages
In declaring Tuesday that he would “finish the job” in Afghanistan, President Obama used a phrase clearly meant to imply that even as he deploys an additional 30,000 or so troops, he has finally figured out how to bring the eight-year-long conflict to an end.


Big Pakistan offensive has failed to nab any Taliban leaders
Most of the Taliban fighters and all of their leaders apparently have escaped Pakistan's widely publicized six-week-old offensive in South Waziristan, forcing the army to begin pounding other parts of the country's lawless tribal area.


Pakistan ex-army officer detained over Chicago case
Pakistani security agencies have detained a former army officer for possible links with two men arrested in Chicago on terrorism charges, an army spokesman said on Wednesday.


Iraq parliamentary election 'not possible in January'
Iraq will not be able to hold parliamentary elections before the end of January as required by the country's constitution, electoral officials say.


Bomb attack sabotaged Iraq-Turkey oil pipeline
A bomb attack in Salahuddin province damaged the Iraq-Turkey oil pipeline more than four days ago and the damage will take up to four more days to fix, an Iraqi Oil Ministry official said on Tuesday.


British and US officials talked of ousting Saddam two years before the Iraq invasion
BRITAIN'S inquiry into the Iraq war has been told British and American officials discussed toppling Saddam Hussein two years before the 2003 invasion. The long-awaited inquiry opened in London with a pledge from chairman Sir John Chilcot that he would not shy away from criticisms where warranted.


The latest news from Al Jazeera.

November 24th Morning Readbook

U.S. President Barack Obama held a final strategy session with top aides on whether to send more U.S. troops to Afghanistan and plans to announce his decision within days, the White House said. (REUTERS/Jim Young)

Obama to Announce Afghanistan Decision Within Days
President Barack Obama held a final strategy session with top aides on whether to send more U.S. troops to Afghanistan and plans to announce his decision within days, the White House said.


Pressure Builds Over Obama’s Afghanistan Plan
As President Obama nears a decision on a troop increase for the war in Afghanistan, he is facing increasingly vocal criticism from senior Congressional Democrats over the war’s cost, the size of the United States troop commitment and the reliability of America’s allies.


Indian PM says Pakistan must reject terror
Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh said Monday that the world must press Pakistan to stop supporting terrorists who continue to target India. Singh, speaking on the eve of an elaborate White House state visit, also urged Pakistan to bring to justice those who planned the Mumbai terror attacks, which left 166 people dead a year ago.


Getting to the negotiating table with the Taliban
As you might expect at a meeting attended by Nato defence ministers and senior officers, there was a lot of support voiced in Halifax over the weekend for the much anticipated Afghan surge. President Barack Obama has yet to make his announcement, which has been delayed until after Thursday's Thanksgiving holiday in the US, suggesting that there is still discord within the administration.


Iraq national vote unlikely in January: official
Iraq will be unable to hold a national election in January as planned, a poll official said on Tuesday, heaping more uncertainty on a vote meant to cement democracy and pave the way for a partial U.S. troop withdrawal.


US helping Iraq adopt election law: Clinton
The United States is "deeply involved" in efforts to help Iraqi rivals adopt an electoral law, but elections may be delayed, Secretary of Stage Hillary Clinton said Monday. "We support the Iraqi government's efforts to pass an election law so that they can proceed with planned elections," Clinton told reporters.


Some 'Sons of Iraq' Sunni militia units still active
Officials said the Sunni-dominated Sahwa militia, also known as Sons of Iraq, has been operating in several provinces in Iraq despite a government decision in October 2008 to disband the force. They said the force, which once numbered 100,000, contains tens of thousands of officers, most of whom were meant to have been transferred to either the security forces or other government jobs.


Terror Case Cites Qaeda Links of U.S. Citizens
Federal officials on Monday unsealed indictments identifying who they said were key actors in a recruitment effort that led roughly 20 young American men to join an extremist rebel group in Somalia with ties to Al Qaeda.


The latest news from Al Jazeera.

Monday, November 23, 2009

November 23rd Morning Readbook

Iraqi Maj. Gen Qassem Atta watches a video confession aired during a press conference in Baghdad (AFP)

Alleged Iraq bombers offer confessions
Three jailed suspects in Oct. 25 bombings that killed more than 150 people in Iraq said they filmed the targeted buildings before the attack and escorted the car bombs in a convoy into Baghdad, according to confessions shown on Iraqi television Sunday. The men, who were seated and wearing orange jumpsuits while speaking in custody, introduced themselves as members of Saddam Hussein's outlawed Baath party.


Iraqi prime minister organizes TV confessions accusing Baathists of terrorism
While the Kurdish autonomous region in the north is encroaching on Iraqi territorial unity, the prime minister in Baghdad is launching a media campaign to counter the Vice President's attempts to reintegrate the mainly Sunni Arab displaced citizens of Iraq. Nouri al-Maliki's Shiite-dominated government staged an appearance on state TV of three men, clad in prison clothes, who confessed their alleged role in planning suicide attacks in Baghdad last month.


Iraq says October 25 bombers came from Syria: spokesman
Iraq on Sunday for the first time said that the bombers who killed more than 150 people in Baghdad on October 25 came from neighbouring Syria, but steered well clear of accusing Damascus of collusion. "The group came from Syria but we are not accusing Syria again," said government spokesman Ali al-Dabbagh on state television.


Iraq PM ramps up attacks on Baathists before vote
A stepped-up campaign by Iraq's prime minister against Saddam Hussein loyalists is alienating Sunni Muslims and stoking tensions between them and the majority Shiites ahead of key national elections. In its latest anti-Baathist attack, Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki's Shiite-dominated government put three men on state television Sunday to confess their alleged role in planning suicide attacks in Baghdad last month. The three, all in detention and dressed in orange prison jumpsuits, said the bombings were ordered by Saddam's Baath Party.


Analysis: Voting With Bombs
Terrorism in Iraq has become the continuation of politics by other means. That came into sharp relief with last month’s bombing of three government buildings here by two suicide truck bombers. It was probably no accident that they chose to strike just as Iraq’s leaders had bogged down on attempts to draft an election law.


FACTBOX-Security developments in Iraq, Nov 22
GARMA - A suicide car bomber blew himself up at a police checkpoint, killing one policeman and wounding seven people, including three policemen, in the town of Garma, 30 km (20 miles) west of Baghdad, police said.

QAIM - Police shot dead a suicide truck bomber as he approached a police station in the town of Qaim, 300 km (185 miles) west of Baghdad, police said. Police managed to dismantle the vehicle without any casualties.

BAGHDAD - A police colonel died of wounds sustained when gunmen opened fire on him while he drove in southern Baghdad's Saidiya district on Saturday, police said. His son was also wounded in the attack.

MOSUL - A roadside bomb wounded two Iraqi soldiers in western Mosul on Saturday, police said.


In 3 Tacks for Afghan War, a Game of Trade-Offs
Should President Obama decide to send 40,000 additional American troops to Afghanistan, the most ambitious plan under consideration at the White House, the military would have enormous flexibility to deploy as many as 15,000 troops to the Taliban center of gravity in the south, 5,000 to the critical eastern border with Pakistan and 10,000 as trainers for the Afghan security forces.


Pakistan to US: Don't surge in Afghanistan, talk to Taliban
The Pakistani government has some advice the Obama administration may not want to hear as it contemplates sending additional US troops to neighboring Afghanistan: Negotiate with Taliban leaders and restrain India. Pakistan embraces US efforts to stabilize the region and worries that a hasty US withdrawal would create chaos. But Pakistani officials worry that thousands of additional American soldiers and Marines would send Taliban forces retreating into Pakistan, where they're not welcome.


The latest news from Al Jazeera.

Sunday, November 22, 2009

November 22nd Morning Readbook

Baghdad security spokesman Major General Qassim Moussawi speaks during a news conference in Baghdad November 22, 2009. (REUTERS/Mohammed Ameen)

Detained Saddam Hussein loyalists confess Baghdad deadly bombings
Iraqi authorities broadcasted on Sunday a video showing three of Saddam Hussein's Baath party members confessing to have planned massive truck blasts that killed and wounded more than 600 people in central Baghdad last month. Qassim Atta, spokesman of Baghdad Operation Command, told reporters at a press conference aired by the official channel of Iraqia that the three confessed their role in committing the deadly bombings.


Al-Qaeda in Iraq regaining strength
The group asserted responsibility for four powerful bombings that targeted five government buildings in Baghdad in August and October -- the deadliest attacks directed at the government in more than six years of war. Authorities say al-Qaeda in Iraq intends to carry out additional high-profile attacks in the months ahead and is attempting to regain its foothold in former strongholds just outside the capital.


Iraq's Oct. oil exports drop due to attacks
An Iraqi official says insurgent attacks caused a 4 percent drop in the country's oil exports in October compared to the previous month, but that revenues were up due to higher prices. Oil Ministry spokesman Assem Jihad says exports averaged 1.877 million barrels a day in October, grossing $4.187 billion with an average price of $71.94 a barrel.


Report: Leaked UK documents detail Iraq war chaos
Leaked British government documents call into question ex-Prime Minister Tony Blair's public statements on the buildup to the Iraq war and show plans for the U.S.-led 2003 invasion were being made more than a year earlier, a newspaper reported Sunday.


US 'helps build anti-Taliban militias' in Afghanistan
The United States has begun helping a number of anti-Taliban militias in several parts of Afghanistan in hopes for a large-scale tribal rebellion against the radical Islamic movement, The New York Times reported late Saturday.


Taliban debating whether to end Afghan war: expert
A debate is underway among the Taliban's senior leadership about finding ways to end the war in Afghanistan, and the Western coalition should pursue peace talks with moderate leaders of the insurgency, says the man widely considered to have the closest contacts, of any Westerner, with the Taliban.


Partisan divide widens as Obama considers Afghanistan policy
As President Obama nears a decision on Afghanistan, he faces a partisan divide in public opinion that is pulling him in opposite directions. His recent statements about the decision suggest that he is trying to accommodate the views with a war strategy that can be successful and contained.


The latest news from Al Jazeera.

Saturday, November 21, 2009

Basics of COIN Part 4: Military Limitations

REUTERS/Bruno Domingos

Foreign conventional military forces cannot provide a self-sustaining economic, educational, medical, or political solution to another nation's insurgency. At most, foreign militaries can temporarily assist in security and provide a logistics chain for other efforts. The idea that a political problem can be completely solved with a military solution is false unless the intent is to create a military dictatorship.

Cultural Aspects

Most cultures with ongoing insurgencies involving the U.S. hold great respect for elders, yet the first face these influential locals meet are a young non-native speaking member of the military. The universal nature of warrior cultures will go only so far in assisting relations. Granted an all-volunteer military affords the opportunity for the best and brightest to end up on the front lines, but this is personality dependent not institutionalized. Does the U.S. military have its most qualified COIN troops leading operations in Afghanistan today? The answer is reflective of the national priority for achieving success.

Origins of Oil Spot

Another danger with military-centric approaches to COIN is the repetition of failed or inapplicable strategy; specifically the oil spot or ink blot. Bernard Fall best sums up the origins of this strategy.
Some people have spoken of what is called the "oil-slick principle," which has been described as the holding of one particular area, one central area, and working one's way out of the center. That was fine when the French developed the concept for the Sahara, because in the Sahara there are obligatory watering points. If they have all the oases, those outside have to come in and get water. But Viet-Nam doesn't happen to be the Sahara or an oasis. Thus, the oil-slick method succeeds mostly in pushing the Viet Cong units into the next province. Of course, it looks good, at least, because for one week there will be a "cleared" province. For the time being this is considered adequate until something more imaginative is discovered.
In a chaotic environment we have what are called attractors. Think of dropping a bag of marbles on your kitchen floor. It would be nearly impossible to accurately predict how each marble would bounce, roll, and settle. But drop a bag of marbles into a large funnel and you could accurately predict where they would end up. Identifying these cultural attractors is critical to formulating a successful COIN strategy. In other words where are the most people, specifically insurgents funneled? The answer contrary to U.S. strategy is not always a city as demonstrated by Fall's oasis example. Sometimes it is a location, an event or time frame.

Dependable Host Nation Partner

Current U.S. COIN doctrine focuses on providing security for the population in order to join the people with their government. But what if the government is an enemy of the population it governs? Or worse, what if the government does not exist in an area? A recent RAND commentary from earlier this summer discusses this issue.
A key tenet of counterinsurgency doctrine is to empower the host government to fight the forces trying to topple it. But in Iraq the government itself was for years little more than a microcosm of the complex mix of conflicts in the country. Attempts to strengthen the government embroiled the United States in a nettlesome political balancing act. The Americans were frequently in the awkward position of picking winners and losers, and often manipulated by one faction to gain advantage over its rivals. The very state forces the United States helped to establish and train were implicated on numerous occasions in systematic sectarian violence.
As a third-party military conducting COIN operations, U.S. forces will be manipulated, used, and befriended by opportunists. This is not always a bad thing, but it will reshuffle the local power. In this situation the counterinsurgents are the revolutionaries seeking to change the status quo. Absent a reliable partner and political indoctrination of local partners, any achievements by the counterinsurgents will be temporary. Upon exiting the nation, they will leave with their money, influence, logistics, and protection for local collaborators.

Counterinsurgents as Revolutionaries

Political indoctrination is at the core of revolutions yet the U.S. military has not institutionalized this at the grassroots level. Although the military may not be the best suited to carry out such a mission, but they are capable of facilitating those trained in indoctrinating the masses. Insurgencies end with political solutions. If the U.S. desires to leave behind a stable and democratic government in Iraq and Afghanistan, political indoctrination is required. The U.S. is asking people to give up their way of life, one that has barely changed for centuries. The ultimate goal then becomes convincing an ancient people into desiring a modern society. Without indoctrinating a population into a culturally acceptable means of adopting such a quantum leap of lifestyle, mission failure can be delayed but ultimately inevitable.

David Kilcullen
speaks to this specific point:
Politically, in many cases today, the counterinsurgent represents revolutionary change, while the insurgent fights to preserve the status quo of ungoverned spaces, or to repel an occupier — a political relationship opposite to that envisaged in classical counterinsurgency. Pakistan’s campaign in Waziristan since 2003 exemplifies this. The enemy includes al-Qa’ida (AQ) linked extremists and Taliban, but also local tribesmen fighting to preserve their traditional culture against 21st century encroachment. The problem of weaning these fighters away from extremist sponsors, while simultaneously supporting modernization, does somewhat resemble pacification in traditional counterinsurgency. But it also echoes colonial campaigns, and includes entirely new elements arising from the effects of globalization.
Demands for modernization without values, politics, ethics, morals, or any sort of culturally translatable narrative gives the insurgents the propaganda opportunity necessary for them to leverage nationalist sentiments. This brings into question the larger debate; is modernization and nation-building necessary to counter an insurgency?

Basics of COIN Part 3: Anarchy and Insurgency

(AP Photo/Mukhtar Khan)

Countering an insurgency is not building a nation

A nation must first exist in order for an insurgency to exist as well. Merriam-Webster defines "anarchy" as:
1a : absence of government
b : a state of lawlessness or political disorder due to the absence of governmental authority
c : a utopian society of individuals who enjoy complete freedom without government
Does this best describe your COIN situation? If so, you are not countering an insurrection, you are countering the creation of government. In other words, YOU are the insurgency. Keep in mind that insurgents are not limited to violence alone as they are trying to establish an alternative form of governance.

Now if you have the mission of fighting against the "bad" insurgents while assisting locals to become part of the national government you support, then welcome to neo-colonialism (aka nation-building).

Is neo-colonialism too strong a word?

Possibly. But ask yourself if the U.S. and NATO would support a democratically elected Taliban government. The fact is that we want a "democratically" elected government that will act in the best interests of NATO and the United States.

You can support that. So what is wrong with nation-building?

The U.S. is terrible at it; instead it unintentionally creates breeding grounds for instability and radicalism. There are certain levels of literacy, education, economics, essential services, and most importantly security that are required for both stability and democracy. Keep those five metrics in mind when reading this list of the most corrupt governments in the world courtesy of Transparency International:
1. Somalia
2. Afghanistan
3. Myanmar
4. Sudan
5. Iraq
6. Chad
7. Uzbekistan
8. Turkmenistan
9. Iran
10. Haiti
Note that most of the listed countries were and still are failed U.S. experiments in nation-building. Democratic elections have brought international legitimacy to HAMAS and Hezbollah among other former insurgent groups. Keep in mind that democracy is a popularity contest and insurgents require popular support.
Before I begin, I say to you that security is an indispensable pillar of human life and that free men do not forfeit their security, contrary to Bush's claim that we hate freedom...No, we fight because we are free men who don't sleep under oppression. We want to restore freedom to our nation, just as you lay waste to our nation.

-Osama bin Laden, October 2004
An insurgent must appear as a modern day Robin Hood in order to maintain popular support. Building a nation does not counter an insurgency, it creates an easy target to popularly oppose, to justifiably attack, and to eventually replace; all while damaging the international reputation of those responsible for its creation.

November 21st Morning Readbook

Iraqi Shiite protesters chant slogans against the veto made by Iraq's Sunni Arab vice president Tariq al-Hashemi on the election law, in front of a banner which reads in Arabic ' Nothing to fear on Iraq as long as Maliki is in power', after Friday prayers in the Shiite holy city of Najaf, on Friday, Nov. 20, 2009. (AP Photo/Alaa al-Marjani)

Iraqi lawmakers seek to end election crisis
Iraq's parliament is discussing ways to end a dispute over an election law after a vice president vetoed the bill, throwing national polls slated for January into question. Vice President Tariq al-Hashemi vetoed the legislation earlier this week. He wants more votes allocated for Iraqis living abroad, most of whom are Sunnis like him.


U.S. officials fear that rebuilding efforts in Iraq may go to waste
In its largest reconstruction effort since the Marshall Plan, the U.S. government has spent $53 billion for relief and reconstruction in Iraq since the 2003 invasion, building hospitals, water treatment plants, electricity substations, schools and bridges.


Gates Says U.S. Could Withhold Aid if Afghanistan Cannot Curb Corruption
Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates said Friday that the United States could start holding Afghanistan’s government accountable for corruption by withholding money for projects “where we control the flow of dollars.”


Conflicting blast reports reflect fear in Pakistan
A gas explosion injured one person and damaged a two-story building in northwestern Pakistan near the Afghan border Saturday. Police initially said it was a bomb but later determined it was an accident.


‘Al-Qaeda, Taliban leaders not in Pakistan’
Strongly reacting to some of the reports of the presence of al-Qaeda and Taliban leadership in Pakistan by the US newspapers and some intelligence agencies, President Asif Ali Zardari on Friday said that Pakistan was seriously cooperating with the international community in the war against terrorism and the sacrifices rendered by it were unassailable.


The latest news from Al Jazeera.

Friday, November 20, 2009

Baghdad & the "Surge"

The "Surge" and the shift to a population-centric COIN strategy obviously did not occur in a vacuum. One of the large contributors to the reduction of violence in Baghdad was the sectarian homogenization of neighborhoods. Take a look at the change from 2003 to mid-2008.




Larger maps covering Baghdad's sectarian layout in 2003, 2006, early 2007, late 2007, and 2008 can be found at the links provided.

A great deal of credit for the dramatic drops in Baghdad violence is given to the change in U.S. strategy, but Shiite militias running out of Sunnis to kill is a significant factor as well.

November 20th Morning Readbook

Former Sahwa leader Adel Mashhadani's arrest in Baghdad's Fadel district on March 28, 2009, triggered street a battle between policemen and the Sahwa, or Awakening, anti-Qaeda militia. (Getty Images)

Sunni leader in Iraq sentenced to death
A leader of a Sunni Awakening Council was sentenced to death for kidnapping and murder yesterday, setting off charges that the Shi’ite-dominated Iraqi government was trying to weaken the Sunni movement, which is credited with much of the reduction in sectarian violence since 2006. The Sunni leader, Adil al-Mashhadani, who led the Awakening militia in the impoverished Fadhil neighborhood of Baghdad, was arrested in March on charges of terrorism.


Iraq’s Election Law Morass
Iraqis have quickly learned to play hardball politics. That was evident on Wednesday when one of Iraq’s two vice presidents, Tariq al-Hashimi, who is a Sunni, vetoed an important election law at the last minute. He demanded a change that would allocate more parliamentary seats for Iraqi Sunnis living abroad.


Suicide bomber kills 13 in western Afghanistan
A suicide bomber riding a motorcycle killed 13 people, including a police officer, and wounded 30 others Friday in a busy city square in western Afghanistan.


U.S. missile strike kills 8 in Pakistan
Eight Islamist militants were killed in a U.S. missile strike in northwest Pakistan on Friday, officials said, after three policemen were killed in a bomb blast.


Why Pakistan Won't Fight the Afghan Taliban
President Barack Obama is about to announce his new strategy for Afghanistan, but the success of whatever option he chooses will depend heavily on Pakistan acting to stop its territory being used to attack Western forces next door. And that's bad news, because the demands of its own domestic counterinsurgency campaign, doubts about the duration of U.S. commitment in Afghanistan and looming political instability in Islamabad have left Pakistan in no hurry to help out.


The latest news from Al Jazeera.

Thursday, November 19, 2009

COIN in California

Photo By Randi Lynn Beach For The Washington Post Photo

I recently stumbled across this article from the Washington Post on veterans teaching COIN techniques to police handling gang issues. The mayor is asking for 84 more officers but has yet to receive a response for funding. Sound familiar?
Since February, combat veterans of Iraq and Afghanistan have been advising Salinas police on counterinsurgency strategy, bringing lessons from the battlefield to the meanest streets in an American city.

"This is our surge," said Donohue, who solicited the assistance from the elite Naval Postgraduate School, 20 miles and a world away in Monterey. "When the public heard about this, they thought we were going to send the Navy SEALs into Salinas."

In fact, the cavalry arrived in civvies, carrying laptops rather than M-16s and software instead of mortars. In this case, the most valuable military asset turned out to be an idea: Change the dynamic in the community and victory can follow.

"It's a little laboratory," said retired Col. Hy Rothstein, the former Army career officer in Special Forces who heads the team of 15 faculty members and students, mostly naval officers taking time between deployments to pick up a master's degree. Their effort in Salinas counts as extracurricular and is necessarily voluntary, given the constitutional bar on the military operating within U.S. borders.
Law enforcement is moving to this population-centric military approach that was based on the best practices in...law enforcement. Apparently the military was not the only occupational field that forgot how to do a foot patrol.

You can read the full article at the link below:
Iraq's lessons, on the home front
Volunteer veterans help California city use counterinsurgency strategy to stem gang violence

November 19th Morning Readbook

(AFP/File/Massoud)

US has time to reconsider Iraq drawdown plan-Odierno
The U.S. military does not have to decide until April or May whether to push back the end of its combat operations in Iraq due to a possible delay in the country's next election, the U.S. commander said on Wednesday.


Al Qaeda in Iraq becoming less foreign-U.S. general
Al Qaeda in Iraq is becoming more Iraqi and less dominated by foreigners as the insurgent group increasingly joins forces with Saddam Hussein's outlawed Baath party, the commander of U.S. forces said on Wednesday.


Karzai Sworn In for Second Term as Afghan President
Tainted by a flawed election and allegations of high-level corruption in his regime, President Hamid Karzai was inaugurated Thursday for a second term, saying the Afghan Army should assume full control of the country’s security within five years.


Afghans say poverty, not Taliban, main cause of war
Most Afghans see not Taliban militants but poverty, unemployment and government corruption as the main causes of war in their country, according to a report by a leading aid group released on Wednesday.


Suicide bomber kills 18 in Pakistan's Peshawar
A suicide bomber blew himself up outside a court building in Peshawar on Thursday, killing 18 people, officials said, in the latest of a series of attacks on the northwestern Pakistan city.


The latest news from Al Jazeera.

Wednesday, November 18, 2009

November 18th Morning Readbook

Pakistani troops walk on a hilltop post near Ladha, a town in the Pakistani troubled tribal region of South Waziristan along the Afghan border, Tuesday, Nov. 17, 2009. (AP Photo/Anjum Naveed)

Abu Ghraib attack raises fears of resurgent Al Qaeda in Iraq
The execution-style killings of 13 Iraqis over the weekend west of Baghdad has raised fears than a resurgent Al Qaeda in Iraq (AQI) is taking advantage of the gaps between retreating US forces and Iraqi troops not yet capable of maintaining security on their own.


Iraq VP vetoes new election law
One of Iraq's two vice-presidents has vetoed part of the country's new election law, putting the parliamentary polls scheduled for January in doubt. Tariq al-Hashemi, a Sunni Arab, revoked Article 1 of the law and called for the representation in parliament of displaced people to increase to 15%.


U.S. divided on troop increase in Afghanistan - poll
A majority of Americans expressed confidence U.S. President Barack Obama's new Afghanistan strategy will succeed, but they are divided over how many more U.S. troops to send there, according to a Washington Post-ABC News opinion poll released on Tuesday.


Afghans on hold, awaiting Karzai, Obama decisions
Its protracted presidential election has finally been decided, but Afghanistan is on hold. President Barack Obama hasn't said how many troops he'll send. Speculation abounds about whether Afghan President Hamid Karzai will assemble a Cabinet of reformers or political friends. It's unclear whether humanitarian work will be curtailed by the U.N.'s decision to relocate several hundred workers out of the country after five staffers were killed in an attack.


Pakistani Successes May Sway U.S. Troop Decision
This windswept, sand-colored town in the badlands of western Pakistan is empty now, cleared of the militants who once claimed it as their capital. But its main brick buildings, intact and thick with dust, tell not of an epic battle, but of sudden flight.


Where are Taliban and al Qaeda commanders, US media asks Pak
A day after senior Pakistani army commanders claimed that their forces have captured all major towns and population centres of the extremist-ridden South Waziristan, Taliban and foreign militants appear to have disappeared and not been eliminated.


Al Qaeda Africa wing less a threat to Europe - U.S.
Al Qaeda's North African wing is less likely now to carry out attacks in Europe, mainly because of pressure on the group from Algerian security forces, a U.S. counter-terrorism official said on Tuesday.


US drone strategy raises concern in Pakistan



The latest news from Al Jazeera.

Tuesday, November 17, 2009

November 17th Morning Readbook

Sahwa militiamen guard a checkpoint on the outskirts of Baghdad. (AFP/File/Aubrey Belford)

Attacks Threaten Fragile Security Gains in Cradle of Iraq Insurgency
Maj. Gen. Tariq al-Youssef caught a fleeting glimpse of the man who wanted him dead. As his armored sport utility vehicle pulled past the battered yellow taxi, General Youssef, the commander of the police in Anbar Province, recalled thinking that the driver looked like so many men in this impoverished territory — another poor peasant trying to eke out a living.


FACTBOX-Security developments in Iraq, Nov 16
KIRKUK - A car bomb exploded in a crowded marketplace, killing six and wounding six others in northern Kirkuk, 250 km (155 miles) north of Baghdad.
BAGHDAD - A bomb planted under a car parked near an Iraqi army checkpoint exploded, killing two soldiers and wounding six civilians in Baghdad's Mansour District, police said.
MOSUL - A hand grenade exploded, killing one civilian in central Mosul, on Sunday, police said.


13 Sunni men, boys reported slain in Iraq
In a massacre that revived memories of Iraq's worst years of sectarian bloodshed, assailants dressed in Iraqi army uniforms savagely killed 13 men and boys late Sunday near the restive city of Abu Ghraib, according to Iraqi officials and villagers.


Afghanistan: Barack Obama gets ready to make toughest call of presidency
President Barack Obama is expected to make a long-awaited announcement on his Afghan war strategy in the next few days in an attempt to bring an end to a prolonged period of uncertainty surrounding US intentions, officials said today.


Taliban blow up girls' school in Pakistan: officials
Taliban militants blew up a girls' school in Pakistan's Khyber district on Tuesday, the third such attack in the tribal region bordering Afghanistan so far this month, officials said. An intelligence official in the area said Taliban attacked the government-run school overnight when no one was at the property.


Holder's al Qaeda Incentive Plan
When it comes to terrorists, you would think that an al Qaeda operative who targets an American mom sitting in her office or a child on a flight back home is many degrees worse than a Taliban soldier picked up after a firefight with U.S. Army troops.


The latest news from Al Jazeera.

Monday, November 16, 2009

Basics of COIN Part 2: The Insurgency

REUTERS/Stringer


An insurgency is the manifestation of popular will, not exclusively guerrilla and terrorist actions. There can be numerous reasons why and how an insurgency begins, but once it has endured over a period of time the popular "cause" becomes irrelevant. Eventually a fence-sitting population will side with the projected winner of the conflict as backing a losing side is a potential death sentence. Survival is the most basic instinct and most important factor during an insurrection.

The political nature of an insurgency is tragically often overlooked. Western militaries go to great lengths to separate politics from military action but this is a doctrine for failure. War is an extension of politics and insurgency is a form of armed politics. While the Defense Department excludes itself from politics, U.S. diplomats in Kabul and Baghdad interact with host nation government officials as if they are representatives from a well-established European nation, not opportunistic collaborators. Failure to respond to the political nature of an insurgency is a "whole of government" U.S. failure.


Strategies for disrupting insurgent violence:

Hammer and Anvil:

Kill / Capture missions carried out within a controlled environment. Conventional troops will secure the population while other units conduct raiding operations to dismantle the known insurgent network. Kill / Capture missions alone may remove known members but ultimately prove futile if insurgents can still recruit.

Amnesty:

There have been few successful counterinsurgency campaigns absent an amnesty program. Without a means to surrender, host nation governments force insurgents to fight to the death. Insurgencies can be marginalized and isolated from the population, but absolute destruction is only possible in a dictatorial police state. Former insurgents entering into a "witness protection" styled program can be used in propaganda to crush the morale of active insurgents while providing critical information on insurgents at large.

Network Corruption:

Insurgent groups are structured dynamic social networks of cells based upon previous or recent trusted relationships. When the trust of a cell erodes, the network begins to collapse. Arrest five insurgents, ask four to spy on the insurgency, and release all of them. The four solicited insurgents will suspect the fifth one is a traitor and possibly have him killed. Paranoia will grow if this process is repeated continuously.


These efforts conducted simultaneously will maximize chances for success in mitigating violence, but will only provide a window of opportunity for the host nation government to settle legitimate political grievances that spawned the insurgency. Removing the "cause" from the insurgency is required to isolate and marginalize the remaining insurgents from the population in order to achieve a true victory.

Friday, November 13, 2009

Basics of COIN Part 1

(AP Photo/Maya Alleruzzo)

You can have links to every blog out there, an entire library from Galula to Kilcullen, and still make things worse than when you arrived. In the simplest of terms, counterinsurgency is a popularity contest. Repeatedly on this blog it is stated that if you understand the culture the strategy will write itself. This is exactly what this refers to as you have been thrown into a popularity contest. Garrison military customs and courtesies will destroy your unit's ability to innovate; take the necessary steps to politically outmaneuver the enemy on his home turf.

General Overview:

If you have no chance of the population electing you to an office, relieve yourself of command. You are a foreigner and most likely not a muslim. There is little you can relate to at the offset, so if you burn bridges within your first three months you created an insurgent friendly environment.

Rank is an antiquated concept and counterproductive in COIN. You may have cultural experts in your unit but overlooked them. Ditch the rank and formalities until you are out of the country. Network your experts and trusted minds keeping them outside a traditional chain of command.

Break every World War II-era regulation designed to maintain discipline. Beards, first names, and modified uniforms specifically are half your battle. Imagine you are on a plane and five men dressed just like Mullah Omar sit in first class. What is going through your head? It is the same thing that is going through an Afghans when he sees yet another foreign military unit in his home country.

Find a native Afghan salesman while still in your home country and have him teach you everything he knows. It is one thing to be able to sell something to your neighbor, it is another to talk a Taliban supporter into following you. Understanding the culture will assist in formulating an effective approach for your unique area of operations.

Do not back corrupt officials; their tainted credibility damages yours as well. Do whatever you have to in order for them to resign. When they resign, take credit for it to keep your place as an honest broker in the eyes of the population.

Avoid internal strife. Mission envy destroys morale just as fast as taking casualties. Do not come down on a unit that is required to do more or dress differently. You are all on the same team and need them as much as you need the population on your side.

Neutrality in reporting current events is a myth; specifically during an insurgency. The media and rumors will always help one side and hurt another. Negative news carries more weight than positive. Also a "good news" story from an untrusted source (your PAO) has the same effect as a vicious rumor. Free speech is a luxury; do not defend your critics as they are intentionally or unwittingly shaping opinion against you.

Your popularity is your life. Do whatever you have must to keep it as high as possible; among your troops, partner agencies, and most importantly the population you will now protect. The public will typically fall into three of five basic categories in the spectrum of opinion: hate, dislike, indifference, like, love. Keep them ranging from indifference, like, and love and you will be fine.

Focus on the influential, not the masses. In other words, win the shepherds as they bring the sheep. Your resources and capabilities will be nowhere close to what you need. A focused campaign of winning over elders, chiefs, and mullahs will get you where you need to be much faster as time is another luxury you will not have.

Train your local replacement. Find an individual out of the population to take your place. He must be as popular as yourself if not more so. Most importantly, he must be able to tap into the resources you have available. Not creating a self-sustaining environment is simply kicking the can down the road. This is the first step in grassroots acceptance of governance.

November 13th Morning Readbook

An Iraqi police officer leads four detainees in southwestern Baghdad, Iraq, Thursday, Nov. 12, 2009. The 5th division, 2nd brigade of Iraqi federal police arrested the four-member gang, which is suspected of kidnapping children and holding them for ransom, police said. (AP Photo/Khalid Mohammed)


FACTBOX-Security developments in Iraq, Nov 12
MOSUL - Gunmen shot dead a government employee in northern Mosul, police said.
BAGHDAD - Gunmen in a speeding car killed the headmistress of a secondary school in central Baghdad, police said.
KIRKUK - Gunmen wounded a policeman in a drive-by shooting on Wednesday in southern Kirkuk, 250 km (155 miles) north of Baghdad, police said.
BASRA - Three prisoners accused of carrying out militant attacks escaped on Wednesday from a prison in central Basra, 420 km (260 miles) southeast of Baghdad, police said.


White House talks up need for exit strategy in Afghanistan
The White House sent its strongest signal yet Thursday that it is searching for an eventual way out of Afghanistan even as it considers sending thousands of additional troops to join the war there.


Obama vows clear mission for US troops
President Barack Obama told US troops in Alaska that he will not risk their lives needlessly and promised a clear mission as he weighed his next steps in the Afghanistan war. "I want you guys to understand I will never hesitate to use force to protect the American people or our vital interests," Obama told troops gathered at Elmendorf Air Force Base in Anchorage, Alaska.


Surge in US troops will fuel Taliban insugency, former Afghan warlord says
Gen Abdul Rashid Dostum, the controversial former Afghan warlord, has warned Washington that sending more US troops to Afghanistan will simply hamper its war against the Taliban insurgency.


Suicide bomber attacks military convoy near Kabul
The Taliban claimed responsibility for a suicide bombing Friday that wounded six people near the Afghan capital, while Britain's prime minister suggested 5,000 more NATO troops could be deployed to the troubled country.


Bomber Hits Pakistan Spy Agency in Peshawar, Kills 10
Pakistani officials says a suicide car bombing targeting an office of the country's main intelligence agency in Peshawar has killed at least 10 people, and wounded more than 100.


U.S. alert over German al Qaeda threat
U.S. officials extended a travel alert in Germany and urged Americans to remain wary after terrorist organization al Qaeda posted messages in recent months threatening attacks in the country.


The latest news from Al Jazeera.

Thursday, November 12, 2009

November 12th Morning Readbook

U.S. President Barack Obama has spent the past three months avoiding General McChrystal's request for re-enforcements. REUTERS/Jim Young

Barack Obama 'to reject Afghanistan war options in favour of plan with clear exit strategy'
Barack Obama is to reject all of the options outlined for increasing troop numbers in Afghanistan in favour of revised plans which include a clear exit strategy, it has been claimed.


US ambassador warns against Afghanistan troop surge
The US ambassador to Afghanistan has dramatically intervened in the debate about troop reinforcements, warning President Obama against committing tens of thousands of extra troops to the country.


Clinton: U.S. concerned about Afghan corruption
The United States is concerned about corruption and poor governance in Afghanistan and has raised those issues with the administration of President Hamid Karzai, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said on Thursday.


Reporting from Iraq: Freedom at risk
"We take our freedom for granted. But imagine not to be able to speak or discuss or debate or even question the society you live in," Tony Blair told the House of Commons in March 2003, urging MPs to support the invasion of Iraq. They were fine words. But they ring hollow more than six years after a war held in the name of democracy led to elections and a new constitution, which promised to guarantee "freedom of expression using all means".


The Case for Keeping Al Qaeda Alive
In perhaps the most counterintuitive counterterrorism piece you’ll read, Gustavo de las Casas argues in Foreign Policy that even though the West has Al Qaeda reeling, it shouldn’t finish it off.


The latest news from Al Jazeera.

Wednesday, November 11, 2009

November 11th Morning Readbook

U.S. soldiers make themselves plates of food during a ceremony marking Veterans Day at the U.S. Camp Phoenix in Kabul, Afghanistan on Wednesday, Nov. 11, 2009. (AP Photo/Musadeq Sadeq)

Iraq PM says 73 arrests in Oct 25 attacks probe
Iraq has arrested 73 people suspected of playing a direct role in two massive bombs that killed more than 150 people in Baghdad on October 25, Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki said on Tuesday. They are suspected of working on the orders of the outlawed Baath party of executed dictator Saddam Hussein, and included members of Al-Qaeda, Maliki told reporters in Baghdad.


Iraqi court rules Guardian defamed Nouri al-Maliki
An Iraqi court has ordered the Guardian to pay Nouri al-Maliki damages of 100m dinar (£52,000) after supporting a complaint by the Iraqi prime minister's intelligence service that he had been defamed by a Guardian story in April describing him as increasingly autocratic.


Iraq's PM warns of threat in run-up to January elections, vows to maintain security
Iraq's prime minister warns that insurgents may try to undermine the country's fledgling democracy in the run-up to January's national elections. Nouri al-Maliki told tribal leaders from Baghdad's Shiite Sadr City district on Wednesday that maintaining security was his top priority, but said insurgent groups do not want the vote to be held in a secure climate.


3 Top Obama Advisers Favor Adding Troops in Afghanistan
Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates, Adm. Mike Mullen, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton are coalescing around a proposal to send 30,000 or more additional American troops to Afghanistan, but President Obama remains unsatisfied with answers he has gotten about how vigorously the governments of Afghanistan and Pakistan would help execute a new strategy, administration officials said Tuesday.


Taliban jail unearthed as troops kill nine in South Waziristan
Security forces have killed nine more Taliban in South Waziristan, the military said on Tuesday, as troops destroyed a number of caves, towers and observation posts and unearthed a private Taliban jail.


Would Taliban fighters switch sides?
The news from Afghanistan looks unremittingly bleak for the West these days. Casualties among foreign and Afghan troops are again rising, with the rancour over the fraud-marred presidential elections still in the air.


‘Nobody in Pak govt aware of Qaeda leaders’ whereabouts’
The US finds it hard to believe that nobody knows where the Al Qaeda leadership is, but there is no evidence to suggest that anybody at the top levels of the Pakistani government knows, said US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.


The latest news from Al Jazeera.