Shafts of Light

August 21, 2008 at 2:58 pm (COIN, Iraq, War on Terror) (, , , , , , , , , , )

From the blog of Hayder Al-Khoei — grandson of Grand Ayatollah Abdul-Qasim Al-Khoei — I found this post on hearing the music of Lebanese singer Nancy Ajram in what was the heartland of Sadrist Iraq really affecting:

Things just arn’t the same as they were in Kufa. When the US and Iraqi armies battled Moqtada’s army in 2004 most of the people that wandered the streets of Kufa were militiamen. Even in times of peace this town was a bastion for the Mehdi Army. Historically, Kufa has always been the heart of the Sadrists in southern Iraq.

The local police were either sympathetic to the Sadrists, indifferent when it came to their crimes or Sadrists themselves. In many instances the police would man checkpoints together with the militia. If the Sadrists needed police cars or equipment they would either steal them from the police or be given them by the police. Anyone wearing jeans, having the wrong haircut or playing music loud from their cars would be humiliated, taken out of their cars and beaten with sticks in the middle of the street.

Those days are long gone. Now commandos and Rapid Intervention Forces patrol the streets alongside the police, there is no room for the Sadrists to breathe. Yesterday we had to drive over a mile to find a space to park alongside the river bank. The river was lined with families and teenagers laughing, enjoying dinner, drinking tea, playing backgammon or smoking sheesha. Every few minutes a car would drive past with Arabic music on full volume blaring out of the windows and there was not a single Sadrist there to shut them up. Some of the older men even encourage the teenagers, with beads swinging in their hands they shout “hele, hele” as they hear the sweet voice of Nancy Ajram.

Al-Khoei’s pleasure at the relaxed atmosphere in Kufa reflects the broader improvements in security that led Stephen Biddle, Michael E. O’Hanlon, and Kenneth M. Pollackto proppose, in a recent article in Foreign Affairs, a strategy for troop withdrawal from Iraq that doesn’t come at the cost of stability.

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War Dead and Press Freedom

August 6, 2008 at 2:42 pm (COIN, War on Terror) (, , , , , , )

A post at Abu Muqawama by ‘Kip’ reflects on the recent furore surrounding Zoriah Miller, a freelance photographer whose pictures of the aftermath of a suicide bombing were recently published by The New York Times. Miller is now banned from his Marine Corps embed after publishing pictures on his blog showing Marines killed by a suicide bomb attack. At stake is whether the public has a right to see pictures of dead soldiers, or whether the feelings of the soldiers’ families should take president. Miller has described the reaction of Multi-National Force – West, the regional command who has forbidden him from embedding with Marines again in Iraq, as “censorship”,

I took pictures of something they didn’t like, and they removed me. Deciding what I can and cannot document, I don’t see a clearer definition of censorship.

Kip agrees that “the public has a right to see war in all of its incarnations, including that of death, in reporting.” Furthermore, Kip thinks that,

We, that is the military, have indeed gone a long way toward sanitizing war for the average American. All that is asked of him or her is to stand with hand over the heart at the playing of the national anthem at a myriad of events and places. He is not asked to sacrifice for the war, neither from his blood nor from his pocketbook; he has, in effect, passed on the latter burden to his children. He neither understands the war nor the enemy that will continue to confront him.

Confronted with images of death, Americans will be forced to ask the question of what they ought be doing for the effort and who should be held accountable for mistakes. Faced with those images at the beginning of the war, they would be, Kip believes, more determined (not less) to win the long war.

Dave Dilegge thoughfully explains why he disagrees at CTLab.

Essentially, this argument revolves around which types of medium are acceptable for the conveying of information during war. The written word is ok when recording an event; the photograph is not. It does seem a rather questionable distinction to make. Why is one acceptable and not the other? As a citizen of states with such awesome military power, you must believe that ‘I should witness the full horrors of war, that I might better understand what is done in my name’. But let’s look at the problem from the opposite perspective – why should we stop at mere photographs? Assuming that it doesn’t ‘violate OPSEC’ or aid our enemy’s strategic assessment, why shouldn’t we watch our soldiers die on the television news? Hell, technology being what it is, we could be watching it streamed live from Afghanistan straight onto our laptops!

Obviously, when Kip says that he wants Americans to be able to see pictures of dead soldiers, he has a particular outcome in mind – he hopes that these pictures will enable civilians to better understand war and the sacrifices their troops are making. A very laudable goal, but it does not therefore follow automatically that it will be so.

Consider a possible consequence: the floodgates open, and there are lots of pictures of dead servicemen and women in the media. Perhaps this will be decisive in the way Kip envisions, but perhaps it will make no difference in either direction. I can easily imagine a time when reporting of battles was simply not allowed period, and the same argument could have been made. And yet we have the written word, and here we nevertheless are. And when we can see photos, perhaps we will need videos to understand; and when we have videos, perhaps we will need live HD feeds to understand… and so on. We should ask, in the long run, does the medium used really change things? What if we rip open grieving families’ wounds by showing pictures of the fallen, but it doesn’t alter the balance at all? (God, can you imagine the horror – having the picture of a slaughtered loved one published and readily available on the internet for posterity? I think it would be hard to survive such an ordeal). What if people get used to it, and continue to ‘go to the mall’ as before? One can even foresee a situation in which our behaviour as civilians gets worse because of our increased de-sensitivity to and distance from the subject of the photographs…

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Mapping Iran’s Secret War

December 11, 2007 at 5:15 pm (4GW, COIN, Counterinsurgency, Intervention, Iran, Iraq, Qods Force, War on Terror)

Bill Roggio has an timely and in-depth analysis of Iranian involvement in the Iraqi insurgency via the Ramazan Corps, Qods Force’s operational command in Iraq. The Ramazan Corps provides arms, advice and basic training, distributed along a series of “ratlines” that run into the country from Iran’s western border.

Inside Iran, Qods Force manufactures and distributes weapons, provides training for Iraqi recruits, then facilitates the movement of weapons and fighters inside Iraq. Iraqi recruits, largely radicalized Shia from Muqtada al Sadr’s Mahdi Army, are sent to Iran for what one US military officer described as “basic jihadi training.” The recruits receive several weeks of training with small arms and, depending on the units assigned, mortars and the use of explosively formed penetrators, or EFPs.

American commanders also dispute reports that Iran has reduced its involvement in Iraq, and that it has helped to curb the violence:

“I don’t know what this Iranian pledge is, but the number of munitions has increased,” Lynch said on November 11. “It could be that we are finding them more. But it is still troublesome. I have no idea when these EFP munitions came … before or after the pledge. I don’t know.”

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4GW vs. NCW

December 6, 2007 at 2:43 pm (4GW, COIN, Cebrowski, Garstka, Iraq, Military doctrine, NCW, Transformation, War on Terror)

Reading the recent exchange between Noah Shactman and Tom Barnett, it seems to me that both are right in some sense, or at least, both have useful contributions to make.

Shactman’s thesis (published in WIRED) is only partially explained by its title: How Technology Almost Lost the War: In Iraq, the Critical Networks Are Social — Not Electronic. In the article he describes how the focus of the American military, as an institution, on fighting large, WWII-scale battles against peer (or almost peer) opposition armed forces, occluded them and left them unable to recognise or divine the looming mess of post-conflict Iraq urban insurrection.

Except, that’s not quite what he says. It’s probably what he should have said, but as Tom Barnett points out, Shactman’s article, in effect, excuses the US Administration for any mistakes made or lack of foresight, and instead blames it all on… Arthur Cebrowski, John Garstka and the theory of Network Centric Warfare as they developed it.

However, although he initially proposes a strangely simplified dichotomy (further reduced by me to 4GW vs. NCW), as the piece progresses the two supposedly opposing sides don’t seem quite so exclusive. For instance, though Shactman is unimpressed by the Fourth Division’s ultra-modern telecommunications and networked tracking systems, the actual users appear to feel differently. “No commander at his level has ever been able to see so many of his men so easily. “It increases the unit’s combat power, no question,” Prior says.” The potential of the NCW doctrine is ignored, even as its successes are recounted: “When the US went to war in Afghanistan, and then in Iraq, its forces achieved apparent victory with lightning speed.” Garstka even tells him directly that “you have your social networks and technological networks. You need to have both.” But Shactman either can’t see the obvious positive uses for the networked, advanced-tech, quantitative analysis approach which emerge from his writing or, perhaps more probably, doesn’t want to because it contradicts his idea.

It’s almost funny when Shactman interviews Petraeus towards the article’s end. “I’m expecting a frontal assault on network-centric warfare,” he writes. “Instead, he sings me a love song.”

Zenpundit sums it up well:

The crux of the problem with Shachtman’s article is that his opener gives the impression that the botching of the occupation in Iraq should be laid at the door of two men who articulated strategic ideas with impressive intellectual celerity and subtlety, one of whom is no longer able to defend himself.

Indeed, Shactman would do better to look at institutions rather than an idea because,

whenever a theory is accepted by a large and powerful bureaucratic organization- like, say, the Pentagon – it collides with reality.

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Is the “surge” working?

November 30, 2007 at 3:16 pm (Counterinsurgency, Iraq, Middle East, The "surge", War on Terror)

We certainly hope so (from The Financial Times):

Violence in Iraq has fallen at a rate that has surprised military commanders and even one of the architects of the “surge” that boosted US troop numbers in the country this year, according to figures gathered by the US.

The figures show the numbers of suicide attacks, roadside bombings, mortar and other attacks on US forces and on the Iraqi population have more than halved since 30,000 extra troops in June.

The military attributes the decline to the surge, the spread of local ceasefire deals across Iraq, a ceasefire by radical Shia militias and an improvement in the Iraqi security forces.

Jack Keane, the former army general who helped persuade George W. Bush, US president, to increase troop numbers in Iraq, said the decrease in violence was “phenomenal” and had occurred far faster than he had expected.

“When you understand you are dealing with the complexity of a counter-insurgency operation which can take years to resolve, to have this dramatic a success in a short period of time, it’s unprecedented,” he said.

The US military says the number of civilian deaths has also fallen 60 per cent since the surge took effect, with a drop of 75 per cent in Baghdad. According to icasualties.org, the average monthly US death toll dropped from 96 for the first half of 2007 to 66 in the past four months. The average monthly death toll for Iraqi civilians and security forces has dropped from 2,157 to 1,223 in the same period….

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September 11

September 11, 2007 at 6:00 pm (9/11, Al Qaeda, International Politics, Martin Amis, Middle East, Radical Islam, September 11, War on Terror)

Martin Amis, writing in The Times on 9/11 and the Cult of Death:

Sayyid Qutb, like someone relaying a commonplace or even a tautology, often said that it is in the nature of Islam to dominate. Where, though, are its tools and its instruments? The only thing Islamism can dominate, for now, is the evening news. But that is not nothing, in a world of pandemic suggestibility, munition glut, and our numerous Walter Mittys of mass murder. September 11 entrained a moral crash, planet-wide; it also loosened the ground between reality and reverie. So when we speak of it, let’s call it by its proper name; let’s not suggest that our experience of that event, that development, has been frictionlessly absorbed and filed away. It has not. September 11 continues, it goes on, with all its mystery, its instability, and its terrible dynamism.

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Cometh the hour…

September 11, 2007 at 12:53 pm (American Politics, COIN, Crocker, International Politics, Iraq, Middle East, Petraeus, War on Terror)

General Petraeus reports to Congress:

As a bottom line up front, the military objectives of the surge are, in large measure, being met. In recent months, in the face of tough enemies and the brutal summer heat of Iraq, Coalition and Iraqi Security Forces have achieved progress in the security arena. Though the improvements have been uneven across Iraq, the overall number of security incidents in Iraq has declined in 8 of the past 12 weeks, with the numbers of incidents in the last two weeks at the lowest levels seen since June 2006.

One reason for the decline in incidents is that Coalition and Iraqi forces have dealt significant blows to Al Qaeda-Iraq. Though Al Qaeda and its affiliates in Iraq remain dangerous, we have taken away a number of their sanctuaries and gained the initiative in many areas.

We have also disrupted Shia militia extremists, capturing the head and numerous other leaders of the Iranian-supported Special Groups, along with a senior Lebanese Hezbollah operative supporting Iran’s activities in Iraq.

Coalition and Iraqi operations have helped reduce ethno-sectarian violence, as well, bringing down the number of ethno-sectarian deaths substantially in Baghdad and across Iraq since the height of the sectarian violence last December. The number of overall civilian deaths has also declined during this period, although the numbers in each area are still at troubling levels.

Iraqi Security Forces have also continued to grow and to shoulder more of the load, albeit slowly and amid continuing concerns about the sectarian tendencies of some elements in their ranks. In general, however, Iraqi elements have been standing and fighting and sustaining tough losses, and they have taken the lead in operations in many areas.

Additionally, in what may be the most significant development of the past 8 months, the tribal rejection of Al Qaeda that started in Anbar Province and helped produce such significant change there has now spread to a number of other locations as well….

The post at SWJ includes the full transcript and briefing slides for both General Petraeus’ and Ambassador Crocker’s Congressional testimonies.

Additional Assessment:

Col. Pat Lang – Petraeus and Crocker – Intersting

B. Smith & J. Martin – The Candidates Respond to Petraeus

E.J. Dionne – The Surge Has Succeeded… in Washington

Michael Yon – Don’t Ask Me What I Think about the Petraeus Report

Thomas P.M. Barnett – Petraeus’ report was everything we were told it would be

Karen DeYoung & Thomas Ricks – The General’s Long View Could Cut Withdrawal Debate Short

Jonathan Rauch – Be Angry… but Patient

Jacob Laksin – Surgin’ General

Frederick W. Kagan – No Middle Way

Tony Bey – Gen. Petraeus on Iran, Hezbollah and Syria in Iraq

The Times editorial – Listen to Petraeus

Gerard Baker – General Petraeus polarises Washington

Babak Dehghanpisheh & John Barry – The Brains Behind the Petraeus Iraq Report

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Signal to Noise – Regime Change, Iran?

September 10, 2007 at 5:36 pm (American Politics, International Politics, Iran, Middle East, Radical Islam, War on Terror)

The air of the blogosphere is currently thick with rumours that the US government is preparing the ground for an attack on its most trenchant enemy in the Middle East: Iran. Iran has been a determined ideological foe of the United States of America since the time of the Iranian Revolution and the inception of Komeini’s regime. It was responsible for the kidnapping of American embassy personnel in 1979, the attack on the USMC barracks in Beruit in 1983 and the Khobar Towers bombing in 1996, as well as regularly excoriating America as, using the now notoriously familiar epithet, “the Great Satan”. In fact, according to noted “neo-con” and Iranian expert Michael Ledeen, “for nearly thirty years, the Iranians continuously attacked us, and, aside from some harsh rhetoric from time to time, we never responded.” In addition, Ledeen states in a recent NRO interview, that Iran and Al Qaeda have “been working together since 1994, and we are now up to our uvulas in evidence showing Iran’s support for al Qaeda in Iraq.”

Even if you believe, as many seem to, that Ledeen is unreliable and ideologically suspect, the broad consensus on Iranian involvement in Iraq is hard to ignore. The narrative is now well established: Iran is historically the regional powerhouse, and the liberation of Iraq removed its chief rival and peer, as well as empowering Iraqi Shia co-religionists. The US also removed the militant Wahabbi regime in Afghanistan, another country which, like Iraq, shares a border with Iran. Hence the Iraq war has provided an incredible boost to the aspirations of the Iranian leadership, who desire to become a regional hegemon in the style of their historical predecessors. Absent even the facts (such as they are), and common sense still tells you that Iran must try to aid its political or religious allies in Iraq (and even groups that one would consider its natural enemies), frustrate its foes (be they American, Sunni or otherwise), and protect its interests. Only a fool or someone who doesn’t care about holding power would do otherwise. More broadly, it is surely the case that no regime in the Middle East who fears reform and “Americanisation” (i.e. opening up the country to globalised trade and liberal democracy) could possibly welcome the establishment of a secure and successful secular state on its doorstep. Iran follows the same logic.

Obviously, the chief worry at the present time is the Iranian search for a nuclear bomb, which would make it a nuclear Islamic power, an elite group that currently consists of just one country: Pakistan. According to the American strategist Thomas Barnett,

Tehran’s reach for the bomb, quite frankly, makes a ton of strategic sense given: 1) our recent wars on its right and left and our avowed talk of regime change and 2) Schelling’s historical point that the bomb ends your vulnerability to U.S. invasion (in fact, invasion or attack from anyone–in short, deterrence works, whether you’re Tehran or Tel Aviv).

In short, Barnett’s view is that Iran’s desire for the bomb is merely common sense; unfortunate that it will further destabilise the region and increase the potential for nuclear war, yes, but common sense nonetheless. It is this struggle that is adding tension to a Middle East already brimming with nervous anxiety. There is a time limit now, for “dealing” with Iran. After they build a nuclear weapon, even the small amount of leverage we currently have from the threat of punitive military action will be removed. And of course, the prospect of adding nuclear weapons to the heady regional brew of radical Islam, failing states, simmering resentment, inter-faith rivalry and nascent anti-Americanism is not an altogether pleasant one.

Faced with this appalling scene, the Bush administration is thought to be marshalling its resources to prepare the ground with the American public for an invasion of Iran, or possibly just the bombing of its nuclear facilities. Daniel Drezner has a decent round-up of relevant articles in the US press. For instance, Drezner links to a Washington Times op-ed which states that, after meeting with the Bush family in Maine, “Sarkozy came away convinced his U.S. counterpart is serious about bombing Iran’s secret nuclear facilities.” Underlying all of this, of course, is the fear that someone has let Cheney near the reigns again.

Mohamed ElBaradei of the International Atomic Energy Agency recognises the danger that an Iranian bomb poses. In a recent interview with Der Spiegel, he stated that, “we stand at a crossroads, and we are moving rapidly toward an abyss.” It is obvious that the current state of affairs is neither desirable, nor sustainable. So what, if anything, should be done?

Even a hawk like Ledeen, who considers the Iranian threat to be greater than that posed by the Sunni extremists in the global Salafi Jihad, is against direct military intervention with Iran. In his new book The Iranian Time Bomb: The Mullah Zealots’ Quest for Destruction, Ledeen warns that “it’s time for us to fight back … using political and economic weapons,” but, “not military power.” Barnett believes that,

America has to grow up a bit and realize that the Big Bang [meaning the United States' activities in the Middle East post-9/11] leads to the Shia revival and that it’s only through that path that we’ll foster genuine pluralism and less religious extremism in politics.

So we need to foster the rising Shia revival, because the alternative is merely the same old brutal Sunni extremism that led to the terrible events of 9/11. However, an angry and powerful Iran, with its proxies frustrating our efforts at Middle Eastern reform in Lebanon, Syria and Iraq, is obviously to no one’s benefit. Can we craft a set of policies that empower the Shia, without merely appeasing and encouraging a new set of extremists to counter-balance the old set of extremists that we helped to create in Saudi Arabia? What chance of peace and development is there in the Middle East while theocrats and dictators have power?

Obviously, these are difficult questions, and I certainly can’t provide the answers that are needed. However, we can try to predict what will happen. I would not necessarily be against pinprick military strikes on Iran’s nuclear facilities. I do expect that the US military will be wargaming this scenario and drawing up plans for such an eventuality. However, according to a recent piece in the Sunday Times, at a meeting organised by The National Interest, a prominent conservative journal,

Alexis Debat, director of terrorism and national security at the Nixon Center, said last week that US military planners were not preparing for “pinprick strikes” against Iran’s nuclear facilities. “They’re about taking out the entire Iranian military,” he said.

However, as Drezner points out, “This time around, Bush and Cheney will face a sizeable domestic opposition, a hostile foreign policy community, and opposition from within the executive branch.” And not only that, but there is also the small matter of the strength of the American military and its ability to open a third front in the Middle East. And as Pat Lang and others have pointed out, should Iran choose to, they could play havoc with the logistical supply lines that the Americans use to move supplies from Kuwait straight up the motorway to Baghdad and other areas in the north of the country. The issue will be further complicated by the withdrawal of British forces from the region, and the need for Petraeus to further stretch his forces to fill the power vacuum there. So for those reasons, it seems very unlikely to me that America will be going to war with Iran any time soon. Barnett, in a short review of Ledeen’s new book, states that

Where Ledeen intrigues more is with a connectivity-style counter-the-revolution strategy of seeding the mullahs’ downfall from within using dollars and PCs. In principle, this is how we took down the Sovs (infecting them with the hard-currency dollar that revealed the falsehood of their economy and the information revolution, the economic advance the Sovs couldn’t command their way through), starting this process with Nixon’s brilliant detente.

Surely, that would be the best method of defeating Khamenei’s regime, and the one that would come with the least monetary and human cost, to say nothing of regional stability and strengthening the hand of the Mullahs by appearing once again to be the “imperialists” of common Arab parlance. It is also the case that fear of foreign-sponsored regime change is encouraging the regime to clamp down hard on any perceived dissent.

In any case, and irrespective of the media hype, as Yorkshire Ranter demonstrates, there is a distinct lack of indicators pointing to military action against Iran. For instance, “currently, there is one US Navy carrier group in the Middle East (Enterprise and Co). This is down from two for most of this year, and is the lowest for some time”. And,

As before, Vinson, Roosevelt, and Washington are all in dockyard hands. Lincoln is in the early stages of workup, having done flight deck and carrier qualifications in July. Eisenhower took part in a JTFEX during July, but please note that as she only returned from deployment in May, she probably has significant yard time in her future. The next ship in the cycle is therefore Harry S. Truman, whose JTFEX it was, and who has also recently done her COMPTUEX.

Yorkshire Ranter also discusses the lack of financial indicators here.

Although I would love for America to be the ass-kicking, liberal hawk of my fantasies, I don’t believe that it is, or probably ever will be. I agree with Ledeen that our best option for regime change is not military, but political and economic. The idea of another Islamic bomb is not a pleasant one, but we’ve dealt with nuclear dictatorships enough to be able to make sensible decisions and not get panicked into doing something that will be not only costly, but also unsustainable given the current state of international relations and the general consensus in the minds of the public in free countries around the world. In addition, America has none of the “sympathetic capital” it acquired (and spent) in the wake of 9/11. These are all unfortunate facts, but facts nonetheless. Here’s hoping for the positive, non-military action described by both Ledeen and Barnett. Or perhaps, all we need to do is listen to Zenpundit:

If the Bush administration really wants to cripple Iran, instead of planning an EBO attack or using IO scare stories about nuclear weapons, we should simply encourage Iran to adopt Ahmadinejad’s economic program.

Well, perhaps not. I don’t want Iran to continue down the path of economic disaster and become another Zimbabwe or Venezuela. But why play the Mullah’s game by being the enemy that they desire to shore up their failing state and useless ideology? Instead, we should adopt the tried and tested method that worked with the USSR: kill them with connectivity.

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Recommended Reading

July 6, 2007 at 1:35 pm (American Politics, British Politics, COIN, Economics, Recommended Reading, War on Terror)

Paul Berman has written a long, almost book-length article on Tariq Ramadan, the French Islamist and Muslim intellectual, examining what he represents within his own current of so-called “salafi reformism” and what his widespread feting by liberal European intellectuals tells us about society today. It’s very much in the spirit of Terror and Liberalism and, as such, is not so much recommended reading as required. The article was published in The New Republic and is called The Islamist, the Journalist, and the defence of Liberalism.

The Observer, not normally a newspaper I rate very highly, published a brilliant and very brave article by Hassan Butt recently, My plea to fellow Muslims: you must renounce terror. Butt was, at one time, the spokesman for a proscribed British Islamist organisation, Al-Muhajiroun, an involved feature of what he terms the “British Jihadi Network”, and even, following his arrest under the Terrorism Act, a minor celebrity of Muslim extremism. Hassan has renounced his past positions and is using his platform to now call for an Islamic response to Islamist terror, specifically, one grounded in Islamic law.

In the July edition of Reason Magazine, Brink Lindsey has a new article, The Aquarians and the Evangelicals, which discusses the split in what he calls the “postwar liberal consensus” in American society. The split, which gave birth to the oppositional yet curiously complementary left/right political spectrum of today, severed the American polity into the socially liberal anti-capitalists, who enjoyed modern freedoms yet hated the engine of capital that generated them, and the fiscally conservative religious right, who protected the market economy yet despaired of the freedoms it created. Lindsey notes that,

On the left gathered those who were most alive to the new possibilities created by the unprecedented mass affluence of the postwar years but at the same time were hostile to the social institutions—namely, the market and the middle-class work ethic—that created those possibilities. On the right rallied those who staunchly supported the institutions that created prosperity but who shrank from the social dynamism they were unleashing. One side denounced capitalism but gobbled its fruits; the other cursed the fruits while defending the system that bore them.

Senior Counterinsurgency Adviser in the Multi-National Force – Iraq, Dave Kilcullen, has a very revealing and timely post at the Small Wars Journal Blog, Understanding Current Operations in Iraq. Kilcullen explains the rational behind the surge and the MNF’s strategy for defeating the insurgency. The strategy will not focus on chasing clandestine cells of jihadists around the desert, but will instead look to protect the Iraqi population and cutting off support (be it moral or logistical) for the terrorists. Despite the ever more shrill shouts of “failure” in the press, Kilcullen advises his readers to wait and see, because in fact the surge proper is only just starting. The activity of the previous months was merely the prepapration of forces. “This is the end of the beginning,” he writes. If you want to understand what the MNF is doing in Iraq at present, you really need to read this. Links to related commentary (Kilcullen is always worth discussing) here.

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The Coming Storm

July 3, 2007 at 1:17 pm (Futurology, International Politics, Middle East, War on Terror)

And I beheld when he had opened the sixth seal, and, lo, there was a great earthquake; and the sun became black as sackcloth of hair, and the moon became as blood.
Rev 6:12

According to World Tribune,

Israel is preparing for an imminent war with Iran, Syria and/or their non-state clients. Israeli military intelligence has projected that a major attack could come from any of five adversaries in the Middle East. Officials said such a strike could spark a war as early as July 2007.

On Sunday, Israeli military intelligence chief Maj. Gen. Amos Yadlin told the Cabinet that the Jewish state faces five adversaries in what could result in an imminent confrontation. Yadlin cited Iran, Syria, Hizbullah, Hamas and Al Qaida.

Across the Middle East there is the sense that pressure is building, and that its release will unleash a huge storm across the region. Various conflicts appear to be coalescing, as once bitter enemies join together under the banner of defeating American-Israeli “hegemony”. In a recent op-ed in Opinion Journal, Joshua Muravchik wrote that “a bigger war… is growing more likely every day, beckoned by the sense that America and Israel are in retreat and that radical Islam is ascending.” The belief that American resolve is weakening, that the tide of public opinion in the west has turned firmly against Israel, and that at last Islam is a power once more is increasing the likelihood of regional conflagration.

Iran and Syria already believe that Israel was defeated by their proxy, Hezbollah, in last summer’s war in the Lebanon. Following the conclusion of that campaign, Syrian dictator Bashar Assad crowed “we tell [the Israelis] that after tasting humiliation in the latest battles, your weapons are not going to protect you — not your planes, or missiles, or even your nuclear bombs.” Ahmadinejad was also triumphant, stating that “God’s promises have come true”.

The Israeli “problem” is of central importance to the Arab psyche. Ahmed Sheikh, Editor-in-Chief of Al Jazeera has said that all the problems in the Middle East originate here. “It’s because we always lose to Israel. It gnaws at the people in the Middle East that such a small country as Israel, with only about 7 million inhabitants, can defeat the Arab nation with its 350 million. That hurts our collective ego.” And in the final analysis, it’s that perception that counts, rather than whether or not destroying Israel really would improve the political and economic realities of life in the Middle East. The prospect of war with Israel and victory for Arab forces is a powerful attraction that is drawing various different, ongoing regional conflicts together.

To that end unlikely alliances are forming. The Shiite theocracy in Iran is collaborating with its supposed religious enemies, the Sunni Al Qaeda, in Iraq. Syria, lead by a Baathist regime that draws its members from a Shiite sect, the Alawites, has also been collaborating with Al Qaeda groups, despite its secularity and Al Qaeda’s religiosity. The Iranian network is spreading, with reports of Iranian weapons being supplied to the Taliban and their sphere of influence widening to include even those jihadists who consider their religion apostasy. Their missiles point at Israel from Lebanon and Gaza, and their Revolutionary Guards tie down American counterinsurgency efforts in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Dangerously, the Islamic radicals have begun to hope. As Muravchik notes, “A large portion of modern wars erupted because aggressive tyrannies believed that their democratic opponents were soft and weak. Often democracies have fed such beliefs by their own flaccid behaviour.” If Iran feels that victory is within its grasp (a feeling fed by Western leftists and apologists), it could lead to a five sided war with Israel later this summer, ultimately involving America as it comes to the aid of its ally. Should that happen, defeat for Israel seems unlikely, though misery and hardship are certain to be widespread. The region will probably begin to resemble contemporary Iraq: an area lit up by “low intensity conflict” and criss-crossed by a splintered web of terrorist factions.

Once again, the Middle East hangs upon a precipice.

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