Small Wars Journal

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SWJ Blog is a multi-author blog publishing news and commentary on the various goings on across the broad community of practice.  We gladly accept guest posts from serious voices in the community.

by SWJ Editors | Fri, 03/18/2011 - 7:35pm | 0 comments
Book Announcement: East of the Orteguaza: The Story of an American Military Advisor and the Colombian Drug War by Victor M. Roselló, Colonel, USA, Ret. Also available as a Kindle edition and discussed on Facebook.

As stated in the subtitle, East of the Orteguaza is the story of an American military advisor and the Colombian drug war. The book's title is a geographic reference to an actual place in time...a military base that was at the center of the drug war, deep inside the jungles of southern Colombia...and a place where the author lived and worked.

Tres Esquinas is the name of this military base. In Spanish it means three corners, or the junction where two rivers, the Orteguaza and the Caquetá flow together to create one main river. The Rí­o Orteguaza is a tributary of the Rí­o Caquetá and it runs parallel and west of the base...hence, the title, East of the Orteguaza. Orteguaza is believed to be one of many names derived from the native indigenous groups of this Amazonian region, such as the Tukano, Koreguaje, or Huitoto. Historical research reveals that in 1635, Franciscan missionaries may have been the first to Hispanicize the name Orteguaza from the name of the Oyoguaja tribe of the Tukano Family. Still another conjecture is that Orteguaza originated from the native indigenous word Ocoguaje, which literally means "people of the water."

This is a story steeped in fact and inspired by true events as experienced by the author while assigned to a counterdrug base near the Ecuadoran/Peruvian border in the drug infested Putumayo and Caquetá region of southern Colombia.

More importantly, this is the story of a quiet war; a war so quiet that it rarely catches the attention of the news media....despite the presence of hundreds of US military advisors in Colombia. It focuses on the many varied facets of the US military advisory mission in the jungles, valleys, plains, and mountainous regions of Colombia in support of the Colombian Armed Forces...and their quiet war.

About the Author: Victor M. Roselló is a retired US Army Colonel, intelligence officer, and Latin America Foreign Area Officer. During his 30 year career he served as a military advisor to the Salvadoran and Colombian Armed Forces and combat parachuted into Panama with the 82nd Airborne Division during the 1989 invasion. An Army Ranger and Master Parachutist, he graduated from the US Army Command and General Staff College, School of Advanced Military Studies, and the US Army War College. He has a Master of Arts degree in Latin American and Caribbean Area Studies from the University of Chicago.

Purchase East of the Orteguaza: The Story of an American Military Advisor and the Colombian Drug War at Amazon.

by SWJ Editors | Fri, 03/18/2011 - 12:17pm | 18 comments
Michael Cummings, SWJ friend and co-author of On Violence, recently published an Op-Ed in The Washington Post titled, "I didn't deserve my combat pay."

BLUF. When I compare my first deployment to Afghanistan with my second deployment to Iraq, one thought remains lodged in my cerebellum: I didn't deserve my combat pay.

My first deployment, to eastern Afghanistan in 2007, sent me as part of the 173rd Airborne Brigade to Korengal Valley, which Vanity Fair dubbed the "valley of death." Staff Sgt. Salvatore Giunta, a soldier in my battalion, last year became the first living recipient of the Medal of Honor since Vietnam. Twenty-four of our battalion's soldiers made the ultimate sacrifice.

We slept on cots. I roomed with eight other people. In the winter, snowmelt leaked through our roof. In the summer, temperatures routinely passed 100 degrees and our AC units would crash. It took several minutes to get hot water in the shower, if it came. Food consisted of two warm trays of heated . . . stuff, if we didn't eat MREs. A snowstorm could knock out the satellite television feed and the Internet, as one did on Super Bowl Sunday.

Much more at The Washington Post.

by SWJ Editors | Thu, 03/17/2011 - 6:14pm | 9 comments
An Unmanned No-Fly Zone is Possible

by Luke Tarbi

As calls for a no-fly zone over Libya increase, US defense planners cite concerns over future scale and cost as cause for trepidation. And rightly so -- most no-fly zone estimates are based on US experiences over Iraq, and show the need for over one hundred fighter jets, as well as a command and control element, an airborne refueling capability, and a means to rescue potentially downed pilots. These costs can add up; it is estimated that one year of Operation Northern Watch and Operation Southern Watch over Iraq cost US taxpayers between $1.4 and $1.7 billion dollars.

by SWJ Editors | Thu, 03/17/2011 - 8:23am | 0 comments
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by SWJ Editors | Wed, 03/16/2011 - 9:57pm | 0 comments
There Is No Neutral by Nadia Schadlow at Foreign Policy. BLUF: "If NGOs think they can claim neutrality in Afghanistan, they're fooling themselves."
by SWJ Editors | Wed, 03/16/2011 - 5:15pm | 1 comment
Via USMC PAO; "Many of you have asked about this document. It was released yesterday evening." And, yes we have, now published and approved for public release - Reshaping America's Expeditionary Force in Readiness: Report of the 2010 Marine Corps Force Structure Review Group, 14 March 2011.
by SWJ Editors | Wed, 03/16/2011 - 2:53pm | 1 comment
Petraeus, Polls Disagree On Afghan War Progress by David Wood, Huffington Post. BLUF: "Petraeus argued that a substantial number of American troops will be needed well after this July, while the Afghan government, at the national and local levels, is prodded and encouraged and trained. While the Post-ABC poll found that nearly 80 percent of respondents wanted a "substantial'' withdrawal of troops this summer, Petraeus said many of those who are withdrawn from secure areas may be reassigned within Afghanistan rather than brought back home."
by SWJ Editors | Wed, 03/16/2011 - 2:19pm | 0 comments
It Happened On the Way to War: A Marine's Path to Peace

by Rye Barcott

In 2000, Rye Barcott spent part of the summer living in ten-by-ten-foot shacks in the Kibera slum of Nairobi, Kenya. He was a twenty-year-old college student heading into the Marines, and he sought to better understand ethnic violence—something he would likely face in uniform. Barcott learned Swahili and listened to young people talk about how they survived amidst poverty he had never imagined existed. He stumbled into friendship with a widowed nurse, Tabitha Atieno Festo, and a tough community organizer, Salim Mohamed.

by Robert Haddick | Wed, 03/16/2011 - 11:33am | 8 comments
According to the BBC, "blood money" -- very likely from the U.S. government -- was paid to the relatives of the three Pakistani men killed in the Davis affair. The BBC reported that under Pakistani law, relatives of a murder victim can pardon the alleged killer. In Davis's case, 18 members of the victims' families appeared at a court hearing and requested Davis's acquittal, after receiving "blood money" payments.

For background on the Raymond Davis affair, see this post.

Nothing follows.

by SWJ Editors | Wed, 03/16/2011 - 5:12am | 0 comments
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by SWJ Editors | Tue, 03/15/2011 - 7:11pm | 4 comments
A Clear and Sober Assessment on Afghanistan by Max Boot at Commentary. BLUF: "Overall, despite inevitable setbacks and continuing challenges, I'd say that the counterinsurgency campaign - which began in earnest only in the fall of 2010 - is going about as well as can be expected right now."
by SWJ Editors | Tue, 03/15/2011 - 6:00pm | 3 comments
Coalition Has Momentum in Afghanistan, Petraeus Says by Jim Garamone, American Forces Press Service.

WASHINGTON, March 15, 2011 -- The Taliban's momentum has been reversed in most areas of Afghanistan, but the progress achieved there is fragile and reversible, the commander of NATO and U.S. forces said here today.

Army Gen. David H. Petraeus told the Senate Armed Services Committee that much dangerous work remains ahead for coalition and Afghan government forces in the country.

"Nonetheless, the hard-fought achievements in 2010 and early 2011 have enabled the joint Afghan-NATO transition board to recommend initiation this spring of transition to Afghan lead in several provinces," he said. The progress also will factor into his recommendations in drawing down the number of U.S. forces in the country, now at around 100,000, the general added.

The progress, Petraeus said, has put the NATO-led effort on the path to turn over security responsibility for the country to Afghan forces by 2014.

The effort in Afghanistan is more than simply a military campaign, Petraeus told the senators. Support and resources the United States and the 47 other troop-contributing countries have provided has allowed the civil-military campaign to work, he said.

And, Petraeus noted, the Afghans themselves are shouldering an increasingly larger share of the defense burden.

"More than 87,000 additional NATO ISAF troopers and 1,000 additional civilians have been added to the effort in Afghanistan since the beginning of 2009," the general said. "In Afghanistan, security forces have grown by over 122,000 in that time as well."

Getting the inputs right has enabled all forces to conduct the comprehensive campaign, he said.

"Our core objective is, of course, ensuring that Afghanistan does not once again become a sanctuary for al-Qaida," Petraeus told the panel. "Achieving that objective requires that we help Afghanistan develop sufficient capabilities to secure and govern itself, and that effort requires the execution of the comprehensive civil-military effort on which we are now embarked."

The effort has enabled a stepped-up tempo of precise, intelligence-driven operations to capture or kill insurgent leaders, the general said.

"In a typical 90-day period, in fact, precision operations by U.S. special mission units and their Afghan partners alone kill or capture some 360 targeted insurgent leaders," Petraeus said. "Moreover, intelligence-driven operations are now coordinated with senior officers of the relevant Afghan ministries, and virtually all include highly trained Afghan soldiers or police, with some Afghan elements now in the lead on these operations."

Combined ISAF-Afghan operations have cleared the Taliban from important safe havens, and the forces are holding these areas, allowing governance and development to take root, Petraeus noted.

"ISAF and Afghan troopers have, for example, cleared such critical areas as the districts west of Kandahar city that were the birthplace of the Taliban movement, as well as important districts of Helmand province," he said.

These operations have resulted in the gradual development of local governance and economic revival in the growing security bubbles, the general said, pointing out that in Marja in Helmand province --- once a Taliban stronghold --- 75 percent of registered voters cast ballots in recent city elections.

"As a result of improvements in the security situation there," Petraeus said, "the markets -- which once sold weapons, explosives and illegal narcotics -- now feature over 1,500 shops selling food, clothes and household goods."

Safe havens in Pakistan also are receiving attention, as ISAF has troops in place to interdict these corridors, the general told the senators, and ISAF and Afghan troops are cooperating with Pakistani forces across the border to trap Taliban forces between this hammer and anvil.

Afghan President Hamid Karzai will announce which provinces will transition to full Afghan control next week, Petraeus said. "In keeping with the principles adopted by [NATO's] North Atlantic Council to guide transition," he said, "the shifting of responsibility from ISAF to Afghan forces will be conducted at a pace determined by conditions on the ground with assessments provided from the bottom up so that those at operational-command level in Afghanistan can plan the resulting battlefield geometry adjustments with our Afghan partners."

The transition, he continued, will allow NATO to take some troops out of the country, and will enable a bulk-up of troops in other areas.

"Similar processes are also taking place as we commence transition of certain training and institutional functions from ISAF trainers to their Afghan counterparts," Petraeus said.

It's important to ensure the transition process is irreversible, the general said.

"As the ambassadors of several ISAF countries emphasized at one recent NATO meeting," he said, "we'll get one shot at transition, and we need to get it right."

Since the surge of forces into Afghanistan reached its peak eight months ago, the progress is undeniable, Petraeus told the panel. The Taliban have lost safe havens, many insurgent leaders have been killed or captured, and hundreds of reconcilable mid-level leaders and fighters have been reintegrated into Afghan society, he said.

Meanwhile, Petraeus added, Afghan forces have grown in numbers and capabilities, and security improvements have meant real progress in governance and the economy.

"None of this has been easy," the general said. "The progress achieved has entailed hard fighting and considerable sacrifice. There have been tough losses along the way, and there have been setbacks as well as successes. Indeed, the experience has been akin to that of a roller coaster ride. The trajectory has generally been upward since last summer, but there certainly have been significant bumps and difficult reverses at various points."

The Taliban will try to regain momentum this spring, Petraeus said.

"We believe that we will be able to build on the momentum achieved in 2010, though that clearly will entail additional tough fighting," he added.

by Robert Haddick | Tue, 03/15/2011 - 5:46pm | 4 comments
In my Foreign Policy column last Friday, I surmised,

Obama undoubtedly knows that he will face intense criticism if he stands by while Qaddafi ruthlessly crushes the rebellion. Knowing this, we must presume that outcome, assuming Obama allows it to occur, is part of a larger calculation of risks. What might those calculations be? Topping the list might be that Obama and his advisors have decided that they want to encourage no more rebellions in the Arab world, particularly in Saudi Arabia or elsewhere on the Sunni side of the Persian Gulf.

Events over the past four days have only reinforced that impression. The Obama administration backed the protesters in Egypt's Tahrir Square and openly pressed for Hosni Mubarak's resignation. That seemed like wise strategy at the time; the protesters weren't going away, the Egyptian army was not going to permit a violent repression of the revolt, and thus the United States government had to get on the right side of history.

But that was then. It seems clear now that the Obama team has had enough of that kind of excitement, especially with the situation in Bahrain seemingly getting worse every day. Veterans of the Carter administration no doubt get a burning sensation in their stomachs when they recall what happened to a U.S. ally on the eastern side of the Persian Gulf during the last two years of their one and only term in office. Today's White House staffers must shudder to think of history repeating itself on the western side of the Gulf.

Click below to read more ...

by SWJ Editors | Tue, 03/15/2011 - 4:18pm | 0 comments
The Center for a New American Security's (CNAS) Fifth Annual Conference will take place in Washington, D.C., on Thursday, June 2, 2011. Conference registration will open in the coming weeks.

Registration information, the agenda and featured speakers will be available soon on the CNAS 5th Annual Conference webpage.

This year's conference will focus on how the United States can manage global risk and seize opportunities in a time of growing economic constraint. Featured topics include cyber security and Internet freedom, the rapidly evolving Middle East, a new phase of the war in Afghanistan and cooperation and competition in the Asia-Pacific.

by SWJ Editors | Tue, 03/15/2011 - 1:09pm | 0 comments
Is U.S. Aid to Afghanistan Helping Win the War? Doubts are Increasing. By Anna Mulrine, Christian Science Monitor. BLUF: "Increasingly, some defense analysts are coming to the conclusion that development aid is not, in fact, helping America win its war in Afghanistan."
by SWJ Editors | Tue, 03/15/2011 - 7:36am | 0 comments
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by Dave Dilegge | Mon, 03/14/2011 - 10:37pm | 8 comments
We have been remiss in offering up our SWJ quote of the week. As a bit of remedial action, we offer up this potential SWJ quote of the year by Metin Turcan in his Small Wars Journal article Seeing the Other Side of the COIN: A Critique of the Current Counterinsurgency (COIN) Strategies in Afghanistan.

If the numbers of the COIN soldiers who are watching the war from their screens are more than the numbers of soldiers who see the pupils of the insurgents with their own eyes, COIN cannot disrupt this insurgency. Stated another way, the more soldiers you have fighting the insurgency from behind their screens in their hi-tech bubbles, instead of fighting on the ground in the theater of war, the more easily you fall into this trap. If COIN soldiers are not able to see, smell, taste, and, more importantly, feel the theater (by saying feeling the theater I mean to fully understand the terrain and weather conditions, and the agonies, perceptions, motivations, hatred, happiness of the local people who live in it) they experience a sort of alienation from the reality on the ground.
by SWJ Editors | Mon, 03/14/2011 - 8:30am | 0 comments
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by Mike Few | Sun, 03/13/2011 - 11:07am | 4 comments
Technology and Training

With advances in technology in the advent of the information age, IPhones and IPads can now assist us in land and aerial navigation, survey and census collection, and basic communication via text and email.

by SWJ Editors | Sun, 03/13/2011 - 4:21am | 0 comments
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by SWJ Editors | Sat, 03/12/2011 - 8:45am | 7 comments
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

NATO Training Mission-Afghanistan

Combined Joint Public Affairs Office

Camp Eggers -- Kabul

Mar. 5, 2011

Release # 2011-03-04

Feature - The Time Is Now: Building an ANP Force, "Shohna ba Shohna," that will stand the test of time

by 1st Lt. Steven Comerford, Aide-de-Camp

KABUL, Afghanistan -- Since the creation of conflict and resolution involving state actors, one main question has beleaguered the states involved. The question is simple in wording but not in meaning. The question is "How and when do you enable a war stricken people to perpetuate ownership in their country again?" The question is valid, for when is the right time to facilitate the rebuilding of the "soul" of a country? It has become apparent throughout the history of time that not one country can accomplish such a monumental task on its own. So how do you begin to address such a seemingly insurmountable task? The answer is simple; it is the dynamic that has to be changed.

by SWJ Editors | Sat, 03/12/2011 - 3:47am | 0 comments
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by Robert Haddick | Fri, 03/11/2011 - 8:15pm | 7 comments
Here is the latest edition of my column at Foreign Policy:

Topics include:

1) Libya's rebels scramble to hold out

2) Think grand strategy is too hard? It's really not, say Kaplan and Kaplan.

Libya's rebels scramble to hold out

The armed uprising against Libyan strongman Muammar al-Qaddafi appears to be cracking, and it may collapse before U.S. President Barack Obama and other Western leaders have sorted out their policies toward the rebellion. Qaddafi, the rebels, and Obama will each have to quickly consider their political and military strategies as what may be the endgame approaches in Libya.

According to the BBC, military forces loyal to Qaddafi have broken through the rebel's defenses outside Ras Lanuf, the oil town that was the western perimeter of the rebel's stronghold over the eastern half of Libya. A few days earlier, rebels were ejected from Bin Jawad, the next town further to the west along the coast road. The risk now is that rebel morale and cohesion will shatter and that they will be unable to establish another defensive line before loyalist mechanized forces advance down the coast road toward Benghazi, the capital of the rebellion. Further complicating the rebel's task is the apparent collapse of rebel resistance in the western town of Zawiya, near Tripoli. Pacification of Zawiya would allow Qaddafi to redeploy reinforcements for the push on Benghazi.

Qaddafi's key vulnerability at this moment is the ability of his forces to maintain his advantage in mobility. The combatants are fighting down the coast road and the adjoining open terrain between towns. The military advantage will go to the side that keeps its tanks and infantry fighting vehicles -- all highly susceptible to breakdowns -- repaired and in the fight. Should Qaddafi ultimately win the war, those most deserving of credit might be those contractor mechanics he has undoubtedly hired to keep his armored vehicles running.

Click below to read more ...

by SWJ Editors | Fri, 03/11/2011 - 4:14pm | 2 comments
Once-Secret Iraqi Documents Offer Lesson for Libya by Yochi J. Dreazen, National Journal. BLUF: "An analysis of the documents by the U.S. Military Academy's Combating Terrorism Center found that Libya sent more fighters to Iraq on a per-capita basis than any other Muslim country, including Saudi Arabia. Perhaps more alarmingly for Western policymakers, most of the fighters came from eastern Libya, the center of the current uprising against Muammar el-Qaddafi."
by SWJ Editors | Fri, 03/11/2011 - 12:49pm | 0 comments
COIN Center: Monthly Webcast

The US Army Counterinsurgency Center is pleased to host Dr. John A. Bonin, Professor of Concepts and Doctrine at the U.S. Army War College, Carlisle Barracks, Pennsylvania. Previously, he was the Scholar in Residence for the Army Heritage Center Foundation. He will be presenting from the U.S. Army War College on Thursday, 17 March 2011 at 1000 CST, 1100 EST, 1500 ZULU. His briefing is entitled Building the Security Capacity of Partners. Please see this slide for additional details.

Those interested in attending may view the meeting online at https://connect.dco.dod.mil/coinweb and participate via Defense Connect Online (DCO) as a guest. Remote attendees will be able to ask questions and view the slides through the software.

Certificate Errors: Anytime you have problems connecting to DCO meetings and get "certificate" or "security" errors pop up, go the main DCO website and click on "DoD Certificates Download" link on the left-hand side. It will bring up a pop-up window and click on the first link "InstallRoot 3.13.msi" and run this installer to install the DoD Root Certificates. That should fix any certificate/security errors from then on when connecting to DCO.

Army War College: America and Its Profession of Arms

The Commandant of the U.S. Army War College cordially invites you to join this critical conversation at the U.S. Army War College's XXII Annual Strategy Conference to be held at Carlisle Barracks, Pennsylvania from April 5-7, 2011. Join over 20 leading experts, the U.S. Army War College Class of 2011, and 200 other strategists, academics, journalists, government officials, business leaders, and other members of the public as they examine and debate the critical relationship between the U.S. military and the American society. The conference will include panels discussing the changing role of the military; the possible divergence of the cultural perspectives of the U.S. military and American society in general; and the potential impact such cultural divergence could have on various groups, including those representing both the profession and the larger society--such as military families and veterans. The conference agenda can be found here.

Marine Corps University: Emerald Express

Marine Corps University, in partnership with the DoD Minerva Research Initiative and the Marine Corps University Foundation, is proud to announce its 2011 Emerald Express Strategic Symposium, entitled Al-Qaida after Ten Years of War: A Global Perspective of Successes, Failures and Prospects. The one-day conference will be held 26 April 2011 at the Gaylord National Resort and Conference Center, National Harbor, MD.

The conference will examine the multidimensional aspects of the Al-Qaida threat in various theaters where it currently operates or may do so in the future. The symposium will bring together authorities on Al-Qaida from academia, government (both military and civilian), think tanks, and media from both the United States and from the regions under discussion. We are proud to feature Gen Michael V. Hayden (USAF, Ret), the former Director of the CIA, former Director of the NSA, and former Principal Deputy Director of National Intelligence, as our morning keynote speaker.

To see the agenda and/or register, please visit the symposium website.