"The statement by Army Lt. Gen. Austin 'Scott' Miller during his confirmation hearing was an acknowledgment that the war has dragged on nearly 17 years and of how past U.S. commanders often proclaimed that conditions were set for forces to make significant progress soon."
Blog Posts
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 Military Times | Tue, 06/19/2018 - 12:53pm | 0 comments
“While acknowledging that 17 years of war “is a very long time,” the incoming head of U.S. forces in Afghanistan told lawmakers he sees progress in the ongoing fight thanks to recent changes in military strategy there.”
by Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments | Tue, 06/19/2018 - 12:10pm | 0 comments
A Center for Strategic & Budgetary Assessments Study - "By the middle of the 21st century, ground forces will employ tens of thousands of robots, and the decisions of human commanders will be shaped by artificial intelligence; trends in technology and warfare make this a near certainty."
by The Washington Post | Tue, 06/19/2018 - 9:23am | 0 comments
"And then they come, bus after bus, wheelchair after wheelchair, battalions of his bent brothers, stooped with years but steeped in pride, veterans coming to see their country’s monument to their sacrifice and to be welcomed by of one of their country’s icons."
by The New York Times | Tue, 06/19/2018 - 12:05am | 0 comments
"Raiding among cattle-herding tribes is a traditional part of life in South Sudan, but in the past five years, the skirmishes have become more violent and unrestrained. Small armed bands that traditionally guarded their communities’ livestock have been drawn into bitter proxy battles."
by Association of the United States Army | Mon, 06/18/2018 - 9:05pm | 0 comments
John Nagl and Paul Yingling - "We are old men who spent the better part of two decades fighting on the battlefields of the Middle East and in the halls of the Pentagon. In the Middle East, our enemies were insurgents. In the Pentagon, we were the insurgents: pushing the Army to adapt to the challenges of irregular warfare. Our goal here is not to refight those old battles. Instead, in the great tradition of Kenny Rogers, we’d like to offer some advice to young leaders who are considering fighting the battle for defense reform."
by The Washington Post | Sun, 06/17/2018 - 4:21pm | 0 comments
“After two days of rising hopes across the country, Taliban leaders Sunday brusquely rejected the government’s proposal to extend a three-day ceasefire and said they were ordering all insurgent fighters to resume operations against ‘the foreign invaders and their internal supporters.’”
by SWJ Editors | Sun, 06/17/2018 - 2:01pm | 0 comments
Via the United Nations University's Centre for Policy Research - "There is a clear case to be made that the sustainable development fight may be won or lost in cities. Urban areas, especially in conflict-affected contexts, are emerging as epicentres of multi-layered violence and extreme vulnerability."
by Voice of America | Sun, 06/17/2018 - 12:25pm | 0 comments
"A suicide bomb attack has killed at least 19 people and wounded more than 50 others in eastern Afghanistan, a day after a deadly attack in the same area targeted government soldiers and Taliban insurgents celebrating a temporary cease-fire during the Muslim festival Eid al-Fitr."
by Associated Press | Sun, 06/17/2018 - 12:51am | 0 comments
"In 2016, the Colombian government and the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, signed a peace deal that ended five decades of conflict. The peace accord was praised around the world but its implementation has been slow going and ridden with obstacles."
by The Washington Post | Sat, 06/16/2018 - 8:04pm | 0 comments
"President Ashraf Ghani ordered the extension Saturday of a first-time cease-fire with Taliban insurgents, offered to provide medical treatment to injured Taliban fighters and announced that 46 Taliban prisoners had been released Friday as a sign of official goodwill."
by The Hill | Sat, 06/16/2018 - 11:58am | 0 comments
"The Government of Afghanistan on June 7 offered a unilateral, week-long cease-fire to the Taliban beginning June 12, in observance of the end of the holy month of Ramadan. Of course, a cease-fire is not a peace agreement, but it can lead to one."
by Stars & Stripes | Sat, 06/16/2018 - 7:14am | 0 comments
"The first day of the Eid holiday in eastern Afghanistan brought a strange sight - presumed Taliban fighters walking up to Afghan soldiers at checkpoints and taking selfies with them."
by The Washington Post | Sat, 06/16/2018 - 6:46am | 0 comments
"Nearly two years after a historic peace accord ended Latin America’s longest-running insurgency and garnered a Nobel Prize, an old scourge is again spreading across the rural valleys and jungle towns of Colombia’s northeast - guerrilla warfare."
by The New York Times | Fri, 06/15/2018 - 4:34pm | 0 comments
"They come from all walks of life, ages 17 to 65. Among them is a high school student who went home to complete his final exams before rejoining the others; a poet who still carries in his chest one of the four bullets he was shot with; a bodybuilding champion who abandoned his gym and has lost 20 pounds of muscle on the journey. They are day laborers, farmers, retired army officers, a polio victim on crutches, a mechanic who was robbed of his sight by war."
by Military Times | Thu, 06/14/2018 - 1:15pm | 0 comments
“As missiles fly and bombardments are launched by the Saudi-led coalition in Yemen, experts say that requests for direct U.S. military involvement to take the vital port city of Hodeida could open a host of problems for U.S. concerns in the civil war-ravaged nation.”
by Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction | Thu, 06/14/2018 - 11:50am | 0 comments
Today, the Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction (SIGAR) John F. Sopko delivered remarks at New America in Washington, D.C., marking the launch of SIGAR's fifth lessons learned report.
by Military Times | Thu, 06/14/2018 - 12:29am | 0 comments
“The proposal for the report suggests the Marine Corps could take over all counterinsurgency missions from the Army, thereby eliminating the newly established and deployed Security Force Assistance Brigades.”
by DoD News | Thu, 06/14/2018 - 12:27am | 0 comments
Nearing its 100th day of its deployment in Afghanistan, the highly trained and specialized 1st Security Force Assistance Brigade for the NATO Resolute Support mission is seeing results, the brigade’s commander said today.
by Voice of America | Thu, 06/14/2018 - 12:25am | 0 comments
U.S. envoy Nikki Haley rebuked the General Assembly for using its time to criticize Israel, instead of addressing other situations. "Instead, today the General Assembly is devoting its valuable time to the situation in Gaza," Haley said. "Gaza is an important international matter, but what makes it different and more urgent than conflicts in Nicaragua, Iran, Yemen, Burma or many other desperate places?" She said the assembly was meeting because "attacking Israel" is the "favorite political sport" of some U.N. member states.
by The New York Times | Wed, 06/13/2018 - 12:51pm | 0 comments
“Even soldiers who fight wars from a safe distance have found themselves traumatized. Could their injuries be moral ones?”
by Stars & Stripes | Wed, 06/13/2018 - 12:08am | 0 comments
"A top Afghan general said Monday that more than 77,000 Taliban and other militants are now fighting against the government – more than double earlier U.S. and Afghan estimates despite a large increase in U.S. airstrikes over the past year."
by Military Times | Tue, 06/12/2018 - 2:28pm | 0 comments
“Despite the recent attacks that have killed and wounded U.S. troops operating in Africa, the role of forces there remains in advising partners, not in direct combat, according to the Pentagon.”
by Military Times | Tue, 06/12/2018 - 12:44pm | 0 comments
“In recent weeks coalition forces have more than tripled the number of strikes they made against ISIS elements in Iraq and Syria. But more ground operations in pockets of those countries are needed to flush out the remaining fighters, officials said.”
by The Wall Street Journal | Tue, 06/12/2018 - 12:06pm | 0 comments
In this WSJ video, Donald Bolduc, the former commander of special operations in Africa, and Jack Murphy, an eight-year army special forces veteran, speak about the report. Some of their assessments differ from the findings laid out by the Pentagon about what went wrong.