"More nations should consider creating police-cum-military forces for hybrid stabilization missions. They are a domestic police force, but they are doing their jobs in countries hundreds and thousands of miles from home: Afghanistan, Kosovo, Lebanon, Palestine. They get so many invitations — pleas, really — from countries emerging from conflict, or descending into it, that they must turn some down. They are Italy’s Carabinieri, and their unusual mix of law-enforcement talent and military capability may often be a better answer than traditional troops to today’s not-quite-wars."
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 NBC News | Mon, 04/16/2018 - 2:37pm | 0 comments
... "With their election interference and ongoing manipulation of social media platforms like Twitter, the Russians have been regularly outfoxing America in the information realm, U.S. intelligence officials acknowledge. Who turned the tables this time? Not the White House, the State Department or the CIA. The recordings were published by a U.S.-government-funded website called Polygraph.info, whose reporter says she got them from a source close to the Kremlin. Polygraph is a relatively new fact-checking arm of an obscure, diminutive media effort by the U.S. to highlight Russian misdeeds and counter Russian propaganda...."
by Bloomberg News | Mon, 04/16/2018 - 5:19am | 1 comment
"The number of countries involved in festering Middle East conflicts most closely resembles the situation before World War I. That's frightening. Some strategic games are too complex to be readily modeled, and when we see such games in the real world that’s exactly when we should be the most worried. That’s my immediate reaction to the situation in Syria and environs."
by The Wall Street Journal | Mon, 04/16/2018 - 12:13am | 0 comments
"President Donald Trump deferred to his Pentagon chief’s caution and tempered his preference for a more robust attack on Syria over allegations it used deadly gas on civilians, the first hints at the direction of his revamped national-security team. The decision late last week, detailed by people familiar with the process, marked the first substantive test of the group now that John Bolton is serving as Mr. Trump’s national security adviser."
by The Wall Street Journal | Sun, 04/15/2018 - 8:05pm | 0 comments
"The crisis in Syria—the chemical weapons attack by President Bashar al-Assad’s forces, followed by the limited U.S.-U.K.-France military response—creates an opportunity to develop the broader Syria strategy the West now lacks."
by The New York Times | Sun, 04/15/2018 - 5:37pm | 0 comments
"Stop me if you’ve heard this one before: Syria is going to explode. I know, you have heard that one before, but this time I mean really explode. Because the U.S., British and French attack on Syria to punish its regime for its vile use of chemical weapons — and Russia’s vow to respond — is actually just the second-most dangerous confrontation unfolding in that country. Even more dangerous is that Israel and Iran, at the exact same time, seem to be heading for a High Noon shootout in Syria over Iran’s attempts to turn Syria into a forward air base against Israel, something Israel is vowing to never let happen."
by Haaretz | Sat, 04/14/2018 - 2:01am | 0 comments
"The recent airstrike in Syria attributed to Israel has brought to the forefront Iran’s intentions of establishing a network of drones (unmanned aerial vehicles) in that country. The project could expand the Islamic Republic’s capabilities of gathering intelligence and prepare the groundwork for possible attacks. Iran began producing drones in the 1980s, building dozens of them, mainly for spying and aerial photography. In recent years, since joining the fighting in support of the Assad regime, its drones have been seen in the skies of Syria and Iraq."
by DoD News | Sat, 04/14/2018 - 1:03am | 0 comments
U.S., British and French air and naval forces launched attacks against the Syrian government’s chemical weapon arsenal in retaliation for the use of such weapons on civilians, Defense Secretary James N. Mattis and Marine Corps Gen. Joe Dunford, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said at a Pentagon news conference tonight.
by Voice of America | Sat, 04/14/2018 - 12:39am | 0 comments
President Trump announced Friday night “a combined operation” by the U.S., France and Britain against the regime of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, aimed at ending his government’s use of chemical weapons. As Trump spoke from the White House, explosions lit up the skies over Damascus, the Syrian capital. The assault is now over. Associated Press reporters saw smoke rising from east Damascus and a huge fire could be seen from a distance to the east. Syrian television said the attacks targeted a scientific research center in Barzeh, near Damascus, and an army depot near Homs.
by DoD News | Fri, 04/13/2018 - 4:02pm | 0 comments
If a nation wants to challenge the United States conventionally, that nation will lose. So, nations won’t challenge America conventionally, but look for asymmetric ways to do so, DoD’s most-senior civilian and military leaders said to the House Armed Services Committee yesterday. Defense Secretary James N. Mattis and Marine Corps Gen. Joe Dunford, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, also spoke about the problems caused by “gray zone” warfare.
| Thu, 04/12/2018 - 9:24pm | 0 comments
"Britain, France and the U.S. united Thursday around broad plans for a military strike against Syria as they worked to bridge differences over the scope and purpose of a coordinated response to a suspected chemical weapons attack, U.S. officials said. President Donald Trump met with his national security team to weigh military options while Syrian President Bashar al-Assad sought to limit the impact of an expected attack by moving warplanes under the protection of Russian air defenses."
by The New York Times | Thu, 04/12/2018 - 8:58pm | 0 comments
"Defense Secretary Jim Mattis sought on Thursday to slow down an imminent strike on Syria, reflecting mounting concerns at the Pentagon that a concerted bombing campaign could escalate into a wider conflict between Russia, Iran and the West. During a closed-door White House meeting, officials said Mr. Mattis pushed for more evidence of President Bashar al-Assad’s role in a suspected chemical attack last weekend that would assure the world that military action was necessary."
by SWJ Editors | Thu, 04/12/2018 - 10:31am | 0 comments
German Marshall Fund of the United States Report by Oytun Orhan - "Changes in the U.S. administration will largely determine the cooperation between the United States and Turkey in Syria. Mike Pompeo, who will soon replace Rex Tillerson as secretary of state, and John Bolton, Trump’s latest pick for national security advisor, both prioritize the containment of Iran, and both hold similar views to the Pentagon in acting unilaterally rather than using the means of diplomacy in foreign policy."
Hammer of the Caliphate: The Territorial Demise of the Islamic State--A Small Wars Journal Anthology
by SWJ Editors | Thu, 04/12/2018 - 12:28am | 0 commentsPart of the Small Wars Journal anthology series, Hammer of the Caliphate is a continuation of previous works on the Islamic State, Al-Qaeda, and their affiliate groups. The anthology title is a play on words related to the fifteenth-century treatise Malleus Maleficarum ("Hammer of the Witches").
by CNN News | Thu, 04/12/2018 - 12:13am | 0 comments
"Not a building in Eastern Ghouta has emerged unscathed after six years of war. The people who remained have carved out livable space within the destruction. Along the side of a road, a boy sat on a burnt barrel atop a mound of debris. Two toddlers played inside a blown-up truck. A barber went about his business inside his ravaged shop. CNN visited the shattered suburb last week in the company of the Syrian military and saw the vestiges of the Damascus suburb's double life, above and below ground."
by Military Times | Wed, 04/11/2018 - 5:53pm | 0 comments
"Robert Wilkie, the undersecretary of defense for personnel and readiness, and retired Army Maj. Gen. Robert Scales on Wednesday unveiled some of the early work being done on a task force that was years in the making but only under Secretary of Defense Jim Mattis has received the heft of funding and resolve to get moving."
by Stars & Stripes | Wed, 04/11/2018 - 2:00pm | 0 comments
"A key U.S. senator is pressing the Army to set aside one of its new Security Forces Assistant Brigades for missions in Africa, which are now being carried out by a mix of rotating units. Sen. Jim Inhofe, R-Okla., a senior member of the Senate Armed Services Committee, said in a letter Monday to Army leadership that U.S. Africa Command would benefit from having a more reliable unit to tap for its expanding advisory mission on the continent."
by The Wall Street Journal | Wed, 04/11/2018 - 7:06am | 0 comments
"President Trump last week ordered National Guard troops to patrol the U.S. border with Mexico. The president is eager to show supporters that he is fulfilling his campaign pledge to eliminate illegal immigration, but he will soon find that using the National Guard this way won’t be easy—and may not do much to solve the problem. Unless acting under the authority of a state governor, the troops the president sends to the border will be restricted to observing and reporting violations."
by Breaking Defense | Wed, 04/11/2018 - 5:58am | 0 comments
"'Battle' is very tactical," said another participant approvingly. "We've got to have a cultural shift." We need to recognize we're in conflict right now with great power adversaries, even if we're not shooting at each other.
by Voice of America | Tue, 04/10/2018 - 6:00pm | 0 comments
The United States on Tuesday consulted with allies in preparation for possible expanded military action in Syria following the latest suspected deadly chemical weapons attack on a Syrian rebel-held village. "We are looking for a coordinated response, whatever that response might be," said State Department spokeswoman Heather Nauert about possible U.S. military action in Syria. President Donald Trump has warned those responsible will pay a "big price" for Saturday's attack in eastern Ghouta that killed at least 40 people.
by The Wall Street Journal | Tue, 04/10/2018 - 2:48pm | 0 comments
"The U.S. is reducing the presence of American commandos on Africa’s front lines, a move U.S. officers believe will make troops less vulnerable to the type of militant attack that left four U.S. soldiers dead in this West African country last fall. American Green Berets, Navy SEALs and Marine special operators serving as advisers to African forces will largely stay closer to the rear, working from command centers and battalion headquarters, rather than accompanying African troops on hazardous operations against militant groups."
by Hal Kempfer | Tue, 04/10/2018 - 12:14am | 0 comments
On April 7th, the Syrians again used chemical weapons against their people, with dozens killed, potentially 70 or more. Many were innocent children, yet again. Israel has put down a marker, by striking first at a Syrian airfield, now the United States must act. Whatever we do in Syria has to gauged on several levels. We don’t want to do something that would help ISIS nor help Al Qaeda affiliates from gaining ground or advantage. The Russians are deeply embedded with the Syrians, so whatever we do militarily will likely cost Russian lives.
by The Washington Post | Mon, 04/09/2018 - 10:15pm | 0 comments
"The U.S. military said Monday that it has killed the senior leader of an Islamic State enclave in northern Afghanistan, highlighting an evolving fight that expanded more than a year ago after the militant left the Taliban in a dispute."
by Military Times | Mon, 04/09/2018 - 12:20pm | 0 comments
"Cyber attacks soon will destroy infrastructure and kill people. And that might be what it takes for policy leaders to prepare for what’s coming, experts said. A panel of four experts from military, finance, cyber and strategy laid out frightening scenarios at the New America Future of War conference Monday that are not far-off possibilities but things that are happening now."
by RAND Corporation | Mon, 04/09/2018 - 7:14am | 2 comments
Continue on for a summary and a link to this newly released RAND Corporation report by Linda Robinson, Austin Long, Kimberly Jackson and Rebeca Orrie. This report examines major U.S. decisions related to the development or employment of special operations forces. The purpose of the report is to analyze how change has previously occurred in Army, Joint, and U.S. Department of Defense policy regarding SOF to inform future development of options for policymakers and to better articulate the ways in which the varied Army Special Operations Forces capabilities can help to meet U.S. national security objectives.