[Rhodes22-list] AQ a Terror Threat?

Steven Alm stevenalm at gmail.com
Thu Jun 28 09:39:56 EDT 2007


Brad,

Bush wouldn't let Abizaid do his job and wouldn't take his advice even
though he was Lebanese, spoke Arabic and knew the middle east culture well.
Time will tell if Petraeus will succeed and if Bush will allow him to do his
job.

Slim

On 6/28/07, Brad Haslett <flybrad at gmail.com> wrote:
>
> Slim,
>
> Great story!  I'm a little short on time this morning or I'd tell the
> story
> about a friend of mine who got arrested in uniform at the MEM airport
> shortly after 9/11.  As he was being led away in cuffs the 'security'
> person
> scolded him, "bein' a pilot at de airport don' mean shit no mo'."  Richard
> Reid, the shoe bomber, was delayed a day because the ticket agent, a
> former
> El Al employee, profiled him.  The French let him fly the next day and the
> only reason he wasn't successful was that the ignitor for his shoe took on
> too much moisture (it was raining in Paris that day).  The AQ threat is
> still out there.  The flying Imans incident and the lawsuit that followed
> in
> your town was an attempt to use PC to open opportunities.  There are
> smarter
> ways to go about Homeland security but we'll have to overcome our PC
> addiction and make more use of technology, biometrics at the passenger
> terminal for one.
>
> Attached is Fred Kagan's latest on Iraq.  The press is giving little
> coverage to current events and our 'leaders' in the Congress from the
> great
> nation of Incumbantstan are too busy watching the polls and their
> re-election campaign fund to make any real analysis.
>
> Brad
>
>    Understanding General Petraeus's Strategy
> Testimony to the House Committee on Foreign Affairs.
> by Frederick W. Kagan
> 06/27/2007 10:00:00 AM
>
>
> *Testimony delivered by Frederick W. Kagan, resident scholar at the
> American
> Enterprise Institute, to the House Committee on Foreign Affairs on
> Wednesday, June 27, 2007.*
>
> American military forces in Iraq are now entering the second phase of
> their
> kinetic operations even as political efforts continue on a separate but
> linked track. Ambassador Ryan Crocker and General David Petraeus are in
> the
> midst of a multi-faceted program that will not proceed in a linear way and
> will not generate clear and consistent metrics in all of its phases. The
> early signs are positive in a number of respects, although difficulties
> and
> challenges clearly remain. But it is too soon to evaluate the outcome of
> an
> operation that is just moving into the first of several phases intended to
> produce significant positive change in the situation overall.
>
> It is now beyond question that the Bush Administration pursued a flawed
> approach to the war in Iraq from 2003 to 2007. That approach relied on
> keeping the American troop presence in Iraq as small as possible, pushing
> unprepared Iraqi Security Forces into the lead too rapidly, and using
> political progress as the principal means of bringing the violence under
> control. In other words, it is an approach similar to the one proposed by
> the ISG and by some who are now pushing for political benchmarks and the
> rapid drawdown of American forces as the keys to success in the war. It is
> no more likely to work now than it was then. Political progress is
> something
> that follows the establishment of security, not something that causes it.
> The sorts of political compromises that Iraq's parties must make are
> extraordinarily difficult--one might even say impossible--in the context
> of
> uncontrolled terrorism and sectarian violence. And the Iraqi Security
> Forces, although significantly better than they were this time last year,
> are still too small and insufficiently capable to *establish* security on
> their own or even to maintain it in difficult and contested areas without
> significant continuing coalition support.
>
> For all of these reasons, the president changed his strategy profoundly in
> January 2007, and appointed a new commander in General Petraeus and a new
> Ambassador in Ryan Crocker to oversee the new approach. This new approach
> focuses on establishing security in Baghdad and its immediate environs as
> the prerequisite for political progress. It recognizes that American
> forces
> must be in the lead in many (but not all) areas, and that they will have
> to
> remain in areas that have been cleared for some time in order to ensure
> that
> security becomes permanent. The aim of the security strategy is to buy
> space
> and time for the political process in Iraq to work, and for the Iraqi
> Security Forces to mature and grow to the point where they can maintain
> the
> dramatically improved security situation our forces will have helped them
> to
> establish.
>
> The scale of the problem required an increase in American forces in Iraq,
> which the president ordered in January, of around 40% (from the equivalent
> of 15 brigade combat teams to more than 21). It also required a
> multi-phased
> approach on both the military and the political side of the equation,
> which
> has been begun.
>
> The first phase began on January 10th with the announcement of the new
> strategy and the beginning of the movement of the 5 additional Army
> brigades
> and Marine elements into the theater. That deployment process was only
> completed at the beginning of this month--in fact, critical enablers for
> those combat forces are still arriving in theater. As the new units
> entered
> Iraq, the U.S. military commanders began pushing those that were already
> in
> the theater forward from their operating bases into Joint Security
> Stations
> and Combat Outposts in key neighborhoods in Baghdad and elsewhere. The
> purpose of these movements was not to clear-and-hold--the units present in
> theater were not sufficient in numbers to conduct such operations. The
> purpose was instead to establish positions within those key areas and to
> develop both intelligence about the enemy and trust relationships with the
> local communities that would make possible decisive clear-and-hold
> operations subsequently. During this phase of the operation, additional
> Iraqi Security Forces deployed to Baghdad in accord with a plan developed
> jointly by the U.S. and Iraqi military commands. All of the requested
> units
> appeared in the first Iraqi Army rotation, and the Iraqi military has just
> completed its second rotation of units into Baghdad--again, all designated
> units arrived, and their fill levels were generally higher than in the
> first
> rotation.
>
> Generals Petraeus and Odierno did not allocate the majority of the new
> combat power they received to Baghdad. Only 2 of the additional Army
> brigades went into the city. The other 3 Army brigades and the equivalent
> of
> a Marine regiment were deployed into the areas around Baghdad that our
> generals call the "Baghdad belts," including Baqubah in Diyala province.
> The
> purpose of this deployment was not to clear-and-hold those areas, but to
> make possible the second phase of the operation that began on June 15. The
> purpose of this operation--Phantom Thunder--is to disrupt terrorist and
> militia networks and bases outside of Baghdad that have been feeding the
> violence within the city. Most of the car bomb and suicide bomb networks
> that have been supporting the al Qaeda surge since January are based in
> these belt areas, and American commanders have rightly recognized that
> they
> cannot establish stable security in the capital without disrupting these
> networks and their bases.
>
> But even this operation--the largest coordinated combat operation the U.S.
> has undertaken since the invasion in 2003--is not the decisive phase of
> the
> current strategy. It is an operation designed to set the preconditions for
> a
> successful clear-and-hold operation that will probably begin in late July
> or
> early August within Baghdad itself. That is the operation that is designed
> to bring security to Iraq's capital in a lasting way that will create the
> space for political progress that we all desire.
>
> The U.S. has not undertaken a multi-phased operation on such a large scale
> since 2003, and it is not surprising therefore that many commentators have
> become confused about how to evaluate what is going on and how to report
> it.
> Sectarian deaths in Baghdad dropped significantly as soon as the new
> strategy was announced in January, and remain at less than half their
> former
> levels. Spectacular attacks rose as al Qaeda conducted a counter-surge of
> its own, but have recently begun falling again. Violence is down
> tremendously in Anbar province, where the Sunni tribes have turned against
> al Qaeda and are actively cooperating with U.S. forces for the first time.
> This process has spread from Anbar into Babil, Salah-ad-Din, and even
> Diyala
> provinces, and echoes of it have even spread into one of the worst
> neighborhoods in Baghdad--Ameriyah, formerly an al Qaeda stronghold.
> Violence has risen naturally in areas that the enemy had long controlled
> but
> in which U.S. forces are now actively fighting for the first time in many
> years, and the downward spiral in Diyala that began in mid-2006 continued
> (which is not surprising, since the Baghdad Security Plan does not aim to
> establish security in Diyala).
>
> All of these trends are positive. The growing skill and determination of
> the
> Iraqi Army units fighting alongside Americans is also positive. Some Iraqi
> Police units have also fought well. Others have displayed sectarian
> tendencies and participated in sectarian actions. Political progress has
> been very slow--something that has clearly disappointed many who hoped for
> an immediate turnaround, but that is not surprising for those who always
> believed that it would follow, not precede or accompany, the establishment
> of security at least in Baghdad. And negative sectarian actors within the
> Iraqi Government continue to resist making necessary compromises with
> former
> foes. Overall, the basic trends are rather better than could have been
> expected of the operation so far, primarily because of the unanticipated
> stunning success in Anbar and its spread. But it remains far too early to
> offer any meaningful evaluation of the progress of an operation whose
> decisive phases are only just beginning.
>
> To say that the current plan has failed is simply incorrect. It might
> fail,
> of course, as any military/political plan might fail. Indications on the
> military side strongly suggest that success--in the form of dramatically
> reduced violence by the end of this year--is quite likely. Indications on
> the political side are more mixed, but are also less meaningful at this
> early stage before security has been established.
>
> Great commanders in history have understood two critical truths: the
> situation in war is constantly changing, and decisions must take that
> change
> into account--and, therefore, that it is best to delay decisions until the
> last possible moment to ensure that they are made on the basis of the most
> recent and accurate understanding of the situation, rather than on
> preconceptions formed in different circumstances. The situation in Iraq is
> very different today from what it was in January 2007, to say nothing of
> November 2006. It will be very different in September, and still more
> different in December of this year. It would be a great error to attempt
> to
> decide now upon the strategy to pursue when the current plan has actually
> been implemented, because we cannot now predict what the situation will be
> then with any confidence or accuracy. And it would be a very grave error
> indeed to rush now to abandon the first strategy that offers some real
> prospect for success in favor of a return to an approach that has already
> failed repeatedly.
> *
>
> --Frederick W. Kagan
> *
>
>
> On 6/28/07, Steven Alm <stevenalm at gmail.com> wrote:
> >
> > I moved to MD in 1980 driving a 1969 Dodge van.  It had MN plates with
> > expired stickers so I just tore the stickers off and planned to play
> dumb
> > if
> > I got stopped.  And I did.  The cop said he thought MN required stickers
> > and
> > kinda scratched my head and said, "Dunno.  Never done it before."
> >
> > He went back to his cruiser for a few minutes and came back said his
> > computer was broken down so he couldn't check.  So off I went on my
> merry
> > way.  Next I had to grease the palm of the guy at the inspection shop to
> > get
> > him to pass my old van held together with bailing wire and various
> > jury-rigged light switches.
> >
> > Pardon the rambling but this was funny:  The break light switch under
> the
> > break pedal was shot and no longer available so I by-passed the old
> switch
> > and ran wires up the steering column and out onto the three-on-the-tree
> > shift lever.  There I mounted a SPST momentary throw switch which turned
> > on
> > the break lights.  When stopping, I always had my hand on the shifter
> > anyway
> > so when I stepped on the breaks I also through the switch with my thumb.
> > When the inspector asked what the switch was for I said it was for an
> old
> > horn that I don't have anymore.  I through the switch a few times while
> he
> > looked closely at it and didn't hear any horn.  When he walked around
> > checking the lights, he called out, "Break Lights!"  I didn't even push
> > the
> > pedal, I just thumbed the switch and passed.
> >
> > I never did change my driver's license because I was only there for the
> > school year.
> >
> > Slim
> >
> > On 6/27/07, Robert Skinner <robert at squirrelhaven.com> wrote:
> > >
> > > Mary Lou Troy wrote:
> > > > What? you didn't bring the bill or piece of mail with your local
> > > > address on it or was it some other frivolous bit of info? Because we
> > > > have such a long drive to Easton, we brought lots of paper with us
> > > > and I don't remember what I actually needed. I do remember that with
> > > > the vehicles it cost me a lot more than in PA.
> > > -----------------------------------------------------
> > > I also migrated from PA to MD about 20 years ago,
> > > and even then, the tariff for bringing in a vehicle
> > > was outrageous.
> > > /Robert
> > > __________________________________________________
> > > Use Rhodes22-list at rhodes22.org, Help? www.rhodes22.org/list
> > >
> > __________________________________________________
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> >
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