Omnivore 24/09/09

Tie Troops To Progress on Afghanistan’s Corruption, Brookings Institute

Should the United States Withdraw From Afghanistan? Cato Institute

A “Better War” in Afghanistan, Center for a New American Security

Shape, Clear, Hold and Build: “Uncertain Lessons of the Afghan and Iraq Wars”, Centre for Security & Int’l Studies

Pakistani Capabilities for a Counterinsurgency Campaign, New America Foundation

President Asif Ali Zardari Address, International Institute for Strategic Studies

The Will To Intervene (W2I) Report, Montreal Institute For Genocide & Human Rights Studies

The Congolese Elite and the Fragmented City, LSE Crisis States Research Center

Regional Arrangements and Security Challenges, LSE Crisis States Research Center

Discussion on Drug Syndicates, Institute For Security Studies

Sanctuary, Reloaded

Alright, there’s a pretty animated back-and-forth going on between Ex, Bernard Finel, and the pros at the new go-to-blog on COIN issues, Ink Spots, on whether or not a larger troop commitment to Afghanistan is actually going to fix anything. Quite a bit of it digs into sanctuary/safe haven issues, which of course gets my attention.

Finel, to my relief, is talking good sense on the subject, too, so if anyone out there is listening, go read it. I’d tell Finel so, too, in his comments section, if it wasn’t for the fact that comments are apparently by invitation only – try as I might, I can’t get past the username/password log-in requirement  that keeps popping up.

I also can’t really afford the time to weigh in right now because I’m, well,  on a deadline to get a feature on militant sanctuaries in to Janes Intelligence Review.  I promise to weigh in by the end of the week.

Omnivore 23/09/09

The Decline of the Defense Intellectual Base, Bernard Finel, Bernardfinel.com

Insurgency, Swiss Made, Thomas Rid, Kings of War

Fending Off Failure in Afghanistan, Editors, Room For Debate/New York Times

Afghan Recovery Report: Project Highlights, Jean Mackenzie, Institute for War & Peace Reporting

The Ultimate AfPak Reading List, Peter Bergen, The AfPak Channel

Challenges From Deployment, Joshua Foust, Registan.net

Weary Troops Are Fighting a Losing Battle, Not a Lost Cause, Anthony Lloyd, The Times

Military Cross Hero Killed in Afghanistan, Michael Evens, The Times

Riot Police Clear Calais Camp, Angelique Chrisafis & Alan Travis, Guardian

Brown Move To Cut Nuclear Subs, BBC News

Who’s Running the Show?

David Axe has got an interesting piece up at DR on the incoming Supreme Allied Commander Europe (SACEUR), US Navy Admiral James Stavridis. Axe makes some interesting points about the relevance of Stavridis’ narco-busting experience in South America, but what struck me was how details about his and General Stanley McChrystal’s respective roles have gotten garbled.

Axe:

Navy Adm. James Stavridis, arguably the sea service’s intellectual leader, is making the leap from Latin America’s U.S. Southern Command, to the top job at European Command. That means he’ll also be NATO Supreme Commander, which puts him at the head of the faltering NATO war effort in Afghanistan.

Stavridis, in a media interview:

My experience there will translate well to my role as the NATO commander in Afghanistan, which is, let’s face it, an insurgency, drug-fueled, obviously 100 percent different in many ways. But, my experiences in understanding and learning counter-insurgency I think are up to the task.

Axe again:

Based on his experience in Colombia, Stavridis praised the elevation of commando Gen. Stan McChrystal, to lead U.S. forces in Afghanistan. “I think he’s a perfect choice. He has deep, deep tactical experience in insurgency.”

Sigh… Stavridis is Supreme Allied Commander Europe, a.k.a. “SACEUR” (pronounced SACK-UR). That makes him el supremo of Allied Command Operations (ACO), which is one of two NATO strategic commands (the other being Allied Command Transformation, or ACT). The position places Stavridis in charge of a number of European headquarters, as well as all NATO operations. What it doesn’t do is make him “NATO Supreme Commander”. There’s this little position called Secretary General (or SecGen), see, and SecGen and SACEUR have equivalent authority. The former directs the civilian-diplomatic part of the Alliance, the latter runs the military strategic side of things.

Stavridis’ job as SACEUR also doesn’t make him the guy running the show in Afghanistan, at least not directly. There’s an intermediate operational headquarters between SACEUR and ISAF, for one thing. McChrystal is Commander ISAF (COMISAF). That means he’s doing more than just leading US forces in Afghanistan, he’s also running the NATO mission there, including troops from more than forty contributor nations. He reports to Stavridis, but he’s the one directly responsible for the show in Afghanistan.

A lot of this can be put down to the byzantine nature of NATO structures. Some of it can probably be explained away as new guy slip of the tongue. But at the end of the day, it’ll be interesting to see how the ego pokes turf wars campaign plays out.