Being tech un-savvy, I’ll leave the tech talk to this article, but with the impact social media has on everything from cute baby videos going viral to the Islamic State spreading its jihad, the power of its ability to influence people can not be underestimated. Opinions form quickly and many political activist groups successfully use this tool for successful public relations operations. Some use it to spread disinformation, misinformation and as a battleground to launch scorched-earth political nuclear attacks, effectively annihilating their political opponents. With this in mind, here’s a thought-provoking piece from Wired:
Monthly Archives: August 2015
Sophisticated political manipulation?
Filed under Culture Wars, General Interest, Politics, The Media
Iran: The Big Sell | Foreign Policy Research Institute
Iran: The Big Sell | Foreign Policy Research Institute. Hat tip to JK.
Filed under Foreign Policy, General Interest, Military, Politics, Terrorism
Don’t forget to watch the sleight of hand
While all the oxygen has been sucked up by Donald Trump, the Hillary Clinton email server fell to the back pages. She and her minions are defying a federal judge’s orders:
So, while the press and we blabber on about Donald Trump, his friend, Hillary Clinton, and her girls club are stalling and doing the latest version of the Rose Law Firm billing records hokey-pokey dance. They’re particularly adept at the “shaking it all about” part – deflecting and obfuscating, hoping eventually those asking questions can be cast as the villains and Saint Hillary can boldly prance around proclaiming she’s been the victim of a vicious right-wing inquisition again.
The rule of law is for little people, not for Hillary Clinton.
Filed under Culture Wars, Foreign Policy, General Interest, Politics
Trump – the influence-peddler in chief
The first Republican debate ended with no clear winner emerging. Sure, there were plenty of gotcha questions, but Donald Trump didn’t answer any questions in detail, except the one explaining his support for Democrats in the past. His followers will latch onto his bombastic, red meat, xenophobic rhetoric, missing that Trump personifies exactly what these supporters hate about Washington. He eloquently described buying politicians and peddling influence. He represents the worst part of big money greasing palms in DC. I would have asked him why he wanted Hillary Clinton at his wedding, since he said his big donations compelled her to attend.
Nothing Trump said demonstrated he studied the issues and did some research prior to this debate. His performance reminded me of Sarah Palin, who reveled in throwing out the same sort of red meat rhetoric, devoid of any substantive details. If he doesn’t bother to read up on and research the complex issues facing America for this debate, one can only wonder how he would handle them as President. It speaks to a narcissism that echoes the current occupant at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, another “I am the greatest” ego.
The other non-politician on the stage, Ben Carson, displays a genuine humility and seriousness. He talked about studying issues, while Trump acts like the details are beneath him. Interestingly, Carly Fiorina, another non-politician, shone in the earlier debate, specifically because she does her homework. Trump has lots of money, as he reminds us in every other breath, so why didn’t he hire top-notch coaches to prepare for this debate? I suspect the answer is he thinks his money will buy him the Presidency, after all that is how he understands the American political system. Sadly, so many conservatives are so angry at the state of our country and fed-up with Washington and the GOP establishment that they hunger for the red meat he’s offering. In reality, all he really has to offer is bologna.
Filed under General Interest, Politics
Buyer beware!
Many voters within the base of both parties feel betrayed by Washington insiders, so the Democrats have a declared Independent, unabashed socialist making huge inroads within the Democratic base. Many fed-up conservatives have embraced Donald Trump’s candidacy out of total disgust and anger at the GOP establishment politicians, who routinely betray conservatives.
Perhaps, it’s just a personal call, but the Washington Post is reporting a call that Bill Clinton made to Donald Trump shortly before Trump decided to run as a Republican. As one who remains extremely wary of Trump’s motives and his rather late in life swing to the GOP, this inquiring mind keeps wondering if he is just trying to sabotage the GOP. Or more likely, the Clintons got wind of Trump considering a run, so Bill Clinton might have been trying to ferret information out of Trump or encouraged Trump to run, in hopes he would throw the GOP race into chaos. Never underestimate the Clintons when it comes to underhandedness.
Filed under Culture Wars, General Interest, Politics
A short Mugabe primer
Here is another link to read, ” Cecil the Lion and Robert Mugabe”, by Robin Wright at The New Yorker. Wright clarifies the situation:
“Mugabe’s autocratic rule has remained almost impossible to investigate or challenge. Opposition parties are officially permitted but unofficially not tolerated. “Human-rights abuses range from violent attacks, and sometimes murderous ones, on opposition figures to detentions and harassment,” Roth said. In June, the State Department accused Zimbabwe of not only curtailing freedoms of speech, press, assembly, association, and movement but also of abducting and torturing dissidents—with no recourse. “Corruption occurred at every level of the police force,” the annual U.S. human-rights report declared.
Last Friday, Zimbabwe demanded the extradition of Walter J. Palmer, the Minnesota trophy hunter who shot Cecil with an arrow and then, forty hours later, finished him off with a gun. The country’s environmental minister announced that the “foreign poacher” had to be held to account for his crime.”
Filed under Culture Wars, Foreign Policy, General Interest, Politics
“Extradition to Zimbabwe”, be for real!
With all the ink already spilled elsewhere about Cecil the Lion, I had resolved to hold my tongue, but seeing the reports about a petition to extradite the dastardly dentist to Zimbabwe for justice, made we want to scream, “Who in the hell is going to extradite an American citizen to Robert Mugabe’s dictatorship in Zimbabwe?” Really, over a lion, we’re going to send an American citizen to Mugabe’s justice system??? Any idiot who signed that petition should be scorned and ridiculed!!! Besides the vast, decades long history of human rights violations by Mugabe’s government, it’s also one of the world’s most corrupt governments too. Americans need to wake-up and start thinking before they follow these lunatic leftist pop culture pipers, because it’s alarming how totally ignorant vast swaths of Americans truly are, yet they run around following TV personalities and idiots in Hollywood, based on emotional theatrics.
Various TV personalities do the man-on-the-street interviews to showcase the shocking ignorance of Americans on just about any political or historical topic, but the Mark Dice video on You Tube yesterday should alarm, not entertain you. He stopped random passers by and asked them if they would support Hillary’s campaign promise to repeal the Bill of Rights if she’s elected. Now, suspend arguments that she just might do that, since she has no respect for the rule of law, but truly she hasn’t suggested that. Dice uses these outlandish videos to showcase how ignorant and way too easily led many Americans are. Perhaps, its a toss-up on whether the worst part is these people blabber on oblivious to how lost in the fog of progressive muddled thinking they are or that these are the “low-information” voters the left tries to get to the polls. Leftists rant about “their rights” constantly, so it would seem that the “Bill of Rights” might ring a bell that THE “Bill of Rights” might be something important. What these people are following is celebrity. Hillary Clinton is a celebrity figure in America.
Time to listen to that sappy song “Born Free” popularized by the Elsa the Lion story, oh my, I can ponder freedom and lions’ rights to life all at once… yippee!
Here’s the Dice video:
Filed under Culture Wars, Food for Thought, General Interest, Politics
Kurdistan?
Talk about serendipity, just after responding to Kinnison making the case for the Kurds, I read the latest article by G. Murphy Donovan at the New English Review, “Reform Islam? Recognize Kurdistan!” GMD writes:
“If the democratic West seeks to win the war of ideas with the theocratic East, it could do worse than support the national aspirations of a unique culture such as Kurdistan. Persians and Arabs have had their day, yet both are still yoked by religious repression. The time may have come to reward the kind of Muslim polity that the rest of the world can live with.
Recognizing Kurdistan sends a powerful message to Islam. Statehood for the Kurds could spark a reformation that enlightens the entire Muslim world. Indeed, Kurdistan would be, for example, a much more reliable Muslim “partner” in NATO than Turkish backsliders. A Kurdish state might not be the final answer, yet Kurds are surely a better bet than Turks or Palestinians – and a more enlightened addition to the community of tolerant, free nations.”
I think you guys are onto something and combine this idea with the ideas in a SSI paper from 2014 by Huba Wass de Czege, BG (ret.), that I mentioned in a May blog post, “A SSI Paper on defeating the Islamic State” and we might be on our way to a real strategy.
JK, yes, you’re right, the PKK does complicate matters and they are designated terrorists by both Turkey and the United States, but the Turks will use the latest terrorist attacks to crack down on Kurds, in general, if history is any guide.
Filed under Food for Thought, Foreign Policy, General Interest, History, Military, Politics
Some fresh ideas on “nation-building”
I like considering fresh ideas to approaching old problems and this article in the latest Strategic Studies Institute newsletter looks at fragile states in a new way. Instead of looking at fragile states remedies from a top down state-building approach, Dr. Robert D. Lamb states that outsiders, to include international state-building groups, can’t fix fragile states and he suggests a bottom up approach, recognizing that some subnational groups within fragile states manage to organize themselves and even govern themselves in some cases, despite the dysfunction at the national level. His ideas deserve consideration, in light of the dismal failure of “nation-building”:
“Strategic Insights: Fragile States Cannot Be Fixed With State-Building”
Filed under Foreign Policy, General Interest, Politics
Obama’s ISIS Strategy – “FUBAR”
A few days ago I posted links to Patrick Poole’s reporting on the embarrassing state of our “training Syrian moderates to be our boots on the ground in Syria project”. Back in 2014, I wrote several posts on the Syrian moderate project, here, here, here, here and here. From “Obama’s mercurial foreign policy”, the following quote from Marc Lynch, director of Middle Eastern Studies and the Project on Middle East Political Science at Georgetown University stated in an article, “Would arming Syria’s rebels have stopped the Islamic State” :
“The idea that these rebel groups could be vetted for moderation and entrusted with advanced weaponry made absolutely no sense given the realities of the conflict in Syria. These local groups frequently shifted sides and formed alliances of convenience as needed. As MIT’s Fotini Christia has documented in cases from Afghanistan to Bosnia, and the University of Virginia’s Jonah Shulhofer-Wohl has detailed in Syria, rebel groups that lack a legitimate and effective over-arching institutional structure almost always display these kinds of rapidly shifting alliances and “blue on blue” violence. A “moderate, vetted opposition” means little when alliances are this fluid and organizational structures so weak.”
It seems obvious that due to the brutal nature of this Syrian civil war, at this late date “moderates” either fled or were killed and hopes that “moderates” will stand a chance against battle-hardened fighters, who pay no heed to the Geneva Conventions or any other sort of international humanitarian pleas rests as wishful thinking rather than rational policy. Despite the obvious, the Obama administration, some in Congress and even some in the Pentagon remain convinced that training Syrian “moderates” will work.
The neighborhood in that region just became more complicated, while this White House and many in Congress don’t even have any clue as to the history of the region, the complicated dynamics between various factions, or understand how our pathetic strategy leads other leaders in that region to quickly recalibrate their own national security concerns and alliances. After watching President Obama’s mercurial and duplicitous dealings with other leaders in the region, all of those leaders seem to be hedging their bets, because they can’t trust the United States.
Testifying before Congress recently, Ash Carter was asked about the Syrian moderates training, Politico reports:
“We have enough training sites. We don’t have enough trainees to fill them,” Carter told the House Armed Services Committee. The U.S. is applying a stringent process to screen “moderate” Syrians to ensure those fighters who join will be reliable, he said, which is one reason why the process is taking so long.
Carter and Dempsey responded to a question from Illinois Democrat Rep. Tammy Duckworth, who said she had many reservations about the Syrian train-and-equip program for which Congress authorized $500 million last year. How will the U.S. support the “moderate” units once they’re in combat, she asked. Who will continue to supply them with NATO-grade ammunition, she asked, given they’ll be using U.S. or European-style rifles as opposed to Russian-style AK-47s?
Dempsey said the administration is determining the answers to these and other outstanding questions but hasn’t yet arrived at any conclusions.
Carter also didn’t have an answer for what happens if these Syrian moderates engage with Assad’s forces, a likely scenario given the close proximity. He didn’t know if the US would offer air support or other support to these Syrian moderates if they engage with Assad’s forces rather than ISIS. As Patrick Poole reported in recent days, our first batch of Syrian moderates appear to have been captured by Al Nusra. This first trial run will most assuredly dry up the well of future Syrian “moderates” volunteering to join our fight against ISIS, unless they join as a ruse to acquire US military training and weapons. This quick capture might be a ruse too and it’s very possible these first volunteers were not really “moderates” in the first place. The US has already been duped numerous times by “moderates”. In 2014 Jamal Maaroof was touted: “Meet Jamal Maarouf, the West’s best fighting chance against Syria’s Islamist armies”. After receiving US training and weapons, to include TOW anti-tank missiles, Maaroof struck a peace deal with ISIS.
In light of this slow-motion train wreck, Obama’s war against ISIS policy, comes internal tremors within Turkey with terrorist attacks, rising ethnic tensions, porous border issues, and an escalating refugee crisis. The Turks finally joined the war against ISIS in deed, rather than just word, but along with bombing ISIS, they’ve targeted Kurds too. The American simplistic take on foreigners runs something like the Kurds are noble warriors (good guys), despite the Kurds being numerous diverse groups, religiously and politically. The PKK, a Turkish Kurdish group, are designated terrorists by both the United States and Turkey and they will be a prime Turkish target. The Iraqi Kurdish leader, President Masoud Barzani condemned the Turkish attacks, but he also urged the PKK to remove themselves from civilian areas in the region, to keep the battlefield away from civilians.
Courtesy of JK are some helpful links to make more sense out of the Turkish viewpoint and also information on the Kurds:
This is a helpful link that’s basically, “understanding the Kurds for Dummies”
Here’s a May report from the International Crisis Group, “Arming Iraq’s Kurds: Fighting IS, Inviting Conflict”
In typical Obama leading from behind fashion, last week the press reported on Obama’s “safe zone” plan”, to create a zone along Syria’s northwest border with Turkey for Syrian refugees to safely return to Syria. Of course, the details of who would protect this “safe zone” were like every other strategy from this administration – to be ironed out later. On July 28, 2015, Josh Rogin in Bloomberg reported:
“Days after the U.S. and Turkey announced a breakthrough deal to fight together against the Islamic State, U.S. officials are insisting that — contrary to reports — there are definitely no U.S. plans for a “safe zone” inside Syria. In fact, there really is no “zone,” and there is no plan to keep the area “safe.”
This confusion is a microcosm of the disorganized U.S. approach to the Islamic State threat since last summer. Each incremental escalation into which the U.S. gets dragged in Syria seems poorly thought out and even more poorly explained. Until the Barack Obama administration can reconcile the different objectives among the members of its anti-Islamic-State coalition, the various partners will continue to work at cross-purposes. In this case, for the U.S., the Islamic State is the one and only priority; for Turkey, the imperative is protecting civilians from Syria’s Bashar al-Assad regime and eventually forcing its exit.”
Here are three more articles on Turkey and the Islamic State worth reading (H/T JK):
From War on the Rocks: “What’s eating Turkey? Ankara and the Islamic State”
From World Affairs: “The War Arrives in Turkey”
From the Daily Mail: “Britain’s secret war on ISIS: Cameron gives SAS the green light to launch killing raids on terror leaders inside Syria and Iraq”
So, once again, we have the infamous leading from behind from the White House and the “I was for them, before I was against them” strategic genius emanating from the mist at Foggy Bottom. No plan, no strategic vision, no clue what’s in this agreement, just like no clue what’s in the agreement with Iran.
My assessment: “FUBAR!”
Filed under Uncategorized