Category Archives: Terrorism

Short note

Posted my plan again at National Review under my susanholly username – in the comments of some piece that reads like a freshman college research paper – lot of noise, no real insights or understanding of military strategy.   A lot of recitation of the neocon talking points.  Btw, I wonder if Andrea Tantaros read my plan –  yesterday in that group of talking women show on FOX she suggested talking to Putin and attacking ISIS as they move eastward… LOL Maybe women will be more receptive to a new strategy coming from a woman.  Men won’t even pay any attention to my plan.

“How To Confront Vladimir Putin” by Matthew Continetti

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Ideology breeds lies, deceptions, delusions

Here’s the LB primer on how I try to analyze the news and intelligence information too.  A while back, I wrote a blog post on agendas within the American media and it’s to the point where political partisanship has so infected our society that most people pick their niche and then read only news and blogs that cater to their political views.  The problem comes in when partisans twist the news and the facts to fit their agenda.  This is where we are at in America.  With the situation in Syria, the partisan “experts”, both civilian and military,  are coming out of the woodwork to promote their pet policy ideas, because frankly, their professional reputations are riding on this and/or they are so enmeshed in the domestic political partisanship, that they are blinded to the truth.

Prepare yourself to be stunned at the battle they put up to fight strawmen, imaginary enemies and create narratives to prop up their delusions.  Americans also might wake up to the fact that  many of their trusted, so-called “military analysts” and “foreign policy experts”, upon whom they rely, repeat mindless power point drivel, nicely wrapped in bad historical analogies or hollow catchphrases.

You can believe whatever you want, but cold, hard facts are cold, hard facts no matter how you spin it and in this situation, let me be clear, I am an American first, before any partisanship and my loyalties are to the United States of America, not a political party.  We have American military members at risk every day, who put their lives on the line to protect America and to defend The Constitution.  I swore that oath in 1979 and I intend to keep it.  In this Syrian debacle, it’s not just about President Obama’s foreign policy;  American lives are at risk in the region and our leaders, both civilian and military, owe it to these brave warriors to do due diligence, can the egos and come up with the best strategy to achieve the mission.

I recommended this little booklet before, but it’s imperative for Americans to wake up and recognize lies, deceptions, distortions and to learn, as this booklet’s title states it: “ How To Analyze Information: A Step-by-Step Guide to Life’s Most Vital Skill”, written by Herbert E. Meyer.  This short booklet identified the problem we have in America to finding an effective American foreign policy – it’s called “IDEOLOGY”.

When I read information, I like to find out the source.  Next I like to know some background on the source, like what political affiliation and educational background.  It also helps to look at past places the person worked and their previous writings. It gives me a frame of reference.

I’ve been mentioning these maps from the Institute for the Study of War (ISW), which get accepted as the “facts on the ground” in Syria, by the media, the US State Department and even many in the Department of Defense without question.   Many prominent neoconservative mouthpieces have bought into a particular strategic paradigm on the situation in Syria and they’re stuck on arming the Syrian moderates, Assad must go, and the safe zone track.  They have staked their professional reputations on this policy, so don’t expect them to change.  The Obama administration likewise wants to create a narrative to cover-up the colossal failure of its strategy to defeat the Islamic State.

So, here’s the deal, ideology distorts your vision and it can even blind you to the truth, especially political and religious ideology.   Meyer’s booklet costs a couple bucks, but it can teach you how to become more savvy at analyzing information.  Learn to doubt experts!  Strategy, especially military strategy, should be able to be explained in clear, simple language that ordinary people can understand.  Using fancy terminology or creating catchy terminology often masks terrible strategy or magical thinking.  Learn to be a skeptic. Learn to take the pieces of a strategy apart and think about whether that piece will really achieve the ends it’s supposed to.  If you have doubts, good, start doing some independent research.

Aquamarine vs. turquoise explains the dangers of factions and extreme ideology.

 

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Wandering in circles in the desert….

Wrote a lengthy comment at The American Thinker this morning – it’s a repeat, but I want to keep track of my comments and post them here.  Just skip it if you read yesterday’s blog post.  The article I posted on was interesting too, “What goes around, goes around” by Shoshana Bryen, who writes a lot of very good stuff on the Mid-East.  Definitely go read her article!  Here’s my morning ramble:

susanholly Friday, October 9, 2015 9:33 AM” 16 minutes ago

The US policy went from being one of trying to straddle the three big divides in the region: Shia, Sunni, and Israel and our goal used to be “regional stability”, which benefited our American national interests. And we tended to gauge much of that straddling by the overarching strategic moves of the Cold War. After the fall of the Soviet Union, we spent the 90s being swayed by Clintonian “humanitarian war” arguments to intervene for that “larger purpose”, even in the face of no compelling case of American national interest being defined.

Since 9/11 we’ve lost our way and wandered into some murky “war on terror” wherever we find it and the “we must prevent safe havens for terrorists”, which morphed into regime change to “promote democracy”. Now, we’re somewhere between the feel-good Arab Spring “promote democracy”, the Samantha Power genocide pixie’s “responsibility to protect” humanitarianism and fighting “terror”. Absent any clear-cut American national interest, our schizophrenic policies have fueled widespread chaos, virulent sectarian strife, more power vacuums and seismic regional instability.

Power vacuums are more dangerous and a vastly more immediate threat to our American national interests than Assad. Syria has been a Russian client state for over 40 years, so how Syria remaining a Russian client state is some cataclysmic change, I don’t know. The truth is the US left a gaping power vacuum in Iraq by walking away from a mess we created when we ousted Saddam. Odious Saddam formed a check on Iranian expansion, which we removed. So, Iran’s Shia influence has moved into Iraq and there we’re ostensibly fighting the Islamic State with the Shia-leaning Baghdad government, who now relies on Iranian-backed militias. The Sunni minority after a decade of US occupation became more radicalized, the policy of de-Ba’athification fueled more defections to the Sunni radicals too. American presence also fueled another layer of discontent and violence.

These US policy experts now find themselves wandering in circles repeating bad clichés masquerading as foreign policy. What has them so alarmed is Russia, one-by-one, has picked off American allies in the region and formed their own alliance with Iran to prop up Assad. The US doesn’t have any bold plans – just fear-mongering about Russian aggression, while still talking about arming “Syrian moderates”. Supposedly, these “moderates” were being armed to fight ISIS, but many of them are not moderates and are working with or actually ARE ISIS. Suffice it to say Sunni Islamist views prevail among the rebels fighting Assad. How the US thinks these rebels will lead to a stable government is the same sort of magical thinking that fueled the ouster of Saddam and Gadaffi and Mubarak.

We need to get back to stepping out of micro-strategic thinking to looking at macro-strategic-thinking – REGIONAL STABILITY. If Assad goes as seems to be the US policy at the moment, there is no plan in place to fill that power vacuum. The Islamic State and radicalized Sunnis will seize control. Yes, Russia stands to gain stature and a stronger foothold in the region, but so far our policymakers offered nothing that makes any sense at all.

Now we could talk to Putin like sane people and come up with a real plan to defeat ISIS as the Russians push them eastward toward Iraq. Then after some stability and order is restored in Syria and Iraq, international pressure could be brought to bear from Brussels to deal with Assad. The Russians might be inclined to give up Assad if a Russian-friendly government is in Syria, international pressure could then promote safe zones and actually make them work in Syria for a return of displaced refugees. And the US and Russia might be viewed as adults on the world stage for a change, instead of treating the rest of the world like pawns in some geopolitical chess game (which the US plays badly btw). http://libertybellediaries.com…

I then added a comment:

On second thought we should call the US foreign policy: “I was for them, before I was against them”…. And we wonder why our allies are defecting to Lavrov over listening to Kerry diplomacy, omg.

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The “Bosnia Plan” is a bust!

Yesterday on FOX News I heard a new “idea” from Michael O’Hanlon from the Brookings Institution and also the same general plan from former ambassador, Dennis Ross – ta-dummmmm, hold the applause, it’s “The Bosnia Plan”.

Generally, this plan envisions a partitioned Syria with safe zones for the various factions and get this, the Russians are supposed to help secure this and maybe the Turks and who knows maybe the unicorns, pixies and leprechauns can magically appear too.

There’s this delusional trapped thinking that paralyzes so many of these academic strategic analysts, who only talk to other like-minded insular thinkers.  No new ideas, no bold moves, just regurgitated, echo-chamber nonsense.  So, try this on for size – if Assad falls, ISIS will seize control of all of Syria.  This will be a seismic event for the “Caliphate” and IT will encourage more radical extremism, because nothing encourages followers more than being on a winning team.  It motivates people to sign up.

Ross, O’Hanlon, the entire Obama administration argue the opposite.  They say Assad staying will encourage more jihadists, but here’s the catch, the only way to avoid ISIS seizing control of all of Syria is for someone to fight ISIS and the Russians have put together an alliance to do that.

The reality on the ground determines the options available -a smart strategist should try to seize this opportunity for America to change course, talk to the Russians – work out a coordinated effort to defeat ISIS and guess what, if we act, a lot of the Arab leaders will gravitate toward the US alliance, because they will want to counter the Iranian influence.  Balancing the push and pull from both sides of the Shia/Sunni divide will be easier to work out with the Russians than with the Shias and Sunnis frankly.

We need to keep our eyes on REGIONAL STABILITY, which benefits everyone, except ISIS and other jihadist nutjobs.

Let the Cold War die – look ahead and try to think of a different approach!

A couple years ago I wrote a blog post, “The Mom World Peace Solution”:

“Certainly the tragedy in Syria leaves one wishing for a way to end the fighting quickly.  However, handing more weapons to poorly led, rampaging bands of rebels with little military finesse and a lot of rage seems a recipe for more horrific violence, not less.  The world needs real leadership where the strongest countries should agree to provide a united front and force some calm and work at disarming rather than funneling in more and more advanced weaponry.  Once the irrational actors are neutralized, then rational actors in places like Syria should come to the table and work at political solutions.  This is the Mom world peace solution – take away the dangerous toys from the kids who can’t play nice and who haven’t mastered some self-control.  No fancy one-world government solution or new complicated political theory or even some religion- just common sense.  The road to Peace is built, brick by brick, by building trust among leaders (people).  As with most human endeavors the answers are simple, but that sure doesn’t make them easy.   Trust is one of the hardest things for people to achieve – definitely much harder than devising a theory like “mutually assured destruction”.  Only men could think up that one, believe me!  A Mom sure never would – she’d take away the weapons from the misbehaving, immature kids on the world stage and put them in time out until they learned to play nice;-)”

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Propaganda at work?

Let me be clear that both LTC Tony Shaffer and GEN Jack Keane gave an accurate military analysis of what’s going on with the Russian airstrikes, but Shaffer was on Megyn Kelly last night and Kelly went on and on about the Russians hitting targets other than ISIS, which is the Obama administration narrative. Shaffer explained the true nature of the targets and laid out the Russian moves objectively.  GEN Keane, likewise explained the military moves objectively with Chris Wallace  on Sunday.  Look at both maps in the background, both from the Institute for the Study of War.  The map on the Kelly show has that entire rebel area where the bulk of the strikes occurred as solid yellow which is the rebel controlled area, not ISIS.  The map with General Keane shows ISIS areas in green ISIS-controlled areas within that yellow rebel zone and the largest Russian target area is a green area to the north of the regime-controlled area.  The Kelly show is the more recent aired show with the less accurate map – why?

Embedded image permalink

Image from Megyn Kelly’s Twitter- https://twitter.com/megynkelly/status/651207283574083584

generalkeanemap

Image from http://politibrew.com/politics/3298-general-jack-keane-how-russian-airstrikes-will-impact-region

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My bare-bones plan

Here’s my plan – laugh if you want, but this is what I think we should do. I posted this using my susanholly user name at National Review in comments at David French’s “The Irony of Obama’s Declaration of Russian Weakness”

http://www.nationalreview.com/corner/425100/irony-obamas-declaration-russian-weakness-david-french

We should work with the Russians to take out ISIS and Al Qaeda as the Russian/Assad/Iranian coalition pushes them eastward. Monday morning quarterbacking about supposed “moderate” CIA backed rebels , who have been closing in on Assad, not ISIS as we’re ostensibly arming them to do or whining about Russian targets and battle plans shows clearly that America doesn’t have a strategy. A smart President would try to look at the big picture strategy that really does serve American national interests, which is REGIONAL STABILITY. We could work with this grand Allied coalition Obama bragged about, the Baghdad government, Kurds and prepare to actually make a dent in ISIS, in coordination with the Russian/Assad/Iranian coalition, while not having to actually engage in their same battlefield space. We could salvage some American credibility for a change.

The President could make a deal with the Russians to rein in the Iranians arming Hezbollah, as part of our bargaining, which we sure owe the Israelis as our closest ally in the region.

Assad could then be a problem perfect for the pressure of Brussels.

The late GEN William E. Odom identified this strategy all along: https://youtu.be/j8DPV-qDKcQ

We (the American people) should quit playing into Obama administration narratives.

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Defining the American strategy: REGIONAL STABILITY

I thought about this General William E. Odom advice on Iraq and President Obama did pull out of Iraq, but he has failed on the finding a new strategy.  We left a gaping power vacuum, with a dithering, weak, ineffectual administration allowing Russia to take the lead on now trying to establish some sort of alliance to prop up the Assad regime.

No matter how you slice this, it will mean neutralizing Al Qaeda and ISIS, which are the opposition forces threatening the Assad regime.  Despite the White House trying to save face with a propaganda campaign, I highly doubt it’s some U.S. backed “Syrian moderate” force the Russians are bombing.  The better question would be to challenge President Obama and John Brennan, the director of the CIA, about who exactly we have been arming in Syria!  I certainly would love to know who all these “Syrian moderates” are.

What we need is exactly what GEN Odom talks about in this video – a long-term strategy focused on “REGIONAL STABILITY”.  At the very beginning he mentions counterinsurgency too and offered some opinions worth thinking over:

https://youtu.be/j8DPV-qDKcQ

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NY Times on training foreign fighters

Billions From U.S. Fail to Sustain Foreign Forces

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Al Qaeda brigade claims attack on Russian forces in Syria | The Long War Journal

On the same day that Katibat al Tawhid wal Jihad, a mainly Uzbek jihadist group, swore allegiance to Al Nusrah Front, it claimed an attack on Russian forces in

Source: Al Qaeda brigade claims attack on Russian forces in Syria | The Long War Journal

Note: September 30, 2015 story

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Ahrar al Sham claims rocket attacks on airbase where Russians are stationed | The Long War Journal

Ahrar al Sham claims to have launched Grad rockets at the Hmeimim airbase in the Latakia province of Syria earlier today. Russian forces are stationed at the

Source: Ahrar al Sham claims rocket attacks on airbase where Russians are stationed | The Long War Journal

Note: October 2, 2015 story

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