How the US killed Zarqawi 11/19/2009
Abu Musab al-Zarqawi was at the time the most wanted man in Iraq after trying to ignite a Sunni-Shia civil war in the country. Additionally, he was public enemy number 1 in his native Jordan for bombing 3 Amman hotels. This is the apparent story of how America killed him, from a NY Times piece on Gen. Stanley McChrystal:
This time, McChrystal believed, Zarqawi was in his sights. The tip was long in coming, a result of thousands of hours of intelligence work, but according to several sources, it boiled down to this: Under interrogation, an Iraqi insurgent who was a member of Zarqawi’s inner circle pointed to an Iraqi named Abd al-Rahman, who, the insurgent said, served as Zarqawi’s spiritual adviser.
Whenever Rahman was preparing to meet Zarqawi, the source told the Americans, he would send his wife and family out of Baghdad the day before. McChrystal and his JSOC team watched Rahman for 17 consecutive days. Then, on June 6, 2006, it happened — Rahman’s family was seen piling into a vehicle and leaving the city.
The next day, a Predator drone followed Rahman himself as he made his way northeast out of Baghdad, to a small house in a palm grove near the village of Hibhib. Rahman went inside. McChrystal had a commando team on the ground, 18 minutes away.
As McChrystal and his staff watched through the Predator camera, a man, dressed in black, walked from the house to the edge of the road. The man looked to his right, then to his left. It was Zarqawi. He walked back inside. They were sure it was him. At an operations center, a senior Special Forces commander, realizing that time was short, ordered an airstrike. Two F-16’s were dispatched; one of them was hooked up to a refueling plane; the second jet was told to go alone. A pair of 500-pound bombs killed Zarqawi.
This time, McChrystal believed, Zarqawi was in his sights. The tip was long in coming, a result of thousands of hours of intelligence work, but according to several sources, it boiled down to this: Under interrogation, an Iraqi insurgent who was a member of Zarqawi’s inner circle pointed to an Iraqi named Abd al-Rahman, who, the insurgent said, served as Zarqawi’s spiritual adviser.
Whenever Rahman was preparing to meet Zarqawi, the source told the Americans, he would send his wife and family out of Baghdad the day before. McChrystal and his JSOC team watched Rahman for 17 consecutive days. Then, on June 6, 2006, it happened — Rahman’s family was seen piling into a vehicle and leaving the city.
The next day, a Predator drone followed Rahman himself as he made his way northeast out of Baghdad, to a small house in a palm grove near the village of Hibhib. Rahman went inside. McChrystal had a commando team on the ground, 18 minutes away.
As McChrystal and his staff watched through the Predator camera, a man, dressed in black, walked from the house to the edge of the road. The man looked to his right, then to his left. It was Zarqawi. He walked back inside. They were sure it was him. At an operations center, a senior Special Forces commander, realizing that time was short, ordered an airstrike. Two F-16’s were dispatched; one of them was hooked up to a refueling plane; the second jet was told to go alone. A pair of 500-pound bombs killed Zarqawi.
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Corruption by the Numbers 11/17/2009
Transparency International recently released its annual Corruption Perception Index. You can access the full report here and an interactive corruption map here.
The Bottom Five Most Corrupt Countries:
176 (tie). Iraq
176 (tie). Sudan
178. Myanmar
179. Afghanistan
180. Somalia
The Top Five Least Corrupt Countries:
1. New Zealand
2. Denmark
3 (tie). Singapore
3 (tie). Sweden
5. Switzerland
Update: The BBC recently published an extremely interesting article on corruption in Afghanistan. Money quote:
"The Bertelsmann Foundation, one of the sources for the conclusions of Transparency International, said: 'Corruption is endemic to all state functions (police, judiciary) and is seen as a usual form of business transaction; even ministers were involved in land grabs. Corruption is additionally interlinked with the opium business. Thus, bribery is invested on a massive scale to undermine efforts against the drug economy.'"
Read the full article here.
The Bottom Five Most Corrupt Countries:
176 (tie). Iraq
176 (tie). Sudan
178. Myanmar
179. Afghanistan
180. Somalia
The Top Five Least Corrupt Countries:
1. New Zealand
2. Denmark
3 (tie). Singapore
3 (tie). Sweden
5. Switzerland
Update: The BBC recently published an extremely interesting article on corruption in Afghanistan. Money quote:
"The Bertelsmann Foundation, one of the sources for the conclusions of Transparency International, said: 'Corruption is endemic to all state functions (police, judiciary) and is seen as a usual form of business transaction; even ministers were involved in land grabs. Corruption is additionally interlinked with the opium business. Thus, bribery is invested on a massive scale to undermine efforts against the drug economy.'"
Read the full article here.
Some moron writing for the Guardian tracked down Caspian Makan, the boyfriend of Neda Agha Soltan. Neda is the young woman who was murdered by a basiji's bullet on June 20th in Tehran while protesting the rigged Iranian election. The article is worth reading to hear Caspian's story.
Caspian and Neda had fallen in love while on vacation in Turkey last April. They planned to get married-- until everything changed on June 20th. The Iranian authorities arrested Caspian and held him in the notorious Evin Prison. He was released on bail after pressure from various human rights groups, and then fled the country.
Sadly, the author writes with the skill of a lobotomized monkey. The phrase, "the family were allowed" is not proper English, and should never be published by a newspaper. Then, in the middle of the piece, the author spasms into an unrelated anti-American invective, calling US elections "soporific staged affairs." That doesn't even merit a response.
Worst of all, the author engages in the most repugnant form of journalistic myopia: "It is impossible to say what the election result really was...[although] thousands of Iranians felt they had been cheated."
Are you kidding me??? You aren't sure who won? And in an article about Neda? This person should have their right hand amputated.
Caspian and Neda had fallen in love while on vacation in Turkey last April. They planned to get married-- until everything changed on June 20th. The Iranian authorities arrested Caspian and held him in the notorious Evin Prison. He was released on bail after pressure from various human rights groups, and then fled the country.
Sadly, the author writes with the skill of a lobotomized monkey. The phrase, "the family were allowed" is not proper English, and should never be published by a newspaper. Then, in the middle of the piece, the author spasms into an unrelated anti-American invective, calling US elections "soporific staged affairs." That doesn't even merit a response.
Worst of all, the author engages in the most repugnant form of journalistic myopia: "It is impossible to say what the election result really was...[although] thousands of Iranians felt they had been cheated."
Are you kidding me??? You aren't sure who won? And in an article about Neda? This person should have their right hand amputated.
Gaddafi Watch 11/16/2009
Everyone's favorite tyrant is back in the news, this time for attempting to evangelize Rome's beauties. From the BBC:
The girls had to be beautiful, between 18 and 35 - and at least 1.70m tall. The dress code was strict: plunging necklines and short miniskirts were most definitely out. Two-hundred women passed muster and were bussed to a plush residential corner of the Italian capital.
Security scanned and shown into an imposing reception room, they were then left waiting, as several complained, without so much as a glass of water. An hour later, their host's identity was finally revealed. Col Gaddafi proceeded to preach the benefits of Islam, taking particular pains to assure his guests that it was not misogynistic, and encouraging them to convert.
Two hours later, the women left, looking a touch bemused, 50 euros ($75; £45) better off and clutching a copy of the Koran.
Gaddafi rarely makes sense, but is almost always entertaining.
Update: Der Spiegel has an epic photo set here. And Al Jazeera's Arabic language service is reporting that one of the girls actually converted. Money quote translated:
"Reports stated that one of the participants said--at the end of the lecture that lasted two hours--that she was convinced by what the Libyan president said and has decided to convert to Islam. While another participant merely pointed out that what Gaddafi said was important."
Hat tip to Diana for help with the translation.
The girls had to be beautiful, between 18 and 35 - and at least 1.70m tall. The dress code was strict: plunging necklines and short miniskirts were most definitely out. Two-hundred women passed muster and were bussed to a plush residential corner of the Italian capital.
Security scanned and shown into an imposing reception room, they were then left waiting, as several complained, without so much as a glass of water. An hour later, their host's identity was finally revealed. Col Gaddafi proceeded to preach the benefits of Islam, taking particular pains to assure his guests that it was not misogynistic, and encouraging them to convert.
Two hours later, the women left, looking a touch bemused, 50 euros ($75; £45) better off and clutching a copy of the Koran.
Gaddafi rarely makes sense, but is almost always entertaining.
Update: Der Spiegel has an epic photo set here. And Al Jazeera's Arabic language service is reporting that one of the girls actually converted. Money quote translated:
"Reports stated that one of the participants said--at the end of the lecture that lasted two hours--that she was convinced by what the Libyan president said and has decided to convert to Islam. While another participant merely pointed out that what Gaddafi said was important."
Hat tip to Diana for help with the translation.
Recovering Islamists 11/16/2009
Johann Hari has a fascinating piece on British Islamist leaders who turned against terrorism.
Money quote 1:
To my surprise, the ex-jihadis said their rage about Western foreign policy – which was real, and burning – emerged only after their identity crises, and as a result of it. They identified with the story of oppressed Muslims abroad because it seemed to mirror the oppressive disorientation they felt in their own minds. Usman Raja, a bluff, buff boxer who begged to become a suicide bomber in the mid-1990s, tells me: "Your inner life is chaotic and you feel under threat the whole time. And then you're told by Islamists that life for Muslims everywhere is chaotic and under threat. It becomes bigger than you. It's about the world – and that's an amazing relief. The answer isn't inside your confused self. It's out there in the world."
Money quote 2:
After more than 20 years in prison, they had reconsidered their views. They told him he was false to believe there was one definitive, literal way to read the Koran. As they told it, in traditional Islam there were many differing interpretations of sharia, from conservative to liberal – yet there had been consensus around once principle: it was never to be enforced by a central authority. Sharia was a voluntary code, not a state law. "It was always left for people to decide for themselves which interpretation they wanted to follow," he says.
These one-time assassins taught Maajid that the idea of using state power to force your interpretation of sharia on everyone was a new and un-Islamic idea, smelted by the Wahabis only a century ago. They had made the mistake of muddling up the enduringly relevant decisions Mohamed made as a spiritual leader with those he made as a political ruler, which he intended to be specific to their time and place.
Money quote 1:
To my surprise, the ex-jihadis said their rage about Western foreign policy – which was real, and burning – emerged only after their identity crises, and as a result of it. They identified with the story of oppressed Muslims abroad because it seemed to mirror the oppressive disorientation they felt in their own minds. Usman Raja, a bluff, buff boxer who begged to become a suicide bomber in the mid-1990s, tells me: "Your inner life is chaotic and you feel under threat the whole time. And then you're told by Islamists that life for Muslims everywhere is chaotic and under threat. It becomes bigger than you. It's about the world – and that's an amazing relief. The answer isn't inside your confused self. It's out there in the world."
Money quote 2:
After more than 20 years in prison, they had reconsidered their views. They told him he was false to believe there was one definitive, literal way to read the Koran. As they told it, in traditional Islam there were many differing interpretations of sharia, from conservative to liberal – yet there had been consensus around once principle: it was never to be enforced by a central authority. Sharia was a voluntary code, not a state law. "It was always left for people to decide for themselves which interpretation they wanted to follow," he says.
These one-time assassins taught Maajid that the idea of using state power to force your interpretation of sharia on everyone was a new and un-Islamic idea, smelted by the Wahabis only a century ago. They had made the mistake of muddling up the enduringly relevant decisions Mohamed made as a spiritual leader with those he made as a political ruler, which he intended to be specific to their time and place.
Must Read Article on China 11/16/2009
Westerners often think of China as a monolithic behemoth. It isn't. Patrick Chovanec has a must-read piece at the Atlantic that separates China into 9 geographic regions useful for nuanced thinking. An excerpt below:
THE FRONTIER (Inner Mongolia, Ningxia, Gansu, Qinghai, Xinjiang, Tibet)
The land beyond the Great Wall has long captivated the Chinese with its aura of danger and romance. Wild Mongol horsemen, silk-laden caravans, and the inaccessible mysteries of Tibet offer a thrilling contrast to the regulated confines of Chinese life. But what really set this region apart are its vast open spaces. The Frontier comprises over half of China’s territory and just 6 percent of its population—a landmass and population density similar to the continental United States west of the Mississippi. Its desolate plateaus, scorching deserts, and snow-capped mountains resemble Nevada or Wyoming more than Beijing.
China’s frontier with Inner Asia has always had enormous strategic significance. For centuries, its overland caravan routes—the famous Silk Road—provided China’s richest trade link to the outside world, while its marauding nomads posed an ever-present threat to the Middle Kingdom. To secure control, China developed an extensive network of military colonies and prison work camps, not unlike Siberia’s gulag archipelago. The region’s trackless wastes hide many of China’s most sensitive military facilities. But the Frontier’s greatest strategic value lies in its largely untapped natural resources: oil and gas from the Tarim Basin and neighboring Central Asia; rich veins of nickel, copper, and coal; dairy and wind farms on the vast open grasslands; and vineyards that may someday produce world-class wines.
The key to unlocking these resources is the railroad. By bringing in settlers and connecting them with markets back east, the railroad is transforming China’s frontier beyond recognition. But like America’s Manifest Destiny, China’s “Go West” movement has a dark side. The natives of China’s frontier—the Mongols, Tibetans, and Muslim Uighurs—see their land and ways of life being swept away by a flood of Han Chinese immigrants. When their anger boils over into violence, as it did last year in Lhasa and this summer in Urumqi, the response is invariably swift and brutal. China’s West is being won, but what will be lost in the process?
THE FRONTIER (Inner Mongolia, Ningxia, Gansu, Qinghai, Xinjiang, Tibet)
The land beyond the Great Wall has long captivated the Chinese with its aura of danger and romance. Wild Mongol horsemen, silk-laden caravans, and the inaccessible mysteries of Tibet offer a thrilling contrast to the regulated confines of Chinese life. But what really set this region apart are its vast open spaces. The Frontier comprises over half of China’s territory and just 6 percent of its population—a landmass and population density similar to the continental United States west of the Mississippi. Its desolate plateaus, scorching deserts, and snow-capped mountains resemble Nevada or Wyoming more than Beijing.
China’s frontier with Inner Asia has always had enormous strategic significance. For centuries, its overland caravan routes—the famous Silk Road—provided China’s richest trade link to the outside world, while its marauding nomads posed an ever-present threat to the Middle Kingdom. To secure control, China developed an extensive network of military colonies and prison work camps, not unlike Siberia’s gulag archipelago. The region’s trackless wastes hide many of China’s most sensitive military facilities. But the Frontier’s greatest strategic value lies in its largely untapped natural resources: oil and gas from the Tarim Basin and neighboring Central Asia; rich veins of nickel, copper, and coal; dairy and wind farms on the vast open grasslands; and vineyards that may someday produce world-class wines.
The key to unlocking these resources is the railroad. By bringing in settlers and connecting them with markets back east, the railroad is transforming China’s frontier beyond recognition. But like America’s Manifest Destiny, China’s “Go West” movement has a dark side. The natives of China’s frontier—the Mongols, Tibetans, and Muslim Uighurs—see their land and ways of life being swept away by a flood of Han Chinese immigrants. When their anger boils over into violence, as it did last year in Lhasa and this summer in Urumqi, the response is invariably swift and brutal. China’s West is being won, but what will be lost in the process?
Bushehr Delayed (Again) 11/16/2009
Citing ever dubious "technical issues," Russian Energy Minister Sergei Shmatko announced that work on the Bushehr nuclear plant in Southern Iran will not be completed this year as expected. This isn't the first time Russia has balked at finishing the Bushehr project. The date has been pushed back multiple times since the Russia officially agreed to begin work in 1995.
Analyzing the timing of events like this always has the quality of a tea leaf reading. With that in mind, the most obvious explanation is that the Russians are actually committed to working with the West to impede Iran's nuclear progress and are using Bushehr (which isn't directly involved in Iran's nuclear weapons program) to generate leverage.
Last year while interning for the Hudson Institute I wrote a piece on the history of contemporary Russian-Iranian relations. Anyone interested in 50 pages of background on Bushehr, Russian-Iranian arms trade, etc. can download the whole paper below.
-Evan
Analyzing the timing of events like this always has the quality of a tea leaf reading. With that in mind, the most obvious explanation is that the Russians are actually committed to working with the West to impede Iran's nuclear progress and are using Bushehr (which isn't directly involved in Iran's nuclear weapons program) to generate leverage.
Last year while interning for the Hudson Institute I wrote a piece on the history of contemporary Russian-Iranian relations. Anyone interested in 50 pages of background on Bushehr, Russian-Iranian arms trade, etc. can download the whole paper below.
-Evan
| tachovsky_e._h._modern_russian-iranian_relations.doc |
The Most Awkward Room in the World 11/15/2009
Forget Obama in China. Here are mullahs in Mazar-i-Sharif, Afghanistan, listening to a lecture on breast feeding and birth control organized by Stopes International. The mullahs were paid to attend.
Nothing in the Quran forbids birth control, but Afghan men are generally opposed to it. Furthermore, birth control promotion gives birth (sorry, I had to do it) to a million conspiracies about Western plans to destroy Islam.
Afghan women have on average 6 children in their lifetime, and have one of the highest maternal mortality rates in the world.
In neighboring Iran, the mullahs outlawed birth control when they came to power in 1979. The result? Birth rates skyrocketed out of control, and the mullahs had a change of heart. Now Iran is a developing world model for birth control success.
Nothing in the Quran forbids birth control, but Afghan men are generally opposed to it. Furthermore, birth control promotion gives birth (sorry, I had to do it) to a million conspiracies about Western plans to destroy Islam.
Afghan women have on average 6 children in their lifetime, and have one of the highest maternal mortality rates in the world.
In neighboring Iran, the mullahs outlawed birth control when they came to power in 1979. The result? Birth rates skyrocketed out of control, and the mullahs had a change of heart. Now Iran is a developing world model for birth control success.
An Awkward Visit to the PRC 11/14/2009
What an awkward beginning to Obama’s first visit to China. On the eve of Obama’s visit, Qin Gang, Beijing’s Foreign Ministry spokesman, said that Obama should be especially understanding of China’s need to crush “splittist” factions in China, namely the Tibetans.
Qin continued that Obama “is a black president, and he understands the slavery abolition movement and Lincoln's major significance for that movement.” Lincoln was an abolitionist who put territorial integrity of the Union first.
In the official Chinese history, independent Tibet under rule of the (13th) Dalai Lama was a feudal society. Feudalism is slavery. By conquering Tibet Mao liberated the Tibetans from feudalism. Thus, Mao/PRC = Lincoln/The Union.
The Chinese think they really struck gold with this analogy. Somehow, I don’t think that Obama agrees.
Check James Fallows's analyisis here.
Qin continued that Obama “is a black president, and he understands the slavery abolition movement and Lincoln's major significance for that movement.” Lincoln was an abolitionist who put territorial integrity of the Union first.
In the official Chinese history, independent Tibet under rule of the (13th) Dalai Lama was a feudal society. Feudalism is slavery. By conquering Tibet Mao liberated the Tibetans from feudalism. Thus, Mao/PRC = Lincoln/The Union.
The Chinese think they really struck gold with this analogy. Somehow, I don’t think that Obama agrees.
Check James Fallows's analyisis here.
Obama and Afghanistan 11/14/2009
A few thoughts on Obama’s decision-making process for Afghanistan:
1. He is not going to simply agree to a 40,000 troop increase. Otherwise, he wouldn’t be taking so long.
2. Publicly questioning the military leadership on strategy takes immense courage. I agree with Sullivan—Bush could never have done this. Bush had no credibility, nor confidence, and so outsourced the responsibility to Patraeus. If the surge failed, he was simply following his expert general. If the surge succeeded, Bush could take credit, and he did. Furthermore, its always easier to double down on sunk costs and thus postpone the final day of reckoning, even if it’s the wrong move.
3. Obama is determined to connect any influx of troops to the political process in Afghanistan. When he refused to say that he was wrong about the Iraq surge during the campaign, he meant it. The Iraq surge was supposed to open up room for political reconciliation, which has yet to happen. Iraq could still very plausibly descend into civil war when the U.S. pulls out.
Similarly, a surge in Afghanistan has to be for something, not just a temporary reduction in violence. But that’s why the recent election was such as disaster. Karzai is illegitimate and ineffectual. Obama does not want to sacrifice more American blood and treasure just to prolong Karzai’s corrupt rule.
War is politics by other means. It's a tactic for achieving a political goal. That is what the Eikenberry cables were about, and that is what is keeping Obama up at night. This week will be interesting.
1. He is not going to simply agree to a 40,000 troop increase. Otherwise, he wouldn’t be taking so long.
2. Publicly questioning the military leadership on strategy takes immense courage. I agree with Sullivan—Bush could never have done this. Bush had no credibility, nor confidence, and so outsourced the responsibility to Patraeus. If the surge failed, he was simply following his expert general. If the surge succeeded, Bush could take credit, and he did. Furthermore, its always easier to double down on sunk costs and thus postpone the final day of reckoning, even if it’s the wrong move.
3. Obama is determined to connect any influx of troops to the political process in Afghanistan. When he refused to say that he was wrong about the Iraq surge during the campaign, he meant it. The Iraq surge was supposed to open up room for political reconciliation, which has yet to happen. Iraq could still very plausibly descend into civil war when the U.S. pulls out.
Similarly, a surge in Afghanistan has to be for something, not just a temporary reduction in violence. But that’s why the recent election was such as disaster. Karzai is illegitimate and ineffectual. Obama does not want to sacrifice more American blood and treasure just to prolong Karzai’s corrupt rule.
War is politics by other means. It's a tactic for achieving a political goal. That is what the Eikenberry cables were about, and that is what is keeping Obama up at night. This week will be interesting.
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