Help - Search - Members - Calendar
Full Version: Just Military News and Commentary
Common Ground Common Sense > Issues that Affect Our Lives > U.S. Military Issues > U.S. Military Issues Archive
Pages: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16
Snuffysmith
PENTAGON TO REVIEW ITS STRATEGY IN IRAQ - DAVID STOUT (NEW YORK TIMES, NOVEMBER 10)
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/11/10/washingt...agewanted=print
Snuffysmith
THE BALL IS IN THE DEMOCRATS' COURT - HELEN THOMAS (SEATTLE POST-INTELLIGENCER, NOVEMBER 10/COMMON DREAMS): The voters have sent a clear message to President Bush: It's time to pull out of Iraq. But the president still refuses to listen.
http://www.commondreams.org/views06/1110-24.htm
Snuffysmith
WINNING WAS THE EASY PART - DAN K. THOMASSON (WASHINGTON TIMES, NOVEMBER 12): President Bush seems to have gotten the message the American people sent him about his leadership. Iraq is not where they want this country to be and they want it to end quickly.
http://www.washtimes.com/functions/print.p...11-111012-5577r
Snuffysmith
IRAQ DISASTER FINALLY CAUGHT UP WITH BUSH - ANDREW GREELEY (CHICAGO SUN-TIMES, NOVEMBER 10/COMMON DREAMS): Enough of the people were fed up with the Iraq war that Rove's black magic did not work like it used to.
http://www.commondreams.org/views06/1110-23.htm
Snuffysmith
DUBYA'S DISASTER - GEORGE F. WILL (NEW YORK POST, NOVEMBER 12): Tuesday's losses were not excessive punishment for the party that has presided over what is arguably the worst foreign-policy disaster in U.S. history.
http://www.nypost.com/php/pfriendly/print....rge_f__will.htm
Snuffysmith
THE MESSAGE OF THIS WIPEOUT IS THAT AMERICANS BELIEVE THEY'VE LOST THE WAR - CHRISTOPHER CALDWELL (SPECTATOR, NOVEMBER 11)
http://www.spectator.co.uk/printer-friendl...t-the-war.thtml
Snuffysmith
A PREGNANT PAUSE IN THE US OVER IRAQ - MONITOR'S VIEW (CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR, NOVEMBER 10): Exit polls during Tuesday's elections in the US reveal public opinion split along three lines on what course to take: An immediate US withdrawal, a steady pullout over time, or a beefing up of troops to secure Iraq while it pulls itself together.
http://www.csmonitor.com/2006/1110/p08s01-comv.html

INTERPRETATION
Snuffysmith
IRAQ: A MESS, BUT SO WHAT? - ADAM BRODSKY (NEW YORK POST, NOVEMBER 12): The realities of Iraq don't justify the enormous resentment that some insist is the explanation for Tuesday's election results.
http://www.nypost.com/php/pfriendly/print....dam_brodsky.htm
Snuffysmith
LIVE BY THE SWORD, DIE BY THE SWORD - LEON HADAR (ANTIWAR.COM, NOVEMBER 11): The results of the elections are going to force the president to "change the course" in Iraq.
http://www.antiwar.com/hadar/?articleid=9994
Snuffysmith
GLOBALIST: IN MORE FLUID MIDEAST, WHAT NOW FOR THE U.S.? - ROGER COHEN
(INTERNATIONAL HERALD TRIBUNE, NOVEMBER 10): Bush's latest scaled-down definition of victory -- an Iraq that can "govern itself, sustain itself and defend itself" -- is not beyond what intelligence and new thinking can fashion.
http://iht.nytimes.com/protected/articles/...s/globalist.php
PAID SUBSCRIPTION
Snuffysmith
BUSH WRESTLES WITH A NEW REALITY: RUMSFELD IS OUT, AND THE DREAM OF A PERMANENT REPUBLICAN MAJORITY IS OVER - DANIEL SCHORR (CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR, NOVEMBER 10): What remains to be seen is whether Bush's conciliatory move will extend to heeding his generals and changing his policy on Iraq.
http://www.csmonitor.com/2006/1110/p09s03-cods.html
Snuffysmith
A CONSENSUS ON IRAQ: PRESIDENT BUSH AND DEMOCRATS SAY THEY WANT TO FIND COMMON GROUND ON THE WAR. THEY CAN - EDITORIAL (WASHINGTON POST, NOVEMBER 12): A close look at what the White House and Democrats have been saying, along with what is emerging from the bipartisan Iraq Study Group, offers grounds for some optimism.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/conte...1100730_pf.html
Snuffysmith
PANEL MAY HAVE FEW GOOD OPTIONS TO OFFER: BIPARTISAN GROUP'S PLAN EXPECTED IN DEC. - MICHAEL ABRAMOWITZ AND THOMAS E. RICKS (WASHINGTON POST, NOVEMBER 12): Those familiar with the work of the panel led by former secretary of state James A. Baker III and former Indiana congressman Lee H. Hamilton (D) predict that the ultimate recommendations will not appear novel and that there are few, if any, good options left facing the country.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/conte...1100996_pf.html
Snuffysmith
DEMOCRATS AND IRAQ - EDITORIAL (NEW YORK TIMES, NOVEMBER 12): We are sure that even a few weeks more of drift and confusion will guarantee more chaos and suffering once American troops leave. Voters gave the Democrats the floor -- and are now waiting to hear what they have to say.
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/11/12/opinion/...agewanted=print
Snuffysmith
MORE WORK AHEAD - ALAN BOCK (ANTIWAR.COM, NOVEMBER 11): The war in Iraq is looking unwinnable not because the politicians haven't unleashed the military sufficiently to get the job done, but because the job simply couldn't be done through military means or by an occupying force that didn't understand or care to understand the cultures of the peoples whose land it was occupying.
http://www.antiwar.com/bock/?articleid=9998
Snuffysmith
WE'VE LOST IN IRAQ; TIME TO FINESSE A PULLOUT - JAMES KLURFELD (NEWSDAY, NOVEMBER 10/COMMON DREAMS)
http://www.commondreams.org/views06/1110-20.htm
Snuffysmith
BUSH'S IRAQ LEGACY: WHAT KIND OF IRAQ WILL HE BEQUEATH TO HIS SUCCESSOR? - ROBERT KAGAN & WILLIAM KRISTOL (WEEKLY STANDARD, NOVEMBER 20): Whatever political solution one favors, they all depend on achieving a minimum level of order and security in Iraq, and that is something that only American forces have any chance of providing.
http://www.weeklystandard.com/Content/Publ...5lhpfm.asp?pg=1
Snuffysmith
RUMSFELD'S SELF-INFLICTED WOUNDS: THE OUTGOING DEFENSE SECRETARY WAS TOO FOCUSED ON TRANSFORMING THE MILITARY, AND FAILED TO PLAN FOR ACHIEVING POLITICAL GOALS IN IRAQ - FREDERICK W. KAGAN (LOS ANGELES TIMES, NOVEMBER 12): Rumsfeld will not be known as the secretary of Defense who transformed the military, but as the secretary of Defense who, at best, nearly lost the Iraq war.
http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/la-op-...inion-rightrail
Snuffysmith
THE DONALD RUMSFELD I KNOW - DOUGLAS J. FEITH (WASHINGTON POST, NOVEMBER 12): "Rumsfeld's warnings about the dangers of war -- including the perils of a post-Hussein power vacuum -- were more comprehensive than anything I saw from the CIA, State or elsewhere. ... And he asked what the consequences might be of having a large footprint in Iraq and playing into propaganda about the United States wanting to take over the country."
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/conte...1001388_pf.html
Snuffysmith
PROSECUTE RUMSFELD, NOW - MARK LEVINE (COMMON DREAMS, NOVEMBER 9): For the sake of the integrity of the United States, and for all the harm we've done to Iraq, Donald Rumsfeld must be indicted and prosecuted as a war criminal as soon as possible.
http://www.commondreams.org/views06/1109-32.htm
Snuffysmith
DON'T LEAVE TOWN, DON: THE WAR CRIMES CASE AGAINST RUMSFELD - MARJORIE COHN (COUNTERPUNCH, NOVEMBER 10)
http://www.counterpunch.org/cohn11102006.html
Snuffysmith
THE NEXT MOVES - JAMES A. LYONS (WASHINGTON TIMES, NOVEMBER 12): Our next strategic and tactical moves in Iraq need to be governed by how we plan to deal with Iran.
http://www.washtimes.com/functions/print.p...11-111012-1218r
Snuffysmith
CONCILIATION TOWARD IRAN AND SYRIA?: "WE WORRY ABOUT STAYING ALIVE, NOT THE U.S. ELECTIONS" - PATRICK COCKBURN (COUNTERPUNCH, NOVEMBER 11/12): The administration spent three years digging itself into a deep hole -- and may spend the same amount of time digging itself out.
http://www.counterpunch.org/patrick11112006.html
Snuffysmith
CDI Missile Defense Update #9

Nov. 13, 2006

Center for Defense Information

www.cdi.org



**********



NB#1: The flight test of the Ground-based Midcourse Defense (GMD) missile defense system on Sept. 1, 2006, marked the first test intercept for the program in nearly four years. In a commentary recently published by Space News and Defense News, CDI Research Analyst Victoria Samson cautions that our expectations about the system’s usefulness should be checked. “Give U.S. Missile Defense Realistic Testing” is available at http://www.cdi.org/program/document.cfm?Do..._page=index.cfm.



NB#2: The Congressional Budgetary Office (CBO) report, “Long-Term Implications of Current Defense Plans: Summary Update for Fiscal Year 2007,” dated October 2006, is available at http://www.cbo.gov/ftpdocs/76xx/doc7671/10...TermDefense.pdf. In this report, CBO predicts that missile defense’s annual budget will hit a high in 2016 of $18 billion. For more analysis, please go to CDI’s press release at http://www.cdi.org/program/document.cfm?Do...ge=../index.cfm.



NB#3: On Sept. 29, 2006, the U.S. Senate and House of Representatives conference committee approved the National Defense Authorization Act for fiscal year 2007. In it, Congress authorized the Missile Defense Agency to continue testing missile defense capabilities. Specifically authorized was continued testing and development of the Ground-based Midcourse Defense system, the Aegis ballistic missile defense system, the Patriot PAC-3 system, and the Terminal High Altitude Area Defense system. Additionally, the emphasis on near-term missile defense capability at the expense of long-term capabilities is notable. For the relevant language and analysis by CDI Research Assistant Tim Murphy, please go to http://www.cdi.org/program/document.cfm?Do..._page=index.cfm.



***********



1. Space-based test bed may be on its way

2. ABL laser holds beam control/fire control tests

3. SBX probably won’t leave for Alaska until spring

4. THAAD test abruptly stopped

5. Contract awarded for SBIRS alternative

6. Czech Republic’s PM ousted

7. Russia objects to Europe-based missile defense shield

8. New deputy director at Missile Defense Agency

9. Still no Canadian part in U.S. missile defense program

10. U.S. missile defense technology to go to Israel, Japan

11. U.S., German material to boost South Korean missile defense

12. Two U.S. companies chosen to lead NATO missile shield



************

1. Space-based test bed may be on its way

The Missile Defense Agency (MDA) still plans on asking Congress for funding in the fiscal year 2008 budget request for a space-based test bed of interceptors that would try to shoot down missiles in their boost phase. According to MDA officials, “The attributes of space are global coverage, flexibility, access and availability. We are not designing a ballistic missile defense
system that is reliant or dependent upon any one component or layer…Any effort in space would augment and complement what we've deployed terrestrially. We don't know what the future holds on threats and populating terrestrial defenses can be expensive...so the role of space needs to be explored.” It is unclear how the change in Congress and Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld – still in power until his replacement steps in - will affect the future of this program. Before taking office, Rumsfeld headed a group that warned of a “space Pearl Harbor.” Congress had warned MDA in the fiscal year 2007 defense authorization that a report on a space-based interceptor would be necessary before it would allow any funding to go toward testing or developing such a program.

(Defense Daily, Oct. 17, 2006)



2. ABL laser holds beam control/fire control tests

Lockheed Martin announced that the Airborne Laser (ABL) held a series of beam control/fire control (BC/FC) tests on the ground that went well. These tests were of the tracking laser (developed by Raytheon) and the beacon laser (developed by Northrop Grumman). According to a Lockheed Martin statement, “The tests demonstrated the ability to control the path of the illuminator lasers and to control the high-energy laser beam as it travels at the speed of light toward its target. The program achieved a large majority of the objectives of the ground tests and expects to satisfy the remaining ones in the coming months.” The first ABL was rolled out on Oct. 27, 2006, and feted by Lt. Gen. Trey Obering, head of the Missile Defense Agency (MDA), as being “impressive in its size, complexity, and performance.” The laser still has not been fired on an airborne laser – it has only gone through ground tests to date – and it has not proven that it can be effective in sending a laser through the earth’s atmosphere that could be powerful enough to cut through a moving ballistic missile’s outer skins and cause it to fail. Atmospheric disturbance is a serious concern for the ABL’s lasers. $3.5 billion has been spent on the program to date, with no end in sight.

(Defense Daily, Oct. 30, 2006; Reuters, Oct. 27, 2006; United Press International, Oct. 31, 2006)



3. SBX probably won’t leave for Alaska until spring

The Sea-based X-band Radar (SBX), stuck doing repairs in Hawaii, may get to winter there yet. It stopped there earlier this year en route to its home port of Adak, Alaska. It initially was going to be there by the end of last year. Now it may not leave for Alaska until spring of next year. Information from the SBX wasn’t used to help with the intercept of the most recent test on Sept. 1, 2006, of the Ground-based Midcourse Defense (GMD) system. The next test of the GMD system, still scheduled for December or January, probably will not incorporate data from the SBX either. However, the SBX may not head out to Alaska until after the test has been held.

(Kodiak Daily Mirror, Oct. 26, 2006)



4. THAAD test abruptly stopped

A test of the Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) system on Sept. 13, 2006, had to be stopped due to a faulty test missile. The test was an attempt to intercept a separating target in the exo-atmosphere. Instead, the unitary Hera target missile had to be destroyed by safety officers at the White Sands Missile Range (WSMR), N.M., two minutes after it was launched. The Hera missile may have had a panel give way before the first stage could complete burn out, causing the missile to veer off-track. The THAAD interceptor, scheduled to be launched five and a half minutes after the Hera missile, was thus not launched. According to Col. Charles Driessnack, THAAD project manager, data collection during the test makes them believe that the THAAD interceptor “wouldn't have had any difficulty engaging that target.” As such, he says that “we're very confident in the system's performance.” The Missile Defense Agency (MDA) had hoped to hold that test plus one more at WSMR before it shut down in December. The next test of THAAD is scheduled for this December. It will be a radar characterization flight and no live target will be used. THAAD’s testing program is scheduled to move to the Pacific Missile Range Facility in Hawaii by next year.

(Defense Daily, Sept. 14, 2006; Inside Missile Defense, Sept. 27, 2006; Defense Daily, Oct. 11, 2006)



5. Contract awarded for SBIRS alternative

The struggling satellite network that is supposed to help the U.S. missile defense system with detecting the launch of enemy missiles may be on even more tenuous ground. A $25 million contract was awarded to Science Applications International Corporation (SAIC) on Oct. 24, 2006, for work on a payload for Alternative Infrared Satellite System (AIRSS), a possible replacement for the Space-based Infrared System (SBIRS). According to SAIC, the company’s employees would “design, build, integrate and test an innovative infrared (IR) sensor assembly for space applications, and integrate the latest IR focal plane arrays, and readout electronics. They also will process data relevant to the Air Force's missile warning and missile defense missions.” This award came after the Air Force Research Laboratory awarded a contract to Raytheon to develop, according to AFRL, a sensor that would “meet the threshold missile warning and defense objectives of the Defense Satellite Program/ Space Based Infrared Surveillance (DSP/SBIRS) High Systems.”

(United Press International, Oct. 26, 2006)



6. Czech Republic’s PM ousted

Jiri Paroubek, the prime minister of the Czech Republic, and of the Civic Democratic Party leader, resigned on Oct. 11, 2006, after his Civic Democratic Party received a vote of no confidence on Oct. 3. This came after a tumultuous summer when the June election results were heavily disputed, allowing the controversial topic of whether the Czech Republic would allow the United States to place a third interceptor site for the U.S. missile defense system on Czech soil to play a powerful role in the national debate. While Paroubek and his party supported this level of cooperation, the Czech population by and large did not. Paroubek had taken office on Sept. 4, 2006. New Prime Minister Mirek Topolanek is not as supportive of hosting an interceptor site and claims, “The missile base will probably not be placed in our country. And if so, it would be only a radar base with which 60 per cent of citizens agree.” On Oct. 25, 2006, the Czech parliament voted down a law that would have allowed for a referendum on whether the country should cooperate with the United States on missile defense. Topolanek denies the need for such a referendum, claiming that parliament should make that decision.

(Agence France-Presse, Oct. 11, 2006; CTK news agency, Oct. 15, 2006; Associated Press, Oct. 25, 2006)



7. Russia objects to Europe-based missile defense shield

The United States hopes to select a location for its European-based missile defense system by winter, according to Gen. Marvin McNamara, deputy director of the Missile Defense Agency. Once a country is selected and consents to host the missile shield, construction is scheduled to begin next year with the base fully operational by 2011. The Czech Republic and Poland top the list thus far, with stern Russian warnings following such considerations. Yevgeny Buzhinsky, director of the Russian Foreign Defense Ministry’s international military cooperation department, said U.S. missile defense units near Russian borders would be a “real threat to [Russia’s] deterrent forces” and “would require taking adequate retaliatory measures.” To assuage Russian anxiety over the possible missile defense base, Poland assured that its placement would not be directed at Russia but rather at nations like North Korea or Iran. The prospective missile defense base would deploy 10 ground-based interceptors and two radar units, to be manned by 200 – 400 soldiers. Russia has also indicated it will sell its S-300 anti-aircraft system to Belarus, possibly foreshadowing the type of “retaliatory measures” to which Buzhinsky alluded.

(United Press International, Oct. 19, 2006; RIA Novosti, Oct. 17, 2006; Agence France-Presse, Oct. 3, 2006; Prague Monitor, Oct. 22, 2006)



8. New deputy director at Missile Defense Agency

Brig. Gen. Patrick O’Reilly, who has directed the Ground-Based Midcourse Defense (GMD) program for the past year, will take over as Lt. Gen. Trey Obering’s deputy in January 2007. The successful interception and destruction of a test missile in September, which took place under O’Reilly’s watch, surely elevated his status within the Department of Defense (DOD). With Brig. Gen. McNamara, former deputy director of the Missile Defense Agency (MDA), moving to the Pentagon as Army Chief of Staff, the promotion positions O’Reilly to eventually take over as director of the MDA.

(United Press International), Oct. 10, 2006



9. Still no Canadian part in U.S. missile defense program

In early October, Canadian senate defense committee members called for their government to join the U.S. missile defense shield. Senator Michael Meaghan said, “It is in Canada’s best interest to begin discussions once more with the United States with a view to becoming partner in the U.S. ballistic missile defense program.” However Ottawa does not plan to join the program. Etienne Allard, a spokesman for Canada’s defense minister, stated, “We will not initiate discussions with the [United States] on this issue. The issue is closed.” Allard also said the U.S. ambassador indicated his government does not plan to invite Canadian participation in the missile defense program. The previous Canadian government was critical of the missile defense system and, in March 2005, opted out of the program over concerns it would escalate an arms race and the weaponization of space. The recent senate defense committee call is an effort to reopen the debate within the Canadian government.

(Agence France-Presse, Oct. 5, 2006; Ottawa Sun, Oct. 6, 2006)



10. U.S. missile defense technology to go to Israel, maybe Japan

The U.S. Congress voted to contribute $20 million to an Israeli short-ranged missile defense system, while pledging $150 million to a joint Ballistic Missile Defense (BMD) program. The recent war between Israel and Hezbollah, where thousands of short-ranged Katyusha rockets were fired into northern Israel, highlighted the need to defend against such threats. The Arrow interceptor, which is Israel’s primary defense against intermediate-ranged missiles like the Iranian Shihab, will receive $135 million for research and development. However, the Arrow Weapon System is not designed to intercept rockets, so it is unclear how effective this improvement will likely be.



Japan is hoping to buy 16 Patriot Advanced Capability (PAC)-3 interceptors from the United States at a cost of $144 million. In addition to a four-pack of canisters (that have four missiles each) Defense Daily reports (Oct. 3, 2006) that the proposed sale would include “support equipment, modification kits, publications, spare and repair parts.” This implies that it would be Japanese-manned, as opposed to rumors that the United States is moving U.S.-manned PAC-3 batteries into Japan in response to North Korea’s bellicosity over the past several months.

(United Press International, Oct. 3, 2006)



11. U.S., German material to boost South Korean missile defense

A $150 billion South Korean emergency defense allocation was passed in response to North Korea’s six missile tests on Jul. 4, 2006. From the $150 billion, South Korea will buy a $1.5 billion Patriot missile system to be delivered by 2008. In order to cut costs, South Korea’s defense procurement office said the country wanted to purchase Germany’s leftover Patriot missile systems and only buy ground-control equipment from the United States. The new surface-to-air missile system will accompany a new missile defense command center which the South Korean army announced had begun operating on Sept. 28, 2006. The enhanced missile defense capability and command center are to counter the threat from North Korea’s missiles and artillery deployment.

(Agence France-Presse, Sept. 30, 2006; Yonhap News, Sept. 30, 2006)



12. Two U.S. companies chosen to lead NATO missile shield

Raytheon and Science Applications International Corporation (SAIC) have been awarded a $95 million contract to integrate the NATO Active Layered Theater Ballistic Missile Defense (ALTBMD). SAIC will assist by developing and testing ALTBMD design proposals through simulations, modeling and prototyping. Raytheon Missile Systems will contribute engineering designs, ballistic missile censors, and command and control communications. ThalesRaytheonSystems will aid in test bed development and system integration. All efforts are meant to unify and augment NATO’s existing capability and to create a reliable and efficient missile defense system.

(SpaceDaily.com, Sept. 19, 2006)
Snuffysmith
Out with the Old, In With the Old
The Revolving Gates at the Pentagon
By Col. DAN SMITH

The change in control of both houses of Congress was not the only bad news for George Bush. The day after the election, he announced the resignation of Donald Rumsfeld as secretary of defense and the nomination of Robert Gates as his successor.

Coming just a week after the president told reporters that he wanted Rumsfeld to stay for the duration of his tenure in the White House, the change in the Pentagon's civilian head caught many by surprise. There was also a lot of relief. In the European parliament, 200 socialist deputies hailed "the beginning of the end of a six-year nightmare for the world."

Not necessarily. Changing personalities at the Pentagon does not necessarily mean that policy will change. In fact, Bush stated flatly that the goal is still "victory"-an Iraq that can defend itself from terrorists and the meddling of it neighbors, provide basic services for its people, and is fully integrated into the world economy.

So the question really is whether Robert Gates can offer a different direction-and whether Bush will listen?

Confirming Gates

First, however, the Senate will hold confirmation hearings for Gates, who currently is president of Texas A&M. Gates, no stranger to Washington, knows the process well. In 1966, after two years in the Air Force working with intercontinental ballistic missiles, he joined the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) as a Soviet analyst. He rose rapidly through the ranks until President Reagan appointed him deputy director of the CIA in 1986. One year later, he faced confirmation hearings to replace William Casey as director of the CIA.

In the meantime, however, the Iran-Contra scandal had blown wide open. A special prosecutor was investigating grounds for criminal indictments and Congress was holding extensive hearings. Many in Congress and in the nation were skeptical of Gates' claim that, until very late in the action, he was largely "out of the loop." The sale of weapons and spare parts to Iran and the diversion of the proceeds to the Nicaraguan Contras was a major operation. Even if directly orchestrated by Casey and Oliver North of the National Security Council staff, Gates most likely knew something of the scheme. That Casey and the CIA were directly aiding and abetting the Contras to overthrow the Sandinista government of Daniel Ortega only fueled suspicions.

Facing an uphill confirmation battle, Gates withdrew his name. He remained deputy director of the CIA until 1989 when he joined the National Security Council. There he stayed through the 1991 war that ousted Saddam Hussein from Kuwait. In March 1991, President George H. W. Bush nominated Gates (for a second time) to be head of the CIA. The Senate confirmed Gates in early November of that year, and he served until 1993.

When he appears before the Senate Armed Services Committee for confirmation hearings to be secretary of defense, Gates will see some familiar faces from his past, especially if the hearings take place in the lame duck session. Among those who spoke against the nominee in 1991 are current members such as Carl Levin and Edward Kennedy.

They may well resurrect the charges lodged against Gates in 1987 and in 1991. They may ask him again whether he lied to Congress about the extent of his involvement in or knowledge of Iran-Contra. They may want to know whether the CIA, under his watch, altered national intelligence estimates on Soviet capabilities to make the threat seem worse than warranted. Their questioning might probe his involvement in providing military equipment and intelligence to Saddam Hussein during the 1980-1988 Iraq-Iran War, all of which helped Saddam in his battles against U.S. forces in 1991 in Operation Desert Storm. More broadly, Gates may be held to account once again for the CIA's failure to predict the demise of the Soviet Union, the lack of monitoring of Saddam's progress toward developing a nuclear weapon in the 1980s, and the "politicizing" of intelligence to support presidential biases.

Anything but Rummy

Whether the U.S. Senate, in the upcoming lame-duck session controlled by the Republicans, will try to push through abbreviated hearings and confirm Gates as soon as possible or leave that task for the new Senate remains unclear. Regardless, even though he's been out of government service for a dozen years except to serve on special commissions such as the current Baker-Hamilton Iraq Study Group, Gates will most likely be confirmed ­ if for no other reason than the Democrats are eager to have anyone other than Donald Rumsfeld as secretary of defense.

The real test will be whether the change at the Pentagon and the change in Congress will produce any significant alteration in U.S. strategy in Iraq and Afghanistan. At the very least, the U.S. public has expressed its dissatisfaction with the war choices of the administration and Congress. Needed now is planning for the withdrawal of U.S. forces from Iraq. And the United States must begin to prepare itself psychologically for the day that Iraqis actually assume the full burden of devising a political solution that will be fair and workable for all Iraqi citizens.

On this point, the public will quickly glimpse just how Gates will fit in with other administration players. There may be White House pressure to implement the recommendations of the Iraq Study Group-due out December 7-no questions asked. Gates will have to take a principled stand, if warranted, or be seen as "politicizing" the war.

Mr. Gates, should he be confirmed, has his work cut out for him-as does the new Congress. And neither has time to waste.

Col. Dan Smith is a military affairs analyst for Foreign Policy In Focus, a retired U.S. Army colonel, and a senior fellow on military affairs at the Friends Committee on National Legislation. Email at dan@fcnl.org

http://www.counterpunch.org/smith11132006.html
Snuffysmith
Rumsfeld’s long walk into Political Oblivion

By Mike Whitney

Even after being forced to resign in utter disgrace, he still shows no sign of doubting his abilities as a military genius. His ego remains as impervious to criticism as tempered steel.
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article15603.htm
Snuffysmith
SECRECY NEWS
from the FAS Project on Government Secrecy
Volume 2006, Issue No. 119
November 15, 2006

Secrecy News Blog: http://www.fas.org/blog/secrecy/

Support Secrecy News:
http://www.fas.org/static/contrib_sec.jsp


** CONFRONTING SECRET LAW
** THE LIMITS OF TRANSPARENCY
** ARMY DOCTRINE ON URBAN OPERATIONS
** IN OTHER NEWS
** ILLUMINATING RUSSIA'S MAIN DIRECTORATE OF SPECIAL PROGRAMS


CONFRONTING SECRET LAW

The U.S. Supreme Court should reject the idea of a secret law or
directive that purports to regulate public behavior yet cannot be
disclosed, several public interest groups argued yesterday.

The groups filed amicus curiae briefs in support of a petition by
John Gilmore, who challenged a government requirement that he
produce official identification in order to board an airplane and
was told that he could not see the underlying policy document
because it is "sensitive security information."

The government says that Mr. Gilmore had adequate notice of the ID
requirement without inspecting the written policy.

But "The laws of the United States do not permit the Executive
Branch to govern public conduct through secret laws," wrote Marcia
Hofmann of the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), and the Court
should therefore agree to review the Gilmore matter. The FAS
Project on Government Secrecy signed on to the EFF brief.

Other amicus briefs were filed by the Reporters Committee for
Freedom of the Press and the Electronic Privacy Information Center.

The latest briefs, and other background on the case, can be found
here:

http://papersplease.org/wp/category/secret-law/

See also "Groups ask high court to review aviation ID policies," by
Andrew Noyes, National Journal's Technology Daily, November 14:

http://www.govexec.com/story_page.cfm?articleid=35494


THE LIMITS OF TRANSPARENCY

Openness in government is a prerequisite to democratic self-rule and
is the best available antidote to official corruption.

Yet greater transparency, particularly on the international level,
"is not an unmitigated good," argues Kristin M. Lord in a new,
somewhat contrarian book.

"In all likelihood, the trend toward greater transparency will be at
once positive and pernicious," she writes, particularly since some
disputes are based on real conflicts of interest and are not simple
misunderstandings that could be resolved through greater disclosure.

"More information about the military capabilities of other states may
show vulnerability and encourage aggression by the strong against
the weak. Greater transparency can highlight hostility and fuel
vicious cycles of belligerent words and deeds.... Transparency
sometimes can make conflicts worse."

The author illustrates her thesis with case studies of the role of
information in the unfolding of the Rwanda genocide, and of
information policy in Singapore's relatively open yet rather
authoritarian society. She seeks to distinguish between the means
of openness and the hoped-for ends that are implicitly believed to
follow from them, sometimes without justification.

For more information, including the first chapter of the book, see
"The Perils and Promise of Global Transparency" by Kristin M. Lord,
State University of New York Press, 2006:

http://www.sunypress.edu/details.asp?id=61337

The ill effects of too much transparency are still a rather
hypothetical problem, since national and international efforts to
control disclosure of information persist and in some cases are
growing.

In another recent book, author Alasdair Roberts identifies several
factors that are inhibiting transparency, including the
privatization of certain categories of government information, the
increasing influence of international organizations with restrictive
information policies, and the growing international collaboration of
security agencies.

See "Blacked Out: Government Secrecy in the Information Age" by
Alasdair Roberts, Cambridge University Press, 2006:

http://www.cambridge.org/us/catalogue/cata...isbn=0521858704


ARMY DOCTRINE ON URBAN OPERATIONS

The conduct of military operations in urban areas is the subject of a
new Army doctrinal manual.

"Of all the environments in which to conduct operations, the urban
environment confronts Army commanders with a combination of
difficulties rarely found elsewhere [due to its] intricate
topography and high population density."

The hazards and threats posed by the urban environment, and the
spectrum of potential responses to mitigate or exploit them, are
considered at length in the 315-page unclassified manual.

See "Urban Operations," U.S. Army Field Manual FM 3-06, 26 October
2006 (a large 14 MB PDF file):

http://www.fas.org/irp/doddir/army/fm3-06.pdf


IN OTHER NEWS

"For those who believe in transparent government and fact-driven
legislation, the power shift in the U.S. Congress represents a
unique opportunity to open up one important Congressional
institution -- the Congressional Research Service -- and bring back
another one -- the Office of Technology Assessment -- twelve years
after it was disbanded," suggests Christian Beckner in Homeland
Security Watch:

http://www.hlswatch.com/2006/11/13/free-th...g-back-the-ota/

The Army Science Board has drastically reduced public disclosure of
its unclassified advisory studies, Inside the Army reported. And by
doing so, it may have undermined the impact of its own work. See
"Citing Security, Army Tightens Reins On Science Board Research" by
Fawzia Sheikh, Inside the Army, November 13:

http://defense.iwpnewsstand.com/insider_sp...ssue=11132006sp

The unprecedented prosecution of two former pro-Israel lobbyists who
are charged with improperly receiving and disseminating classified
information has unpleasant implications for reporters who cover
national security, among others. The case was reviewed by civil
libertarian Nat Hentoff in "Bush Revives Espionage Act," Village
Voice, November 10:

http://villagevoice.com/news/0646,hentoff,75002,6.html

"The mainstream news media is too fond of articles in which it is
said some flavor of demonical terror menace can be put together from
cookbooks found on the Internet," George Smith blasts in his Dick
Destiny blog and in the UK's The Register.

http://www.theregister.co.uk/2006/11/10/dd_nuke_cookbooks/

Federal Computer Week did a profile this week of, ahem, me. See "A
career as a secrecy watchdog" by Aliya Sternstein, FCW, November 13:

http://www.fcw.com/article96769-11-13-06-Print


ILLUMINATING RUSSIA'S MAIN DIRECTORATE OF SPECIAL PROGRAMS

The Main Directorate of Special Programs (Russian acronym: GUSP) is a
somewhat mysterious Russian security organization that was
established as one of the various successors to the former KGB.

"The directorate's specialists have a great deal of experience in
building fortified structures and tunnels and know how to handle
explosives," according to an article in Moskovskiy Komsomolets (16
September 1999).

"Moreover, the GUSP is the president's very own special service and
is accountable only to the head of state."

In a neat bit of detective work, the Open Source Center (OSC) of the
Office of the Director of National Intelligence noticed that new
details of GUSP's internal structure could be gleaned from official
badges sold by commercial vendors of military paraphernalia.

"Russian commercial websites specializing in the sale of military
insignia provided identifying information for a number of military
units belonging to the Special Facilities Service (SSO) of the Main
Directorate for Special Programs of the Russian Federation President
(GUSP)," the Open Source Center reported this week.

"[This] is in most instances the only available public reference for
these units and their affiliation with the Special Facilities
Service," the OSC said.

In another neat bit of work, Allen Thomson retrieved images of those
telltale military insignia and combined them with other published
material to produce "A Sourcebook on the Russian Federation Main
Directorate of Special Programs (GUSP)" which may be found here:

http://www.fas.org/irp/world/russia/gusp.pdf

Secrecy News is archived at:
http://www.fas.org/sgp/news/secrecy/index.html

Steven Aftergood
Project on Government Secrecy
Federation of American Scientists
web: www.fas.org/sgp/index.html
email: saftergood@fas.org
voice: (202) 454-4691
Snuffysmith
LOSE A WAR, LOSE AN ELECTION - WILLIAM S. LIND (ANTIWAR.COM, NOVEMBER 14): Today, in Washington, the generals want peace. They could give the politicians of both parties and both relevant branches of government the cover they need to make peace, by going public in favor of an early withdrawal.
http://www.antiwar.com/lind/?articleid=10012
Snuffysmith
Gates May Rein In Pentagon Activities
Nominee Has Opposed Defense Department's Dominance in Intelligence Efforts

By Walter Pincus
Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday, November 14, 2006; Page A12

The nomination of Robert M. Gates as secretary of defense has begun to ease concerns in the intelligence community about the rapid growth of Pentagon intelligence activities since the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, said experts inside and outside the government and on Capitol Hill.

Gates, a former CIA director, has a long history of opposing expansive Pentagon intelligence activities. He has voiced unease about roles being taken over by Pentagon personnel, in part because more than 80 percent of all intelligence spending is now done by Defense Department agencies.

Robert Gates, right, has opposed Donald Rumsfeld's intelligence expansion. (By Gerald Herbert -- Associated Press)

Photos
Robert Gates Tapped to Run Pentagon
On Wednesday, Nov. 8, President Bush announced that former CIA director Robert M. Gates is his pick to replace Donald Rumsfeld as secretary of defense. Gates currently serves as president of Texas A&M University in College Station. Rumsfeld issued his resignation on Wednesday.

Donald H. Rumsfeld, the outgoing defense secretary, has vastly expanded Pentagon intelligence activities, increasing operations overseas and creating a new position and a new agency to handle military intelligence.

In 1991, after being confirmed for the dual role of director of central intelligence and CIA director, Gates tried to rein in Pentagon activities by getting a White House directive from then-President George H.W. Bush that created the Community Management Staff to help oversee all intelligence activities. A CIA history of that period says Gates, whose background was as an analyst, saw the Defense Intelligence Agency "as 'feeling [its] oats' and 'moving to expand in every direction,' including pushing some 'crazy ideas' " on the collection of human intelligence.

Gates's 1991 initiative "caused some heartburn in DOD, partly because he used the word 'management,' " requiring him to send out an explanatory joint statement signed by himself and then-Defense Secretary Richard B. Cheney.

More recently, Gates watched Rumsfeld create the position of undersecretary of defense for intelligence, whose role is to coordinate and expand worldwide military intelligence activities in the post-Sept. 11 world. In an op-ed piece in The Washington Post in May, Gates wrote that he and other CIA veterans were "unhappy about the dominance of the Defense Department in the intelligence arena" at a time when "close cooperation between the military and the CIA in both clandestine and intelligence collection is essential."

The article supported Gen. Michael V. Hayden becoming CIA director in part because Hayden, while director of the National Security Agency, opposed Rumsfeld keeping control of the NSA instead of having it move to the new director of national intelligence, John D. Negroponte. Gates went on to say that the combination of Negroponte and Hayden would establish "a strong civilian institutional counterbalance and alternative strategic intelligence perspective to the historically strong Defense Department intelligence arm."

John E. McLaughlin, a former acting CIA director, said yesterday that Gates "understands more than anyone the appropriate balance between the military and civilian intelligence agencies."

One quick indication of how Gates will deal with interagency tensions will be whether Rumsfeld's undersecretary of defense for intelligence, Stephen A. Cambone, and his top deputy, Army Lt. Gen. William G. Boykin, remain in their current positions. They have backed the growth of the Counterintelligence Field Activity, the controversial new agency that in three years has spent nearly $1 billion to gather data to be used in the protection of defense facilities at home and abroad.

Both have supported the increased roles for the military in sending Pentagon intelligence collectors abroad to gather information that could be needed if military operations against terrorists were initiated in various countries. Some conflicts arose in past years when Defense agents turned up in countries without notice to U.S. ambassadors and CIA chiefs of station.

A Pentagon spokesman said Cambone had no comment on the Gates nomination. Spokesmen for Negroponte and Hayden said neither would discuss the impact that Gates may have on the intelligence community.

McLaughlin noted yesterday that Negroponte's office has taken steps to create a system of transparency, easing some of the tensions. Gates "understands better than anyone that confusion overseas has to be stopped," he said, adding that the Pentagon "is not an alien world to him."

Another former senior intelligence official, who has worked closely with Gates, said that from his experience, Gates knows what the military needs in human intelligence and analysis as well as the best way to obtain it. Having come from the analytic side of the CIA, Gates is a great believer "in established clear lanes in the road, where each agency has its own responsibilities and knows the 'crosswalks' where there is a need to work together," the official said.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/conte...6111301135.html
Snuffysmith
Iraq deadline quagmire
As some Dems talk withdrawal, the top U.S. commander asks for more time -- and troops. At what point will continued failure not be acceptable?

By Michael Scherer

REUTERS/Joshua Roberts

U.S. Army General John Abizaid, commander of U.S. Central Command, testifies to the Senate Armed Services Committee on the situation in Iraq during hearings on Capitol Hill in Washington November 15, 2006.


Nov. 16, 2006 | WASHINGTON -- In four to six months, on a date that falls between Valentine's Day and Memorial Day, America will know whether the war in Iraq can still be won, according to Gen. John Abizaid, the U.S. military commander for the Middle East. "I think [the violence] needs to be brought down in the next several months," he said Wednesday, when asked when he expected Iraq to pass a "tipping point" of violence and civil unrest. "Four to six months."

He was speaking before the dissatisfied and downtrodden members of the Senate Armed Services Committee, who had gathered to make good on their promise to increase oversight of the White House execution of the Iraq war. With the elections now over, the senators mostly avoided attacking President Bush or questioning each other's patriotism. But stripped of their talking points, they faced the reality of a conflict that will not be won by legislative fiat. The outlook is grim.

According to the Defense Intelligence Agency, the number of daily attacks in Iraq averaged 180 in October, up from 170 in September and 70 in January. "Today, DIA assesses the conditions for the further deterioration of security and instability exists," the agency announced in a statement released Wednesday. "Although a significant breakdown of central authority has not occurred, Iraq has moved closer to this possibility."

Abizaid's prescription: Allow "four to six months" for the Iraqis to calm the sectarian fighting with American help. Let the Iraqi government disband the Shiite militias that are terrorizing parts of Baghdad. Demand that the nation's elected leaders make political progress in reconciling the various ethnic groups. Give the Iraqi police and military more time to take over security. "We want the Iraqis to do more," he said. "It's easy for the Iraqis to rely on us to do the work."


In the meantime, he asked the Senate not to meddle with his military planning, which may include a temporary increase in troop strength to accelerate the training of Iraq forces. Abizaid emphasized that the U.S. needs to boost resources for its military transition teams (10- to 15-man teams known as MiTTs), which live and fight alongside the Iraqi forces. "If more troops need to come in, they need to come in to make the Iraqi army stronger," he said.

Abizaid's focus on U.S. military advisors reflects a need raised months ago by some military officers serving in Iraq -- some of whom contended that the advisor strategy had been neglected by U.S. leaders for the past year. A Salon report in August revealed that "according to more than a dozen Marine and Army officers, since its launch approximately a year ago, the MiTT program has been dogged by bureaucratic mismanagement, inadequate training, and an astonishing shortage of equipment and supplies."

Abizaid also rejected calls for legislative timetables for troop withdrawal, a proposal embraced by Sen. Carl Levin, D-Mich., the chairman-in-waiting of the Armed Services Committee.

None of the senators appeared particularly satisfied by the state of affairs, or Abizaid's comments. "I regret deeply that you seem to think that the status quo, and the progress we are making, is acceptable," charged Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., a presumptive presidential candidate who advocates more troops to patrol areas of the country outside of Baghdad.

"Senator, I agree with you, the status quo is not acceptable," Abizaid shot back. But he then pointed out that the military was already stretched thin, limiting his options. "We can put in 20,000 more Americans tomorrow and achieve a temporary effect," he said. "But when you look at the overall American force pool that is available out there, the ability to sustain that commitment is just not something we can sustain right now."


New York Sen. Hillary Clinton, another presidential contender, appeared exasperated when she finally got a chance to speak, in the hearing's second hour. "We are really left with very few strategic options other than the continuation of hope," she said, after listing all the options that Abizaid had ruled out, like increasing or decreasing troop strength. She fell back on the adage: "Hope is not a strategy."

But neither was despair a path to success, Abizaid responded. "When I come to Washington, I feel despair," he told Clinton. "When I am in Iraq with my commanders, when I talk to our soldiers, when I talk to the Iraqi leadership, they are not despairing. They believe that they can move the country toward stability with our help. And I believe that. This has been a very hard and difficult process. And over the length of time we have learned some hard lessons."

Abizaid's appearance before the Senate, which was followed by a meeting with the House, was just the first of many hearings to offer a public reexamination of Iraq over the coming weeks. Soon, former CIA director Robert Gates, who has been nominated to replace Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, will come before the Senate to seek confirmation and lay out his vision of success in Iraq. That will be followed by the presentation of the congressionally sanctioned Iraq Study Group, led by James Baker, and by the public presentation of an internal Pentagon study group being led by Gen. Peter Pace, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.

But if Wednesday's hearing is any indication, more oversight and study may not reveal any elegant solutions to the problem in Iraq. It might, however, encourage leaders like Abizaid to set up a goal post beyond which continued failure will no longer be acceptable. For the moment, that deadline has been set for next spring -- hardly the first of its kind for allegedly measuring progress. It comes "four to six months" from Wednesday.
http://www.salon.com/news/feature/2006/11/16/iraq_troops/
Snuffysmith
The Marines plan to deploy the new V-22 to Iraq in 2007, but the “Osprey” is not ready for combat. It is flawed by unsolved design problems that have burdened the aircraft with serious operating limitations. Those limitations and poor quality control in the V-22’s production have already cost 30 American lives, and they can too easily have fatal consequences in combat for Marines employing the new “tilt-rotor” aircraft. It is also incompletely tested, implying potential additional limitations that have not yet been fully identified. Rather than the moniker “Osprey,” it may quickly gain a reputation as a “widow maker.”

Straus Military Reform Project Adviser Lee Gaillard has written an in-depth analysis of the glitch-plagued V-22 in his new monograph, V-22 Osprey: Wonder Weapon or Widow Maker? It explains all the problems in full. The executive summary is attached. A copy of the complete manuscript is available to journalists and other writers interested to review it for the purpose of writing a review or an article. To obtain a copy, contact the director of the Straus Military Reform Project, Winslow Wheeler, at winslowwheeler@comcast.net.

The Straus Military Reform Project will also sponsor a briefing on the manuscript when it is available in hard copy in January. Details follow:

When: Jan. 18, 2007, 10 a.m. – 12 p.m.
Where: Carnegie Endowment, 1779 Massachusetts Ave, NW, Washington, D.C., First Floor, Butler Room
RSVP: Whitney Parker, wparker@cdi.org, or 202-797-5287.



Winslow T. Wheeler

Director

Straus Military Reform Project

Center for Defense Information @ www.cdi.org/smrp

202 797-5271 in DC

301 840-8992 in MD

301 221-3897 cell

winslowwheeler@comcast.net
Snuffysmith
Time for Another Body Count in Iraq

By Sheldon Rampton, PR Watch. Posted November 18, 2006.



Critics of the Lancet study suggesting hundreds of thousands of deaths in Iraq since the 2003 invasion should call for additional, independent studies that could provide a scientific basis for either confirming or refuting its alarming findings. Under the strange Bizarro rules that right-wing pundits use to interpret politics in the United States, election season is the time when no one is supposed to discuss any of the things that might actually have a serious impact on their voting decision. The Mark Foley scandal was dismissed as an election-season "October surprise" cooked up by Democrats (even though the people who exposed it were Republicans, not Democrats). And James Baker announced that his secret plan to help Bush turn things around in Iraq would not be released publicly until "after the election in order to try and take our report out of domestic politics."

Let's ignore for the moment the fact that this curious delicacy about political bombshells in an election season comes from the same people who chose September 2002 — the beginning of congressional midterm elections — as the moment to launch their public push for war with Iraq. Let's humor the pundits and pretend that there really is some reason why people should hold off on discussing matters of pressing political interest during elections. If that's the case, then now is the moment when those discussions ought to begin. Let's start by talking about the dead in Iraq.

Last month there was very little discussion of the study published in the Lancet, a highly respected British medical journal, which estimated that 650,000 Iraqis have died since 2003 as a result of the war. The Lancet study too was dismissed as an "October surprise," and it disappeared from the news within days of its publication. But now that the election is over, can we finally discuss it?

I was shocked myself when I saw the figure of 650,000. It seemed huge, much larger than I had imagined possible. It is approximately four times the Iraqi Health Ministry's recent estimate, and twice the figure of 300,000 that is often given as an estimate of the number of people killed by Saddam Hussein during his 23 years of brutal rule.

The Lancet study, with Gilbert Burnham as its lead author, was conducted by some of the same researchers from Johns Hopkins University and Al Mustansiriya University in Baghdad who conducted a previous study in 2004 which estimated that 98,000 people had died. The earlier study was attacked at the time by supporters of the war and was largely ignored by the mainstream news media in the United States, as John Stauber and I noted in our recent book, The Best War Ever: Lies, Damned Lies and the Mess in Iraq (for an excerpt, see the Third Quarter 2006 issue of PR Watch). The new study suggests that some half a million additional lives have been lost in the subsequent two years.

As the Lancet paper explains, this number is an estimate based on statistical sampling of Iraq's population, and due to limitations in the number of people surveyed, it has a fairly wide margin of error. The researchers followed standard scientific procedure and reported their findings using a "95% confidence interval" — a minimum and maximum value derived from statistical analysis which finds a 95 percent probability that the two limiting values enclose the true number. The minimum value in their confidence interval was 392,979, and their maximum value was 942,636, which means that although 650,000 is their most likely estimate, the true number could be substantially lower or higher. Even so, the low end of this range is nearly 400,000, while the high end is nearly a million.

Are these numbers credible? I looked at reactions to the Lancet study from several groups: American political pundits, scientists with expertise in health and mortality research, and Iraqis (as reflected in the views of Iraqis with English-language weblogs). Many of the political pundits (even those with anti-war views) either rejected the study or questioned its conclusions and methodology. The scientists, however, gave it high marks, and most of the Iraqis thought the number sounded like it was in the right ballpark.

What the Study Says
The full Lancet study is available online. Although it is a scientific paper, I found it easy to read and jargon-free. However, a couple of terms might need explanation.

The study uses a "cluster sampling" methodology that is commonly used in health and mortality research, especially in places hit by war or other humanitarian disasters such as floods or earthquakes. The methodology is somewhat less precise — but more cost-effective and practical — than simple random sampling, in which individual members of the population being studied are selected and interviewed at random. Rather than individuals, researchers interview randomly-selected clusters of individuals and use standard statistical techniques to reach conclusions about the entire population. As Daniel Engber explains in Slate magazine, "It's the same basic method used for political polls in America, which estimate the attitudes of millions of people by surveying 1,000 adults."

A survey of this type, in which researchers go out and methodically sample the population being studied, is called "active surveillance" as opposed to "passive surveillance," which relies on information collected by external sources such as government or news reports. Passive surveillance generally tends to produce unrealistically low estimates, because they miss cases in which someone has died but the death has simply gone reported. Consider, for example, the difference between the results that you would get if you attempted to estimate the health impact of tobacco smoking using passive rather than active surveillance. Epidemiologists have repeatedly and conclusively demonstrated that tobacco smoking causes several hundred thousand deaths per year in the United States, but individual cases of smoking-related death are rarely reported as such in newspapers, so you would get a much lower number if you attempted to compile statistics based on newspaper reports alone.

Currently the most comprehensive attempt to compile statistics on Iraqi death using passive surveillance is being done by the Iraq Body Count website, which as of this writing (November 2, 2006) has tallied 45,061 to 50,022 deaths — less than a tenth of the Lancet result. As the Lancet paper itself notes, "Our estimate of excess deaths is far higher than those reported in Iraq through passive surveillance measures. This discrepancy is not unexpected. Data from passive surveillance are rarely complete, even in stable circumstances, and are even less complete during conflict, when access is restricted and fatal events could be intentionally hidden. Aside from Bosnia, we can find no conflict situation where passive surveillance recorded more than 20% of the deaths measured by population-based methods."

Lancet editor Richard Horton made the same point in a commentary published in the Guardian:

Only when you go out and knock on the doors of families, actively looking for deaths, do you begin to get close to the right number. This method is now tried and tested. It has been the basis for mortality estimates in war zones such as Darfur and the Congo. Interestingly, when we report figures from these countries politicians do not challenge them. They frown, nod their heads and agree that the situation is grave and intolerable. The international community must act, they say. When it comes to Iraq the story is different. Expect the current government to mobilise all its efforts to undermine the work done by this American and Iraqi team. Expect the government to criticise the Lancet for being too political. Expect the government to do all it can to dismiss this story and wash its hands of its responsibility to take these latest findings seriously.

Assessments from Scientists


Here are some of the reactions from scientists who work in the field of mortality research:

Ronald Waldman, an epidemiologist at Columbia University who worked at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention for many years, told the Washington Post that the Lancet's survey method was "tried and true" and said its findings were "the best estimate of mortality we have."
According to Professor Frank E. Harrell Jr., chairman of the biostatistics department in the School of Medicine at Vanderbilt University, "The investigators used a solid study design and rigorous, well-justified analysis of the data. They used several analytic techniques having different levels of assumptions to ensure the robustness of mortality estimates and the estimated margin of error. The researchers are also world-class."
Francisco Checchi, an epidemiologist at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine who has worked on mortality surveys in Angola, Darfur, Thailand and Uganda, said that he found the survey's estimates "shockingly high," but added that dismissing it "simply on gut feeling grounds seems more than irrational." He noted that its "choice of method is anything but controversial" and found its results "scientifically solid" and "compelling."
In Australia, 27 of the country's leading scientists in epidemiology and public health signed a letter supporting the study, noting that it "was undertaken by respected researchers assisted by one of the world's foremost biostatisticians. Its methodology is sound and its conclusions should be taken seriously. ... The study by Burnham and his colleagues provides the best estimate of mortality to date in Iraq that we have, or indeed are ever likely to have."
Asked about the study at a news conference, President Bush dismissed it out of hand, calling it "not credible" and saying its methodology was "pretty well discredited."

"That's exactly wrong," responded Richard Garfield, a public health professor at Columbia University who works closely with a number of the authors of the report. "There is no discrediting of this methodology. I don't think there's anyone who's been involved in mortality research who thinks there's a better way to do it in unsecured areas. I have never heard of any argument in this field that says there's a better way to do it."

Politicians and Pundits
Most of the methodological criticisms of the Lancet study actually come from people like Bush who have no expertise in epidemiology, and of course the boldest attacks have come from supporters of the war.

Writing in the conservative National Review, for example, Richard Nadler called the Lancet paper a "cooked up study." His only methodological critique, however, consisted of an odd claim that the researchers were guilty of "baseline bungling" because they "chose their 'base-line' for pre-invasion Iraq carefully: January 2002 through March 2003."

The baseline to which he referred is the study's pre-war estimate of the annual death rate in Iraq. The Lancet researchers arrived at that estimate the same way they arrived at their estimate of post-war deaths — by asking the people they interviewed whether any members of their household had died during that period. By comparing the pre-war baseline against the post-war death rate, they arrived at their estimate of 650,000 "excess" deaths in the post-war period.

Nadler's argument is that the period from January 2002 through March 2003 was less violent than earlier periods of Saddam Hussein's rule. If, therefore, the researchers had measured the post-war death rate against an earlier, more violent period, the comparison wouldn't look so bad. Of course, January 2002 through March 2003 wasn't chosen arbitrarily, since it happens to be the period that immediately preceded the actual invasion of Iraq. And if the period immediately before the invasion was relatively peaceful, why was the Bush administration so insistent on the urgent need for war?

Criticism of the baseline mortality rate was also a central element in another criticism of the Lancet, published by Fred Kaplan in Slate magazine. The Lancet estimated that 5.5 Iraqis per 1,000 were dying each year before the war. According to Kaplan, this estimate showed that the study was flawed because it differed from an estimate of 10 per 1,000 published by the United Nations. Moreover, he says, a 5.5 per thousand prewar mortality rate would have been "lower than that of almost every country in the Middle East" (a claim made also by columnist William M. Arkin in the Washington Post).

Australian computer scientist Tim Lambert demolishes this criticism in more detail than I'm prepared to, pointing out that 5.5 deaths per thousand was actually higher than the mortality rate in "all but one" of the other countries in the Middle East. The CIA Factbook also estimates Iraq's mortality rate at 5.37 per thousand, a figure that is very close to the Lancet estimate. Moreover, the United Nations estimate cited by Kaplan was itself just a guess, since prior to the Lancet studies, "No surveys or census based estimates of crude mortality have been undertaken in Iraq in more than a decade, and the last estimate of under-five mortality was from a UNICEF sponsored demographic survey from 1999."

Kaplan's other critique invoked an entirely new coinage and concept — the term "main street bias." He cited a letter published in Science magazine by a British physics professor and an economist who argue that the Lancet team's sampling technique was insufficiently random because it overselected people who live near main streets in Iraqi cities. This would skew the results, they claim, because people who live near main streets would have had higher death rates than the country's overall population.

There are two problems with this criticism. First, the Lancet researchers deny that they oversampled from main streets. The methodology section of the published study states that they surveyed homes selected randomly from "a list of residential streets crossing" a randomly-selected main street (emphasis added). But even if the study did overselect homes located near main streets, there is no evidence other than speculation to support the conclusion that "main street bias" would lead to an overcount.

Another attempt at methodological criticism came from Republican pollster Steven E. Moore, who conducted surveys in Iraq and served as an advisor to Paul Bremer. Moore blasted the Lancet paper, calling it a "bogus study." His criticism focused on the study's allegedly too-small sample size and imprecision. "Survey results frequently have a margin of error of plus or minus 3% or 5%--not 1200%," he wrote. This is generally true — with regard to the sort of opinion surveys that Moore performs (although his research in Iraq left Bremer forced to admit belatedly that "we really didn't see the insurgency coming"). The Lancet study, however, was studying mortality, and its sample size was dictated in part by the limited funds available to finance it and in part by concern for the safety of the Iraqi researchers who conducted the survey. It is true that the results are less precise than the results that would be needed to predict election outcomes in a political opinion poll, but that was not its purpose. As the Lancet paper itself explains, "A sample size of 12,000 was calculated to be adequate to identify a doubling of an estimated pre-invasion crude mortality rate of 5·0 per 1000 people per year with 95% confidence and a power of 80%, and was chosen to balance the need for robust data with the level of risk acceptable to field teams."

Moore also claimed that the Lancet researchers collected no demographic data about survey respondents — a claim that was untrue but that is nevertheless repeated in a separate Wall Street Journal editorial which called the study a "fraud."

Similar vitriol came from Christopher Hitchens, the former Trotskyist turned pro-war polemicist, who dashed off a column that didn't so much critique the Lancet paper as urinate on it. After accusing the epidemiologists of "moral idiocy," Hitchens mocked the name "Lancet," called its editor an "Islamist-Leftist," and went on to claim that its mortality estimate is (1) "almost certainly inflated" and (2) actually justifies the war. Why? The study found that 31 percent of deaths were attributed to coalition forces, while 24 percent were attributed to "other" causes and 45 percent were "unknown" (because either the responsible party was not known, or the surveyed households were hesitant to specifically identify them). From this evidence, Hitchens concluded that insurgents are the true killers in Iraq and that the Lancet study is therefore "a reminder of the nature of the enemy we face."

Iraq Body Count
Other criticism of the study came from a source that may seem surprising: Iraq Body Count (IBC), the anti-war, London-based organization that has been tracking Iraqi deaths since the beginning of the war. IBC issued a news release questioning the wide gap that separates its own numbers and official Iraqi government statistics from the Lancet's much larger estimate. The discrepancy, they argued, is so large as to be implausible. For example, IBC doubts that the number of deaths estimated by the Lancet could have occurred "with less than a tenth of them being noticed by any public surveillance mechanisms." A gap that large, they argue, can only mean that either there has been "incompetence and/or fraud on a truly massive scale by Iraqi officials in hospitals and ministries," or else the Lancet authors "have drawn conclusions from unrepresentative data."

Les Roberts, one of the authors of the Lancet study, has responded to these criticisms in an interview with the British Broadcasting Corporation. Citing examples from other wars, he points out that "It is really difficult to collect death information in a war zone! ... I do not think that very low reporting implies fraud."

It should be noted that IBC's own methodology follows rules that should be expected to lead to a lower count than the Lancet survey:

Whereas the Lancet study attempts to estimate all deaths — including the deaths of insurgents, police and Iraqi military — IBC only counts civilian deaths and excludes combatants.
IBC only counts deaths that are reported in English-language news media, and Iraq is not an English-speaking nation. Many more deaths are reported in the Iraqi press in Arabic than in the Western-language wire services.
As for the gap between the Lancet figure and deaths reported by the Iraqi Health Ministry, a number of Iraqi commentators (some of whom I quote below) have noted that conditions in many parts of the country as so unstable as to prevent reliable government accounting. Moreover, the question of how many people have died in Iraq has been politically charged since the start of the war, and the United States has not only avoided issuing statistics of its own but on a number of occasions has also pressured Iraqi officials against doing so. Shortly after the invasion in 2003, Baghdad's medical officials were forbidden to release morgue counts. In December of that year, Iraq's Health Ministry ordered a halt to counting civilian deaths and told its statistics department not to release figures, according to the Associated Press. More recently, following a wave of Shiite-on-Sunni violence in February of this year, Iraqi officials originally estimated more than 1,000 deaths but lowered the estimate to 350 following what an international official described as political pressure. In October of this year, Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki's office even instructed the country's health ministry to stop providing mortality figures to the United Nations.

Complicating things still further, the Washington Post reported in August that Iraqi hospitals themselves have become killing fields where Sunni Muslims are kidnapped and killed because Iraq's Shiite-run Health Ministry has been taken over, along with several other government ministries, by the Mahdi Army, a militia controlled by radical cleric Moqtada al-Sadr. The resulting "reluctance of Sunnis to enter hospitals is making it increasingly difficult to assess the number of casualties caused by sectarian violence," the Post noted. As another indicator of the inadequacy of official Iraqi statistics, the most recent United Nations human rights report on Iraq states, "The Ministry of Health reported zero number of killed in Al-Anbar for July, which may indicate an under-estimation due to difficulties experienced in collecting information in that particular Governorate." Al-Anbar is one of the most violent provinces in the country, where the Lancet study found that more than 10 people per 1,000 have died annually in violence.

Iraqis Weigh In
Among Iraqi bloggers, the strongest challenge to the Lancet study came from Omar Fadhil, one of two brothers who contributes to a pro-occupation website called "Iraq the Model" (ITM). Fadhil emotionally blasted the study, accusing the Lancet researchers of

exploiting the suffering of people to make gains that are not the least related to easing the suffering of those people... They shamelessly made an auction of our blood, and it didn't make a difference if the blood was shed by a bomb or a bullet or a heart attack because the bigger the count the more useful it becomes to attack this or that policy in a political race and the more useful it becomes in cheerleading for murderous tyrannical regimes.

When the statistics announced by hospitals and military here, or even by the UN, did not satisfy their lust for more deaths, they resorted to mathematics to get a fake number that satisfies their sadistic urges...

These comments prompted an equally emotional outpouring from dozens of other Iraqi bloggers, who called ITM "a holocaust denier," "sucking up to the Americans," "a traitor," "like the Baathist apologist that they so despise," and "shameful." An Iraqi housewife declared that she was full of "Guilt and anger because the Iraq I always dreamt of has become one big nightmare. ... Guilt and anger because outside these walls are trashbins filled with decapitated bodies of women, children and men. ... Guilt and anger because after all the years of tyranny, people are now wishing for Saddam the criminal to come back. ... The so called freedom that everyone, every single person was hoping and dreaming of has gone."

I spent some time sampling discussions of the Lancet study from among the more than 200 blogs listed at the Iraq Blog Count website. Many of the bloggers there noted that they themselves have seen widespread death due to the war, including the loss of personal friends and family: "I don't know of anyone who hasn't lost at least some members of their extended family," wrote Iraqi blogger Raed Jarrar.

Riverbend, an anti-occupation blogger, wrote that she found found the figure of 650,000 dead entirely plausible:

For American politicians and military personnel, playing dumb and talking about numbers of bodies in morgues and official statistics, etc, seems to be the latest tactic. But as any Iraqi knows, not every death is being reported. As for getting reliable numbers from the Ministry of Health or any other official Iraqi institution, that's about as probable as getting a coherent, grammatically correct sentence from George Bush — especially after the ministry was banned from giving out correct mortality numbers. ... The chaos and lack of proper facilities is resulting in people being buried without a trip to the morgue or the hospital. During American military attacks on cities like Samarra and Fallujah, victims were buried in their gardens or in mass graves in football fields. Or has that been forgotten already?

We literally do not know a single Iraqi family that has not seen the violent death of a first or second-degree relative these last three years. Abductions, militias, sectarian violence, revenge killings, assassinations, car-bombs, suicide bombers, American military strikes, Iraqi military raids, death squads, extremists, armed robberies, executions, detentions, secret prisons, torture, mysterious weapons - with so many different ways to die, is the number so far fetched?

Similar comments came from a Zeyad at Healing Iraq. Zeyad's reaction is interesting in part because he initially supported the war as a means of getting rid of Saddam Hussein and bringing democracy to his country. After reading the Lancet study, he questioned whether its methodology was appropriate "in Iraq's case, where the level of violence is not consistent throughout the country," and he thought its estimate of 650,000 deaths was too high. "My personal guesstimate would be half that number," he wrote, adding, "but then I have a limited grasp on statistics and I stress that I may be wrong. ... The people who conducted the survey should be commended for attempting to find out, with the limited methods they had available. On the other hand, the people who are attacking them come across as indifferent to the suffering of Iraqis, especially when they have made no obvious effort to provide a more accurate body count." Moreover,

There also seems to be a common misconception here that large parts of the country are stable. In fact, not a day goes by without political and sectarian assassinations all over the south of Iraq, particularly in Basrah and Amara, but they always go unnoticed, except in some local media outlets. The ongoing conflict between political parties and militias to control resources in holy cities and in the oil-rich region of Basrah rarely gets a nod from the media every now and then, simply because there are very few coalition casualties over there. The same with Mosul and Kirkuk, both highly volatile areas. I am yet to see some good coverage on the deadly sectarian warfare in Baquba, northeast of Baghdad, which has the highest rate of unknown corpses dumped on the streets after the capital, and which was about to be announced an Islamic Emirate by the end of Ramadan. There are absolutley no numbers of civilian casualties from Anbar. There is no one to report them and the Iraqi government controls no territory there, while American troops are confined to their bases. And much, much less data from other governorates which give the impression of being "stable."

I have personally witnessed dozens of people killed in my neighbourhood over the last few months (15 people in the nearby vicinity of our house alone, over 4 months), and virtually none of them were mentioned in any media report while I was there. And that was in Baghdad where there is the highest density of journalists and media agencies. Don't you think this is a common situation all over the country?

A few days later, Zeyad noted the recent killing of another close friend before adding, "I now officially regret supporting this war back in 2003. The guilt is too much for me to handle."

Conclusions
Of course, no single survey should be regarded as the final word on a topic as important and complex as the death toll from this war. It's possible (although unproven) that Zeyad is correct in suspecting that the researchers may have somehow based their findings on an unrepresentative sample of the Iraqi population. One American who works on health projects in Iraq had a similar reaction, stating that "there appears to be an unintentional sampling bias toward the most violent governorates" and that "there could also be a trend to sample the more violent locations within each governorate. ... I offer these critiques as grains of salt. The report may in fact be accurate. I do not dispute the honesty of the researchers. I know from experience that one never has much control over operations in Iraq, and without a great deal of control, information errors can creep in. ... My own guess is that the death rate in the war is twice as much or more than Iraq Body Count, but probably half as much as reported in this study."

Even so, the results of the Lancet study, combined with what we know about the limitations of other attempts to count the dead, suggest that the war in Iraq has already claimed hundreds of thousands rather than tens of thousands of lives.

It is rather striking, moreover, that critics of this research have mostly avoided calling for additional, independent studies that could provide a scientific basis for either confirming or refuting its alarming findings.

The Lancet researchers themselves have called for such research. "At the conclusion of our 2004 study," they state, "we urged that an independent body assess the excess mortality that we saw in Iraq. This has not happened. We continue to believe that an independent international body to monitor compliance with the Geneva conventions and other humanitarian standards in conflict is urgently needed. With reliable data, those voices that speak out for civilians trapped in conflict might be able to lessen the tragic human cost of future wars."

http://www.alternet.org/waroniraq/44459/
Snuffysmith
Kissinger: No Military Victory in Iraq

By TARIQ PANJA
The Associated Press
Sunday, November 19, 2006; 7:05 AM



LONDON -- Military victory is no longer possible in Iraq, former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger said in a television interview broadcast Sunday.

In a wide ranging interview on British Broadcasting Corp. television, Kissinger presented a bleak vision of Iraq, saying the U.S. government must enter into dialogue with Iraq's regional neighbors _ including Iran _ if any progress is to be made in the region.

"If you mean by 'military victory' an Iraqi Government that can be established and whose writ runs across the whole country, that gets the civil war under control and sectarian violence under control in a time period that the political processes of the democracies will support, I don't believe that is possible," he said on the BBC's Sunday AM breakfast show.

But Kissinger warned against a rapi

d withdrawal of troops, saying it could lead to "disastrous consequences," destabilizing Iraq's neighbors and causing a long-lasting conflict.

"If you withdraw all the forces without any international understanding and without any even partial solution of some of the problems, civil war in Iraq will take on even more violent forms and achieve dimensions that are probably exceeding those that brought us into Yugoslavia with military force," he said.

Iraq's neighbors, especially those with large Shia populations, would be destabilized should their be a quick withdrawal from Iraq, Kissinger said.

"So I think a dramatic collapse of Iraq _ whatever we think about how the situation was created _ would have disastrous consequences for which we would pay for many years and which would bring us back, one way or another, into the region," he said.

Kissinger, whose views have been sought by the Iraqi Study Group, led by former Secretary of State James Baker III, called for an international conference bringing together the permanent members of the United Nations Security Council, Iraq's neighbors and regional powers like India and Pakistan to work out a way forward for the region.

He also said that the process would have to include Iran and that the U.S. must enter into dialogue with the country.

Asked if it was time for President Bush and British Prime Minister Tony Blair to change course, he responded: "I think we have to redefine the course, but I don't think that the alternative is between military victory, as defined previously, or total withdrawal.

© 2006 The Associated Presshttp://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/11/19/AR2006111900287_pf.html
Snuffysmith
A tongue-in-cheek preview of the findings from the Iraq Study Group, written by "Werther", the pen-name of a Northern Virginia based defense analyst. We are grateful to Winslow Wheeler for drawing this to our attention.

Beltway Bromo-Seltzer
A Sneak Peek at the Baker Commission Report
By WERTHER

As we have stated in the past, the reports of government commissions serve their intended purposes best when they act as a cover-up disguised as an exposé. The 9/11 Commission Report is the classic and best-known recent example, with Tom Kean and Lee Hamilton giving bravura performances in pretended gravitas, with only an occasional lapse into imbecility by John Lehman or Jim Thompson. [1] The Robb-Silverman Report, by contrast, was so shakily constructed, and the co-chairmen's dissembling so unconvincing, that their "investigation" should have been accompanied by the music track of "Three Blind Mice."

In the wake of the human and fiscal wreckage of the Iraq fiasco, all Washington trembles in anticipation at the release of the Baker-Hamilton Commission's report on Iraq. Unlike many other commissions, its lucubrations have been held in camera, the method favored by chief Bush family consigliere and fixer James Baker.

A run-down of its other principals should give us a strong indication where this operation is heading. Aside from Baker, there is as co-chairman once again Lee Hamilton, a past master at these performances. As the éminence beige of the Democratic foreign policy apparatus, Hamilton has been participating in high-level cover-ups of government shenanigans stretching back to the Iran-Contra affair.

The rest of the cast consists of: Vernon Jordan, one of Bill Clinton's money men and obviously intended to slap the Wahabbite insurgents of the Black Caucus into line; Ed Meese, faithful purveyor of balderdash for countless decades and a link to the Reaganites; Lawrence Eagleburger, a saturnine Bush family wheel horse and Kissinger liegeman known mainly for his staggeringly immense girth and ability to balance on a cane while juggling a cigarette and an asthma inhaler; Leon Panetta, a professional ward heeler and thief of a 1986 Indiana Congressional election, tasked to corral a spectrum of Democrats roughly bounded by Rahm Emanuel and Steny Hoyer; former Defense Secretary William Perry, representing the interests of the merchants of death; Charles Robb, who began his career as a White House doorman and who symbolically remains one four decades later; ex-Senator Alan Simpson, wise-cracking cowpoke (and member of a disastrous Congressional delegation to Iraq in 1990, whose purpose was to ply Saddam with U.S. taxpayer loot via the Commodity Credit Corporation); and former Associate Justice Sandra Day O'Connor, the lone member of the commission with no obvious ties to Beltway monkey business and presumably tapped for the sheer novelty value.

Probably the only reason Baker and Hamilton didn't select Clark Clifford or Paul Nitze to serve on the commission is that these two quintessential Establishmentarians are legally dead. But the leaden predictability of its membership preordains its conclusions.

Given that the rules governing these types of commissions are as ritualized as Noh drama, we believe it is safe to roll out our own projection of what its findings will be. Here, in capsule form, are the Baker-Hamilton report's major findings:

There have been major challenges to stabilizing Iraq, but it remains vital to our interests; precipitate withdrawal risks chaos and a power vacuum (i.e., Iraq has been a colossal screw-up, but we are holding no one accountable. "Our" interests means superior folks like us. Nature abhors a vacuum; too bad it does not abhor drones and aged blowhards).

The next six months will be critical (Where have we heard that before? As we have been in Iraq for over 42 months, there have been at least 7 inflexion points where "the next six months will be critical." These are Fabian tactics).

The Iraq government needs to get its act together (Do tell. But how can the dummy solve problems created by the ventriloquist?).

The Iraq government must be given a timetable/benchmarks/some other euphemism (This finding will challenge the creative writing skills of the commission staff).

We need to strengthen/beef-up/robustify Iraq's army and police forces (No kidding; you geniuses earned your per diems for this? We tried that with a variety of indigenous forces: the ARVN, Hmong, Meo, Coral Gables Cubans, and a host of other Third World paladins now operating chop suey parlors in proximity to CIA front buildings in the Northern Virginia suburbs).

U.S. forces will redeploy to neighboring states (where the ruler has a CIA stipend or the local emir has business interests intertwined with the Bush family. The "deliberate" and "phased" withdrawal means the redeployment will proceed at the speed of the Humboldt Glacier).

The United States must pursue a multilateral approach with its friends/allies/coalition partners/nodding acquaintances in order to bring stability to Iraq (That would be a first; but why, then, has the Executive Mansion resubmitted the nomination of acting UN ambassador John Bolton, who vetoes UN resolutions as maniacally as Grover Cleveland vetoed pension bills? And for the express purpose "as part of a public relations strategy to put the onus on the Democrats for not allowing a vote on his appointment to go to the floor"). [2]

There must be a just and lasting peace in the Middle East. But Israel, our major ally/the only true democracy in the region/the light unto the gentiles, deserves blah blah blah (This is standard boilerplate wherewith the commissioners will simultaneously sound "balanced," yet not risk suffering a boycott against their lucrative consultancies by the Israel lobby).

There will be more in the report, but it will amount to cotton-wool packing, filigree, and cathedral gargoyles.

The politicians will rush to praise the report's sagacity, and heed it, more or less. For the Establishment, which stretches back through Clifford and Nitze, through Henry Stimson, Colonel House, Albert Beveridge, back through the Morgans and the Astors, through the founding of Skull & Bones, and finally alighting on Alexander Hamilton, the prototypical oligarch of the new North American republic, it will be a Bromo-Seltzer after the nightmarish hangover of a failed scion's rebellion against his illustrious father. It will be an assurance, like a bank vault slamming shut, that in Washington, everything will be fundamentally the same for all eternity.

Werther is the pen name of a Northern Virginia-based defense analyst.

[1] Indeed, the session in which then-National Security Advisor Condoleezza Rice writhed on the cruel hook set by commissioner Richard Ben Veniste was a masterpiece of high television drama which connoisseurs of the old Perry Mason series could fully savor.

[2] "U.N. Post Will Test Bush on Pledge for Consensus," The New York Times, 11 November 2006.
Snuffysmith
By JOHN HEILPRIN, Associated Press Writer
1 hour, 51 minutes ago



Americans would have to sign up for a new military draft after turning 18 if the incoming chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee has his way.

Rep. Charles Rangel (news, bio, voting record), D-N.Y., said Sunday he sees his idea as a way to deter politicians from launching wars and to bolster U.S. troop levels insufficient to cover potential future action in Iran, North Korea and Iraq.

"There's no question in my mind that this president and this administration would never have invaded Iraq, especially on the flimsy evidence that was presented to the Congress, if indeed we had a draft and members of Congress and the administration thought that their kids from their communities would be placed in harm's way," Rangel said.

Rangel, a veteran of the Korean War who has unsuccessfully sponsored legislation on conscription in the past, said he will propose a measure early next year.

In 2003, he proposed a measure covering people age 18 to 26. This year, he offered a plan to mandate military service for men and women between age 18 and 42; it went nowhere in the Republican-led Congress.

Democrats will control the House and Senate come January because of their victories in the Nov. 7 election.

At a time when some lawmakers are urging the military to send more troops to Iraq, "I don't see how anyone can support the war and not support the draft," said Rangel, who also proposed a draft in January 2003, before the U.S. invasion of Iraq.

Sen. Lindsey Graham (news, bio, voting record), a South Carolina Republican who is a colonel in the U.S. Air Force Standby Reserve, said he agreed that the U.S. does not have enough people in the military.

"I think we can do this with an all-voluntary service, all-voluntary Army, Air Force, Marine Corps and Navy. And if we can't, then we'll look for some other option," said Graham, who is assigned as a reserve judge to the Air Force Court of Criminal Appeals.

Rangel, the next chairman of the House tax-writing committee, said he worried the military was being strained by its overseas commitments.

"If we're going to challenge Iran and challenge North Korea and then, as some people have asked, to send more troops to Iraq, we can't do that without a draft," Rangel said.

He said having a draft would not necessarily mean everyone called to duty would have to serve. Instead, "young people (would) commit themselves to a couple of years in service to this great republic, whether it's our seaports, our airports, in schools, in hospitals," with a promise of educational benefits at the end of service.

Graham said he believes the all-voluntary military "represents the country pretty well in terms of ethnic makeup, economic background."

Repeated polls have shown that about seven in 10 Americans oppose reinstatement of the draft and officials say they do not expect to restart conscription.

Outgoing Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld told Congress in June 2005 that "there isn't a chance in the world that the draft will be brought back."

Yet the prospect of the long global fight against terrorism and the continuing U.S. commitment to stabilizing Iraq have kept the idea in the public's mind.

The military drafted conscripts during the Civil War, both world wars and between 1948 and 1973. An agency independent of the Defense Department, the Selective Service System trains, keeps an updated registry of men age 18-25 — now about 16 million — from which to supply untrained draftees that would supplement the professional all-volunteer armed forces.

Rangel and Graham appeared on "Face the Nation" on CBS.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20061119/ap_on_...draft&printer=1
Snuffysmith
Leave now or perish, Mr Howard
By Alan Stretton
November 20, 2006
Page 1 of 2 | Single page

As Iraq continues to sink further into the quagmire of civil war, the leaders of the coalition of the willing continue to close their eyes to what is happening and keep repeating the untruths about how democracy in Iraq is starting to work. The remarkable thing is that while President George Bush and Prime Minister Tony Blair are suffering the political consequences, our own Prime Minister is weathering the storm The reason is that there is still a general apathy in the Australian electorate because we have been fortunate enough to avoid major casualties.

It is sad that Bush and Howard both think that the trial of Saddam Hussein shows that democracy in Iraq is working. The trial was not set up by the Iraqi Government (which was not in existence at that time) but by a military commission controlled by the US.

The first judge hearing the case resigned because the Iraqi Government and their American advisers thought he was "too soft" on Saddamn. A second judge was murdered. Three of Saddam's lawyers were gunned down during the trial and other defence counsel were banned from the court. The third judge shut down the defence before all their witnesses could be called. This is democracy at work, according to Mr Bush and Mr Howard!

And guess what? The guilty verdict was able to be announced two days before the American mid-term elections. Not that it did much good as the American people gave a resounding answer to the lies, spin and deceit still being promoted by the President as the military casualties rise to nearly 3000. Not to mention the hundreds of thousands of Iraqis who have been massacred.

Many eminent lawyers cannot understand why Saddam was not brought to justice and made answerable for his crimes before the International Criminal Court. If this had occurred the world would have been reminded that it was the United States that armed Saddam Hussein during the war with Iran. It was also likely to publicise that the gas and chemicals used by Saddam against the Kurds came from the United States. It is easy to understand why the Americans wanted Saddam to be tried by a court controlled by them.

The term "cut and run" is no longer used by the leaders of the coalition of the willing. It is now being replaced by the term "withdrawing with honour". Certainly a major withdrawal of American forces will be under way before the presidential election in 2008. It is also certain that a withdrawal of some Australian units will take place before Howard comes up for re-election in 2007.

There was a great opportunity to withdraw 400 troops earlier this year. They were guarding Japanese troops helping to rebuild the infrastructure in southern Iraq that had been destroyed by the Americans in their initial air onslaught. They should have been brought home to relieve the strain on the Australian Army, which is overstretched with other foreign commitments. The cynical could believe that the decision to leave these forces there in an operational role has a political motive, so that their withdrawal can have a political impact closer to the federal election.

From the start, our involvement in Iraq has been a military and political catastrophe. The stated aim for the invasion was to destroy weapons of mass destruction and to fight the war against Osama bin Laden and his terrorists who carried out the terrorist attack on September 11, 2001. The attack on Iraq was launched without any United Nations authority. The fact that there were no weapons of mass destruction and that Saddam was not involved in the attack on America is now acknowledged . The main reason for the American invasion of Iraq was that, after 12 months of bluster and threats by Bush in the so-called war against terror, the Americans could not find bin Laden, and the Republicans were losing political support.

The invasion of Iraq as part of the war against terror has had the opposite effect to that which the coalition of the willing intended. Instead of decreasing terrorism it has provided radical Muslims with a reason to call a jihad against American efforts to dominate affairs in the Middle East. It has provided the spark to start fires around the Western world that will take decades to extinguish.

There is now no way the invading forces in Iraq can withdraw with honour. The excuse for withdrawing US forces during the Vietnam War was that the American policy of Vietnamisation had made the South Vietnamese forces strong enough to defeat the Vietcong themselves, and the Americans were no longer needed. This was a complete falsehood that served the purpose for internal American consumption. But it will be difficult to use this excuse again. Despite the American resources being poured into the growing Iraqi army and police force, the results have been very disappointing. On many occasions the Iraqi army has refused to fight and many terrorist acts have been committed by Iraqi army personnel.

The American aim to set up a Western-style democracy in Iraq was doomed from the start. With the country divided into three major factions - the Shiites, Sunnis and Kurds - the only solution may have been a loose federation controlling three semi-autonomous zones. Unfortunately so much damage has been done that this political solution is unlikely to succeed.

Both militarily and politically the invasion of Iraq will become one of the great catastrophes in the Middle East and have lasting consequences for peace and security. Australia's involvement for the wrong reasons, in the wrong place at the wrong time must have major political repercussions for the Australian Government despite the political skills of Howard.

Although some Australian forces need to remain to protect our embassy and other Australian officials, there is no reason why the 400 Australians who were guarding the Japanese cannot be brought home now, before they risk taking casualties. Should Australian casualties occur, the political fallout for the Government will be greater than any gain from a withdrawal closer to the next election.

Major-General Alan Stretton was the Australian Army chief of staff during the Vietnam War and was later placed in charge of Darwin after Cyclone Tracy. He spoke out strongly out against involvement in the Iraq War.

There was a great opportunity to withdraw 400 troops earlier this year. They were guarding Japanese troops helping to rebuild the infrastructure in southern Iraq that had been destroyed by the Americans in their initial air onslaught. They should have been brought home to relieve the strain on the Australian Army, which is overstretched with other foreign commitments. The cynical could believe that the decision to leave these forces there in an operational role has a political motive, so that their withdrawal can have a political impact closer to the federal election.

From the start, our involvement in Iraq has been a military and political catastrophe. The stated aim for the invasion was to destroy weapons of mass destruction and to fight the war against Osama bin Laden and his terrorists who carried out the terrorist attack on September 11, 2001. The attack on Iraq was launched without any United Nations authority. The fact that there were no weapons of mass destruction and that Saddam was not involved in the attack on America is now acknowledged . The main reason for the American invasion of Iraq was that, after 12 months of bluster and threats by Bush in the so-called war against terror, the Americans could not find bin Laden, and the Republicans were losing political support.

The invasion of Iraq as part of the war against terror has had the opposite effect to that which the coalition of the willing intended. Instead of decreasing terrorism it has provided radical Muslims with a reason to call a jihad against American efforts to dominate affairs in the Middle East. It has provided the spark to start fires around the Western world that will take decades to extinguish.

There is now no way the invading forces in Iraq can withdraw with honour. The excuse for withdrawing US forces during the Vietnam War was that the American policy of Vietnamisation had made the South Vietnamese forces strong enough to defeat the Vietcong themselves, and the Americans were no longer needed. This was a complete falsehood that served the purpose for internal American consumption. But it will be difficult to use this excuse again. Despite the American resources being poured into the growing Iraqi army and police force, the results have been very disappointing. On many occasions the Iraqi army has refused to fight and many terrorist acts have been committed by Iraqi army personnel.

The American aim to set up a Western-style democracy in Iraq was doomed from the start. With the country divided into three major factions - the Shiites, Sunnis and Kurds - the only solution may have been a loose federation controlling three semi-autonomous zones. Unfortunately so much damage has been done that this political solution is unlikely to succeed.

Both militarily and politically the invasion of Iraq will become one of the great catastrophes in the Middle East and have lasting consequences for peace and security. Australia's involvement for the wrong reasons, in the wrong place at the wrong time must have major political repercussions for the Australian Government despite the political skills of Howard.

Although some Australian forces need to remain to protect our embassy and other Australian officials, there is no reason why the 400 Australians who were guarding the Japanese cannot be brought home now, before they risk taking casualties. Should Australian casualties occur, the political fallout for the Government will be greater than any gain from a withdrawal closer to the next election.

Major-General Alan Stretton was the Australian Army chief of staff during the Vietnam War and was later placed in charge of Darwin after Cyclone Tracy. He spoke out strongly out against involvement in the Iraq War.

http://www.theage.com.au/news/opinion/leav...3871268501.html
Snuffysmith
Pentagon Review Sees Three Options in Iraq
More Training of Iraqi Troops a Likely Focus

By Thomas E. Ricks
Washington Post Staff Writer
Monday, November 20, 2006; A01



The Pentagon's closely guarded review of how to improve the situation in Iraq has outlined three basic options: Send in more troops, shrink the force but stay longer, or pull out, according to senior defense officials.

Insiders have dubbed the options "Go Big," "Go Long" and "Go Home." The group conducting the review is likely to recommend a combination of a small, short-term increase in U.S. troops and a long-term commitment to stepped-up training and advising of Iraqi forces, the officials said.

The military's study, commissioned by Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Gen. Peter Pace, comes at a time when escalating violence is causing Iraq policy to be reconsidered by both the White House and the congressionally chartered, bipartisan Iraq Study Group. Pace's effort will feed into the White House review, but military officials have made it clear they are operating independently.

The Pentagon group's proceedings are so secret that officials asked to help it have not even been told its title or mandate. But in recent days the circle of those with knowledge of its deliberations has widened beyond a narrow group working for the Joint Chiefs of Staff.

"Go Big," the first option, originally contemplated a large increase in U.S. troops in Iraq to try to break the cycle of sectarian and insurgent violence. A classic counterinsurgency campaign, though, would require several hundred thousand additional U.S. and Iraqi soldiers as well as heavily armed Iraqi police. That option has been all but rejected by the study group, which concluded that there are not enough troops in the U.S. military and not enough effective Iraqi forces, said sources who have been informally briefed on the review.

The sources insisted on anonymity because no one at the Pentagon has been permitted to discuss the review with outsiders. The review group is led by three high-profile colonels -- H.R. McMaster and Peter Mansoor of the Army, and Thomas C. Greenwood of the Marine Corps. None of them would comment for this article.

Spokesmen for the chairman and vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff did not return calls or respond to e-mails seeking comment.

"Go Home," the third option, calls for a swift withdrawal of U.S. troops. It was rejected by the Pentagon group as likely to push Iraq directly into a full-blown and bloody civil war.

The group has devised a hybrid plan that combines part of the first option with the second one -- "Go Long" -- and calls for cutting the U.S. combat presence in favor of a long-term expansion of the training and advisory efforts. Under this mixture of options, which is gaining favor inside the military, the U.S. presence in Iraq, currently about 140,000 troops, would be boosted by 20,000 to 30,000 for a short period, the officials said.

The purpose of the temporary but notable increase, they said, would be twofold: To do as much as possible to curtail sectarian violence, and also to signal to the Iraqi government and public that the shift to a "Go Long" option that aims to eventually cut the U.S. presence is not a disguised form of withdrawal.

Even so, there is concern that such a radical shift in the U.S. posture in Iraq could further damage the standing of its government, which U.S. officials worry is already shaky. Under the hybrid plan, the short increase in U.S. troop levels would be followed by a long-term plan to radically cut the presence, perhaps to 60,000 troops.

That combination plan, which one defense official called "Go Big But Short While Transitioning to Go Long," could backfire if Iraqis suspect it is really a way for the United States to moonwalk out of Iraq -- that is, to imitate singer Michael Jackson's trademark move of appearing to move forward while actually sliding backward. "If we commit to that concept, we have to accept upfront that it might result in the opposite of what we want," the official said.

The Pentagon official said this short-term boost could be achieved through three steps: extending the tours of duty of some units already in Iraq, sending other units there earlier than planned and activating some Army Reserve units.

The group concluded that such a step might be necessary because it is concerned that the continuing violence is undercutting the Iraqi government's credibility. "Folks increasingly realize that if violence can't be contained, the spiral downward will continue, the national government will lose the effectiveness it has . . . . and then all bets will be off," the official said.

Also, it would take months to prepare and implement the expansion of the program to train and advise Iraqi forces, he noted. The military will have to find those additional advisers, prepare them for the deployment, get infrastructure in place to house and feed them, order and ship equipment for them to use, and recruit additional Iraqis for them to train.

"The 'Go Long' approach is one that can work if there is sufficient strategic patience, resources appropriated and [if] leadership executes effectively," a military intelligence official said.

Another potential obstacle to the "Go Long" option is that it runs counter to the impulse of many congressional Democrat