- Reaction score
- 0
- Points
- 210
I was following the Benazir Bhutto thing - and reading the instant experts so I thought I'd try my own quick reading of the tea leaves
It seems to me that this is just the beginning of a long deployment that is welcomed at first, then as it "doesn`t end in the current APS" is left for a few years to figure out what to do (from a high level political perspective - our Battlegroups knowing what they have to do), and then once the active fighthing phases taper off - the "what`s next" kicks in. Nobody ever knows whats next and because its driven at the top by politics - we are just bystanders at the bottom.
A BULLET POINT ON THE CDS DAILY BRIEF Sometime in 2010
In 25 words or less - local interests have got to be persuaded that Al Quaeda and regional Instability is against their interests - this is a classic technique that was used by Brits to counter Indians Allied with the French in North America -
SOME THOUGHTS - FEEL FREE TO PILE ON - I THINK WE CAN ALL FIGURE THIS OUT BETTER THAN ANY NATIONAL MEDIA TALKING HEADS
My view of why Pakistan can't appear to do anything is that there is fragmentation inside Pakistan proper with respect to the Armed Forces - Counter Terror outside of Pakistan is a low priority since the end of the 2003 Conflict and earlier with the end of the Russian Rule. When the Russians left - the Taliban who were the link to Pakistani influence against the Soviets were not demobilised. Most of the heavy work had been done by indigenous warlords on Afghanistan who are also very fragmented - i.e. they have no total government control - but they control this or that district in a patchwork coalition that adapts and contracts as required to local situations. As the Taliban wondered what was next - in came Al Qaeda without any checks and balances from the west or from Pakistan.
So the recap is
* Russians Out
* Taliban Expand Power
* Al Qaeda brings in $$$$$ which the Taliban needed
* Al Qaeda allowed to operate in a safe haven
* West (incl Pakistan) did not check them
* Then West Came in and wiped out Taliban government in 3 weeks in 2003 after 911
* Taliban then fled across the border to the Tribal Homelands which are not firmly controlled by the central powers in Islamabad as a contractual agreement for the creation of Pakistan way back in the late 40s. So NATO keeps the Taliban on the run - but the homelands are not allied to Islamabad and are a large logistic problem to clean up when the main event has been India vs. Pakistan where presumably the best and the brightest are focussed - and in any bureaucracy - they will resist change until the road to the top of the military and government in Pakistan is seen as leading from a reduction of direct or indirect support of rag headed radicals in the Tribal Home Lands
* To get change at the top you probably need at least a political force in power that sees it in their best interest to assist the Afghanistan efforts on a reciprocal basis - while balancing the political interests of the various governors of the tribal homelands which many describe as being failed or ba$tard states in the best of cases.
* And this doesn't even consider the fact that much of the Taliban - not Al Qaeda, has a large following originating (look up the Deobandi Movement on Google) in the late 1800s in Pakistan that focuses against a statist government as anti Islamic from the word go. Now mix in low levels of education and demagoguery on a scale we probably can't even imagine and you have two solutions - Genghis Khan - piles of skulls everywhere - which the Russians seems to have tried and screwed up royally - or a long slow bleed out of the purported extremists - you fight them with water wells and health care so the farmers can get stuff to market and generate cash on a predictable basis which removes the attraction of falling in with the Taliban or their fire breathing ilk. Net result sees a lot of small scale Khandahar deployments like Canadians do in this version - there is no massive Armies Sweeping across the Plains of Helmand province because there is no massive insurgent Armies that will come out to meet you.
Andy Leslie's Tea Leaf reading thus resolves to this:
1. The Canadian and Allied battalions clean out the garbage
2. The Special Forces operate beyond them to flush out the ones and twos that are called "Wilderness Ghazi" ---- the term is explained here http://www.jhuapl.edu/POW/notes/two_enemies.pdf
3. Repeat treatment as necessary, back off as local forces come on line in a consistent manner
4. National leadership has to marginalise the do nothing approach of the appeasement driven Liberals and the amazingly defeatist NDP and Bloc
Some links
Background to the area in the 1890s - and it probably hasn't changed since - you only control the area your rifle can hit ..... http://www.au.af.mil/au/awc/awcgate/congress/maxboot_29jun06.pdf --- the writer is one of THE EXPERTS on the subject of cooperating with the locals
``It seems that everyone wants a piece of some ungoverned space but nobody wants to take on the real problem of Pakistan and its unwillingness or inability to control its own territory.`` http://blog.washingtonpost.com/earlywarning/2006/04/pirates_just_what_pakistan_nee.html
2008 - A good link to cover all bases in War on Terror http://smallwarsjournal.com/blog/
NYT article - What MAY happen as the west attempts to step up the action in the tribal homelands http://www.nytimes.com/2007/11/19/washington/19policy.html?_r=1&th&emc=th&oref=slogin
Finally - why be serious?
The Chinese Mobster is having vision problems so he goes for a eye check-up in Chinatown. The Ophthalmologist says ``You have cataract``. The Mobster says - no no - ``I drive Rinkin``
From the Sopranos Season 2 DVD collection
It seems to me that this is just the beginning of a long deployment that is welcomed at first, then as it "doesn`t end in the current APS" is left for a few years to figure out what to do (from a high level political perspective - our Battlegroups knowing what they have to do), and then once the active fighthing phases taper off - the "what`s next" kicks in. Nobody ever knows whats next and because its driven at the top by politics - we are just bystanders at the bottom.
A BULLET POINT ON THE CDS DAILY BRIEF Sometime in 2010
In 25 words or less - local interests have got to be persuaded that Al Quaeda and regional Instability is against their interests - this is a classic technique that was used by Brits to counter Indians Allied with the French in North America -
SOME THOUGHTS - FEEL FREE TO PILE ON - I THINK WE CAN ALL FIGURE THIS OUT BETTER THAN ANY NATIONAL MEDIA TALKING HEADS
My view of why Pakistan can't appear to do anything is that there is fragmentation inside Pakistan proper with respect to the Armed Forces - Counter Terror outside of Pakistan is a low priority since the end of the 2003 Conflict and earlier with the end of the Russian Rule. When the Russians left - the Taliban who were the link to Pakistani influence against the Soviets were not demobilised. Most of the heavy work had been done by indigenous warlords on Afghanistan who are also very fragmented - i.e. they have no total government control - but they control this or that district in a patchwork coalition that adapts and contracts as required to local situations. As the Taliban wondered what was next - in came Al Qaeda without any checks and balances from the west or from Pakistan.
So the recap is
* Russians Out
* Taliban Expand Power
* Al Qaeda brings in $$$$$ which the Taliban needed
* Al Qaeda allowed to operate in a safe haven
* West (incl Pakistan) did not check them
* Then West Came in and wiped out Taliban government in 3 weeks in 2003 after 911
* Taliban then fled across the border to the Tribal Homelands which are not firmly controlled by the central powers in Islamabad as a contractual agreement for the creation of Pakistan way back in the late 40s. So NATO keeps the Taliban on the run - but the homelands are not allied to Islamabad and are a large logistic problem to clean up when the main event has been India vs. Pakistan where presumably the best and the brightest are focussed - and in any bureaucracy - they will resist change until the road to the top of the military and government in Pakistan is seen as leading from a reduction of direct or indirect support of rag headed radicals in the Tribal Home Lands
* To get change at the top you probably need at least a political force in power that sees it in their best interest to assist the Afghanistan efforts on a reciprocal basis - while balancing the political interests of the various governors of the tribal homelands which many describe as being failed or ba$tard states in the best of cases.
* And this doesn't even consider the fact that much of the Taliban - not Al Qaeda, has a large following originating (look up the Deobandi Movement on Google) in the late 1800s in Pakistan that focuses against a statist government as anti Islamic from the word go. Now mix in low levels of education and demagoguery on a scale we probably can't even imagine and you have two solutions - Genghis Khan - piles of skulls everywhere - which the Russians seems to have tried and screwed up royally - or a long slow bleed out of the purported extremists - you fight them with water wells and health care so the farmers can get stuff to market and generate cash on a predictable basis which removes the attraction of falling in with the Taliban or their fire breathing ilk. Net result sees a lot of small scale Khandahar deployments like Canadians do in this version - there is no massive Armies Sweeping across the Plains of Helmand province because there is no massive insurgent Armies that will come out to meet you.
Andy Leslie's Tea Leaf reading thus resolves to this:
1. The Canadian and Allied battalions clean out the garbage
2. The Special Forces operate beyond them to flush out the ones and twos that are called "Wilderness Ghazi" ---- the term is explained here http://www.jhuapl.edu/POW/notes/two_enemies.pdf
3. Repeat treatment as necessary, back off as local forces come on line in a consistent manner
4. National leadership has to marginalise the do nothing approach of the appeasement driven Liberals and the amazingly defeatist NDP and Bloc
Some links
Background to the area in the 1890s - and it probably hasn't changed since - you only control the area your rifle can hit ..... http://www.au.af.mil/au/awc/awcgate/congress/maxboot_29jun06.pdf --- the writer is one of THE EXPERTS on the subject of cooperating with the locals
``It seems that everyone wants a piece of some ungoverned space but nobody wants to take on the real problem of Pakistan and its unwillingness or inability to control its own territory.`` http://blog.washingtonpost.com/earlywarning/2006/04/pirates_just_what_pakistan_nee.html
2008 - A good link to cover all bases in War on Terror http://smallwarsjournal.com/blog/
NYT article - What MAY happen as the west attempts to step up the action in the tribal homelands http://www.nytimes.com/2007/11/19/washington/19policy.html?_r=1&th&emc=th&oref=slogin
Finally - why be serious?
The Chinese Mobster is having vision problems so he goes for a eye check-up in Chinatown. The Ophthalmologist says ``You have cataract``. The Mobster says - no no - ``I drive Rinkin``
From the Sopranos Season 2 DVD collection
