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Wednesday, 22 August 2012

Pic Dump...........
















H/T Jeff

Newsweek Turns on Obama: Are Journalists Sick of Their Candidate?

Newsweek magazine ran a cover story entitled "Hit the Road Barack." Is the mainstream media really turning on the president, or is this Niall Ferguson story just an aberration? Find out on this Trifecta.

News..............

CDR Salamander​: Retro Wednesday

Top U.N. official in Iraq 'misled' world on camp for Iranians

Dempsey Arrives in Baghdad for Talks With Iraqi, U.S. Officials

Man In Afghan President’s Uniform Shoots Secretary Of Defense In Latest ‘Green-on-Blue’ Attack

Sukhoi T-50 Stealth Fighter Completes Tanker Plug Trial

Airman Missing in Action from WWII Identified

BLACKFIVE: Do former Spec Ops types need to hush about Obama leaks?

Syrian forces abandon security compounds on Iraq border

Obama Stimulus Bucks Paid for Advertisin​g on MSNBC

Due West: A Tale of Two Regimes

DOJ Backs Down, Approves Virginia Voter ID Law

McDonald's Fires Back on Food Police First Lady

RNC: Hints of Violence as Law Enforcemen​t Prepares for Tampa

Inaction on Syria could cost us dear

Wage demands spread to Anglo Platinum and other mines

Ethiopia commentary: Meles Zenawi death a headache for the West

US porn industry halted after actor tests positive for syphilis

Iran's supreme leader orders fresh terror attacks on West

The World from Berlin - Obama's Warning 'Will Not Deter Assad'

Northern Ireland wants to outlaw paying for sex

Nigeria's former Niger Delta warlords now govt made millionaires

History’s Hostage: China, India and the War of 1962

Taiwan and the South China Sea

Iran Rolls Out Upgraded Ballistic Missile

Why crunch time is coming for Israel and Iran

The Return of Howling Howard

Top Ten Reasons Obama Kept Biden on the Ticket

Marines bear brunt of the never-ending war

Egypt denies Sinai tank movement done without Israel's knowledge

Bonus Babe...........


Cartoon Round Up....






DEBT BOMB - The Global Financial Crisis Stripped Bare



by Dominic Frisby

H/T Jeremy Jacobs

Caution, President at work! Of course that's only if you call the "Obama Classic" work! (Video)...from Mike Haltman at TPC


Setting records as the President who has attended the most fundraisers while campaigning for reelection, what do you suppose is on the Barack Obama's agenda for Wednesday?

Foreign policy, the economy, Middle East peace or maybe some other part of the peoples business?

Don't be ridiculous! He's playing in the Obama Classic in New York City, attending a $20,000 a head fundraiser after having attended two other fundraisers earlier in the day! Phew!

Read about it at The Political Commentator here.

Chasing the storm............

A short time-lapse film shot around the Plenty Valley and Yarra Valley in Melbourne's outer east by Nathan Kaso


H/T Shelly


H/T Jeff

Terminal velocity?.......................from Rico

Skydivers understand "terminal velocity"...in simple terms, that's the speed where you cannot fall any faster than you already are falling.
- The technical explanation is that maximum velocity is reached when drag force equals driving force. They mean the same thing: you cannot fall any faster.

They also understand the concept that "it's not the fall, but the sudden STOP that will kill you."

The "velocity of money" has never been lower in modern US history.
- People are worried, credit is tight, times are hard, and money does not change hands very rapidly. When an economy is very sick, money does not circulate. This was last seen in the 1930's.

"It's not the historic 'slow' velocity of money, but the sudden STOP that will kill the economy."

Big money, Jacob Rothschild, John Paulson, and George Soros are dumping their fiat money for bullion. They are preparing for something....
- And so is Warren Buffet. This should really concern you, since he is saying something loud-and-clear about American municipalities, cities, and states. Warren has just decided to drop his CDS contracts worth ~$8 billion at a P&L cost of hundreds of millions of Dollars.

"It's not that credit protection contracts are unprofitable, but when the municipalities, cities, and states suddenly STOP making their payments it would kill Berkshire Hathaway."




Overnight News..............

An Indonesian Woman Locks Her Knees

Awww: WH shy about mentioning new regulatory chief's tenure at Bain & Co

Marine Aviation Memorial Tower Dedicated

Deputies: Drunk Teen Drives For Intoxicated Relative

Federal appeals court strikes down EPA's Cross-Stat​e Air Pollution Rule

Israel's Nuclear Warning Shot Option

CBS: Obama needs to answer for the tone of the campaign

Anti-Obama Navy SEAL leader: I’m A Birther; Barack Obama's A Born Red-Diaper Baby

Ryan: I'm pretty happy clinging to my guns and religion, thanks

Court Rules Alabama Public Schools Can't Check Citizenshi​p of New Students

Puffy Press Patter Proving A Liability for Obama

'Issues' or America? by Thomas Sowell

Woman confesses to bra full of marijuana

Fred Barnes: How Ryan Recasts the Race

Crime in Chicago 2012: Buckets of blood fill up in August in Chicago as forecasted

The Border Conspiracy​, Part Two: Video Confession​s of a Hidalgo County Sheriff's Deputy

German Circumcision Ban Bags First Victim

Why Obama Still Won’t Go to Israel


The Loan Arranger Rides Again

Wednesday Wenches...........





Tuesday, 21 August 2012

Why Did Violence Decline in Iraq in 2007?

Cross-posted from American Power, "Testing the Surge in Iraq"...

*****

I read this piece a few weeks back, as soon as the journal hit my mailbox. I meant to get this posted earlier, but better late than never.

This is excellent research, from Stephen Biddle, Jeffrey Friedman, and Jacob Shapiro, at International Security, "Testing the Surge: Why Did Violence Decline in Iraq in 2007?"

At issue: What explains the decline of military and civilian fatalities in Iraq after mid-2007? The decline in violence coincides with the Bush administration's high-profile shift in war strategy, popularly called "the surge." Opponents of the war dismissed the administration's claims that the decline in violence was the result of a successful military reorientation under General David Petraeus, who combined increased troop contingents with a new war-fighting doctrine that sent patrols out into the most dangerous Baghdad neighborhoods to clear and hold the areas most wracked by sectarian violence. Troops were dismounted and mobile and military bases were dispersed, in contrast to pre-surge war-fighting that stressed large, fortified bases and mounted troop patrols. The antiwar opponents argued instead that sectarian violence was so unchecked that there remained no more ethnic groups left to cleanse. Ethno-religious rivalry played out between Sunni and Shiite Muslim factions. According to the authors:

Proponents of the cleansing thesis argue that it was the spatial intermingling of prewar Sunnis and Shiites that led to violence: large, internally homogeneous communities would be defensible and thus secure, but the prewar patchwork quilt of interpenetrated neighborhoods created a security dilemma in which each group was exposed to violence from the other. In this view, the war was chiefly a response to mutual threat, with each side fighting to evict rivals from areas that could then be made homogeneous and secure. While the populations were intermingled, the violence was intense, but the fighting progressively unmixed the two groups, yielding large, contiguous areas of uniform makeup with defensible borders between them. This in turn resolved the security dilemma, and as neighborhoods were cleansed, the fighting petered out as a product of its own dynamics rather than as a response to U.S. reinforcements [p. 14].
Political bloggers will remember these debates quite well, which makes this research especially interesting. It provides a careful empirical rebuttal to the debased arguments of the antiwar left, groups who worked to politically destroy the Bush administration, and often gave aid and comfort to the enemies of the United States.

The authors demonstrate that the cleansing thesis, despite its intuitive appeal, cannot explain the reduction in violence over the time period. However, it wasn't just the surge alone that prepared the way for the military victory in Iraq. The authors indicate that a complex interaction took place between the surge of military force (and the change in troop deployments) and the rise of what's been called the "Anbar Awakening" --- the mobilization of local Sunni tribal forces in an uprising against the insurgency of al Qaeda in Iraq. Antiwar opponents also latched onto the Awakening thesis as a means to deny the Bush administration credit for the improvement of conditions on the ground. If local tribesman rose up against outside forces, aided by cash payments (amid the decline of sectarian violence, since everything was all cleansed out), then it wasn't more troops or the innovations of the COIN doctrine. It was local contingencies, and the Bush adminstration was not only wrong about the war, but its top officials should be tried as war criminals.

But the authors show that there was synergy between the surge and the Awakening, and that military improvement would not have taken place without the synergistic interaction of these two variables. Folks will want to read the piece for the full argument and evidence. The authors employ historical process-tracing analysis combined with a statistical data set charting the "standing up" of the Sons of Iraq forces (SOI). From the article:
The surge-Awakening synergy thesis ... sees the reinforcements and doctrinal changes as necessary but insuficient. In this view, the surge was too small, and the impact of doctrinal changes insufªcient, to defeat a determined insurgency before the reinforcements’ time limit was reached and their withdrawal began. Hence the surge without the Awakening would have improved security temporarily but would not have broken the insurgency, which would have survived and returned as the reinforcements went home. The surge added a temporary, yearlong boost of about 30,000 U.S. troops to a pre-surge coalition strength of about 155,000 foreign and 323,000 Iraqi troops and police as of December 2006 (Iraqi Security Forces, or ISF, grew by about another 37,000 by September 2007, when violence had begun to drop). Thus the surge entailed only a marginal increase in troop density: an expansion of less than 15 percent overall and perhaps 20 percent in U.S. strength. Half of the overall increase, moreover, was in Iraqi forces, which were far from proªcient in the new U.S. methods by 2006–07.

And as mentioned above, the U.S. component had only about a year in which to function at this strength, after which it was to return to pre-surge numbers or fewer. For this reinforcement per se to have been decisive, one must assume that previous troop density lay just below some critical threshold that happened to be within 20 percent of the presurge value. Although this coincidence cannot be excluded, there is no prima facie reason to expect it.

For synergy proponents, the Awakening was thus necessary for the surge to succeed. In this view, the Awakening had three central effects. First, it took most of the Sunni insurgency off the battleªeld as an opponent, radically weakening the enemy. Second, it provided crucial information on remaining holdouts, and especially AQI, which greatly increased coalition combat effectiveness. And third, these effects among Sunnis reshaped Shiite incentives, leading their primary militias to stand down in turn.

As for the first two points, although the SOI movement never comprised just former insurgents, the insurgency nevertheless provided much of the SOIs’ combatant strength—and the bulk of the secular Sunni insurgency nationwide became SOIs over the course of 2007. By the end of the year, SOI strength nationwide had reached 100,000 members, under more than 200 separate contracts. As insurgents progressively realigned in this way, the remaining insurgency shrank dramatically. The fact that so many SOIs were former insurgents also made the SOIs uniquely valuable coalition allies: they knew their erstwhile associates’ identities, methods, and whereabouts in ways that government counterinsurgents rarely do. When insurgents who had been allied with AQI realigned as Sons of Iraq, the coalition suddenly gained intelligence on AQI membership, cell structure, the identity of safe houses and bombmaking workshops, and locations of roadside bombs and booby traps. Guerrillas rely on stealth and secrecy to survive against heavily armed government soldiers. When SOIs lifted this veil of secrecy, coalition ªrepower guided by SOI intelligence became extremely lethal, creating ever-increasing incentives for holdouts to seek similar deals for themselves; soon only committed AQI fanatics remained, marginalized in a few districts in Iraq’s northwest.

In the synergy account, Sunni realignment in turn had major consequences for Shiite militias such as the Jaish al-Mahdi. Many of these militias began as self-defense mechanisms to protect Shiite civilians from Sunni attack, but they grew increasingly predatory as they realized they could exploit a dependent population. Rising criminality in turn created fissiparous tendencies as factions with their own income grew increasingly independent of their leadership. When the SOIs began appearing, the Sunni threat waned, and with it the need for defenders. At the same time, the SOI cease-fires freed arriving U.S. surge brigades to focus on Shiite militiamen. These developments created multiple perils for militia leadership. In previous firefights with U.S. forces, the JAM in particular had sustained heavy losses but easily made them up with new recruits given its popularity. Shiites’ growing disaffection with militia predation, however, coupled with declining fear of Sunni attack, threatened leaders’ ability to make up losses with new recruits. At the same time, intraShiite violence among rival militias, especially between the Badr Brigade and the JAM, posed a rising threat from a different direction. When Shiites were united by a mortal Sunni threat and U.S. forces were tied down by insurgents and AQI, these internal problems were manageable. But as the Sunni threat waned, Shiite support weakened, internal divisions multiplied, and U.S. troop strength grew, Shiite militias’ ability to survive new battles with coalition forces fell. In the synergy account, these challenges persuaded Muqtada al-Sadr to stand down rather than risk another beating from the coalition, and the result was his announced cease-ªre of August 2007—which took the primary Shiite militia off the battlefield, leaving all of 2006’s major militant groups under cease-ªres, save a marginalized remnant of AQI, and producing the radical violence reduction of late 2007 and thereafter.

Proponents of the synergy thesis thus see the Awakening as necessary for the surge to succeed. In this view, however, neither the surge nor the Awakening was sufficient, nor did these factors combine in an additive way. As noted above, Sunni groups had attempted similar realignments on previous occasions—and those earlier attempts had all failed at great cost. For the synergy school, what distinguished the failures from the successful 2007 Awakening was a coalition force that could protect insurgent defectors from counterattack. The surge may not have been large enough to suffocate a determined insurgency, but it was large enough to enable cooperation with turncoat Sunnis and exploit their knowledge to direct coalition firepower against the still-active insurgents, enabling them to survive the kind of retaliation that had crippled their predecessors... [pp. 23-26]
The full article is here.

The authors caution against applying the lessons from their research to the war in Afghanistan. The correlation of factors in Iraq were highly idiosyncratic, and not likely to be replicated elsewhere. But the authors do indicate that much remains to be teased out on theories of counterinsurgency, that much more work along these lines awaits, which in turn will provide important information for policymakers.

Late News..........

New evidence of Earhart's plane found in right spot, searchers say

ISAF kills, captures al Qaeda-linked Taliban commanders in east

Netanyahu Determined to Strike Iran Before U.S. Elections

Chavez Attacked By His Proletaria​t

Key Democrat Convention Component: The 'Success' of the Auto Bailout

Voter Fraud: Coming to a Booth Near You?

Will Obama Keep Power 'by Any Means Necessary'​?

Obama Adds Military Heroes to 'Enemies List'

Mitt Romney Calls on Embattled Rep. Todd Akin to Quit #MOSen Race

See Twitchy, "Mitt Romney calls for Rep. Akin to drop out."

But Akin's standing firm, "'Rush to the Gunfire': Embattled Todd Akin Vows to Stay in the Race."

Here's Akin's mea culpa from this morning:



PREVIOUSLY:

* "Progressives Call for Rape of Missouri Rep. Todd Akin."

* "Conservatives Push for Todd Akin to Quit Missouri Senate Race."

* "'I Would Be Thinking About What's In the Best Interest of the Party' — Sean Hannity Interview With Embattled Missouri Senate Candidate Todd Akin."

* "Social Conservatives Stand Up for Todd Akin."

* "Obama Emerges From the Bunker to Declare 'Rape is Rape'."

* "Missouri's Todd Akin Asks for 'Forgiveness'."

CONTENT WARNING: Al Qaeda in Iraq Execute Policemen in Murderous Raid in Haditha (VIDEO)

It's truly brutal.

See: "GRAPHIC: Video Shows al Qaeda in Iraq Executing Policemen in Haditha."

Those are close-up shots to the head, a couple with several rounds. Amazing how the human body jerks like that when the bullets penetrate the skull.

These are summary executions. Not for the faint of heart. Watch it alt the link.

Bedtime Totty...........


Only In America - Romney Ryan

President Obama's gutting of the work requirement in welfare reform keeps people in a cycle of dependency on government. This is the story of Danny Vargas. He grew up on welfare, yet eventually became a business executive and community leader. In this country, the outcome may not be guaranteed, but the opportunity is.

Late Pic Dump..........













ZoNation with Alfonzo Rachel: The Democratic Party's Long History of Racism

Vice President Joe Biden accused the GOP of wanting to put people in chains. Were his words taken out of context, or could this be another racist sentiment at the core of the Democratic party? Hear the details on this ZoNation.



H/T Airship DC

Ta Da! The Remilitari​zation of the Sinai..................from Dan Friedman

[Once the camel gets its nose under the tent, the rest of its body soon follows. df]

Gatestone Institute, August 20, 2012

Egypt Fully Remilitarizing Sinai - with U.S. Help

Egypt has moved forces into the Sinai beyond what was agreed to in the Egypt-Israel Peace Treaty. Getting them in wasn't that difficult – Israel agrees that security in the Sinai has deteriorated. Getting them out again later may be another matter.

by Shoshana Bryen

Times of Israel, August 21, 2012

After buildup, Israel tells Egypt to remove tanks from Sinai

Stern message sent via the White House to Cairo warning that military presence in peninsula contravenes terms of peace agreement

After buildup, Israel tells Egypt to remove tanks from Sinai

Bonus Babe...........


Cartoon Round Up....






NewsBusted 8/21/12