Archive for June, 2017

Defense policy bill would require Trump’s Afghanistan, Syria … – The Hill

The House Armed Services Committees version of the annual defense policy bill would require the president to give Congress his strategies for United States involvement in Afghanistan and Syria.

The provisions in the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) are meant to ensure the administration follows through on its promise to give Congress an Afghanistan strategy and build off a previous bills requirement that it give Congress a Syria strategy, a committee aide said Monday.

For Afghanistan, Defense Secretary James Mattis has promised to deliver Congress a new strategy by mid-July that would include a troop increase of a few thousand to break what top generals have described as a stalemate.

To ensure Congress gets a strategy, the NDAA would require the Pentagon to submit a report by Feb. 15 that looks beyond the next five years and should connect current lines of effort to a steady state for U.S. involvement in Afghanistan that meets U.S. objectives, according to the bill summary.

Asked Monday whether the committee is concerned the administration is being too slow with the strategies, the aide said, Its not that.

With regard to Afghanistan, we are anticipating they havent made a decision but a change in their strategy and so its just, Ill call it 'due diligence and appropriate oversight' to ensure that we actually get that strategy articulated, the aide continued in a background briefing.

On Syria, Congress has been asking for the administrations broader strategy since President Trump ordered a cruise missile strike on a Syrian government airfield in April. The strike came in response to the chemical weapons attack on civilians carried out by Syrian President Bashar Assad.

To that end, the catch-all fiscal 2017 appropriations bill required the president to submit a strategy for the Syrian civil war, as well as one for the war against the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS). Congress fenced $2.5 billion until it receives the ISIS strategy.

Building on that, the NDAA would require a report by Feb. 1 that assesses the goals of state actors such as Iran, non-state threats such as al Qaeda and the ISIS, the resources and timeline required to achieve U.S. objectives, the transition from military operations to stabilization programs and the risks to U.S. forces.

The committee understands that the political and military situation in Syria is unpredictable and that the nature of U.S. involvement may change as the result of such volatility, the bill summary says. The committee, however, believes it important to articulate the United States' strategic objectives and describe a realistic process for achieving such objectives.

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The 5 Wars in Afghanistan – The Diplomat

U.S. policymakers are oblivious to the fact that Afghanistan is home to not one but five distinct conflicts.

By Abrar Ahmed for The Diplomat

June 27, 2017

The Associated Press reported on June 16 that Washington would soon add 4,000 more troops to the 14,000 U.S. and NATO troops already stationed in Afghanistan. This development would be the result of the U.S. interagency review process and corresponds with proposals from the commander of U.S. forces in Afghanistan, General John Nicholson. But increasing troops alone wont solve the Afghanistan conundrum.

The dominant discourse regardingthe Afghanistan crisis is often centered around U.S. war in Afghanistan and its strategic implications. This reductionist approach ignores the fact that Afghanistan is home to not one, but five distinct conflicts. Interestingly, four of these conflicts precede the U.S intervention in 2001. Nonetheless, the U.S. strategy is often oblivious to the regions historical intricacies, thus complicating the situation further still.

Afghanistans first war is ethnic in nature. It is an age-old political power struggle between the countrys dominant ethnic community, the Pashtuns, and the other ethnic groups: Uzbeks, Hazaras, Tajiks, Aimaqs, and a modicum of other small ethnic groups. Historically, Pashtuns have almost always been atthe top of political power in the country, despite the fact that they constitute less than half of the total population. They have vehemently struggled to preserve their favored position, which has consequently generated resistance, and their opponentshave created a web of shifting alliances to counter Pashtun power.

This was most vividly evident in 2004, when the new constitutional framework sought to stabilize the government by concentrating power effectively in the office of the president. This generated persistent opposition and hostility from non-Pashtun factions, so much so that, in 2014, President Ashraf Ghani, a Pashtun, was forced to reach a power-sharing agreement with Chief Executive Abdullah Abdullah, a Tajik, under a National Unity Government.

The result of this settlement is a government thatis stable enough to sustain but too fragile to govern effectively. This division of power has created room for disagreements between Ghani and Abdullah to turn into political deadlock, particularly over political appointments. The inability of the government to hold or reschedule the planned parliamentary elections in October 2016 expressly manifested this deadlock.

These ethnic ruptures subsequently trickle down to the level of military platoons and local municipal government officials. It has created a patrimonial state apparatus whereby the patrons keep their subordinates in line with money and promotions, and the bureaucrats, in turn, fleece the people to repay their superiors. Thus, in a place where ethnic association is a principal source of political legitimacy, nepotism and corruption becomes rampant and pervades all sections of society. All of the efforts on part of international community to curtail corruption in Afghanistan have failed miserably. As proof, Afghanistan ranked 169th in Transparency Internationals 2016 Corruption Perceptions Index.

To make matters more complicated, there is also political strife among Afghanistans Pashtun community. This is the second conflict, inter-ethnic in nature, that runs along tribal lines and stretches back to 18th century. The primary antagonists are theGhilzai tribe of rural east and the elites of the Durrani tribe in the south. The Afghan state was founded in 1747 when the Ghilzai were defeated by the Durranis. Since then, the Durranis ruled the country, with a few brief exceptions, until 1996. Later, the Taliban seized power under the leadership of Ghilzai Mullah Mohammed Omar. The subsequent U.S. intervention handed countrys rule back to the Durranis by making Hamid Karzai the interim president in 2002. Today, the violence in Afghanistans east is the continuation of centuries-long power play between these two tribes. The majority of Taliban foot soldiers areGhilzai who deem themselves as fighting a holy war against Western invaders allied with a hostile Durrani-led government.

The third conflict is a cultural war between the cosmopolitan progressives in Afghanistans urban centers and religious conservatives in the rural areas. This conflict also stretched back hundreds of years. In the 19th century, Afghanistans emir, Abdur Rahman Khan, undertook a series of reforms to liberalize the country and delegitimize the ecclesiastical authority of religious leaders. Consequently, there were around 40 insurgencies during his reign.

In the 1920s, when his grandson Amanullah Khan sought to advance modernization and womens rights, the clerical mullahs engineered another rebellion that culminated in his abdication. In 1979, the communist leader Hafizullah Amin attempted to include women in a national literacy program, which sparked conservatives to rebel in the countrys west. The movement spread across the country when Amin tried to suppress the rebellion with force. This subsequently led the Soviet Union, which feared it was a CIA plot to destabilize the southern border of USSR, to invade Afghanistan. Gallons of ink has been spilled to note the chaos that followed thereafter.

The fourth conflict in Afghanistan is one that pervades the whole South Asian region: a cold war between Pakistan and India. Since decolonization, Pakistan has viewed its foreign policy through a security prism vis--vis India. In fact, both India and Pakistan have each used Afghanistan to gain strategic depth and asymmetric advantages over the other. The spillover effect of thiscold war in Afghanistan resulted in the creation of yet another insurgency the Pakistani Taliban, who have operated primarily in the Federally Administered Tribal Areas of Pakistan. This extremist upsurge is connected to the larger Taliban movement, and both countries have been accused of using Afghanistans soil to prop up insurgencies in each others territories.

Layered on top of these four conflicts is the ongoing U.S. war against the Taliban in the country, which has, in turn, accentuated all other conflicts. These forces are pulling Afghanistan apart. Deploying 4,000 more troops would not end the long-standing ethnic conflict between the Pashtun and other communities, nor would it mitigate the centuries-old tribal hostility between the Durrani and the Ghilzai. Rural communities would keep resisting any form of foreign invasion or attempts to alter their traditional culture. More than 15 years of scrupulous U.S. diplomacy has been unable to change Islamabads strategic calculus in Afghanistan and the country wont cease being the theater of an India-Pakistan cold war anytime soon.

By adding more troops, Trump will be making the same mistake his predecessors did. At best, the Trump administrations latest surge will partially inhibit the Talibans momentum. It wont contribute to creating a conducive environment for establishing sustainable peace in the country. Instead, the Trump administration should pursue a containment strategy a minimalistic approach that protects the U.S. homeland from terrorist networks in Afghanistan and prevents regional destabilization that could encompass its neighbors. In the context of these multiple conflicts, the goal to turn Afghanistan into a modern, liberal state is neither achievable nor sustainable.

Abrar Ahmedis a political analyst and a specialist in global democratic affairs based in Lahore, Pakistan.

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The 5 Wars in Afghanistan - The Diplomat

India, US agree to strengthen ties to ensure peace in Afghanistan – The Indian Express

By: PTI | Washington | Published:June 27, 2017 6:45 am Prime Minister Narendra Modi and US President Donald Trump discussed in depth several regional issues, including Afghanistan during their meeting. (Photo: Reuters)

Prime Minister Narendra Modi and US President Donald Trump today agreed to continue strengthening coordination for ensuring peace and stability in Afghanistan as they expressed concern over rising instability in the war-torn country caused by terrorism. Trump thanked the Indian people for their contributions to the effort in Afghanistan, and for joining us in applying new sanctions against the North Korean regime.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi and US President Donald Trump discussed in depth several regional issues, including Afghanistan during their meeting.

Modi said the rising instability in Afghanistan due to terrorism is a cause of mutual concern for both India and the US.

India and the US have played a crucial role in the redevelopment of Afghanistan and its security. We will have close coordination, consultation and communication to achieve peace and stability in Afghanistan, Modi said.

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India, US agree to strengthen ties to ensure peace in Afghanistan - The Indian Express

North Korea helping Iran grow its ballistic missile program …

An Iranian opposition group has found 12 sites, not previously disclosed, where the Islamic government is developing ballistic missiles with the help of North Korean experts.

The disclosure, one of many in a lengthy and detailed report released Tuesday by the National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI), describes how Irans missile program has accelerated since it signed an agreement on July 14, 2015, to limit its development of nuclear weapons. The reports material reflects intelligence gathered by the Peoples Mojahedin Organization of Iran.

The findings show the first full picture of the missile program of the Iranian regime, which is very extensive and costly. It also shows a close tie between the nuclear weapons program and the missile program, Alireza Jafarzadeh, deputy director of the NCRIs U.S. office, said to Fox News.

The NCRI claims that Ayatollah Khamenei tasked the IRGCs Aerospace Force to execute the mandate of an increase in activity related to the missile program (AP photo/Vahid Salemi)

Tehran has accelerated its missile program [since signing the nuclear deal] to make up for its domestic impotence and increasing regional isolation. The missile program of the regime is essential for its survival. Unfortunately the missile program of the Iranian regime has remained primarily unchecked.

The report shines a light on three key aspects of Irans missile program: It reveals the existence of 12 previously unknown missile developments sites; it discloses details about the sites, including locations and facilities at the sites; and it describes the partnership between the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps and North Korean experts.

Among the 42 missile sites -- which include the 12 newly disclosed sites -- 15 are part of a manufacturing network, another 25 are being used as missile storage sites, 13 are being used as launching sites and another eight are being used to train missile brigades, the report says.

The NCRI also documents the extent of the Tehran-Pyongyang partnership.

North Korea has been closely aligned with Iran in developing its missile program, Jafarzadeh said. All of the tunnels under the mountains are built after the North Korean model. [For example] North Korean experts have been present in Al Mahdi Garrison, a key missile site allocated to missile training near Tehran.

In this picture released by the Iranian state-run IRIB News Agency on Monday, June 19, 2017, a missile is fired from city of Kermanshah in western Iran targeting the Islamic State group in Syria. Iran's powerful Revolutionary Guard, a paramilitary force in charge of the country's missile program, said it launched six Zolfaghar ballistic missiles from the western provinces of Kermanshah and Kurdistan. (IRIB News Agency, Morteza Fakhrinejad via AP)

The NCRIs report comes just days after Iran launched missiles at targets in Syria, a move that Tehran said was intended to attack ISIS but which the NCRI said was a propaganda ploy in response to growing opposition from Iranian citizens to the missile and nuclear projects not to combat the Islamic State.

The primary reason for launching these missiles was in no way ISIS, Jafarzadeh said.

According to many reports, the missile did not hit ISIS, but took a lot of casualties among ordinary citizens. The Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps has tens of thousands of forces, including foreign fighters in Syria. It has built missile manufacturing sites on Syrian territory.

So, there was absolutely no need to fire missiles from inside Iranian territory. In the past few years, the [Revolutionary Guard] was stationed very close to ISIS in Syria, but did not even fire a single bullet against it, Jafarzadeh said.

Perry Chiaramonte is a reporter for FoxNews.com. Follow him on Twitter at @perrych

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Iran nuclear deal must be allowed to thrive | Letters | World news … – The Guardian

Workers at the Bushehr nuclear power plant in Iran, pictured in 2010. Photograph: Reuters

The Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), also known as the Iran nuclear deal) is excellent; it is far better and more extensive than I ever expected (Dont upset the balance of power in the Middle East, 23 June). If followed by all parties, it blocks all avenues for Iran to develop nuclear explosives. To be sure, it is vehemently opposed by Israels prime minister Netanyahu and Republicans in Congress.

I am a physicist who worked in nuclear safeguards and non-proliferation for 38 years at the Los Alamos national laboratory; the majority of my efforts were for and with the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) that has the responsibility of inspecting the nuclear facilities of states signatory to the nuclear non-proliferation treaty (NPT). Among other things, I developed programmes that have been part of the initial IAEA inspectors training since 1980. Ive trained many of the inspectors who inspect Iran today, and have inspected Irans facilities since it signed and ratified the NPT shortly after it came into force in 1970.

There are only three nations that have not signed the NPT: India, Israel, and Pakistan. All three have large nuclear arsenals and effective delivery capabilities. Israel has over 400 nuclear weapons of all types and the ability to deliver them anywhere in the world, including the US. Israel also has a policy known as the Samson Option that implies it will destroy the world if ever it feels in danger of falling. Dr T Douglas Reilly Los Alamos, New Mexico, USA

Ali Akbar Salehis piece was a calm, reasoned argument for the JCPOA to be allowed to thrive, despite the expected noises from Trump and his ilk. Whyis Iran so often seen as the enemy? The country is stable and calm and much to the annoyance of its detractors has regular elections that the Iranian people deem worthwhile participating in. SaudiArabia, on the other hand David Gleeson London

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Iran nuclear deal must be allowed to thrive | Letters | World news ... - The Guardian