States of Conflict: An Update"
In 2009, Iraq, Pakistan and Afghanistan dominated American military and foreign policy. Which themes emerged over the last year?
In Iraq, 2009 was the year of relatively smooth transitions. Despite catastrophic attacks in August, October and December, and a continuing level of violence that keeps it a troubled place by normal standards, the year went reasonably well in statistical terms. Violence did not increase, even as United States forces left the cities and generally reduced their role.
In Pakistan, 2009 was the year of the offensives. The country was still very turbulent, but major government military initiatives in the Swat Valley and South Waziristan reflected a new determination against the Pakistani Taliban. Unfortunately, the Taliban responded in its own brutal way with an intensification of suicide attacks against civilians, killing hundreds.
But momentum may be shifting to the governments side helped by successful American drone attacks against top Taliban and Qaeda leaders. That said, in terms of the basic strength of its economy and society, Pakistan is far from out of the woods.
In Afghanistan, 2009 was the year of decisions by President Obama, of course, by Gen. Stanley A. McChrystal and by the Afghan people as they re-elected Hamid Karzai as president. Afghanistan had a bloody year, with more than 300 Americans and some 500 international troops, as well as more than 1,000 Afghan security personnel, losing their lives.
However, as General McChrystal noted in recent Congressional testimony following President Obamas decision to raise troop levels in Afghanistan, our operations have begun to change the momentum in parts of the country though this momentum is bound to be halting, as last weeks horrific suicide bombing at a United States base made painfully clear. In the year ahead, the hope is that this fragile progress will continue, and that President Karzai will justify American support by accelerating his efforts to reform the Afghan police force and to root out corruption.
Ian Livingston and Heather Messera are researchers at the Brookings Institution in Washington
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This seems very oversimplified to me, and even somewhat naive, but I am not familiar with previous work, so withold judgement.
You DON’T want to get me started on McChrystal and Afghanistan. OR the backward trend in Iraq. OR the insanity in Pakistan.
And NOW we can add Yemen, Kenya, Somalia, Ethiopia, Nigeria, to Sudan, Egypt, and more to the creeping war zones of muslim terrorism threatening to start literal tribal warfare all over the African continent.
Just saying.