Thursday, 4 October 2012

Woodrow Wilson Center: Remarks by Deputy Secretary of Defense Carter on China's Military Challenge

Defense.gov News Transcript: Remarks by Deputy Secretary of Defense Carter on China's Military Challenge at the Woodrow Wilson Center


Remarks by Deputy Secretary of Defense Carter on China's Military Challenge at the Woodrow Wilson Center

            MR. RICHARD J. ELLINGS:  In any case, for the sake of time, it is my pleasure -- let me turn this over to you, Deputy Secretary of Defense Ashton Carter. (Applause.)
            DEPUTY SECRETARY OF DEFENSE ASHTON B. CARTER:  Thank you.
            Thank you, thanks, Rich, for that great introduction.  Great reminder of Shali, and more about Shali in a moment.  Thanks to NBR and to the Woodrow Wilson Center.  And I just left Jane Harman, for those of you at the Woodrow Wilson Center, over in the Pentagon.  And she’s briefing right now, Secretary Panetta on – she’s a member of the Defense Policy Board - on Iran, actually, so she wasn’t able to here, but she’s a wonderful leader for that institution as well.  I want to recognize her as well. 
            Stape, Mr. Ambassador, all the members of the diplomatic community who are here, distinguished guests, ladies and gentlemen, truly wonderful to be with you today to celebrate the launch of this year’s edition of Strategic Asia.   NBR’s mission – to strengthen Asia-Pacific policy through research – is one that’s close to my own heart. 
            I share NBR’s conviction that facts and ideas matter in the public realm.  NBR’s research helps us understand the world, and make decisions within it.  For the publications you produce, and the meetings you convene, Scoop Jackson would have been proud of your impact.
            And for NBR, I’ve known many of the people in NBR for decades, Rich, Ashley, whom I’m glad to see here today, my friend.  I am especially pleased to see the great success of the John M. Shalikashvili Chair in National Security Studies.   Shali was a dear friend of mine, with whom I worked in the Pentagon in the 1990s, and then outside of government as well.  And the nation was lucky to have him as a citizen, a solider, a public servant. 
            Through his service as Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff in the 1990s, when we were in the Pentagon together, he left us a really rich legacy – of stability in Europe, peace in the Balkans, of stronger relations with China – all of that Shali was responsible for – and, most importantly, a superb U.S. military, which has performed so well in Iraq, Afghanistan, and a range of missions around the globe.  He had rich and inquisitive mind, a sense of national purpose, both of which drew him to NBR after he moved back to Washington State. 
            And the Chair that NBR established carries Shali’s legacy, a very vibrant program of research.  I congratulate you on your many successes.  And for these reasons and many more, it gives me great pleasure to be here with you today.
            The book that you launch is principally about China.  But I want to speak with you about a broader topic – and that is our defense strategy and budget, and particularly the defense aspects of our so-called rebalance to the Asia-Pacific region, which is a key part of our strategy.
            Our rebalance is not about the United States. It’s not about China.  It’s not about any other individual country or group of countries.  It's about a peaceful Asia-Pacific region, where all countries can enjoy the benefit of security and continue to prosper.
            In the first pages of this year’s edition of Strategic Asia, which I did have the chance to peruse, you ask whether the United States has the ability to meet the objectives we’ve set for ourselves in the rebalance.  It is fair question, given our fiscal realities.  And today I want to tell you how it is that we do have the capacity to resource the rebalance and meet our commitments. 
            With our allies and partners, I think you’ll see, we are, in fact, across the Asia-Pacific region able to invest to sustain peace and prosperity.  In other words, we are not just talking the talk, we are walking the walk.  And I’d ask if you don’t believe us, to just watch our steps over coming months and years, and you’ll see us implement the rebalance. 
            And today I want to tell you a bit about those steps, at least the steps we in the Pentagon are taking as part of what is a broader government-wide rebalancing.   
            The overall strategic context in which the rebalance takes place is important.  And let me start with that.  We in the United States find ourselves in national defense at a moment of great transition.
            After 11 years of conflict since September 11th, 2001, one war has ended, in Iraq.  The other, in Afghanistan, has for sure not ended, but is transitioning to Afghan lead, and thanks to the superb effort of U.S., coalition, and Afghan forces, will wind down in coming years. 
            And while we've been focused on fighting insurgency in two places and terrorism world-wide, the world has not stood still.  Our friends and enemies have not stood still.  And technology has not stood still. 
            And so this for us is a time to look up, look around, and look forward at what the world will need from us next – to the security challenges that will define our future after Iraq and Afghanistan. 
            That is the great transition upon which we are embarked in defense.  And we would need to make this strategic transition no matter what.  But we are also subject to a second great source of change.  And that is the need to keep the United States’s fiscal house in order, as outlined in the Budget Control Act, which Congress passed last year, and which required our Department to remove $487 billion dollars from our budget plans over this next ten years. 
            Can’t get through an hour here in Washington without this slight digression to rant about sequestration, so let me do that. The Budget Control Act, as I’m sure all of you know, also threatens a drastic process of sequestration if Congress does not pass a comprehensive and balanced overall budget plan that the President can sign. 
            Secretary Panetta and I, as I said, have been railing about this since last winter, when many people didn’t know what the word sequester meant – and gradually it’s been sinking in here in Washington and also around the country that sequester would be a disaster for defense.  It’s chaotic, wasteful, damaging, not just to defense but every other function of government. 
            The intent of sequester was to use the threat of cuts to both defense and non-defense on top of the 487 billion dollar cuts but – and additionally, implemented mindlessly and inflexibly -- to force Congress to enact a compromise deficit reduction plan.   It was never designed to be implemented. 
            If it comes to pass, it will inevitably lead to a hollowing of the force, impacting our investments, the lives of servicemembers, our other employees and their families – as well, as I said, of all those of other agencies of government.  It is no way to do business from a management point of view.             
            The nature of sequestration makes it impossible to devise a “plan” that eliminates, or even substantially mitigates its foolish impacts.  We are working with OMB to understand this complicated legislation, and we are assessing its impacts, and we will be ready to implement if it ever comes to pass.
            But we are still three months from January and I’m hoping, to quote Secretary Panetta, who has a lot of experience in this field, that Congress, both Republicans and Democrats, will exercise the necessary leadership to make sure that sequestration is de-triggered, putting the national interest above all else. 
            If sequester is averted, as so many in Congress actually wish, under the Budget Control Act, to get back to the beginning, our base defense budget will not go down -- not go down -- but neither will it continue to go up, as it has for the last ten years and as we planned for it to go up.  And that’s the 487 billion dollar difference outlined under the Budget Control Act – the difference between what we planned and what we will get.
            So, these two forces, one of strategic history, and the other of fiscal necessity, led us to define a new defense strategy for the 21st century, in a remarkable process last winter, steered personally by President Obama, which was unprecedented in my experience.  The President brought together the leadership of the Department of Defense and others in a conversation about the future trajectory of national defense that went on through several months.  We made a series of decisions through that process to design a balanced, effective defense strategy, taking into account cuts imposed upon us, and above all making the transition from the era of Iraq and Afghanistan, building a force for the future to meet our strategic objectives. 
            That future force is what our Chairman, Mary Dempsey, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs, calls the Joint Force of 2020.  That’s what we’re building towards.  And as Secretary Panetta likes to say, our future force is gonna be agile, it’s gotta be lean, it’s gotta be ready, and it’s gotta be technologically advanced, and able to defeat any adversary, anywhere, anytime.
            Our political and military rebalance to the Asia-Pacific region is one of the most important tenets of the new strategy.  There are several, this is the most important. Underlying our security engagement with the region is our support for long-standing principles that go well beyond security – of free and open access to commerce; of a just international order that upholds the rule of law; of open access to all domains; and of the peaceful resolution of disputes. 
            We seek a peaceful Asia-Pacific region, where all the states of the region – all of them – can enjoy the benefits of security and continue to prosper, just as they have for almost 70 years, since the valiant efforts of the brave men and women who fought so courageously in World War II. 
            Indeed, part of the reason states in the region have been able to rise and prosper is due – has been due – to our military presence.  Thanks to that historic security, states in the region have had the freedom to choose and forge their own economic and political futures. 
            The stability provided in important measure by the United States military presence in the region helped, first, Japan and South Korea, to rise and prosper, then Southeast Asia to rise and prosper, and now, yes, China, and in a different way, India, to rise and prosper.  Working with all of them, we intend to continue to play that positive, pivotal, stabilizing role.  That’s what the rebalance is all about.
            To those who ask whether we will be able to deliver on our security commitments under our rebalance, I am gonna give you five reasons why we will be able to do so.
            The first is due to increased military capacity.  With the war in Iraq now over, and as we transition security responsibilities to the government of Afghanistan, we will release much of our military capacity that has been tied up there for other missions, like fostering peace and strengthening partnerships in the Asia-Pacific.  Naval assets that will be released from Afghanistan and the Middle East include surface combatants, amphibious ships, and, eventually, aircraft carriers. 
            From the Air Force, unmanned systems and intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance assets, as well as bomber, cyber, and space forces, can all be redeployed and refocused on the Asia-Pacific region.  In the Army and the Marine Corps, equipment and personnel previously committed to Iraq and Afghanistan are available for new missions in other regions. 
            Second, we are investing in new capabilities that will be especially relevant to the Asia-Pacific region.  And we have carefully protected these capabilities, even in the face of the Budget Control Act.  In the Navy, we are investing in the Virginia-class submarine and the Virginia payload module, which will allow our attack submarines to carry torpedo-sized weapons and over 60 cruise missiles. 
            We are investing in anti-submarine warfare capabilities to maintain our enormous undersea advantage, including P-8A maritime patrol aircraft, the M-60 helicopter, as well as ISR assets, like the Broad Area Maritime Sensor, BAMS, which is essentially a marinized version of the Global Hawk.  And the Air Force is investing in the KC-46 refueling tanker, a new very stealthy bomber, and a host of ISR investments that will be relevant to the region. 
            One of the key tenets of our defense strategy is to protect our future-focused investments – the “seed corn” of the future force.  President Obama was crystal clear – very insistent – about this himself during our strategy and budget deliberations last winter.  And that’s what we’re doing as we budget.  Our newest investments of course have the shallowest roots, so it’s easy to tear them away when budget cuts are made, but we can’t afford to do that, we can’t afford to lose our future technological edge, particularly as we look to the Asia-Pacific region.   And so we’re protecting those investments.
            We are investing in things like cyber, space, and electronic warfare; Unmanned Aerial Vehicles; the Long Range Strike family of systems, all of which are so important to the Asia-Pacific region.  And we will continue our science and technology investments across the board. 
            The third reason why we can carry out the rebalance is that we are shifting our posture forward and into the Asia-Pacific region.  That it, not what we have, but where we put it is also changing.  By 2020, we will have shifted 60 percent of our naval assets to the Pacific. 
            That’s an historic change for the United States Navy.  The Marine Corps will have up to 2,500 Marines on rotation in Australia, we will have four Littoral Combat Ships stationed forward in Singapore – new Littoral Combat Ships, I was just aboard both of the variants in San Diego last week – and will proceed fully to build-out our military presence on Guam and surrounding areas, which is an important strategic hub for the Western Pacific. 
            We will begin to rotate B-1 bombers into the region, augmenting the B-52 bombers already on continuous rotation.  We have already deployed F-22s to Kadena Air Force Base in Japan, and we will deploy the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter to the region.  Said differently, we are sending our newest assets to the Asia-Pacific region first. 
            Fourth, we are working closely with our allies and partners to build a peaceful Asia-Pacific where every state in the region may prosper, and we do that project together.  The State Department of course leads our diplomatic engagement in the region, but our defense relationships play a big part as well. 
            A key objective of our rebalance is to build a healthy, transparent, and sustainable U.S.-China defense relationship, one that supports a broader U.S.-China relationship.  As Secretary Panetta said when he was in China two weeks ago, a strong and cooperative U.S.-China partnership is essential for global security and prosperity in the 21st century, and we seek to cooperate with China on a range of diplomatic, economic, and security issues, including working closely with them to create – build an enduring foundation for U.S.-China military-to-military relations.  
            Recently, our navies participated in a joint counter-piracy exercise in the Gulf of Aden, off the coast of Somalia, an area of strategic and economic importance for both countries.  The exercise helped us to build trust, and gave our sailors a chance to work together.  And Secretary Panetta invited China to participate in the annual Rim of the Pacific Exercise, which is our largest multilateral maritime exercise.   So our relationship – our defense relationship with China is an essential part of our rebalance.           
            To foster security across the region, we are deepening our involvement in regional multilateral security institutions, like the ASEAN Defense Ministers Meeting Plus.
            We are expanding bilateral and multilateral exercises of all kind, increasing defense trade, and deepening our defense relationships.  Secretary Panetta has been to the region three times in the last 12 months. 
            And I spent ten days in the region during this summer, doing the practical work – that’s my job – of strengthening our ties with Japan, Thailand, Korea, and India.  Last year, the United States military participated in 172 exercises in the Asia-Pacific region with 24 countries.  And we are looking to expand that further. 
            We are taking a broad and comprehensive approach to our security cooperation.  We are building partnership capacity, improving interoperability, and cooperating on new capabilities.  Our security cooperation in the region includes a range of Foreign Military Sales, Direct Commercial Sales, and technology cooperation.  For us, exports are a “two-fer”: they help us build our partners’ capabilities, and they help our defense industry’s competitiveness. 
            We are improving our overall export control system under President Obama's 2010 Export Control Reform Initiative, and taking strong steps within DoD to improve our internal processes as well.  We're making our decision process more anticipatory – that is, looking to what partners are likely to want in the future, and beginning our thinking and technical preparations at an earlier stage.  These reforms should make it easier for us to cooperate with our partners across the region.
            To strengthen our regional missile defense posture, we are forging with Japan, Australia, and South Korea new missile defense approaches.  We are integrating Japanese sensors into our space surveillance network, and cooperating with Australia on space capabilities. 
            We are enhancing our access and sustainment across the region.  In addition to rotationally deploying Littoral Combat Ships, in Singapore, as I mentioned earlier, we are exploring options for increased training there.  With the Philippines, we are exploring options for rotational force deployments in priority areas.  We are focused on building the Philippines’ maritime security presence and capabilities, and strengthening their maritime domain awareness. 
            We are integrating roles, missions and capabilities with Japan, and taking numerous steps to solidify and strengthen our enduring presence on the Korean peninsula. 
            We are deepening our security cooperation, technology sharing, and defense trade with India, another state so important to our rebalance, and, we believe, to the broader security and prosperity of the 21st century.   We believe that given the inherent links between India and the United States, in values, in political philosophy, that the only limit to our cooperation with India should be our independent strategic decisions – because any two states can differ – not bureaucratic obstacles.   So I personally am working daily to remove those obstacles.  We are moving well beyond purely defense trade with India, towards technology sharing and co-production. 
            So our engagement with our allies and partners is a key step in executing our rebalance, as they help us achieve all of our regional security objectives. 
            Fifth, and last, the Defense Department is turning its formidable innovative power to the Asia-Pacific region.  We are by no means abandoning counterinsurgency – that’s a core skill-set we’ve gotten very good at doing, and which we’re gonna keep.  But as we come out of Iraq and Afghanistan, defense planners, analysts, scientists, and institutions across the country are devoting more and more of their time to thinking about the Asia-Pacific region. 
            We are developing new operational concepts for our forces.  We are integrating operations and aligning the Air Force and Navy to maintain access in contested regions.  We are reviewing our contingency plans to ensure we are prepared for any opportunity or challenge that may arise.  
            So the Pentagon leadership is focused intently on executing the rebalance.  Secretary Panetta hosts a video teleconference – this is something new.  This is something that Secretary Gates and then Secretary Panetta have been doing with commanders in Iraq and Afghanistan as a way of keeping involved, keeping in touch, constantly consulting, constantly working on issues.  And we’ve decided to do that with Admiral Locklear, out in Honolulu, also, to keep the tempo of our activities up so the Defense Department leadership can make decisions effectively and quickly about the Asia-Pacific region.  I am conducting a Defense Department-wide management review to support, assess, and implement all of those rebalance initiatives.   We are watching every dollar, every ship, and every plane to make sure that we execute our rebalance effectively.
            So, in conclusion, we are not just talking the talk of rebalance – we are walking the walk.  Even in a period of fiscal austerity, we can and will invest in a continued military presence and engagement for the Asia-Pacific region, for all of the reasons and in all the ways I’ve outlined today. 
            For each of our strategic initiatives, we have had to make careful investment decisions.  We have had to weigh costs, and measure benefits.  We are investing in new capabilities we need for the future.  And to do so, we have had to let go of some unneeded and overlapping capabilities, and make difficult calls on underperforming programs to make way for new capabilities and better performing programs.  Choices like this are the essence of strategy.  We are balancing our investments to meet our strategic objectives. 
            So thank you very much for being here today, inviting me to join you.  NBR and the Woodrow Wilson Center, you conduct valuable public policy research in support of the national interest.  And so as we execute our rebalance, we will continue to look to you to provide us with insights and analysis about this important region of the world.  I know you will have some thoughts of your own and some questions of your own, and I welcome them.   Congratulations again on all of your success, and thank you.
            Congratulations again on all of your success.  And thank you. (Applause.)
            MR. ELLINGS:  We are extremely privileged to have you give a major address on the rebalancing here.  And I think we're all kind of impressed at the comprehensiveness of your remarks, and deeply appreciative.
            I would now like to open this to questions.  And let me kind of search around here.  Can we start over here, the gentleman on the end of the row?
            MR. ELLINGS:  I chose the gentleman furthest from the microphone.  I apologize. (Laughter.)
            Q:  Well, thanks for calling on me.  Eric McVadon, the Institute for Foreign Policy Analysis.
            I wonder if the new leadership in China and the relatively new leadership in North Korea provide us with some opportunities or whether we can create opportunities for further cooperation and engagement.
            DEP. SEC. CARTER:  Well, I think for China, that is definitely the case.  Obviously, that's not new leadership either to China or to us.  Many of those individuals we've known, we've worked with in the past, and they've all indicated they're -- not only their willingness but their desire to continue to develop this relationship in a positive way, economically, politically, but for us in the Defense Department and in a security sense.
            In North Korea, we'll have to see.  We remain concerned about so many dimensions of North Korea.  And that's one of the reasons why we're so intent upon solidifying our posture there.  And that's the reason why we're looking at number of steps in Korea that I'm sure you're familiar with, but I'll just remind you of what's going on there.
            We are making our presence there, particularly our ground force presence, they're putting it on a more permanent basis, some more solid basis.  That's what the Yongsan relocation plan and land partnership program is all about.  We're in the middle of executing them.  We're making a number of improvements in our force structure, number of command and control arrangements with the government of the ROK.  Looking at the way our operations plans are configured in making sure that they're completely up to date.
            So we're doing a lot on the Korean Peninsula for a lot of reasons, but one of them is in order to continue to keep the peace on the Korean Peninsula.
            And we'll just have to see what the new leadership there is like.
            MR. ELLINGS:  Yes, Stanley Roth.
            Q:  I'll just shout.
            ELLINGS:  We actually -- this is...
            DEP. SEC. CARTER:  Stanley's like that.
            MR. ELLINGS:  ... televised so... (Laughter.)
            ... let's bring him (inaudible)
            Q:  I wanted to ask you about the reaction in the region to the rebalancing, particularly given Secretary Panetta's recent trip to China and your own contacts with the Chinese.
            For those of us outside government, it appears to be a fairly negative reaction -- i.e., talking about it as containment, that it's aimed at them, all the things we say it's not.  But any insights you can share in what we say to them to try to persuade China that this is, indeed, you know, a region-wide not defense-specific initiative.
            And on the other side, for all the rest of the people in the region, the question of how credible is the pivot or rebalancing.  People are looking particularly at all the Chinese naval activity in the South China Sea and East China Sea, and what do we say to them?
            DEP. SEC. CARTER:  You -- you've -- Stanley, you've hit on the head.  I mean, overall, I think the reaction has been positive among old friends and new friends.  But there are two questions that come up.  The one, I addressed specifically today is, are you really going to do this or not?  Or are you going to walk the walk or are you just talking the talk?
            I told you why we're going to walk the walk and I told you if you don't believe it just watch the steps.  So watch the steps.  That's all I can say on that one.
            On the issue of containing China again, you have to watch what happens.  And I would say the Chinese friends who have that concern, and not all do; many understand the point and the logic.  To those who have concerns, I'd say the same thing:  watch the steps.
            And the steps we want to take are ones that are cooperative.  We're reaching out.  We're trying to do more with the Chinese military and make the Chinese military part of this security mix, which we are also an essential part of but not the only part of.  But it's that which has kept a good thing going for 70 years in that part of the world.  It's that -- been that environment in which these tremendous economic transformations of one Asian state after another can take place.
            We welcome that.  We think that's a good thing.  We want to keep going with that.  That's what it's all about.
            So I, you know, on both of those questions, Stanley, all I can say is watch.
            MR. ELLINGS:  OK, one more question.  How about in the back there, the hand raised?  I'm trying to be equal opportunity per section of the audience here.
            Q:  Thank you.  I'm Tom Reckford with the Malaysia-America Society and the World Affairs Council.
            You talk about the need for peaceful resolution of disputes.  I wonder if you can elaborate a bit about what Stan Roth referred to in the South China and East China Seas, where China's assertiveness is causing so much concern.
            DEP. SEC. CARTER:  Sure.
            Well, we see that and I think we have a very principled position on all of this.  You know, first of all, people say we don't take sides in these disputes, but that's not true.  We actually do take a side, and we take a side for freedom of navigation and peaceful resolution of these disputes.
            That's where we are.  That's where we're going to stay.  And, you know, we don't  we don't always have a direct intermediating role.  I understand that. 
            But that's  when I talk about the American position in the regions beginning from principle, that's a good example of it.  And our principle is equal access and peaceful resolution.
            And I think for those in all of the states that have all of these historic disputes, these things have to be kept in proportion.  The big game is peace and security that allows prosperity and development.  And to endanger that for small things is not in anybody's interest.  Everybody needs to keep that in perspective.
            And to play the freedom of navigation game, you know, everybody can play that around the world.  And that there, down that road lies trouble for everybody.
            So, you know, our -- our position's pretty clear.  And it is related to the rebalance, because it -- the rebalance sets up a vision of what the security system in that part of the world ought to be.  And I think if people keep this in proportion, they'll realize that not to sacrifice the big game for little games.
            MR. ELLINGS:  Secretary Carter, I'm going to exercise the -- having a microphone in my hand, the prerogative of one who holds the microphone:  Is there anything you want to say specifically?  He asked about the South China Sea.  How about the maritime difficulties, disputes, particularly between Japan, China...
            DEP. SEC. CARTER:  Same thing.
            MR. ELLINGS:  Same thing?
            DEP. SEC. CARTER:  Same thing.
            MR. ELLINGS:  Anything specific there?
            DEP. SEC. CARTER:  No, the same -- the same principles, same thing.  And different set of parties in that particular case, somewhat different history.  And, you know,  it indicates that this is a part of the world where many historic animosities never dispelled, wounds were never properly healed after World War II and beyond, and didn't have the experience that Europe had with NATO, which, remember, took decades itself to heal these things.
            So that's another task before us and another reason to have the kind of cooperative security structure in the region that I'm talking about and that the United States seeks.  So that over time these things can be put behind and people can march on to the future that their people really deserve.
            MR. ELLINGS:  Well, tremendous thanks and a tremendous job.  We really are pleased to have you here.  Thank you so much on behalf of everyone.  And we really appreciate your coming.
            DEP. SEC. CARTER:  Thank you, appreciate it.  Thank you. (Applause.)
 

U.S. Army Characterizes People “Frustrated With Mainstream Ideologies” As Terrorists

U.S. Army Characterizes People “Frustrated With Mainstream Ideologies” As Terrorists | Pakalert Press

Paul Joseph Watson
Infowars
A leaked U.S. Army document obtained by Wired Magazine characterizes people “frustrated with mainstream ideologies” as potential terrorists, while also framing those who “believe in government conspiracies” as violent radicals.
“These are some warning signs that that you have turned into a terrorist who will soon kill your co-workers, according to the U.S. military. You’ve recently changed your “choices in entertainment.” You have “peculiar discussions.” You “complain about bias,” you’re “socially withdrawn” and you’re frustrated with “mainstream ideologies,” writes Spencer Ackerman.
The manual (PDF) was produced in 2011 by the Asymmetric Warfare Group, a unit within the U.S. Army headquartered at Fort Meade, Maryland. The document is intended to weed out “internal threats” within the ranks of U.S. soldiers.
Given that both the Department of Homeland Security and the FBI have identified returning veterans as one of the primary domestic terror threats, the document is seemingly designed to spot such radical extremists well ahead of time.
Examples of behavior that is considered an indication of potential terrorism include the following;
- Complaining about bias;
- Being frustrated with “mainstream ideologies”;
- Being reclusive;



- Believing in government conspiracies “to the point of paranoia”;
- Visiting “extremist” websites or blogs;
- Altering your reading habits;
- Having “peculiar discussions”;
- Being “highly emotional”;
- Using “social networks”.
The Army manual is just one of numerous similar manuals and publications issued by military, law enforcement and the federal government over the last decade which define mundane behavior as extremist and a potential indication of terrorism.
As we reported earlier this month, a leaked training manual used in the State and Local Anti-Terrorism Training (SLATT) program for law enforcement and funded by the Department of Justice lists political bumper stickers expressing opposition to the United Nations and support for the bill of rights as indications of terrorist activity.
The document also characterizes people who hold political opinions that “represent a fairly popular point of view” as terrorists. Anti-abortion activists are also listed as terrorists under this category.
The infamous 2009 MIAC report, published by the Missouri Information Analysis Center and first revealed by Infowars, framed Ron Paul supporters, libertarians, people who display bumper stickers, people who own gold, or even people who fly a U.S. flag, as potential terrorists.
Under the FBI’s Communities Against Terrorism program, the bulk purchase of food is also labeled as a potential indication of terrorist activity, as is using cash to pay for a cup of coffee, and showing an interest in web privacy when using the Internet in a public place.
A recent Department of Homeland Security-funded study produced by the National Consortium for the Study of Terrorism and Responses to Terrorism at the University of Maryland characterizes Americans who are “suspicious of centralized federal authority,” and “reverent of individual liberty” as “extreme right-wing” terrorists.

Come help us reimagine journalism | IJNet

Come help us reimagine journalism | IJNet

The John S. Knight Journalism Fellowships program at Stanford University is seeking print, online or broadcast journalists who have shown leadership and have a proposal to improve some aspect of journalism. Ideally, applicants will have at least seven years of professional experience. The deadline for international journalists in the class of 2013-14 is Dec. 1, 2012.
The program is designed to serve the needs of journalists in an ever-changing media environment and nurture innovation and entrepreneurialism in the field. Applicants spend an academic year leveraging the vast resources of Stanford University and Silicon Valley to sharpen and broaden their skills and to develop a project of their choice addressing a particular journalism challenge, problem or opportunity.
The program is intended to support quality journalism by helping journalists develop the tools and professional standards of the future.
For more information, see http://knight.stanford.edu. Email knight-info@lists.stanford.edu if you have further questions.

Six tips for writing an effective Twitter bio | IJNet

Six tips for writing an effective Twitter bio | IJNet

Six tips for writing an effective Twitter bio

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Aspiring and professional journalists may spend countless hours fine-tuning their resumes and portfolios of work samples, but too often neglect their "twesumes," or Twitter bios.
When they do, they miss an opportunity to be more easily found online by potential employers, sources and other contacts.
In a recent Poynter Online post by veteran reporter Herbert Lowe offered this advice for getting the most out of the 160 characters that make up the Twitter bio:
Start with the basics
First things first: tell people who you are and what you do. "Students and graduates should definitely include your college or university; your major and year in school; your leadership roles and past successes, on campus and elsewhere; and your career aspiration," Lowe writes.
Show off your writing
The Associated Press Stylebook (or the style guide your news organization follows) should govern every piece of writing you make public, no matter how small. "Remember the adage about doing what’s right even when no one’s looking? Well, demonstrating good writing in short bursts helps prove you take it seriously," Lowe advises.
Always consider your audience
Be professional for potential recruiters. Show personality. And use all of the 160 characters available. "Don’t stop at 135 just because you have cited all the basics. It’s OK to list or note an acceptable hobby or passion at the end," Lowe writes.
Don’t distract from the goal
Don't get too creative with your photo and Twitter handle, Lowe says. Avoid pictures that could detract from your professionalism. He advises using your first and last name in your handle if possible.
Show people where to find your work
Link to a personal website, portfolio or LinkedIn page, preferably in the space for a link provided below the bio.
Keep it updated
Make sure your bio reflects the most up-to-date version of yourself--hobbies and passions included.
Poynter Online, IJNet’s partner and the website of the Poynter Institute, is a school serving journalism and democracy for more than 35 years. Poynter offers news and training that fits any schedule, with individual coaching, in-person seminars, online courses, webinars and more.

Social media etiquette for journalists: how the rules have changed | IJNet

Social media etiquette for journalists: how the rules have changed | IJNet

Social media etiquette for journalists: how the rules have changed

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Ever since Facebook and Twitter emerged as key tools for news, journalists and newsrooms have performed a high-wire act: They need to use social media to engage their audience in new and inventive ways, while also maintaining ethical standards.
Achieving that balance has been rocky for many reporters, and several have faced serious consequences for speaking their minds in 140 characters or less.
But some practices that were frowned upon in the early days of social media engagement are no longer verboten, according to top social media editors who participated on the panel “Social Media Debate: Best Practices vs. Bad Habits” at the Online News Association’s 2012 conference in San Francisco. Associated Press social media editor Eric Carvin was the moderator.
Here are the social media points of etiquette that have changed the most in recent years:
The decline of "the view from nowhere"
The notion that journalists should only spit out facts and headlines has been replaced by the idea that it's acceptable to have a point of view and show some personality.
“If you asked me two years ago, I would [have] said, 'No, a journalist should not have an opinion on Twitter,' " said Niketa Patel, social media product manager for CNN Money. But now her thinking has changed. "We are humans, too. We do have opinions. I think as long as you're not controversial about it, or you're not overly trying to make a statement, then I think it’s OK...to have somewhat of an opinion," she said.
For Liz Heron, social media director at The Wall Street Journal, journalists are at their best on social media when they offer analysis and context instead of just the straight story.
Deleting tweets is up for debate
Liz Heron used to think you should never delete a tweet. “I actually have changed my philosophy on that,” said Heron, who wishes Twitter had a correction tool so mistakes wouldn't go viral. “If it’s a bad link or a typo, I'll go ahead and delete it and send out a correction.”
Patel and Reuters social media editor Anthony De Rosa still think think the best way to handle a tweet with bad information is to leave it and post a follow-up tweet with a correction.
One thing is still not up for debate: If your tweet sparked some sort of controversy that needs to be clarified, you shouldn't just delete it and try to sweep it under the rug.
Social media policies may not be essential
The New York Times decided not to set a social media policy, since guidelines can become outdated quickly, Heron said. However, at The Wall Street Journal, reporters asked for a set of guidelines.
Patel said she believes newsrooms should focus less on establishing a list of negative rules--and more on best practices and empowering staff to use social media effectively.
Photos create new ethical issues
Visual storytelling is "the language of the social web these days," Heron said. The ubiquity of crowdsourced images is a boon for storytelling, but presents new problems for social media editors who have to decide when and how to use images.
Want to use a photo you found on social media? The panel suggested these steps: Reach out to the person who posted it, verify the info they posted, make sure the photo is real, ask for permission to use it and properly attribute it. News organizations should come up with a standard process for use of user-generated images and vet their system with a lawyer, Patel said.
What's next for social media and news?
The intersection of video and social media might be a big topic a year from now, De Rosa believes. Patel foresees a rebirth of audio storytelling, while Heron singled out Reddit as a platform to keep an eye on. (That's the one President Barack Obama used for an “Ask Me Anything” session--and almost broke in the process.)

Arms sales to developing countries | The Economist

Arms sales to developing countries | The Economist

Arms sales to developing countries


Arms deliveries to developing countries last year were the highest since 2004, totalling $28 billion, or around 60% of global sales. America and Russia, the world’s leading arms suppliers, accounted for around two-thirds of deliveries to the developing world. America’s exports in particular are helped by a long-standing client base, which orders upgrades, spare parts and support services every year. Arms deals were buoyed last year by unusually high demand from Saudi Arabia. The Middle Eastern country is the developing world’s biggest arms buyer; deliveries were $2.8 billion in 2011. India, which is Russia’s biggest high-value arms client, was close behind, with $2.7 billion-worth of deliveries last year.

China and Japan: Could Asia really go to war over these? | The Economist

China and Japan: Could Asia really go to war over these? | The Economist

China and Japan

Could Asia really go to war over these?

The bickering over islands is a serious threat to the region’s peace and prosperity


THE countries of Asia do not exactly see the world in a grain of sand, but they have identified grave threats to the national interest in the tiny outcrops and shoals scattered off their coasts. The summer has seen a succession of maritime disputes involving China, Japan, South Korea, Vietnam, Taiwan and the Philippines. This week there were more anti-Japanese riots in cities across China because of a dispute over a group of uninhabited islands known to the Japanese as the Senkakus and to the Chinese as the Diaoyus. Toyota and Honda closed down their factories. Amid heated rhetoric on both sides, one Chinese newspaper has helpfully suggested skipping the pointless diplomacy and moving straight to the main course by serving up Japan with an atom bomb.
That, thank goodness, is grotesque hyperbole: the government in Beijing is belatedly trying to play down the dispute, aware of the economic interests in keeping the peace. Which all sounds very rational, until you consider history—especially the parallel between China’s rise and that of imperial Germany over a century ago. Back then nobody in Europe had an economic interest in conflict; but Germany felt that the world was too slow to accommodate its growing power, and crude, irrational passions like nationalism took hold. China is re-emerging after what it sees as 150 years of humiliation, surrounded by anxious neighbours, many of them allied to America. In that context, disputes about clumps of rock could become as significant as the assassination of an archduke.
One mountain, two tigers
Optimists point out that the latest scuffle is mainly a piece of political theatre—the product of elections in Japan and a leadership transition in China. The Senkakus row has boiled over now because the Japanese government is buying some of the islands from a private Japanese owner. The aim was to keep them out of the mischievous hands of Tokyo’s China-bashing governor, who wanted to buy them himself. China, though, was affronted. It strengthened its own claim and repeatedly sent patrol boats to encroach on Japanese waters. That bolstered the leadership’s image, just before Xi Jinping takes over.
More generally, argue the optimists, Asia is too busy making money to have time for making war. China is now Japan’s biggest trading partner. Chinese tourists flock to Tokyo to snap up bags and designer dresses on display in the shop windows on Omotesando. China is not interested in territorial expansion. Anyway, the Chinese government has enough problems at home: why would it look for trouble abroad?
Asia does indeed have reasons to keep relations good, and this latest squabble will probably die down, just as others have in the past. But each time an island row flares up, attitudes harden and trust erodes. Two years ago, when Japan arrested the skipper of a Chinese fishing boat for ramming a vessel just off the islands, it detected retaliation when China blocked the sale of rare earths essential to Japanese industry.
Growing nationalism in Asia, especially China, aggravates the threat (see article). Whatever the legality of Japan’s claim to the islands, its roots lie in brutal empire-building. The media of all countries play on prejudice that has often been inculcated in schools. Having helped create nationalism and exploited it when it suited them, China’s leaders now face vitriolic criticism if they do not fight their country’s corner. A recent poll suggested that just over half of China’s citizens thought the next few years would see a “military dispute” with Japan.
The islands matter, therefore, less because of fishing, oil or gas than as counters in the high-stakes game for Asia’s future. Every incident, however small, risks setting a precedent. Japan, Vietnam and the Philippines fear that if they make concessions, China will sense weakness and prepare the next demand. China fears that if it fails to press its case, America and others will conclude that they are free to scheme against it.
Co-operation and deterrence
Asia’s inability to deal with the islands raises doubts about how it would cope with a genuine crisis, on the Korean peninsula, say, or across the Strait of Taiwan. China’s growing taste for throwing its weight around feeds deep-seated insecurities about the way it will behave as a dominant power. And the tendency for the slightest tiff to escalate into a full-blown row presents problems for America, which both aims to reassure China that it welcomes its rise, and also uses the threat of military force to guarantee that the Pacific is worthy of the name.
Some of the solutions will take a generation. Asian politicians have to start defanging the nationalist serpents they have nursed; honest textbooks would help a lot. For decades to come, China’s rise will be the main focus of American foreign policy. Barack Obama’s “pivot” towards Asia is a useful start in showing America’s commitment to its allies. But China needs reassuring that, rather than seeking to contain it as Britain did 19th-century Germany, America wants a responsible China to realise its potential as a world power. A crudely political WTO complaint will add to Chinese worries (see article).
Given the tensions over the islands (and Asia’s irreconcilable versions of history), three immediate safeguards are needed. One is to limit the scope for mishaps to escalate into crises. A collision at sea would be less awkward if a code of conduct set out how vessels should behave and what to do after an accident. Governments would find it easier to work together in emergencies if they routinely worked together in regional bodies. Yet, Asia’s many talking shops lack clout because no country has been ready to cede authority to them.
A second safeguard is to rediscover ways to shelve disputes over sovereignty, without prejudice. The incoming President Xi should look at the success of his predecessor, Hu Jintao, who put the “Taiwan issue” to one side. With the Senkakus (which Taiwan also claims), both Mao Zedong and Deng Xiaoping were happy to leave sovereignty to a later generation to decide. That makes even more sense if the islands’ resources are worth something: even state-owned companies would hesitate to put their oil platforms at risk of a military strike. Once sovereignty claims have been shelved, countries can start to share out the resources—or better still, declare the islands and their waters a marine nature reserve.
But not everything can be solved by co-operation, and so the third safeguard is to bolster deterrence. With the Senkakus, America has been unambiguous: although it takes no position on sovereignty, they are administered by Japan and hence fall under its protection. This has enhanced stability, because America will use its diplomatic prestige to stop the dispute escalating and China knows it cannot invade. Mr Obama’s commitment to other Asian islands, however, is unclear.
The role of China is even more central. Its leaders insist that its growing power represents no threat to its neighbours. They also claim to understand history. A century ago in Europe, years of peace and globalisation tempted leaders into thinking that they could afford to play with nationalist fires without the risk of conflagration. After this summer, Mr Xi and his neighbours need to grasp how much damage the islands are in fact causing. Asia needs to escape from a descent into corrosive mistrust. What better way for China to show that it is sincere about its peaceful rise than to take the lead?

The next crisis: Sponging boomers | The Economist

The next crisis: Sponging boomers | The Economist

The next crisis

Sponging boomers

The economic legacy left by the baby-boomers is leading to a battle between the generations


ANOTHER economic mess looms on the horizon—one with a great wrinkled visage. The struggle to digest the swollen generation of ageing baby-boomers threatens to strangle economic growth. As the nature and scale of the problem become clear, a showdown between the generations may be inevitable.
After the end of the second world war births surged across the rich world. Britain, Germany and Japan all enjoyed a baby boom, although it peaked in different years. America’s was most pronounced. By 1964 individuals born after the war accounted for 41% of the total population, forming a generation large enough to exert its own political and economic gravity.
These boomers have lived a charmed life, easily topping previous generations in income earned at every age. The sheer heft of the generation created a demographic dividend: a rise in labour supply, reinforced by a surge in the number of working women. Social change favoured it too. Households became smaller, populated with more earners and fewer children. And boomers enjoyed the distinction of being among the best-educated of American generations at a time when the return on education was soaring.
Yet these gains were one-offs. Retirements will reverse the earlier labour-force surge, and younger generations cannot benefit from more women working. There is room to raise educational levels, but it is harder and less lucrative to improve the lot of disadvantaged students than to establish a university degree as the norm for good ones, as was the case after the war. In short, boomer income growth relied on a number of one-off gains.
Young workers also cannot expect decades of rising asset prices like those that enriched the boomers. Zheng Liu and Mark Spiegel, economists at the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco, found in 2011 that movements in the price-earnings ratio of equities closely track changes in the ratio of middle-aged to old workers, meaning that the p/e ratio is likely to fall. Having lived through a spectacular bull market, boomers now sell off assets to finance retirement, putting pressure on equity prices and denying young workers an easy route to wealth. Boomers have weathered the economic crisis reasonably well. Thanks largely to the rapid recovery in stockmarkets, those aged between 53 and 58 saw a net decline in wealth of just 2.8% between 2006 and 2010.
More worrying is that this generation seems to be able to leverage its size into favourable policy. Governments slashed tax rates in the 1980s to revitalise lagging economies, just as boomers approached their prime earning years. The average federal tax rate for a median American household, including income and payroll taxes, dropped from more than 18% in 1981 to just over 11% in 2011. Yet sensible tax reforms left less revenue for the generous benefits boomers have continued to vote themselves, such as a prescription-drug benefit paired with inadequate premiums. Deficits exploded. Erick Eschker, an economist at Humboldt State University, reckons that each American born in 1945 can expect nearly $2.2m in lifetime net transfers from the state—more than any previous cohort.

Boomers’ sponging may well outstrip that of younger generations as well. A study by the International Monetary Fund in 2011 compared the tax bills of a cohort’s members over their lifetime with the value of the benefits that they are forecast to receive. The boomers are leaving a huge bill. Those aged 65 in 2010 may receive $333 billion more in benefits than they pay in taxes (see chart), an obligation 17 times larger than that likely to be left by those aged 25.
Sadly, arithmetic leaves but a few ways out of the mess. Faster growth would help. But the debt left by the boomers adds to the drag of slower labour-force growth. Carmen Reinhart and Kenneth Rogoff, two Harvard economists, estimate that public debt above 90% of GDP can reduce average growth rates by more than 1%. Meanwhile, the boomer era has seen falling levels of public investment in America. Annual spending on infrastructure as a share of GDP dropped from more than 3% in the early 1960s to roughly 1% in 2007.
Austerity is another option, but the consolidation needed would be large. The IMF estimates that fixing America’s fiscal imbalance would require a 35% cut in all transfer payments and a 35% rise in all taxes—too big a pill for a creaky political system to swallow. Fiscal imbalances rise with the share of population over 65 and with partisan gridlock, according to other research by Mr Eschker. This is troubling news for America, where the over-65 share of the voting-age population will rise from 17% now to 26% in 2030.
That leaves a third possibility: inflation. Post-war inflation helped shrink America’s debt as a share of GDP by 35 percentage points (see article). More inflation might prove salutary for other reasons as well. Mr Rogoff has suggested that a few years of 5% price rises could have helped households reduce their debts faster. Other economists, including two members of the Federal Reserve’s policymaking committee, now argue that with interest rates near zero, the Fed should tolerate a higher rate of inflation to speed up recovery.
The generational divide makes this plan a hard sell. Younger workers are typically debtors, who benefit from inflation reducing real interest rates. Older cohorts with large savings dislike it for the same reason. A recent paper by the Federal Reserve Bank of St Louis suggests that as a country ages, its tolerance for inflation falls. Its authors theorise that a central bank could use inflation to achieve some generational redistribution. Yet pressure on the Fed to cease its expansionary actions has been intense, and led by a Republican Party increasingly driven by boomer preferences.
The political power of the boomers is formidable. But sooner or later, it cannot escape the maths.

Equality, race and schooling: The complicated path to equal opportunity | The Economist

Equality, race and schooling: The complicated path to equal opportunity | The Economist

Equality, race and schooling

The complicated path to equal opportunity

Oct 1st 2012, 20:59 by S.M. | NEW YORK

IN A complaint filed last week, the NAACP Legal Defense Fund charged that the admissions procedures of Stuyvesant High School and other specialised high schools in New York City are “unsound and discriminatory” because the Specialized High School Admissions Test (SHSAT)—the sole factor in admissions—has yielded striking racial imbalances in the schools’ student bodies. They are asking the federal department of education to investigate:
Year after year, thousands of academically talented African-American and Latino students who take the test are denied admission to the Specialized High Schools at rates far higher than those for other racial groups… For example, of the 967 eighth-grade students offered admission to Stuyvesant for the 2012-13 school year, just 19 (2%) of the students were African American and 32 (3.3%) were Latino. 
This complaint will likely go nowhere. Recent Supreme Court jurisprudence on the Civil Rights Act holds that “a prima facie case of disparate-impact liability—essentially, a threshold showing of a significant statistical disparity…and nothing more” is insufficient proof of racial discrimination. In order for a complaint of this kind to stick, there must be proof that the city decided to use the SHSAT despite the existence of “an equally valid, less-discriminatory alternative” admissions test. Holistic admissions policies yielding more diverse student bodies can be found at elite high schools in New York City and around the United States, but there is no evidence that the New York explicitly rejected these alternatives in settling on the SHSAT for its specialised high schools.
The NAACP’s complaint, though, strikes at the heart of a debate about the meaning of equality that is animating much of the discourse in this year’s presidential election.
If a common thread can be found in the speeches delivered at the Democratic and Republican conventions, it is the meme of “equality of opportunity”. Speaker after speaker from both parties told narratives of hard beginnings, tall odds and redemptive outcomes. Ann Romney’s story of suffering through meals of “tunafish and pasta” in a basement apartment during her husband’s business-school years didn’t ring quite as true as Senator Marco Rubio’s account of growing up poor in Cuba before encountering “the American miracle”. A week later at the Democrats' convention, Julian Castro, the mayor of San Antonio, offered a remarkably similar spin on the American dream.
Close as the parties sound on the value of equality of opportunity, they differ markedly on how it should be secured. The Republicans favour economic freedom and sharply limited government as the mechanisms for ensuring opportunity, while the Democrats focus on the social institutions that help individuals develop the tools to achieve their goals. So Mr Rubio emphasised that "we should be free to go as far as our talents and work can take us", while Mr Castro noted that "there are some things we can't do alone".
In the case of New York's schools, Michael Bloomberg, the city's mayor, stands on the Republican side of the debate. In a testy response to the NAACP complaint, he said, “These are schools designed for the best and the brightest. Life isn’t always fair. What we’ve got to do is make sure everyone has equal opportunity. We’re not here about equal results. We’re here about equal opportunity."
But how do we know when equality of opportunity obtains? In this case, do we look at the procedure by which seats in elite schools are distributed, or do we look at the racial identity of the individuals who wind up in those seats?
According to the theory of democratic egalitarianism developed by philosopher Elizabeth Anderson, equality is “a relationship among people rather than merely a pattern in the distribution of divisible goods”. Viewed in this light, the question of who belongs at Stuyvesant High School cannot be resolved by Mr Bloomberg’s deference to a purportedly objective test. Nor is it to be decided strictly by counting heads. Integration, though, is imperative: diversity is essential at all levels of education, and especially at elite institutions. De facto segregation may not communicate quite the same message of intolerance as does separating the races through legal decree, but many of its harms are just as weighty. Minorities who show promise and motivation in their studies but are excluded from excellent public schools on the basis of a single standardised test score will lack opportunities to develop skills and acquire social and cultural capital. Privileged students who do win a spot will miss out too, as Ms Anderson explains:
Segregation also deprives the more advantaged of knowledge. To the extent that they lead lives that are isolated from the lives of the disadvantaged and personally know few disadvantaged people, they are liable to be relatively ignorant of the problems the latter face in their lives and of the constraints within which the latter must cope with their problems. When the elite is drawn overwhelmingly from multiply advantaged, segregated groups, their cognitive deļ¬cits hurt the disadvantaged, because elites constituted in this way lack awareness of and responsiveness to the problems and interests of the disadvantaged.
But what about Mr Bloomberg’s claim that schools like Stuyvesant are rightfully intended “for the best and the brightest”? Isn’t there room for schools that cater to the gifted, as Chester Finn argued recently? There is no good reason to close schools for more promising students, but the standards for accepting students to these institutions must be matched to their overall purpose.
As philosophers Harry Brighouse and Adam Swift point out, schools provide a range of private benefits to students: the “non-positional” goods involved with discovering a “world of culture, complexity and enjoyment” and “positional” advantages such as business connections and competitiveness in labour markets. It matters greatly how these goods are distributed. Life may not “always be fair”, as Mr Bloomberg said, but the government has a duty not to entrench and enhance social inequities.
The raison d’etre of public education is the provision of public goods. Ultimately, as John Dewey emphasised a century ago, public schools should devote their energies to serving the public at large. So whether or not the federal government finds that New York City’s specialised schools’ racially-imbalanced student bodies represent an illegal “disparate impact” on disadvantaged minorities, a serious commitment to democratic equality requires that the specialised schools rethink and retool their admissions policies.

Wednesday, 3 October 2012

Is The United States Violating Pakistan's Sovereignty? - Forbes

Is The United States Violating Pakistan's Sovereignty? - Forbes

Is The United States Violating Pakistan's Sovereignty?

By Art Keller
Soldiers at Wagah border
Pakastani Soldiers (Photo credit: *_*)
In the USA’s schizophrenic relationship with Pakistan, one accusation frequently flung at the U.S. is that our “kinetic” activities in the tribal areas of Pakistan violate Pakistani sovereignty. This view is held most strongly by those Pakistanis who don’t live in the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (aka FATA), and who don’t have to endure the tyranny of armed militants controlling their lives.
While it is true that Pakistan’s Army does maintain military outposts in the tribal areas, and those forces sometimes violently clash with militants, the Army does not now and never has had sovereign control as modern nation-states define the concept.
Graphic but grisly proof can be seen in this video clip.
It was drawn from a propaganda video produced by “Al-Amat” studios, the media arm of the Pakistani Taliban, for domestic distribution in the tribal areas of Pakistan. Its goal was to bolster support for the Pakistani Taliban among the local Pashtun populace, and to demoralize the Pakistani Army. (Warning: it shows a night raid on a checkpoint in North Waziristan manned by the Tochi Scouts, a branch of Pakistan’s paramilitary Frontier Corps. It includes graphic footage of dead Pakistani soldiers.)
The appalling footage of the dead Tochi Scout is followed by what can only be described as demonic-appearing Taliban jihadi railing against Pakistani Army soldiers. (Remarks are an excerpt).
“WE WANT THE PAKISTANI ARMY TO UNDERSTAND THEIR GOALS. AND NOT TO…GO TO HELL FOR THEIR DOINGS. LISTEN AND UNDERSTAND THE MEANING OF BELIEF, BEING CLEAN, AND JIHAD IN THE WAY OF ALLAH. THINK ABOUT YOUR LIFE AFTER DEATH. ARMY MOTHERS, SISTERS, FATHERS, AND BROTHERS: MAKE YOUR CHILDREN UNDERSTAND. YOU HAVE WISHED THAT YOUR SON SACRIFICE THEMSELVES FOR THEIR COUNTRY, AND BE SUCCESSFUL. BUT TODAY YOUR SONS HAVE JOINED THE INFIDELS AND THE AMERICAN FLAG AND THEY ARE FIGHTING WITH MUJAHEDEEN AND RUINING THEIR LIFE AND AFTERLIFE, AND WILL GO TO HELL. WOULD YOU LIKE THIS TO HAPPEN TO YOUR LOVED ONES? YOU ARE THE WIFE OF THE ARMY SOLDIERS? DO YOU WANT YOUR HUSBAND TO BE YOUR PRIDE AND NOT A SLAVE?”
Disturbing as the words and images are in the video, the strongest proof that Pakistani claims of “sovereignty” in the tribal area are a fiction aren’t footage of the vicious attack, but rather the simple introductory graphics at the beginning of the video. The person selling this video is so confident that he won’t be bothered by the Pakistani Army that he provides the name of his business (Unique Computers), his name (Shahjee) and the location of his shop (Tawakal Market, Wana, South Waziristan). He is not just selling but openly advertising that he sells videos advocating the murder of Pakistani Army soldiers. These videos are for sale a mile and a half from the major Pakistani Army base in Wana. The Pakistani Army’s inability to police such fulminating militant activity on their own doorstep suggests that instead of sovereign control, what Pakistan’s Army really has in these tribal areas is a tenuous toehold.
Another key proof of this is the surreal custom of negotiating what are known as “Road Opening Days.” Road opening days are designated days during which local militants allow the Pakistani Army to move troops and equipment on the roads and agree not to attack them.
It is self -evident that any region you must obtain permission from others to transit is not a region you have sovereign control of.
If Pakistan’s generals were willing to demilitarize their “Line of Control” with India and move those troops to the FATA, they might indeed have the forces necessary to bring the fractious inhabitants of the tribal areas under Islamabad’s direct control. But until that happens, Pakistanis need to stop fooling themselves with the claim that “the U.S. is violating our sovereignty.” It is precisely Pakistan’s lack of sovereign control over the festering mess of militant activity in the FATA that makes our actions necessary. U.S. policymakers likely wish that Pakistan’s “sovereign control” of the tribal belt was a reality, but what Pakistan really has throughout the FATA is a simmering armed insurrection with yearly flare-ups. In fact this year’s flare up, this time in North Waziristan, is about due to ignite.
The U.S. may be a superpower, but even with all our technical magic, we cannot make disappear what was never there in the first place.
Art Keller is a former case officer who conducted operations against nuclear proliferation and terrorism for the CIA’s National Clandestine Service. He is the author of the new novel about the CIA and Iran, Hollow Strength.