Friday, June 29, 2007

The US and A are still No 1.

From this weeks Economist.

If America were a stock, it would be a “buy”: an undervalued market leader, in need of new management. But that points to its last great strength. More than any rival, America corrects itself. Under pressure from voters, Mr Bush has already rediscovered some of the charms of multilateralism; he is talking about climate change; a Middle East peace initiative is possible. Next year's presidential election offers a chance for renewal. Such corrections are not automatic: something (a misadventure in Iran?) may yet compound the misery of Iraq in the same way Watergate followed Vietnam. But America recovered from the 1970s. It will bounce back stronger again.


The USA always bounce back and they will be world leader for the next 100 years, at least.

Wednesday, June 27, 2007

David Pogue on the iPhone

Totally worthwhile to read! Also see the the movie. From the NYTimes.

New Zealand Wins Again in America’s Cup Race

Well for this one I can not agree more with what the NYTimes have to say about the 3rd Race in this years Americas Cup. Quote from Bertarelli from the article:

“I do a lot of racing in Lake Geneva, where it’s very flaky, and you do have shifts of 20 to 40 degrees at a time,” Bertarelli said. “I do go to Las Vegas, as well, which I enjoy a lot, but the America’s Cup for me is a different thing than what we had today. I don’t think the race committee should have started the regatta. We waited for two hours and one second before the 5 o’clock time line, we launch a regatta and one minute after the start, we have a 20 degree shift. If Team New Zealand saw right, well good on them.”

“I’m sure for those who are watching, it’s exciting for sure,” he added. “But you know, I think you can go to Las Vegas for that. It’s not exactly what sailing should be, at least at this level. I think this level is about the boat and about the crew. I’m actually more satisfied today than I was on Sunday. That was a race we should have won.”

Whereas the Kiwis have this answer:

“You know we’ve been racing through the Louis Vuitton in conditions a lot worse than that; that’s part of yacht racing,” said Matt Mason, the mastman on Team New Zealand. “That’s the venue here. That’s what Valencia is like on some of these days. You’d lose a lot of days if you didn’t go out and sail in a day like today.”

It is also about the weather call, and Team New Zealand’s afterguard and its team led by Don “Clouds” Badham certainly got it right on the first leg. According to Mason, the mood on board was still far from celebratory.

“You know straight away when you get the lead like that so quickly, it’s probably going to turn their way at some stage,” he said. “Your dream is not going to carry on.”

Tuesday, June 26, 2007

Understanding Current Operations in Iraq

From his latest post, quote by David Kilcullen:
"I know some people in the media are already starting to sort of write off the surge and say Hey, hang on: weve been going since January, we havent seen a massive turnaround; it mustnt be working. What weve been doing to date is putting forces into position. We havent actually started what I would call the surge yet. All weve been doing is building up forces and trying to secure the population. And what I would say to people who say that its already failed is watch this space. Because youre going to see, in fairly short order, some changes in the way were operating that will make whats been happening over the past few months look like what it isjust a preliminary build up."

The difference between "a suicide bomber" and an "Attacker".

What is the difference between the word "Attacker" and the word "Suicide Bomber". Obviously for the NYTimes this is exactly the same. Not for me! To me a suicide Bomber is always worse. So why does the NYTimes put a title like this "Attacker Kills 4 Sunni Sheiks Who Aided U.S." and then start the first sentence of the article like this "A suicide bomber on Monday assassinated ...". Sometimes I just do not understand the totally biased, old fashioned Media, whose freedoms of speech - we should not forget - depend on very democratic values. Free speech does not exist in a place like Iran. I do not understand why the NYTimes does not more vigorously defend the very basic and simple values that make it possible to do her business?

Dealing with Different Tasks

Our working days consists of many tasks. How do we deal with the different tasks throughout the day?

1. New Tasks
Those are the easiest. Because they are fresh and new and you can put your mind to something new. Baisically you can start when ever you feel like it though I believe it is better to start when _you_ want to start or when you _planned_ to start.

2. "A task that makes you angry"
Those are more difficult to deal with emotionally because obviously something did not work out as planned and you are upset and you want to fix it because you are angry. Fixing something because you are angry is never a good idea. I believe it is best when you approach the emergency Task _after_ it has cooled down, after your emotions have cooled down. Put tasks that make you angry in a short period of time ahead of you. First let you anger cool off.

3. Emergency Tasks
Emergency tasks should never happen. If they do happen then you have to deal with them immediately, instantly. There has to be a will in you not wanting to have "emergency tasks". Never.

4. Decide actively what task you want to do next
Who "decides" how you work? Does the task dictate your working schedule or are you deciding what task you want to deal with next. You have to make your choice actively. If you do not make your choice actively the tasks will dictate your working day.

5. Test in peace
When you have to test if what you did really works do it in peace and use the scheduled time. Do not take shortcuts.

Monday, June 25, 2007

Google-Reader is not updating

I do not know about you but Google-Reader is not updating my RSS-Feeds since this morning 0800 GMT. Normally Google-Reader Updates every 5 minutes as I have subscribed to more then 100 RSS-Feeds.

Saturday, June 23, 2007

New Paradigms for 21st Century Conflict

A new piece by David Kilcullen is out, from his post at SWJ:

a. Integrate terrorism, subversion, humanitarian work, and insurgency to support propaganda designed to manipulate the perceptions of local and global audiences.
b. Aggregate the effects of a very large number of grassroots actors, scattered across many countries, into a mass movement greater than the sum of its parts, with dispersed leadership and planning functions that deny us detectable targets.
c. Exploit the speed and ubiquity of modern communications media to mobilize supporters and sympathizers, at speeds far greater than governments can muster.
d. Exploit deep-seated belief systems founded in religious, ethnic, tribal, or cultural identity, to create extremely lethal, nonrational reactions among social groups.
e. Exploit safe havens such as ungoverned or undergoverned areas (in physical or cyber space); ideological, religious, or cultural blind spots; or legal loopholes.
f. Use high-profile symbolic attacks that provoke nation-states into overreactions that damage their long-term interests.
g. Mount numerous, cheap, small-scale challenges to exhaust us by provoking expensive containment, prevention, and response efforts in dozens of remote areas.

Friday, June 22, 2007

Turning on al-Qaeda in Baquba

A interesting article from TIME by Joe Klein. From the article:

After the briefing I asked Colonel Antonia if he'd asked the Sunnis why they had turned against al-Qaeda. "They said it was religious stuff," he said. "AQI demanded that the women wear abayas, no smoking and they preached an extreme version of Islam in the mosque. They'd also spent the winter without food and fuel because of the violence al-Qaeda was causing. One guy said to me, 'We fought against you because you invaded our country and you're infidels. But you treat us with more dignity than al-Qaeda,' and he said they'd continue to work with us. I've been involved in many operations here and this is a first—usually everybody's shooting at us. This is the first time we've had any of them on our side." (In web postings, the 1920 Revolutionary Brigade has denied it is cooperating with the Americans.)

Also Michael Yon criticizes the PAO (Public Affairs Officers) for doing a bad job for the media not giving them the facilities and equipment they need to do good journalistic work.

Michael R. Gordon on the selection of General Petraeus

Another great piece from Michael R. Gordon about General Petraeus copied from here:

Why only 20,000 [additional troops in the surge]? How do we get at the specifics of what they decide to do?

There's a whole discussion now about how big the reinforcement should be. Gen. Casey, he understands that the White House wants a different approach, and he himself has increased his force by some 7,000 in August. So he develops a recommendation, which I think really becomes something for two-brigade reinforcement, which is about another 7,000. ...

And this time, the Iraqis of course [are] supposed to pony up the brigades they never supplied last time, plus one. So the two brigades that never showed last time are supposed to show this time, plus one. So there will be three additional Iraqi brigades, bringing their brigades up to nine. ... So a plan is developed.

Really, until the very last moment, there's an option that's promulgated that's called 2-1-2: two American brigade combat teams in Baghdad; one on call in Kuwait as kind of a reserve force; two on call in the United States, if you need them. It would be sort of a phased introduction of forces. ... The broader context for this is the American military is stretched thin, and there's just not a lot of excess capacity. In fact, there's no excess capacity. ...

So that's a leading option. ... But remember, the White House has seen this movie before. They gave 7,000 troops in August. Now they're talking about another 7,000 troops. It just smacks of incrementalism to the president, to the vice president, to some of his advisers -- another kind of piecemeal effort that's unlikely to be decisive. ...

And another important factor is by this time, the decision has been made that a new strategy requires a new commander, and that new commander is to be Dave Petraeus. And Dave Petraeus -- the former commanding general of the 101st Airborne, former head of the training effort of the Iraqi army in Iraq, and the senior American Army general at Fort Leavenworth who's overseen the development of the new counterinsurgency manual -- wants five brigades, and he wants them as quickly as possible.

He doesn't want to do this incremental approach -- send two; if you need it, send another one; if you need it, send more. He believes that you need mass, because it's a big city; you need everybody you can get. He wants to be decisive, and he wants access to all five brigades. That becomes his position, and it's a position that's very much in tune with the thinking at the White House.

So when the decision is made -- and I believe it's made over just the last few days prior to being announced -- the president opts for the bigger package. And he announces a surge of five brigade combat teams -- not up to five -- five brigade combat teams for Baghdad, two additional battalions for Anbar, and then they're going to hold over a Marine unit there.

So you end up with a force that's upward of 20,000 -- 21,500 or so becomes the total force. And I wouldn't be surprised if it eventually ends up being somewhat larger, although it can't be greatly larger. ...

Who is [Gen.] Jack Keane and what is his role in all of this?

There's a very interesting side story to this. ... Gen. Jack Keane, who was the former vice chief of staff for the Army under Shinseki, was Rumsfeld's choice for a while to replace Shinseki, but was unable to take the job for personal reasons. He becomes a very active force in the discussions outside of government as to what to do next. He has a lot of influence inside the government, and he throws his weight very much behind a surge; in fact, a surge that's even bigger than the one that the president opted for.

He works on a study that's done under the auspices of the American Enterprise Institute and [military historian and AEI resident scholar] Fred Kagan. And there's a very interesting thing about this study that some people haven't noticed, and that is, a lot of the work on this study was done by two recently retired American Army officers. They ... served under H.R. McMaster, and they were part of the unit that took Tal Afar in what is seen to be the kind of textbook case for how to do counterinsurgency -- clear, hold and build, the one the White House always cites, the one that's in the military's counterinsurgency manual.

These two recently retired Army officers did a lot of the technical work on this AEI study calling for a surge -- how you would get the forces, where they would be deployed. And I think this reflects the fact that there's no monolithic view within the Army as to how to proceed in Iraq. ...

[The] selection [of Gen. Petraeus] sends what kind of a signal to the rest of the military and to the rest of the government?

[Petraeus is] obviously a very dedicated, capable and thoughtful officer. He had some success in Mosul in engaging in nation-building activities, which he basically dreamed up himself since nobody else was thinking this way in Baghdad. At a time when [Ambassador L. Paul] Bremer, [head of Coalition Provisional Authority, 2003-2004], was trying to promulgate a very rigid and sweeping de-Baathification effort, Petraeus managed to persuade Bremer to exempt the professors at Mosul University from this, because otherwise he'd have to shut down the university. ...

What you will have now in Baghdad are two people, first of all, who are committed to the idea that additional U.S. troops can be a positive influence, who haven't been committed to the notion that we have to withdraw to transfer responsibility to the Iraqis. But really, they've changed the mission. …

The mission now is going to be population security. And what do I mean by that? It means so much of the effort before was on enabling the Iraqis, getting them to step up, not doing too much because they have to do it, putting them online as quickly as possible. They stand up; we stand down.

I think now the thinking is more is they stand up, and we also stand up, and together we try to do something that we really haven't done that effectively in Baghdad, which is actually protect the people who live there. This is a very tall order. But it's key to their strategy that they're going to try to apply, because the theory is that if you can begin to bring security to these mixed Shi'ite-Sunni neighborhoods and actually protect the population, that population will become less dependent on, let's say, militia forces or rogue elements to provide for their own security. I mean, if you're a Shi'ite and you're getting attacked by Sunnis, and the American military can't protect you and certainly the Iraqi military can't protect you, it's understandable that you might look to Jaish al-Mahdi [the Mahdi Army] as your protector. So part of the theory behind this is if the Americans and the Iraqi security forces bring security to the city, the population will be less inclined to turn to the militias. …

The way it works now is there are these what they call FOBs, forward operating bases, around Baghdad -- Striker, Falcon, Liberty. I've been on these places. You stay with the units there, and they do patrols in the city. They can be long patrols, and they're dangerous patrols. They come back out to the FOB; another unit comes in. They're doing these patrols in and out of the city, but no one's living in these neighborhoods except for maybe a tiny number of possibly American advisers at a police station. …

So one of the big departures here, it's not simply a matter of additional troops; it's an entirely different operational concept. We're going to put forces that will stay in these areas, as Gen. [Raymond] Odierno, [commander, MNC-I, 2006-present], says, 24/7. They're going to be a presence there all the time. And that's the hold phase. The Iraqis are supposed to do most of it, but we're going to be there to make sure it actually happens and to kind of stiffen their spine. This is some of what was done in Tal Afar. So they're applying these lessons in this town out west and trying to do it and scale it up and do it to a larger extent in Baghdad. ...

Really the big challenge is, well, how do you deal with the Mahdi Army? The Mahdi Army has replaced Al Qaeda as the main threat to security in Baghdad. That's in the Pentagon's own public reports. The Shi'ite militias and their agenda to rout the Sunnis and push them out of the city has become the biggest threat to stability in Baghdad.

When I was embedded, the insurgent element was there. But much of what I saw was what they call counter-JAM operations -- counter-Jaish al-Mahdi, trying to keep these Shi'ite militias from killing Sunnis and clamp down on them. But Moqtada al-Sadr, who's a force in the Iraqi government, he has some 70,000 Mahdi Army fighters he can call on. So really the big challenge that's out there is how to deal with the Mahdi Army and how to handle them.

I don't think the Americans are going to want to recreate Mogadishu and go in for a big fight in Sadr City with the Mahdi Army if it can be avoided. I think what they're hoping is by establishing more control over the city, by beefing up the capability of the Iraqis, by being partnered with these Iraqi units and by putting pressure on the Maliki government, they can create a situation where the Mahdi Army maybe restricts its activities to Sadr City and excludes those activities that include going outside the confines and killing Sunnis. I think that's a big part of the strategy that's under way now.

What are the problems here? A, the Iraqis have to send three more brigades -- but they have to really, really send them this time. That has to actually happen. They promised it will happen, but it has to happen. ... B, the Iraqi government has told the Americans: "No more constraints on where you can go in Baghdad. No more of this business [that you can't] pick up this Shi'ite guy because he's a friend of the government even though he might be implicated in a death squad. You find bad guys; there are no inhibitions on what you can do to track them down." That's a commitment that's been made by the Maliki government. Easy to say, but it has to happen in practice. …

Then all of this reconstruction that the Iraqi government has promised and the American government has now committed to also has to happen to build support among the population, because part of what's happening is there's a breakdown in trust, and the breakdown in trust is between the Iraqi citizens and their own government. One way you try to build that trust is by the government actually doing things for its own citizens: picking up the trash, fixing the sewer lines, creating jobs, opening banks instead of closing banks, providing medical services, all these sorts of things that give people a stake in the new order and make it think that the Iraqi authorities in the Green Zone aren't simply a bunch of sectarian leaders who have hijacked authority but actually people who represent their interests. All of this has to happen. It's just a massive challenge.

A great comment by "Conflict Blotter"

Hamas and Fatah have secured their fiefdoms for now anyways, Fatah in the West Bank, Hamas in Gaza. The two will continue their struggle for hearts and minds in the Palestinian street. The campaign will be a comparison between what Hamas has done with Gaza and what Fatah has done with the West Bank. Hamas will tout the restoration of law and order in Gaza, and Fatah will boast of bettering the economy in the West Bank. The Fatah economic model in the West Bank vs the Hamas security model in Gaza.
From Conflict Blotter.

Quote: “Most of the people living in this neighborhood trust the Americans more than the Iraqi Army”

A highly interesting article by Michael R. Gordon in the NYT! This is what I call good journalistic work. More about Michael R. Gordon from pbs.org.

Thursday, June 21, 2007

Opera Mini 4 Beta

I tested the Opera Mini 4 Beta on my Treo 680 and it does not work in a usable manner. I crashed my device twice without being able to load a single search result from Google or ODDB.org. Does anybody have any success with his Opera Mini 4 Beta on a Treo 680?

Baghdad Area


A nice map from BillRoggio.com.

Rice Orders That Diplomatic Jobs in Iraq Be Filled First

Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice ordered this week that U.S. diplomatic positions in Iraq must be filled before any other State Department openings in Washington or overseas are made available, raising the possibility that soon the agency will be forced to order its employees to serve in Iraq.

From the Washington Post

Wednesday, June 20, 2007

My Wedding Movie.



Directed by Jürg Da Vaz.

Start of ‘Arrowhead Ripper’ highlights Iraq operations


“The end state is to destroy the al-Qaeda influences in this province and eliminate their threat against the people," said U.S. Army Brig. Gen. Mick Bednarek, deputy commanding general of operations for the 25th Infantry Division. “That is the number one, bottom-line, up-front, in-your-face task and purpose.”

Tuesday, June 19, 2007

Junge Zürcher Forscher auf der Spur von Terroristen

ETH-Spin-off erhält ZKB-Pionierpreis für radiologischen Detektor.

The Battle of Baqubah II

Bill Roggio about the beginning of "The Battle of Baqubah II".

From the article:
The New York Times, which incorrectly reported the operation as consisting of 2,000 U.S. troops, reported that the western portion of the city of Baqubah has been sealed off with ground a and air units as troops pursue the 300 to 500 Qaeda believed to be operating in the area.
Read the full article here:

Teaching Old Dogs New Tricks.

From the Small Wars Journal.

Iraq's Doctor

A piece from Newsweek about General David Petraeus.

Linux vs MS on the Server Front.