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AFCEA Global Intelligence Update: 12/28/09

December 28th, 2009 | No Comments | Posted in International, Security, analysis

NightWatch

For the Night of 28 December 2009

North Korea: Update. The Ministry of Public Security has imposed a “complete prohibition of foreign currency usage.” The decree was issued on 26 December and went into effect on the 28th.

According to a Daily NK source inside North Hamkyung Province reported, “A declaration on banning the use of U.S. dollars, Yuan and the Euro was publicized on the 26th. The declaration was posted in public places and in every work place starting this morning (28 December).”

A source from Yangkang Province also reported, “From December 28, no foreign currencies can be used. The foreign currencies the declaration meant were dollars, Yuan and the Euro.” According to the source, the cabinet decided this new regulation.

The title of the declaration is, “On punishing severely those who use foreign currencies within our Republic.” The declaration stipulates, “Not for any reason may individuals or organizations possess any foreign currency, with the exception of banks.” Trading enterprises or foreign currency earning organizations are directed to put earned foreign currency in the bank within 24 hours and, if they fail to do so, managers will be punished.

The declaration also states, “All the foreign currencies held by trading enterprises should be put in the bank and, when it is needed for trade, it can be withdrawn after obtaining approval.” Foreigners, meanwhile, have to deposit their currency into a designated account and exchange it for North Korean won.

Apparently, one aim of the currency reform is to strengthen the North Korean currency, which is worthless outside North Korea. Those analysts who speculated that the currency reform somehow was intended to support a plan for opening the economy mistook opening for recentralization of the statist system.

North Korea-US: The Korean Central News Agency confirmed in a brief report, “A U.S. citizen illegally entered the country across the North Korea-China border and has been detained. The person is currently undergoing questioning by a related agency.”

Robert Park, a Korean American fundamentalist Christian, has not been heard of since Christmas Day, when he walked across the frozen Tumen River that borders North Korea and China. Based on comments Park made to Reuters last week, he intended to be arrested and was willing to be executed, if necessary, to draw attention to human rights abuses.

North Korea eventually will expel him, after interrogation, and arrest and torture anyone who helped him inside North Korea.

Pakistan: Security. At least 30 people have been killed and dozens injured in a suicide bombing of a Shia Muslim procession in Karachi, officials said. Ashura on Monday was the climax of the holy period that commemorates the death of the Prophet Muhammad’s grandson.

The attacker was in a procession with tens of thousands of people, according to the Interior Minister. After the explosion, marchers turned their anger on ambulance workers, security forces and journalists. Rioters torched dozens of shops and vehicles, while members of the security forces who had been guarding the procession were pelted with stones.

Pakistan’s security forces have been on high alert as Shia Muslims marked the holy month of Muharram. Obviously this was another in a long line of security lapses. The Shiites will retaliate.

Iran: At least 15 people were killed yesterday during massive anti-government protests in Tehran when opposition supporters clashed with security forces in the streets, Iranian state television reported Monday.

The report said 10 people killed during Sunday’s fierce clashes in the Iranian capital were members of “anti-revolutionary terrorist” groups, apparently referring to opposition supporters. The other five who died were killed by “terrorist groups” in a “suspicious act,” the report said, without elaborating.

Iranian security forces stormed a series of opposition offices on Monday, rounding up at least seven prominent anti-government activists in a new crackdown against the country’s reformist movement, opposition Web sites and activists reported.

Comment: An overreaction phase is in progress. One source reported the Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei is interested in making concessions to the opposition but is prevented by hardliners, presumably in the Islamic Revolutionary Guards.

The pattern conforms to the model. Every crackdown has been followed by a worsening of the opposition in terms of more and more daring outbreaks in more cities and then a relaxation of the restrictions. The sequence of crackdowns that have failed to suppress the opposition has fostered is expansion beyond the ranks of the university students and opposition clerics. A wider portion of the voting public appears to be sympathetic if not supportive.

Opposition blogs claim isolated incidents in which security force members have refused to fire on protestors or have joined them. The reports about refusals to obey orders are unconfirmed. However, this is a critical indicator of deteriorating internal instability conditions that always lead to power sharing.

Somalia anti-piracy patrol: Chinese state media say a hijacked Chinese cargo ship and 25 sailors have been rescued two months after they were seized by pirates off the Somali coast. Xinhua reported the ship and crew were rescued early Monday morning, but didn’t say whether the ship was retaken by force or if a ransom was paid. A Somali pirate outlet reported China paid a ransom of $4 million.

The De Xin Hai was seized 19 October about 700 miles (east of the Somali coast. It is the first Chinese vessel to be hijacked since China deployed a three-ship squadron to the Gulf of Aden last year to join the international anti-piracy flotilla.

End of NightWatch for 28 December.

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AFCEA Global Intelligence Update: 10/27/09

October 27th, 2009 | No Comments | Posted in Government, International, Security

About this post: The post below is my edited summary of John McCreary’s informative, unclassified/open source NightWatch Global Intelligence Update.

afcea_logo_smNightWatch is published by AFCEA, the Armed Forces Communications & Electronics Assn. of which I am a member. Past editions of NightWatch are archived here in their entirety on AFCEA’s site.


UPDATES BY COUNTRY:

Japan: Defense Minister Toshimi Kitazawa told reporters today that Japan is “definitely” withdrawing its naval refueling mission in the Indian Ocean in January, but might provide similar support off the Somali coast for the international fight against pirates. “It’s quite likely the case,” Kitazawa said. “It would be good to use our expertise of refueling somewhere else.”

Officials said that Japan’s future contribution to Afghanistan’s reconstruction would focus on strengthening the police, agriculture and job training, rather than the naval refueling mission, which started in 2001.

Japan-South Korea: Odd. The Maritime Self Defense Force destroyer, Kurama, collided with a South Korean freighter today in the Kammon Strait during the night on 27 October.  Defense Minister Kitazawa told a hastily arranged news conference that the Kurama crew was scrambling to contain a fire in the bow section of the destroyer.

japan warship collision south korea

The incident is “extremely regrettable,” Kitazawa said.  Three MSDF sailors were injured; the Korean crew sustained no injuries. The Strait is narrow and heavily used. Kurama was returning to port from a fleet review.

India-Pakistan: The Indian government today issued an official notice advising Indians against travel into Pakistan because of militant attacks in Punjab Province, where all Sikh gudwaras (temples or shrines) are located, Press Trust of India reported. Travel should halt until security in Pakistan improves, the Indian advisory said.

The warning is intended mainly to prevent Indian Sikhs from making pilgrimages to Sikh religious shrines in Pakistan, according to The Himalayan. The Sikhs straddle Indian and Pakistani Punjab Provinces.  The annual pilgrimage season has begin to visit sites associated with Guru Nanak, the founder of Sikhism, The Guru’s place of birth is Nankana Sahib, which is located near Lahore, the capital of Pakistan’s Punjab Province.

It is not clear that there is a specific Islamist threat against Sikhs, but the advisory also is part of the psychological warfare campaign that India is waging against Pakistan to encourage it to maintain pressure on Islamic extremists.

India-Somali anti-pirate patrol: The Indian Navy has decided to deploy two ships in the Indian Ocean to counter threats from Somali pirates, the Indian Express reported 27 October. According to unidentified sources, the ships will take up duty stations near Mauritius and the Seychelles.

Navy Captain Manohar Nambiar told the press that the Indian Navy has a presence in the region devoted to surveillance that is separate from the Navy ship already patrolling the Gulf of Aden. The guided missile frigate INS Trishul operates with international maritime forces off Aden.

The two warships bound for the Seychelles are the naval amphibious ship INS Shardul and Coast Guard offshore patrol vessel Varuna, which  were originally on a “routine training and surveillance mission” to the waters near Seychelles. Both have naval cadets aboard, but are responding to a Seychelles request to prolong what was a training mission.

Somali pirate depredations near Mauritius and the Seychelles this summer afford India a legitimate cover for maintaining a naval presence off the coast of Africa. These deployments will provide India situational awareness in the western Indian Ocean, serving a purpose similar to India’s base in the Andaman Islands at the mouth of the Malacca Strait in the eastern Indian Ocean. The Indians take seriously the name of the Ocean. Plus, they get to work with US navy remotely piloted aircraft and support crews in the Seychelles.

Nevertheless, according to the Times of India, the External Affairs and Defence Ministries are considering several options for combating piracy off the Seychelles. The government has not decided whether it should approve a “prolonged continuous deployment of Indian warships in those waters, like the ongoing one in the Gulf of Aden. “

According to the Times, in the last 12 months, Indian Navy ships have escorted 644 merchant ships across the 490 nautical mile-long “internationally recommended transit corridor” in the Gulf of Aden, thwarting 13 piracy attempts since October 2008. India’s annual imports through the Gulf of Aden are valued at $50 billion, while exports are estimated at $60 billion.

Pakistan: President Asif Ali Zardari has agreed to give up the presidential power to dissolve the parliament and appoint the heads of military branches, Information Minister Qamar-u-Zaman Kaira said in a televised interview 27 October.  The clause in the constitution that so empowers the presidency was added by former President Musharraf, as a key component of his plan to bless Pakistan with a strong presidential system of government. The National Assembly was a rubber stamp operation under Musharraf. In fairness, he did good things for women’s and citizens’ rights that would never have become law under earlier administrations, but mishandled the Islamists dreadfully.

Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari
Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari

Comment: In 2008, as part of the election compact with former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, Zardari agreed to repeal Musharraf’s measures to re-engineer the government. Zardari apparently has enjoyed the power, but not the accountability. In addition his abuses of patronage have eroded respect for the elected government, whose chief executive is Prime Minister Gilani, not the president, who is head of state. Zardari has promised to honor his promises on this issue in the past, but this is the first time his Information Minister has spoken as his agent to a national audience. Still, seeing is believing in the case of Zardari.

The move would have implications on many levels, assuming Zardari executes this undertaking.  For example, it would restore the National Assembly to its Westminster roots in which the legislative and executive powers of the government reside in the National Assembly.

The Presidency would revert to its British model, of a ceremonial figurehead. That would pretty much nullify an enormous amount of diplomatic energy during the past two years devoted to persuading Zardari, instead of trying to persuade Prime Minister Gilani.

Military hostility to Zardari – for example, for having misstated in public in 2008 Pakistan’s strategic nuclear weapons use policy — would become pointless and misdirected. Reversion to a ceremonial presidency would relieve military pressure for political change.  In other words, it would reduce the threat of a military coup or other action against the President.

It would complicate foreign diplomatic initiatives which would need to be redirected to the parliament (National Assembly). The Presidential system is convenient as a one stop shop, compared to the parliamentary system.

Finally, it would give direction to former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif’s political ambitions. In a strong presidential system, Nawaz must court the provincial legislators as well as the national assembly because in combination they make up the electoral college for the president.  In a restored parliamentary system, Nawaz only needs to get elected to the National Assembly. From there he can do all that would be necessary to become prime minister, including changing constitutional term limits on holding the office of the prime minister.

Stay tuned to this issue because it significantly affects US tactics in dealing with Pakistan, though the administration might not yet appreciate that. Again, assuming Zardari does not renege.

Afghanistan: Gunmen attacked a guest house used by U.N. staff in the Afghan capital of Kabul early Wednesday, killing at least seven people including three U.N. staff, officials said. Heavy gunfire reverberated through the streets shortly after dawn and a large plume of smoke rose over the city following the attack in the Shar-e-Naw district. Kabul police chief Abdul Rahman said seven people were killed, including some attackers, according to The Associated Press.

U.N. spokesman Adrian Edwards confirmed that three U.N. staff were among the dead and one was seriously wounded. He said 20 U.N. staff were known to be registered there, but he was unsure whether all were there at the time of the attack.

afghan_election_woman2
Woman casts her ballot in 2009 Afghan presidential elections

Taliban spokesman Zabiullah Mujahid claimed responsibility for the attack in a telephone call to The Associated Press, saying three militants with suicide vests, grenades and machine guns carried out the assault.  He said three days ago the Taliban issued a statement threatening anyone working on the 7 November runoff election between President Hamid Karzai and Abdullah Abdullah. The Taliban said, “This is our first attack.”

The continuing high level of Taliban and anti-government attacks in late October is a direct reaction to the run-off elections on 7 November.  Mullah Omar and his acolytes failed to stop the election in August and are pleased to have a second chance, apparently.

NightWatch question: Do readers think a “more legitimate” government will result from the runoff election on 7 November? Feedback is invited; please include your reasoning and/or evidence.

The Associated Press published a somewhat counter-intuitive analytical commentary by a Serbian expert –the Serbs actually have experience fighting Muslim insurgents, after their own fashion.

There are already more than 100,000 international troops in Afghanistan working with 200,000 Afghan security forces and police. It adds up to a 12-1 numerical advantage over Taliban rebels, but it hasn’t led to anything close to victory.

Now, the top U.S. and NATO commander in Afghanistan is asking for tens of thousands more troops to stem the escalating insurgency, raising the question of how many more troops it would take to succeed.

The commander, Gen. Stanley McChrystal, says the extra forces are needed to implement a new strategy that focuses on protecting civilians and depriving the militants of popular support in a country where tribal militias may be Taliban today and farmers tomorrow. The

Taliban rebels are estimated to number no more than 25,000. Ljubomir Stojadinovic, a military analyst and guerrilla warfare expert from Serbia, said that although McChrystal’s reinforcements would lift the ratio to 20-1 or more, they would prove counterproductive.

“It’s impossible to regain the initiative by introducing more foreign forces, which will only breed more resentment and more recruits for the enemy,” he said. “The Soviets tried the exact same thing in Afghanistan in the 1980s with disastrous results.” There are currently about 104,000 international troops in Afghanistan, including about 68,000 Americans. Afghan security forces consist of 94,000 troops supported by a similar number of police, bringing the total Allied force to close to 300,000 members

The problem with the Serb’s analysis is the gross numbers do not tell the story. The actual numbers of NATO/ISAF combat soldiers compared to Taliban part-time fighters is probably closer to two-to-one, at best. The number of policemen willing and capable of holding gains achieved by the combat forces is not worth calculating because in every district they are outnumbered by the Taliban and anti-government Pashtun fighters who live in the same districts.

The lessons of Indian operations in Kashmir and Sri Lankan operations against the Tamils indicate that force ratios need to be between 50 and 100 to one to ensure success. Those ratios include combat and holding forces

Iran: Today’s installment of the Iranian slow roll is an announcement that Iran can accept the Russian enrichment proposals with significant changes. Um, that makes the Iranian statement a rejection followed by a counter-proposal.

Muhammad Ali defeats George Forman (1974) with "rope-a-dope" tactics
Muhammad Ali defeats George Forman (1974) with “rope-a-dope” tactics

Note: Legendary boxing champion Muhammad Ali had a technique he called “rope-a-dope,” in which he would use various deception techniques in the ring to maneuver his opponent into a blistering facial beating that was almost inescapable. The “dopes” fell for it almost every time.

Thanks to a brilliant reader for suggesting the explanation of the term rope-a-dope. It perfectly describes Iranian nuclear diplomatic maneuvers.

Ukraine: Former Prime Minister Yanukovych announced today that if re-elected he would make Ukraine strictly neutral and eliminate conscription for the armed forces.

Italy-Afghanistan: For the record. The Italian government announced 400 Italian soldiers will be home by Christmas

Nigeria-China: Nigeria signed a $875 million deal with the Chinese company China Civil Engineering Construction Corporation to build a 125-mile rail line between Abuja and the northern city of Kaduna, Agence France-Pressse and China Daily reported 27 October.  The Chinese government has provided a $500 million loan to Nigeria for the project, which is scheduled to be built over the next three years.

Other segments of the railroad will link Kaduna in the north to Lagos, the former capital, on the coast, as the Chinese said, in a seamless transportation system by 2020. For old hands this will look remarkably like the TANZAM railroad during Mao’s era. The difference is that socialist solidarity has been replaced by economic imperialism. China is doing the same thing in Afghanistan, building a railroad in return for control of the largest copper mine on earth at Aymak.

Japan: Defense Minister Toshimi Kitazawa told reporters today that Japan is “definitely” withdrawing its naval refueling mission in the Indian Ocean in January, but might provide similar support off the Somali coast for the international fight against pirates. “It’s quite likely the case,” Kitazawa said. “It would be good to use our expertise of refueling somewhere else.”

Officials said that Japan’s future contribution to Afghanistan’s reconstruction would focus on strengthening the police, agriculture and job training, rather than the naval refueling mission, which started in 2001.

Japan-South Korea: Odd. The Maritime Self Defense Force destroyer, Kurama, collided with a South Korean freighter today in the Kammon Strait during the night on 27 October. Defense Minister Kitazawa told a hastily arranged news conference that the Kurama crew was scrambling to contain a fire in the bow section of the destroyer.

The incident is “extremely regrettable,” Kitazawa said. Three MSDF sailors were injured; the Korean crew sustained no injuries. The Strait is narrow and heavily used. Kurama was returning to port from a fleet review.

India-Pakistan: The Indian government today issued an official notice advising Indians against travel into Pakistan because of militant attacks in Punjab Province, where all Sikh gudwaras (temples or shrines) are located, Press Trust of India reported. Travel should halt until security in Pakistan improves, the Indian advisory said.

The warning is intended mainly to prevent Indian Sikhs from making pilgrimages to Sikh religious shrines in Pakistan, according to The Himalayan. The Sikhs straddle Indian and Pakistani Punjab Provinces. The annual pilgrimage season has begin to visit sites associated with Guru Nanak, the founder of Sikhism, The Guru’s place of birth is Nankana Sahib, which is located near Lahore, the capital of Pakistan’s Punjab Province.

It is not clear that there is a specific Islamist threat against Sikhs, but the advisory also is part of the psychological warfare campaign that India is waging against Pakistan to encourage it to maintain pressure on Islamic extremists.

India-Somali anti-pirate patrol: The Indian Navy has decided to deploy two ships in the Indian Ocean to counter threats from Somali pirates, the Indian Express reported 27 October. According to unidentified sources, the ships will take up duty stations near Mauritius and the Seychelles.

Navy Captain Manohar Nambiar told the press that the Indian Navy has a presence in the region devoted to surveillance that is separate from the Navy ship already patrolling the Gulf of Aden. The guided missile frigate INS Trishul operates with international maritime forces off Aden.

The two warships bound for the Seychelles are the naval amphibious ship INS Shardul and Coast Guard offshore patrol vessel Varuna, which were originally on a “routine training and surveillance mission” to the waters near Seychelles. Both have naval cadets aboard, but are responding to a Seychelles request to prolong what was a training mission.

Somali pirate depredations near Mauritius and the Seychelles this summer afford India a legitimate cover for maintaining a naval presence off the coast of Africa. These deployments will provide India situational awareness in the western Indian Ocean, serving a purpose similar to India’s base in the Andaman Islands at the mouth of the Malacca Strait in the eastern Indian Ocean. The Indians take seriously the name of the Ocean. Plus, they get to work with US navy remotely piloted aircraft and support crews in the Seychelles.

Nevertheless, according to the Times of India, the External Affairs and Defence Ministries are considering several options for combating piracy off the Seychelles. The government has not decided whether it should approve a “prolonged continuous deployment of Indian warships in those waters, like the ongoing one in the Gulf of Aden. “

According to the Times, in the last 12 months, Indian Navy ships have escorted 644 merchant ships across the 490 nautical mile-long “internationally recommended transit corridor” in the Gulf of Aden, thwarting 13 piracy attempts since October 2008. India’s annual imports through the Gulf of Aden are valued at $50 billion, while exports are estimated at $60 billion.

Pakistan: President Asif Ali Zardari has agreed to give up the presidential power to dissolve the parliament and appoint the heads of military branches, Information Minister Qamar-u-Zaman Kaira said in a televised interview 27 October. The clause in the constitution that so empowers the presidency was added by former President Musharraf, as a key component of his plan to bless Pakistan with a strong presidential system of government. The National Assembly was a rubber stamp operation under Musharraf. In fairness, he did good things for women’s and citizens’ rights that would never have become law under earlier administrations, but mishandled the Islamists dreadfully.

Comment: In 2008, as part of the election compact with former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, Zardari agreed to repeal Musharraf’s measures to re-engineer the government. Zardari apparently has enjoyed the power, but not the accountability. In addition his abuses of patronage have eroded respect for the elected government, whose chief executive is Prime Minister Gilani, not the president, who is head of state. Zardari has promised to honor his promises on this issue in the past, but this is the first time his Information Minister has spoken as his agent to a national audience. Still, seeing is believing in the case of Zardari.

The move would have implications on many levels, assuming Zardari executes this undertaking. For example, it would restore the National Assembly to its Westminster roots in which the legislative and executive powers of the government reside in the National Assembly.

The Presidency would revert to its British model, of a ceremonial figurehead. That would pretty much nullify an enormous amount of diplomatic energy during the past two years devoted to persuading Zardari, instead of trying to persuade Prime Minister Gilani.

Military hostility to Zardari – for example, for having misstated in public in 2008 Pakistan’s strategic nuclear weapons use policy — would become pointless and misdirected. Reversion to a ceremonial presidency would relieve military pressure for political change. In other words, it would reduce the threat of a military coup or other action against the President.

It would complicate foreign diplomatic initiatives which would need to be redirected to the parliament (National Assembly). The Presidential system is convenient as a one stop shop, compared to the parliamentary system.

Finally, it would give direction to former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif’s political ambitions. In a strong presidential system, Nawaz must court the provincial legislators as well as the national assembly because in combination they make up the electoral college for the president. In a restored parliamentary system, Nawaz only needs to get elected to the National Assembly. From there he can do all that would be necessary to become prime minister, including changing constitutional term limits on holding the office of the prime minister.

Stay tuned to this issue because it significantly affects US tactics in dealing with Pakistan, though the administration might not yet appreciate that. Again, assuming Zardari does not renege.

Afghanistan: Gunmen attacked a guest house used by U.N. staff in the Afghan capital of Kabul early Wednesday, killing at least seven people including three U.N. staff, officials said. Heavy gunfire reverberated through the streets shortly after dawn and a large plume of smoke rose over the city following the attack in the Shar-e-Naw district. Kabul police chief Abdul Rahman said seven people were killed, including some attackers, according to The Associated Press.

U.N. spokesman Adrian Edwards confirmed that three U.N. staff were among the dead and one was seriously wounded. He said 20 U.N. staff were known to be registered there, but he was unsure whether all were there at the time of the attack.

Taliban spokesman Zabiullah Mujahid claimed responsibility for the attack in a telephone call to The Associated Press, saying three militants with suicide vests, grenades and machine guns carried out the assault. He said three days ago the Taliban issued a statement threatening anyone working on the 7 November runoff election between President Hamid Karzai and Abdullah Abdullah. The Taliban said, “This is our first attack.”

The continuing high level of Taliban and anti-government attacks in late October is a direct reaction to the run-off elections on 7 November. Mullah Omar and his acolytes failed to stop the election in August and are pleased to have a second chance, apparently.

NightWatch question: Do readers think a “more legitimate” government will result from the runoff election on 7 November? Feedback is invited; please include your reasoning and/or evidence.

The Associated Press published a somewhat counter-intuitive analytical commentary by a Serbian expert –the Serbs actually have experience fighting Muslim insurgents, after their own fashion.

There are already more than 100,000 international troops in Afghanistan working with 200,000 Afghan security forces and police. It adds up to a 12-1 numerical advantage over Taliban rebels, but it hasn’t led to anything close to victory.

Now, the top U.S. and NATO commander in Afghanistan is asking for tens of thousands more troops to stem the escalating insurgency, raising the question of how many more troops it would take to succeed.

The commander, Gen. Stanley McChrystal, says the extra forces are needed to implement a new strategy that focuses on protecting civilians and depriving the militants of popular support in a country where tribal militias may be Taliban today and farmers tomorrow. The

Taliban rebels are estimated to number no more than 25,000. Ljubomir Stojadinovic, a military analyst and guerrilla warfare expert from Serbia, said that although McChrystal’s reinforcements would lift the ratio to 20-1 or more, they would prove counterproductive.

“It’s impossible to regain the initiative by introducing more foreign forces, which will only breed more resentment and more recruits for the enemy,” he said. “The Soviets tried the exact same thing in Afghanistan in the 1980s with disastrous results.” There are currently about 104,000 international troops in Afghanistan, including about 68,000 Americans. Afghan security forces consist of 94,000 troops supported by a similar number of police, bringing the total Allied force to close to 300,000 members

The problem with the Serb’s analysis is the gross numbers do not tell the story. The actual numbers of NATO/ISAF combat soldiers compared to Taliban part-time fighters is probably closer to two-to-one, at best. The number of policemen willing and capable of holding gains achieved by the combat forces is not worth calculating because in every district they are outnumbered by the Taliban and anti-government Pashtun fighters who live in the same districts.

The lessons of Indian operations in Kashmir and Sri Lankan operations against the Tamils indicate that force ratios need to be between 50 and 100 to one to ensure success. Those ratios include combat and holding forces.

Iran: Today’s installment of the Iranian slow roll is an announcement that Iran can accept the Russian enrichment proposals with significant changes. Uh… that makes the Iranian statement a rejection followed by a counter-proposal.

Note: When boxing champion Mohammed Ali was known as Cassius Clay, he had a boxing technique he called “rope-a-dope” in which he would use various deception techniques in the ring to maneuver his opponent into a blistering facial beating that was almost inescapable. The “dopes” fell for it almost every time.

Thanks to a brilliant reader for suggesting the explanation of the term rope-a-dope. It perfectly describes Iranian nuclear diplomatic maneuvers.

Ukraine: Former Prime Minister Yanukovych announced today that if re-elected he would make Ukraine strictly neutral and eliminate conscription for the armed forces.

Italy-Afghanistan: For the record. The Italian government announced 400 Italian soldiers will be home by Christmas

Nigeria-China: Nigeria signed a $875 million deal with the Chinese company China Civil Engineering Construction Corporation to build a 125-mile rail line between Abuja and the northern city of Kaduna, Agence France-Pressse and China Daily reported 27 October. The Chinese government has provided a $500 million loan to Nigeria for the project, which is scheduled to be built over the next three years.

Other segments of the railroad will link Kaduna in the north to Lagos, the former capital, on the coast, as the Chinese said, in a seamless transportation system by 2020. For old hands this will look remarkably like the TANZAM railroad during Mao’s era. The difference is that socialist solidarity has been replaced by economic imperialism. China is doing the same thing in Afghanistan, building a railroad in return for control of the largest copper mine on earth at Aymak.

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