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From:
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Monday, October 14, 2013 11:24 AM
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October 14 update
14 October, 2013
Article 1.
=1 - Monitor
US Has Time, Rouhani Doesn't
=enneth M. Pollack
=a href="#b">Article 2.
=he National Interest
Syria: It Wasn't Isolationism
John Mueller <http://nationalinterest.org/profilehohn-=ueller>
Article 3.
=1-Monitor
Meshaal to Tehran: Return of the Prodigal Son?
Ali Hashem for AI-Monitor chttp://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/contents/=uthors/ali-hashemi.html>
=a href="ftd">Article 4.
=olitico
President Obama's foreign policy shift
=osh Gerstein
Article 5.
=he Washington Post
Obama's bad choices on Egypt
Jackson Diehl chttp://www.washingtonpost.com/jackson-die=l/2011/02/24/ABccMXN_page.html>
Article 6.
=tratfor
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The Evolution of War
=eorge Friedman and Robert D. Kaplan
=rticle 7.
=YT
A Surprising Case Against Foreign Aid
=red Andrews
&=bsp;
&nbs=;
&n=sp;
Arti=le 1.
Al - Monitor=/p>
US Has Time, =ouhani Doesn't
Kenneth M. Pollackaspan>
October 13 - This w=ek, the United States and its allies will enter another round of=negotiations with Iran, this one more
hopeful as a result of Hassan Rouhan='s election as Iranian president and his repeated statements that he wants a deal
to end Iran's nuclear impasse. One=of the foundational assumptions of the American approach to these negotiat=ons all
along has been that the West doesn't have time and the Iranians =o. As a result, the United States has insisted that the
talks cannot be allowed to drag on. They need to be concluded qui=kly. The rationale behind this assumption is that the
Iranians care more a=out retaining their nuclear program than they do about having sanctions li=ted, and their goal is
merely to stave off worse measures by the West — either US or Israeli militar= operations, or even harsher sanctions —
while they continue to enrich u=anium and draw closer and closer to acquiring a breakout capability. (A br=akout
capability is the ability to quickly field a workable nuclear weapon. Although the term "quickly" is undefi=ed and has
changed significantly over the years, it is often described as =eaning "faster than the West could act to prevent it.")
It was not wrong or=misguided to believe this. In the past, there was good reason to believe i= was entirely correct.
However, today, the evidence suggests that it is fu=damentally mistaken, and that it is the Iranians, particularly Rouhani,
who face time pressures more than the =est.
Let's start with =he Iranian side. Rouhani is unquestionably looking to change Iran's situ=tion both internally and
externally. In particular, he is undoubtedly look=ng for a deal on the nuclear program that, at the very least, would see
Iran compromise on its enrichment program in =eturn for sanctions relief. He may very well be willing to go further
than=that. Certainly, he has suggested as much.
The claims that Rou=ani is a "wolf in sheep's clothing," that he does not represent=a significant change in Iran's
demeanor, simply do not stand up to scrut=ny. This is neither the time nor the place for a full explication of the evidence
— there is too much to be presented in = short essay, and with the nuclear talks about to begin, Iran's behavior=in those
talks should be allowed to stand as the best proof for either the=ry. Suffice it to say that the evidence so far available is
overwhelming that Rouhani clearly wants change of some=kind, and that he is already paying a price for it at home. He
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has been re=eatedly attacked by Iran's hard-liners, who are uninterested in a deal.&=bsp; But Rouhani has persevered,
suggesting that this deal is important to him. He has twice said publicly that h= needs the deal soon — in one instance,
he argued for three to six month= — because if he cannot demonstrate quickly to Iran's supreme leader, =yatollah Ali
Khamenei, and his hard-line rivals that he can secure meaningful compromises from the West, they will use his=failure
to curtail his room for further maneuver.
In fact, it's curio=s that Rouhani chose to make resolving the nuclear impasse his first major=policy move. Most
politicians would have chosen to start by tackling small=r, domestic problems related to Iran's economy or political
system as a way of racking up some quick wins to bols=er their political position before turning to a major foreign policy
gambi=.
Moreover, this one =s focused on a foreign policy problem that has proven utterly intractable =or years; represents a
core difference with Iran's powerful hard-line fa=tion; requires a deal that the supreme leader himself may oppose; and
relies on Iran's repeatedly proclaimed gr=atest adversary to do the right thing for the Islamic Republic. In ma=y ways, it
is a gamble of monumental proportions, which again should reinf=rce both our sense that Rouhani is serious about
getting a deal and the notion that he is probably ready to make sign=ficant compromises to get it. But it also gives
credence to Rouhani's ow= warning that he needs this deal soon, or else his presidency could be cri=pled by its failure.
On our side, the ev=dence of the past few years gives reason to reassess our assumptions about=Iran's nuclear strategy.
Of greatest importance, Iran has been deliberat=ly refraining from pursuing a nuclear weapon as quickly as it could have.
At first, many feared that once =ran began large-scale enrichment activities, it would simply enrich enough=uranium for
one bomb to weapons grade (90% purity or better) and then deto=ate a crude bomb. Iran achieved that capability in
about 2008, yet they did not break out. Then, the fear=was that once the Iranians accumulated enough low-enriched
uranium (3.5% p=rity) for one bomb they would immediately enrich that to weapons grade and=break out. Iran passed
that benchmark in about 2010, and again they did not do so.
Next, the fear was =hat once Iran had acquired enough uranium enriched to 19.75% purity (somet=mes called "medium-
enriched uranium") for one bomb it would immediatel= convert that to weapons grade and break out. Iran passed that
benchmark in 2012, and again, it chose not do =o. In fact, instead, Iran has regularly converted some of its "medi=m-
enriched uranium" to plates for the Tehran Research Reactor (which mak= them difficult to further enrich for weapons),
and it has done so to ensure that it has less than a bomb's worth of med=um-enriched uranium on hand at any time.
This behavior is im=ortant because it demonstrates that whatever Iran does ultimately intend f=r its nuclear program —
and there should be no doubt that its current nurlear program is a military program meant to produce weapons, not a
civilian program meant to produce electricity =97 Tehran has consciously decided not to break out and race for an
arsenal=and has held to that policy for at least five years. Israel's form=r chief of military intelligence, Amos Yadlin, and
Israeli nuclear expert Yoel Guzansky have called attention to this imp=rtant pattern, noting that "Iran is not advancing
toward the bomb at as =apid a pace as it could. It appears to realize that such progress would br=ng with it negative
strategic repercussions."
Just why Iran has c=osen not to go ahead and weaponize remains a mystery, but there are at lea=t four powerful factors
that, taken together, probably have convinced Tehr=n not to do so for now. These include the threat of an Israeli or
(more likely) American military attack; fear t=at the United States would greatly ramp up its covert action and
cyberwarf=re campaigns against Iran if it decided to weaponize; fear that the Saudis=would obtain nuclear weapons of
their own if Iran did; and, of greatest importance to my mind, fear that t=e Chinese and Indians would join the Western
sanctions against Iran becaus= Beijing and New Delhi have made it clear to Tehran that while they do not=support a war
against Iran, they are dead-set against an Iranian nuclear arsenal.
What's important =bout these factors is that all remain firmly in place. If they have =een adequate to dissuade Iran from
exercising its breakout capability for =he past five years, it is likely that they will continue to do so for some time to
come. Indeed, in spring 2013= both President Barack Obama and Israeli Prime Minister Ben=amin Netanyahu publicly
stated that it would take Iran a year or more=to field a workable nuclear weapon from a decision to do so (a decision
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that has not been given). That is a pretty wide break=ut window, and it will take some time — probably several years —
for l=an to narrow it significantly. Thus, even if we continue to fear that=Tehran's game is to play for time until it has
narrowed that breakout window — a claim inconsistent with Rouhani's cu=rent behavior, but perhaps what Iran's hard-
liners have in mind — we d= not need to fear that Iran will be in that position for some time to come=
This is neither an =rgument for complacency nor for lowballing the Iranians on the assumption =hat we are now in a
more advantageous bargaining position than they are. W= simply do not know what Rouhani will ultimately be willing or
able to put on the table as part of a nuclear dea=. We also don't know if he can sell any nuclear deal that we would
accep= to Iran's supreme leader and the hard-liners back in Tehran. But he rep=esents the best opportunity we have had
to get a negotiated settlement to one of the most dangerous problems i= the world today. If he makes us a decent
offer, we should take it =97 and hope to build on it to deal with other problematic aspects of Irani=n behavior like its
support for terrorist groups. And we should try to move quickly because he needs to, not because=we need to.
<http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/contents/=uthors/kenneth-m-pollack.htm I>
Kenneth M. Polla=k is a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution and the author most rece=tly of Unthinkable: Iran, the
Bomb and American Strategy.<=p>
gspan>
Arti=Ie 2.
The National Intere=t
Syria: It Was='t Isolationism
John Mueller <http://nationalinterest.org/profile/john-=ueller>
October 14, 2013 --=One popular explanation for the American public's palpable unwillingness=to countenance military
involvement in the Syrian civil war was that the c=untry has slumped into a deep isolationist mood. But the reaction
scarcely represents a "new=isolationism <http://w.w.nytimes.com/2013/09/09/opinion/keller-our-new-
isolationism.html?pagewant=drall&_r=0> [3J" or a "growing isolationism
chttp://www.nytimes.com/2013/09/13/opinion=global/cohen-an-anchorless-world.html?hp& _r=0> [41" or a "new
noninterventionist fad <http://www.washingtonp=st.com/blogs/right-turn/wp/2013/09/08/rubio-and-others-run-from-
internatio=alism-when-it-matters/?hpid=z3> (5)."=Rather, there has always been a deep reluctance to lose American
lives or =o put them at risk overseas for humanitarian purposes.
In Bosnia, for exam=le, the United States held off intervention on the ground until hostilitie= had ceased, and, even
then, the public was anything but enthusiastic when=American peacekeeping soldiers were sent in. Bombs, not boots,
were sent to Kosovo. In Somalia, the United Sta=es abruptly withdrew its troops when eighteen of them were killed in a
cha=tic firefight in 1993. The United States, like other developed nations, ha= mostly stood aloof in many other
humanitarian disasters such as those in Congo, Rwanda and Sudan. The count=y did get involved in Libya, but the
operation was strained and hesitant, =nd there was little subsequent enthusiasm to do much of anything about
the=conflict in neighboring Mali.
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This perspective is-seen most clearly, perhaps, when pollsters presented Americans in 1993 wit= the statement,
"Nothing the U.S. could accomplish in Somalia is worth t=e death of even one more U.S. soldier." Fully 60 percent
expressed agreement. This is not such an unusual position=for humanitarian ventures. If Red Cross or other workers are
killed while =arrying out humanitarian missions, their organizations frequently threaten=to withdraw, no matter how
much good they may be doing.
Some commentators, =ncluding such unlikely soulmates as Andrew Bacevich, Robert Kagan, John Me=rsheimer, Rachel
Maddow and Vladimir Putin, have variously maintained that=we have seen the rise of a new American militarism in the
last decades or that Americans hail from Mars.
But that perspectiv= extrapolates far too much from the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. In these=cases, opinion was
impelled not by a propensity toward militarism, but, as=with entry into World War II, by the reaction to a direct attack
on the United States. These ventures—the 9/1= wars—have proved to be aberrations from usual patterns, not portents
of=the future. Although they demonstrate that Americans remain willing to str=ke back hard if attacked, they do not
indicate a change in the public's reticence about becoming militarily in=olved in other kinds of missions, particularly
humanitarian ones.</=>
An examination of t=e trends in a poll question designed to tap "isolationism" does not su=gest a surge of militarism.
Instead, it documents something of a rise in p=blic wariness regarding military intervention beginning with the Vietnam
War and, thereafter, a fair amount of steadines= punctured by spike-like ups and downs in response to current events,
incl=ding 9/11 and its ensuing wars.
Since 1945, pollste=s have periodically asked, "Do you think it will be best for the future 4 this country if we take an
active part in world affairs, or if we stayed=out of world affairs?" The question seems to have been framed to generate
an "internationalist" response. In 194=, after all, the United States possessed something like half of the wealth=of the
world and therefore scarcely had an option about "taking an activ= part in world affairs," as it was so blandly and
unthreateningly presented. And, so queried, only 19 percent=span style="font-size:18.0pt"> [61 of poll respondents in
1945 picked the "stay out" or "isolationist" o=tion. The authors of the poll question got the number they probably
wanted=
(Actually, to gener=te high levels of this quality, the query can be reformulated to "We sho=ldn't think so much in
international terms but concentrate more on our own=national problems and building up our strength and prosperity
here at home." In that rendering, measured "is=lationism" registers <http://www.gallup.com/poll/22489/little-change-
isolationi=t-sentiment-among-americans.aspx> 17130 to =0 percentage points higher.)
In the post-war yea=s the "stay out" percentage rose <http://www.ropercenter.uconn.edu/public-
perspective/ppsca./43/43095.pdf> 161 a bit to around 25 percent, bu= it had descended to 16 percent in 1965 in the
aftermath of the 1962 Cuban missile crisis and as the war in Vietna= was about to begin. The experience of that war
pushed it much higher—to=31 to 36 percent—as part of what has been called the "Vietnam syndrome="
It has stayed at ar=und that level ever since. There was a temporary downward dip during the G=lf War of 1991 and
interesting spikes upward at the time of the Kosovo con=lict in 1999 even though no American troops were lost and
even though it was deemed successful at the time. And= in this century, the "stay out" percentage dropped to 14, its
lowest =ecorded level, in the aftermath of 9/11. It rose the next year, and then p=unged downward again in 2003 and
2004, the first two years of the Iraq War. By 2006, however, it had risen again =o post-Vietnam levels where it has
remained through 2012
<http://www.thechicagocouncil.org/UserFiles/File/Task%20Fo=ce%20Reports/2012_CCS_Report.pdf> (8], th= last time
the question was asked.
Given the bland att=activeness of the "take an active part in world affairs" option, it is=impressive that around a third or
more of the public since Vietnam has gen=rally rejected it to embrace the "stay our option. However, this is likely to be
more nearly an expression of =ariness about costly and frustrating military entanglements than a serious=yearning for
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full withdrawal. There is, for example, no real indication th=t Americans want to erect steely trade barriers. And polls
chttp://www.alternet.org/story/20030/=mericans_say_no_to_unilateralism> [9], including ones on Syria
<http://www.people-press.org/2013/09/03/public-opinion-run=-against-syrian-airstrikes/> [10], conti=ually show that
the public is far more likely to approve foreign ventures if they are approved and supported by a=lies and international
organizations. Real isolationism should be made of =terner stuff.
The public response=to intervention in Syria also suggests that people, contrary to a large li=erature, are not readily
manipulable by "opinion elites." The Obama ad=inistration dramatically proposed military action in response to chemical
weapons use in Syria, and leaders of both p=rties in Congress rather quickly fell into line. Moreover, these bipartisa=
"leadership cues" were accompanied by disturbing photographs of the c=rpses of Syrian children apparently killed in the
attack.
Nonetheless, the Am=rican public has been decidedly unwilling <http://www.people-press.org/2013/09/03/public-
opinion-run=-against-syrian-airstrikesh [10] =ven to support the punitive bombing of Syria—a venture likely to risk few
if any American lives—out of concer= that it would lead to further involvement in the conflict there. And the =.S. public
has remained suspicious of, and therefore immune to, repeated a=surances from President Barack Obama that he has
categorically ruled out putting "boots on the ground <http://ww=.cnn.com/2013/05/04/world/meast/us-syria-
obama/index.html> (11]" in Syria.
Leaders may propose=acting abroad, but that doesn't mean public opinion will move in concert, =hat people will
necessarily buy the message. And on the occasions when the= do, it is probably best to conclude that the message has
struck a responsive chord, rather than that the publi= has been manipulated.
Ideas are like comm=rcial products. Some become embraced by the customers while most, no matte= how well
packaged or promoted, fail to ignite acceptance or even passing =nterest. It is a process that is extremely difficult to
predict and even more difficult to manipulate.
John Mueller is = political scientist at Ohio State University and a senior fellow at the C=to Institute. Among his books are
War, Presidents and Public Opinion, Poli=y and Opinion in the Gulf War, Atomic Obsession: Nuclear Alarmism from
Hiroshima to AI-Qaeda, and War and Ideas.=This article expands on, and much more fully develops,
commentaryq=pan> <http://m.indianexpress.com/news/caution-syria-ahead/1=62441/> [12] presented earlier in=the
year in the Indian Express.
Links:
[1] http://www.addthis.com/book=ark.php?v=250&username=nationalinterest
[2] http://nationalinterest.org/profile/john-mueller
[3] http://www.nytimes.com/2013/09/09/opinion/keller-our-new-isolationism.h=ml?pagewantedrall&_r=0
[4] http://www.nytimes.com/2013/09/13/opinion/global/cohen-an-anchorless-wo=ld.html?hp&_r=0
[5] http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/right-turn/wp/2013/09/08/rubio-and-=thers-run-from-internationalism-
when-it-matters/?hpid=z3
[6] http://www.ropercenter.uconn.edu/public-perspective/ppscan/43/43095.pdf=br> [7]
http://www.gallup.com/poll/22489/little-change-isolationist-sentiment-a=ong-americans.aspx
[8] http://www.thechicagocouncil.org/UserFiles/File/Task%20Force%20Reports/=012_CCS_Report.pdf
[9] http://www.alternet.org/story/20030/americans_say_no_to_unilateralism [10] http://www.people-
press.org/2013/09/03/public-opinion-runs-against-syr=an-airstrikes/
(11] http://www.cnn.com/2013/05/04/world/meast/us-syria-obama/index.html
[13] https://secure.flickr.com/photos/victoriapeckham/164175205/in/set-7215=602263959625/
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[141 http://nationalinterest.org/topic/politics/public-opinion
[151 http://nationalinterest.org/topic/politics
[161 http://nationalinterest.org/region/middle-east/levant/syria
=/span>
Arti=le 3.
Al-Monitor</=>
Meshaal to Te=ran: Return of the Prodigal Son?
Ali Hashem for AI-Monitor <http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/contents/=uthors/ali-hashemi.html>
October 13 -- Khale= Meshaal will visit Iran. This has been confirmed by Al-Monitor's source= in Tehran, but still
unconfirmed — to us and Meshaal — is the timing.=/span>
It was obvious that=relations between Hamas, the strong Palestinian resistance faction, a=d Iran, its regional backer,
deteriorated due to conflicting interests in =yria. Iran backed its ally Bashar al-Assad while Hamas decided it was time to
ally with its ideological mother, the M=slim Brotherhood, which was already gaining ground in Tunisia, Egypt and w=s a
favorite to rule Syria, in case the revolution succeeded in toppling t=e regime.
But out of the blue=the situation changed. The Brotherhood in Egypt was toppled, and Hamas fou=d itself up a blind
alley. A previous piece I wrote for Al-Monitor on Aug.=12 explains how llamas =nd Iran began this new chapter and who
were=the main players.
In Tehran, there wa= still a wing that thought the revival of relations with Hamas needed a co=fidence-building process,
an Iranian source close to this wing told Al-Mon=tor, adding, "What happened during two years of crisis in Syria raised
concerns over the benefit of supportin= a group that, at the first serious junction, turned around and placed its=lf in the
camp of our enemies." The source stated, "Since there =s a consensus on closin= the old chapter completely= we don't
mind, but it's better to frame the relation."
A well-informed sou=ce in Tehran told Al-Monitor that one month ago, at the funeral of Quds Fo=ce commander Qasem
Soleimani's mother, Hamas official Mohammad Nasr visite= Tehran to pay condolences to the man who is believed to
oversee and manage Iran's influence in the Middle Eas=. The source revealed that there was a suggestion that Meshaal
himself lea= a delegation to the funeral, but the Iranians thought it too early to bro=ch this stage. "Khaled Meshaal
personally is responsible for the old chapter. There were historical leaders in Hamas=who opposed his anti-Iran policies,
therefore Iran was waiting a real chan=e. Here, the problem is with Meshaal himself and not with Hamas anymore.=94
Nasr's move was a= icebreaker with respect to direct contact between Meshaal and the Iranian=leadership, with an
agreement settled to take the relations further. In th=s regard, days ago, Nasr visited Tehran once again carrying a
message from Meshaal, who at almost the same time wa= delivering a speech from Istanbul via videolink to a gathering
in Beirut =egarding Jerusalem. In his speech, Meshaal stated that he's with the&nbs=;peop=e's right to protest
peacefully=and not raise weapons, calling on those fighting to direct their arms towa=d Israel and seek to liberate
Jerusalem from Israeli occupation.
Meshaal's stances=were seen as positive in Tehran, and from here, it is believed that the se=ond stage will start. The
second stage means an official visit by Hamas=92 leader to the Iranian ca=ital. A Palestinian source in Tehran told Al-
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Monitor that Meshaal expresse= his willingness to visit Tehran and the Iranians welcomed the move, but the only thing
pending is the timing. Sour=es believe there are few hurdles blocking Meshaal's way, but this doesn=92t mean the
relation with Hamas isn't improving: "Hamas is regarded a= part of the bloc, and Iran is assisting them. As far as they are
resisting Israel, then they can bet on us."
It's important to=mention that despite the ups and downs of Iran and Hamas' relationship, th= group's office in Tehran
didn't close, its representative never left an= visits from several of the group's military and political officials didn't stop.
On a final note, an=Iranian official said, "If Meshaal is to visit Tehran at any time, for s=re, you're not going to know the
timing from media outlets. He'll come=to Tehran and then people will know, Abu al-Walid (Meshaal] is a resistance
leader and there are security measures =o be taken to keep him safe."
Arti=le 4.
Politico
President Oba=a's foreign policy shift
Josh Gerstein
October 13 - Presid=nt Barack Obama's decision to slash aid to Egypt's military government=is the latest sign of a course
correction shifting the U.S. foreign and na=ional security policies back to the idealistic themes central to his 2008
campaign.
On issue after issu=, Obama's recent moves seem aimed at recapturing principles he articulat=d five years ago as a
candidate crusading against what he portrayed as Pre=ident George W. Bush's overreliance on executive power and
failure to uphold American values like human rights. =93I'll turn the page on the imperial presidency," Obama declared
in 20=7. "We'll be the country that credibly tells the dissidents in the pri=on camps around the world that America is
your voice, America is your dream, America is your light of justice."
In his first term, =arious events pushed Obama into a pragmatic realpolitik as he dramatically=escalated the use of
armed drones, acquiesced in crackdowns on dissent in =ountries like Bahrain and bypassed Congress to maintain a
military operation in Libya.
Now, Obama is chang=ng course.
U.S. military raids=in Libya and Somalia last weekend seemed squarely aimed at capturing suspe=ts rather than killing
them with drones. Obama is again taking modest step= to move prisoners out of Guantanamo Bay. And when he
decided in August that military action was needed to resp=nd to Syria's alleged use of chemical weapons, he surprised
many on his =wn staff by insisting that the action be taken to Congress for approval.</=pan>
Obama hasn't admi=ted to major mistakes on national security policy in his first term, but h= has acknowledged dangers
in some of his own policies and called for Ameri=a to open a new chapter in the fight against terrorism.
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"With a decade of-experience now to draw from, this is the moment to ask ourselves hard ques=ions — about the
nature of today's threats and how we should confront =hem," he said in May. "America is at a crossroads. We must
define the nature and scope of this struggle, or else it will defi=e us."
Obama also seemed t= be confessing to a degree of overreliance on tools like drones, when he d=clared: 'The very
precision of drone strikes and the necessary secrecy o=ten involved in such actions.... can also lead a president and his
team to view drone strikes as a cure-all for terr=rism."
Some analysts see O=ama recalibrating in part out of concern that his foreign policy and natio=al security legacy was at
risk of being defined in shorthand as "drones =nd surveillance."
"In every adminis=ration, the first term is about the election and the second term is about =egacy," said former State
Department spokesman P.J. Crowley. "At the m=dway point, the White House did look at what was promised in 2008,
what we will be judged on in 2017 and what still rem=ins on the to-do list." The recent shifts may have been inspired by
or a= least fueled by a reshuffle in senior national security positions that sa= Susan Rice replace Tom Donilon to National
Security Adviser and installed Samantha Power as the U.S. Ambassa=or at the United Nations.
'The playbook has='t changed, but when you change the coaching staff, you do change the fi=st instinct," Crowley said.
"It's possible that over time we'll se= a different play selection."
Rice and Power are =oth seen as more activist and willing to take action in humanitarian crise=, such as Libya and Syria.
They may also be more inclined to incur the wra=h of authoritarian regimes like Egypt's military government in order to
signal U.S. support for democracy and huma= rights.
When the U.S. annou=ced Wednesday that Obama had decided suspending delivery of cash assistanc= and major
weapons systems to Egypt's government, officials acknowledged=that more conciliatory efforts to coax military leaders
into returning to democracy had failed. "I =on't think anyone would claim there's going to be any direct line betw=en
decisions that we're announcing on assistance and immediate changes o= the ground in Egypt exactly in line with what
we are urging the Egyptians to do," said a senior administration official w=o spoke on condition of anonymity. "But at
the same time, the president =ade clear how important these things are to us and this decision just unde=scores that
the United States will not support actions that run contrary to our interest and our principles. =nd it's important to be
clear about those things." M=ny national security experts sense that a shift is underway on various fro=ts, but say it's
hard to divine with certainty since the foreign policy and national security sphere involves responding to cri=es as they
arise.
"It's like clim=te change," said Ben Wittes of the Brookings Institution. "You have we=ther events and some sort of
aggregate change, but to what extent should y=u attribute any weather event to climate change?" The pair of U.S.
military operations in Libya and Somalia last weekend cau=ht the eye of many experts because the raids seemed
squarely aimed at capt=ring terrorism suspects rather than killing them with drones, as the admin=stration sought to do
on hundreds of occasions during Obama's first term.
Josh Gerstein is=a White House reporter for POLITICO, specializing in legal and national se=urity issues.
gspan>
Arti=le 5.
The Washington Post=
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Obama's bad=choices on Egypt
Jackson Diehl <http://www.washingtonpost.com/jackson-die=l/2011/02/24/ABccMXN_page.html> <1=>
13 October -- Presi=ent Obama tends to describe Egypt <http://www.whitehouse.govithe-press-
office/2013/09/24/rem=rks-president-obama-address-united-nations-general-assembly> as a distasteful conflict
betwe=n an autocratic military and its secular supporters and the Islamist Musli= Brotherhood, which won democratic
elections but is intolerant and anti-We=tern. That view is aggressively reinforced by Cairo's de facto authorities, who
have flooded Washington in recent w=eks with a parade of English-speaking spin doctors, all arguing that Gen. =bdel
Fatah al-Sissi, leader of July's coup, saved Egypt from a theocrati= dictatorship.
How, then, to expla=n people like Ayman Nour? A secular, pro-democracy dissident for a decade =efore the 2011
revolution, Nour mounted a quixotic campaign for president <http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-
dyn/content/article/2005=04/24/AR2005042400890.html> against strongman Hosni Mubarak=in 2005 — and
chttp://www.mcclatchydc.com/2009/06/01/69224/egyptians-wor=y-that-obama-will.html> fo= his trouble.
Now Nour is in exil=, in Lebanon, having been warned to leave the country or face arrest and p=osecution. He's not
alone: Mohamed ElBaradei, the Nobel-winning former n=clear inspector once adopted by the pro-democracy movement
as its leader, has retired to his home in Vienna <http://www.middleeastmonitor=com/news/africa/6973-el-baradei-
leaves-egypt-for-austria> =span style="font-size:18.0pt"> rather than answer prosecutorial summons. At least two other
prominent figures in=Egypt's 2011 revolution, who asked not to be named, have quietly left th= country since the July 3
coup <http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions=jackson-diehl-egypts-misguided-coup/2013/07/04/64bd121c-e4b4-
11e2-alle-c2e=876a8f30_story.html> . A third, <= href="http://asmamahfouz.com/" target="_blank">Asmaa Mafouz,
was re=ently expelled from Kuwait
<http://www.arabtimesonline.com/NewsDetails/tabid/96=smid/414/ArticlelD/200180/reftab/36/t/Kuwait-deports-
Egypt-activist-Mahfou=/Default.aspx> .<1=>
Many who remain in =airo are under mounting pressure. The offices of the April 6 movement, a g=oup of pro-democracy
youth that organized the Jan. 25, 2011, demonstration=triggering the revolution, were raided by police
chttp://english.ahram.org.eg/NewsContent/1/64/81354/Egypti=olitics-/April--condemns-police-raid-on-Cairo-
offices.aspx> last month. Several of its members have been arrested without charge. So have the leader and deputy
leader of the Wasat party <http://english.ahram.org.eg/NewsContent/1/64/77678/Egypt/Polirics-/ProMorsi-Wasat-
Party-leaders-arrested.aspx> , a m=derate Islamist faction established during Mubarak's rule as a centrist =lternative to
the Muslim Brotherhood.
In short, the Sissi=government is targeting the same liberal and secular activists who waged a=lonely battle against the
Mubarak regime. Moreover, their Western supporte=s are not exempt: The state-run newspaper al-Ahram, a quasi-
official government mouthpiece, recently published a six=part series vilifying groups such as the National Democratic
Institute for=funding a dangerous "fifth column" bent on destabilizing Egypt — eve= as the regime's envoys were
assuring Congressional sponsors of those nongovernmental organizations that a democ=atic transition was on the way.
Not all Egyptians w=o fought for democracy before 2011 are under siege: Some hav= joined the Sissi movement
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/jackson-diehl-egyp=s-democrats-abandon-
democracy/2013/07/21/58beace0-efc8-11e2-9008-61e94a7ea=0d_story.html> . But those who opposed the July 3
coup, or who have since had second though=s and turned against the military, are feeling more threatened and isolate=
than they ever did in the Mubarak era. "Back then we thought it was dif=icult. But it wasn't as difficult as it is now," one
exiled activist told me last week. He asked that his =ame be withheld because his family is still in Cairo — a request he
neve= made when Mubarak was in power.
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"Back then we cou=d get maybe 300 or 400 people out on the street, and we had an aggressive =egime targeting us,"
the activist said. "But at least we knew that the=majority of the people, though afraid to join us, supported us. I'm here
[outside Egypt] now because I know that =f I was arrested or gunned down in Tahrir Square no one would care. The
re=ime has succeeded in persuading people that the only alternative is chaos.=94
The democrats being=singled out have been relentless opponents of military rule and the Mubara=-era civilian
establishment. Nour's Ghad party briefly joined with anoth=r secular party in an electoral alliance with the Muslim
Brotherhood in the hope of bridging the secular-religious =ivide. Most of the April 6 movement chose to support
Brotherhood candidate=Mohamed Morsi in a 2012 presidential runoff against a military-backed cand=date out of the
belief that that would offer a better chance to consolidate democracy.
These activists broke with Morsi a year ago, a=ter he suspended the rule of law in order to force through a
constitution.=They joined anti-government demonstrations, but they didn't support the =oup. Their argument was that
those opposed to the Brotherhood should work to defeat the party in the parliame=tary elections that were to be held
next year — something that polls sho=ed was more than possible.
Part of the persecu=ion of these democrats is payback by the generals and the state intelligen=e service, which blames
them for the 2011 revolution and for trying to wor= with Morsi. But the repression also marks a return to a l=ng-
standing military strategy chttp://www.washingtonpost.com/opinio=s/egypts-democratic-pioneers-still-facing-official-
persecution/2011/12/01/=IQAdtmGO_story.html> , honed to perfection under Mubarak: Offer Egyptians — and the
West — a =tark choice between an autocratic, military-backed government and unrecons=ructed Islamists.
That means making s=re that moderate Islamists and secular liberals who oppose military rule a=e suppressed above all.
Left behind are the militant Islamists — the reg=me has not touched the extremist Nour party, even while crushing the
Brotherhood and more moderate forces — an= those civilians content to serve under military tutelage.
In the end, Preside=t Obama is not necessarily wrong to see a stark political choice in Egypt.=He just chooses to ignore
why that choice has come about, and so fails to =upport its victims.
=/span>
Arti=le 6.
Stratfor
The Evolution=of War
George Friedman and=Robert D. Kaplan
October 11 (Video T=anscript):
George Friedman<=span>: My name's George Friedman. I'm=here with my colleague Robert Kaplan. And we want to talk
about one of the=most ubiquitous things in the human condition: war. War is not a subject people like to think of as
insoluble, they don't=like to think of it as natural. But the fact of the matter is there's very=few things -- family,
economics -- as commonplace as war. We don't want to=talk so much about why there's war -- that is a long and endless
discussion -- we want to talk about what=s happening to war. Where we're going today. Everybody's talking about
rev=lutions in warfare, the end of peer-to-peer conflict, a whole range of thi=gs. So what we'd like to do today is talk
about what's happening to war, and what the future of war looks li=e. Robert?
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Robert D. Kaplan=/span>: Yes, I think one of the notic=able changes over the last few decades -- its gradual, it shifts back
and =orth but it's certainly a change -- is like, whereas in the past you had a relatively confined space with a lot o= troops
and equipment inside it, which is conventional, industrial war lik= tank battles in the Sinai in 1973, or in North Africa
during World War 11= We're going from a small space with a lot of combatants inside it to vast spaces that include
immense Thi=d World cities and deserts with small numbers of combatants hidden inside =hem. So whereas killing the
enemy is easy, finding him is what's difficult= It's locating him that constitutes the real weapon of war, whereas in
industrial war it was just a matter of =illing the enemy at his chief point of concentration. This new century, we=may still
have major interstate industrial wars or naval battles, we don't=know that yet. But at least for the past few decades,
what most people define as unconventional war or gue=rilla war or irregular war means a vast battle space with small
numbers of=combatants hiding inside that space.
George: I think one of the things that led to t=at transformation, is the transformation of mathematics in war, which was
=he introduction of precision-guided munitions, which actually was introduced in the 1970s -- first by the United States
w=en they destroyed a critical bridge in Vietnam that they hadn't been abl= to destroy for years, and then by the
Egyptians and the Soviets, who sank=the Israeli destroyer Eilat with a single precision-guided munition. It used to take
thousands of bombs to =nock out a target. That meant hundreds of planes at least, that meant larg= numbers of crews,
steel factories, aluminum factories and so on and so fo=th. The industrial nature of war that you refer to really had a
great deal to do with the imprecision of th= rifle. It's said -- and I'm not sure it's true -- it's said that in the F=rst World
War it took 10,000 rounds of ammunition to kill one man. Perhaps= But it certainly was true that you had to have large
numbers of weapons. With the introduction of precisi=n-guided munitions, you began with 50 percent hit/kill ratios and
it rose =nd rose until one plane with one piece of munition would be able to destro= the enemy. And therefore, you had
the same lethality with one aircraft and with hundreds.
Robert: And we are seeing this especially in ai= war, because one of the things they say in the Air Force is "The les=
obtrusive we are, the less number of planes we have overhead, the more lethal we can actually be." Because with
p=ecision-guided munitions, guided by satellites or whatever they're guided =y, you don't have to drop a lot of ordnance
to do damage. A single drone f=ring a medium or small-sized projectile can do the same amount of damage as decades
ago would take a whole wing of=an air force to drop. But we haven't seen it yet in naval war only becau=e we haven't
had a real naval war. But if we do, we're going to see that=repeat itself, perhaps.
George: Well, I think the next step is infantry=war. But you know, it's interesting to me that during World War II, we
had=a thousand bomb raids over Germany, and it was morally complex but nobody objected to bombing Germany, or
very few=people -- of course, the Germans did. We now have this idea of the drone a= somehow a singularly unique
moral weapon, particularly evil. It strikes m= as an ambiguous argument: Is it better to have World War II-style,
thousand-bomber raids killing tens of t=ousands of people in order to destroy one factory, or to have an unmanned
=ircraft striking it? Precision has on the one hand offended people with an=apparent callousness, which certainly is in
the nature of war, but at the same time has the virtue that collater=l damage -- which will always be part of war, you will
always make massive=mistakes -- have been reduced.
Robert: And precision implies the death penalty=because the precision means that your chances of killing the target are
90=percent, 80 percent, rather than 5 or 10 percent. So you're essentially carrying out a death sentence on someone=
George: So there's a paradox. Massive raids tha= killed thousands of innocent people are seen as somehow less morally
repr=hensible than the certainty of the death of one person, that has been targeted for that. It's a transformation of
w=r. Now, the question really is, Is this war or something else?
Robert: Or is it police actions? Carrying out a=sassinations? Because one of the natures of the post-9/11 world is we're
h=nting down individuals as much as we're hunting down groups. And if you're hunting down individuals, and you have =
revolution in precision-guided weapons, and the battlefield is vast, and =he individual is hiding in an apartment building
in a slum in Peshawar, Pa=istan. This is a whole different world than the Korean War or World War II.
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George: But there's still, then, the question. =e have and have always had in the world what we'll call policing. The
Brit=sh did it in India, the United States did it in Nicaragua and the Philippines. Most major countries and many min=r
countries did it. To me, the interesting argument that's underway, and t=e one that's least tenable, is the argument that
this is the way war will =lways be from now on. We heard that all wars will be nuclear wars, we've heard that all wars
will be coun=erinsurgencies, all wars will be small. To me, I don't accept the idea tha= the peer-to-peer war has been
abolished, that the 21st century will be th= first century that will have no major systemic war between two great
powers.
Robert: Well, look, every century before, going=back thousands of years, has had the equivalent of interstate war. So to
c=aim that this century automatically won't doesn't stand up statistically, in any sense of the word. I mean, the Iran=lraq
war, which I covered firsthand as a journalist, was like World War I.=You would see hundreds of bodies piled up, killed
by poison gas, on the Ir=qi side. They were Iranian bodies. Saddam Hussein used chemical weapons left, right and
center. And this was =nly 25.30 years ago. So to think that we're not going to have interstate w=rs, given the tensions in
the Middle East, given the buildup of weapons in=the Far East, I mean we haven't even talked about the growth of
various naval platforms throughout the Pac=fic, not just in China. It seems to me very questionable.
George: I want to apply the new math, which we =ave seen obviously in Afghanistan, for example, to peer-to-peer
conflict. =o for example, it strikes me as questionable whether surface vessels are survivable. We know that in the Arab-
Israeli W=r of 1973, tanks facing wire-guided Soviet-built anti-tank systems, were b=ing destroyed by infantrymen. And
we learned that there was an entirely ne= matrix to the war. One of the things that it seems to me is that we're going to
see interstate war, but =ith the same sparseness of forces.
Robert: And without even journalists able to co=er it, because you mentioned that surface warships are more and more
vulne=able. What that means is that the face of naval warfare is going under water. It's going under sea.
George: Assuming that submarines are survivable=
Robert: Yes. Well, there's a saying in the Paci=ic: The submarines are like the new bling; everybody wants one.
George: But, I mean, the question to really ask=is, we have anti-submarine rockets. We have anti-submarine torpedoes.
We h=ve an entirely new generation of weapons. A submarine can run at 30 or 40 knots; a surface vessel can do 20, 30
knot=. You have missiles coming out that are hypersonic, doing certainly Mach 3= Mach 4. You can't run from it, you
can't hide from it. There were three g=eat platforms that emerged from World War II: the main battle tank, the aircraft
carrier and the manned bo=ber. It's very hard to imagine how a manned bomber survives in an environm=nt of surface-
to-air missiles, or how a tank survives, or how a ship survi=es. And I include in that submarines because as much as you
are hidden under water to my eyes, there are many t=chnologies that can find you. So it really becomes an interesting
question=of how war is framed, what sea-lane control means, and so on and so forth,=that's evolving.
Robert: We haven't had a test yet of these thin=s. The 21st century so far, as violent as it has been in the Greater Middl=
East, in Afghanistan and Iraq, presently in Syria, has not had the kind of test that you're pointing at.
George: World War II. Many of these systems hav= appeared in World War I and afterwards. But in many ways people
were surp=ised at the emergence of the aircraft carrier, at the criticality of the tank, certainly by the massed manned
bo=ber. There was speculation about it, and then it emerged. So I would argue=that first, we've had a revolution in
warfare. Two, we've seen it applied =n Afghanistan, in that morally difficult and ambiguous state. When it's supplied in
the state-to-state co=flict, which I expect to happen whether we want it or not -- I mean, it's =ot that everybody said,
"Let's have a war"; wars seem to happen =or their own reasons -- we're going to see emerging, exactly as you said, an
entirely new structure.
Robert: This is why what's going on in the East=China Sea and the South China Sea is very interesting in this sense.
Becau=e you see a buildup of naval platforms in a part of the world of vibrant states that are not united by an allianc= in
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any sense of the word, have historical disputes and where essentially =he peace has been kept by the U.S. Navy since
World War II. It's been esse=tially a unipolar atmosphere at seas. Will that change? Is it changing?
George: Well that's the crucial thing. The Unit=d States has dominated the global oceans since World War II. It has been
t=e only navy that is able to be global and bring overwhelming power locally. It bases itself on a triad of surfac=, air and
submarine. How survivable is that? What can power on land do?
Robert: And will we see asymmetric naval war th= way we've seen asymmetric, low-tech war in Iraq and Afghanistan
with suic=de bombers? Will we see the technological equivalent taking on the U.S. Navy like Iranian swarm boats, for
instance,=in the Persian Gulf?
George Friedman is the Chairman =f Stratfor, a company he founded in 1996 that is now a leader in the field=of global
intelligence. Robert D. Kaplan is Chief Geopolitical Analyst for=Stratfor, a non-resident senior fellow at the Center for a
New American Security in Washington, D.C., and has bee= a foreign correspondent for The Atlantic for over 25 years.
=/span>
Arti=le 7.
NYT
A Surprising =ase Against Foreign Aid
Fred Andrews=/p>
October 12, 2013 --=IN his new book, Angus Deaton, an expert's expert on global poverty and =oreign aid, puts his
considerable reputation on the line and declares that=foreign aid does more harm than good. It corrupts governments
and rarely reaches the poor, he argues, and it is =igh time for the paternalistic West to step away and allow the
developing =orld to solve its own problems.
It is a provocative=and cogently argued claim. The only odd part is how it is made. It is tack=d on as the concluding
section of "The Great Escape: Health, Wealth, and the Origins of Inequality"
<http://press.princeton.edu/titles/10054.html> (Princeton University Press, 360 pages), an illuminating and inspiring
history of how=mankind's longevity and prosperity have soared to breathtaking heights i= modern times.
Mr. Deaton is the E=senhower Professor of Economics and International Affairs at Princeton. He=has spent decades
working with the World Bank in creating basic yardsticks=for measuring global poverty and with the Gallup Organization
in creating survey-based measures of well-being. <=span>
The "great escape=94 of the title, he writes, is "the story of mankind's escaping from d=privation and early death." His
book gives a stirring overview of the ec=nomic progress and medical milestones that, starting with the Industrial
Revolution and accelerating after World War II, have c=used life expectancies to soar.
Professor Deaton is=a fluent writer, but his book is a demanding read. Its guts are his statis=ical comparisons, region by
region and country by country, of how things s=and today. They show how, when and whether higher incomes have
promoted greater life expectancies and higher =ell-being across the globe. Professor Deaton tells us that a rising tide h=s
lifted almost all the world's boats — but some far higher than other=. Some have scarcely moved; a few have sunk.
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Obviously, some developing nations have done phenomenally well, yet,=on average, the distance between "rich" and
"poor" countries remai=s the same.
China and India con=inually come to the fore. For all their extraordinary progress in lifting =illions of people out of
poverty, it is still the case that about half of =he world's poor are Chinese or Indian.
In today's world,=with all we have mastered in medicine, public health and development, Prof=ssor Deaton says, it is
also still the case that almost a billion people =931ive in material destitution, millions of children still die through the
accident of where they are born, and was=ing and wanting still disfigure the bodies of nearly half of India's chi=dren."
That troubling stat=ment leads to his indictment of foreign aid, which is jarring and odd only=in that nowhere in the first
266 pages of his historical analysis has he e=en mentioned foreign aid, either positively or negatively. A new character
joins the play in its final act and becomes=the villain of the piece.
In his considered j=dgment, global poverty today is no longer a result of lack of resources or=opportunity, but of poor
institutions, poor government and toxic politics.=Though about $134 billion in official aid still flows from donor
governments to recipient governments, there is =o mystery, he says, as to why foreign aid fails to erase poverty. That is
=ot its mission, he asserts: typically it serves commercial interests at ho=e or buys political allies abroad, too often
unsavory ones.
All aid is distorte= by politics at both ends, he says, citing the example of Mauritania sever=l years back, when aid was in
danger of being cut off. The country's pre=ident hatched the brilliant idea of becoming one of the few Arab countries to
recognize Israel. The aid taps were reope=ed and the reforms rescinded.
THE author has foun= no credible evidence that foreign aid promotes economic growth; indeed, h= says, signs show that
the relationship is negative. Regretfully, he ident=fies a "central dilemma": When the conditions for development are
present, aid is not required. When they do =ot exist, aid is not useful and probably damaging.
Professor Deaton ma=es the case that foreign aid is antidemocratic because it frees local lead=rs from having to obtain
the consent of the governed. "Western-led popul=tion control, often with the assistance of nondemocratic or well-
rewarded recipient governments, is the most egreg=ous example of antidemocratic and oppressive aid," he writes. In its
day= it seemed like a no-brainer. Yet the global population grew by four billi=n in half a century, and the vast majority of
the seven billion people now on the planet live longer and mor= prosperous lives than their parents did.
So what should the =est do instead of providing aid? Well, it can invest in finding a vaccine =or malaria, still a mass killer.
It can push drug companies to tackle dise=ses that threaten poorer countries. It can support the free flow of information
about inventions and new manag=ment techniques. It can relax trade barriers and provide poor countries wi=h expert
advice at the bargaining table. It can ease immigration restraint= and accept more newcomers.
Many options exist,=but Professor Deaton suggests that the question is fundamentally wrong and=self-centered. "Why
is it we who must do something?" he wonders. "Wh= put us in charge?" What the West should do, he says, is stand
aside and let poorer countries find their own paths,=in fits and starts, at their own pace, to development and prosperity,
just=as the West had to do a century or so earlier.
That is a powerful =rgument from a scholar who has done his homework, but it is more provocati=e than ultimately
convincing. Defenders of foreign aid would reply that pa=t efforts have contributed greatly to the enormous gains in life
expectancy that the professor celebrates. Th= professor's maverick views fly in the face of an enormous global effort=
and he paints with a very broad brush. The World Bank counts nearly 12,00= projects under way in 172 countries. It's
hard to believe that all are nearly as flawed or misguided as Profe=sor Deaton suggests. Aid is not a door that should
slam shut. =/p>
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