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Thread: John Robb's "The Switch"

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    Default John Robb's "The Switch"

    http://globalguerrillas.typepad.com/....html#comments

    Traditional guerrilla movements and insurgencies were founded on strict ideologies or political agendas. As a result, their organizations tended towards hierarchy and strong central control. However, the advent of a dominant global market (that no organization, despite claims to the contrary, controls) and the subsequent and inevitable weakening of the nation-state changed that. It substituted market values for ideological or political values and insurgencies are quickly changing to reflect that.

    This "switch" also means that control of the nation-state became is nearly useless in an environment where success was only generated by competition within a global market system at a local level. As a result, modern or 21st Century guerrilla movements/insurgencies increasingly don't put ideology or politics first (although there are some high profile hold-outs, reversals such as al Qaeda suffered in Iraq demonstrate that an inability to invert goals is the path to failure). Increasingly, they put economics first, or more specifically: they focus on the ability of the group and its members to generate wealth. They do this through the integration of their military capability with production centers and supply routes that power the multi-trillion dollar flows of Black Globalization. This connection provides them with the ability to:
    grow support, grow operations, etc.

    John Robb can be painfully arrogant and doesn't have much of a grasp on history, but he is still very much value added to the collective body of futuristic thinkers on warfare.

    This post is interesting (although not entirely accurate from a historical stand point), and so are the comments provided by his readers. It is definitely relative to the SWJ community, since one of the key lines of operation according to our COIN doctrine is economic development.

    Some of the key take aways (my perspective):

    1. The black or underground economy is nothing new, but the global demand for black products by increasingly wealthy countries is larger than ever, as is the ability to shift mega dollars around the world in seconds.

    2. Ideology is still critical to insurgencies, and is still the main driving force of most "true" insurgencies, even if it is a thinly veiled attempt to cover up the main effort which may be organized criminal activity. I would agree that criminal organizations are many ways similiar to insurgencies, so his points are still valid. Regardless, many failed insurgencies have evolved into organized criminal groups.

    3. The challenge of the global market on our stability efforts is immense, and one need look no further than Mexico, Columbia and Afghanistan for well known examples. The opium problem in Aghanistan continues to challenge our efforts and presents us with a wicked problem.

    4. How do you make the Nation State relevant economically to the populace(a key to controlling and governing their populace) when the global trade in underground drugs, humans, pirated software and videos, is so lucrative, and what drives the many local economies? What can the State offer? When the State attempts to control this so called illicit trade due to pressure from other States, they are in effect declaring war of sorts on their own entrepreuers, their own people (sort of like excessive taxes on small businesses, but much worse), so the State is labeled an enemy, and a criminal insurgency starts. There are no easy answers to this.

    5. Robb didn't address the ability of terrorists/insurgents to raise money locally with the drug trade, kidnappings, etc. They are no longer dependent on some mosque in Saudi anymore, they have adapted the street gang model to generate money (supplements other funding efforts), thus raise thoursands of dollars through extortion, pedaling black market gasoline in Iraq, kidnapping in the Philippines, selling drugs everywhere, etc...

    More thoughts on this later, I just wanted to get out to the community for now.

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    Frankly, I thought this was one of the stupider things I have read in awhile.

    Long on buzz-word hyperbole and unsupported statements, low on facts.

    Can someone provide me some examples of these "market driven guerrillas" that have made nation states irrelevant?

    This is a hack piece, pushing a weakly historical buzzword laced idea for book and speaking fees. I am prepared to be argued wrong. I'm not denying the existence or threat of trans-national groups, but is he seriously saying they won't be ideologically based?
    Last edited by Cavguy; 11-16-2008 at 04:22 AM.
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    Default Al Qaeda's Budget Slips through the Cracks

    http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/27644191/

    Terrorism, as one Treasury official noted, is “not a rich man’s sport.”

    An analysis of some of the most notable attacks show that al-Qaida and others it has inspired have spent between $5,000 and $500,000 to carry out the attacks. Although the numbers in most cases is an approximation—and may not include all costs, such as training—they serve as an indicator of how little is needed to get the world’s attention.

    Michael Sheehan, the former counterterrorism director for the New York Police Department, says the department has long been guided by a “4 x 10” rule – “10 men + 10 weeks + $10,000 = 10,000-pound bomb.”

    This summary bears out the rule.

    The Mafia Is Italy's Biggest Business

    http://abcnews.go.com/International/...6238022&page=1

    Organized crime is the biggest business in Italy, according to the latest study by the country's shopkeepers association, Confesercenti.

    In this file photo, an Italian carabinieri walks near a burnt bus in the La Valle bus depot at San Donato Mineo, in the south of Italy. Over 30 buses were burnt in the early morning to terrorize the owner of bus company and the arson is blamed on the N'Drangheta, the Calabrian Mafia.

    The biggest business operating in Italy today is organized crime, according to the latest study by Italy's shopkeeper's association, Confesercenti.
    That Italy's mafias do a booming business, particularly the drug-related variety, is common knowledge. But the effect on the country's legitimate businesses such as tourism and food production had not been as clear until the Confesercenti released the figures, which are staggering.

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    Council Member Cavguy's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Bill Moore View Post
    Ok, this is organized transnational crime/smuggling, which has been going on - oh - since the beginning of history. There is little new here. The link between crime and insurgency didn't emerge in the last 10 years.
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    Default I said his history was weak

    Can someone provide me some examples of these "market driven guerrillas" that have made nation states irrelevant?
    It is painfully clear to most that Robb's hyperbole is Robb's self marketing methodology, and it will eventually backfire if he ever presents himself in forum to debate his ideas; however, I still find an occassional post of his useful. In this case, it prompted me think about our economic development line of effort as it relates to COIN.

    To answer your specific question above, I think I listed three examples already, Afghanistan, Mexico, and Columbia. I agree irrelevant is normally too strong a term, but in Afghanistan that "may" be the case, as I don't see what viable economic alternative the State has to offer for the opium trade. I hope I'm wrong, but there are plenty of Afghan experts who monitor our posts, so hopefully they'll weigh in.

    Mexico in my opinion is currently at war with organized crime, and it is an insurgency, because the criminals are fighting for political control in certain areas of Mexico to facilitate their activities.

    My concern, and I stand by it is the following:

    How do you make the Nation State relevant economically to the populace(a key to controlling and governing their populace) when the global trade in underground drugs, humans, pirated software and videos, is so lucrative, and what drives the many local economies? What can the State offer? When the State attempts to control this so called illicit trade due to pressure from other States, they are in effect declaring war of sorts on their own entrepreuers, their own people (sort of like excessive taxes on small businesses, but much worse), so the State is labeled an enemy, and a criminal insurgency starts. There are no easy answers to this.
    You said the Mafia in Italy (and elsewhere) is nothing new. You're right, but the power of organized crime has increased considerably in recent years due to the effects of globalism. Not only do they have more money to subvert governments (Mexico is one example, Russia is another), they are getting increasingly sosphisticated. The reason I posted the article about the Italian Mob being the biggest business in Italy is two fold, one to point out that the black economy is bigger than the legal economy in a G7 country, and two to point out the connection between the current economic crisis and how that is empowering some criminal organizations. It is clearly a much more serious threat to national security than it has been in the past.

    As for supporting insurgents and terrorist, I only point that out as a reminder. Chasing money in their bank accounts is important, but as the article points it is fairly easy to raise the money needed through decentralized criminal activities. Again it there is no one magic node that we can target to shut down their operations.

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    Default What about Somalia?

    In the spirit of discussion - while I may not agree with the suppositions posted within the articles, could Somalia be an "isolated" example of "market driven guerillas"?

    It has been suggested in several articles that Somalia has heavy Al-Qaeda influences, has been the target of US military action due to the involvement of the embassy bombings - and yet - piracy proliferates in the Indian Ocean and the Gulf of Aden.

    High ransoms, extortion, and loosely organized bands of pirates prey on every size of boat that traverses the Somalia coast.

    Could this be driven by insurgent ideology or be a method of making money for a lawless, impoverished society?

    Thanks for your thoughts and insight.

    Pat

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    Default Somalia

    My knee jerk reaction, is that the piracy we're seeing off the coast of Somalia isn't new, but the intensity of it is due to a relatively recent (past 20 years) loss of State control, more weapons available on the open market (pirates probably have greater capability, and success begets success, because they have more money to buy faster boats and more weapons), fewer viable economic alternatives.

    Somalia is a country in the non-integrated gap, and what I have read to date their criminals are integrated into the global economy, but simply tapping into it by holding ships and crews for ransom. I'm sure there is more to the story, I'm basing this admittedly lame assessment off about three newspaper articles .

    However, their operations are having an effect on the global economy. This problem should be relaatively easy to suppress to an acceptable level again if the international community is willing to take the harsh actions needed against the pirates, so the risk out weighs the gains in their decision making calculus, but the long term permnanent fix (nothing is permanent) is regaining State control and creating alternative economic models for the coastal populations of Somalia.

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    When I read about non-ideologically driven ("market") insurgents, the first two things that popped into my head were mercenaries and pirates. They still exist today, of course, but not nearly at levels seen in previous eras.

    I think there's some ethnocentrism here as well. One person's "illegal" or "black" market is another person's legitimate enterprise. The opium trade in Afghanistan is but one example. If Afghanistan produced widgets instead of opium, the Taliban and other groups would get their funding from widgets just as easily. What would John Robb's argument be then?

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    Quote Originally Posted by Bill Moore View Post

    To answer your specific question above, I think I listed three examples already, Afghanistan, Mexico, and Columbia. I agree irrelevant is normally too strong a term, but in Afghanistan that "may" be the case, as I don't see what viable economic alternative the State has to offer for the opium trade. I hope I'm wrong, but there are plenty of Afghan experts who monitor our posts, so hopefully they'll weigh in.
    Afghanistan - one can argue it never had a functioning government, and always has been run by smugglers and traders. Nothing really new and groundbreaking there - like warfare, the tools have changed, but not in a game-changing way. In fact, one can postulate that non-state actors act as nation states themselves when considering decisions regarding entry for conflict.

    Mexico - yes, a large problem now. However, the government is theoretically quite capable of clamping down on it, but like all of these movements, it is a cycle.

    Columbia - I think there is a strong case that Columbia has done exceedingly well at neutering FARC after a 20 year struggle.

    Smuggling and crime have been with us through history and will continue to. There are plenty of periods where pirate groups controlled entire regions (Barbary pirates, 'Japanese' 16th century piracy along China's coast, and lots of others) This movement towords entropy and back to order is the natural rythym of history.

    Yes, there are less barriers than before to these groups because of the "flattening" of the world. I still have seen nothing that indicates that the nation-state is extinct anytime soon.

    For all three of your examples - if the west legalized drugs, and taxed it, would Robb's theory still hold? Same for prostitution (sex smuggling?)?
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    This movement towords entropy and back to order is the natural rythym of history.

    Yes, there are less barriers than before to these groups because of the "flattening" of the world. I still have seen nothing that indicates that the nation-state is extinct anytime soon.

    For all three of your examples - if the west legalized drugs, and taxed it, would Robb's theory still hold? Same for prostitution (sex smuggling?)?

    We're in violent agreement, but I don't think a problem needs to be new to present a significant threat. Probably 100% of us who are regulars on the SWJ would agree that Irregular Warfare is nothing new, yet if you look the amount of effort being applied to adjust to this "new" threat, you would think that earth has been invaded by Aliens.

    The threat has evolved, and State has not yet adjusted to it. If I even have point (you now have me wondering if I do), it is that the State needs to recognize this threat and address it. Your comment on Afghanistan is correct, but we still have to address it if our goal is to make Afghanistan a viable nation-state. Regarding Mexico, that conflict has just started in ernest, but if you read the article and numerous others you know it isn't restricted to Mexico, their drug cartels are global in every one of our States. Is that a global insurgency? I don't think so, but it is geting close.

    The Columbians have done very well against the FARC, but he FARC is only one problem, the problem now is that the various criminal groups are becoming decentralized, and they are undermining other governments in the region, and I even recently saw a report of S. American durg cartels undermining a government in Western Africa. We're a long ways off from achieving success.

    I have arguing for legalizing drugs for some time for that very reason, but unfortunately that option appears to be too politically incorrect to be an acceptable course of action. How would legalize pirated DVDs, CDs, etc.? Much smaller scale problem, but still a problem.

    I think there's some ethnocentrism here as well. One person's "illegal" or "black" market is another person's legitimate enterprise. The opium trade in Afghanistan is but one example. If Afghanistan produced widgets instead of opium, the Taliban and other groups would get their funding from widgets just as easily. What would John Robb's argument be then?
    Entrophy, I can't speak for Robb and I don't want to be seen as coming to his defense, I simply discussing a problem area. However, I don't think the problem is mercenaries, it is more sosphisticated than that and contrary to your assumptions (unless you're talking about the Middle Ages, before the advent of the Nation State).

    I think if the Taliban controlled any form of economic production (widgets or drugs), then Robb's argument would be the same, it is non-state controlled so it is a black economy. I agree that another person may thnk his enterprise is legitimate, but if we believe in the nation-state construct and his enterprise is not legal, then it isn't legitimate.

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    Bill,

    The thing with Afghanistan is that there has never really been "state" control of economic activity. I personally believe, based in part on this history, that such control is unlikely anytime soon. In many areas of Afghanistan the locals don't recognize any kind of "state" control and never have. Can one therefore claim that all economic activity that takes place in those areas is "black" or "illegitimate?" I don't think so, and believe it would be a mistake to blindly treat it as illegitimate.

    The point I tried to make is that just because we may view some kind of economic activity as illegitimate from our perspective, it doesn't necessarily mean it that others view it the same way. There are many more contemporary and historic examples where "states" have not "controlled" economic activity. Look across the border at the tribal areas of Pakistan. The state has little to no control over economic activity there. This was even codified to a certain extent in the Pakistani constitution - collection of taxes in the tribal areas in unconstitutional.

    That insurgents or groups in conflict with a nation-state would use economies outside of government control seems kind of obvious. Has this not always been the case? John Robb then says:

    It should be apparent that "the switch" to economic agendas in combination with decentralized organizational structures makes modern guerrillas much more dangerous than ever in history.
    I think he needs to read more history.

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    Default I'll second that

    Quote Originally Posted by Entropy View Post
    The thing with Afghanistan is that there has never really been "state" control of economic activity. . . Can one therefore claim that all economic activity that takes place in those areas is "black" or "illegitimate?" I don't think so, and believe it would be a mistake to blindly treat it as illegitimate.
    All true.
    ...John Robb then says . . . I think he needs to read more history.
    Also true... That or just get out more...

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    Default Items: What the US Could Learn From The Mafia

    1- In Colonel Jones article about PCE's he talks about understanding the purpose of the organization. Criminal organizations are generally profit oriented, they may do things to influence a government but they don't want to overthrow one.

    2- The Mafia doesn't mess with other peoples religions or ideologies.

    3-They look at the population as customers, they don't care about the rest. They don't believe in free markets....they create them and strange as it seems they take care of them.

    4-They often make large donations to their own religious organizations.

    5-They take care of their own organization...they would never sign a treaty that gave away an advantage to another organization.

    6-They would never let large groups of people in their organization be without work, thus they generate great loyalty.

    7-They are patriotic, they support the US and did many things during WW2 that allowed us to win.

    8-They could tell you what to do with the drugs in Astan, but I doubt we will go that route.

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    Default Counter points to the point

    Entrophy, no one in their right mind would argue your points on Afghan's history. That isn't the issue, the issue is that our objective is to establish a viable Nation-State, and if it can't control the economy (at least more than it influences now), is our objective feasible?

    Slapout, you're living in the past regarding the Italian Mafia, which is a shadow of what it once was in America, but has regained new strength in Italy and other parts of the world. The Italian Mafia (just like the Russian, Mexician, Albanian, Chinese mafias, etc.) are not supporters of the U.S. government. Just because the U.S. government used them as surrogates for a couple of operations, ones they were well compensated for I'm sure, doesn't make them loyal citizens of our country.

    In Colonel Jones article about PCE's he talks about understanding the purpose of the organization. Criminal organizations are generally profit oriented, they may do things to influence a government but they don't want to overthrow one.
    There is little difference between the type of subversion the Mafia's conduct and the overthrow of the government. If they own the key politicians, judges, police chiefs, etc., then they in effect had a successful coup. They may not want to establish a Marxist government or Sharia law, but they sure as hell want to subvert the law, which is ultimately the purpose of a State.

    They take care of their own organization...they would never sign a treaty that gave away an advantage to another organization.
    If you're implying they wouldn't work with other groups, that has been proven false. They'll jockey for a stronger position, incorporation, and perhaps eventually eliminate the competition if it fits their design, but they have consider flexibility in thei policy objectives.

    They could tell you what to do with the drugs in Astan, but I doubt we will go that route.
    Even the Italian mob is running drugs now, so I doubt they're going to undermine a source by helping us help.

    What's this love affair with the Italian Mob all about? Were you on their payroll when you were in Miami Vice?

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    Default Dress these patriots in red, white and blue....

    http://www.parl.gc.ca/37/1/parlbus/c...brousse2-e.htm

    Services are exchanged between organizations, political and criminal, essentially at the ring level. Following is an example of such an exchange which puts Islamists and Mafia members in contact with each other: in Milan in November 1994, Italian police stopped Djamel Loucini, no. 3 of the FIS, who was suspected of having engaged for three years in an intensive traffic in weapons intended for resistance groups. To organize the deliveries, Loucini had first relied on rings of North African drug traffickers operating in southwestern Germany. They provided him with their logistical support (in particular couriers) to convey weapons via France, Spain and Morocco in exchange for access to Loucini's financial operations to launder revenues from their illegal activities. Settled in Italy since January 1994, Loucini had gained access to the Mafia's underground channels - in particular the drug connections of the Neapolitan Camorra and the labour trafficking connections in western Sicily - to assist in transporting weapons to Algeria.

    Although it is not out of the question that certain criminal rings might convert to the revolutionary cause, particularly when that cause is a religious one, the reverse is what most often occurs.
    http://jihadwatch.org/archives/001650.php

    ROME (Reuters) - Italian investigators have found a link between Islamic militant groups and the Camorra, one of Italy's main organized crime groups, a top anti-Mafia investigator said on Monday.
    "We have evidence that groups of the Camorra are implicated in an exchange of weapons for drugs with terrorist groups," Pierluigi Vigna, Italy's national anti-mafia prosecutor, told reporters at the foreign press club.

    Asked what kind of groups, he said: "Islamic terrorist groups."
    http://www.a1b2c3.com/drugs/opi012.htm

    By 1981, Pakistani laboratories, with the Sicilian mafia as their intermediaries, were supplying over 60 percent of the US heroin demand and an even greater proportion of Europe's market. By the mid-1980s, an individual mafia cosce, the Badalmenti, was distributing bulk heroin directly across America through the facade of local pizza parlors and accumulating extraordinarily profits.

    While the modern mafia may have grown Mercury's wings to move drugs across Asia to the Americas, the logic of laundering brought its cosce back home to Palermo to seek a safe haven for narco profits. Such an expanded local base may also have contributed to mafia's growing penetration of the Italian state. With a vast capital from its role as heroin broker, the mafia increased its control over the hidden politics that operated at the intersection of the Italian state, parties, corporations and criminality. Specifically, the better capitalized mafia cosce were able to begin dictating the agenda for public works and the allocation of their illegal profits, reaching beyond the South to the whole of Italy
    http://www.iwar.org.uk/news-archive/...-vol-04-04.pdf

    Italian investigators have found a link between Islamic terrorist groups and the Camorra, one of Italy's main organized crime groups, a top anti-Mafia investigator said Monday. "We have evidence that groups of the Camorra are implicated in an exchange of weapons for drugs with terrorist groups," Pierluigi Vigna, Italy's national anti-mafia prosecutor, told reporters at the foreign press club. Vigna, whose Rome-based office coordinates the work of magistrates investigating organized crime in Italy, said he could not give more details. Pressed further, he suggested the cooperation came about after a member of the Camorra, the Naples-area version of the Sicilian Mafia, converted to Islam and met in prison with Muslims who had been arrested in Italy. Aked what kind of terrorist groups, he said: "Islamic terrorist groups."
    http://www.icclr.law.ubc.ca/Publicat...UDY_REPORT.pdf

    have reported arm smuggling activities by Italian and other European crime organization to Palestinian groups in the middle east, and between Italian crime groups involved in both arms and drug trafficking and various Arab clients through the Syrian Government. Terrorists in Italy are said to have assisted the Sicilian mafia, the Neapolitan Camorra and Calabrian gangsters in smuggling narcotics.

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    Default This isn't an insurgency, or is it?

    http://westernfrontamerica.com/2008/...rain-soldiers/

    Mexican drug cartels are now advertising for young men to step up and to come and join their ranks to fight the Mexican army. The ads and banners premise those who join will make good money have food and a place to stay even while in training. “Operative group ‘The Zetas’ wants you, soldier or ex-soldier. We offer a good salary, food and benefits for your family. Don’t suffer anymore mistreatment and don’t go hungry.”

    Mexican drug cartels according to recent press reports have military style training camps on and near the border with the United States. These Training camps are for military-style killers. Federal authorities say these camps have Afghanistan and other middle eastern instructors who teach the latest military fighting tactics that are utilized in Iraq and Afghanistan by the Islamic radicals that are fighting and killing American and allied troops in those countries

    Former Mexican national security adviser and ambassador to the United Nations, Adolfo Aguilar Zinser, stated, that “Spanish and Islamic terrorist groups are using Mexico as a refuge

    And globalism at its finest:

    It is well known that the Russian mafia is deeply entrenched in the criminal fabric of the Mexican drug cartels and still today plays an important roll in providing guns and other weapons to the cartels and are purveyors of, drug smuggling, money laundering, prostitution, trafficking in women from Eastern and Central Europe and Russia, alien and terrorist smuggling, and kidnappings for ransom.
    O.K., I have it off my chest now.

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    Default Said Russians providing, among other things, the very popular

    FNH P90 and Five Seven Pistola to penetrate Federale Armor...

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    Quote Originally Posted by Cavguy View Post
    Frankly, I thought this was one of the stupider things I have read in awhile.

    Long on buzz-word hyperbole and unsupported statements, low on facts.

    Can someone provide me some examples of these "market driven guerrillas" that have made nation states irrelevant?

    This is a hack piece, pushing a weakly historical buzzword laced idea for book and speaking fees. I am prepared to be argued wrong. I'm not denying the existence or threat of trans-national groups, but is he seriously saying they won't be ideologically based?
    Having read it, and browsed the web-site, I agree and it begs a question as to accuracy and usefulness. There is some old 4GW stuff in here, so I don't hold out much hope. I like a respect, both Lind and Hammes, but I still think 4GW is not helpful, and this seems to be progressing the same basic ideas.

    Let's invite the guy over and see what gives?
    Infinity Journal "I don't care if this works in practice. I want to see it work in theory!"

    - The job of the British Army out here is to kill or capture Communist Terrorists in Malaya.
    - If we can double the ratio of kills per contact, we will soon put an end to the shooting in Malaya.
    Sir Gerald Templer, foreword to the "Conduct of Anti-Terrorist Operations in Malaya," 1958 Edition

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    Default Shifting focus away from Robb to

    I made the mistake of starting this discussion with a post from Robb, and now the focus is on Robb instead of the real issue the nexus between transnational crime and terrorism, and the so what factor of it all. A lick on me, but in an attempt to get the discussion focused once again...

    http://search.loc.gov:8765/query.htm...13&submit.y=19

    Mexico’s three major drug cartels are being superseded by a half-dozen smaller, corporate style, trafficking networks. In a process that mirrors the post-cartel reconstitution of drug trafficking networks in Colombia, this “new generation” of Mexican drug traffickers is less prone to violence and more likely to employ sophisticated technologies and cooperative strategies. The processes that are driving Mexican drug trafficking organizations toward establishing cooperative networks of increasing sophistication and decreasing visibility are likely to intensify in the post-September 11 environment. As a result, Mexican drug trafficking networks are likely to emulate their Colombian counterparts by investing heavily in counterintelligence, expanding and diversifying their legitimate enterprises, and concealing transnational partnerships that could attract undue attention from U.S. intelligence and law enforcement agencies
    This is another excerpt from the interagency study posted to the Library of Congress website. It is well researched; however, this assessment made in 2002 couldn't be more off the mark. While half of it is on the mark, you have probably seen the reports on the documentaries on their counter intelligence capabilities, but so much for cooperation between the gangs. Greed is greed, and the groups are fighting one another and the government to gain a bigger share of the action.

    Failure to see the significance of this threat is extremely dangerous in my opinion, and it parallels our failure to prevent the attacks on 9/11 due to our lack of imagination. We're not talking simply rifles, p-shooters and marajuana, but billions of dollars of illicit trade, major weapons systems to include surface to air missiles, and a dangerous network that can facilitate reach throughout the entire U.S.A.

    There are two issues here:

    These criminal enterprises are not just competing against governments, they are subverting governments (replacing governments in many areas) and in many ways they are insurgencies without an ideology (and I don't like agreeing with Robb). They will shift with the markets, and if Middle Eastern Terrorists are paying top dollar (or with drugs) to smuggle their folks into the U.S. or for weapons the criminal enterprises will provide the goods and services. More than ever are available since the end of the Cold War.

    The information is all available open source, numerous organized criminal elements and now terrorist organizations opening shop in Mexico so they can link into the services and products provided by the Mexican Mafia because of the access they can provide to the good ole U.S.A. and its markets. The Mexican mafia has a well established and growing network in almost all 50 states. This is just one example, there are other examples of other criminal in in Europe and Asia that provide the similiar services and products. The nexus isn't new, just more dangerous than it has been in the past.

    As for inviting Robb to the forum good luck. I tried to debate him on his website based on some of his interpretations of history and when he couldn't respond to the first challenge he replied I don't think you should participate here He is another Rush Limbaugh in some respects, just another loud mouth with very little depth. He isn't a Lind or Hammes, he is a software geek that likes to frame problems using software and networking terms. The most amusing aspect is he seems to believe he is the only one who gets it, but on the other hand, based on some of the comments throughout this council, he may have a point. There appears to be a significant lack of understanding of emerging threats. Hiding behind the myth of it isn't anything new reminds me of the three monkeys (see no evil, heaar no evil, speak no evil). New or not, it is still a problem that needs to be dealt with.

  20. #20
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    Ideology is prehaps the most misunderstood aspect of Insurgency. Throughout the GWOT our national strategy has identified it as the strategic Center of Gravity, and launched our entire national security aparatus on quest to "Defeat Extremist Ideology."

    Robb goes to the other end of crazy and says that ideology and politics are no longer important for "modern insurgency."

    Insurgency is insurgency, the principles don't change, but the environment does. In today's globalized world the state system is having less relative power and importance as populaces gain in the same. But they are still here, and will be here for decades, and probably centuries to come. Another big change is the rise of non-state organizations, like AQ, that are now waging UW much as states always have.

    Ideology is absolutely a critical requirement to any and every insurgency. It is the message that speaks to the populace, and takes a position that the target government is either unable, or unwilling to co-opt. You must have one to run a successful insurgency. However, though you must have one, the nature of it is not particularly important so long as it accomplishes the purpose stated here. We focus far too much on "defeating ideologies," and not nearly enough on addressing underlying causes that make a populace susecptible to such seditious messaging.

    As Chairman Deng said regarding ideology: "It does not matter if a cat is black or white, so long as it catches mice."

    So, while I would agree that our focus on ideology is currently terribly wrong; to suggest that it, and more aburdly politics (insurgency is politics) are no longer relevant offers nothing helpful to the debate.
    Last edited by Bob's World; 11-17-2008 at 12:43 PM.

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