Breakthrough Institute
 


New Breakthrough report explains the method behind the madness of terrorism and concludes that terrorists pose no existential threat to the United States.

PlanesTrains&CarBombs_cover.jpg

Contrary to the apocalyptic worries of some commentators, hirabi (aka jihadi) terrorists are employing a polarization and recruitment strategy that does not benefit from WMD attacks -- and, bluffs aside, they are nowhere near capable of developing or acquiring such weapons.

Instead, they will continue their attempts to inspire a violent movement striving for an (increasingly) unpopular theocracy. Furthermore, they will persist with their longstanding repertoire of weapons and attack styles -- gravitating around Planes, Trains, and Car Bombs -- because it is so adequate for the goals of creating spectacle, shocking the senses, and intimidating governments.

Read more, here.





The steady trickle of Bush-era security officials speaking out against his administration's policies continues as the founding warden of GITMO, Terry Carrico, says, shut it down!

The Carrico story provides some helpful cover to an Obama administration that has been walking confidently into enemy political fire lately. It just recently submitted an extraconstitutional signing statement against silly/counterproductive/demagogic NDAA provisions. And today, the President and his national security team announced their plan to build a leaner, smarter, more versatile military.

GOPers are already against it . It will be interesting to see how this debate flares up during Presidential debates. Maybe Ron Paul, promoter of a less interventionist foreign policy, will give Obama even more cover as Islamophobic Santorum pulls Romney closer to the cliffs of Armageddon.





Leon-Panetta2.jpg

The Senate is pushing forward legislation to allow the US military to detain US citizens indefinitely as enemy combatants. But the Department of Defense does not want that power. Neither does the CIA. Nor the Department of Justice. Strange.

Spencer Ackerman reports:

Defense Secretary Leon Panetta opposes the maneuver. So does CIA Director David Petraeus, who usually commands deference from senators in both parties. Pretty much every security official has lined up against the Senate detention provisions, from Director of National Intelligence James Clapper to FBI Director Robert Mueller, who worry that they’ll get in the way of FBI investigations of domestic terrorists. President Obama has promised to veto the bill.


When the security state declines to accept rights-infringing powers offered by the people's Senate, the centuries-old understanding of an adversarial relationship between the power hungry state and the defiant governed is turned on its head.

I am reminded of Frederick Doglass's quote -- one that often inspired me:

“Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never did and it never will. Find out just what any people will quietly submit to and you have found out the exact measure of injustice and wrong which will be imposed upon them, and these will continue till they are resisted with either words or blows, or both."

I wonder if old Frederick is smiling in his grave right now.






One by one, his former colleagues and allies are rejecting his spin and openly questioning his judgments and actions.

Dick_Cheney.jpg

Somehow I missed Jack Goldsmith's Times piece explaining that Cheney's War on Terror policies were ultimately counterproductive even for the purposes of bolstering executive power. In it he cites both Bush and Rumsfeld expressing regrets for taking Cheney's advice to secretly and unilaterally create CT policy.

Cheney, of course, is "'not inclined to make any mea culpas."

As Goldsmith writes:

He has instead deflected the failures of his philosophy by maintaining that Barack Obama embraced his policies. Obama did continue many of the Bush administration counterterrorism policies as they stood in January 2009. But the 2009 policies Obama inherited were not Cheney policies. They were the products of a four-year pushback against those policies...

After the killing of al-Awlaki, Cheney and his daughter stepped up to the mic to demand an apology from Obama. Their logic: Obama had criticized some of their policies, but was also using some of their other policies (sort of). And that's not fair.

John McCain responds with readily apparent exasperation to a question about whether Obama owes Cheney or Bush an apology: "About what?" He also notes that the so-called 'enhanced' interrogation program netted no valuable information.




Libya's National Transition Council envisions a moderate and modern democracy based on Muslim traditions

Jalil_Libya.jpg

BBC News reports that Mustafa Abdul Jalil, the head of Egypt's National Transition Council (NTC) has announced the NTC goal to create a modern democratic government influenced by the teachings and example of Islam's founding religious and political leader, Mohammed:

In his first speech since moving to the capital from the NTC stronghold of Benghazi, Mr Jalil told some 10,000 supporters to avoid retribution attacks, adding that Libya's new leaders would not accept any extremist ideology.

"We are a Muslim nation, with a moderate Islam, and we will maintain that. You are with us and support us - you are our weapon against whoever tries to hijack the revolution," he said.

Mr Jalil, who served as Col Gaddafi's justice minister before joining the rebels when the uprising started, said women would play an active role in the new Libya, and thanked a number of nations - including France and Britain - for supporting the NTC.

But he also warned against secularism, envisaging a state "where sharia [Islamic law] is the main source for legislation".

His words, broadcast live on television, were met with rapturous applause, as fireworks illuminated the Tripoli waterfront.

Americans need to support and respect such movements toward democracy as long as they allow moderate and modern interpretations of sharia to compete for public support. Because Islam's founding father was a political and religious figure -- and he formalized many principles of governance and religion in the same moments -- it is unrealistic to think that endogenous self-determination movements in overwhelmingly Muslim countries will not be suffused with Islamic values and narratives.

But many of Mohammed's principles -- like political leaders' responsibilities to their constituents and the insistence on respect for minorities -- align easily with the democracy of the European Enlightenment. Others are less compatible, but open to interpretation and contestation and likely to modernize with the economies of the region. Now is a time for the West to wish the best to Libyans, show friendship, and support movements toward democracy and increased individual freedoms.





He knows it doesn't work.

imgres.jpeg

In a CNN interview with John King, Joe Biden "denied former Vice President Dick Cheney's assertion that controversial interrogation techniques such as waterboarding... would help generate useful intelligence in the war against al Qaeda and other organizations."

""I've seen zero evidence that it works, and I think there's abundant evidence that it hurts us internationally. It hurts our security," Biden said."




Forget what Cheney, Yoo, and Hayden are saying to cover their counterproductive policy choices. Ali Soufan was on the ground and in the interrogation booth.




Ten years out, writers from the left and right hunker down in their battle over the War on Terror, a war our security agencies have long since quietly abandoned.


Thumbnail image for caucus-obama-panetta-petraeus-blog480.jpg

As we ramp up to a weekend that will flood our televisions and radiowaves with retrospective specials on the 9/11 attacks, America's opinion-makers are vying to define the meaning of those horrors and the decade since.

But instead of using this moment to reconstruct narratives affirming our successes and clarifying the many lessons we only learned through error, many among the opinion-making class have dug in their heels, cherry-picking from ten years of evidence to support whatever position on counterterrorism they staked out on September 12, 2001.

Commentators from the right continue to harp on the very simplistic logical fallacy that because there has not been a devastating attack since 9/11, EVERY aspect of the government's response was a success. They are nearly as eager to point out, too, that because the Obama administration has yet to renounce all of its predecessor's policies, it must have judged them all to be effective:
Charles Krauthammer propagates the fallacy with gusto:

10 years, no second attack (which everyone assumed would come within months). That testifies to the other great achievement of the decade: the defensive anti-terror apparatus hastily constructed from scratch after 9/11 by President Bush, and then continued by President Obama. Continued why? Because it worked.

John Yoo defends his team's record even against the price of tens of thousands of American casualties:
In the last decade, our nation has certainly paid a price in the lives of the brave men and women who have defended us. But who would say, after 10 years, that it wasn't worth it to keep our nation safe?"

...and also interprets the Obama administration's counterterrorism as continuous with Bush's:

"reality and political opposition forced the [Obama] administration to return to many of its predecessor's core terrorism policies."


The Council on Foreign Relations' Max Boot
also fails Logic-101, supporting both the fallacy that a single outcome proves the causality of multiple antecedent policies and the fallacy that subsequent failure to do away with any one of those policies indicates acceptance of all of them:
"A near absence of terrorist incidents in the United States since 9/11 points to the successes of the Bush Administration's counterterrorism measures that once stirred controversy but now have bipartisan acceptance."

Michael Gerson is perhaps boldest in his case for the continuity of the Bush and Obama approaches when he states:
"A decade beyond Sept. 11, the Bush Doctrine has been adopted by the Obama administration and vindicated by events."

By Gerson's lights, the fact that Obama has chosen a course of responsible exit from Iraq and Afghanistan, and honored America's commitment to its NATO alliance by taking a decidedly-backseat role in the ousting of Qaddafi, indicates his full-blown endorsement of aggressively militarist democracy promotion.

Commentators from the left, meanwhile, have their own reasons for closely comparing the policies of Bush and Obama. (To avoid charges of drawing false equivalencies, I should note that the rhetorical flourishes of these commentators pale in comparison to the flights from logic coming from folks like Krauthammer and Yoo.)
Having spent the early part of the decade vigilantly defending civil liberties against real and counterproductive encroachments by an overzealous Bush administration, they show little hesitation in skewering Democrats for failing to enact the entire agenda they campaigned on.

Robert Wright, for example, writes of the whole counterproductive War on Terror :

"Certainly President Obama seems bent on sustaining it. In addition to authorizing the assassination of al-Awlaki (an American citizen, by the way, in theory guaranteed due process by our Constitution), the President has massively expanded drone strikes in Pakistan and Afghanistan, and he recently extended them to Somalia, even as they continue in Yemen."
He calls on the President to:

"Quit doing the kinds of things that have made so many in the Muslim world hate the United States. Get our troops out of Muslim lands, stop firing drones into their countries."

Elizabeth Anderson concurs with Wright's lament that Obama merely continues Bush's policies:
"He escalated the war in Afghanistan. He failed to close the prison in Guantanamo Bay, move terrorism trials out of military commissions to civilian courts, end extraordinary rendition, or prosecute Bush Administration officials who ordered torture. … In targeting Muslim cleric and accused Al Qaeda propagandist Anwar al-Awlaki for assassination, he has affirmed Bush’s claim that the president can order the extrajudicial killing of an American citizen, even outside any battlefield context. Overall, Obama’s record on executive power and civil liberties diverges little from that of his predecessor. In certain respects it is even worse…"

Wright's and Anderson's complaints not only exaggerate the continuity between Bush and Obama -- neither employing drone strikes nor properly resourcing an ongoing counterinsurgency/institution-building mission in Afghanistan is nearly tantamount to launching a ground invasion of Iraq on flimsy pretenses without an inkling of an exit strategy -- they exaggerate the continuity between the national security policies of Bush's first and second terms. If Obama can be faulted for not turning 180 degrees from Bush's initial War on Terror policies, that is largely because

Continue reading "9/11 Coverage Round-Up: Left and Right get it Wrong: War on Terror is Over" »




John Yoo can't stop digging.

Yoo.jpg

John Yoo signs off his self-congratulatory 9/11 retrospective in the Wall Street Journal with this chestnut:


"In the last decade, our nation has certainly paid a price in the lives of the brave men and women who have defended us. But who would say, after 10 years, that it wasn't worth it to keep our nation safe?"

I don't know if it is better or worse that Yoo posed this conclusion as a rhetorical question. I guess -- given my understanding of what actually keeps our nation safe and what endangers it -- it would strike me as incredibly cavalier and tone-deaf either way.

But, to take Yoo's challenge, I will say, unequivocally, that the war-footing that sent us on a misadventure in Iraq, distracted special operations from the obliteration of al Qaeda in Tora Bora at a moment when their allies were convinced 9/11 (and the "far enemy" approach it aimed to advance) was a strategic blunder, precipitated the metastasization of al Qaeda into Iraq and beyond, killed at least tens of thousands of innocent Iraqis, shamed the U.S. around the world, destabilized the region to the benefit of Iran, and placed us anywhere from 1-3 trillion dollars deeper in debt was not worth a single American life. And it certainly wasn't worth thousands of American lives, nor the physical and psychological maiming of tens of thousands more of our soldiers and their families.

Did we need to root out al Qaeda? Yes. But that's not what Yoo and friends did. They fertilized al Qaeda and spread its seeds throughout the Middle East and North Africa by "choosing war" (in Yoo's words). They chose the only way of dealing with al Qaeda - expansive war in the Middle East - that could have made them more relevant and popular after 9/11.

Without that chosen war, the decade would have looked quite different. A small special operations unit would have dispatched bin Laden and much of the rest of al Qaeda in Tora Bora. The CIA and JSOC would have increased their surgical and limited counterterrorism operations, containing any Hirabi groups seeking to emulate al Qaeda's approach. The internal debate in Muslim lands about how to incorporate Islamic traditions into their political systems would have stayed an internal debate, and eventually the Arab Spring would have swept Hussein out of power along with the other authoritarians in the region. We would be basically where we are now, without having squandered unnecessary blood, treasure, and good will.

But Yoo does not get any of that. As he argues:

Continue reading "Covering the 9/11 Coverage: John Yoo" »





waterboard1.jpg

In a fairly sedate apologia for George W. Bush's post 9/11 foreign policy appearing in Foreign Affairs, Melvyn Leffler writes:

"To extract actionable intelligence, it [the Bush Administration] resorted to detention, rendition, and, in a few cases, torture."

This formulation suggests both that 'actionable intelligence' was won using such tactics and that the administration 'resorted' to their use only after other tactics were tried and found wanting. But leaked and declassified accounts of interrogations featuring the 'torture' Leffler refers to suggest that neither of these propositions are true. Coercive techniques did not produce actionable intelligence, and they were used despite the superior efficacy of rapport-based techniques that generated far more intelligence with those very detainees.

For a thorough debunking of the meme Leffler casually propagates, see this.



1 2 3 4 Next
 

Bringing Science to Security

We bring cutting edge science to questions of national security and counterterrorism.

Click here to find out more.

In the News

Science of Security narrates the End of the War on Terror in The ATLANTIC's special section on 9/11.

Congressional Quarterly Researcher quotes "CT Since 9/11" and Nick Adams on Obama Administration's recent counter-radicalization policy memo.

Reader's Digest cites "CT Since 9/11" report.

Science of Security op-ed appears in Roll Call

Findings from CT Since 9/11 cited in New York Times.

The Science of Security releases new report: "Counter-terrorism Since 9/11"

Recent Blog Posts

Archives

Categories

Reports

Sites of Interest

Authors

Upcoming Events

None scheduled... but check back soon.


Planes, Trains, and Car Bombs

More Cover for Obama's National Security Approach

Security Establishment Says 'No Thanks' to Indefinite Detention Power

Steal This Meme: Cheney's War on Terror Ended Long Ago Because it Didn't Work

The Emergence of Non-Jeffersonian Democracy in the MENA Region

Biden Gets It on So-called 'Enhanced' Interrogation

Ali Soufan's Book is Out

9/11 Coverage Round-Up: Left and Right get it Wrong: War on Terror is Over

Covering the 9/11 Coverage: John Yoo

Covering the 9/11 Coverage: Melvyn Leffler on Torture

Covering the 9/11 Coverage: The Economist

Covering the 9/11 Coverage: Ross Douthat

What Killed the War on Terror?

The Best Analysis Yet of What Atiya's Death Means

'CT Since 9/11' Cited in Reader's Digest

An Outlier, Not a Trend: The Coordinated Attacks in Iraq

The Security Shuffle

Obama/Brennan CT Strategy Memo Underscores Stalled Debate

Did Torture Work? Congress Doesn't Seem to Know

New York Times Op-ed Cites Breakthrough's "CT Since 9/11" Report

Zawahiri Next on Obama's List

Science of Security to Brief Capitol Hill During This Week's NDAA Debate

There They Go Again: Latest Claims about the Effectiveness of Enhanced Interrogation also Proven False

Q&A, with Audrey Kurth Cronin

Al Qaeda and Counterterrorism After Bin Laden

Humanitarian Intervention in Libya - Considering the Endgame

Friends of 'Science of Security' Report from Libya, Afghanistan

Unqualified, Self-appointed CT Experts Training Local Law Enforcement

Politics Trumps Effectiveness in U.S. Congress

Presenting "CT Since 9/11: Evaluating the Efficacy of Controversial Tactics"

Terrorism studies remains an "unruly" academic field, but for how long?

AQ organizationally stronger but strategically/motivationally anemic?

January 2012

December 2011

October 2011

September 2011

August 2011

July 2011

June 2011

May 2011

April 2011

March 2011