Posts tagged robert gates

Dr. Charles G. Cogan: Afghanistan: the Diem Moment?

My friend Dexter Filkins tells it all (“Inside Corrupt-istan,” NYT, Sept 5, 2010), viz: Transparency International ranks Afghanistan 179th in terms of corruption, ahead only of…Somalia; and ex-deputy attorney-general Fazel Ahmad Fakiryar, who tried to bring corruption charges against members of the government of Hamid Karzai and who was dismissed by the latter for his efforts, has become a national icon.
Robert Gates, who tries gamely to be straight with the public while adhering to national policy, has never been effusive about what is happening in Afghanistan. Other defense observers, such as retired Col. John Nagl last week on The News Hour, have candidly acknowledged that Mr. Karzai has become a major problem for American policy aims in Afghanistan.
It is clear that Karzai has lost all credibility with the Afghan people — to the extent that one wonders whether, in the secret corridors of Washington, a discussion might be moving from whether to dismiss Karzai to how to do it.

Read More…


Remarks And Observations From U.S. Secretary Of Defense Robert Gates


KANDAHAR AIRFIELD – U.S. Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates, center, and U.S. Army Lt. Gen. David Rodriguez, left, deputy commander of the International Security Assistance Force, walk to a meeting with Regional Command South personnel on Kandahar Airfield, Afghanistan, Sept. 3, 2010. DoD photo by U.S. Air Force Master Sgt. Jerry Morrison


Defense Secretary Offers Cautious Views on Wars — New York Times

SENJARAY, Afghanistan — No one has ever accused Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates of happy talk, but during a trip this week to assess the state of America’s two wars his words were more restrained than usual.

Even after pronouncing himself “encouraged” on Friday during a visit to the Afghan province of Kandahar, where United States forces are trying to flush out the Taliban from their spiritual home, Mr. Gates quickly added, “Everybody knows this is far from a done deal.”

Read more ….

More News On U.S. Secretary of Defense Gates

Gates Sees 2-3 Years of Combat in Afghanistan – Wall Street Journal
Gates Confident Afghan Strategy Working, But Outcome Not Assured — Voice of America
Gates rallies troops in Kandahar — Financial Times
Gates meets US troops in Afghan Taliban heartland — AFP
Gates says Pakistan havens still threaten Afghanistan — Reuters
U.S. Defense Chief Sees Progress In Tour Of Afghan South — Radio Free Europe
Gates sees progress in tour of Afghan war zone — Yahoo News/AP
Gates visits US forces in southern Afghanistan — AP
US Defense Secretary Visits Afghan Taliban Birthplace — Voice of America
Gates meets US troops in Afghan Taliban heartland — AFP
Gates says Pakistan havens still threaten Afghanistan — Reuters
Gates, Karzai Discuss Way Ahead in Afghanistan — U.S. Department of Defense
Gates: U.S. won’t turn back on Afghanistan — UPI
Gates Says U.S. Forces in Afghanistan for ‘Years’ to Come — FOX News

Reason for war invalid: Gates — The Age
Gates: Iraq outcome ‘will always be clouded by how it began’ — McClatchy News
Gates: History will judge legacy of Iraq – Xinhuanet
Gates Sees Iraq Successes Forever ‘Clouded’ by Faulty WMD Intel — FOX News
Gates, in Iraq, Takes the Long View — New York Times
Raw Video: Gates Tells Legion Convention Iraq’s Better, Not Perfect — Todaystmj4
For Gates the US war in Iraq is over but cloud remains — AFP
Gates marks end of Operation Iraqi Freedom with emotion and warning – CNN
Gates: All is not well as combat role ends — AP
Gates: History will reveal what the U.S. achieved during Iraq war — Stars And Stripes
Pentagon chief sees tough road for Iraq — The Hill

Gates Calls for Peacetime Pentagon Reform
— ExecutiveGov
TRANSCRIPT: FOX News Interview with Defense Secretary Robert Gates by James Rosen — FOX News
Eying the Pentagon, Gates considers three changes — Washington Post
More cuts for Robert Gates’s Defense Department — Washington Post
Robert Gates renews his assault on wasteful defense spending — Washington Post editorial
Gates’ budget ax swings at Pentagon overhead, Joint Forces Command — Christian Science Monitor
Gates Takes Out His Knife — Daily Dish, The Atlantic
Generals Push Back On Robert Gates’ Budget Cutting — Huffington Post
Pentagon: Gates ‘still has a lot to do’ — The Hill

US defense chief confirms plans to leave office in 2011 – AFP
Gates plans to retire next year — AP
Robert Gates to leave in 2011 — Politico
The Robert Gates Clock Is Ticking (Or Maybe Not) — Time Magazine
Pentagon Chief Plans To Retire Next Year — NPR
Long Goodbye for Robert Gates, His Legacy Still Taking Shape — FOX News opinion

In Hampton Roads, a Military Bastion Meets ‘Austerity’

What the military giveth, the military can taketh away. It’s not a happy lesson, but it is one that many Military Bastions, counties around armed services installations, have learned in the recent years through rounds of base closings.

And it is a lesson that the 16-county region in southern Virginia known as Hampton Roads is confronting now.

The economy in Hampton Roads is diverse, pushed by multiple drivers including trade at the area’s massive ports and tourism on its beaches, but always underpinning it all has been a steady and substantial military presence. Four of the 16 counties in the region fall into Patchwork Nation’s Military Bastion category – including Norfolk, home to the Navy’s Second Fleet.

Now all of that is being thrown in the air after a string of announcements from the Pentagon that appear to point to a scaling down of much of the area’s military presence.

Since January, the region has been hearing about how it might lose one its carriers to Florida – meaning a possible loss of 11,000 jobs. In early August, Secretary of Defense Robert Gates announced plans to eliminate the Joint Forces Command based in the region – another 6,000 jobs hang in the balance there. And just recently came word that the Navy may consider “mothballing” the second fleet.

Add it all together and the impact is vast. The military has long been considered a key part of the three-legged stool that props up the region. The people of Hampton Roads are wondering how long that will continue to be the case – and whether that stool is going to get a bit wobbly.

A Stool with Two Legs

In some ways Hampton Roads is positioned better for cuts than other Military Bastions around the country. A stool with two legs is better than a stool with none. In some Military Bastions, big cuts in nearby bases can destroy a local economy.

Hopkinsville, Ky., for instance, relies so heavily on nearby Fort Campbell it’s hard to imagine what the economy would look like there without it. The manufacturing jobs that once helped push the area forward have long since dried up, as have the rail routes.

But no matter what the rest of the area economy looks like, Hampton Roads is not taking the news of its potential military departures lightly. Five different cities in the area quickly released resolutions protesting the Joint Forces elimination. Some cities are actively fighting the Joint Forces decision. Economic impact studies showed the area would be losing billions in revenue with the changes in mind.

The state of Virginia also quickly jumped in and Gov. Bob McDonnell announced the creation of a commission designed to expand the state’s defense and national security facilities.

The stakes in the proposed changes are much higher than the just military jobs. In the modern military, remember, contractors are an integral part of everything from maintenance to office work. The net impact of large cuts is sweeping.

The Politics of Utility and Austerity

That’s why, in some ways, the budget battles involving Military Bastions like Hampton Road are going to be fascinating to watch in the coming years as the national debt plays a large role in the national political dialogue.

The nation’s Military Bastions tend to be conservative bastions as well, solidly Republican. And as voices in the GOP increasingly argue for austerity, eventually the budget axe will fall on these communities driven, in many senses, by government spending.

In announcing the elimination of the Joint Forces command, Defense Secretary Robert Gates cited as one of the reasons “the culture of endless money that has taken hold” in the military.

And so in Hampton Roads and Military Bastions like it, the arguments are likely to begin, focusing on the need or utility of the items or forces being cut. No one has argued that a program that is wasteful, duplicative or unnecessary should be saved. And in Hampton Roads, the lines have already been drawn.

Rep. Randy Forbes, whose district encompasses some of the Hampton Roads, called the decision to eliminate the Joint Forces Command “further evidence of this administration allowing its budget for social change to determine defense spending.” The argument in other words is less about the need for the cuts than spending priorities.

The meaning? All the talk from politicians about needing to make cuts and trim back spending in Washington is going to face some serious hurdles. Austerity is always popular until it hits near home.

Military Bastions like Hampton Roads may find themselves with more reasons than other communities to be picky about what form of austerity they embrace.

This is cross-posted on Patchwork Nation.

US defence secretary makes surprise visit to Iraq

US Defence Secretary Robert Gates arrived Wednesday in Iraq on a surprise visit, as the US military officially ended its combat mission in the war-torn country, an AFP journalist said.

Gates was scheduled to attend a change of command ceremony for the head of US forces in Iraq that would also mark the beginning of a new training and advisory mission to be undertaken by remaining American troops.

General Ray Odierno, the top US commander in Iraq since taking over from General David Petraeus in 2008 is stepping down to be replaced by Lieutenant General Lloyd Austin.

Soon after his arrival, Gates headed to Camp Ramadi, an American base about 100 kilometres (80 miles) west of Baghdad, where he was to meet US soldiers.

US Vice President Joe Biden is also in Iraq, having arrived in the capital on Monday for talks with political leaders.

Both Gates and Biden were due later Wednesday to attend a ceremony marking the start of Operation New Dawn, the name given to the US military’s new “advise and assist” mission.

The ceremony, during which command will also be transferred from Odierno to Austin, was due to take place at the Al Faw Palace near Baghdad airport.

President Barack Obama late Tuesday officially announced the end of the US combat mission in Iraq. US forces are now down to less than 50,000 with only an advisory and training mission left.

Operation Iraqi Freedom is over, and the Iraqi people now have lead responsibility for the security of their country,” Obama said in the 18-minute address marking the transition of the US mission in Iraq.

Obama had vowed to get American combat troops home from Iraq and has pulled nearly 100,000 soldiers out — even as he escalated the war in Afghanistan.

But with around 49,700 American troops remaining in Iraq until the end of next year, Obama warned that although US combat was ending, violence in Iraq would not.

Gates for his part said in a speech in the Midwestern state of Wisconsin on Tuesday that it was too early for victory parades in Iraq.

“I am not saying that all is, or will necessarily be, well in Iraq,” he said.

“The most recent elections have yet to result in a coalition government. Sectarian tensions remain a fact of life. Al-Qaeda in Iraq is beaten, but not gone,” he warned.

“This is not a time for premature victory parades or self-congratulation,” Gates said, adding “we still have a job to do and responsibilities there.”

In a television address to his people, Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki earlier stressed that his country’s soldiers and police were now in charge, adding he was confident the last US forces would leave as planned in 2011.

“This is a day that will remain in the memory of all Iraqis. Today, Iraq has become a sovereign and independent country,” he said.

Iraq speech will not claim victory, Obama vows

President Barack Obama said Tuesday his speech marking the end of US combat operations in Iraq would not be a victory lap, as Iraqi leaders vowed their forces could defend the country.

“Our combat phase is over,” Obama told American troops on a sprawling Texas military base before his solemn Oval Office address to the nation to mark the end of combat in Iraq seven years after the US-led invasion.

But the US commander-in-chief warned “there is still a lot of work to do” and he insisted his speech at 8:00pm (0000 GMT) Tuesday would not be “a victory lap, it is not congratulatory.”

A major US troop pullout over past months has left less than 50,000 US soldiers in Iraq, but a near simultaneous surge in car bombings and shootings, has left hundreds dead, and many remain fearful for the future.

In a television address to his people, Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki stressed the Iraqi military and police were in charge, adding he was confident the last US forces would leave the country as planned at the end of 2011.

“This is a day that will remain in the memory of all Iraqis. Today, Iraq has become a sovereign and independent country,” he said.

“As of today, our security forces will play the leading role in maintaining the security and defense of our country.”

But the country has been left with no functioning government since March elections, with various attempts to form a coalition between rival groups failing to form a viable majority.

The White House on Tuesday urged Iraq to move with “a sense of urgency” in forming a new government after months of delay.

In talks with Iraqi leaders on Tuesday “we urged Iraq’s leaders to move forward with a sense of urgency in forming a government,” said Ben Rhodes, deputy national security advisor for strategic communications.

“We believe that government should be inclusive,” Rhodes told reporters.

US Defense Secretary Robert Gates also said Tuesday it was too early for victory parades, paying tribute to the 4,427 US troops killed in Iraq and the 34,268 wounded since the invasion to topple late dictator Saddam Hussein.

“I am not saying that all is, or will necessarily be, well in Iraq,” Gates said in a speech in the Midwestern state of Wisconsin.

“The most recent elections have yet to result in a coalition government. Sectarian tensions remain a fact of life. Al-Qaeda in Iraq is beaten, but not gone,” he warned.

“This is not a time for premature victory parades or self-congratulation,” Gates said, adding “we still have a job to do and responsibilities there.”

Obama spoke in a mess hall before some 170 American troops, with a table poignantly set up with an empty chair, plate and a single rose to honor those killed in action.

“This table is empty. They are not with us today. Remember,” said a notice next to the Table of Remembrance.

The US leader then shook hands with every soldier, sharing a few words and saying thank you. Earlier he met with some widows of fallen soldiers.

Obama also spoke earlier Tuesday with his predecessor, former president George W. Bush, who ordered the invasion, wrongly accusing Saddam of harboring weapons of mass destruction.

White House spokesman Robert Gibbs said the change of mission in Iraq provided Americans the opportunity to put behind them one of the most divisive periods in recent history.

“We can thank the men and women who made tremendous sacrifices. We can heal the wounds that were opened… about whether we should go to Iraq,” he told ABC television.

However, a well-known Obama critic said the president, who opposed the so-called “surge” strategy in Iraq, should not years later be allowed to claim credit for any improvements in security.

“Today we mark not the defeat those voices anticipated — but progress,” said House of Representatives Republican Minority Leader John Boehner in excerpts from a speech to be delivered after Obama’s national broadcast.

US Vice President Joe Biden landed in Baghdad late Monday to mark the military’s change of focus from combat to training and advisory tasks in support of Iraqi forces, starting from Wednesday.

But Iraqis seem unconvinced there will be an improvement in security.

“If the politicians continue fighting on the chairs, the situation will get worse,” said Baghdad market trader Salah Abu al-Qassim, 36.

U.S. Secretary Of Defense Gates Comments On Iraq Drawdown




Gates: All Is Not Well As Combat Role Ends — Washington Post

MILWAUKEE — All is not well in Iraq as the United States formally closes down its combat mission there, Defense Secretary Robert Gates said Tuesday, warning that political paralysis and continued sectarian violence cloud that country’s future.

Gates said conditions in Iraq are much better, however, as the United States shifts to an advisory role seven years after the U.S.-led invasion that toppled dictator Saddam Hussein.

Read more ….

More News On Secretary Of Defense Gates Remarks On Iraq

Text of Secretary of Defense Robert Gates’ speech on August 31, 2010 — Stars And Stripes

Gates: No Victory Celebration for Iraq as Mission Changes — Voice of America
Gates Speaks Cautiously on Iraq – Wall Street Journal
Gates: Iraq better, not perfect as US role changes — AP
Not yet time for victory parades in Iraq: Gates — AFP
Marking Iraq Milestone, Gates Strikes Cautious Note — New York Times
Gates warns Iraq commitment isn’t over — McClatchy News
Gates Gets Emotional Speaking of Fallen in Iraq — ABC News

Not yet time for victory parades in Iraq: Gates

US Defense Secretary Robert Gates conceded Tuesday it was too early for victory parades in Iraq as the US ends its combat mission in the war-torn country.

“I am not saying that all is, or will necessarily be, well in Iraq,” Gates said in a speech in the Midwestern state of Wisconsin as the number of US troops in the country slid below the symbolic figure of 50,000.

“The most recent elections have yet to result in a coalition government. Sectarian tensions remain a fact of life. Al-Qaeda in Iraq is beaten, but not gone,” he warned.

“This is not a time for premature victory parades or self-congratulation,” Gates said, adding “we still have a job to do and responsibilities there.”

Clearly choking back tears, he paid tribute to the 4,427 US servicemen killed in Iraq, and the 34,268 wounded since the US-led 2003 invasion.

President Barack Obama was on Tuesday marking the symbolic end of US combat operations in Iraq, seven years after the invasion which he had opposed when a senator in Congress.

Speaking from the Oval Office, Obama was to address Americans in a nationally televised speech at 8:00 pm (midnight GMT).

In his own television address to his people, Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki said he was confident the last American forces would leave as planned, stressing the Iraqi military and police were firmly in charge.

From Wednesday, US soldiers in Iraq will be charged with advising Iraqi security forces and training soldiers before a final US pullout at the end of 2011 under a deal struck between Washington and Baghdad.

“As the US military campaign in Iraq winds down, an invigorated and reinforced Afghanistan effort is moving ahead on all fronts,” Gates said in the speech in Milwaukee.

Some 140,000 international forces are fighting a Taliban insurgency in Afghanistan, and Gates said that while the coalition now had the forces it needed in the bloody conflict, he warned the road ahead would be difficult.

“It will be a tough, hard campaign, with its share of setbacks and heartbreak,” he said.

“Success there is not inevitable. But with the right strategy and the willingness to see it through, it is possible. And it is certainly worth the fight.”

Afghan Security Force More Than A Year Away, Senior U.S. Commander Says

WASHINGTON — A senior U.S. commander on Monday wouldn’t predict when Afghanistan might take control of its own security and warned that NATO needs at least another year to recruit and train enough soldiers and police officers.

The assessment by Lt. Gen. Bill Caldwell, the head of NATO’s training mission in Afghanistan, further dims U.S. hopes that the planned U.S. withdrawal next year will be significant in size.

President Barack Obama has said that troops will begin pulling out in July 2011, the size and pace of withdrawal depending on security conditions. Defense officials, including Defense Secretary Robert Gates, have said they believe next summer’s pullout would be modest.

In a Pentagon briefing, Caldwell told reporters that Afghan army and police forces won’t reach sufficient numbers until Oct. 31, 2011 – three months after Obama’s deadline to start U.S. withdrawals.

NATO has set the goal of creating an Afghan military and police force of 305,600 personnel – 171,600 army and 134,000 police.

There are currently 249,500 personnel – 134,000 army and 115,500 police.

But Caldwell predicted that desertion and injury rates are so high among Afghan forces that NATO will have to recruit and train 141,000 people to ensure it has the 56,000 additional personnel needed next fall.

Because Afghanistan is still scrambling to recruit and train its security forces, Caldwell said there was no accurate estimate on when Kabul might take control of even the more peaceful parts of the country.

“It doesn’t mean in small isolated pockets that they can’t have the lead with coalition” support, Caldwell said of Afghan forces. “But to say that they’ll be able to do much more before October of next year would be stretching it, only because we haven’t finished the development of their force.”

Caldwell also said it is likely the U.S. and international community will have to pay for that force for some time, even after NATO troops leave.

“The U.S. has made an enduring commitment to be supportive,” he said.

As was the case in Iraq, the training and equipping of Afghan security forces is considered the linchpin in the U.S. exit strategy. However, the effort has been particularly difficult in Afghanistan, where illiteracy rates are high, corruption is rampant and there is little banking infrastructure to ensure troops get paid.

Last June, Gates predicted that Afghan forces could take control of security in some areas by the end of this year. But diplomats in the U.S. and Europe have since said the first hand over may not occur until early next year.

A NATO conference in Lisbon in November would decide which areas would be handed over first.

Caldwell said that notable gains have been made in the past nine months. For example, he said that the size of the Afghan army and police has more than doubled from levels in previous years.

Caldwell said that recruiting and retention has been aided by pay increases, particularly for Afghan police, as well as a “new sense of urgency” by the Afghan government to boost recruitment.

The U.S. also has sent more police and military trainers to Afghanistan, mostly fixing a severe shortfall that dominated NATO meetings last fall, Caldwell said.

Still, challenges remain. Caldwell said that fewer than 18 percent of the Afghan force is literate, preventing most soldiers from recognizing the serial number on their weapons or performing other basic tasks.

Illiteracy also has kept some Afghans from being able to access their wages through an electronic banking system, established by NATO to reduce the risk that corrupt officers would divert some of the money.

Caldwell said that some 27,000 recruits are enrolled in NATO literacy programs – a figure he hopes will grow to 100,000 by next summer.

Another major issue is attrition. Caldwell said the attrition rate last month for Afghanistan’s civil order police force was 47 percent. The figure is down from 70 percent last year but remains “unacceptable,” he said.

More on Afghanistan


Congress Working To Stop The Pentagon’s Cost Saving Drive


Pentagon Cost-Saving Drive Comes Under Fire — Wall Street Journal

Lawmakers worried about potential job losses in their districts have rallied against the closure of a military command in Virginia, presenting Secretary of Defense Robert Gates with a big test of his sweeping effort to hold down military spending.

Earlier this month, Mr. Gates announced he would cut payments to outside contractors by 10% a year for the next three years, saying the Pentagon bureaucracy had “grown over-reliant on contractors and grown accustomed to operating with little consideration to cost.”

Read more ….

My Comment: Tens of billions of dollars are at stake, as well as tens of thousands of jobs …. it should come to no one’s surprise that this cost cutting drive will have its critics. But when the final decision to get things done comes down to the wire …. that is when the fireworks will really start to fly.

Congress Working To Stop The Pentagon’s Cost Saving Drive is a post from: Updated News

Congress Working To Stop The Pentagon’s Cost Saving Drive


Pentagon Cost-Saving Drive Comes Under Fire — Wall Street Journal

Lawmakers worried about potential job losses in their districts have rallied against the closure of a military command in Virginia, presenting Secretary of Defense Robert Gates with a big test of his sweeping effort to hold down military spending.

Earlier this month, Mr. Gates announced he would cut payments to outside contractors by 10% a year for the next three years, saying the Pentagon bureaucracy had “grown over-reliant on contractors and grown accustomed to operating with little consideration to cost.”

Read more ….

My Comment: Tens of billions of dollars are at stake, as well as tens of thousands of jobs …. it should come to no one’s surprise that this cost cutting drive will have its critics. But when the final decision to get things done comes down to the wire …. that is when the fireworks will really start to fly.