MEMO TO ISAF: Running Out of Time to Professionalize Afghan Security Forces
October 14, 2011 3 min. read

Earlier this week, the U.N. Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA) published a highly critical report alleging that Afghan security forces have engaged in “systematic torture” in prisons and detention facilities. According to interviews with more than 300 suspects held in these facilities, Afghan security forces engaged in beatings, sexual assault and other acts that might constitute […]

Read more
GailForce: Afghanistan Update Part I
October 14, 2011 10 min. read

Over the last month I’ve participated in two Department of Defense sponsored Bloggers roundtable on Afghanistan and one sponsored by the Army on the role and importance of our forces in Europe to our National Security policy. What I like about these forums is it gives me an opportunity to hear views about important topics […]

Read more
NATO: Lessons Learned in Libya
October 13, 2011 4 min. read

Operation Unified Protector, NATO’s mission in Libya, is winding down. Claiming victory, the Obama administration is chiding those who opposed U.S. involvement. While NATO has succeeded in preventing Muammar Qadhafi from further targeting civilians, the mission has exposed a significant alliance weakness: the unfair sharing of the burden for common defense among NATO members. In […]

Read more
When Will We Stop Over Sexualizing Our Children?
October 13, 2011 3 min. read

Regardless of how much you want to shield the children of the world from exposure to sexual content, it is increasingly difficult and near impossible. Shy of eliminating all forms of media from your child and then never leaving the house with them in tow, you really can’t. We live in a world where sex […]

Read more
Gorbachev and Reagan Era Officials on Reykjavik, Getting to Zero
October 13, 2011 2 min. read

Former Soviet Leader Mikhail Gorbachev has added his two rubles to the ongoing commemorations of the Reykjavik Summit that almost did away with nuclear weapons. Whether its been a post-Soviet conversion or his ability, now long out of power, to wax poetic on things nuclear, Gorbachev has been speaking out about the value of nuclear […]

Read more
Drone Proliferation (2)
October 13, 2011 1 min. read

The numbers are unsettling. According to a story in last Sunday’s Review section of the New York Times, Chinese manufacturers showed off 25 different kinds of remotely controlled aircraft at an aerospece show this time last year. In all, 50 countries are thought to have built or bought UAVs, and more do so all the […]

Read more
Iran & The Science of Killing
October 12, 2011 3 min. read

Anyone in the business of studying violence should look askance at recent US claims that Iran’s Quds Force – a unit belonging to the Pasdaran, aka the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) – is behind the amateurish plot to assassinate the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia’s Ambassador to the US. The main issue in contention here is […]

Read more
Some Good Graphics
October 12, 2011 1 min. read

The good folks at Masters in Environmental Science have collated some very good infographics on climate change that are worth your seeing.  Here is one on the “carbon footprint” that shows how different countries are performing both on a gross output basis and per capita.  (All credit here to Miller-McCune, the excellent media outlet, and […]

Read more
Using Food to Increase Birth Registration
October 12, 2011 4 min. read

A child’s first access to human rights comes with the registration of their birth.  Birth registration is more than than a right, but the key to the future.  Without a birth certificate a child is left to wander through life vulnerable to abuse and victimization.   Despite how valuable birth registration is to a child’s welfare, registering […]

Read more
Heinonen on Iran, the DPRK and A.Q. Khan
October 12, 2011 3 min. read
Tags: , , ,

In light of the amazingly dramatic reveal of an Iranian plot to kill the Saudi Ambassador to the U.S. at his favorite DC dinner spot using a Mexican drug cartel gun for hire (calling Robert Ludlum!), I thought it pertinent to cite a recent Der Speigel interview with former IAEA Deputy Director for Safeguards Olli […]

Read more
Are Politics to Blame for the Deaths of 30,000 Children in Somalia?
October 11, 2011 3 min. read

In July, the UN declared a famine in two regions of Southern Somalia, the first such announcement in the region since the infamous 1984 famine in Ethiopia. Somalia continues to find itself gripped tightly by starvation; the famine has claimed the lives of some 30,000 children in the last 3 months alone. More than 12 […]

Read more
Refugee agriculture in the United States
October 10, 2011 1 min. read

Even before it was a country, the United States has drawn people eager to realize the opportunities that it affords to new arrivals.  For refugees living in the United States, however, their arrival often accompanies a traumatic break from their homelands because of conflict or persecution. The U.S. Office of Refugee Resettlement initiated a program […]

Read more

Popular from Press