Afghanistan Strategy by Brzezinski

The article is called West Must Avoid Russia’s Mistakes in Afghanistan, and who better to explain how to do that than the man who led the armament and training of Afghan mujahedeen: Zbigniew Brzezinski.

His main point seems to be that the US will fail if it tries to impose its own vision of government, backed by military force, rather than allow political forces within the country emerge on their own. He also says that a major shakedown of the country to “root” out opponents will backfire. Perhaps most interesting, however, is his cost model for fighting drugs:

Simply trying to wipe out the poppies and deprive the farmers of income will not undercut the Taliban, it will strengthen them. The Europeans should pay the Afghan farmers as much as it takes to abandon drug crops. The Europeans should do that because most of these drugs go to Europe. The drug problem in Afghanistan is simultaneously a source of income for the Taliban and a serious threat to Europe. In this respect, the European responsibility for dealing with it is self-evident.

Makes sense, but good luck selling that one to the EU or even the US. Bombs are easy to explain. Who is going to be able to win broad support for a policy that pays foreign farmers to help with domestic security?

Speaking of money, the Danger Room reports that lots of it is being directed into technology companies started by ex-Pentagon executives to achieve…wait for it…nation-building:

The goal of the tech-heavy effort is not only to avoid a Hurricane Katrina repeat. It’s to get better at stabilizing failed states that could easily slip into radical hands. But first, the boys in uniform have to get over their traditional reluctance to cooperate with civilians.

Nation-building, perhaps by default, has become a core mission for the U.S. military.

Has become? Has been for a long time, albeit only small portions of the military. Russia failed at this on a much more costly scale and Brzezinski warns not to repeat their mistakes. Danger Room goes on to explain there might be a silver lining:

The project is called STAR-TIDES (Sustainable Technologies, Accelerated Research-Transportable Infrastructures for Development and Emergency Support). The acronym may be long, but the concept is simple: it is supposed to pull together cheap and effective solutions for humanitarian emergencies or post-war reconstruction.

I’ve been working on just such a plan for the past five years with an ex-military guy myself. My car was running on fuel from a STAR-TIDES-like energy plant for about six months. Wonder if there is a case now to be made for funding. In any case I think the answer here is to remove the military from the equation and get them out of the nation-building game entirely. Let them innovate for their own needs and then pass on the knowledge. No need for management by the brass or ex-brass, thank you. That’s more likely to succeed than trying to overcome the (arguably well-reasoned) American culture and laws that still separate the army from domestic affairs.

Palin Smackdown

Margaret and Helen tell it like it is:

But what really makes me mad is the hypocrisy. She claims to be a Washington outsider and yet is the worst kind of politician. She will say anything and avoid answering any question instead choosing to spout whatever line or soundbite some adviser put into her mouth a few hours earlier. And exactly when did sounding like a hick make someone “more like us”. Last time I checked we were a country striving to educate our children to be intelligent and honest. I think I would die if my daughter came home from school and said something like “I gotta tell ya. Change is a comin’.” At the very least I would remove the Beverly Hillbillies from her approved TV viewing list.

Excellent analysis and commentary. Awesome. Who needs the Economist anymore? The story continues here:

For crying out loud America. How bad does it have to get? Senator McCain is practically crumbling to dust before our very eyes while Governor Palin is out in the hinterland screeching about some 60’s hippie who bumped into Obama once or twice over the years. This from the woman who panders to secessionists in Alaska. Please, dear God, somebody throw a stone because that glass igloo needs to be shattered!

Agreed, and the Palin membership with separatists who hate America is current, not twenty years ago, not ten…it is today.

Fantastic

by Will.I.Am to the beat of “I Want You Back” by the Jackson Five

I’m alright, I’m alright, I’m alright, I’m fantastic…

Nine years of lovin’ you, that’s now flushed down the drain
Six years with a bundle of joy, the last two was the pain
Too immature to handle love, we was just playin games!
You used to say I was your everything, now you can’t say my name
I never thought that I could survive, without you in my life
If you was wonderin’ about how I’m doin’, baby I’m doin’ alright
But it don’t even look like you would cry, if I was to up and die
Die tomorrow, uh-huh, but that’s alright girl, ’cause

Don’t even worry ’bout me
Don’t even worry ’bout me
I’m doin good now, doin super baby
Don’t even worry ’bout me, I’m super duper baby
I’m doin good now, yeah

Six months and a couple of weeks and not one call from you girl
Three months after we broke down, I moved up in the world
I wanna know what’s goin’ on, what’s goin’ on in your life
I know it’s really hard to be my friend, when you were gon’ be my wife
We used to love our relationship, but now we just can’t relate
I understand why you had to go and change your, love for me into hate
And that’s why I believe you wouldn’t cry, if I was to up and die
Die tomorrow, uh-huh, but that’s alright girl, cause

Don’t even worry ’bout me
Don’t even worry ’bout me
I’m doin’ good now, super duper baby
I’m doin’ good now, I’m fantastic
Fantastic, yeah

Fantastic
Fantastic
Fantastic

Ghosts on Surveillance

Spoiler alert: just read the original story if you want to be led through all the clues, one by one, as LiveScience tries to eliminate the supernatural. Otherwise, here’s their conclusion:

One obvious answer, prematurely dismissed by Peterson and others, is almost certainly the correct one: the ghost is a bug. A spider or insect wandered onto the camera; that’s why it was out of focus, why it seemed to glow, why it didn’t interact with anything in the room, and why it only appeared on one camera. It’s true that a moving light wouldn’t activate the camera, as they are sensitive to motion, not light. But it was the bug’s movement that triggered the sensor and started the recording.

This gives new meaning to a surveillance bug.