February 2006 Issue
To Ambassador L. Paul Bremer
the former head of the Coalition Provisional Authority in Iraq, for publishing the first serious memoir by a senior official involved in making Iraq policy. Ironically, Bremer’s ghost...
To the Dutch
For alliance solidarity. AFJ understands that NATO is supposed to be a big, happy and victorious family in Afghanistan, but sometimes the truth intrudes. The Dutch, for example, are...
To the U.S. Army
For not being “an institution at war.” Our reporting here is anecdotal, to be sure, but the pile of war stories is immense from soldiers and commanders deployed to Iraq and...
She decided to multipurpose a tent that had been used for watching movies.
Yoga helped Staff Sgt. Bonnie McKinley shed 75 pounds at an Iraqi air base, according to an adjective-verbing scribe in apparent need of some lexicographical enlightmentization of his own.
U.S. AIR FORCE PRESS RELEASE, JAN. 11
Kill the QDR
Doctor: “Where does it hurt?”
By TOM Donnelly
A vote for victory
This is the first installment in a regular series on the blogs — personal Web logs — maintained by U.S. servicemen and women fighting in the war on terrorism. The proliferation...
By Christopher Griffin
Dis-integration
The U.S. military foresees a future where its enemies are watched by a network of sensors that feed targeting information to a multitude of shooters who attack from an array of platforms....
By William Matthews
In this issue
This month’s AFJ marks an initial appearance on these pages by Michael Vickers, whose primary paycheck comes from the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments in Washington,...
Survival strategy
As the Christmas holiday approached, it was time to talk about terrorism. I spent part of a December afternoon in a sterile conference room symbolic of strategic thought in Washington...
By Ralph Peters
Spiraling ahead
Retired Vice Adm. Arthur K. Cebrowski, who died Nov. 12, was at the center of the U.S. military’s struggle with the information age, part of a small coterie of visionaries who...
By William A. Arkin
The ‘who’ question
Tom Donnelly’s editorial “The ‘who’ question” in the December issue leaves me with more questions than answers. The thrust of the article is that the Bush...
Don’t blame Air Force
I wish to rebut the statement made by Loren Thompson in “Finesse trumps firepower” in the December issue. Mr. Thompson asserted that “America still suffered the greatest...
al-Qaida in southern Africa
Although the U.S. invasion of Afghanistan after Sept. 11, 2001, did not start the deterritorialization of al-Qaida, it certainly accelerated the process.
By Kurt Shillinger
What the QDR should say
The report summarizing the work of the 2005 Quadrennial Defense Review will be sent to Congress on Feb. 6. I’ve spent a lot of time and effort contributing to this process over the...
By Michael G. Vickers
License to steal
In a mid-December commentary, Commerce Department Undersecretary David McCormick announced that his department would soon publish guidelines to govern which foreign nationals can gain access...
By Gary Schmitt
Give & take
In December’s cover story, “The sun also rises,” AFJ examined the transformation of the U.S.-Japan alliance in the post-Cold War world. This month, MIT Professor Richard J....
By Richard J. Samuels
The waiting game
For the 18,000 U.S. troops in Afghanistan, the appearance of victory could be a recipe for defeat. American commanders in Afghanistan say they are in a high-stakes race against time. Their...
By Sean D. Naylor
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Posted 1/7/2009 by Administrator
Botnets outmaneuvered
Posted 1/7/2009 by Administrator
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