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In-Depth Coverage

Original Commentaries

07/24/08
Strategy and Leadership Needed  —Lt. Gen. (Ret.) David W. Barno, U.S. Army; commander, Combined Forces Command Afghanistan (2003-2005); director, Near East South Asia Center for Strategic Studies, Natl Defense University. Interview with Middle East Bulletin.
07/22/08
What the U.S. Should Do  —Andrew Exum, former Army captain, led U.S. Army Rangers in Iraq and Afghanistan; Ph.D student, War Studies, King's College London. Original Commentary for Middle East Bulletin.
07/08/08
Planning the Transition  —Ghaith al-Omari, director of advocacy, American Task Force on Palestine; former foreign policy adviser to Palestinian President Abbas. Original Commentary for Middle East Bulletin.

Setting the Record Straight

Neglecting Afghanistan

“[W]e're fighting two wars at once, three wars at once. We're fighting the global war on terror, we're fighting a war in Iraq, and we're fighting a war in Afghanistan. There are multiple demands on our forces. That's the reality of life at this point. The focus of our efforts clearly has been in Iraq, the battleground which Osama bin Laden identified as the central front in their war against us, the place in which they sought to set up a foothold for their caliphate that would reach into Europe.”
—Pentagon Press Secretary Geoff Morrell, DoD News Briefing, July 23, 2008  versus
  • “The most dangerous area of the world … representing the most significant U.S. national security threat … is not Iraq but the border region between Afghanistan and Pakistan. … [W]e still lack relevant, long-term strategies to achieve sustainable security and stability in both Iraq and Afghanistan.”
    —Senator Chuck Hagel (R-NE), speech, Brookings Institution, June 26, 2008
  • Middle East Analysis

    May 30, 2007

    Several developments in the region since 2003 have prompted major changes in Iran’s strategic posture. The events in Iraq represent the most important development, as the 2003 war effected a dramatic change in Iran’s most important neighbor. Iraq currently houses a large and threatening American force, sent there to overthrow a regime that at the time was perceived in the United States as developing weapons of mass destruction and heavily involved in terror.

    The American threat appears even more ominous when considering that at the end of 2001 the US overthrew another Muslim regime, the Taliban in Afghanistan. The result of the military action in two neighbor states is that Iran is encircled by states connected to the US, some of which are still housing American forces.

    The signal to Iran was clear: if Iran did not cease developing weapons of mass destruction and promoting terror, it too could be subject to the threat of military action. Access the full article>>