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John Robb is someone who I read carefully

May 10, 2004 by Michael Boyle

John Robb is someone who I read carefully

after the events of September 11. It’s instructive, three and a half years later, to go and look at his early post-Sept-11 assessment. He proposed three scenarios. One, a quick attack and total victory over the Taliban and Bin Laden. Two, a legalistic approach over a longer event horizon. Three, a worst case scenario in which, “a general anti-US movement in the muslim countries erupts due to a botched US attack…”

Robb meant a botched attack on Afghanistan, I think. In Afghanistan, even with out bin Laden I think his optimistic first scenario played out pretty well. But then came Iraq, and it’s working out much much worse.

What was Robb’s prediction of the fallout from his worst case scenario?

the world loses confidence in the US-based economic system and a multipolar system emerges. A long protracted recession occurs. Many developing countries fall into chaos. The dollar collapses as capital flight occurs. Security concerns slow business activity. The world develops along multipolar lines with no one nation in a position to protect the overall system. The standard of living experienced by the western world drops by over 20%. We enter the world of cyberpunk world of Gibson where technology advances but virtually all other aspects of the world’s systems are inoperative. Countries and regions isolate themselves. Cost to the world economy? $300 trillion over 20 years.

Tags: International Affairs

Full text:

May 5, 2004 by Michael Boyle

Full text:

MSNBC has posted the full U.S. Army report on Iraqi prisoner abuse, aka the Taguba report (after its author).

Tags: International Affairs

If you haven’t read it yet,

May 4, 2004 by Michael Boyle

If you haven’t read it yet,

Sy Hersh’s article about Iraqi prison abuses is online.

I haven’t commented about all of this, because frankly words have escaped me. I do know three things, however.

  1. Any American leader who pleads “isolated incident” is going to be subject to ridicule.
  2. To me, the leadership (military and ‘intelligence’) who say they didn’t know anything about this is as culpable in this as the torturers.
  3. These are war crimes and should be tried as such.

Tags: International Affairs

Jason Burke in Foreign Policy:

April 26, 2004 by Michael Boyle

Jason Burke in Foreign Policy:

Think Again: Al Qaeda. An important reality check about Al Queda, its goals, and its general nature.

Tags: International Affairs

Must-read:

April 21, 2004 by Michael Boyle

Must-read:

The US Senate Committee on Foreign Relations holds regular hearings on a number of subjects, including of course Iraq and the post-war transition occurring there. Yesterday’s session was called Iraq Transition: Civil War or Civil Society?. Dr Juan Cole’s testimony is indispensible if you wish to understand what’s going on there now and what should be done about it. [Direct Link to a 33K PDF]

Tags: International Affairs

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