Very good detailed investigation of the US Special Operations Command (SOCOM), 
the military arm entrusted with counter-insurgency warfare. Now based in more 
than 100 countries, its rise coincides with the costly failure in blood and 
treasure of using American ground forces to further its imperial objectives in 
Iraq and Afghanistan.

*       *       *

America’s Black-Ops Blackout 
Unraveling the Secrets of the Military’s Secret Military 
By Nick Turse
Tom Dispatch.Com
January 7 2014

[...]

SOCOM’s reach and global ambitions go further still. TomDispatch’s analysis of 
McRaven’s first two full years in command reveals a tremendous number of 
overseas operations. In places like Somalia and Libya, elite troops have 
carried out clandestine commando raids. In others, they have used airpower to 
hunt, target and kill suspected militants. Elsewhere, they have waged an 
information war using online propaganda. And almost everywhere they have been 
at work building up and forging ever-tighter ties with foreign militaries 
through training missions and exercises.

“A lot of what we will do as we go forward in this force is build partner 
capacity,” McRaven said at the Ronald Reagan Library in November, noting that 
NATO partners as well as allies in the Middle East, Asia and Latin America “are 
absolutely essential to how we’re doing business.”

In March 2013, for example, Navy SEALs conducted joint training exercises with 
Indonesian frogmen. In April and May, US Special Operations personnel joined 
members of the Malawi Defense Forces for Exercise Epic Guardian. Over three 
weeks, 1,000 troops engaged in marksmanship, small unit tactics, close quarters 
combat training, and other activities across three countries—Djibouti, Malawi 
and the Seychelles.

In May, American special operators took part in Spring Storm, the Estonian 
military’s largest annual training exercise. That same month, members of the 
Peruvian and US special operations forces engaged in joint training missions 
aimed at trading tactics and improving their ability to conduct joint 
operations. In July, Green Berets from the Army’s 20th Special Forces Group 
spent several weeks in Trinidad and Tobago working with members of that tiny 
nation’s Special Naval Unit and Special Forces Operation Detachment. That Joint 
Combined Exchange Training exercise, conducted as part of SOCSOUTH’s Theater 
Security Cooperation program, saw the Americans and their local counterparts 
take part in pistol and rifle instruction and small unit tactical exercises.

In September, according to media reports, US Special Operations forces joined 
elite troops from the ten Association of Southeast Asian Nations member 
countries—Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, Brunei, 
Vietnam, Laos, Myanmar (Burma) and Cambodia—as well as their counterparts from 
Australia, New Zealand, Japan, South Korea, China, India and Russia for a 
US-Indonesian joint-funded coun­terterrorism exercise held at a training center 
in Sentul, West Java.

Full: http://www.tomdispatch.com/blog/175790/
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