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Subject: Pentagon's 21st Century Counterinsurgency Wars: Latin America andSouth 
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Sent: Aug 2, 2009 10:35 AM

Pentagon's 21st Century Counterinsurgency Wars: Latin America and South Asia By 
Rick Rozoff URL of this article: 
www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=14599 Global Research, August 1, 
2009 More than half a year after the departure of the George W. Bush 
administration the United States is embroiled in its largest combat operation 
since the second attack on Fallujah in November of 2004 and the most extensive 
and lengthy offensive in its nearly eight-year-old war in Afghanistan.
It has also announced plans to intensify its involvement in the 45-year 
counterinsurgency war in Colombia with deployments of 1,400 additional soldiers 
and contractors to five more military bases there.
The qualitative escalations of counterinsurgency wars in Afghanistan and 
Colombia are, first of all, integrally related and, second, both part of far 
broader regional strategies. The current Obama administration has continued and 
accelerated the expansion of the Afghan war into neighboring Pakistan, with 
almost six times the population of its neighbor and nuclear weapons; and its 
enhanced role in Colombia, a nation that launched a military assault into 
Ecuador in March of last year and has been installing bases and deploying 
troops on its border with Venezuela, can also drag the entire Andean region 
into the vortex of armed confrontation and eventual war.
Two recent appointments have signalled that cross-border counterinsurgency wars 
in Asia and South America will be the dubious "peace dividend" following 
withdrawal of troops - far slower and less extensive than promised - from Iraq .
On June 10th of this year the US Senate approved former chief of the Pentagon's 
Joint Special Operations Command, Stanley McChrystal, to replace General David 
McKiernan, previously sacked, as commander of the U.S. Forces Afghanistan 
(USFOR-A) and the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF), 
putting him in charge of over 90,000 US, NATO and NATO partner troops in 
Afghanistan.
The Joint Special Operations Command was created in December of 1980 after the 
disastrous Operation Eagle Claw operation in Iran . A 2006 book by The Times of 
London journalist Michael Smith on the Command is titled Killer Elite: The 
Inside Story of America's Most Secret Special Operations Team.
During McChrystal's tenure as its commander he oversaw counterinsurgency 
operations, acknowledged and clandestine, in Iraq from the invasion in 2003 to 
last year.
A report called " US shifts focus to counterinsurgency in Afghanistan " 
synopsized the current situation by mentioning that "With the US pulling out 
from major Iraqi cities, many believe Washington is switching its focus to 
Afghanistan ....By the end of this year, 68 thousand US troops will be in 
Afghanistan , more than double the number at the end of 2008. General Stanley 
McChrystal is the top commander of the US and NATO troops." [1]
Afghanistan: US Shifts Troops From Iraq, NATO Provides 10,000 More
Entire US military units have been transported directly from Iraq to 
Afghanistan or had deployments slated for the first switched to the second in 
recent months, including 4,500 airborne troops. The US escalation has been 
supplemented by boosts in the number of soldiers, armor, attack helicopters and 
warplanes deployed or scheduled for deployment by NATO allies. Germany is soon 
to have the 4,500-troop maximum currently allowed by parliamentary 
restrictions, along with Tornado warplanes, Marder tanks and AWACS; Italy is 
sending more troops, helicopters and drones; Turkey may dispatch an additional 
1,000 soldiers; Romania has been tapped for over 1,000 troops; Britain, which 
has lost 191 soldiers, its highest combat fatalities since the 1982 
Falklands/Malvinas War, recently revealed it was deploying yet more troops, 
Chinook and Merlin helicopters and Predator drones.
In mid-June outgoing NATO Secretary General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer pledged 
between 8,000 and 10,000 troops for the war, adding to nearly 65,000 already 
under NATO command in Afghanistan .
US and NATO drones, planes and helicopters now routinely violate the airspace 
of neighboring Pakistan , usually with deadly consequences.
On July 27 NATO and the Pentagon activated a new global Strategic Airlift 
Capability in Papa, Hungary - described in the local press as "the biggest NATO 
project in 40 years" [2]
For the occasion the first C-17 Globemaster III transport plane, "used for 
rapid strategic airlift of troops and cargo to main operating bases or forward 
operating base anywhere in the world," [3] arrived at the base where "Soldiers, 
combat vehicles...will be flown on the heavy transport planes, primarily to 
remote countries, even amid warlike conditions." [4] Afgahnistan will be their 
chief destination.
Troops, arms and equipment are pouring into Afghanistan from all parts of the 
world. US ambassador to NATO Ivo Daalder has just recruited more New Zealand 
special forces; Armenia announced that it may send its first troops under NATO 
Partnership for Peace obligations to join those from its Caucasus ne
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