Buy Tom's Books
  • Great Powers: America and the World After Bush
    Great Powers: America and the World After Bush
    by Thomas P.M. Barnett
  • Blueprint for Action: A Future Worth Creating
    Blueprint for Action: A Future Worth Creating
    by Thomas P.M. Barnett
  • The Pentagon's New Map: War and Peace in the Twenty-first Century
    The Pentagon's New Map: War and Peace in the Twenty-first Century
    by Thomas P.M. Barnett
  • Romanian and East German Policies in the Third World: Comparing the Strategies of Ceausescu and Honecker
    Romanian and East German Policies in the Third World: Comparing the Strategies of Ceausescu and Honecker
    by Thomas P.M. Barnett
  • The Emily Updates (Vol. 1): One Year in the Life of the Girl Who Lived (The Emily Updates (Vols. 1-5))
    The Emily Updates (Vol. 1): One Year in the Life of the Girl Who Lived (The Emily Updates (Vols. 1-5))
    by Vonne M. Meussling-Barnett, Thomas P.M. Barnett
  • The Emily Updates (Vol. 2): One Year in the Life of the Girl Who Lived (The Emily Updates (Vols. 1-5))
    The Emily Updates (Vol. 2): One Year in the Life of the Girl Who Lived (The Emily Updates (Vols. 1-5))
    by Thomas P.M. Barnett, Vonne M. Meussling-Barnett
  • The Emily Updates (Vol. 3): One Year in the Life of the Girl Who Lived (The Emily Updates (Vols. 1-5))
    The Emily Updates (Vol. 3): One Year in the Life of the Girl Who Lived (The Emily Updates (Vols. 1-5))
    by Thomas P.M. Barnett, Vonne M. Meussling-Barnett
  • The Emily Updates (Vol. 4): One Year in the Life of the Girl Who Lived (The Emily Updates (Vols. 1-5))
    The Emily Updates (Vol. 4): One Year in the Life of the Girl Who Lived (The Emily Updates (Vols. 1-5))
    by Thomas P.M. Barnett, Vonne M. Meussling-Barnett
  • The Emily Updates (Vol. 5): One Year in the Life of the Girl Who Lived (The Emily Updates (Vols. 1-5))
    The Emily Updates (Vol. 5): One Year in the Life of the Girl Who Lived (The Emily Updates (Vols. 1-5))
    by Vonne M. Meussling-Barnett, Thomas P.M. Barnett, Emily V. Barnett
Search the Site
Powered by Squarespace
Monthly Archives

Entries from August 1, 2007 - August 31, 2007

2:00PM

Tom around the web

Andrew Sullivan's link to Bosnia done backwards is still a model, just with more real-time anguish brought a few more:
+ Just Above Sunset
+ Born Again Redneck.
+ Hugh Hewitt says 'speeding the killing' is 'repugnant' and 'repulsive'.

+ The renovation, not liberalization, of fundamentalist faith in a globalizing world was linked by Marketime.
+ So did ShrinkWrapped.

+ DM Hallowell referenced the SysAdmin and BFA.
+ And linked yesterday's column.

+ ZenPundit linked Email: exception on Iran and More Iran email.
+ Gunnar Peterson referenced the Core and Gap.
+ Hidden Unities No way to run a war on terror.
+ So did The Useless Tree.
+ pamc linked 'Take two virtual aspirin...'.
+ Vinay Gupta continued thoughts from his comments on Clear sign of moving into Core? Teaching critical thought.
+ Kindred Winecoff linked More page turning.
+ PurpleSlog thinks maybe Tom should be our next ambassador to China.
+ New Yorker in DC linked Another good look-ahead on Cuba post-Castro.
+ Dans Blog reprinted yesterday's column and the SF Chronicle article.

+ The New American references Tom's work.
+ jasdf said PNM, BFA, and the C-SPAN vids are without equal.
+ The OC Disorder linked the TED video.

11:31AM

Amazon's spotty mining on sources

If you look up PNM, it says that book cites 30 other books and then lists them. Thing is, many of the books listed by Amazon are not cited in PNM and many cited in PNM are not listed by Amazon.

"Deadly Sins" by Thomas Pynchon--not cited in PNM but listed by Amazon.

"Horton Hears a Who"--cited and listed.

Zakaria's "Future of Freedom"--cited and not listed.

11:08AM

Did write next week's column on Krueger's "What Makes a Terrorist"

A harder navigation (once you got into one paragraph, it always seemed tricky to move onto the next, you felt you needed to caveat every statement so thoroughly) than I expected, but I got the first draft done over the course of the day.

10:59AM

"Goodbye Lenin" is ....

the best German movie you've never heard of. Actually, Amazon says it's one of the best--period--that you've never heard of.

Watched it last night in the home theater, and I was really captured.

Starts out goofy funny, then gets surreal, then gets very painful and ends very poignantly.

In short, I laughed, I cried, it changed my life.

I am partial to anything Scottish, Irish or German, but this movie especially so, since I had done my PhD diss on the DDR (learning German to do so) and had read decades of East German foreign policy literature.

Still, even with no background whatsoever, this is an amazing and entertaining movie.

10:00AM

Eat what you kill? Hell, eat what‚Äôs ill!

ARTICLE: “Bank of America Invests $2 Billion in Countrywide,” by James R. Hagerty, Valerie Bauerlein and Lingling Wei, Wall Street Journal, 23 August 2007, p. A1.

Such infusions of capital in faltering companies aren’t made out of humanitarian concern for the targets involved. The major players typically greet such flame-outs in market sectors with a certain greedy glee: now a chance to expand in a new direction at bargain prices.

Survivors are most prized (you want damaged goods at cheap prices, but not too damaged).

For those of us watching this unfold, I say, be grateful the market is doing something to clean up its own.

7:13AM

Back to square one in the Middle East

OP-ED: Post-Iraq Strategy, By David Ignatius, August 26, 2007; Page B07

As reported by Ignatius, this is a sad commentary on the Bush administration's grasp of the region.

Here's the "grand bargain" we offer Tehran:

Early this summer, senior Bush administration officials still hoped that Iran might cooperate with the United States in stabilizing Iraq. The two countries shared an interest in the success of Shiite Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, the theory went. Thus the United States agreed to bilateral meetings with the Iranians in Baghdad to explore a joint framework for security in Iraq. The prospect of an American-Iranian condominium in Iraq frightened the Saudis, but the United States persisted.

America's modest price for working with the Iranians was spelled out by Ryan Crocker, the U.S. ambassador in Baghdad. Iran's Revolutionary Guard had to stop shipping deadly weapons to Shiite forces in Iraq that were destabilizing the country and killing American soldiers. U.S. officials had intelligence resources to monitor whether Iran complied with this basic demand. "We're not seeing it," says the senior State Department official.

It basically amounted to: "Stop meddling in a way that harms us and promotes your interests and then we'll let you bail us out for real."

Gosh, I wonder why that didn't work, given our declining circumstances in Iraq and loose talk about going after Iran's nuclear program with military force.

I've not seen anything from any quarter that suggests we offered Iran anything close to a package that had a chance of working. These deals were pre-packaged for failure, made simply so we could claim Iran wasn't cooperating.

The case for really engaging Iran was never about their simply helping us for nothing in return. But since we have no intention of offering them what we know they want (simple recognition of the legitimacy of their regime and something amounting to a promise that we're not actively seeking its fall), the mullahs are logically refusing to do anything that alleviates our situation in Iraq. The Bush administration's stance amounts to saying "we'll take our losses and failure in Iraq because we think Iran's more important," and to me, that's both scapegoating Iran AND bungling something this administration has repeatedly promised the American people (and our troops) that it would make succeed--no matter the cost.

How can we recognize the legitimacy of this terrorism-sponsoring, authoritarian regime that avows America as it's number one enemy and clearly works to reduce our influence in the region while bolstering its own?

How did Nixon create detente with the Soviets in the early 1970s when that country's crimes and misdemeanors ranked incomparably higher than Iran's today--on every possible scale?

Interestingly enough, that Soviet Union disappears completely within a generation of Nixon's bold move, at the cost of virtually no American lives.

The historical record is clear on tired authoritarian states: a strategy of engagement weakens them from within and they fall, but a strategy of bolstering their disconnectedness only plays into the hands of the power elite, keeping them in control and ruining any chance for moderates and reformers to rise and effectively change the country's course.

We engage tired old Brezhnevian USSR and now it's gone.

We open the door on tired old Mao's PRC and now it's more brutally capitalistic than we are.

We finally get over the hurt on Vietnam, recognize its communist leadership and look what's happened there.

Where were our preconditions for negotiation on any of these states? Very minimal stuff in each instance. I don't remember, for example, telling Moscow or China what they should or should not do with their nukes or militaries.

Then look at our record on isolating Cuba or Iran and ask yourself if we've done anything but benefit hardliners.

When you face tired authoritarianism, you turn their public against them. When you face serious totalitarianism, you have no choice but to go after the leadership directly.

We continue to deny ourselves our greatest possible asset in this struggle with Iran: the Iranian people. You want the Lech Walesas and Vaclav Havels to arise? You have to create the conditions.

Bush has done nothing of the sort, despite the compelling need for a regional security/human rights dialogue created by his administration's many towering failures in managing postwar Iraq. We told everyone going in this was going to be an American show, whether they liked it or not. They could donate troops if they liked, but we were going to make all the calls, including one to simultaneously challenge Iraq's neighbors Syria and Iran, despite the strategic dangers of doing so.

We have made our bed in Iraq with such choices, and now, as Bush's many bad choices have us both sacrificing troops needlessly while standing watch over Iraq's slo-mo soft partitioning (all the while claiming we can't pull back because--CANUBELIEVEIT!--it could lead to a faster soft partitioning and the slow version is sooo much better and defensible, right?), the best we can come up with is a pathetic return to supporting tired Sunni authoritarian regimes in the region in an attempt to isolate Iran because its influence in the region has skyrocketed thanks to the Shiia revival we--apparently--unknowingly triggered when we took down the Sunni dictator of a majority Shiia nation right on Iran's border (WHODATHUNKIT!).

This is where we've come six years after 9/11: right back to square one on Saudi Arabia, right back to square one on Iran, right back to square one on the Taliban/Al Qaeda (who at least had to move one country over).

Tell me how you paint Bush's second term as anything but a complete disaster for the United States in this Long War? Every advantage or momentum achieved in the first term has been given up through our incompetent choices.

7:01AM

China's as bad as we were

ARTICLE: 'A nation of outlaws: A century ago, that wasn't China -- it was us,' By Stephen Mihm, Boston Globe, August 26, 2007

A favorite theme of mine from BFA and a column ("China's Time Machine") a while back.

(Thanks:Tom Morris and Lexington Green)

6:55AM

Screw up so bad, it's like it was on purpose

OP-ED: The MacArthur Lunch, By Roger Cohen, New York Times, August 27, 2007

This one goes--along with all the others--into the file that reads "This isn't impossible unless you purposefully screw it up." This one is all the more painful because the Bush administration seemed to know better in Afghanistan and then abandoned that precedent for Iraq.

6:00AM

Spheres of influence in this era of globalization are measured in markets, not bomber ranges

POLITICS & ECONOMICS: “Is Moscow’s Support for Serbia Stance Paying Off? Russian Firms Relish Push for Privatization ; Kosovo Link is Denied,” by Marc Champion, Wall Street Journal, 23 August 2007, p. A6.

While it’s tempting to think that Putin’s rather showy resumption of long-range bomber patrols signals the new face of Russian aggression, this story would point to a more likely route.

Moscow’s complaining it’s been shut out of Serbia since Milosevic fell, and with the government planning to privatize its state energy company and its state airline, it’s looking to reverse that situation, hence the suddenly vociferous support for Serbia’s position on Kosovo. Now, two Russian companies are looking solid in the bidding for these prized companies.

But you don’t want to over-dramatize this stuff: to the extent that we talk “spheres of influence,” they don’t mean what they once did. Serbia can see Russian investments flow and takeovers unfold and still progressively orient its economy to the EU--still the bigger magnet across the Balkans. After all, Russia’s energy interests increasingly move downstream into Europe, and the EU is still the EU.

More and more, this is business--nothing personal.

But, by all means, get jacked over the bombers if that’s more fulfilling.

3:04AM

Two from the press

First, this article quoted Tom:

ARTICLE: Special military group looks ahead to fight America's future wars, Tom Abate, San Francisco Chronicle, Sunday, August 26, 2007

Excerpt:

Can the United States afford such lopsided bills? Not for long, according to military strategist Thomas Barnett, author of "The Pentagon's New Map," one of the treatises that lay out the scenario for these asymmetrical wars that planners expect.

"The million-to-one (ratio) is unsustainable," Barnett said, although it's difficult for him or anyone else to explain how the United States might be able to end its dependency on high-tech weapons that allow it to project power without putting U.S. forces in harm's way.

Second, The Korea Times picked up yesterday's column.

2:00AM

The soft partition of Iraq is not a function of American strategy; it is oblivious to American strategy

ARTICLE: “U.S. Intelligence Offers Grim View Of Iraqi Leaders: Doubt on Bush Tactics; But Report Also Depicts Plans for Withdrawal as Raising Risks,” by Mark Mazzetti, New York Times, 24 August 2007, p. A1.

Count on intell to talk out of both sides of its mouth: the surge isn’t stopping any soft partition, but if we withdraw, it’ll get bloodier.

Something for everyone and a nice middle ground left over for anyone: the soft-partitioning of Iraq is basically a done deal, despite all the experts dismissing the “option.”

The bottom line is unchanged: we are not providing enough security to an Iraq that--quite frankly--is too far gone for us to manage that level of effort. Sunnis and Shiia are turning inward for protection, much like the Kurds did long ago, and so the partitioning and attendant killing proceed apace.

Talk of “preventing genocide” is fine (and it certainly sounds noble), but it’s roughly three years too late. The systematic targeting of enemy tribes began long ago, and reached a level of self-sustainment well before we bothered to surge. The delta in deaths between us maintaining a high level of troops spread out around southern Iraq and us drawing down and pulling back to next-door sanctuaries in Kurdistan and Kuwait is nowhere as near as some would have you believe. We narrowed that difference a while back.

Now, we’re into the question of maintaining U.S. popular support for active and direct presence and engagement in the region, just like in WWII. That conflict rapidly segued into a long war all its own with the Sovs, and this one is nowhere near over WRT radical extremism within Islam.

The question of note remains the same: are you more interested in credit on Iraq or winning the Long War?

Right now Tel Aviv, Riyadh and Tehran are running our foreign policy more than the Bush Administration is, which is a sad state of affairs to witness. The “great decider” seems now more content to follow history than to make it, all hopes for a legacy-minded second-term foreign policy being dashed.

Watching this length Bush post-presidency unfold while the man is still in office is the most painful sight I’ve come across since Jimmy Carter was in power.

The problem is, the only thing that got damaged with Carter was our pride. What’s being destroyed here is a lot more valuable.

And please, spare me the stabbed-in-the-back bullshit on Bush. The only reason why we find ourselves backed into this idiotic corner is because this administration has refused any serious attempt at a diplomatic surge (for several years now!), believing, in the same neocon dumbass mindset that brought us the postwar non-reconstruction, that military matters rule all, so we can't have any diplomacy until we get the war "won." This sort of binary Cold War thinking is so painfully out of date as to be almost criminally negligent.

We're playing with last century's talent and thinking, so why be surprised we're being outgamed by every rogue and its proxy?

11:28AM

A good summary of where things stand on bottom-up change in the U.S. Army

ARTICLE: "Challenging the Generals," by Fred Kaplan, New York Times Magazine, 26 August 2007, found online with email push from reader Tom Wade.

I get asked a lot of questions about how long it will take the U.S. government in general and the U.S. military in particular to adapt itself to the changes that lie ahead in this Long War, and I always reply that it's a generational thing.

In politics, it's getting past the 60s-soaked Boomers.

In business, we arrived about 12 years ago.

In military affairs, it's fair to say that there's a lot of guys who get it on top (like my "monks of war" Mattis and Petraeus), but the reality is, they're stuck with a presidential administration still operating with a neocon mindset that defines war solely within the context of war and largely ignores the everything else until it's forced upon them. Absent these political limitations, I know full well we have the talent on top of the military to run this Long War well. I've interacted with many of them for years, some across almost two decades. They are high quality and they're serious lifetime learners, as Wass de Czege implies in this article. The Cold War dinosaur flags I ran into in the early 1990s simply no longer exist, although way too many of them still opine on TV.

The real change generation (as it always is in the military) stands ready and willing and able at the 04-05-06 levels, with the big thing being, do the 06s (colonels/navy captains) make it into the flag ranks, or are they all crapped out by the system for their inconvenient truths?

Most important line in the piece says much to the same effect:

“Guys like Yingling, Nagl and McMaster are the canaries in the coal mine of Army reform,” the retired two-star general I spoke with told me. “Will they get promoted to general? If they do, that’s a sign that real change is happening. If they don’t, that’s a sign that the traditional culture still rules.”

Now, of course, it's a bit more complicated than that. The right champion high up can push a lot of much needed new thinking into the flag ranks, so it's not just a matter of this popular handful getting through. What happens to the iconoclasts and thinkers up topside can be crucial as well. I'd like to see the right people shoved into the Joint Chiefs over the next few years, because without them, even if the Yinglings and Nagls and McMasters move up, the going will remain too tough for their innovative thinking to penetrate the system as far as it needs to go.

Right now we're at a potentially profound tipping point.

As the operational experience builds up, the training, the tactics, the doctrine all change. Soon that infiltrates the planning and the scenarios and they in turn start making things uncomfortable for the force structure efforts, because far too much in the pipeline is still built for another age. As those iffy programs lose connectivity to training, tactics, doctrine, planning, scenarios and the schoolhouses, their champions can no longer cite such logical bonds as validating their purchase.

And that's when things can really shift.

Why?

Once you become a flag, the most important thing you do is protect your service's cherished force structure plans from all comers. That's how you get the next star the vast majority of the time.

The radicals of the next generation won't be prone to this mindset. If they emerge, with some top cover from similar visionaries above, and hit the ranks just as the still, relatively united front of the Leviathan force structure mafia starts crumbling, then we're into a serious paradigm shift.

I believe that discomfort zone rapidly approaches, based more on my industry contacts than on my Pentagon ties (thus the basis of my optimism). The industry is moving off a future view of the world that says "what's good for the Leviathan is what keeps my company where it is or moving up." The "everything else" simply beckons far too strongly.

Once that industrial edifice begins to crumble, the capacity for the Nagls and Yiinglings and McMasters to foster system-wide change as flags really takes off.

But no, I don't base my thinking on any sacred, small collection of officers. I've known too many good ones over the years to fall into that trap.

But yeah, this group is special. The visionaries above them are just as special. And given the right correlation of forces, this ball will get moved very far, very fast.

10:56AM

Two for this week‚Äôs column

NEWS ANALYSIS: “A Bump in India-U.S. Rapport: Defining ‘Ally,’” by Somini Sengupta, New York Times, 23 August 2007, p. A3.

ARTICLE: “As Japan and India Forge Economic Ties, a Counterweight to China Is Seen: The 2 leaders meet this week and will back a project linking New Delhi to the sea,” by Heather Timmons, New York Times, 21 August 2007, p. C3.

The most unimaginative thing we can do with China’s rise is pull out the old containment strategy, which, because it worked in the Cold War against the Sovs, is considered the tried-and-true answer for every great power we fear--rising or otherwise.

But it’s not a good answer for a rising power, because it only feeds their natural fears and promotes friction out of our own lack of self-confidence. It’s an especially bad choice when the rising power in question is simply following your long-time advice to emulate your economics.

Plus, trying the “separate lanes” notion of hedging against a military rise while embracing an economic one is just bad diplomacy. As I point out in this week’s column (and in others), you can’t expect a country to experience a dramatic ramp-up of its external economic connectivity and not naturally feel the impulse to build up its capacity to protect that connectivity.

Doing so gives us, the prospective mentor, a huge opportunity. We keep preaching the “stakeholder” route and nothing will get China there faster than trying to narrow that gap between capabilities and perceived exposure. Look at U.S. history in the latter decades of the 19th century and imagine how we would have perceived an external power’s attempt to hem us in just as our rising economic connectivity demanded a more global pol-mil presence. Would that not seem threatening? Or how about those regimes, whose government style differed greatly from our own, proposing that we needed to make our political systems look more like their own in order to gain their trust in our emergence? Imagine how most Americans would have viewed that demand.

We can expect a lot of frantic behavior locally, from India and Japan, for example, but we shouldn’t be in the business of encouraging that, but rather, we should be exploiting those fears to ramp up the regional security dialogue that further cements China’s stakeholder status (again!).

Truth is, for all the talk about moving beyond “realism” with this administration, its principals still display a lot of adherence to concepts of balance of power at a point in history when that thinking will do far more damage than good, primarily by replicating the errors of the past that so many “realists” keep advocating we study.

7:37AM

One sign on the journey

ARTICLE: A Gift Offer for Artists in China: Museums, By David Barboza, New York Times, August 25, 2007

A interesting form of connectivity. As I penned in BFA, your journey into the Core is marked by the world rediscovering your art and artists

(Thanks: Kilngoddess)

3:06AM

This week's column

Why prioritizing China over India in military cooperation makes sense

I've argued for years that America should seek military alliance with China, believing that such a strategic partnership in spreading and protecting globalization would serve each country's supreme national interest. Here's why:

For America to win a long war against radical extremism, we need to make globalization truly global by effectively integrating the one-third of humanity whose noses remain pressed to the glass, wondering when they'll be connected to the global economy. That's labor-intensive, whether it's post-conflict stabilization and reconstruction in failed states or infrastructure development and market creation in developing economies.

Read on at KnoxNews.
Read on at Scripps Howard.

Tom's comment:

I wanted to simultaneously repurpose the USN&WR column's main thrust and spin it off a question I fielded last week from a reader.

5:04PM

Today I celebrate 2 years with Enterra

Actually, I joined 15 Aug 2005, but since Steve hosts a big company bash at his house every late August, that celebration seems to naturally mark the end of the year and our back-to-work party.

When I joined Enterra in 2005, our revenue could be measured in hundreds of thousands. Now we're in an entirely different playing realm. So, while back then our fears centered on sales, now it's all about execution, execution, execution.

No complaints, as this is the right challenge at the right time, but it was nice to catch our breath and just hang out today.

4:58PM

Good piece by Economy on China

ARTICLE: The Great Leap Backward?, By Elizabeth C. Economy, Foreign Affairs, September/October 2007

Good piece. Economy's been writing on this subject for a while, and has it down solid.

Thanks to Eric Osmer for sending this.

2:02PM

Working the slide deck

Sitting with Steve DeAngelis, Jenn Posda, and Jedi Slide Master Bradd Hayes as we work up a slide deck--our advising investment bank (same as Google's) guides us--in the packaging.for the next-stage investing that will tap a host of eager players from the world of institutional investors (all sorts of famous firms). Their eagerness skyrockets with the contracts we're winning on ResilienceNet (we're starting with a major East Coast port), next generation civilian infrastructure security management (a fusion center for one of the biggest U.S. states), information assurance work (for the usual suspects in the USG), pre-configured business processes (major logistics players) and the Development-in-a-Box‚Ñ¢ stuff that's taking off like wildfire in Kurdistan (threatening to gobble up all our cycles if we let it, but run with it we must because the chance to template the concept big time there will allow us to start running with it as a repeatable solution in a host of emerging economies).

Put it all together and Steve and I are collectively stunned at how all the non-stop selling and thought leadership of the last two years is now exploding in a shower of contract negotiations and closings.

On DiB in particular, I had to remind Steve of a phonecon we shared a year ago where we both lamented how DiB seemed like it wasn't getting any traction beyond the usual head nodding from execs, government officials and mil officers. Now, it's gotten to the point where no meeting goes by without a good dozen interrupting calls that must be taken.

I am finding myself to be awfully glad I didn't try to pen the next book on a tight sked. As for Steve, his old favorite expression of "not having enough bandwidth" is now replaced by "coming up for air." As usual, Steve's stamina and work ethic stuns me, and I'm a decently hard-working guy myself!

In sum, a very energizing work session, reminding me that, despite my still heavy speaking sked (the fall starts to fill up), Enterra's going to be a whirlwind this fall and winter heading into 2008. And then there's the book I gotta write!

Thank God the summer was relatively slow, with most of my travel with my family. Those bonds, thus deepened, are going to be tested significantly in coming months.

We're hearing from our adoption agency that we may be as far as two years out from meeting our next beloved. I know this: the child comes when the child comes, and everything in our lives pivots on that moment.

My job is simply to cover the ground required in the time demanded.

11:39AM

This one is moving rapidly along ...

ARTICLE: Bhutto Outlines Version of Musharraf 'Agreement', ThreatsWatch, August 23, 2007

Thanks to CitSAR for sending this.

5:27AM

Good effort, few results, learning process?

ARTICLE: 'U.S. Falters In Bid to Boost Iraqi Business: Few Products Sold To American Firms,' By Josh White, Washington Post, August 24, 2007; Page A01

You could have easily predicted this article on the Pentagon's late-in-the-game effort to revive Iraqi factories from the moment the effort was launched more than a year ago: from the long pole in the tent being security and the hesitancy of American businesses to the personal blowback against its hard-charging, take-no-prisoners leader. This is why I advocate a new federal agency to manage this sort of effort: two weird for Defense and too hard for State. There has to be a new bureaucratic culture built, one that marries up to the new mindset embodied by the Army-Marine COIN doctrine (and yes, it was very cool to see Nagl on "The Daily Show"!).

Two points to keep in mind: First, there is southern Iraq and its insecurity and there is northern Iraq and it's strong will to escape that pathway--indeed,the very definition of a future Iraq.

Second when done right, Development-in-a-Box‚Ñ¢ begins like any normal penetration of an underdeveloped market post-whatever: first come the bottom-of-the-pyramid sellers (the imports thing, with the initial waves being the most basic stuff, like food and media), then come the bottom-of-the-pyramid scavenging investors and infrastructure builders (who need to spot the potential for long-term security (not its opposite), and then come the BOP "exploiters" of cheap labor and resources (the "sticky" foreign direct investment). In every phase, don't expect American businesses to take the lead. It's just not where we're comfortable on the food chain. So, by making this effort so focused on getting American companies involved, we've replicated the same strategic straightjacket on potential outcomes as we did by failing to enlist any New Core pillars in Iraq's postconflict stabilization and reconstruction ops.

As I have argued from the beginning: the SysAdmin needs to be more civilian than uniform, more USG than DoD, more private-sector fueled than public-sector funded, and more the rest of the world than America-only.

We can't connect Iraq to a global economy on our own any more than we can bring security to it absent some larger regional security regime designed to enable that path and--necessarily--several more.

Still, this is a good and valiant effort. Gotta crawl, and understand what it is to collect all those bumps, before you get up off the floor and learn to start walking.

Tragedy to some, a simple and inevitable learning process to those who think systematically across global futures.