Tracking Obama's Arc of Instability around the World
WASHINGTON & SANTA
FE, NM (By Nick
Turse, CBS) September 11,
2011 ―
It's a story that
should take your
breath away: the
destabilization of
what, in the Bush
years, used to be
called "the arc of
instability." It
involves at least 97
countries, across
the bulk of the
global south, much
of it coinciding
with the oil
heartlands of the
planet. A startling
number of these
nations are now in
turmoil, and in
every single one of
them ― from
Afghanistan and
Algeria to Yemen and
Zambia ― Washington
is militarily
involved, overtly or
covertly, in
outright war or what
passes for peace.
Garrisoning the
planet is just part
of it. The Pentagon
and U.S.
intelligence
services are also
running covert
special forces and
spy operations,
launching drone
attacks, building
bases and secret
prisons, training,
arming, and funding
local security
forces, and engaging
in a host of other
militarized
activities right up
to full-scale war.
But while you
consider this, keep
one fact in mind:
the odds are there is no longer a
single nation in the
arc of instability
in which the United
States is in no way
militarily involved.
Covenant of the
arc
"Freedom is on the
march in the broader
Middle East," the
president said in
his speech. "The
hope of liberty now
reaches from Kabul
to Baghdad to Beirut
and beyond. Slowly
but surely, we're
helping to transform
the broader Middle
East from an arc of
instability into an
arc of freedom."
An arc of freedom.
You could be
forgiven if you
thought this
was an excerpt from
President Barack
Obama's Arab Spring
speech, where he
said "It will be
the policy of the
United States to...
support transitions
to democracy." Those
were, however, the
words of his
predecessor George
W. Bush. The
giveaway is that
phrase "arc of
instability," a core
rhetorical concept
of the former
president's global
vision and of
his neoconservative
supporters.
The dream of the
Bush years was to
militarily dominate
that arc, which
largely coincided
with the area from
North Africa to the
Chinese border, also
known as the Greater
Middle East, but
sometimes was said
to stretch from
Latin America to
Southeast Asia.
While the phrase has
been dropped in the
Obama years, when it
comes to projecting
military power
President Obama is
in the process of
trumping his
predecessor.
In addition to
waging more wars in
"arc" nations, Obama
has overseen the
deployment of
greater numbers of
special operations
forces to the
region, has
transferred or
brokered the sale of
substantial
quantities of
weapons there, while
continuing to build
and expand military
bases at a torrid
rate, as well as
training and
supplying large
numbers of
indigenous forces.
Pentagon documents
and open source
information indicate
there is not a
single country in
that arc in which
U.S. military and
intelligence
agencies are not now
active. This raises
questions about just
how crucial the
American role has
been in the region's
increasing
volatility and
destabilization.
Flooding the arc
Given the centrality
of the arc of
instability to Bush
administration
thinking, it was
hardly surprising
it launched
wars in Afghanistan
and Iraq, and
carried out limited
strikes in three
other arc states ―
Yemen, Pakistan and
Somalia. Nor should
anyone have been
shocked it also
deployed elite
military forces and
special operators
from the Central
Intelligence Agency
elsewhere within the
arc.
In his book The One
Percent Doctrine,
journalist Ron
Suskind reported on
CIA plans, unveiled
in September 2001
and known as the
"Worldwide Attack
Matrix," for
"detailed operations
against terrorists
in 80 countries." At
about the same time,
then-Secretary of
Defense Donald
Rumsfeld proclaimed
the nation had
embarked on "a large
multi-headed effort
that probably spans
60 countries." By
the end of the Bush
years, the Pentagon
would indeed have
special operations
forces deployed in
60 countries around
the world.
It has been the
Obama
administration,
however, that has
embraced the concept
far more fully and
engaged the region
even more broadly.
Last year, the
Washington Post
reported that U.S.
had deployed special
operations forces in
75 countries, from
South America to
Central Asia.
Recently, however,
U.S. Special
Operations Command
spokesman Colonel
Tim Nye told me
on any given day,
America's elite
troops are working
in about 70
countries, and
its country total by
year's end would be
around 120. These
forces are engaged
in a host of
missions, from Army
Rangers involved in
conventional combat
in Afghanistan to
the team of Navy SEALs who
assassinated Osama
bin Laden in
Pakistan, to
trainers from the
Army, Navy, Air
Force, and Marines
within U.S. Special
Operations Command
working globally
from the Dominican
Republic to Yemen.
The United States is
now involved in wars
in six
arc-of-instability
nations:
Afghanistan, Iraq,
Libya, Pakistan,
Somalia, and Yemen.
It has military
personnel deployed
in other arc states,
including Algeria,
Bahrain, Djibouti,
Egypt, Israel,
Jordan, Kuwait,
Lebanon, Morocco,
Oman, Pakistan,
Qatar, Saudi Arabia,
Tunisia, and the
United Arab
Emirates. Of these
countries,
Afghanistan,
Bahrain, Djibouti,
Iraq, Kuwait, Oman,
Qatar, Saudi Arabia,
and the United Arab
Emirates all host
U.S. military bases,
while the CIA is
reportedly building
a secret base
somewhere in the
region for use in
its expanded drone
wars in Yemen and
Somalia. It is also
using already
existing facilities
in Djibouti,
Ethiopia, and the
United Arab Emirates
for the same
purposes, and
operating a
clandestine base in
Somalia where it
runs indigenous
agents and carries
out counterterrorism
training for local
partners.
In addition to its
own military
efforts, the Obama
administration has
also arranged for
the sale of weaponry
to regimes in arc
states across the
Middle East,
including Bahrain,
Egypt, Iraq, Jordan,
Kuwait, Morocco,
Saudi Arabia,
Tunisia, the United
Arab Emirates, and
Yemen. It has been
indoctrinating and
schooling indigenous
military partners
through the State
Department's and
Pentagon's
International
Military Education
and Training
program. Last year,
it provided training
to more than 7,000
students from 130
countries. "The
emphasis is on the
Middle East and
Africa because we
know terrorism
will grow, and we
know vulnerable
countries are the
most targeted," Kay Judkins, the
program's policy
manager, recently
told the American
Forces Press
Service.
According to
Pentagon documents
released earlier
this year, the U.S.
has personnel ―
some in token
numbers, some in
more sizeable
contingents ―
deployed in 76 other
nations sometimes
counted in the arc
of instability:
Angola, Botswana,
Burundi, Cameroon,
Chad, Congo, Cote
d'Ivoire, Ethiopia,
Gabon, Ghana,
Guinea, Kenya,
Liberia, Madagascar,
Mali, Mauritania,
Mozambique, Niger,
Nigeria, Rwanda,
Senegal, Sierra
Leone, South Africa,
Sudan, Tanzania,
Togo, Uganda,
Zambia, Zimbabwe,
Sri Lanka, Syria,
Antigua, the
Bahamas, Barbados,
Belize, Bolivia,
Colombia, Costa
Rica, Cuba, the
Dominican Republic,
Ecuador, El
Salvador, Guatemala,
Guyana, Haiti,
Honduras, Jamaica,
Mexico, Nicaragua,
Panama, Paraguay,
Peru, Suriname,
Trinidad and Tobago,
Uruguay, Venezuela,
Albania, Bosnia and
Herzegovina,
Macedonia, Romania,
Serbia, Kazakhstan,
Kyrgyzstan,
Tajikistan,
Turkmenistan,
Uzbekistan,
Bangladesh, Myanmar,
Cambodia, Indonesia,
Laos, Malaysia, the
Philippines,
Singapore, Thailand,
and Vietnam.
While arrests of 30
members of an
alleged CIA spy ring
in Iran earlier this
year may be, like
earlier
incarcerations of
supposed American
"spies," pure
theater for internal
consumption or
international
bargaining, there is
little doubt the U.S. is
conducting covert
operations there,
too. Last year,
reports surfaced
U.S. black ops
teams had been
authorized to run
missions inside that
country, and spies
and local proxies
are almost certainly
at work there as
well. Just recently,
the Wall Street
Journal revealed a
series of "secret
operations on the
Iran-Iraq border" by
the U.S. military
and a coming CIA
campaign of covert
operations aimed at
halting the
smuggling of Iranian
arms into Iraq.
All of this suggests
there may, in
fact, not be a
single nation within
the arc of
instability, however
defined, in which
the United States is
without a base or
military or
intelligence
personnel, or where
it is not running
agents, sending
weapons, conducting
covert operations ―
or at war.
The Arc of
history
Just after President
Obama came into
office in 2009,
then-Director of
National
Intelligence Dennis
Blair briefed the
Senate Select
Committee on
Intelligence.
Drawing special
attention to the arc
of instability, he
summed up the global
situation this way:
"The large region
from the Middle East
to South Asia is the
locus for many of
the challenges
facing the United
States in the
twenty-first
century." Since
then, as with the
Bush-identified
phrase "global war
on terror," the
Obama administration
and the U.S.
military have
largely avoided
using "arc of
instability,"
preferring to refer
to it using far
vaguer formulations.
During a speech at
the National Defense
Industrial
Association's annual
Special Operations
and Low-Intensity
Conflict Symposium
earlier this year,
for example, Navy
Admiral Eric Olson,
then the chief of
U.S. Special
Operations Command,
pointed toward a
composite satellite
image of the world
at night. Before
September 11, 2001,
said Olson, the lit
portion of the
planet ― the
industrialized
nations of the
global north ― were
considered the key
areas. Since then,
he told the
audience, 51
countries, almost
all of them in the
arc of instability,
have taken
precedence. "Our
strategic focus," he
said, "has shifted
largely to the
south... certainly
within the special
operations
community, as we
deal with the
emerging threats
from the places
where the lights
aren't."
More recently, in
remarks at the Paul
H. Nitze School of
Advanced
International
Studies in
Washington, D.C.,
John O. Brennan, the
assistant to the
president for
homeland security
and
counterterrorism,
outlined the
president's new
National Strategy
for
Counterterrorism,
which highlighted
carrying out
missions in the
"Pakistan-Afghanistan
region" and "a focus
on specific regions,
including what we
might call the
periphery ― places
like Yemen, Somalia,
Iraq, and the
Maghreb (northern
Africa)."
"This does not,"
Brennan insisted,
"require a 'global'
war" ― and indeed,
despite the Bush-era
terminology, it
never has. While,
for instance,
planning for the
9/11 attacks took
place in Germany and
would-be shoe-bomber
Richard Reid hailed
from the United
Kingdom, advanced,
majority-white
Western nations have
never been American
targets. The "arc"
has never arced out
of the global south,
whose countries are
assumed to be
fundamentally
unstable by nature
and their problems
fixable through
military
intervention.
Building
instability
A decade's evidence
has made it clear
U.S. operations
in the arc of
instability are
destabilizing. For
years, to take one
example, Washington
has wielded military
aid, military
actions, and
diplomatic pressure
in such a way as to
undermine the
government of
Pakistan, promote
factionalism within
its military and
intelligence
services, and stoke
anti-American
sentiment to
remarkable levels
among the country's
population.
(According to a
recent survey, just
12% of Pakistanis
have a positive view
of the United
States.)
A semi-secret drone
war in that nation's
tribal borderlands,
involving hundreds
of missile strikes
and significant, if
unknown levels, of
civilian casualties,
has been only the
most polarizing of
Washington's many
ham-handed efforts.
When it comes to
that CIA-run effort,
a recent Pew survey
of Pakistanis found
97% of
respondents viewed
it negatively, a
figure almost
impossible to
achieve in any sort
of polling.
In Yemen, long-time
support ― in the
form of aid,
military training,
and weapons, as well
as periodic air or
drone strikes ― for
dictator Ali
Abdullah Saleh led
to a special
relationship between
the U.S. and elite
Yemeni forces led by
Saleh's relatives.
This year, those
units have been
instrumental in
cracking down on the
freedom struggle
there, killing
protesters and
arresting dissenting
officers who refused
orders to open fire
on civilians. It's
hardly surprising, even before
Yemen slid into a
leaderless void
(after Saleh was
wounded in an
assassination
attempt), a survey
of Yemenis found ―
again a jaw-dropping
polling figure ―
99% of respondents
viewed the U.S.
government's
relations with the
Islamic world
unfavorably, while
just 4% "somewhat"
or "strongly
approved" of Saleh's
cooperation with
Washington.
Instead of pulling
back from operations
in Yemen, however,
the U.S. has doubled
down. The CIA, with
support from Saudi
Arabia's
intelligence
service, has been
running local agents
as well as a lethal
drone campaign aimed
at Islamic
militants. The U.S.
military has been
carrying out its own
air strikes, as well
as sending in more
trainers to work
with indigenous
forces, while
American black ops
teams launch lethal
missions, often
alongside Yemeni
allies.
These efforts have
set the stage for
further ill-will,
political
instability, and
possible blowback.
Just last year, a
U.S. drone strike
accidentally killed
Jabr al-Shabwani,
the son of strongman
Sheikh Ali al-Shabwani.
In an act of
revenge, Ali
repeatedly attacked
of one of Yemen's
largest oil
pipelines, resulting
in billions of
dollars in lost
revenue for the
Yemeni government,
and demanded Saleh
stop cooperating
with the U.S.
strikes.
Earlier this year,
in Egypt and
Tunisia, long-time
U.S. efforts to
promote what it
liked to call
"regional stability"
― through military
alliances, aid,
training, and
weaponry ―
collapsed in the
face of popular
movements against
the U.S.-supported
dictators ruling
those nations.
Similarly, in
Bahrain, Iraq,
Jordan, Kuwait,
Morocco, Oman, Saudi
Arabia, and the
United Arab
Emirates, popular
protests erupted
against
authoritarian
regimes partnered
with and armed
courtesy of the U.S.
military. It's
hardly surprising, when asked in
a recent survey
whether President
Obama had met the
expectations created
by his 2009 speech
in Cairo, where he
called for "a new
beginning between
the United States
and Muslims around
the world," only 4%
of Egyptians
answered yes. The
same poll found only
6% of Jordanians
thought so and just
1% of Lebanese.
A recent Zogby poll
of respondents in
six Arab countries
― Egypt, Jordan,
Lebanon, Morocco,
Saudi Arabia, and
the United Arab
Emirates ― found, taking over
from a president who
had propelled
anti-Americanism in
the Muslim world to
an all-time high,
Obama managed to
drive such attitudes
even higher.
Substantial
majorities of Arabs
in every country now
view the U.S. as not
contributing "to
peace and stability
in the Arab World."
Increasing
instability across
the globe
U.S. interference in
the arc of
instability is
certainly nothing
new. Leaving aside
current wars, over
the last century,
the United States
has engaged in
military
interventions in the
global south in
Cambodia, Congo,
Cuba, the Dominican
Republic, El
Salvador, Egypt,
Grenada, Guatemala,
Haiti, Honduras,
Iraq, Kuwait, Laos,
Lebanon, Libya,
Panama, the
Philippines, Mexico,
Nicaragua, Panama,
Somalia, Thailand,
and Vietnam, among
other places. The
CIA has waged covert
campaigns in many of
the same countries,
as well as
Afghanistan,
Algeria, Chile,
Ecuador, Indonesia,
Iran, and Syria, to
name just a few.
Like George W. Bush
before him, Barack
Obama evidently
looks out on the
"unlit world" and
sees a source of
global volatility
and danger for the
United States. His
answer has been to
deploy U.S. military
might to blunt
instability, shore
up allies, and
protect American
lives.
Despite the salient
lesson of 9/11―
interventions abroad
beget blowback at
home ― he has waged
wars in response to
blowback that have,
in turn, generated
more of the same. A
recent Rasmussen
poll indicates
most Americans
differ with the
president when it
comes to his idea of
how the U.S. should
be involved abroad.
Seventy-five percent
of voters, for
example, agreed with
this proposition in
a recent poll: "The
United States should
not commit its
forces to military
action overseas
unless the cause is
vital to our
national interest."
In addition, clear
majorities of
Americans are
against defending
Afghanistan, Iraq,
Pakistan, Saudi
Arabia, and a host
of other arc of
instability
countries, even if
they are attacked by
outside powers.
After decades of
overt and covert
U.S. interventions
in arc states,
including the last
10 years of constant
warfare, most are
still poor,
underdeveloped, and
seemingly even more
unstable. This year,
in their annual
failed state index
― a ranking of the
most volatile
nations on the
planet ― Foreign
Policy and the Fund
for Peace placed the
two arc nations that
have seen the
largest military
interventions by the
U.S. ― Iraq and
Afghanistan ― in
their top ten.
Pakistan and Yemen
ranked 12th and
13th, respectively,
while Somalia ― the
site of U.S.
interventions under
President Bill
Clinton in the
1990s, during the
Bush presidency in
the 2000s, and again
under Obama ― had
the dubious honor of
being number one.
For all the
discussions here
about armed
"nation-building
efforts" in the
region, what we've
clearly witnessed is
a decade of nation
unbuilding that
ended only when the
peoples of various
Arab lands took
their futures into
their own hands and
their bodies out
into the streets. As
recent polling in
arc nations
indicates, people of
the global south see
the United States as
promoting or
sustaining, not
preventing,
instability, and
objective measures
bear out their
claims. The fact
numerous
popular uprisings
opposing
authoritarian rulers
allied with the U.S.
have proliferated
this year provides
the strongest
evidence yet of
that.
With Americans
balking at defending
arc-of-instability
nations, with clear
indications
military
interventions don't
promote stability,
and with a budget
crisis of epic
proportions at home,
it remains to be
seen what pretexts
the Obama
administration will
rely on to continue
a failed policy ―
one that seems
certain to make the
world more volatile
and put American
citizens at greater
risk.
Nick Turse is a
investigative
journalist, the
associate editor of
TomDispatch.com, and
a senior editor at
Alternet.org. His
latest book is The
Case for Withdrawal
from Afghanistan.








