McChrystal's Appointment Increases Chance of Getting Bin Laden, Sources Say
By Paul Bedard, Washington Whispers
The appointment of Lt. Gen. Stanley McChrystal as the next Afghanistan commander increases the chances that the United States will capture or kill Osama bin Laden, intelligence sources say. After all, it was McChrystal who went to Iraq in 2006 as the military's top manhunter. His men quickly started rounding up or killing a long list of al Qaeda operatives, including the biggest prize of all, Abu Musab Zarqawi. After a bomb from an F-16 killed Al Qaeda in Iraq's leader, McChrystal sped to the scene to view the corpse of one of the most brutal terrorists ever.
McChrystal was in Iraq as commander of the supersecret Joint Special Operations Command, which includes the Army's Delta Force, the Navy's SEAL Team Six, and a high-tech intelligence unit known was Task Force Orange. McChrystal, a workaholic and fitness buff, arrived with al Qaeda at its peak in Iraq. According to an intelligence source in Iraq at the time, McChrystal revamped how JSOC works with the CIA and teams from the National Security Agency, which does communications intercepts. He fused all the units together so that a Delta Force squad on the hunt could receive immediate intelligence on the target's whereabouts. Task Force Orange played a big role in locating Zarqawi. Its operatives monitored Internet cafes where al Qaeda messengers did their work. The monitoring led them to an associate of Zarqawi, who ultimately led them in June 2006 to his hideout near Baquba.
How will McChrystal in Afghanistan help the CIA find bin Laden, thought to be in Pakistan? The CIA station chief in Islamabad, who controls operations in that Pakistan, and top commanders across the border in Afghanistan have had rocky relationships in coordinating operations. But in Iraq, McChrystal showed an ability to get the CIA, NSA, and JSOC on the same page, as he virtually took down the al Qaeda network, leader by leader. He can convey that same manhunt know-how to the CIA as it scans Pakistan's rugged western mountains, where bin Laden is believed to be hiding. "McChrystal will bring a wealth of experience dealing with the CIA to the Afghanistan-Pakistan theater," says the intelligence source. "His ability to coordinate the U.S. intel community and focus JSOC tactical assets led to the death of Zarqawi and the destruction of al Qaeda within Iraq. If he can repeat the task with bin Laden in Pakistan and help stabilize Afghanistan, he will be remembered as one of the best counterinsurgency tacticians in history."
Retired Army Gen. Jack Keane, an adviser to Gen. David Petraeus, the overall commander in the region, is also impressed by McChrystal. "He is a very innovative commander, open to new ideas, a quick study who will be able to fully exploit the new strategy for Afghanistan," Keane told Whispers. "He fully understands that the center of gravity for counterinsurgency operations is the people, while the enemy is the center of gravity for conventional operations. Therefore, all military operations must be considered in terms of the context of the people."
Follow Paul and Nikki on Twitter.
Check out more Washington Whispers.
Tags: Osama bin Laden | War in Afghanistan (2001-)
Tools:
Share
|
| Comments (7) | Print
Reader Comments
JSOC and Osama Bin Laden
My advice to our men in the JSOC is to capture him alive if at all possible, then secretly interrogate him to get as much information about Alcaida and related terrorist groups, using 3,000 plus torture methods, each one for everyone of the 3,000 plus American Citizens who died on the 2 Towers on 9/11 and on the plane crashes.
Second, keep him alive for several months, then finally decapitate him like they did the Wall Street Journal reporter John Perlman (this for our brothers-in-arms, the Israelites).
Third, secretly put the decapitation on the Internet on Islamic Jihad websites, so as to bring other Jihadists into the open, to interrogate-kill them too at JSOC's leisure.
First step in winning the respect of the Afghans
The first step in winning the respect of the Afghan people is to pronounce Afghanistan correctly; not like most Americans say it, but like Afghan President Karzai does, and like C. Amanpore and Rafiq Zakaria on CNN and the BBC reporters do. The second step is to win the hearts of the local priests (Mullahs) by rebuilding their mosques damaged in the last two decades of war. Then only will we see the tide of this war turning in favor of democratic reform. However brilliant a tactician General McChrystal is, this is not solely a military campaign. It is a campaign to win the respect and love of the Afghan people. We have to win the general population over to our point of view, and this is done by communicating like they do. Unless we win their respect, someday we will have to withdraw in disgrace like the Russian Army did in the 1980s.
Bin Laden
McChrystal is a good man - But is Bin Laden still Alive?
His releases since the fall of Iraq, could all have been pre-recorded before his death, so that it appears to be the real bin laden, and it is, it is just not a for sure, alive, bin Laden.
But if McChrystal brings him in (Dead or Alive) he will go down as one of the best insurgent tacticians in Military History.
advertisement




