May 20, 2013

Is the U.S. Admitting Defeat in Afghanistan?

8f42a067a1e8a2207aace8b97e6b770f Is the U.S. Admitting Defeat in Afghanistan?
(US Army troops deploy ‘A-pops’ – charges fired by rocket onto surfaces suspected to have IED traps which explode and trigger the safe of the devices at the village of Geranda, Kandahar Province in Afghanistan on Sept. 21, 2012.)

(Phatforums News / Time) — Don’t expect to hear about it in the presidential campaign debates, but the U.S. will leave Afghanistan locked in an escalating civil war when it observes the 2014 deadline for withdrawing set by the Obama Administration — and supported by Gov. . The reported Tuesday that the U.S. military has had to give up on hopes of inflicting enough pain on the Taliban to set favorable terms for a . Instead, it will be left up to the Afghan to find their own once the U.S. and its allies take themselves out of the fight.

Washington has known for years that it had no hope of destroying the Taliban, and that it would have to settle for a compromise political solution with an indigenous that remains sufficiently popular to have survived the longest U.S. in history. Still, as late as 2009, the U.S. had hoped to set the terms of that compromise, and force the Taliban to find a place for themselves in the constitutional order created by the NATO invasion and accept a Karzai government it has long dismissed as “puppets.” This was the logic behind President Obama’s “surge,” which sent an additional 30,000 U.S. troops into the Taliban’s heartland, with the express purpose of bloodying the insurgents to the point that their leaders would sue for peace on Washington’s terms. But the surge ended last month with the Taliban less inclined than ever to accept U.S. terms as the 2014 departure date for U.S. forces looms.

Now, according to the Times, the best case scenario has been reduced to on in which, as a result of NATO’s training and , “the Taliban find the Afghan Army a more formidable adversary than they expect and [will] be compelled, in the years after NATO withdraws, to come to terms with what they now dismiss as a ‘puppet’ government.” Some would see that as another in a long line of optimistic assessments. The Afghan security forces, or at least its ethnic Tajik core, may well find the political will to fight the Pashtun-dominated Taliban, and the means to prevent themselves from being overrun. But it’s a safe bet that the security forces will control considerably less Afghan territory than NATO forces currently do.

And once it is clear that even a raging Taliban insurgency is no longer considered an obstacle to the departure of U.S. and allied combat units, the rationale for staying even through 2014 becomes murky. Already there’s been talk of having little more than a residual force of trainers and special forces in place by the time the withdrawal deadline arrives — and that such a force would stay beyond the deadline, anyway. NATO’s Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen conceded in an interview with the Guardian that the Alliance is considering an earlier withdrawal, its morale battered by ongoing “insider” attacks, which in this year alone have seen more than 50 alliance troops killed by members of the very Afghan forces they’re mentoring.

More pessimistic analysts harbor doubt that either the current system of government, or the security forces, will long survive a U.S. departure. Despite Western donors and backers still issuing the same pleas for good governance and anti-corruption efforts that have been made of President Hamid Karzai for the best part of a decade, there are serious doubts that an election scheduled for 2014 — in which Karzai, after two terms, is constitutionally barred from running — will be any more successful in creating a new national consensus than previous, crooked elections have been. Karzai, in fact, but is believed to be preparing to run his older brother, Abdul Qayum, in his stead, and keep power within his immediate circle.

His regime remains shot through with corruption, but the West has long struggled with the absence of a credible alternative. And a transition in which Afghans will be required to take charge of their own security against the Taliban is likely to exacerbate Karzai’s tendency to empower warlords whose backing he needs in a fight. And with NATO eyeing the exits, it’s an open question just how much pressure Karzai will face to ensure a credible election.

British Conservative MP Rory Stewart, who served the coalition authority in Iraq and who, in 2002, famously walked the length of Afghanistan, alone, documenting his encounters with locals along the way, insists that it’s time to face up to grim reality in Afghanistan. He recently wrote in the Financial Times:

If the U.S., Britain and their allies leave Afghanistan, there will be chaos and perhaps civil war. The economy will falter and the Afghan government will probably be unable to command the loyalty or support of its people. The Taliban could significantly strengthen their position in the south and east, and attack other areas. Powerful men, gorged on foreign money, extravagantly armed and connected to the deepest veins of corruption and gangsterism, will flex their muscles. For all these reasons departure will feel – rightly – like a betrayal of Afghans and of the soldiers who have died.

But a decade of war has proved that Western armies are no more capable than their Soviet counterparts had been in the 1980s of eliminating an indigenous insurgency in Afghanistan. Stewart continues

In the absence of “victory”, three alternative strategies have been proposed: training the Afghan security forces, political settlement with the Taliban and a regional solution. But training Afghan forces, which cost $12bn in 2010 alone, will not guarantee their future loyalty to a Kabul government. Two years and many regional conferences have passed since the formation of the Afghan Higher Peace council, and the clear NATO endorsement of reconciliation: but there is no sign that insurgents, the Kabul government or its neighbours will reach a deal, or feel much desire so to do. So there is no military solution, and no political solution either. Nor will there be before the troops leave. We will have to deal for decades with a troubled Afghanistan, which is not likely in my lifetime to be as wealthy as Libya, as effectively governed as Iraq, as educated as Syria, or as institutionally mature as Pakistan.

Western countries, he argues, have done as much as they are able; their only option now is provide financial backing to sustain the Kabul government and the sort of military support — from nearby airbases — that would prevent the Taliban mobilizing heavy weaponry to overrun its rivals. The rest will be up to the Afghans to sort out among themselves — a conversation that will be conducted with weapons until the limits of each side’s capacity to impose its will are apparent to their commanders and regional backers, and that new battlefield equilibrium sets the terms for new political arrangements. Chances are, it’s not going to look much like the Afghanistan the U.S. had hoped to leave behind.

UFC / MMA: Prior knowledge helps Jones, Evans at UFC 145

f8a578b399db2a0b8dd710a420963cca UFC / MMA: Prior knowledge helps Jones, Evans at UFC 145

(PhatzRadio / ) — ATLANTA — The rift between former teammates Jon Jones and fuels the ’s latest storyline, but the quality of the bout itself might come down to their familiarity.

“He already knows what Jon does,” says one of Evans’ main coaches, Mike Van Arsdale. “He’s familiar with Jon. Anytime you see teammates fighting, it’s way better than a normal fight. … Some of your best fights are in the practice room in .”

Saturday’s at UFC 145 (8 p.m. ET, FX; 10 p.m. ET, pay-per-view) will mark the culmination of a feud brewing for more than a year. When light-heavyweight champion Jones and ex-champ Evans enter the cage in Atlanta, they’ll do so with more than a year of preceding them.

Evans has been UFC’s 205- before, but the same holds true of Jones’ last three victims. This time will be different because the have added knowledge from their days training together at the Albuquerque camp run by coaches Greg Jackson and Mike Winkeljohn.

“We know which way his head is going to lean when he flinches,” Jones says of Evans. “We know his favorite guard passes. We know what his was. We know what gets him tired. We know eeeeverything about him. Absolutely everything.”

Title domination

The last five years have seen Evans compile a formidable record that includes wins against ex-titleholders Jackson, and , and most recently a one-sided decision victory against No. 6 Phil Davis in January. If not for a that kept him from a last year — for Jones — Evans might be the 205-pound champion right now.

But no one currently fighting has equalled Jones’ stretch of UFC dominance of the past .

UFC: More clothing deals to come

VIDEO: Countdown to UFC 145

Not counting Evans, five fighters on UFC’s active roster held the 205- before Jones. Last year he knocked out or choked out three of them in Mauricio Rua, Lyoto Machida and Quinton “Rampage” Jackson; he also submitted prospect Ryan Bader. All four remain in the top eight of the /SB Nation consensus rankings for light heavyweights.

Jones’ success at a young age, accomodating public demeanor and ease in front of the camera make it easy for UFC for promote him as one of its biggest stars even though he’s only 24. Even Evans doesn’t question the organization’s decision to push Jones into the forefront.

“I think it’s justified,” Evans says. “He went in there and he had a great year. … He looks good. He’s got the right image and he’s got an exciting fight style, so why not?”

That concession doesn’t mean he respects Jones as a human being. Evans has been lashing out at the champion for more than a year. He paints Jones as a backstabbing phony for expressing a willingness to fight teammates if UFC insisted.

“Jon Jones, he’s so fake, it makes no sense,” Evans says. “The person that everybody thinks Jon Jones would be could not be more opposite than the person that he truly is in life.”

The champion views himself as a multifaceted person. Although he and Evans were teammates, they did not spend a lot of time together, Jones said.

“I’m a person with a lot of personality, a lot of character,” he says. “Rashad doesn’t know me well enough to call me fake. … It’s just a way of him trying to distract my energy. Just trying to distract my attention to focus on maybe my personality or something, and not focus in on his technique and the actual fight.”

The last man to defend the light-heavyweight belt four times knows the value of an angry rivalry with an ex-comrade. Chuck Liddell knocked out former training partner Tito Ortiz in 2004 and 2006; the second fight set a record for UFC pay-per-view buys at the time.

Liddell confirmed his status as UFC’s biggest star by disposing of Ortiz, who built up bad blood between them by taunting him mercilessly before their bouts.

“It makes a bigger impact,” Liddell said. “Everybody needs to have someone to push them up to that next level.”

Camp squabbles

Proteges of Jackson and Winkeljohn previously vowed never to fight each other under any circumstance, says Evans, who left the team last year when Jones won the championship. Evans now trains in South Florida with several highly regarded fighters, but no prominent light heavyweights.

He blames Jackson for creating the dilemma by allowing Jones to join the squad in 2009 despite Evans’ initial qualms about adding another talented light heavyweight.

“To turn your back and to go against the grain on people who made you who you really are — to me, that’s just low,” says Evans, who joined the Albuquerque gym after winning The Ultimate Fighter reality show in 2005. “If it came down to holding it down and being who he was for the team, then the situation never exist. He would have never brought Jon Jones on.”

Although Jackson does not view the addition of Jones as a bad thing, the coach faults himself for lacking a formal process for dealing with potential title fights between teammates.

“I can’t stand it, honestly,” Jackson says. “The position is weird. …What got me into the whole Rashad Evans-Jon Jones problem in the first place, is my reluctance to kind of deal with that, and now I have to.”

After refraining for several months, Jackson recently agreed to work in Jones’ corner on Saturday.

“It’s not so much I’m leaning towards Jon Jones as I’m leaning toward the team,” Jackson says.. “That notion of being (part of) something special and different and tight, I think that has value and importance, and that’s kind of what’s influencing me right now.”

Noting that he did not want to fight his training partner unless ordered to do so by UFC, Jones wonders if Evans simply needed to find reason to fight for the belt after losing his title shot. UFC only offered Jones the March 2011 championship fight only because Evans hurt his knee while training for the bout.

Accounts of of Evans’ departure from the Albuquerque camp has been retold so much over the past year that they’ve taken on a cathartic value, Jones says.

“It’s funny, because the more you hear the story and the more we all go at it and talk about the coaches and try to figure out who’s telling the truth and what side is most legit, it’s almost therapeutic for everybody. So I think this fight will be like the last counseling session for the whole situation.”

Champ: Evans regressing

Jones views Evans as diminished these days. In the champion’s view, Evans seems slower and less explosive than he was a few years ago, when he could plant all his opponents with double-leg takedowns.

“I just watch the young Rashad and I see so much the speed and the constant movement and the double leg that used to be so powerful,” Jones says. “Now I just see a very slow (re)gression. I see somebody who’s getting older, getting more comfortable.”

Wins against Ortiz and Davis over the last 12 months do not impress Jones because of where they are in their careers. Ortiz plans to retire after one more bout, and Davis only started fighting three-and-a-half years ago.

“He couldn’t even finish Phil Davis,” Jones says. “I realized in that fight, he (Rashad) didn’t execute one double-leg takedown. Double leg used to be his bread and butter. … I just watch the young Rashad and I see so much the speed and the constant movement and the double leg that used to be so powerful. Now I just see a very slow (re)gression. I see somebody who’s getting older, getting more comfortable.”

Making judgements based on the January victory against Davis would be a mistake because Evans went into that fight with three broken ribs and other injuries, Van Arsdale says.

On the other hand, Evans’ coach views most of Jones’ 2011 victories as products of opponents’ anxiety. “Those guys were sitting ducks,” Van Arsdale says. “Guys were scared. Guys didn’t want to fight.”

Despite the hype surrounding this weekend’s bout, Evans has been treating the fight with the same level of seriousness as any other bout, his coach says.

“If you make it anything extraordinary, guess what? You just lost,” Van Arsdale says. “Jon Jones isn’t buying into the hype of it and neither is Rashad, because it’s normal. Normal training and normal daily practice. As soon as you start making a big deal of anything, you just ruined yourself.”

Perhaps that’s why both fighters kept a level, almost amiable tone at the final pre-fight press conference this week.

“I’ve had a year to deal with the situation,” Evans says. “I’ve made my peace in a lot of ways with the situation. I’m not really that emotionally invested in it any more.”

Past appearances together saw them arguing, with Evans often interrupting Jones. But Wednesday’s presser saw both men sitting quietly, occasionally agreeing with each other and declining openings to directly criticize each other one more time.

“It’s truly not personal with me,” Jones says. “There’s a lot of things that have been said that was personal, but when it comes to the actual game, it’s still a game that we play. … The pre-fight hype and all that has nothing to do with the game.”

UFC / MMA: Prior knowledge helps Jones, Evans at UFC 145 is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

 UFC / MMA: Prior knowledge helps Jones, Evans at UFC 145

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325472601571f31e1bf00674c368d335 UFC / MMA: Prior knowledge helps Jones, Evans at UFC 145

NCAA College Football: Week 2 Storylines – Every story is a QB story

f9852ca92a4e1da04733284afb362177 NCAA College Football: Week 2 Storylines – Every story is a QB story

(PhatzRadio / SI) — Ten key plot points for the weekend ahead:

• Everything new is old again: Old-guard fans from North to South in this great nation are clutching at their pearls and croakies this weekend, as two of ’s most storied programs enter Week 2 apparently dead set against naming starting quarterbacks before their high-profile nonconference matchup. Everything new is old again, as veteran coaches and Joe Paterno appear carefully untroubled at the prospect of rotating signal-callers. The four are even dolled up in classic Red Team-Blue Team gear for handy discernment, with Alabama’s AJ McCarron and Phillip Sims in one corner and Penn State’s Rob Bolden and Matt McGloin opposite.

Who will crack first and name a permanent starter? If there’s one thing JoePa’s adept at, it’s outlasting the competition. But Saban’s mind of metal and wheels won’t rust with inactivity. And before you ask, it’s Sims with one M; there’s no relation to the quarterbacking Simms family, so don’t expect any untoward parental interference down Tuscaloosa way. All we can really expect for sure out of Saturday’s outing in Happy Valley is for Bama’s to get picked (McCarron and Sims each tossed two picks against Kent State, of all teams; plus PSU returns four seniors to a highly experienced secondary) and Penn State’s to get hit (the allowed Indiana State to break through for two sacks and were generally unstable in pass protection all game). Last man standing wins? And as far as Alabama is concerned, are we just on the hunt for the best plug-and-play guy under center?

“Right now, we feel confident no matter which quarterback is in,” right guard Barrett Jones said. “It’s not really something that we have to really change anything for. We run the same system with both of them.”

This is truer than it sounds; “Hand the ball to Trent Richardson” isn’t a play that comes with a terrible amount of variety (though it is terribly effective).

• Why doncha pick on a good MAC team, tough guys? What do we really know about this piecemeal Ohio State squad? Joe Bauserman looked more than solid in opening-week action, and Braxton Miller like he might be given room to grow without having to enter in a save-the-day capacity. But Akron’s no yardstick for a team that’s as ragtag as Ohio State ever gets (which is to say, not very). Even with myriad offseason distractions (you might have heard a little something about OSU’s head coach) and an early-season slate fraught with suspended players, OSU enters Week 2 with a No. 15 ranking and an oddsmakers’ edge over the occasionally surprising Rockets. There’s also the small matter of Toledo never having scored a single point on Ohio State in the teams’ two previous meetings. Then, however, there’s this:

Since 2003, the Rockets have six victories against opponents from BCS automatic-qualifying conferences. That’s the ninth-most by a non-BCS school, just two behind renowned giant-killer Boise State. And the Rockets play Boise State next after they take on Ohio State.

If the Buckeyes were to become early victims of a sleepwalking upset, it’d hardly be the most surprising win Toledo’s ever pulled off. And don’t forget that more than one Crystal Ball predictor has Toledo tabbed for a MAC Championship. Don’t look ahead to Miami, Columbus. (The same warnings apply to the Rockets, however, who should find considerably more resistance from the Buckeyes than they did playing New Hampshire in Week 1.)

• Pistols don’t have to fire to be weapons: Oregon displayed surprising weaknesses last week at the hands of an LSU offense that’s seen its fair share of roster-related trauma these past few weeks, and Nevada is fielding an offense I think could still surprise a lot of viewers even in the absence of Colin Kaepernick. But what’s that offense even going to look like? The Wolf Pack drew one of the dreaded Week 1 byes in 2011, giving them additional time to prep for a Ducky storm, but making their schematics even more of a wild card than usual. Can the ‘Pack come out firing at Autzen? And if they can’t, how brutal will the scoreboard hammering get from a Ducks squad determined to shrug off that nasty brush with BCS death in Arlington?

• Perhaps if the tacklers were provided with bags of ice to lounge on while on the sidelines: The defensive preparation Georgia displayed last Saturday in Atlanta was uncomfortably reminiscent of the ever-maligned Willie Martinez era, with players visibly gassed and seemingly unable to discern the routes the Broncos were tidily unfolding in front of them. What do they plan to do about a triumphantly returned Stephen Garcia and a seemingly unstoppable Marcus Lattimore? Could the Dawgs even make Connor Shaw look good, and in Athens of all places? I’m not one to call for Mark Richt’s firing in Week 2 after a game against a consensus top-five team, but that Todd Grantham bandwagon is without riders and has no driver to speak of.

• Does your “need” for a ribcage really outweigh Bret Bielema’s desire for a hat? Oregon State just lost to an FCS team and now has to travel to the raucous home of the No. 8 team in the country. There will be blood, and that blood will not be badgerly in origin.

• Taxonomy of the FBS: A big part of college football coverage this time of year involves pure conjecture over which teams are over- or underrated based on a sample size of one game. Mercifully for us, that sample size will have doubled by tomorrow night. Some of this week’s highest-profile games feature well-regarded teams of virtually unknown quality, sometimes on both sides of the ball: Utah and USC both underperformed last week against what should have been vastly overmatched opponents; which will have the edge (over a division rival, no less) after a weekend in the Coliseum? Can TCU regain its defensive footing against an ever-potent Air Force offense on the road? And after shockingly disappointing seasons in Provo and Austin, can BYU and/or Texas right their foundering ships? (Of football. Ships of football! Boat metaphors!)

• Changing of the conference guard: The defending national champions, you can rest assured, will not be defending their title come January thanks to massive roster attrition. And just as Auburn is fading into the background, it’s got to deal with rising menace and division rival Mississippi State. The Tigers will have home field advantage, but that’s about all.

• Greenville pointsplosion injures over/under bookies nationwide: Last week’s frankly unseemly-for-Beamerball rout of Appalachian State proved the Hokies are willing to put pedal to floor to prove a point. (That point being, in this case, “We swear we don’t always lose to FCS teams at home.”) Will they play a variation on that theme this week against a hapless ECU defense? And will the legendarily prolific Purple Pirates offense mount a gallant stand of its own?

• Their blood was for the trophy: Are details for the new CyHawk trophy being kept under close guard because once the thing’s actually out on the field it’ll be too late for a public outcry? That’s totally what’s happening, right? Unrelated: Did you know that Children of the Corn II: The Final Sacrifice has a Facebook fan page, and that they made five more sequels after the one with “final” in the title?

• No, but there are stripes and it’s going to be dark out! A number of terribly concerned publicists would like you all to know that this weekend’s Michigan-Notre Dame tilt will feature heretofore unseen manners of stripes on the participating players’ clothing! This concludes our discussion of the Michigan-Notre Dame game.

NCAA College Football: Week 2 Storylines – Every story is a QB story is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

 NCAA College Football: Week 2 Storylines – Every story is a QB story

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Libyan rebels move on western town

c438f6abfb4b580a6ac80a71895ad9b6 Libyan rebels move on western town

() – Rebels in Libya’s launched an offensive on Thursday against ’s troops, one day after Britain granted to the opposition.

With prospects of a negotiated settlement fading, both sides appear to be preparing for the five-month-old war to grind on into the month of Ramadan in August.

“We have started attacking Ghezaia with rockets and tanks,” rebel spokesman Mohammed Maylud said.

Ghezaia is a town near the border which has been in government hands since the conflict began.

At a checkpoint outside the nearby rebel-held town of Nalut, they sounded optimistic as the fighting began.

“We are confident we can beat Gaddafi now, we have captured more weapons from the , mostly AK-47s,” said Mohammed Ahmed, 20, a market trader turned fighter.

Basim Ahmed, a fighter coming back from the front, said rebels had taken control of parts of three villages and many had fled, but this was not possible to verify.

As sustained bombardments could be heard in the distance, an ambulance raced to Nalut hospital. A rebel with a wound to the shoulder was brought into the emergency room, where he lay semi-conscious.

Minutes later a commotion could be heard in the parking lot. A government soldier who had been captured was led to a hospital bed a few feet away from the rebel. He was missing a hand and was barefoot.

The soldier, who gave his name as Hassan, told Reuters that the army was losing the will to fight.

“We don’t want to keep fighting. Everybody is against us.” he said, speaking from his hospital cot.

Blood seeped through the bandage bound around the stump of his missing hand but a rebel nonetheless tried to interrogate him, asking him his unit and where he was from.

Eight wounded lay in the hospital in total — four rebels and four Gaddafi soldiers. Six other Gaddafi soldiers had been taken prisoner, witnesses said.

Rebels have taken large swathes of Libya since rising up to end Gaddafi’s 41-year rule.

They hold much of the Western Mountains range, northeast Libya including their stronghold Benghazi, and the western city of Misrata.

Yet they remain poorly armed and are often disorganized. Despite the backing of NATO air strikes, they have failed to reach the capital Tripoli and appear unlikely to do so soon.

Ghezaia is of local strategic importance, a base from which government troops attack rebels in the mountains, but if it fell this would not bring the opposition nearer to Tripoli.

Gaddafi has scoffed at the rebels’ efforts to end his rule and has weathered a rebel advance and NATO air raids on his forces and military infrastructure.

A recent flurry of diplomatic activity has yielded little, with the rebels insisting Gaddafi step down as a first step and his government saying his role is non-negotiable.

United Nations envoy Abdel Elah al-Khatib visited both sides this week with plans for a ceasefire and a power-sharing government that excludes Gaddafi, but won no visible result.

Asked about Khatib’s proposal, rebel leader Mustafa Abdel Jalil said: “We were surprised the day before yesterday that we are taking 10 steps back… and he says to share power with Muammar Gaddafi’s regime. This is laughable.”

Gaddafi also appeared defiant on Wednesday, urging rebels to lay down their arms or suffer an ugly death.

“We all lead this battle, until victory, until martyrdom,” he said in a message aired at a pro-Gaddafi rally in Zaltan, 140 km (90 miles) west of the capital Tripoli.

RECOGNISING THE REBELS

Ramping up pressure on Gaddafi, Britain expelled his diplomats from London on Wednesday and invited the rebel National Transitional Council to replace them.

Foreign Secretary William Hague announced that Britain now recognized the rebels as Libya’s legitimate government and unblocked 91 million pounds ($149 million) in frozen assets.

The United States and about 30 other nations have also recognized the opposition, potentially freeing up billions of dollars in frozen funds.

Gaddafi’s government said the British move was “illegal and irresponsible” and a “stain on the forehead of Britain.”

“We will go to the International Court of Justice and the national courts in Britain, and we will use their justice,” said Libya’s deputy foreign minister, Khaled Kaim.

(Additional reporting by Joseph Nasr in Berlin, Rania El Gamal in Benghazi, Hamid Oul Ahmed in Algiers, Missy Ryan and Lutfi Abu Aun in Tripoli, Mussab Al Khairallah in Misrata; Writing by Lin Noueihed and Richard Meares; Editing by Angus MacSwan)

($1 = 0.612 British Pounds)