
After more than three years of thought pieces, random asides, fun interviews, and general blogging, Bellum is closing up shop. Our “proceedings” are available on Amazon.com in the form of a Kindle book, Ordering Chaos. Mission Accomplished!
The site will remain fully functional. It has been a pleasure. We thank you for reading.
Staff Articles

Rice = Kissinger (Photo: WEF)
When you’re a hammer, everything looks like a nail, and when it’s the season for vice presidential running mates, everybody looks like a vice presidential running mate. There is some evidence Condoleezza Rice could get the nod from Mitt Romney, but it’s pretty thin, and there’s a much stronger case to be made that she has something else in mind for her retirement: statesmanship.
Staff Articles
Just up at Doublethink, Bellum senior editor Tristan Abbey skewers the myth that Britain’s imperial decline was anything but disorganized:
Far from “abrupt,” Britain’s retreat from empire unfolded over the course of some three decades. Because the national leadership did not have a consistent or coherent plan for its imperial commitments, a cycle emerged: Britain would reaffirm a determination to maintain its military presence in a certain country and then reverse itself within a few years or even a few months after the political conditions changed or military risks became too great. This happened in Palestine, Egypt, the Persian Gulf, and elsewhere.
Staff Articles
Bellum senior editor Tristan Abbey has a new piece in The American Interest — a conversation with Namik Tan, the ambassador from Turkey to the United States. A sampling:
“We can talk to anyone and everyone you can think of”, he said proudly. “We can talk to everyone in our region. When you go into Iraq, we can, for instance, talk to every single individual group”, regardless of race and ethnicity. “Even if they don’t talk to each other, they talk to us.” Turkey has relations with the Israelis and with the Palestinians, and even within the Palestinian construction, between those in the West Bank and those in Gaza. “This gives us some special unique ability, really, to make our own contribution to regional peace and stability.”
Staff Articles
Just up at Ricochet.com, a response to the latest chatter about the supposedly impending Israeli airstrike on Iran. Bellum senior editor Tristan Abbey writes:
Everybody assumes it’s just a question of Israeli political will. There is something to that, since any operation would be extremely high-risk and we know that the Israelis value their servicemen’s lives extremely highly; after all, they traded 1,027 Palestinian prisoners for a single IDF soldier.
Staff Articles
Just published today by The American Interest, Bellum senior editor Tristan Abbey’s piece on David Petraeus and the George C. Marshall tradition:
The U.S. Army Command and General Staff College’s decision in 1983 to grant their own Marshall Award to a young captain named David Petraeus has since proven remarkably prescient. The Washington Post’s resident sage, Walter Pincus, asked this past summer, “Which Petraeus will arrive at the CIA: The officer or the gentleman?” Like so many others, Pincus missed the real heart of the story. Langley and the Pentagon will always be joined at the hip, regardless of who is in charge at the CIA. The better question is whether the Petraeus is the last of Marshall’s generation or the first member of a new generation. If the latter, what fundamental belief about America’s role in the world will bind that new generation?
Staff Articles

Afghan commandos, a budding force. (Defenselink)
The death of Osama bin Laden has given those against the war in Afghanistan renewed vigor in their push to withdraw all American forces from the country. In addition to driving al-Qaeda and their Taliban hosts into Pakistan, the United States has knocked off their heretofore invincible leader and financial patron.
Having sufficiently crippled al-Qaeda, the Americans can load up the MRAPS and leave the future of the country to be fought over in the snake pit of Afghan politics. These two reasons (the relocation of al-Qaeda and the internal character of the conflict) are sufficient cause for, as Leslie Gelb puts it in a recent article in the Wall Street Journal , the United States to declare “Mission Accomplished” and head home.
Leonardo Gomez Articles
Readers,
In April of this year, Bellum posted a series of “dispatches” from a woman allegedly named Amina Arraf, who we believed was living in Damascus. It increasingly appears that this was not the case. In fact, there are serious doubts as to her location and even identity, and many are suggesting her entire persona as an American-born Syrian blogging live from the revolution was an elaborate hoax. I apologize that she was not more thoroughly vetted. It will not happen again.
– Tristan Abbey, Senior Editor
Tristan Abbey Articles
Secretary of Defense Robert Gates, speaking at an Air Force base in North Carolina yesterday:
Our military health care budget has gone from $19 billion in 2000 to $53 billion this year. We’re being eaten alive by the thing. It’s 10 percent of our budget at this point.
This is an interesting comment because the military’s health care system is often offered as an example of government-run health care. It is undoubtedly first-class, but is it a good model for a deficit-conscious country?
Staff Articles
Days after the killing of Osama bin Laden, the hunt is on to determine who will replace him and where that replacement might be. One of the leading contenders is Ayman al-Zawahiri. Experts seem as sure of his location as they seemed as of bin Laden’s before this past weekend, which is to say not at all.
General Michael Hayden, former director of the CIA, told John King on CNN yesterday that Zawahiri is probably “somewhere along the Afghanistan-Pakistan border.” Google News will reveal a number of hits on similar phrasing in recent days.
Staff Articles