Article written by John O’Loughlina, Frank D. W. Witmera, 2009 DPDF State Violence Fellow Andrew M. Linke & Nancy Thorwardson, featured in Eurasian Geography and Economics, Volume 51, No. 4:

A team of U.S. political geographers analyzes the secret Afghanistan war logs released by WikiLeaks.org. They offer the chance to examine in detail the dynamics of the conflict in that country. Doing so in a spatial framework is possible because each of the 77,000 events has geographic coordinates and dates. Using cartographic and geostatistical tools, the authors map the changing distribution of the events and compare them to the well-known violent-events ACLED database (see O’Loughlin et al., 2010 in this issue). They conclude that ACLED comprises a representative set of the more comprehensive data in the released files. The released war logs show that the Afghan insurgency spread rapidly in 2008-2009, that the insurgency is moving out of its traditional Pashtun heartlands, and remains mostly rural in location. Hotspot and cluster analysis identifies the key locations of the current war, which indicate that it is relocating to new provinces in Afghanistan while intensifying in the eastern border regions and in the south.

Publication Details

Title
Peering into the Fog of War: The Geography of the WikiLeaks Afghanistan War Logs, 2004-2009
Authors
Linke, Andrew M.
Publisher
Routledge
Publish Date
December 2010
Citation
Linke, Andrew M., Peering into the Fog of War: The Geography of the WikiLeaks Afghanistan War Logs, 2004-2009 (Routledge, December 2010).
Menu