Category Archives: History

Expect the Russian marble game

What to do, what to do about the villain, Vladimir Putin?  Well, first, while it may sound like I am supporting Putin’s takeover of Crimea, I’m not.  I do understand Putin’s moves and respect how adroitly he made his moves though. NATO or any combination of Western leaders will not act and aside from hollow rhetoric and ineffective sanctions, Putin won’t pay much of a price for securing Russian control of Crimea.

How far he dares to encroach further into eastern Ukraine remains to be seen, but if past is prelude, sometimes the Russians push further to give themselves some negotiating space for later.  They may move further into eastern Ukraine, so they can pull back later and look reasonable, while still holding on to Crimea.  The Russians love playing games like this, “Here I took all your marbles, but hey, I’m a magnanimous sort, so I’ll give you back 2 and keep the other 10.”  Really, this is how the Russians bargain and it works for them among the ill-informed western media.

By and large, our leaders are outclassed and due to our internal political partisanship, our politicians remain impotent.  President Obama can’t make tough decisions and has surrounded himself with clueless, far-left loons, who have no grasp of history, geopolitics or strategic-planning.  It’s a complete bust for us.  Heck, the Russians are the likely source of the leak of our foul-mouthed diplomat’s phone conversation with our ambassador in Ukraine, thus spreading distrust  of the US among our European allies, again.  They know how to play the game and we aren’t even in the game anymore – sitting it out …. again.

We aren’t in a position to do much about Ukraine – that’s the reality.  What we need to do to prevent more provocative Russian moves or other countries deciding the US is no longer relevant is get our own house in order.  Here are some steps we need to take.  Energy independence needs to be a national security premiere objective.  Time to rebuild our relationships with our allies and we’ve got to start acting like a trustworthy ally.  Now, isn’t the time to start gutting our military.  We need to get our fiscal house in order and that will mean some painful, hard choices.  If we want to act with one voice abroad, we’ve got to find some common ground between our warring partisans at home.  To remain relevant will require a complete home remodel effort.  We need to rebuild the American team and so far, I don’t see that happening among our feuding political class.

Strength comes from being in a position to act, not react.  Putin knows how to act and others will watch this latest episode of American ineptitude and follow suit.  To thwart this, America needs to master a steep learning curve and I doubt this administration even understands the events unfolding around the world and their integral part in creating the atmosphere where the West, and particularly America,  is seen as a lot of irritating background noise, to tune out.  Weakness is provocative and this administration excels at projecting weakness.

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Speaking truth to insipid reporting

Here’s a must read on Ukraine:  “Ukraine Is Hopeless…But Not Serious”, in David P. Goldman’s, Spengler column at PJ Media.

Best lines:

“Ukraine isn’t a country: it’s a Frankenstein monster composed of pieces of dead empires, stitched together by Stalin. It has never had a government in the Western sense of the term after the collapse of the Soviet Union gave it independence, just the equivalent of the family offices for one predatory oligarch after another–including the “Gas Princess,” Yulia Tymoshenko.”

Here’s another:

“As for the Crimea: Did anyone seriously think that Vladimir Putin would let the main port of Russia’s Black Sea fleet fall into unfriendly hands? Russia will take the Crimea, and the strategic consequences will be nil. We couldn’t have a strategic confrontation if we wanted it. How would we get troops or ships into the Black Sea area in the first place in order to have a confrontation? Perhaps the Belgiums will send in their army instead. I suppose we need to denounce the Russians for violating Ukraine’s territorial integrity.”

He offers a great solution for what we should do, but go read the entire article, to get the full impact.  Bravo, Mr. Goldman, for daring to speak truth to insipid reporting!

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Putin: the geopolitical adventure capitalist

“Still, the influence of all that youthful television-watching is present today. In a book on the inner workings of Obama’s presidential reelection campaign, Politico’s Glenn Thrush reports that although Obama’s biographers “have been more enamored with his complexity,” Obama himself “seeks shallower waters, especially in times of crisis.” When the going gets tough in the White House, Thrush says, the president plays sports and watches ESPN. Indeed, while Obama’s administration was beset by scandals regarding improper IRS investigations and the death of U.S. officials in Benghazi, the New York Times’s Peter Baker reported that Obama “talked longingly of ‘going Bulworth,’ a reference to a little-remembered 1998 Warren Beatty movie about a senator who risked it all to say what he really thought.” Thrush, it seems, was right that movies and TV served as Obama’s version of “comfort food.”” –

– Commentary Magazine – “The Pop Presidency of Barack Obama”, 10-01-13

So, once again the President is nowhere to be seen yesterday, as the situation escalated in Crimea.  Reports surfaced that the National Security Team huddled at the White House for a meeting, but the leading from behind captain of the team skipped the meeting.  Of course, his handlers rushed to assure America and the world, that the President was briefed.

Anyone with some functioning brain cells should have seen Putin’s moves in Crimea coming.  Putin comes from the Cold War era geopolitical school, where he learned from hard school of knocks experiences.  He reads history, he studies maps, he actually takes his leadership responsibilities deadly serious.  Russian influence in Crimea looms vastly important to Russian national security and obviously, he will not cede control of Sevastapol to protestors  or Ukrainian authorities hostile to Russia or blustering Western Neville Chamberlains (thanks to David Duff for bringing up Chamberlain).  They won’t allow a power vacuum to threaten their Black Sea Fleet and beyond that Putin surely possesses some grand strategic visions for Russia and at the moment, who in the West will do more than issue hollow threats?

For a pragmatic view of Ukraine’s crisis, here is David Duff’s, ‘In which I laud, the One and Only Obama’.  The Russians have had their Black Sea Fleet in Sevastopol for centuries, so let them keep it.  If you want to get your dander up, start paying attention to Russian, Iranian and Chinese military moves in the Western Hemisphere (Monroe Doctrine, anyone)- where they’re creeping up on us.  If the Europeans want to do more about Ukraine, let them muster up more than rhetoric.  The world stage offers  plenty of room from some upstarts to take center stage, since President Obama prefers to loaf in the spectator seats, surreptitiously munching on his chips.  Definitely more concerned about hiding from Michelle’s food police than he is about international crises.

Power vacuums keep expanding and unlike our leader from behind, many of our adversaries don’t wait for polite discussions to fill them.  Rant all you want at Putin, but it’s President Obama and wimpy western resolve that Putin gauged and he sure understands this sort of capitalization.  The cost of acting is minimal and the potential rewards are great, wow, Putin the adventure capitalist …. the world gone mad, I say.

Oh yes, “the past is prologue”.

And, as the world spins closer to chaos, let us remember that oft-quoted sage once more – “I believe it is peace in our time.”  Let’s at least give President Obama credit for surpassing  Henry Kissenger’s  measure of a country’s diplomacy,No country can act wisely simultaneously in every part of the globe at every moment of time.”  President Obama, the inept,  doesn’t act at all….. but Putin the new adventure capitalist takes all the risks.  Don’t worry though, this waffler-in-chief, hiding somewhere in the White House watching ESPN,  can sure stand tough on gutting our military, even though he can’t read a world map and he doesn’t have time for international crises.  Simultaneously, Putin is securing his Black Sea Fleet and Russian influence in Ukraine.

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Max Fisher on Ukraine ethnic/political divide

Came across this December 2013 Washington Post article by Max Fisher, “This one map helps explain Ukraine’s protests“, which gives a breakdown of the ethnic/political divide in Ukraine.  Sometimes a map is worth more than a thousand words.

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An outsider look at Ukraine

Over the past several days the airwaves have been filled with loud demands that we do more to support the Ukrainian protestors (frequently dubbed a struggle for freedom against the evil Russians).  This reaction comes quite natural to America, with our long Cold War history, but I have some questions about the situation that I haven’t found clear answers to yet.

First, let me say I am weary of the American media latching onto these international crises and presenting everything as a “fight for freedom”, without providing much in the way of historical background information.  It’s very easy to jump onto foreign causes when they are presented as “struggles against Russian oppression” or “fighting against tyranny”, but truthfully the internal politics in these areas usually are fraught with corruption with a capital C, excesses of violence, abuses of power, and  long-held ethnic animosity.  The situation in the Ukraine is no different.  You can go read about the Holodomor, where the Soviets starved millions of Ukrainians to death, to get a taste of the animosity that still ripples below the surface among many ethnic Ukrainians.

In this latest violence, it sure looks like the protestors are the ones who have been on a torching buildings spree in Kiev, not the government.  Not sure how I would feel if protestors in America started setting buildings ablaze, because those 1-percenters with their destruction of other people’s property sure angered me – urinating and defecating anywhere like animals…  Why does no one in the West tell the protestors to quit torching Kiev, yet all you hear about are how the police need to calm down?  I am not condoning police or military forces shooting unarmed civilians, I’m merely asking why our reporting always champions protestors, even when the protestors are setting a city aflame?

The CIA Factbook offers these statistics as to the demographic make-up of present-day Ukraine: “Ukrainian 77.8%, Russian 17.3%, Belarusian 0.6%, Moldovan 0.5%, Crimean Tatar 0.5%, Bulgarian 0.4%, Hungarian 0.3%, Romanian 0.3%, Polish 0.3%, Jewish 0.2%, other 1.8% (2001 census)”  As to the 2010 Ukrainian presidential election, irregularities ran rife, as usual.  International monitors gave varying accounts.  A report by a group of monitors which included Russia, Poland, France, Armenia, Kyrgyzistan and Belarus (Centre for Monitoring Democratic Processes) offered their verdict here.  A Christian Science Monitor explanation of the election can be found here.  Yanukovich won with a less than 50% of the vote, but it seems like he had a good bit of ethnic Ukrainian support or the ethnic Ukrainians didn’t turn out in sizable enough numbers given this huge ethnic Ukrainian numerical advantage. Here’s a NY Times report on the 2010 election, replete with plenty of criticisms – (NY Times story here).  Any theories, facts or information on this numerical question, anyone?

Now, as in all these other hotspots, American politicians like to get on their soapbox and berate the evil Putin for his undo influence in other countries political affairs and in the Ukraine this charge accompanies almost every report in this latest flare-up.  What you don’t hear much about is how American political groups get actively involved in actually managing campaigns (paid political consultants) in many foreign elections – from Israel to the Palestinian Authority to Iraq to Afghanistan to the Ukraine, and so it goes.  Here’s a link to which American political consultants were hired to work for the respective Ukrainian candidates in the 2010 presidential election in the Ukraine.  Now, what this means is American politicians and their cronies pick sides in many foreign elections, their consultants make big bucks organizing campaigns in foreign countries and our “American” foreign policy ends up being as divided as our internal politics due to this partisan-charged environment.  None of the folks in Washington will step back from their partisan talking points and spoon-fed politicized dogma to actually think about America, in the big picture sense – as one country, needing one voice abroad, to promote our national interests.  We can’t even agree on what our own national interests are, yet here we go again trying to jump into other countries internal affairs – half-cocked.  Naturally, John McCain is at the forefront.  Our politicians are just as much trying to influence internal affairs in the Ukraine as the Russians are – let’s at least be honest about that.

And let’s look at the Obama administration flip-flops dealing with foreign hotspots – completely incoherent.  Libya, Iraq, Afghanistan, Syria, Israel – totally embarrassing and colossal failures.  In Syria, Madame Secretary Clinton proclaimed Assad a “reformer”, President Obama declared red lines, and in the end John Kerry and President Obama handed over control of the situation to Putin.  CNN reported: “U.S. talks tough, but options limited in Ukraine”, indicating that even at CNN  the real world seems to be crashing through their  idolization of President Obama as more hype than actual “change you can believe in”.

Before Americans get too fired up by the likes of John McCain with his denunciations of Putin (here’s a pretty typical rant of his), be fully aware that a financial crisis precipitated this latest Ukrainian unrest, when Yanukovich went with a Russian bail-out offer rather than a lesser European offer.  Here’s a quick background on the real source of Ukraine’s continual corruption problem within it’s natural gas and energy industries: “Ukraine’s $19-billion question of debt and corruption”.  So, while McCain is bellowing about sanctions against the Yanukovich government, be aware that what’s really going to be asked of us, to secure  a European-leaning Ukraine, is a huge bail-out for the Ukraine, which is ranked 144th by Transparency International on corruption – tying with countries like the Central African Republic and Iran and scoring worse than Uganda.  The Ukraine is the most corrupt country in Europe.  If you still feel dismayed at Obama’s bailouts and haven’t had any satisfactory answers as to where all that money went, imagine tossing money into this Ukrainian gambit?

Finally, the Russians have a legitimate interest in the Ukraine based on centuries of ties.  The Russians have based their Black Sea fleet at Sevastopol since the time of Catherine the Great, so it’s not like they just decided to meddle in the Ukraine on a whim.  NATO has pushed toward integrating the Ukraine and Georgia into it’s sphere and there are many Ukrainians who would welcome aligning with Europe.  There are also many ethnic Russians in the Ukraine who want a closer Russian alliance.  The Russians brokered a deal with Yanukovich in 2010, extending the lease for the Black Sea Fleet for 25 years (story here), putting a kibosh on the NATO dream.  As I stated in a post the other day, in real terms, the Russian national security framework shattered with the collapse of the Soviet Union and if you’re Putin standing in Moscow today, his European adversaries are a thousand miles closer – with no natural geographic roadblocks.  Unlike President Obama, I am confident that Vladimir Putin understands military strategy, geopolitics and has a keen grasp of map-reading (remember O and  his 57 states…), so in clear strategic terms, Putin’s moves make perfect sense, while our meandering posturing creates more chaos and international instability.  I’m not for or against either side in the Ukraine.  As an outsider, I’m just trying to make sense out of the chaos and understand what the respective sides are demanding and demolishing.

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Someone else says Saturday

Thomas Sowell offers a column he dubs ,“Random Thoughts”, where he offers up  short paragraphs on wide-ranging topics.  I suspect that unlike most people’s random thoughts, his really probe matters of great import and offer keen insights into current happenings.  Here are a few gold nuggets from his latest musings:

“Anyone who wants to read one book that will help explain the international crises of our time should read “The Gathering Storm” by Winston Churchill. It is not about the Middle East or even about today. It is about the fatuous and irresponsible foreign policies of the 1930s that led to the most catastrophic war in human history. But you can recognize the same fecklessness today.”

and

“It is fascinating to see academics full of indignation over the “exploitation” of low-wage workers by multinational corporations in Third World countries, when it is common on their own academic campuses to have young men get paid nothing at all for risking their health, and sometimes their lives, playing football that brings in millions of dollars to the college and often gets coaches paid higher salaries than the president of the college or university.”

and

“Once, when I was teaching at an institution that bent over backward for foreign students, I was asked in class one day: “What is your policy toward foreign students?” My reply was: “To me, all students are the same. I treat them all the same and hold them all to the same standards.” The next semester there was an organized boycott of my classes by foreign students. When people get used to preferential treatment, equal treatment seems like discrimination.”

Moving on,  I purchased a 20 page little pamphlet,  “How To Analyze Information: A Step-by-Step Guide To Life’s Most Vital Skill”, by Herbert E. Meyer on Amazon.com this morning.  His advice, although seeming like common sense, laid down the simple steps to take to find the hidden needles, in the fields upon fields of haystacks in our information-filled, high-tech world.  The punditry and political classes in America  should heed his advice  What a pleasant surprise this short read turned out to be and I highlighted something in just about every paragraph. For only $1.99, well, I certainly got my money’s worth this time, so here’s his recipe (psst, he uses several food analogies):

first

“Until you know “where you are” you cannot make good use of the available information. That’s because you cannot know what specific information you’ll need next, or what the information you’ll be looking at when you get it will mean. So take the time to figure out “where you are” – literally or metaphorically — before moving on to the next step.” (Meyer, Herbert E. (2010-10-10). How to Analyze Information: A Step-by-Step Guide to Life’s Most Vital Skill (Kindle Locations 67-70). Storm King Press. Kindle Edition)

then

“The key to seeing information clearly is to make certain there isn’t a prism between you and whatever you are looking at. You may not know whether the population of San Francisco is 500,000 or one million – it’s about 740,000 – but you ought to know it’s a big city. You shouldn’t think your best friend is a saint if he’s a crook, and you don’t need to be an expert in world economics  who can reel off India’s current economic growth rate – it’s about 9 percent – to know that the image of India as a hopelessly backward sub-continent is long since outdated. And if you’re dealing with political issues, never let yourself be blinded by ideology.” (Meyer, Herbert E. (2010-10-10). How to Analyze Information: A Step-by-Step Guide to Life’s Most Vital Skill (Kindle Locations 97-99). Storm King Press. Kindle Edition)

finally

“My seventh-grade history teacher in New York, Mrs. Naomi Jacobs, never let a day go by without hammering into our heads a sentence that is so insightful it ought to be painted onto the walls of every classroom and office in the world: “The question is more important than the answer.” She was right; it is. If you don’t ask the right question, you cannot possibly get the right answer.” (Meyer, Herbert E. (2010-10-10). How to Analyze Information: A Step-by-Step Guide to Life’s Most Vital Skill (Kindle Locations 107-110). Storm King Press. Kindle Edition)

Not to quit there, he states, “By studying the information you’ve collected until you have determined the facts and seen the patterns it contains, you have turned raw material into a finished product. You have turned information into knowledge.” (Meyer, Herbert E. (2010-10-10). How to Analyze Information: A Step-by-Step Guide to Life’s Most Vital Skill (Kindle Locations 228-230). Storm King Press. Kindle Edition.).  Mr. Meyer offers sage advice as to why our official intelligence full course meal often falls short:

“Judgment is the sum total of who we are – the combined product of our character, our personality, our instincts and our knowledge. Because judgment involves more than knowledge, it isn’t the same thing as education. You cannot learn judgment by taking a course, or by reading a book. This is why some of the most highly educated people in the world have terrible judgment, and why some people who dropped out of school at the age of sixteen have superb judgment.”
(
Meyer, Herbert E. (2010-10-10). How to Analyze Information: A Step-by-Step Guide to Life’s Most Vital Skill (Kindle Locations 232-236). Storm King Press. Kindle Edition.)

He ends by talking about a fascinating dinnertime conversation with Dr. Jonas Salk, the developer of the polio vaccine, where they discussed Darwin.  To find out the brilliant insights Dr. Salk offered after a few moments of thought, you’ll need to read the book, trust me, that insight alone is worth way more than $1.99 (once again, it’s available here).

A week late, but here’s a link to a Politico story, “Why Does America Send So Many Stupid, Unqualified Hacks Overseas?”, written by James Bruno, a career Foreign Service officer,  about the embarrassing testimony from some new ambassador appointees that President Obama selected – political cronyism, *sigh*.  Alas, Mr. Bruno, none of these latest less than stellar appointees will likely provide nearly as many gaffes as the current Secretary of State, the Vice President, or even this President.

These latest clowns join this three-ring circus late in the performance and much of the world has already learned to bypass America as much as possible.  Even our allies openly diss us:  “Merkel, Hollande to discuss European communication network avoiding US”.   It must be noted that President Hollande just visited America and President Obama hailed France as our oldest ally (official posting of their respective remarks from the White House).  So far, President Obama has presided over some the of the most damaging national security leaks, failures, and a complete muddling of foreign policy.  Let’s see if President Obama accepts Hollande’s invitation to attend the 70 year  D-Day anniversary commemoration, June 6, 2014, as befitting the President of the United States of America.  His track record for showing  due respect for WWII allies is dismal, so I wonder if he will make the effort to attend.

This post started with Winston Churchill and it will end there too, remember President Obama’s return of the Churchill bust and the ensuing Obama administration protestations that the bust hadn’t been returned to the British ambassador, whilst the British stated the bust was now  residing in their ambassador’s residence?   Maybe, President Obama will even take the time to read up on the Churchill’s WWII contributions  (The Churchill Centre site) and when it comes to speeches, sorry,  Mr. President, Winston Churchill  far, far surpasses you (another great Churchill site, The Churchill Society here):

But if we fail, then the whole world, including the United States, including all that we have known and cared for, will sink into the abyss of a new Dark Age made more sinister, and perhaps more protracted, by the lights of pervert science. let us therefore brace ourselves to our duties and so bear ourselves that, if the British Empire and its Commonwealth last for a thousand years, men will say, 

‘This was their Finest Hour’

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One life

Here’s a very short video from Charles Lipson at the American Thinker about  Sir Nicholas Winton, who organized an effort to rescue hundreds of children from Czechoslovakia during WWII.  This video will bring tears to your eyes.  To learn more about his rescue efforts, you can click  his family website here.

The Gelman Educational Foundation has more information (here) about this amazing effort to save children from ending up in Nazi concentration camps.  Sir Nicholas wears a ring given to him by one of the children, inscribed with a line from the Talmud:

Save one life, save the world.

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1740 book on Stonehenge available online

Harvard University Press released a digitized version of 1740 book on Stonehenge titled, Stonehenge, a temple restor’d to the British druids, written by William Stukeley, according to The Heritage Trust blog (a fascinating blog to check out btw).

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Sans context: America’s foreign policy adrift

The political instability in Iraq should come as no surprise to anyone.  To add my two cents worth to the big picture chaos in the Mid-East, here are a few quick thoughts, which I’ll elaborate on later – after I read through a pile of information in my in-box, courtesy of Justin.  All the history plays into the centuries old Shia/Sunni power plays, it seems to me.  Beyond wanting to annihilate the infidels and use our technology to buff up their killing potentials, Muslims are like the Las Vegas commercial – “What happens in Vegas- stays in Vegas.”  We are peripheral to their internal divide in Islam.

Rest assured, whichever moves would be in our strategic interests, this administration will move posthaste 180 degrees in the other direction.  While Obama isn’t at “fault” per se and even the Republicans get it wrong in the ME too, the real things we should have done decades ago to distance ourselves from being beholden to any of these Muslim/ME strongmen is to develop American energy independence.  On a smaller scale, I’m also alarmed at how our military now utilizes non-US acquisition sources for weaponry and such  – really bad idea there, imo.  All the sensible things, to distance ourselves from some of these complex wheeling and dealing antics in the ME, we haven’t done and the only option we ever talk about is the military option. The American Left always lacks strategic vision and their entire operational modus operandi is reactionary, consistently lacking any deep thought process or dedicated historical research and analysis – they only seek “facts” which will bolster their political viewpoint.

The Republican strategic camp vacillates between the brain trust (term used very loosely here) of the McCain/Graham camp and the more serious-minded types like John Bolton.  The McCain/Graham camp can be counted on for grandiose reactionary military gambits, which play fast and loose with historical reality and they simplistically wrap up all their high-flown rhetoric in the American flag.  John Bolton, a very brilliant strategist, can be counted on for clear-sighted analysis, replete with solid historical scholarship to back his position and the only fault I can take from his policy advice, is that often the things he suggests require a stronger political backbone than exists in either political party.  We don’t have the political will to tough out many of the actions required to actually be successful, especially in this hotbed of sensationalized journalism in the modern era.  We capitulate to third-world propaganda fueled by the ubiquitous photos, sans context,  hitting the internet and airwaves.  Here’s a very good Bolton piece on the Kerry ME peace initiative.

What we should start doing before we plan any foreign policy is devote more time to looking at maps, thinking about the big picture and asking ourselves what issues about the various regions matter to our own interests.  Most of our foreign policy debates become entangled with and controlled by people who have vested interests in particular regions of the world and it behooves us to always step back and refocus on the big picture, which for America should be our own national interests.  Only after we’ve studied maps a good bit and done some background historical research should we begin formulating policy.   Then we should always put the horse before the cart, which sad to say isn’t our usual reactionary response mode.  We need to formulate the big picture foreign policy goals first and then we would be prepared for the little picture crises that keep flaring up.  Yawn now, it’s okay, this lecture is over.  More to come though, after I read through a lot more information.  Yes, Justin, covers everything from modern jihadis all the way back to Tamerlane, but I sure appreciate all the links he sends my way!

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Interesting Stratfor Article

The Geopolitics of the Gregorian Calendar

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The Geopolitics of the Gregorian Calendar

Analysis

When England adopted the Gregorian calendar in 1752, some 170 years after it was introduced by Pope Gregory XIII, Benjamin Franklin wrote, “It is pleasant for an old man to be able to go to bed on Sept. 2, and not have to get up until Sept. 14.” Indeed, nearly two weeks evaporated into thin air in England when it transitioned from the Julian calendar, which had left the country 11 days behind much of Europe. Such calendrical acrobatics are not unusual. The year 46 B.C., a year before Julius Caesar implemented his namesake system, lasted 445 days and later became known as the “final year of confusion.”

In other words, the systems used by mankind to track, organize and manipulate time have often been arbitrary, uneven and disruptive, especially when designed poorly or foisted upon an unwilling society. The history of calendrical reform has been shaped by the egos of emperors, disputes among churches, the insights of astronomers and mathematicians, and immutable geopolitical realities. Attempts at improvements have sparked political turmoil and commercial chaos, and seemingly rational changes have consistently failed to take root.

Today, as we enter the 432nd year guided by the Gregorian calendar, reform advocates argue that the calendar’s peculiarities and inaccuracies continue to do widespread damage each year. They say the current system unnecessarily subjects businesses to numerous calendar-generated financial complications, confusion and reporting inconsistencies. In years where Christmas and New Year’s Day each fall on a weekday, for example, economic productivity is essentially paralyzed for the better part of two weeks, and one British study found that moving a handful of national holidays to the weekend would boost the United Kingdom’s gross domestic product by around 1 percent.

The Gregorian calendar’s shortcomings are magnified by the fact that multiple improvements have been formulated, proposed to the public and then largely ignored over the years — most recently in 2012, with the unveiling of a highly rational streamlined calendar that addresses many of the Gregorian calendar’s problems. According to the calendar’s creators, it would generate more than $100 billion each year worldwide and “break the grip of the world-wide consensus that embraces a second-rate calendar imposed by a Pope over 400 years ago.” This attempt, like many of the others, has received some media attention but has thus far failed to gain any meaningful traction with policymakers or the wider public.

Myriad geopolitical elements and obstacles are embedded in the issue of calendar reform, from the powerful historical role of empires and ecclesiastical authorities to the unifying forces of commerce and the divisive nature of sovereignty and state interests. Indeed, geopolitical themes are present both in the creation of the Gregorian calendar and its permanence, and its ascendance and enduring primacy tells us much about the nature of the international system.

How We Got Here

At its core, the modern calendar is an attempt to track and predict the relationship between the sun and various regions of the earth. Historically, agricultural cycles, local climates, latitudes, tidal ebbs and flows and imperatives such as the need to anticipate seasonal change have shaped calendars. The Egyptian calendar, for example, was established in part to predict the annual rising of the Nile River, which was critical to Egyptian agriculture. This motivation is also why lunar calendars similar to the ones still used by Muslims fell out of favor somewhat — with 12 lunar cycles adding up to roughly 354 days, such systems quickly drift out of alignment with the seasons.

The Gregorian calendar, introduced by Pope Gregory XIII in 1582, was itself an attempt to address the problems of its predecessor, the Julian calendar, which had been introduced by Julius Caesar to abolish the use of the lunar year and eliminate a three-month gap that opened up between the civil and astronomical equinoxes. It subsequently spread throughout the Roman Empire (and beyond as Christianity spread) and influenced the design of calendars elsewhere. Though it deviates from the time it takes the earth to revolve around the sun by just 11 minutes (a remarkable astronomical feat for the time), the Julian system overly adjusted for the fractional difference in year length, slowly leading to a misalignment in the astronomical and calendar years.

For the Catholic Church, this meant that Easter — traditionally tied to the spring equinox — would eventually drift into another season altogether. By dropping 10 days to get seasons back on track and by eliminating the Julian calendar’s excess leap years, the Gregorian calendar came closer to reflecting the exact length of an astronomical year (roughly 365.24 days) — it is only off by 26 seconds annually, culminating in a full day’s difference every 3,323 years.

But what was perhaps most significant about Pope Gregory’s system was not its changes, but rather its role in the onset of the globalized era. In centuries prior, countries around the world had used a disjointed array of uncoordinated calendars, each adopted for local purposes and based primarily on local geographical factors. The Mayan calendar would not be easily aligned with the Egyptian, Greek, Chinese or Julian calendars, and so forth. In addition to the pope’s far-reaching influence, the adoption of the Gregorian system was facilitated by the emergence of a globalized system marked by exploration and the development of long-distance trade networks and interconnectors between regions beginning in the late 1400s. The pope’s calendar was essentially the imposition of a true global interactive system and the acknowledgment of a new global reality.

Despite its improvements, the Gregorian calendar preserved several of the Julian calendar’s quirks. Months still varied in length, and holidays still fell on different days of the week from year to year. In fact, its benefits over the Julian calendar are disputed among astronomers. Nonetheless, its widespread adoption and use in trade and communication played a fundamental role in the development and growth of the modern international system.

Implementation Problems

From the start, however, the Gregorian calendar faced resistance from several corners, and implementation was slow and uneven. The edict issued by Pope Gregory XIII carried no legal weight beyond the Papal States, so the adoption of his calendar for civil purposes necessitated implementation by individual governments.

Though Catholic countries like Spain and Portugal adopted the new system quickly, many Protestant and Eastern Orthodox countries saw the Gregorian calendar as an attempt to bring them under the Catholic sphere of influence. These states, including Germany and England, refused to adopt the new calendar for a number of years, though most eventually warmed to it for purposes of convenience in international trade. Russia only adopted it in 1918 after the Russian Revolution in 1917 (the Russian Orthodox Church still uses the Julian calendar), and Greece, the last European nation to adopt the Gregorian calendar for civil purposes, did not do so until 1923.

In 1793, following the French Revolution, the new republic replaced the Gregorian calendar with the French Republican calendar, commonly called the French Revolutionary calendar, as part of an attempt to purge the country of any remnants of regime (and by association, Catholic) influence. Due to a number of issues, including the calendar’s inconsistent starting date each year, 10-day workweeks and incompatibility with secularly based trade events, the new calendar lasted only around 12 years before France reverted back to the Gregorian version.

Some 170 years later, the Shah of Iran attempted a similar experiment amid a competition with the country’s religious leaders for political influence. As part of a larger bid to shift power away from the clergy, the shah in 1976 replaced the country’s Islamic calendar with the secular Imperial calendar — a move viewed by many as anti-Islamic — spurring opposition to the shah and his policies. After the shah was overthrown in 1979, his successor restored the Islamic calendar to placate protesters and to reach a compromise with Iran’s religious leadership.

Several countries — Afghanistan, Saudi Arabia and Iran among them — still have not officially adopted the Gregorian calendar. India, Bangladesh, Israel, Myanmar and a few other countries use various calendars alongside the Gregorian system, and still others use a modified version of the Gregorian calendar, including Sri Lanka, Cambodia, Thailand, Japan, North Korea and China. For agricultural reasons, it is still practical in many places to maintain a parallel local calendar based on agricultural seasons rather than relying solely on a universal system based on arbitrary demarcations or seasons and features elsewhere on the planet. In most such countries, however, use of the Gregorian calendar among businesses and others engaged in the international system is widespread.

Better Systems?

Today, the Gregorian calendar’s shortcomings have translated into substantial losses in productivity for businesses in the form of extra federal vacation days for employees, business quarters of different sizes and imperfect year-on-year fiscal comparisons. The lack of consistency across each calendar year has also created difficulties in financial forecasting for many companies.

Dozens of attempts have been made over the years to improve the remaining inefficiencies in Pope Gregory’s calendar, all boasting different benefits. The Raventos Symmetrical Perpetual and Colligan’s Pax calendars feature 13 months of 28 days, while the Symmetry 454 Calendar eliminates the possibility of having the 13th day of any month fall on a Friday. In 1928, Eastman Kodak founder George Eastman introduced a more business-friendly calendar (the International Fixed calendar) within his company that was the same from year to year and allowed numerical days of each month to fall on the same weekday — for example, the 15th of each month was always a Sunday. This setup had the advantage of facilitating business activities such as scheduling regular meetings and more accurately comparing monthly statistics.

Reform attempts have not been confined to hobbyists, advocates and academics. In 1954, the U.N. took up the question of calendar reform at the request of India, which argued that the Gregorian calendar creates an inadequate system for economic and business-related activities. Among the listed grievances were quarters and half years of unequal size, which make business calculations and forecasts difficult; inconsistency in the occurrence of specific days, which has the potential of interfering with recurring business and governmental meetings; and the variance in weekday composition across any given month or year, which significantly impairs comparisons of trade volume since transactions typically fluctuate throughout the week.

In 2012, Richard Conn Henry, a former NASA astrophysicist, teamed up with his colleague, an applied economist named Steve H. Hanke, to introduce perhaps the most workable attempt at calendrical reform to date. The Hanke-Henry Permanent Calendar (itself an adaptation of a calendar introduced in 1996 by Bob McClenon) is, as the pair wrote for the Cato Institute in 2012, “religiously unobjectionable, business-friendly and identical year-to-year.”

The Hanke-Henry calendar would provide a fixed 364-day year with business quarters of equal length, eliminating many of the financial problems posed by its Gregorian counterpart. Calculations of interest, for example, often rely on estimates that use a 30-day month (or a 360-day year) for the sake of convenience, rather than the actual number of days, resulting in inaccuracies that — if fixed by the Hanke-Henry calendar, its creators say — would save up to an estimated $130 billion per year worldwide. (Similar problems would still arise for the years given an extra week in the Hanke-Henry system.)

Meanwhile, it would preserve the seven-day week cycle and in turn, the religious tradition of observing the Sabbath — the obstacle blocking many previous proposals’ path to success. As many as eight federal holidays would also consistently fall on weekends; while this probably would not be popular with employees, the calendar’s authors argue that it could save the United States as much as $150 billion per year (though it is difficult to anticipate how companies and workers would respond to the elimination of so many holidays, casting doubt upon such figures).

Obstacles to Reform and a Path Forward

Most reform proposals have failed to supplant the Gregorian system not because they failed to improve upon the status quo altogether, but because they either do not preserve the Sabbath, they disrupt the seven-day week (only a five-day week would fit neatly into a 365-day calendar without necessitating leap weeks or years) or they stray from the seasonal cycle. And the possibilities of calendrical reform highlight the difficulty of worldwide cooperation in the modern international system. Global collaboration would indeed be critical, since reform in certain places but not in others would cause more chaos and inefficiency than already exist in the current system. A tightly coordinated, carefully managed transition period would be critical to avoid many of the issues that occurred when the Gregorian calendar was adopted.

Today, in a more deeply interconnected, state-dominated system that lacks the singularly powerful voices of emperors or ecclesiastical authorities, who or what could compel such cooperation? Financial statistics and abstract notions of global efficiency are not nearly as unifying or animating as religious edicts, moral outrage or perceived threats. Theoretically, the benefits of a more rational calendar could lead to the emergence of a robust coalition of multinational interests advocating for a more efficient alternative, and successes such as the steady and continuous adoption of the metric system across the world highlight how efficiency-improving ideas can gain widespread adoption.

But international cooperation and coordination have remained elusive in far more pressing and less potentially disruptive issues. Absent more urgent and mutually beneficial incentives to change the system and a solution that appeals to a vast majority of people, global leaders will likely not be compelled to undertake the challenge of navigating what would inevitably be a disruptive and risky transition to an ostensibly more efficient alternative.

Any number of factors could generate resistance to change. If the benefits of a new calendar were unevenly distributed across countries — or if key powers would in any way be harmed by the change — any hope for a comprehensive global agreement would quickly collapse. Societies have long adjusted to the inefficiencies of the Gregorian system, and it would be reasonable to expect some level of resistance to attempts to disrupt a convention woven so deeply into the fabric of everyday life — especially if, say, the change disrupted cherished traditions or eliminated certain birthdays or holidays. Particularly in societies already suspicious of Western influence and power, attempts to implement something like the Hanke-Henry Permanent Calendar may once again spark considerable political opposition.

Even if a consensus among world leaders emerged in favor of reform, the details of the new system likely would still be vulnerable to the various interests, constraints and political whims of individual states. In the United States, for example, candy makers hoping to extend daylight trick-or-treating hours on Halloween lobbied extensively for the move of daylight saving time to November. According to legend, in the Julian calendar, February was given just 28 days in order to lengthen August and satisfy Augustus Caesar’s vanity by making his namesake month as long as Julius Caesar’s July. The real story likely has more to do with issues related to numerology, ancient traditions or the haphazard evolution of an earlier Roman lunar calendar that only covered from around March to December. Regardless of what exactly led to February’s curious composition, its diminutive design reinforces the complicated nature of calendar adoption.

Such interference would not necessarily happen today, but it matters that it could. Policy is not made in a vacuum, and even the carefully calibrated Hanke-Henry calendar would not be immune to politics, narrow interests or caprice. Given the opportunity to bend such a reform to a state’s or leader’s needs — even if only to prolong a term in office, manipulate a statistic or prevent one’s birthday from always falling on a Tuesday — certain leaders could very well take it.

Nonetheless, a fundamental, worldwide change to something as long established as the calendar is not unthinkable, primarily because it has happened several times before. In other words, calendrical change is possible — it just tends to happen in fits and starts, lurching unevenly through history as each era refines, tinkers and adds its own contributions to make a better system. And if a global heavyweight with worldwide influence and leadership capabilities adopts the change, others may follow, even if not immediately.

Universal adoption, though preferable, is not ultimately necessary. If the United States were to deem a new calendar necessary and demonstrate its benefits to enough leaders of countries key to the international system, a critical mass could be reached (though the spread of the metric system around the world has been achieved without U.S. leadership). And the Gregorian calendar would not need to be eliminated altogether; Henry believes it could still be used by those who depend on it most, such as farmers, in the same way certain religions, industries, fields of study and states use multiple calendars for various needs.

Will the Gregorian calendar survive? Will this century end with a December lasting 31 days or Hanke-Henry’s 38? The current geopolitical realities surrounding calendrical reform tells us that reform would not happen quickly or easily, but history tells us change is possible — especially during periods of geopolitical transformation or upheaval.

Read more: The Geopolitics of the Gregorian Calendar | Stratfor
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The Geopolitics of the Gregorian Calendar is republished with permission of Stratfor

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