Category Archives: Military

Let’s keep pretending

The social fabric of America continues to stretch further each day lately.  Today the Boy Scouts of America announced their executive committee voted unanimously to lift their ban on gay adult leaders.  Also today there’s  news that Ash Carter, the US Secretary of Defense, announced a plan to study ” “readiness implications of welcoming transgender persons to serve openly.”, according to a CNN report.

Without wasting a lot of words, as an American citizen, who is sick to death of the obssession with this social engineering that consumes so much time at the highest levels of the Pentagon, how about these idiots actually do their jobs and make sure our military is able to defend our nation!  In March 2015, Army combat readiness reached an historic low-level.  Army Chief of Staff, General Ray Odierno, testified in Congress:

“The Army also has cut 18,000 soldiers from the Army National Guard and Army Reserve, and it is reducing its total aviation force by 800 aircraft, with almost 700 of them coming from the active force, Odierno said.

“Today, only 33 percent of our brigades are ready, when our sustained readiness levels should be closer to 70 percent,” he said. “We have fewer soldiers, the majority of whom are in units that are not ready, and they are manning aging equipment at a time when the demand for Army forces is much higher than anticipated.””

It’s way past time for the US Armed Forces to get back to focusing on the entire team being able to defend our nation, instead of all these fringe social issues that have NOTHING to do with combat readiness and EVERYTHING to do with creating chaos within the ranks.

I keep reading one story after another about the ongoing efforts to propel some female soldiers into elite special forces units and frankly, the end result will be,they will have to lower the standards to allow for female upper-body strength issues, which everyone who has ever observed females training knows full well.  A lot of political pressure will be expended to get a few women into these units and from there, the push will be to reevaluate the standards and lower them to accommodate more females.

A smart military would play to strengths, but nothing in the politically-fueled, feminist mind-set cares about having a military prepared to defend our nation – they care about their political agenda. Why don’t they recruit some of the most highly-motivated, fittest, smartest women into special forces training that is geared toward specific training for missions designed for male/female teams, where females could add something to, rather than detract from, the team?  In the Muslim world where females are hard for our military to reach, special forces male/female teams might be able to gather more intel and operate in a wider part of Muslim society.  They could expand the missions of female engagement teams and our creativeness would be the limiting factor, not innate biological differences.

Instead, millions upon millions of dollars will be spent and more studies will be undertaken, until the political pressure succeeds in forcing the services to lower standards.  The reality is well-known, after all, the US military has been studying female physical abilities for decades now and they already possess encyclopedic knowledge about how the female anatomy reacts under every sort of training condition imaginable.

So, instead of accepting innate, immovable biological reality, we’ve got a whole country obsessed with pretending – pretending that male and female soldiers are interchangeable parts in jobs requiring a great deal of physical stamina and endurance, pretending that young men and women serving alongside each other, for months upon months, in hostile conditions will not form romantic and/or sexual attachments, and now we’re supposed to pretend that those who want to pretend their gender identity is not their biological sex need to be cossetted and given top billing, where their situation will be reviewed at the highest level, according to Ash Carter.  Well, how about he, and all these other “leaders” in the Department of Defense, worry about combat readiness first!

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Jade Helm 15 Update

“Jade Helm 15, heavily scrutinized military exercise, to open without media access”

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Grace in action

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Lily pads…..

Here’s the latest Obama strategic brain trust – lily pads.  From IHS:

“The United States is sending another 450 ‘advisors’ to Iraq to establish what chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff General Martin Demspey described as another ‘lily pad’: a hub that can be used to empower local Iraqi forces in their fight against the Islamic State militant group.”

Who is this White House consulting for strategic advice, Kermit the Frog?

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Winning my heart and mind

Even though I like to think of myself as not a rush to judgment type of person and a recurring theme in my posts has been, “Get to know people, not about people”, which almost always comes from sources other than the people in question.”, this past week I read General Stanley McChrystal’s new book, “Team of Teams: New Rules of Engagement for a Complex World”, beginning with some negative preconceived notions about General McChyrstal.  The Rolling Stones article, The Runaway Generalyears ago left me with a vastly different impression of him as a leader than I hold now after reading his truly fascinating and brilliant book.  He’s well on his way to winning my heart and mind and that’s no exaggeration!

I began reading his new book, expecting the usual, boring leadership prescriptions and a whole lot of detailed daring war stories to stir patriotic fervor, but instead General McChrystal offers some of the most brilliant, innovative, bold, and I might even say, radical, ideas ever put forth by an American general.  Every chapter left me rethinking some of my cherished beliefs and considering new ways of approaching old problems.  This book puts me in mind of sitting down and pondering Malcolm Gladwell’s books, where even if you don’t accept all of his conclusions, just exploring his fascinating ideas, forcing you to look at things differently, leaves you better off than when you started.

So far on amazon.com the book has a 5 star rating and I’d give it 6 stars if I could.  In fact, I liked it so much, that I’m going to order his previous book, “My Share of the Task: A Memoir”, which I skipped over last year, because of opinions I formed from news reporting years ago.

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A vastly different landscape

Thanks to JK for this link from the In From the Cold blog:

“If a Picture is Worth a Thousand Words…”

Of course, another repercussion of the Obama administration’s abdication of a leadership role in the region is that the Saudis and Jordanians have turned to Putin and the Chinese for support.

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Inside the Ring: Muslim Brotherhood has Obama’s secret support – Washington Times

Inside the Ring: Muslim Brotherhood has Obama’s secret support – Washington Times.

The link above goes to a June 3, 2015 Bill Gertz article in the Washington Times.

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A SSI paper on defeating the Islamic State

The following link goes to a PDF from the Strategic Studies Institute titled, “Defeating the Islamic State: Commentary on a Core Strategy”, written by Brigadier General (Ret.), Huba Wass de Czege.  He states:

“In the rational pursuit of vital interests in any human undertaking,
the design of concrete actions to pursue them must subordinate to a
conceptual strategic design based on a well-researched theory of the
specific situation.1  Any such theory will be based on a combination of
hard data and educated guesses about what those data mean. The under-
lying research must encompass not only the historic sweep of similar
cases (history does not repeat, it educates), but it must also examine
the peculiarities and differences of the present situation compared to
any that came before. Finally, because of the differences between the
present case and those of the past, it must adapt, rather than adopt, past
practices. What results from such inquiry and contemplation is a rough
but useful strategic framework that can be adapted as learning occurs.
At the core of such a framework is a theory of the situation at the very
heart of the matter and a strategy for resolving it – a core strategy”

General Wass de Czege’s 7 page paper covers the components of a core strategy that would be flexible and adaptable from which to build supporting strategies and his attention to dealing with preventing power vacuums once the Islamic State is removed is a bottom up structure, which could be dynamic and useful.  His idea offers a great deal of “learn and grow” potential,  as it relies on grassroots local and tribal leaders to take charge of their communities, rather than trying to impose a national state structure and push a top down structure.  This paper should be one to add to the top of the pile of working ideas on how to defeat the Islamic State.

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Report from The Long War Journal

“Jihadists claim victory in battle for one of the last regime-controlled towns in Idlib”  by Thomas Joscelyn”

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No easy road ahead

Minutes ago, I watched a heated exchange between Bill O’Reilly and Kirsten Powers over what to do about ISIS.  Bill O’Reilly advocates the saber-rattling – “Let’s round up some troops and go kill them!” type approach and Powers defended President Obama’s do next to nothing approach.  The solution, if such can be sought, will not be an American imposed solution, but instead will require dynamic and bold American leadership to rally Gulf State leaders, Russia, China and European leaders to work out a way forward to not only defeat ISIS, but to create some sort of regional security framework for the collapsing Islamic world and to forge ahead, despite huge obstacles, toward working out some sort of, if not peace, then truce in the ongoing Sunni-Shia conflict, which complicates every attempt to quell some of the escalating violence in the region.

ISIS, in my view, while creating horrific, attention-grabbing videos, remains a band of drugged-up, dangerous psychopaths, led by a few savvy politically-minded leaders.  The attempt to actually create some sort of government will be more akin to the Taliban than any dreams of a new Caliphate. ISIS, in my opinion, grabs headlines, but is truly only a symptom of the larger failing and failed states (huge power vacuums) in the region.

Defeating or toppling any one regime or even ISIS, without a comprehensive, long-term regional stabilization plan, agreed to by the power-players in the region, European leaders, and China, Russia and the US will lead to more chaos in the region and perhaps even wars spreading beyond this current hot zone.  What is needed is not a “Let’s go kill ISIS” plan, but a “Let’s work out a comprehensive long-term plan to stabilize the region”.  My suggested way forward would require all sides to make some compromises and to make some painful concessions.

If the goal is to stop the collapse of Islamic civilization and create an environment where moving the political ideological tenor of the Muslim world to a more moderate position, then Islamic religious leaders must engage in the process too, which creates another formidable obstacle.  The power they wield can be used to foment more hate and more deaths of innocent Muslims caught in the crossfire of this religious extremism they continue to aid and abet or they can seek to save Muslim innocents and help build a more prosperous Muslim future. They must decide if they are men of hate or men of God. Or, they can continue to help destroy the Islamic world, because assuredly failed states are not safe for even the self-righteous, pious Muslims.   They are zones where criminals, drug lords, and psychopaths roam free to terrorize innocents. There are no easy choices for anyone involved in this struggle.

From what I can see Syria remains the center of gravity for ISIS and to deal with Syria will require engagement with Russia and Assad, because Assad, must be a part of the solution, if there is to be any solution.  Russia and other Arab leaders, must present the choices to Assad, he can either lose Syria to growing radicalized Islamists or he can do the honorable thing for his country and his people and work to defeat ISIS, then step aside and work to help Syria form an interim government.  He has lost all credibility with the Syrian people and can not possibly remain in power.   This is all my opinion, of course, if I were in charge of leading American foreign policy, these are the avenues I would pursue.  A big picture geopolitical regional security framework would be the goal, to minimize the killing required to subdue the virulent Islamists and to work with Arab regional leaders to unify their military and political efforts in an effective way rather than these disjointed hit or miss, reactionary responses.

As to the O’Reilly, pie-in-the-sky demands of let’s send X-amount (usually large numbers) of US troops to defeat ISIS, this is the alarming reality of US ground troop readiness in America (April 2015 Army Times report):

“The unrelenting budget impasse has compelled us to degrade readiness to historically low levels,” Odierno said.

“Even today we only have 33 percent of our brigades ready, when our sustained rate should be closer to 70 percent. We are unable to generate readiness for unknown contingencies, and under our current budget Army readiness will at best flatline over the next three to four years.”

The ability to deter and compel more than one adversary at a time is in doubt.

The situation “requires us to hope that we can predict the future accurately, something we’ve never been able to do,” Odierno said.”

Tough choices, many huge, almost insurmountable obstacles blocking hope, but with determined global leadership and America taking a resolved stance, perhaps other countries will attempt to help move this mountain, understanding that this will require many hands to lug huge boulders, many miles, for a long time. There is no easy road ahead.

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