Category Archives: Military

US begins airstrikes against Islamic State in Tikrit, supports Shiite militias | The Long War Journal

US begins airstrikes against Islamic State in Tikrit, supports Shiite militias | The Long War Journal.

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More lamentations about Messages of mhere

“Evil report: When an individual maliciously injures, damages or discredits another’s reputation or character through the use of words or attitude.”

Sedler, Dr. Michael D. (2013-07-01). Stopping Words That Hurt: Positive Words in a World Gone Negative (p. 16). Baker Publishing Group. Kindle Edition.

I listened to the entire 22:31 minutes of Monica Lewinsky’s TED talk (here) and several things struck me – first is she speaks with humility, grace and honesty.  Lewinsky defines her purpose of publicly speaking about her past as an attempt to change the culture of “cyberbullying” and the brutal invasion of privacy that modern technology has facilitated.

Lewinsky chronicles the evolution of incivility, invasion of personal privacy and many other horrible offshoots of boorish and cruel behavior fostered online.  Watching Lewinsky talk, it’s obvious she’s full of wit and charm, plus it’s obvious she’s smart too.  Way back when, during this impeachment scandal, I recall writing a comment online about Lewinsky too.  I remember some detailed description about her shopping for a gift, trying to find the right book, for Bill Clinton. I wrote that she was in love, but some much darker emotions drive Hillary Rodham Clinton.  She is consumed with her quest for power.

A large part of Lewinsky’s public shaming, as she refers to it, was not just because of the internet.  The Clinton political machine, driven by one, Hillary Rodham Clinton, fed stories to the media to trash Lewinsky as some psycho and they were quick to utilize the information superhighway to spread their lies.  The man she opens this talk discussing as “falling in love with my boss”, well, he threw her under the bus to save his political career and he let his wife handle the damage control.

The need for a cultural change hits us in the face almost daily with story after story of young people using the internet and cellphones to engage in everything from “cyberbullying” to sexual exhibitionist behavior, filming acts of violence (brawling being the least of it) to post online, or in cases like Tyler Clementi, whom Lewinsky mentions.  Clementi, a young gay college student, whose roommate used a hidden webcam in their dorm room to videotape Clementi in an intimate act, then posted the video online to share with other students stands as one of the cruelest personal acts of “cyberbullying”.  Clementi, upon finding out about this gross invasion of his privacy, committed suicide.  Lewinsky posits the question whether people can be shamed and humiliated to death and the answer is yes.  Lewinsky speaks about how her mother sat by her side, day after day, in the wake of the 1998 impeachment scandal, fearful for her life.

People, in both their private and public lives, have found ways to use the internet and modern electronic technology to achieve real-time connections, where very quickly, with little time given to reflection and thought, they pour out their personal business, they run with spreading stories that are complete lies, with no concerns about the veracity of the information they pass along.

The Clementi tragedy highlights the callous, cruelty of some college students, but Lewinsky skipped over another huge change in our cultural landscape wrought by the information superhighway – our political elites and their moneyed supporters and the press have joined in the reckless, hit and run political attacks, where Lewinsky serves as a prime example of the roadkill left behind.  While the past 17 years have been a struggle for Lewinsky to even find a job, the queen of the Clinton hit squad sits poised to run for President of the United States.  The use of the internet to sway political opinion has evolved  to the point where the current President of the United States, a man who lies more than the Clintons, has his administration writing “narratives”, replete with gross fabrications and distortions, to sell his policies to the American people.

Now, in light of all the things the public has come to know recently about Hillary’s private email server in her home and questions about her off the records intelligence-gathering via Sid Blumenthal, let me once again state that my story related in Messages of mhere (tabbed at the top of my home page) is the TRUTH. Is the idea that she sent some of her minions out to investigate an annoying conservative poster, whose comments were being borrowed by some right-wing pundits, so far-fetched as the details of her private communications network run from her home emerge?  Alas, mhere didn’t belong to any “vast, right-wing conspiracy”, then or now.  In whatever user id, I write under, mhere, libertybelle, or susanholly – I remain fiercely independent., with no political connections – a private American citizen.

I offered the real-life identities of every person mentioned to several reporters, as I stated a while back – no takers.  Oh, the things I wrote about way back then on the excite message boards – I mocked the Clinton spinmeisters (professional LIARS), who invaded those message boards to spin the story.  I pointed out the idiocy of their LIES.  And in mhere fashion – I made sure that I had the last word in each debate.

Yes, alas, my story sounds so far-fetched and after all, while she gets feted and fawned over the more she lies, I am the person who was locked up in a mental facility for 18 days, unable to get even my own family to listen to me.  Yes, my rights were violated repeatedly, and despite being able to shower, dress, talk coherently, someone(s) tried to have me permanently committed to a state mental hospital – something you’d expect in a communist country.  All these records exist, the hearing that freed me – I was not ever advised of my rights or of the hearing.  I had to throw a fit to even get legal representation.  I want to expose every last person who aided in attacking me and helped spread the lies about me.  Why?  Because I believe that woman, the “co-President”,  used an Army commander to attack an enlisted family based on LIES.  She corrupted the chain of command and I will continue to try and expose why she is unfit to ever be commander-in-chief of the US Armed Forces, bequeathed to us by General George Washington.  I don’t even have a speeding ticket.  I’ve never owned a gun or belonged to any militia or “vast right-wing conspiracy”.  I was a homemaker, by choice, with no political connections whatsoever.

On this BookBub thing online, you can get a daily email of book deals and along with that Amish Peace book I mentioned recently, I bought another book called, “Stopping Words That Hurt:  Positive Words In a World Gone Negative”, by Dr. Michael D. Sedler.  The book is written from a Christian perspective, rich with Biblical stories about the sin of spreading evil through lies, gossip, and what the author in general refers to as “evil reporting”.  Well, having been on the receiving end of  some potent “evil reporting”, hopefully someday I can publicly expose the source.

Sedler, identifies 7 types of “evil reporters” we may encounter: backbiters, busybodies, complainers, murmurers, slanderers, talebearers, and whisperers. He states identification as a powerful tool to unite people around an “evil report”:

“Identification: Emotionally, intellectually, physically or spiritually connecting with another individual.”

Sedler, Dr. Michael D. (2013-07-01). Stopping Words That Hurt: Positive Words in a World Gone Negative (p. 117). Baker Publishing Group. Kindle Edition.

Our partisan political factions feverishly work to gain support (identification) through spreading “evil reports”, with little regard for the TRUTH.  Sedler uses the divisiveness of Vietnam to explain how politics can divide not only the country, but create divides within families gathered at the dinner table.  America today is no less divided than it was during the Vietnam era, as evidenced by our polarized and paralyzed federal government.   Lewinsky carefully sidestepped delving into the political corruption within our two main political parties and she has set a noble purpose for her public speaking.  At some point, though, America will need to face up to the corruption attacking the very roots of our government – a breakdown and disregard for the rule of law by those entrusted to protect and defend The Constitution of the United States.

“Let us erect a standard to which the wise and honest may repair.”

– George Washington

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A city-by-city Iraqi mirage

This morning JK sent a link to an article written by Craig Whiteside at War On The Rocks, “Mosul: A Bridge Too Far?”.  This article presents an excellent background history of the factions and dispels the mythological sudden appearance of IS/ISIL/ISIS with a very detailed chronology of how radical Islamist elements aligned in the region surrounding Mosul had local support going back much further than last year when ISIL broke into the western media’s consciousness.  Whiteside states:

“The narrative that Mosul was invaded from Syria by a small number of militants last summer who managed to drive out a corrupt security force supports the idea the ISIL has shallow roots in the area and can be pushed out with moderate effort. As I argued here at War on the Rocks last December, that narrative only tells half of a story. Mosul’s fall last year was less telling as an indicator of the collapse of an occupational army than a measure of ISIL’s true and longstanding strength in the area. It was a tipping point and a shift that better explains why thousands fled from mere hundreds of insurgents. ISIL has had a strong presence in Ninewa (Mosul’s province) ever since Fallujah’s clearance in late 2004 left Mosul as the unofficial capital of ISIL.”

Whiteside’s phrasing using “the narrative” descriptive as more magical myth than detailed, fact-based chronology explains much of the problem with our understanding of IS/ISIL/ISIS and the political lay of the land among Iraq’s many tribes and factions.  The city-by-city strategic plan of defeating the Islamic State seems poorly thought out and a very costly endeavor in not only materiel, but also in lives.  Our press does a terrible job at asking questions and the laziness at actually digging for answers leads to these lapses in understanding  not only  foreign affairs, but also domestic affairs too.  We live awash in reports, experts, and intelligence. Yet, it seems our intelligence agencies don’t communicate and they definitely don’t collate the information available, then carefully assess their working theories or analyses to incorporate the new information.  So, we have these Mike Brown gentle giant myths and this ISIL magically appearing type understanding of the situations.

I’m adverse to escalating military intervention in Iraq (or anywhere in the ME) until there is a complete rethinking of our big picture foreign policy objectives in the region, a careful analysis of the situations on the ground in the various countries (especially the collapsing and failed states).  Then, the U.S. should carry out intense, serious diplomatic discussions with the players in that region and beyond, to include sitting down and talking to Putin and the Chinese about the ME chaos.  This pushing to make retaking Iraqi cities, the metric by which  “defeating ISIS” is judged, is totally idiotic!

That massive hyping by politicians and the press on the battle for Kobani set the stage for this myopic strategy.  By the time Kobani was “won”, what the hell did it matter – the “city” was mostly abandoned, demolished and a pile of rubble.  It made me think of that Vietnam era quote: “It became necessary to destroy the town to save it.”, Peter Arnett reported as a quote from an unnamed U.S. officer.  Sun Tzu, my favorite military strategy book, mentions both avoiding battles in cities and also avoiding so much destruction:

“1. Sun Tzu said: In the practical art of war, the best thing of all is to take the enemy’s country whole and intact; to shatter and destroy it is not so good. So, too, it is better to recapture an army entire than to destroy it, to capture a regiment, a detachment or a company entire than to destroy them.”

The War On The Rocks article includes informative links worth reading, which explain the strategic issues more clearly.  One link, “Stop Looking For The Center Of Gravity”, by Lawrence Freedman, highlights a serious problem in American military strategic planning, where we look for points to attack (center of gravity) and deliver a blow that will topple the enemy.  What we miss in this way of approaching our strategic planning is the most basic big picture strategy, which Freedman explains:

“So the wrong question to ask at the start of a campaign is “What is the enemy’s center of gravity?” The term should henceforth be banned. What should be put in its place? My suggestion may appear anticlimactic and banal. I would pose a simpler, more straightforward question: “What is the position you wish to reach?””

Fighting the Islamic State in cities, where the civilians are forced to flee, the city is reduced to rubble and the combatants, as in Kobani, are two brutal terrorist entities, while western reporters watch and cheer the Kurdish PKK liberators left me wondering what they were cheering about.  The alarming refugee numbers in Syria, Iraq and in many other Islamist battleground locations add up to failed states and ruined lives.  Too often men get so entrenched in fighting and winning that they lose sight of the bigger picture of “at what cost to the people who live there?”  That is an important question that our leaders need to consider.  Yes, defeating IS/ISIL/ISIS is important, but that band of loons is just one component to this whole big Islamic Ascendency civilizational crisis.  Without a big picture understanding and then a comprehensive strategy to address the larger Islamic civilizational crisis, we are wasting lives, money, and time chasing windmills. 

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GMD’s latest pearl of wisdom: “The Faces of Foreign Policy Failure”

Personality is seldom thought to be relevant to national security analysis. Yet in the end, intelligence, policy, and failures are made by men — and the occasional woman. We are fond of blaming history, institutions, processes, or systems for social….

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GMD breaks down the Islamic threat (a must read)

Policy is a worldview. Intelligence is the real world, a wilderness of untidy facts that may or may not influence policy. When Intelligence fails to provide a true and defensible estimate, a clear picture of threat, policy becomes a rat’s nest ….

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#Nothing-burger Plan

JK posted a must-read link on my last post: “Why the Iraq Offensive Will Fail” by Michael T. Flynn, retired US Army  Lieutenant General/former director of the Defense Intelligence Agency.  Flynn clearly articulates the threat and steps to take to defeat the enemy, but first let me quote him from this politico.com article:

“Yet to defeat an enemy, you first must admit they exist, and this we have not done. I believe there continues to be confusion at the highest level of our government about what it is we’re facing, and the American public want clarity as well as moral and intellectual courage, which they are not now getting

 There are some who argue that violent Islamists are not an existential threat and therefore can simply be managed as criminals, or as a local issue in Iraq and Syria. I respectfully and strongly disagree.”
Flynn continues:

“We, as a nation, must accept and face the reality that we and other contributing nations of the world are at war, and not just in Iraq. We are in a global war with a radical and violent form of the Islamic religion, and it is irresponsible and dangerous to deny it. This enemy is far broader than the 40,000 or so fighters in the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria. There also exists a large segment of this radical version of Islam in over 90 nations abroad as well as here at home. Just ask those countries from which foreign fighters are flowing into the Levant to support this “jihad.””

The entire Flynn article is a must read, as he lays out steps he feels we must take to defeat. not only the Islamic State, but the broader fight against adherents of a violent and radical form of the Islamic religion.  In the Cold War we battled a virulent communist ideology and in WWII we fought virulent forms of totalitarianism.   Sadly, many, out of religious tolerance ingrained in our American psyche, tiptoe around the threat posed by radical Islam, perhaps better called Islamic Imperialism, where the stated goal is to annihilate all non-Muslim peoples and establish an Islamic Caliphate to rule the world.

Listening to “experts” analyze Osama bin Laden and Al Qaeda for over a decade, well, I often thought certain opinions got cherry-picked as the definitive summation, while often, it seemed like many “experts” weren’t even really listening to what Al Qaeda spokesmen and Bin laden were saying in their numerous communiques.  When individuals or groups of individuals repeatedly declare war on your country and fellow countrymen, it’s wise to take them seriously, yet far too many of the “experts” consistently tried to whitewash the religious elements to these declared “holy war” edicts from Al Qaeda.  Likewise, the Obama administration spends more time trying to conjure up straw men (right-wing, domestic sovereign citizen hordes) threats to play cheap partisan one-up-manship games with a threat emanating from a large number of Muslims’ interpretation of Islam.

 Whitwall, a poster at Malcolm Pollack’s blog, offered this very fascinating article, “European Colonialism is the Only Thing That Modernized Islam”, by Daniel Greenfield.  Greenfield offers some thoughts to ponder as the West struggles to understand the “religion of Peace”:
“The problem isn’t that ISIS is ‘medieval’. The problem is that Islam is.

What progressives mistake for modern Islam, whether while touring Algeria or on the campus of their university, is really an Islam whose practice has been repressed by the West while its ideology remains untouched. Modern Islam is in a state of contradiction. It’s a schizophrenic religion whose doctrine calls for supremacism but whose capabilities prevent it from exercising the full measure of its doctrines.

Islam is the 90 lb. weakling that wants to be the school bully. It can’t punch you in the face, so it stabs you in the back and then blames someone else. When you punch it back, it plays the victim.

This split between ideas and power forced Islamists to resort to sneakier tactics, from terrorism to mass migration, to fulfill the spirit of their religion. The underlying imperative is to restore a conquering Islam capable of humiliating non-Muslims in Muslim lands and expanding into non-Muslim countries. That is why Saddam and Iran pursued weapons of mass destruction. Why Muslim armies tested themselves against Israel. Why Al Qaeda built a decentralized terrorist network with cells around the world.”

To add to our ISIL/ISIS/IS reading plan today, let me add one more article, not sure if JK or Malcolm posted this link, but I came across it somewhere in my internet travels: “What ISIS Really Wants”, by Graeme Wood at The Atlantic website.  Wood offers a meticuously detailed chronology of how ISIS developed and he offers this view on ISIS being truly Islamic:

“The reality is that the Islamic State is Islamic. Very Islamic. Yes, it has attracted psychopaths and adventure seekers, drawn largely from the disaffected populations of the Middle East and Europe. But the religion preached by its most ardent followers derives from coherent and even learned interpretations of Islam.

Virtually every major decision and law promulgated by the Islamic State adheres to what it calls, in its press and pronouncements, and on its billboards, license plates, stationery, and coins, “the Prophetic methodology,” which means following the prophecy and example of Muhammad, in punctilious detail. Muslims can reject the Islamic State; nearly all do. But pretending that it isn’t actually a religious, millenarian group, with theology that must be understood to be combatted, has already led the United States to underestimate it and back foolish schemes to counter it. We’ll need to get acquainted with the Islamic State’s intellectual genealogy if we are to react in a way that will not strengthen it, but instead help it self-immolate in its own excessive zeal.”

And now we have our own US State Department effort – a newly unified Center for Strategic Counterterrorism Communications, under the directorship of Richard Stengel, whom you may listen to speaking to an NPR reporter about the new strategy here.  He stated they’re looking for “credible new voices” (like Muslim Imams opposed to ISIS, former Islamic terrorists, etc.).  In other words, our government once again is on a search for illusive “moderate Muslims” to aid our fight, so expect this effort to work out as well as the search for those illusive “moderate Syrian rebels”.  And for those who want to say the administration is on the ball, catch this part in a February 16, 2015 New York Times report, “U.S. Intensifies Efforts to Blunt ISIS’ Message”:

““We’re getting beaten on volume, so the only way to compete is by aggregating, curating and amplifying existing content,” Richard A. Stengel, the under secretary of state for public diplomacy and public affairs, said by telephone on Monday. Until now, he said, the efforts to counter ISIS could have been better coordinated.

Many of the plan’s details are still being worked out, but administration officials are expected to describe at least its broad outlines during three days of meetings, sponsored by the White House and beginning Tuesday, intended to showcase efforts underway in the United States and abroad to combat what the authorities call violent extremism.”

In case you missed it: :Many of the plan’s details are still being worked out” , in other words, President Obama once again announced another #nothingburger “plan”.  Want some fries and Heinz ketchup with yours John Kerry?  Never fear though, those cheerleaders at the US State Department have their hashtag signs and tweets ready to fight the Islamic State….  One, two, everyone #Yes, We Can….

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Libertybelle learns the rules of the game

“I don’t want to put the cart before the horse,” Obama told reporters during a White House news briefing. “We don’t have a strategy yet.”

– September 4, 2014 remark on fighting ISIS (from CNN)

President Obama’s admission last Fall that we don’t have a strategy to defeat ISIS (now IS) may be the most honest statement he has made during his presidency.  It may also mark the point where other world leaders determined America slipped from it’s world super power status, relegated to something akin to Whitney Houston trying to restart her sidelined singing career after descending into a downward spiral of drug and alcohol abuse.   The crowds still showed up when she sang, but often many walked out during her performances and the reviews were brutally negative.  Being a Whitney Houston fan, I remained ever hopeful that she would be able to beat the drug addiction and return to her halcyon days of glory, when she gracefully walked on stage, head held high.  Sadly, sometimes the sins of the parents do pass on to the children, as in the tragic case of Bobbi Kristina growing up with parents heavily into drugs.  America is at the point where the crowds still show up when the President of the United States speaks, but few walk away awed by the performance these days.

With Barack Obama holding the reins  we need to seriously worry that the horse has been put out to pasture and the cart disassembled for scrap lumber recycling, such is the state of American national security strategy.  So let’s take a little strategic-thinking horse and buggy ride through the vastly complex modern geopolitical sphere, hold on tight though, because libertybelle is holding these reins:-)

Let’s set aside the Obama administration’s complete and total cluelessness on foreign policy, grand strategy, history (particularly military history), geography, economics and people (cultures).  This post is about my personal big picture strategic learning  curve, which I’ll call “libertybelle learns the rules of the game”.  Long ago, in high school actually, I joined a club that met after school to play a board game called “Diplomacy“, where the players take on the mantle of head of state and commander of the armed forces of their respective country.  Players must form alliances and dupe other players to achieve their strategic objectives on the game board, which is a map of the pre-WWI world.  Being the only girl in this club, I tried to be friends with everyone and much to my dismay, I learned very quickly that the boys lied a lot to me, deliberately working together to defeat me quickly.  My feelings got crushed, because I didn’t want to lie and collude against other players and I didn’t understand why we all couldn’t just sit down and talk and reach a sensible solution.  Men like to fight, that’s what I took away from this game, but this game did pique my interest in grand strategy.

My parents, who I’ve mentioned many times on my blog , were hard-working, simple living country folks, of German ancestry.  We lived on the edge of a rural village in northeast PA, surrounded by fields and picturesque forests.  Most folks there, like my father’s entire family, could claim pre-Revolutionary War arrival to PA.  One of my direct ancestors was tasked with forming a militia of 82 local men in 1774 and  becoming a Captain, leading them and later joining the Continental Army, with some local members dying at Long Island.  My father, whom we referred to as Pop,  built roads for most of his adult life and he loved to pour over blueprints and road maps, a skill he insisted everyone should acquire.  Knowing the lay of the land where you plan to operate is crucial to mission success.  A huge part of knowing the lay of the land is knowing the people who reside there and here again, my Pop’s friendly, outgoing, generous personality served as a excellent role model.  He talked to everyone and more importantly, he listened to people.  Without open, honest dialogue among world leaders, we remain forever locked down in an endless cycle of hostility and distrust.  Don’t buy into parsing political claptrap about ‘leading from behind”.   Leadership is first and foremost about your character – so be honest, be forthright, but be humble and above all else listen to other people.   My Pop believed that if you give your word, you keep your word and I believe this too.

There’s no one course at college to take or one particular book to read on big picture strategic thinking that will turn you into a strategic thinker.  Here’s what I have learned from studying military strategy for almost 40 years (yes from my teens) – strategic thinking is a continual learning process, where you need to keep studying more history, keep reading the news, learn as much as you can about politics around the world, read about cultures (both ancient and modern), but above all else remain open to having all your preconceived “definitives” being ground into dust by new information.  New information must lead to a careful review and re-analysis of your current strategic planning.   Rigid political ideologues like President Obama or Hillary Clinton, rely on “experts” to spoon feed them “definitives’ on  the lay of the land and sadly, the “experts” upon whom they rely appear to have dual loyalties, as in Hillary’s MB- connected  aide, Huma Abedin or the circle of Muslim Brotherhood brothers, President Obama invites to the White House, while ignoring the advice coming from his top generals.  Hillary Clinton, too, has a disdain for the military.

Many people and many books shaped my strategic learning and even now I remain an amateur.  I had a high school German and Russian teacher, who loved US Army film footage and he surely had an amazing collection, which he loved to explain in detail.  I wrote about him long ago in my 2013 post, “Multiculturalism My Way”.  I was writing about foreign aid, but my assessment holds true for this long war we’ve waged pursuing our Islamic democracy project too:

“Over the years I’ve watched this alarming trend of our American efforts in the world to fall flat, despite our best intentions.  As we fixated on “multiculturalism”, we seemed more and more tone deaf about other cultures or ran off  organizing aid efforts that didn’t  reach those they were intended for or didn’t fit the needs of those we wanted to help.  Much of this I attribute to relying on shoddy “experts” in academia, who spend most of their  time projecting their radical politics on their judgments and assessments of what’s going on in the world.   Repeatedly I saw TV reports or read accounts about American efforts at helping in the world, both governmental and private, ending up unwanted, unneeded, or unable to reach the hands in need, due to failing to understand the basic ground truth of the situation we were dealing with.  We often short-shrift considerations of corruption  and civil strife, which dramatically impede our effort, yet  we rush to get rape or grief counselors on the ground.  In the process we often seem to throw away opportunities and much needed basic aid that could meet basic survival needs.”

I greatly admire military leadership and one of my prize possessions is my copy of General Marshall’s Report: “The Winning of the War in Europe and the Pacific”, I acquired in my teens.  Pop liked to take us on rides on weekends to look at all sorts of stuff.  One particular weekend, my Mom and I went along with Pop to look at an old abandoned home that  was going to be demolished and Pop’s boss told him that he could take anything he wanted from inside.  Pop got fixated on the lovely floor-to-ceiling built in bookcases in what must have been a well-stocked home library.  My Mom and I walked behind the house and there was an old shed with a rickety ladder that I scrambled up.  I found a few boxes with 1940s vintage post cards, which I added to my growing old post card collection, having been given some neat old post cards from North Africa during WWII that my great-grandmother received from her son, my great Uncle Kenneth, who was in the Army Corps of Engineers.  I found General Marshall’s Report and have read it several times and wherever I move this report goes with me.  My Pop carefully dismantled those built-in bookcases, carted them home in several trips and he installed some sections in their living room, where both my parents refinished them, creating a lovely focal point.  My Pop gave sections of those bookcases away too, because he didn’t have room for the rest.

I spent shy of two years on active duty, choosing to be a stay-at-home mom, when I married and had children.  In that short time on active duty, I met many wonderful men and women, but I learned about military leadership and military strategy from men.  Military history, almost without exception, is a male endeavor – that’s just the historical record, sorry to break it to the feminist revisionists.  To understand military history and the underlying military strategy  takes a great deal of effort at trying to understand the world of men and male egos, because frankly a lot of  what has happened shakes out to be not some top-lofty intellectual strategic-thinking, but male egos clashing and a lot of male beating upon chests type stuff.  Historians coin new terminology and geo-political theories , but at the end of the day, war has more to do about our leaders’ egos than it does about existential threats or even vital national security interests (which aren’t even unanimously agreed upon by “experts”).

In the modern era, there are a few more female leaders in the world, but by a large margin, the world is still run by men.  In the Muslim world, it is exclusively run by men.  All the multiculturalist kumbaya singing by the women in this administration will not alter that fact.  Failing to understand the men beating upon their chests in that neck of the world rests as more than putting the cart before the horse, it’s hiding behind the skirts of a bunch of silly women, who know absolutely nothing about men or war.  This President is perceived to be a wimp by other world leaders, particularly by those intent on destroying America.

My first battalion commander taught me about mission, from the big picture down to the little picture and he explained everyone’s role in accomplishing the mission.  I was in a Pershing missile battery and our unit crest had the motto, “Mission Accomplished” at the bottom.  I asked him what that meant and  he patiently explained “missions”, both large and small to a Private First Class, without talking down to me.  He explained how everyone has a role in completing the mission.  I believe not everyone needs to understand the entire complex big picture mission, but everyone’s got to know enough to instill confidence in the mission and the leaders.  President Obama exudes indecisiveness, vagueness and frankly cluelessness, all traits that undercut dynamic leadership.  He is a small man wearing a big hat and poorly educated on geography, history, military affairs and lacking in any understanding of grand strategy or diplomacy.  He’s a boring sloganeer of mindless phrases for morons to repeat, “Yes, we can!’   I personally would not support any “strategy” he comes up with, because I have ZERO confidence in his judgment and with any use of US military force comes a duty of our military leadership to never sacrifice American blood or treasure without a national purpose.  This administration couldn’t define American national interests if we were being overrun by marauding enemies.  They’d find excuses for them, instead of protecting, we, the American people.

But, here I’ll jump the partisan line and I’m going to state the truth – the Bush administration’s hope for building “democratic” states in Afghanistan and Iraq lacked any foundation in reality.  By setting up states where Sharia law ruled, any hope of “democratic” forms flew out the window.  We lacked a coherent big picture strategy beyond  the initial toppling the sitting governments and ended flying in a long, long holding pattern looking for some safe landing.  Sure, there were some smaller picture strategic successes, but the big picture mission of defining what success looked like defied all the facts on the ground.   Words like “defeat the enemy” ring hollow if we’re not prepared for the long slough after they’re defeated, because the powers ready to lead in that area of the world are not compatible with US notions of democracy.  Lacking a clear big picture strategic vision led to ad hoc fits and starts as we found ourselves with boots on the ground in inhospitable territory, where both the locals, neighboring states, and even other American adversaries worked behind the scenes to thwart our efforts.  We got mired down in nation-building, which the American political right spent the 1990s gravely warning against and here a Republican president led us into a utopian nation-building exercise.  It was a poor big picture strategy.

How to learn about military strategy, well, read a lot of books, get used to pouring over maps, become a news junkie, and whenever you think you’re an “expert”, it’s time to have someone knock you off that pedestal and eat some humble pie, because sure as the sun will come out tomorrow Annie, you’ll come across some new intel or fact to throw a wrench in your absolutely brilliant analysis.  Be prepared to back up and regroup and be prepared to be knocked down.  Learning how to pick yourself up, dust off your backside and trudge on is the best character builder in the world – learn to fight on.

And finally, jumping from modern education to ancient Chinese wisdom, let me end this long ramble with my own test of grand strategy for a state that wants to lead the world – in military strategy the acme of skill is learning how to win without fighting:

2. Hence to fight and conquer in all your battles is not supreme excellence; supreme excellence consists in breaking the enemy’s resistance without fighting.

– The Art of War by Sun Tzu from classics.mit.edu

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Another excellent GMD analysis

Definitely check out GMD’s latest article, “War Powers and Sucker Punches” at The American Thinker, chronicling America’s strategic failure during the Long War against the more strident devotees of the religion of Peace. 

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Hillary Clinton Libya war genocide narrative rejected by U.S. intelligence – Washington Times

Hillary Clinton Libya war genocide narrative rejected by U.S. intelligence – Washington Times.

Yes, alas, Hillary Clinton, another fabulist of epic proportions, convinced President Obama to wage the Libyan air war to oust Gadaffi.  Her Benghazi saga begins then.  Maybe, we can find out the names of the  Libyan”moderate”, “freedom-fighters” she met with in Benghazi.  They provided her with the intelligence that a “genocide” was imminent and demanded US humanitarian R2P intervention???  Really, she bypassed US vetted intelligence, it appears.  Benghazi….. perhaps the Hillary swan song, la, la, la.

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The palace guard revolts…

Hopefully, I’ll be able to write a longer post soon, which will attempt to weave the many loose threads of our magic carpet that is the Obama foreign policy approach dealing with Islamic imperialism and we can take it on a test spin, but, alas for now I only have time for some links and a few short comments.

Up first, retired Lieutenant General Mike Flynn, former head of the Defense Intelligence Agency, came out stating that the President’s strategy for defeating ISIS and the larger Islamic imperialists (Islamist radicals writ large) isn’t working. He described a war being run by bureaucrats outside of the Pentagon, not by war-fighters. What he said stands as fascinating, but that he said this speaks to a shot across the bow, aimed straight at the White House. Yes, there seems to be a revolt going on and since the generals on active duty can’t speak out against their CINC, expect more rebels in the retired ranks to carry the battle to Congress’s doorstep. Some Mike Flynn links to check out:

http://www.charlierose.com/watch/60510282

http://www.foxnews.com/on-air/fox-news-sunday-chris-wallace/2015/02/08/president-obamas-isis-strategy-falling-short-plus-dr-ben-carson-measles-outbreak-vaccines#p//v/4039127183001

The White House, amidst the chaos wrought by Islamic imperialism (yeah, I think that term works well) refuses to utter the word “Islam” in connection to those who invoke it’s name in all they do.  No the administration calls for “strategic patience”.

Alas, from Deep Throat in the Nixon era, onto the gabby,  gushing , little blue dress clad, deep throat in the Clinton era, veteran reporter, Bob Woodward seems to have cultivated some well-placed “anonymous” deep throat sources within the Pentagon:

http://www.breitbart.com/video/2015/02/08/woodward-military-upset-susan-rice-telling-generals-how-to-fight/

Stay tuned and see whom the Pentagon insiders recruit next to wage their stealth proxy war.  Let’s hope their strategic planning can defeat the Obama sisterhood of Susan Rice, Valerie Jarret and Samantha Power.  Yes, Susan Rice is micromanaging our fight against ISIS – the same Susan Rice who claimed Bowe Bergdahl served with honor and distinction….  The same Susan Rice who blamed Benghazi on a stupid video….

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