Category Archives: Military

President Obama: Defining his foreign policy big picture

The Obama administration full court press effort chugs along without pause, trying to convince America and the world, that absent US intervention in the bloody Syrian civil war, the sky is falling or at least it is according to this Chicken Little president (picture here).  Here’s the type of sweeping, disingenuous, flat-out ridiculous claim he makes to explain our “national interest” in the alleged use of chemical weapons by the Syrian government:

“It’s important for us to recognize that when over 1,000 people are killed, including hundreds of innocent children, through the use of a weapon that 98 or 99 percent of humanity says should not be used even in war, and there is no action, then we’re sending a signal that that international norm doesn’t mean much,” Obama said. “And that is a danger to our national security.” (CNN story here).

Our national interest is threatened enough by Assad’s alleged use of chemical weapons against his own people, but our national interest isn’t threatened enough to act regarding Iran’s determined acquisition of nuclear weapons capability, which Iran clearly would use to threaten the United States and our interests in the world?  President Obama never quite connects the dots of foreign policy issues in a coherent, realistic manner and he often fudges on the facts.  So, here’s the kindergarten level primer on the real “big picture” view of the troublesome Muslim world situation as it pertains to US national interests.

We still need oil, let’s start with that.  Okay, leftists, start wailing, “no war for oil”, but thanks to our failure to secure American domestic self-reliance regarding our energy needs (Obama nixing Keystone/banning new off-shore drilling/attacking fracking ring any bells), we still need to import a good deal of our oil.  Now, many want to demonize Vladimir Putin’s bold strokes, but if you look at a map and watch his moves to secure pipelines to export their oil, he expanded their oil markets eastward to tap into Asian markets, added to their European market.  We have President Obama and his cronies wasting billions on “alternative” energy pipedreams, while stymieing domestic oil, natural gas and coal production.  Having enough fuel to keep our economy functioning is a vital national interest – worth defending!  The Mid-East, absent vast oil supplies, would be a whole big mess we could pretty much avoid, but there you have it – we need oil.

Radical Islam, jihadi nutcases, Al Qaeda & friends, Islamists or as the Obama folks like to take the Islam out of  the name, “radical extremists” – whatever you call them – they are Islamic-inspired loons intent on ridding the world of infidels, of whom they consider Americans to be the #1 Infidels in the world.  That makes America and American interests their prime target.  Now, in Syria, we’ve got a rather ruthless dictator, Assad, who is engaged in a civil war against an assortment of rebel forces – some of them Al Qaeda (those “radical extremists” who want to annihilate America).  Now Secretary of State, John Kerry claims that 15-25% of the rebel forces are Al Qaeda in Syria (here).  Syrian president, Bashar Assad, claims that 80-90% of the rebels fighting him are Al Qaeda (here).  Who to believe, hummmm, well, first I would like to know from what sources John Kerry’s “facts” were attained, before accepting his lowball statistic.  This Syrian resistance lobbying group, Syria Emergency Task Force, who took John McCain to Syria earlier this year to promote US intervention and whose map seems to be accepted as the “official” disposition of rebel forces in Syria seems to be the source of much of the “accepted facts” on Syria.  Their mouthpiece, Elizabeth O’Bagy, keeps  prancing across US news venues as a “senior analyst for the Institute for the Study of War” (which states it is a think tank dedicated to promoting US strategic interests).

President Obama wants us to strike some of Assad’s military assets to help the rebel forces, of which a percentage (some/many, do we even know or care?) are Al Qaeda fighters.  Now, President Obama is very clear that this strike will be very limited, it’s not intended to topple Assad, but only intended to send Assad a message that we won’t tolerate him using chemical weapons against his own people…..  Yep, Assad who is engaged in a brutal existential struggle will be so moved by the US lobbing some cruise missiles in a very limited strike that he will be awed into rethinking his actions.  Okay, we won’t target Assad’s chemical weapons, because we can’t blow them up from the air, because these wily Arab tinpot dictators have the habit of placing their WMD and most vital military assets in places like hospitals, populated civilian areas and schools.  Actually rounding up his WMD stockpiles would require “boots on the ground” and our Chicken Little president doesn’t have the guts to risk that.

Now, Iran, the bigger regional power broker in this Syria issue, will keep sending weapons to Assad.  Russia also is propping up Assad.  The Saudis are happy to export Al Qaeda and company to help the rebel forces in Syria, because that gets these dangerous radicals out of Saudi Arabia.  Now, Iran probably is sending Hezbollah terrorists to aid Assad too, so we’ve got all the worst of worst “radical extremists” involved here and our President thinks a few missiles will faze them???  To understand the way the Mid-East stacks up requires a more in-depth look at the history of the region and how European, Russian and American actions in the region got us to the present day huge mess, but the short explanation is Cold War era alliances and economic concerns play a huge role.  The establishment of Israel post-World War II influences just about every event in the region.  Even further back, anti-colonial movements and pan-Arabism and pan-Islamism movements began to ignite leading to the present-day conflagration in the Arab/Muslim world (here’s an Al Jazeera piece to explain the history).  Does President Obama understand this history?  I  doubt it.

Iran with nuclear weapons does pose a serious threat to us and Israel, our closest ally in the region.  However, President Obama keeps wanting to “talk” to them and he refused to lift a finger to aid the resistance that tried to rise against the oppressive Iranian regime.  He also pulled US troops out of Iraq, leaving the door wide open for Iran to destabilize the fledgling Iraqi government and undermine all the US effort to prop up a functioning post-Saddam government in Iraq (a vital national interest at limiting Iranian influence in the region).  He insisted on aiding the “radical extremists” in Libya, which was instrumental in the ouster of Qaddafi and leaves Libya in a state of lawlessness and ruin, but who cares, as Hillary Clinton joked, “We came, we saw, he died.” (CBS report here).  More recently, Obama turned on reliable ally Mubarek in Egypt, without even consulting the Israelis, whose security relied on upholding the Camp David accords, which served as a pillar in Israeli defense planning (so we stabbed two loyal allies, Mubarek and the Israelis, in the back in one fell swoop).  Obama backed the Muslim Brotherhood power grab in Egypt, by telling us that they were moderate and mostly secular, which was a flat-out lie and since then the Egyptian people ousted the Muslim Brotherhood from power and the Egyptian military took charge, for the moment. (good John Bolton explanation of Camp David and our interests here).  As a little map detour, in Afghanistan Obama is pulling out there after his ballyhooed surge, which he never did fully man and which he announced an end date when he announced the surge, thus telegraphing to the Taliban and the world his total cluelessness on strategy.  Thousands of US soldiers have died fighting for nothing in Afghanistan under this CINC and at the end of the day, he ceded Afghanistan’s future to the Taliban (which he will try to tell us is a new, more moderate Taliban….).

So, President Obama has consistently backed the wrong horse rather than the horse which would  bolster US vital national interests in the Mid-East, but he wants us to trust him now.  Time to wake up America!  This man doesn’t have a clue on the history of the region and all he knows is far-left American college campus radical nonsense.  You can hate George W. Bush and disagree with his policies too, because I disagreed with some of his actions too (not nearly as many as I disagree with this Gumby President though).  It’s way past time for Americans to pull out the history books and don’t believe me, start doing your own research and start where I started when I was a kid reading my trusty World Book Encyclopedia – ask “WHY?”  Don’t keep regurgitating spin.  Don’t accept the glib answers.  Don’t assume one side is 100% right and the other 100% wrong – start looking at the various sides in every issue and then start looking at maps, so that you can actually see where all the players live and what the world looks like from where they stand.  And when you think you have a grasp of that, then start asking yourself what things in this area of the world matter to the United States.  Only then can you see the big strategic picture clearly- it isn’t really all that hard and it doesn’t require a fancy degree – all it takes is a little bit of independent study (read a variety of sources – learning about how each side sees things helps you get a wider view of the situation) and then be willing to think for yourself.

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“Better than none”……. the leading from behind refresher course

With so many idiotic opinion pieces,  penned by “experts” no less, hitting the presses, it’s difficult to choose where to begin commenting.  Frederick Kagan, son of famous historian Donald Kagan, brother of Robert Kagan, brother-in-law of snarky Clinton State Department spokesperson, Victoria Nuland and husband of Kimberly Kagan, who heads the Institute for the Study of War (source of much of Syrian resistance “facts” swirling about) seems like a good choice.  Frederick Kagan offers his expertise in a laughably titled Washington Post piece, On Syria, a weak strike is better than none”.  The title pretty much serves as a leitmotif for the leading-from-behind President.  Yes, I admit it, I laughed at the idiocy of some “military expert” proposing that a “weak” response is better than none.  What a clown!!!  He fits perfectly with this President and bunch of fools.  He rambles on about the morale of the Syrian resistance:

“Especially after this lengthy buildup and public debate, Syrian rebels and their supporters would view a U.S. failure to act as abandonment of their cause. In particular, the moderate Syrian opposition, which relies on support from the United States and its allies, would be devastated.”

Does this man realize that our military’s credibility and morale would be severely damaged by a half-assed, lame strike?  We are still reaping the results of the “no boots on the ground” wimping out mentality from the Clinton years, which emboldened Al Qaeda and our adversaries since the 1990s.  Lobbing some missiles to no real strategic purpose serves no purpose and unless you’re prepared to respond to the repercussions of a strike, you had better not start something you don’t have the guts to finish.  Other people get to play their hand too when we start lobbing missiles outside our borders. Truly, does anyone believe this waffler in the White House will be able to act swiftly and forcefully if presented with an unforeseen challenge if his Syrian “not quite war” gambit blows a bit hotter than he intended?  The success or failure of any strategy always relies on the strengths and weaknesses of the commanders in whose hands the plan takes life.

History is full of examples where the side with all the advantages lost, because of poor, indecisive leadership and we have the ultimate in indecisive leadership as our Commander-In-Chief.  Yes, I consider him an embarrassment, who makes me wish the founding fathers had separated the roles of President and Commander-In-Chief into two separate offices (an idea considered at that time).  In fact, for a long time I have thought we would be better served in a nuclear age with a Commander-In-Chief office, which would be held by a person with the military knowledge, background and expertise commensurate with the responsibility.  We had President Clinton lose the nuclear codes for several months (ABC story here)  This President’s total cluelessness on military affairs serves to highlight that perhaps a serious consideration of this Constitutional change would be a prudent step toward checking runaway executive power and curtail  presidential military adventurism.  And it sure would make me feel safer knowing we have someone with some military experience calling the shots and sparing us from some political hacks in the White House formulating half-baked military options.

This man’s wife, Kimberly Kagan,  heads the Institute for the Study of War, which has been sending their senior analyst, Elizabeth O’Bagy (aka political director for the Syrian Emergency Task Force) all over the TV cable news circuit to convince people that most of the Syrian rebel force is “moderates”.  She is aided by GEN Jack Keane, who has, perhaps unwittingly, lent his good name to this Syrian resistance propaganda campaign

This think thank power couple gets paid top dollar for their expertise and several American generals have included them in their strategic planning (no wonder we end up with crap like “winning the hearts and minds of Afghans” as a serious strategic end game).  Of course, his buddy, William Kristol, at the Weekly Standard penned a pro-strike piece, called, “The Right Vote“, where he implores Republicans to do the statesmanlike thing and vote “yes” for a strike.  Mr. Kristol lambasted Glenn Beck for doubting the Arab Spring meant a new democratic rebirth in the Mid-East and he also embraced the “moderate-new-and-improved” Muslim Brotherhood pipe dream too.   One might think that shame or at least reticence about proclaiming your expertise would kick in if every prediction you make about the Arab world turns out wrong, but that doesn’t seem to faze Mr. Kristol or these other punditry wunderkinds.  Another one is Clifford May at National Review, whose assessments always turn out 180 degrees from ground truth- he offers, “Assad Must Pay“.

Laugh or cry…….. hard to decide at this point, but I can assure you that America’s credibility with this President bottomed out already, so whatever he decides will just bury him (and us) further.  He isn’t even contemplating any sort of military action that could effectively achieve a true strategic objective that would improve America’s or his own image.  He’s tossing around mushy milktoast, strategically short-sighted objectives, which will only further embolden our adversaries in the world.  And, I, for one, don’t really want any parts of having the French covering my back and Gulf State Arab shieks bankrolling my country’s military actions. If this is the “coalition of the willing”, I choose to pass on this adventure.

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Our flat on our back strategy

Back in June I wrote a blog post about John McCain’s Arab democracy projects (The GOP policy maverick rides again unfortunately) where I mentioned:

“It’s way past time for the GOP to take away the megaphones from John McCain and Lindsey Graham.  They spend more time being simultaneously for and against issues than John Kerry and that sure takes policy acrobatics to a whole new level.  These two relish all the media attention and they hog the media spotlight to such an extent that President Obama gets a pass on these policy debacles, because Graham and McCain so generously stamp the GOP seal of approval all over these foreign policy disasters.” 

I could lay claim to being psychic, but many others wrote about this same topic and in my June post I cited an Andrew McCarthy piece titled, Syria: John McCain’s Next Libya“,   it’s definitely worth your time to read this months’ old article, because it’s highlights, in McCarthy’s richly derisive prose, just how clueless John McCain really is on understanding the Arab world.  Here’s the first few lines to give you a taste for what you’re in store for in his piece:

“Did you catch Senator John McCain’s much-heralded (by Senator McCain) trip to the Syrian civil war — by way of our NATO ally Turkey, the lifeline of the Hamas terrorist organization? Yeah, Senator McCain blew into town to prove that all of us dissenters from his latest adventure in “Democracy, Sharia Style” are wacko birds. Surely, the Forward March of Freedom can work just as well in Damascus as it has in Benghazi, Cairo, Baghdad, and Kabul.”

Time fluttered by and here we are months later and John McCain and Lindsey Graham stand ready to yank the blanket of responsibility out of President Obama’s hands.  They will use it to smother any flames of resistance in the GOP ranks, like those pesky firebrands in the Tea Party ranks.  Once again the GOP charges forth to allow this inept, Gumby President of ours to mold himself out of his own story and let the GOP take the fall when this Syria intervention ends up like all of his other foreign policy interventions.  The British paper, The Independent, offered a special report on Libya yesterday: “Special report: We all thought Libya had moved on – it has, but into lawlessness and ruin” (full story here).  Quite the McCain/Obama success story there, maybe someone should ask them about that during these Syria deliberations.

Then we come to the humanitarian crowd, who lament that we have to step in when unconventional weaponry is used, because we must do something when people are gassed.  No where in the Constitution does it state we must intervene in another country’s civil war.  And for the historically-challenged, right at our country’s founding we had just such a foreign challenge and the likes of Thomas Jefferson wanted us to jump right in and help the French free themselves from the shackles of an oppressive monarch.  Cooler heads, like George Washington, cautioned against getting embroiled in another country’s internal affairs.  And as history showed, the French Revolution turned into a bloody, out-of-control mess where mindless murderous rampages took hold and we sure were better off not getting entangled in that debacle.  And the bloody French Revolution did not lead to a better government for the French people.  It led to Napoleon Bonaparte grasping the reins of power and embroiling the entire European continent and North Africa in a decades long war.

Saying we need to do something sometimes sets us on a worse course than if we hadn’t done anything at all.  Throwing more weaponry into the mix escalates a conflict and it almost always provokes more responses.  You had better be prepared that by attempting to “send a message” you don’t get an RSVP you didn’t plan for.  Bill O’Reilly opined on the humanitarian thread last night and yes, Bill, it’s nice to believe we need to set the example, but a Gumby like this President will bend every which way to avoid taking responsibility and he certainly doesn’t have even a drop of courage to react if some other folks don’t like the “message” he’s sending.  He is a vain, clueless wimp and all the other leaders who might be concerned with this Syria civil war figured that out long ago.  And yet, people keep talking about him like he’s some noble leader because he holds the title of President of the United States.  Well, let me point out that sometimes the American people are clueless idiots too and they elected this man to represent them, so when he waffles, dithers, or backs down once again don’t act surprised.  I judge every person on personal character – regardless of what title he/she holds and for the Bill O’Reilly’s of the world:  his being President isn’t going to improve his character, it only gives him way more power than he is fit to shoulder.

And back to the history lesson, we’re dealing with Arab men here – these are men who live and breath things like family honor and deals are still often done verbally by giving your word.  They’re men who judge other men on character weakness or strength.  President Obama’s adversaries in the Arab world already decided on his character and even Assad’s kid is calling President Obama a wimp.

An air strike, where the goals are severely limited and no boots on the ground is our “ground rule”, can only fail.  Heck, even in Clark’s air war over Bosnia – they used decoy tanks to deceive our pilots and we ended up being laughed at.  Once again we are defining the means we will use, before we have clearly defined a strategic mission.  First you decide what your strategic objectives are, then you consider the means at your disposal and you decide which of them you will use to achieve your objectives.   We get this part screwed up all the time and then we wonder why we end up twisted in endless strategic knots, where we accomplish nothing.  Strategy first – state what your short-range, mid-range, long-range goals are.  Now how hard is that?  After you’ve ironed that out – then you can start defining the scope of your military assets you will employ to achieve these goals.  We start cutting off our arms and legs and then we end up flat on our back strategically all the darned time.  We have idiots formulating these missions!!!

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Send in the clowns, oh wait, they’re here….

A few thoughts crossed my mind in the wake of President Obama’s rather dramatic retreat (August 31, 2013)  from engaging in military action in Syria, until Congress weighs in on the matter (story here).  So often, we Americans view the world only from our rather ego-centric “we are the greatest” vantage point, that we fail to even consider trying to understand the world from where others’ stand.  I’ve mentioned this idea before, of trying to step into other world leaders’ shoes and look at the world from where they stand.  Most Americans truly lack any understanding of history and for decades military history has been relegated to a niche corner of historical study in most college and university history departments.  Along with our national lack of taking the study of military history seriously, we also have so many elected officials, to include this American president, who reside in a hazy, feel-good strategic vacuum, lacking even a rudimentary understanding of international relations or serious strategic-thinking.

For decades Americans continue to meander along this path of grasping at emotional catchphrases rather than taking the time to read some history, especially the history of our adversaries.  What the politicians delight in spreading falls into the category of malicious gossipy releases of dubious “intelligence” that they present to create a larger-than-life nemesis for us to rally against.  If we were presented with more facts, rounded out with well-researched historical data, more Americans would begin to understand that the world does not revolve around America and that other people in the world possess legitimate hopes, dreams, aspirations, grievances, and a long history worth listening to.

Calling Bashar Assad another “Hitler” doesn’t really articulate a national vital American interest.  President Obama’s flunky who dropped this lame-brained rationale, “just muscular enough not to get mocked” (LA Times story here), as to the scope of the military action the President has in mind, demonstrates the shocking shallowness of his strategic understanding.  He views military action as a personal face-saving exercise, not from a serious national security view.

B.H. Liddell Hart, the famous British military historian and military theorist, suggested that the advisory organs of government might benefit from establishing an “enemy department” (Strategy by B.H. Liddell Hart, chapter XV, Hitler’s Strategy – available here).  He stated it would be useful to study the war from the enemy’s viewpoint in a detached analytical way.  Our elected officials allow sheer political posturing of the worst sort to substitute for presenting the public with unvarnished, unemotional facts.  Watching this latest Obama circus move from one ring to the next,  where at the end we have Secretary of State, John Kerry, left on the high-wire, with his footing thrown off-balance, valiantly trying to save face for this President and avoid an embarrassing public free-fall, where the safety net might not be waiting, leaves one stunned by the amateurish moves by this President.  It’s been obvious for years that this President rode the Affirmative Action train to power and while many will scream racism at this statement, what it means is Affirmative Action should be coupled with demanding bringing minority students up to par with other students, not doling out degrees without commensurate scholastic merit.   This man has a Harvard degree, which he flaunts constantly, but he is completely clueless on American history, world history, military history and his overblown ego makes him unfit to lead this country.  It isn’t just he who loses credibility for his endless bungling on the world stage; it’s America’s reputation and standing in the world that keeps taking these harsh blows to our national credibility.  For those who want to toss out Vladimir Putin as the evil, on-the-move force on the world stage, well, no wonder when he is faced with this American circus.  What a bunch of clowns in this White House!!!

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A Serious Strategic Question for the Iran Factor Proponents

Some strategists weighing in on military action in Syria cite Iran and the importance of Syria as a buffer between Iranian domination.  They list the importance of a US-friendly regime in Syria as a vital US national interest.  Yesterday on Fox News, General Jack Keane explained this view in-depth.  Certainly a containment of Iranian domination in the region is a vital national security interest, so don’t take this question the wrong way.  My question is what factors indicate that a US-friendly regime in Syria is remotely likely, even if we do assist in toppling Assad?  Our Iraqi experience? Our Afghan experience?  Our more recent forays in Egypt and Libya?  On what basis do General Keane and others, who toss out this pipe-dream as a likely outcome,  base their strategic reasoning?  I would love to hear the historical backing for this position!  Sure, lots of things would be advantageous to the US, but we need to take off the rose-colored glasses and look at the Arab/Muslim world as it is and it is anything but friendly toward US national interests.  We need to deal in reality here – not wishful thinking again!!!

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Our strategic-thinking deficit (Obama & the girls at work)

Time to get back to regular old blogging and give my “Messages of mhere” tale a break.  This clueless president of ours seems to have found his backbone (or at least the pushy women behind him found theirs) and he wants to use the US military for another doomed foray into a Mid-East swirling sand devil – this time Syria, where it defies strategic sense to intervene.  Where is the US vital national interest in this Syrian civil war?  Oh, we don’t have one?  No problem, Samantha Power (aka Summer Vacation Sam) just returned to her post and she’s ready to do battle for all the victims of genocide in the world and lucky girl that she is, she now has the US military (whom she despises as genocidal maniacs) to put power to her radical ideas on how to stop genocide.  Lest you doubt her strategic prowess, she’s a bonafide  “expert” on genocide, even wrote a book,  A Problem from Hell:  America and the Age of Genocide”.

After more than a decade of short-sighted, poorly planned forays into deposing troublesome tyrants in the Muslim world, we still haven’t learned the simple takeaway lessons.  Before we fire the first shot, we need to do the serious strategic-thinking.  Woefully, we lack very many solid strategic thinkers in the world of elected political leadership.  Fewer and fewer of our elected officials ever served in uniform, which used to be the premiere venue to learn serious strategic-thinking skills and out of the few prior-service elected officials we do have, most of them fell into the “social-engineering” side of the military, which has been sidelining serious military planning for the past 30 years.  For instance we have a war hero lady in Congress, who definitely served honorably, but she is mired in the feminism-before-all-else track in the military, so she views all issues from the “social-engineering” viewpoint and one can bet she isn’t real concerned with studying military history or wanting to hear any truths that get in the way of her liberal politics.  On the right of course, we have John McCain, who can switch positions so quickly, that makes one wonder, who is putting the screws to him, or least libertybelle has wondered if he was compromised decades ago.  Alas, that train of thought, where people are compromised by foreign entities, no longer holds sway in Washington obviously.  We even have a Secretary of State who denounced the military he served and we’re supposed to “trust” his judgment.  Now, of course he followed the Secretary of State, who made lying to cover her husband’s indiscretions a cottage industry, but alas she is wonderful too, even in light of angrily declaring, “what difference does it make”  as to why her ambassador and three other Americans died while under attack at some unprotected State Department facility in the bad part of town in Libya (probably gunrunning to Syria).

This track highlights our strategic-thinking brain trust (Lord, help us all).  And at the top is President Obama, the champion of creating fictional “narratives” and “composites”,  that substitute for facts, the truth and a serious education.  Alas, he rides a Harvard degree as his “proof” he’s educated (Lord, help us all again).  This man understands far left political ideology, holds the US military in contempt and is weak, vain and totally clueless on military matters, yet he is our Commander-In-Chief.  So, we have a bunch of vain feminist harpies, Genghis Khan John Kerry and Composite Barack formulating this attack on Syria.  They sure don’t want to hear anyone from the military telling them this is a bad idea.

Now leftist academics attack the Westphalian system, but it is the the international system of states and view of national sovereignty that the world operates under.  To determine national interest the most basic requirement is to pull out a map (yes, we need maps) and then you start looking at the neighborhood you’re thinking of getting involved in.  You look at things like waterways, access to other countries of interest to you, natural resources that matter to you.  You read up on the history and study the people.  You ask yourself, why is the fate of this country of importance to my own country?  That is step one – determine a vital national interest.  If there really is a vital national interest it usually hits you in the face quickly – you don’t have to parse it or look under rocks for it.  If you think you have a vital national interest worthy of committing US military force to defending, then you look at the terrain (yes, before you launch any attack you consider the terrain, climate and any natural obstacles or unusual terrain features.  You had better be thinking about supply lines, no matter what type of attack you plan, because if you don’t think of that, then you are unfit to be the Commander-in-Chief of the United States Armed Forces (I am still angry at the Bush administration for allowing such convoluted, polluted supply routes to Afghanistan – subject to attack and political blackmail).  You decide on clear-cut military objectives and then you begin planning how best to defend your national interest with the arsenal you have at hand.  And here comes the crucial often overlooked step – you’ve got to think ahead to what potential outcomes could ensue from your attack.  I spent most of my life as a homemaker, what would I know right?  Oh well, it looks like Gumby Barack has found his spine and is ready to act and his minions hauled out the Libya trope, “It will last hours, not days” to quell any American anxiety.

If you want some real strategic commentary, Ralph Peters wrote a very good column on our Syria policy a couple days ago at the New York Post titled, “Obama’s third war”.   Ralph begins this column with the line , “You might as well try to teach a snake to juggle as hope the Obama administration will think strategically.”, which is about the nicest thing he has to say about this proposed attack on Syria.

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The Pretty in Pink American Foreign Policy

Ran across two more pieces on why we need to maintain our nuclear arsenal, so I’m not a lone wolf  howling in the wilderness.  “Obama’s Nuclear-Zero Dream”  (National Review piece here) written by Jack David (Hudson Institute bio here) explains why President Obama’s “nuclear zero” world exists only in fantasy and  he explains the suicidal nature of  the president’s proposals.  Mr. David lays out the history of our nuclear weapons capability and the nuclear disarmament efforts since the advent of the nuclear age clearly and he speaks with the weight of someone who has spent many years studying our nuclear capabilities, both offensive and defensive.  Also worth reading is Mr. David’s 2010 spirited argument against the nuclear-zero voices that keep pushing the United States to unilaterally disarm and rail against maintaining our nuclear capabilities, in a Wall Street Journal piece ( located on the Hudson Institute website), “The Dangerous Fantasy of a Nuclear-Free World” .

David Lawrence posted a short blog piece at the American Thinker website, titled, “Don’t Slash Our Nuclear Weapons” with this perfect President Obama policy description:

We need peace through strength, not surrender through clichés.”  Read more: http://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2013/06/dont_slash_our_nuclear_weapons.html#ixzz2XhmuK5Eu   Follow us: @AmericanThinker on Twitter | AmericanThinker on Facebook

Granted, many very smart people would like to see a nuclear-free world, just as many people (myself included) would like to see a world where peaceful interactions became the gold standard of international relations.  However, we live in the world as it is, not as we wish it were and our national defense demands facing the tough choices and employing the most careful consideration to maintaining our military might, for not only our own security, but for the security of the free world,  that depends on our strength to keep them safe too.  President Obama immersed himself in left-wing grievance politics in college and throughout his adult life.  He does not know much of anything about history and more glaringly his views on military matters demonstrate a complete lack of understanding of military history.

From rogue jihadi bands of fighters to world leaders around the globe, they smell American weakness emanating from this President and the sycophantic nincompoops he surrounds himself with.  He now has a dole of far-left doves fluttering about him, Valerie Jarrett, Samantha Power, and Susan Rice with peacenik quacker, John Kerry, to pontificate out of both sides of his mouth.  He picked the yes-sir, yes-sir, three bags full champion, Chuck Hagel, to turn the military into one big group therapy session, where the focus is on personal sexual relations and  GI Jane’s feminist aspirations.  And to figure out our Mid-East mirages he picked the “gone native” Arabist , John Brennan, who is so enamored of everything Arab and reminds me of the British Lawrence of Arabia crowd, who drew the modern-day Mid-East map, ignoring the shifting sands of ethnic and religious hatred.  They studied the Arab world, they lived among Arabs, they spoke Arabic, but they became tools for Arab interests rather than their own and this is the exact problem with Brennan.

In an ever-increasingly dangerous world, when we should be seriously looking at upgrading our military capabilities, to include keeping our front-line combat units trained and focused on these threats, we’ve got  this clueless bunch wailing about social issues in the military.  We should be vigilantly keeping our nuclear arsenal (both defensive and offensive) upgraded and potent.  This administration’s answer is more politicization within the ranks, rather than giving our military leaders the tools to build a stronger fighting force.  As my friend, Gladius, said, “I learned a long time ago, while still a 2LT, that the best welfare and care of troops is good leadership and good training. We went through a lot of feel-good crap on race relations back in the 70’s. Did no good. Then in the 80’s we went through a lot of feel-good crap about how to deal with women in the military. Did no good. People are people. They respond to good leadership and having a worthwhile mission. These people volunteered. They want to do something meaningful. The couple of hundred folks in the entire 4 million person military (counting Guard and Reserve) are causing all the trouble and causing the entire structure to topple.”  His blunt words speak the plain truth about the situation and he added, “They want good leaders and meaningful work. When I saw weak units, there was racial and sexual tension, poor mission performance and poor performance. When I saw strong units, there was none of that. And that applies whether the budget is bountiful or non-existent. The gutless bastards running the military these days have totally forgotten the basics of soldiering and unit cohesion.”

Amidst the looming gigantic defense budget cuts, this president traveled to the Brandenburg Gate, June 19, 2013, where Reagan threw down the gauntlet to the USSR, to blubber on about a nuclear free world and nuclear arms reductions (full speech here).  He lacks any clue as to how to project American resolve or strength, but he certainly excels at highlighting dangerously provocative weakness.  His “red-line rhetoric” and rose-colored proscriptions on the international stage mixed with his “white flag” waving entourage present a very “pretty in pink” American foreign policy – to include wanting the girls to lead from the front, while the President continues to lead from behind.  What an American image we present to the world……….wimpy, wimpy, wimpy.  I keep hoping we’ll get some national leadership with the strength and determination of a Vladimir Putin, yes, I admire his bold stroke moves to advance Russian interests.  We’ve got President Obama with his Gumby soul – he’ll bend any which way, to include tying our hands behind our back in the face of overt threats.   Just don’t expect him to do more than hide behind the skirts of his top female advisers.

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Excellent opinion piece on our nuclear arsenal

In some recent posts I discussed our nuclear arsenal and the importance of maintaining and modernizing our nuclear capabilities.  The drumbeat that beats loudest since the 1980s taps out the nuclear disarmament tune, whereby suggesting our nuclear force plays a critical role in our national defense strategy hits a sour note among most of our national leadership. Here’s a well-written opinion piece from the heartland by Republican senator, Deb Fisher (junior senator from Nebraska), titled Modernize, don’t abandon our nuclear arsenal”  in Politico, which bolsters my position on our nuclear force.

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Sweet land of liberty….. (or land of the gullible?)

Glenn Beck had guests on his show who talked about a new gated community they’re putting together called The Citadel.  Through a careful, highly selective application process they hope to find people united by their belief in patriotism, liberty, pride in American exceptionalism and preparedness.   This community will require everyone to be self-supporting and these organizers, about as efficiently as the central planners in the old USSR, decided to start a firearms manufacturing factory as a means for the first wave of it’s “pioneers” to support themselves.  Guess, they miss the humor in a community touting “liberty” as it’s keystone, building a community with central planners setting up all the rules to become part of the neighborhood, to include what you must believe.

So far, this new community exists only on a webpage and the developers don’t even own the real land to build this oasis of liberty.  Not to worry about this being a ponzi scheme, they assure you this beacon of liberty will be located somewhere in Idaho, where they’ve thus far acquired  land for the weapons factory.  Don’t worry that one of the developers has a criminal record for extortion, which he explained away as his being naive about speaking out.  Not to worry that if you fill out the application (with it’s $33 application fee) and if you  make it through the Skype interview as a worthy new neighbor for the Citadel community, you must begin paying $50 per month to help secure enough money for these developers  to actually buy real property to build this proposed community.

What would living be, where liberty reigns supreme, without the central planners specifying, “All homes will be built of poured concrete for exceptional strength and durability” (even the Three Little Pigs had more freedom).  Rest assured, you will be free to build your home to whatever specifications you choose.  You’ve also got to be part of the community militia and own a firearm to be able to defend the community.  So, you’ll be providing business for the community factory, as well as the work force for it.

I’m going to talk about neighbors and the neighborhood I love best, being part of the United States Army neighborhood.  We, as all Army families do, moved frequently and lived overseas as well as all over the US.  From my very first days around the Army decades ago, one of the most amazing opportunities to me was to actually be able to meet people, up close and personal, from all over the United States. Due to the traveling and also soldiers’ propensity to marry women in far-flung locales, I even met many people from all over the globe.  My husband retired from the Army more than a decade ago and we live in a typical southern town next to a large US Army installation with a population like an international smorgasbord.  Just a few days ago, my primary care doctor, who is Syrian, was talking about the situation in Syria and he pulled out his cell phone to show me pictures of his parents home, where the next-door neighbor’s house had recently been bombed.  His parents are here living with him, so thankfully they are safe.

From a post I wrote in January titled, “Multiculturism My Way”you can glean that I consider the world “my neighborhood”  too and even growing up in the backwoods of rural PA, I longed to meet people from all over the world.  Luck definitely lit my way in life, because it’s been a privilege to have a retired solider hand me a slip of paper that opened the door to first meeting people all over the globe and then to spend decades as part of the US Army neighborhood, where patriotism shines bright. It’s been an opportunity to meet wonderful neighbors and hopefully to be a good neighbor too.  So, I want to talk about my neighborhood, where all the values this proposed phony Citadel scheme purports to value is part of the very fabric of the US Army community.

Soldiers believe in a strong national defense, almost down to the last man and woman.  Soldiers believe in patriotism too and a cloak of values shields our neighborhood: loyalty, duty, respect, selfless service , honor, integrity, personal courage (Army values here)  As the standard-bearers of General George Washington’s army, we certainly take very seriously the trust invested in us to bear true faith and allegiance to the Constitution of the United States.  Unlike these, hummm, I’m searching for a word that isn’t a cuss word, because ‘jackasses” came to mind.  Here, I’ll settle on calling them deluded people, unlike them, the Army community is strong enough to welcome people from all over the US and the world and still be a place where our values flourish.  In basic training at Fort Dix, NJ, I learned about how a foreigner seeking citizenship, could acquire it by serving in the US Army.  So, we’re strong enough to welcome diverse people into our ranks and still stay true to our values.

I had all kinds of neighbors living in the barracks as a young private and once I married we found wonderful neighbors everywhere we lived – on Army posts, in German villages and in civilian communities in America.  I’ve managed to make friends and learn a heck of a lot by embracing people who are different than me.  I’ve learned to make some darned good egg rolls from an Army wife from Thailand, who came to my home and spent the afternoon showing me.  I’ve acquired recipes galore and much more.  I had an Army wife from Korea (who married a Cuban guy) show me how to make sushi (yes, I know Japanese, right) in her kitchen.  She was trying to learn how to make Cuban dishes.  I learned to prepare many German dishes from numerous German friends.  I had a Cuban neighbor in one neighborhood, who loved to cook and she was constantly bringing food to me and telling me, “here try this, you’ll love it!” and I did.   That Cuban lady was friends with my next-door neighbor who was Puerto-Rican, so I often got a combination of foods to try. When my oldest daughter was in kindergarten, I met a Lebanese neighbor down the street and she asked me to bring my kids down to her house to play with her son, who was my daughter’s classmate. We became friends and I learned about Lebanese food, because this family ran a Lebanese restaurant.  Lebanese food ranks as some of the best food in the world.

In my food from around the world saga, I can’t leave out this wonderful Southern lady, who was married to a retired Special Forces soldier, who lived down the street from me when we lived off-post at Fort Bragg.  This wonderful lady and her husband had adopted two special needs children and this lady struck up a friendship with me, because her little daughter was the same age as my oldest daughter.  This lady taught me about Southern cooking and boy, she loved to cook.  She often would call in the morning and tell me to bring my daughter down to her house and she’d list the lunch menu and many times she’d say, “come early and we can chat and I’ll show you how to cook”….- fill-in-the-blank with a Southern dish.

Now, some of my forays into international cooking do go awry and I provided a good laugh for my youngest daughter’s  friend several years ago when she was in my kitchen watching me roll up burritos.  This neighbor has a Mexican mother and she had this dismayed look on her face and said, “What are you doing!”  She told me how to properly roll up burritos and I am sure her mother got a good laugh out of her story about my pathetic burrito-rolling skills, but hey, this girl loves my potato salad, so we all have our strong suits:-)

I must confess that my favorite cuisine is authentic Chinese.  Unfortunately, I never met a Chinese woman to come teach me how to cook Chinese food.  I do have a friend who is half-Japanese who offered lots of advice on Japanese cooking, but I’ve been winging it on Chinese cooking with cookbooks and experimenting over the years.  When I did volunteer work at the American Red Cross doing Red Cross messages, a lovely Puerto-Rican friend frequently brought in food.  I learned that the Caribbean is sort of an international mishmash of cultures and thus I still use this handwritten recipe from this friend called , “Puertorican Chinese Arroz”, where she helpfully put “rice” in parentheses.

What’s magical about Chinese cuisine, as well as their culture, is how they take what little they have and through a long, long history, as one of the oldest cultures on earth, developed  ways to adjust and thrive, through good times and bad.  Chinese people demonstrate amazing resilience.  Their cooking encapsulates this, how with a few varied cooking techniques or a few spices,  they can take a few simple ingredients and turn it into something unique and flavorful.  The Chinese spirit to adapt and persevere always amazes me.  Of course, they offer Sun Tzu too, which I just love- all that ancient wisdom on military strategy that still resonates today;-)

This is a true story about a neighbor I had one time – a lovely, good neighbor with a very kind heart and the kind of trusting soul – like the type of people who will start sending money to some schemers like these Citadel planners (yes, this liberty-based community is a “scheme” – it exists only on their webpage).  We were living in military quarters in Germany at the time and my neighbor (a lovely German lady) was preparing to move back to the States with her soldier husband.  My neighbor had an extensive David Winter cottage collection, which she decided to sell.  She sold them to a soldier who didn’t have the money up front, so she accepted a stack of postdated checks, which she agreed to deposit each month and he assured her that  he would have money in this checking account to cover them.  I urged her to hold on to her collection until she found a buyer with cash in hand.

That same neighbor was planning to buy some lovely lakefront property in the US, dirt cheap and sight unseen, but she needed  to send money fast before someone else snatched up this almost too good to be true deal.  I forget where she heard about this property, but I begged her to hold on to her money until she got back to the US and could actually walk around this property and see what she was buying.  When I thought her naive trust had reached its limit, she told me about this puppy her dog had.   Her close friend down the street headed back to the States and my neighbor said her friend was going to send money to her to fly that puppy back to the States as soon as they were settled at their next duty station. The friend had said she wanted the puppy, but then had endless excuses why she couldn’t take the puppy with them.  I gently tried to tell my neighbor that if her friend had really wanted that puppy, she would have taken it with them when they left.  Naturally, my neighbor was stuck keeping that puppy.

My neighbor would help anyone and she had a wonderful sense of humor.  She was the type of neighbor I loved having and you know I couldn’t tell you exactly what her politics were, nor did I ever think about her patriotism.  What I did value was that if I needed a helping hand or help in an emergency, I knew she would do whatever she could to help me.  I judged her on her character and she had a sterling character, albeit a bit too trusting of a soul.  It might be better to teach your kids to respect and value people with differing views rather than enclosing your family behind a fortress to shield them from people with different views.

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Paving the path to Peace

Here’s a quick news story, “Egypt sees Ethiopian dam as risk to water supply” in the Guardian,  to illustrate the importance of access to water.   I stated in my last blog piece that access to water may prove to be one of the gravest friction points in decades to come.  In this report, Ethiopia, sensing Egyptian weakness, appears intent to move on a dam project.  This dam project will provide much needed energy for Ethiopia and development opportunity.  On the other side, this dam might spell looming crop failures and a crisis for Egypt.  Egypt, already in a precarious situation from the much-hyped Arab Spring, could collapse even more, because the Arab Spring was a big lie.   President Obama backed the Muslim Brotherhood – the group that spawned radical Islamism.  President Obama keeps trying to paint the Muslim Brotherhood as a mostly secular organization, but there again is another one of those big lies he told.  Egypt’s economy has gotten much worse since the ouster of Mubarak and the prospect of a diminished water supply or an impediment to the primary water source for Egypt portends a potential for more conflicts, both internal and external.

This little example illuminates just one factor that might ignite another war or another internal revolt inside Egypt and we see these regional friction points all over the globe. It would be lovely if some naive notion like Global Zero could resolve the world’s problems and make us all safe.  The truth is we need to maintain our military might, restore our economic equilibrium and start working to be a shining example for democratic ideals.  The United States should be upgrading our aging nuclear arsenal, not dismantling it or allowing it to decay.  We need to be able to protect ourselves and the many countries that rely on our nuclear umbrella for security. The Wall Street journal ran an interview with former Defense Secretary, James Schlesinger, in 2009 that I came across yesterday mentioned in another article (I forgot which article or I’d put a link to that too).  Mr.Schlesinger provides the most insightful, detailed, clear reasons why we need to remain a nuclear power for the foreseeable future in this piece titled,“Why We Don’t Want a Nuclear-Free World”.  (WSJ interview here).

We should take a leadership role with other world powers to strike a path toward resolving the third world hot spots by forging consensus, instead of playing out our high stakes strategic gambits on the backs of these much poorer countries.  Constantly upping the ante and fueling these conflicts with more and more weapons just prolongs the carnage.  Recovering from war takes decades, sometimes longer.  The American South remained trapped in poverty for almost a century after the US Civil War and even today remnants of the effect of that war can easily be found.  Some of these third world countries remain trapped in almost endless strife, where the people face a daily struggle for just the vestiges of survival.

To confidently support arming some lunatic rebel bands in Syria, where a video hit the airwaves and online, with one such “commander” slicing up his fallen foe and yanking out his heart and liver – and eating it, well, obviously it’s reprehensible to arm these types of barbarians in our name.  Assad is a monster too, so I’m not supporting him either.  The solution would be to try to limit the arms flowing in, instead of trying to find ways to fan the flames.  I watched Vladimir Putin talk about this video and I agree with him, but I think his trying to prop up Assad won’t work either.   If Russia, China and the US decided to end this Syrian tragedy, they could do it.  All it would take is deciding the carnage has dragged on long enough, end the senseless slaughter and work toward some sort of political arrangement.  President Obama and Hillary Clinton’s arrogant presumptions about redrawing the map of the Mid-East  to fit their political agenda has led to the deaths of thousands upon thousands of civilians and will end up costing even more.  To use US might, directly or through arming others, imposes responsibility for the end result.  Supporting the Arab Spring has destabilized the entire region and their cavalier bravado looks likely to end in the region spiraling out of control and likely will lead to a larger regional war.

The last century’s collapse of colonialism, world wars and cold war era need to become historical stepping stones on a path to more constructive cooperation among the world’s leaders.  Assuredly there will be many twists and turns along the path and maybe even a few obstacles that seem insurmountable.  We might even come upon some obstacles that seem like a Sisyphean boulder that will keep rolling downhill to crush our hopes for peace. If we believe it is possible, the only thing standing in our way is the will to chip away at that boulder until it becomes just gravel to pave our path.  Being the daughter of a man who built roads for a living, I watched Pop blast away entire mountains, so I know it can be done;-)

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