
Xenophon's Ten Thousand
The Route of the Ten ThousandHistory,Connectivity,and Commentary: “Teach this triple truth to all: A generous heart, kind speech, and a life of service and compassion are the things which renew humanity.”- Buddha. But, "Always speak softly, and carry a big stick." Theodore Roosevelt

Xenophon's Ten Thousand
The Route of the Ten Thousand
First Republic
Second Republic

Just to see if you're paying attention!
Piracy April 2009Reading about them has become tedious, as they stick their proverbial thumb in the eye of the six powers and the UN.
Fabius Maximus with an inquiring mind offers these related posts questioning whether Americans have lost the ability to rise to the challenge when crisis looms.
This question was raised during a few rounds of cyber tennis between two experts on 4th generation warfare, Chet Richards and John Robb — posting at their websites Defense and the National Interest and Global Guerrillas. This being an open game in which any number can play, this post discusses one aspect of their debate. First, a recap of the opening rounds. These highlight only part of the debate; these posts are worth reading in full.
Read More: Are Americans easily panicked cowards? I think not, but many experts disagree.
In this next post, Fabius turns to 9/11 as an example that America's response has revealed us to be like a powerful bull, that has charged about at waving red flags, (the global war on terror) only to find ourselves pricked by the thrusts of many banderillas, that have weakened our resolve and left us weary of continuing the engagement. He questions that 9/11 revealed us to be so armored against a major threat, that when something tiny on the grand scale gets inside our armor and bits us, we react as if we were given a contagion that now threatens to cripple our national resolve.
Fab begins.
With a single strike al Qaeda changed the course of the world’s hegemonic state, by many measures the most powerful nation (relative to its time) that the world has ever seen. They did this at a negligible cost in money and manpower — never have so few changed so many with so little effort. Our counter-strikes have damaged or crippled al Qaeda, but its leaders may see al Qaeda as the vanguard of their movement, not its body — and hence expendable.
9/11 changed the course of America in terms of both internal and external policy, changing both in ways almost certainly inimical to our long-term strength and prosperity. Al Qaeda manipulated America as a matador does with a bull, waving a cape to so that the bull charges into position for the thrust of the sword.
Read More: Was 9/11 the most effective single military operation in the history of the world?
In counterpoint I offer these two posts that draw attention to American resolve. One is at the personal level and found among the men we have sent to Afghanistan to blunt the thrusts of the metaphoric AQ matador's sword.
I wholeheartedly agree with abu mugqawama's endorsement of this article in the New York Times last week. Okay, this is great reporting.
ALIABAD, Afghanistan — The two Army lieutenants crouched against boulders beside the Korangal River. Taliban gunfire poured down from villages and cliffs above, hitting tree branches and rocks and snapping as the bullets passed over the officers’ helmets.
ROTC Graduates
Vicksburg, May 22 1863
USS Zeilin. burial service off Tarawa, Nov, 16 1943













