
Tuesday, September 15, 2009
Has America Become Neurotic Superpower?

Saturday, September 13, 2008
McCain and the OODA Loop





The line of the day, by Barone:
John Boyd would have been a terrific political consultant.
There will be more to come in the next two weeks about John Boyd, and how his strategy transcends all forms of combat, military, business and politics.
Saturday, August 2, 2008
Post-Heroic America?




An excellent post by Pat Porter on the blog Kings of War caught my eye today. The topic looks at the current perception of war in Western World.
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Porter begins:
I’ve always been a little uneasy with the notion that we in the West wage post-heroic war because we live in post-heroic societies.
The argument goes like this: several converging influences have made traditional heroic world views redundant. Western societies that don’t live in almost a permanent state of emergency (like, say, Israel) are increasingly distant from the military.
They live in times of affluence and material plenty without precedent. They are very casualty averse.
Hence the way we prefer to fight wars: low-casualty (or even bloodless for our own side, like Kosovo in 1999); a preoccupation with force protection over risk-taking heroism; a preference for air power-driven strategies over ground operations; an obsession with media-management and public relations; no conscription, compulsion and hardly any mobilization of broader society (the Marines are at war, America is at the mall); and a judicialisation of warfare, so that some victims of malpractice in our expeditionary wars are given a hearing and compensated.
“The Dark Knight,” then, is a conservative movie about the war on terror. And like another such film, last year’s “300,” “The Dark Knight” is making a fortune depicting the values and necessities that the Bush administration cannot seem to articulate for beans.
What seems to be happening is something more complex: policymakers reckon on a post-heroic society, and then their policies are interpreted as evidence of the existence of post-heroic society.
This essay is fertile with ideas that resonate and stir ones inner conscious mind and beg reflection as we continue to face the reality that war, is still a part of the human experience.
An Example of Heroism
This blog has posted often about the people we send in harms way. It is appropriate revisit one site and the ongoing battle being waged in a hospital room to save a young mans life. Attention was called to this young man by the post Broken Arrow for Kaboom Readers! Matthew Wheeler who was burned over 60% of his body in a fueling accident in on June 22, 2008 continues his struggle to recover. For those of you who have not followed his progress, here is the link to a daily blog by Matt's mom, who to me, exemplifies the best in motherhood. (http://www.caringbridge.org/visit/matthewwheeler). It reminds us that heroism is not confined to the battlefield.
Friday, August 1, 2008
After Action Report-Afghanistan





A very important report has been posted at Small Wars Journal by the SWJ Editors. The report was filed by retired U.S. Army General Barry McCaffrey, who recently returned from a fact finding study in Afghanistan. His observations strip away the veneer and gets to the heart of what the World must face up too, in order to midwife the difficult birth of a nation.
The Report: After Action Report (AAR)
Bottom-Line: Six Assertions:
(1) Afghanistan is in misery. 68% of the population has never known peace. Life expectancy is 44 years. It has the second highest maternal mortality rate in the world: One of six pregnant Afghan women dies for each live birth. Terrorist incidents and main force insurgent violence is rising (34% increase this year in kinetic events.) Battle action and casualties are now much higher in Afghanistan for US forces than they are in Iraq.
Without NATO we are lost in Afghanistan. The next Administration must have a major diplomatic commitment to strengthen the capabilities and commitment of our 26 NATO allies.
Pakistan
Pakistan is a state of four separate nations under a weak federal government. The Pakistani military is the central load-bearing institution of the state.
Afghanistan: A Narco-State
The Taliban, Al Qaeda, war lords, and Afghan criminal enterprises are principally funded by what some estimate as $800 million dollars a year derived from the huge $4 billion annual illegal production and export of opium/heroin and cannabis.
Building the Afghan Security Forces
… We desperately need an additional 2300 police trainers. This is the central effort to win the war in Afghanistan.
The US Armed Forces:
The combat effectiveness, courage, and leadership of our deployed joint military forces are simply inspirational. The leaders are battle-hardened, show enormous initiative, and can organize anything.
Summary:
We cannot allow ourselves to fail in Afghanistan.
NATO is central to achieving our purpose.
This is a generational war to build an Afghan state and prevent the creation of a lawless, extremist region which will host and sustain enduring threats to the vital national security interests of the United States and our key allies.
Afghanistan is a region that has resisted change, and outsiders for over two millennium. The very nature of those who chose to inhabit the lonely mountain valleys and are content to live as their ancestors have lived presents a problem that the core states of the World find completely alien. McCaffrey notes that it will take at least 25 years of involvement to bring Afghanistan to a sustainable level. The level of commitment will be tested many times, and truthfully, if we follow the pattern of history, Afghanistan and the mountainous tribal regions will remain unreachable until some other social cancer like AQ or it's offshoots commit such an unspeakable horror that the World reacts too in a equally unspeakable response. That said, it is a mission that the collective world needs to see completed. General McCaffrey lays out his views, they may diverge from other's but his bottom line is the same for all informed observers.Friday, April 11, 2008
WILLPOWER
