Saturday, December 13, 2025

European NATO Holds the Mediterranean Sea

Never forget that European NATO states provide security for American interests, too. Like in the Mediterranean Sea. 

Italy is leading the NATO naval force in the Mediterranean Sea:

Standing NATO Maritime Group Two (SNMG2), led by the Italian Navy, has begun a new operational phase in the Mediterranean Sea after departing Taranto, Italy, as part of NATO’s ongoing maritime security operations. 

... Operating under NATO’s Allied Maritime Command in Northwood, UK, the group maintains a continuous presence across the Mediterranean to support freedom of navigation, deter potential threats, and enhance regional cooperation.

I don't worry about America having a post-Cold War phantom fleet in the Mediterranean Sea

Without us, NATO will ensure that Russia's squadron in the region leads a short but exciting life during war.

NOTE: TDR Winter War of 2022 coverage continues here.

NOTE: You may also like to read my posts on Substack, at The Dignified Rant: Evolved. Go ahead and subscribe to it. It's the right thing to do!  

NOTE: Photo from the article.

Friday, December 12, 2025

A Harsh Lesson That Europe Can Be Friend or Foe

Sovereign European countries can be America's friends. "Europe" if it means the European Union speaking for them cannot. Are people just noticing this?

I don't understand why this is confusing (tip to Instapundit):

My recent trip to Brussels for the@NATO Ministerial meeting left me with one overriding impression: the US has long failed to address the glaring inconsistency between its relations with NATO and the EU. These are almost all the same countries in both organizations. When these countries wear their NATO hats, they insist that Transatlantic cooperation is the cornerstone of our mutual security. But when these countries wear their EU hats, they pursue all sorts of agendas that are often utterly adverse to US interests and security—including censorship, economic suicide/climate fanaticism, open borders, disdain for national sovereignty/promotion of multilateral governance and taxation, support for Communist Cuba, etc etc.

NATO allows America--even in a more limited ground role--to have influence on European states and lead them in defense of freedom.

The European Union, on the other hand, is not part of the free West, as Vice President Vance reminded us with his warning about lack of free speech in Europe. The EU is in fact a proto-imperial body that hates America and desperately wants to strip away the prefix.

Russia is an active threat to America and Europeans. The EU is a long-term threat

Don't let either empire force us to rely on our Atlantic moat as America's first line of defense.

NOTE: TDR Winter War of 2022 coverage continues here.

NOTE: You may also like to read my posts on Substack, at The Dignified Rant: Evolved. Go ahead and subscribe to it. It's the right thing to do!  

NOTE: I made the image with Bing. 

Thursday, December 11, 2025

The Tip of the Chinese Iceberg

If China's submarine fleet becomes as good in technology and training as Western submarines, their quantity will put America in a world of hurt.

Submarines have long been considered the West's trump card against China's expanding fleet. How long will that last? 

China’s industrial base has, for several years, been far outstripping the productive capacity of the West, delivering four submarines in the past year. Such a rate is wishful thinking for Europe and the United States, with the US struggling to produce two nuclear submarines over a 12-month period, and the UK and France still further behind.

According to a 2023 report from the then US Department of Defense, subsequently rebranded to the Department of War, China was planning to increase its submarine force to 80 units by 2035, while working to retire older, less capable models.

I keep clinging to the advantage our forward military presence with capable allies provides America.

NOTE: TDR Winter War of 2022 coverage continues here.

NOTE: You may also like to read my posts on Substack, at The Dignified Rant: Evolved. Go ahead and subscribe to it. It's the right thing to do!  

NOTE: I made the image with Bing. 

Wednesday, December 10, 2025

Air Defense Forces Rotary Wing Aircraft to Adapt or Die

Will the current generation of helicopters be the last ones to go into combat?

Change? 

The Department of War is evaluating a reform concept that would sharply reduce or halt the purchase of new piloted helicopters for the U.S. Army beginning in the second half of the decade, according to individuals familiar with internal discussions.

The concept under review focuses on maintaining and upgrading the current helicopter fleet while transitioning funding and force structure toward uncrewed strike, reconnaissance, and logistics platforms.

I'll need persuasion to say this is a mistake.  

Not that crewed helicopters will be gone. But they will be on the path of being phased out as the uncrewed versions gain capabilities to match the current helicopters--but without the risk to crews.

Of course, I don't expect the cost of these new robotic platforms to be significantly cheaper (and they could be more expensive at least at first) than what we have now. 

And they will be remotely piloted (or programmed), so the personnel requirement may not be reduced even if the personnel are safer. 

NOTE: TDR Winter War of 2022 coverage continues here.

NOTE: You may also like to read my posts on Substack, at The Dignified Rant: Evolved. Go ahead and subscribe to it. It's the right thing to do!  

NOTE: I made the image with Bing. 

Tuesday, December 09, 2025

The Great Friction Game

America doesn't need to get Russia or China to love us to get one to abandon the other. We just have to promote friction between the two of them. 

Interesting:

Once a peripheral concern for U.S. policymakers, Central Asia is moving up Washington’s foreign-policy agenda as a result of renewed great-power competition. Geography, energy, and connectivity have turned this landlocked region into a strategic crossroads between Russia, China, and the West.

China has territorial grievances in regard to Russian expansion. And Central Asia is an arena for Russia-China competition. And China may decide that when push comes to shove, China needs America more than it needs Russia:

Beijing has been issuing maps depicting areas of eastern Russia – including Vladivostok, which was seized by Russia in the 19th century – as part of China.

China’s willingness to stop companies from buying Russian oil should be seen as a gesture of goodwill ahead of hopefully better relations with Washington. This makes sense because the Chinese economy needs access to U.S. markets. ...

All this is to say that Russia’s obsession with its western border has come at the expense of its southern border, the countries along which are interested in reaching an accommodation with the United States. 

Normally, I'd say that Central Asia is an interest too far. As long as Iran is hostile to America, we don't have secure ground lines of communication into the area.

But American diplomatic and economic attention might be a tool to help Russia resist China in Central Asia--if Russia pulls their Putin out of their buttocks and treats NATO like a friendly rear area and China as the threat to Russia it is.

We don't need to make Russia love us. But creating friction between Russia and China might get both to compete for our friendship.

Gosh! I am such an optimist!

NOTE: TDR Winter War of 2022 coverage continues here.

NOTE: You may also like to read my posts on Substack, at The Dignified Rant: Evolved. Go ahead and subscribe to it. It's the right thing to do!  

NOTE: I made the image with Bing. 

Monday, December 08, 2025

The Winter War of 2022 Turns the Confidence Dial to Eleven

I've long said that Russia projects a Potemkin Village of military strength and indifference to casualties. The purpose is to demoralize Ukrainians and the West so that Russia can conquer Ukraine before its own troubles expand too much to continue the war. The Russians have turned the propaganda dial to 11.

The war goes on. Russia grinds forward at high cost in selected sections of the front. Ukrainians make Russia pay in time, men, and materiel. Russia proclaims this proves Russia is unstoppable.

Russia bombards Ukraine's energy grid and civilians. Ukraine bombs Russia's ability to sustain combat at the front. Even Ukraine's special forces are active inside Russia. That's nice. And it helps Ukraine. 

But the war will be won or lost on the main land front.

Who is the Russian government fooling when even pro-war Russians can see through the facade?

Russian state media is leveraging Russian President Vladimir Putin’s recent statements to intensify the false narrative that the frontline in Ukraine will imminently collapse, likely in an effort to coerce the West and Ukraine into capitulating to Russian demands that Russia cannot secure itself militarily. ISW continues to assess that the frontline in Ukraine is not facing imminent collapse. A prominent Kremlin-affiliated milblogger observed that the Russian state media, following Putin’s November 27 press conference, is widely spreading false claims that the frontline in Ukraine is collapsing as Ukrainian forces desert and surrender en masse and leave large areas undefended; that Russian forces will soon drive on Kyiv City; and that Russian forces have already defeated Ukrainian forces and only have to “finish them off.” The milblogger accused Russian state media of fabricating some territorial successes and amplifying Putin’s exaggerated claims, using artificial intelligence (AI) to generate fake videos of Ukrainian forces surrendering, and deliberately targeting social media users. [original emphasis removed]

How desperate is Moscow to resort to this level of deception? 

Mind you, I don't pretend to know who will collapse first. I suspect Russia is more at risk but I could be biased by my hope that Russia breaks first. Yet I'm hardly blind to Ukraine's problems. Even if Russia's chances of collapse are higher, the battlefield consequences of a Ukrainian collapse would be far more severe because Russia has the strategic initiative and could more easily discover and push through a broken defense.

It is easy to make straight line projections of a slow-moving war. But the war is fought and sustained by people who have lost nearly three years of their lives with death and hardship. A hard winter is coming and I would not dare predict that the war will reach the four-year mark.

We must do enough to make sure Ukraine isn't the side that loses its will to fight. 

UPDATE (Friday): Ukraine extends its strategic warfare campaign to the Caspian Sea:

Ukraine's special forces, in coordination with local resistance, strike two Russian ships transporting military equipment in the Caspian Sea. The extent of the damage remains unclear.

UPDATE (Saturday): 

Ukraine's launched a successful local counter-attack at Kupyansk:

Ukrainian 2nd Khartiya Corps reported on December 12 that Ukrainian forces conducted a successful counterattack to stabilize the situation in the Kupyansk direction and liberated Kindrashivka and Radkivka (both north of Kupyansk) and the surrounding forests, liberated areas in northern Kupyansk, and broke through to the Oskil River, cutting Russian ground lines of communication (GLOCs) to the Kupyansk area. The Ukrainian 2nd Corps stated that Ukrainian forces have encircled roughly 200 Russian personnel in Kupyansk as of December 12.

I keep hoping Ukraine can scale that capability up to a counteroffensive. I keep hoping that the thin Ukrainian infantry line is deliberate to create a strategic reserve for that purpose. But I see no indications that is true.

NOTE: ISW updates continue here. Also, I put war-related links and commentary in the Weekend Data Dump.

NOTE: You may also read my posts on Substack, at The Dignified Rant: Evolved.  

Sunday, December 07, 2025

Weekend Data Dump

I post at The Dignified Rant: Evolved on Substack. Help me out by subscribing and by liking and sharing posts. I also post here on TDR seven days a week, including Weekend Data Dump and Winter War of 2022. I occasionally post short data dump-type items on my Substack "Notes" section

In case you missed it on Substack: First Step to POLARCOM?

In case you missed it on Substack: Sink the PLAN and give the PLA Ground Forces a Dieppe Welcome

In case you missed it on Substack: Red Teaming a Taiwan Invasion

In case you missed it on Substack: ZAPAD-2025 and Russian Reliance on Nuclear Weapons [Huzzah! This is my 500th post on Substack.]

The Battle of Britain is privatized: "British patriots have established a 'task force' in France dedicated to locating 'migrant rubber dinghies' and slashing them before they can launch." Tip to Instapundit. What did I just note last week about what happens when government doesn't defend its people? 

Goodbye 2nd SFAB: "An Army brigade that specializes in training foreign troops [in Africa and the Middle East] was inactivated this week[.]" SFABs were created when Special Forces were committed to direct action against Islamist terrorists. Will Special Forces resume their training missions?

Two U.S. Air Force F-35 squadrons deployed to Britain are now fully operational.

The F-117 still has missions.

Is the Lebanese army displacing Hezbollah? Or doing housekeeping until Hezbollah returns? 

Russia's drone games accelerates NATO capabilities: "The Netherlands plans to cobble together an air-defense system by fitting a remote-controlled weapon system on wheeled armor to provide its infantry units with mobile anti-drone capacity[.]" Strategery

Swedish fighter planes intercepted Russian Backfire bombers and Su-35 fighters over the Black Sea

Japan will buy missiles designed for anti-landing craft use to defend their islands. The missiles are useful for killing tanks, too. Good.

The last one pre-dates joining NATO? "Finland has released a new Arctic security strategy[.]" Will America give the region some organizational love?

Lithuania really wants American troops to remain: "Lithuania will cover all the costs associated with hosting U.S. troops in the country[.]"

I assumed the anonymous report of a double-tap strike on a drug boat were resistance fan fiction, and so it seems to be. Tip to Instapundit. Now do past drone strikes on American citizens. Mind you, outside our jurisdiction I have no problem killing even Americans who wage war on America. But there are limits.

Longer-range drones will be able to threaten lines of supply to the frontline troops. But will the more expensive aerial drones be as numerous? Will armies restore air defense units to their former prominence? I can totally see UGV logistics and air defense units battling the UAVs.

UGV casualty evacuation for Ukrainian soldiers is better than nothing--but kiss the Golden Hour standard goodbye. There's no way to meet even a properly interpreted standard in large-scale war. We need battlefield alternatives.

Ukraine suffers heavily from desertion. I hope most return to duty after a bit. Otherwise that is crippling.

Was the Afghan former ally who ambushed National Guard troops in Washington, D.C., radicalized in America? Damning, if true. While facing the Taliban he had no problem fighting them. Once here he was infected with anti-American hate. Perhaps we need to coin the term "Americaphobia". 

Is it true America can't build a surface Navy now? If so, dealing with China that mass produces surface warships might rely on my concern being true. 

Huh: "Russia has suffered a failed Intercontinental Ballistic Missile (ICBM) test after a launch at the Yasny range in the Orenburg region ended in an explosion only seconds after liftoff." Exception? Or the rule? 

I wouldn't quite say that neither NATO/Ukraine nor Russia are "willing--or able--to force a decisive end[.]" Both believe/hope that inflicting pain will eventually force the other side to collapse or give up trying. Can Putin seize enough ground to justify the casualties when more casualties are needed to take it?

This is a warning about sending "signals" to foes: "Biden’s unfortunate remark that a 'minor' Russian invasion might not invoke a U.S. response did not help [deter Putin in 2022]." Perhaps Putin defined "minor" as "brief." Oops

You silly Yanks who need your written list of rights! Oh ... Tip to Instapundit. 

If the EU stayed out of the America-led NATO defense lane, this wouldn't be a problem: "Even when it comes to its own security, the EU struggles to be a central player." It never lets a crisis go to waste, eh? 

American energy sanctions on Russia are weakening the lingering links to Bulgaria and Serbia. I expect sanctions to weaken over time as ways around them are built.

China's modernized hardware makes its military look good. But it has problems that hollow it out. How much is the question, and would it matter depending on the target. But yes, I've long known it isn't as good as its shiny image portrays

More relevant is whether Hamas can be forced to loosen their grip

Oh well. Sucks to be in month 45 of the brutal special military operation you launched. Tip to Instapundit.

The enemy of our enemy is at best our frenemy: "The US military, in conjunction with Syrian forces, has announced the destruction of 15 Islamic State weapons caches in southern Syria." 

This is BS: "After World War II, Germany embraced pacifism as a form of atonement. Now the country is arming itself again." The West Germans were excellent in the Cold War. The East Germans were never pacifists. And limited German rearmament will take a long time--if it happens. I'll wait to praise too much.

Sh*t got ... hmmm ... in the Caribbean.

High-altitude heroism above the Houthi

Could a summit between South Korea and North Korea establish a real ceasefire rather than be a ploy by the North to weaken South Korea's defenses? Interesting. That would work well with an alternate path for stronger North Korean ties with Moscow in a new Russian security alignment to contain China.

Chinese aid to Russia is restrained but vital. If Russia wins the war, China can demand much given the power imbalance between China and Russia. But the benefits named require that Russia conquers Ukraine and that the West doesn't spirit out Ukrainian blueprints, scientists, and technicians. 

Is Russia India's best friend? No. But Russia could be the enemy of India's enemy. A relationship that could benefit America and NATO.

Another entry in the "Let the Wookie win" foreign policy genre

The Internet: Putin can't live with it. Can't shoot it on the street.

High-altitude heroism above the Houthi

When United States Navy aircraft attacked the Japanese battleship Yamato in April 1945 in several waves, at no time did the attacks with bombs and torpedoes get suspended to help rescue sailors from the crippled ship. It was struck until it capsized, sank, and exploded--in that order. 

Gaining power did not moderate the Taliban: "the world learned a familiar lesson: movements built on rigid ideology do not moderate simply because diplomats hope they will." What?? Who could possibly have predicted that outcome?

True peace is hard: Southeast Asia edition

Canada seeks to diversify its defense away from America to the European Union. This is a strategic tantrum done knowing that America will spare Canada from consequences--the EU won't protect Canada--by defending Canada (to defend America) even if the sulky teenager doesn't clean its room.

Is China effing up or deliberately seeking justification for attacking Taiwan? "A diplomatic spat between China and Japan over Taiwan is escalating into a regional showdown, forcing smaller Asian nations to pick sides." America's role is to herd the cats.

A sad era of Navy shipbuilding comes to a truncated end: "Cleveland is the 16th and final ship of its class, marking the completion of the Freedom-variant littoral combat ship (LCS) construction phases[.]" The singing of praises frankly nauseates me.

The momentum of Force Design continues to change the Marine Corps. Welp

Friends in a dangerous neighborhood: "Officials from U.S Central Command (CENTCOM) and the Kingdom of Bahrain opened a new bilateral Combined Command Post for air defense[.]" 

Once, pacifist Japan did not sell weapons. China has changed that with a proposal to sell air defense missiles to the Philippines

A lot of illegal fishing is conducted: "Overseas Development Institute identifies China’s [Distant Water Fishing] fleet to be five to eight times larger than previous estimates, with 16,966 vessels." On the other hand, a wartime blockade of China will be a problem for the Chinese Communist Party.

Russia can put an air-to-air missile on a Shahed suicide drone. Why not a reusable drone?

WTF? "Typhoon jets will be deploying to the Arctic later this month for what is intended to be a secret escort mission involving a cargo aircraft." 

Strategy: "Britain can expand its long term influence in the Indo-Pacific by using its alliances, training strengths and regulatory expertise[.]" Britain is torn between a pivot to Asia and renewed Russian aggression in Europe.

I bet this African effort to establish colonialism as a crime and get reparations won't cover the Islamic Arab conquest of large areas or the massive use of African slaves in the Arab Islamic world.

Before World War II, our effort wasn't enough: "[American] armed forces are rebuilding island bases from World War II, reviving old units in allied countries, and fortifying important bases." As I've long asked.

China is building more air and sea bases across from Taiwan.  Tip to OPFOR Journal. As I've noted, China doesn't need a large fleet of big amphibious warfare ships to invade Taiwan when China itself is a massive amphibious warfare platform 100 miles away.

I sure hope they can be updated by the time they are used: "The Pentagon plans to purchase more than 200,000 industry-made drones by 2027 — with forthcoming orders for 30,000 of those unmanned assets to be delivered by July 2026 — via its new Drone Dominance Program." 

I have no problem killing drug smugglers in international waters. This is potentially a problem: "President Trump said Tuesday his administration could attack accused drug traffickers who traverse Latin America by land 'very soon'". A solution? But what is the mission?  

Taiwan has a "$1 billion project that aims to procure up to 1,350 sea drones for coastal defense purposes against a potential Chinese invasion." I'm not saying they can't be useful. I'm just saying USVs are hyped as silver bullet wonder weapons.

Putin boasts he is ready for war with Europe. Maybe he is. But his military is not. Chest beating and flinging poo is SOP.

Arrow 3 south of Berlin: "Germany’s first long-range missile shield will enter service in an initial configuration on Wednesday[.]"

While Russia harasses NATO with balloons and small drones, NATO prepares to scrape Russia's exclave flat if necessary: "A Royal Air Force RC-135W Rivet Joint has carried out an intelligence-gathering orbit around Kaliningrad." If Russia goes to war with NATO, Kaliningrad is NATO's first offensive mission.

Teaming up conventional warships with small USVs and UUVs. I think blue water slaved USVs could be external magazines for manned warships.

Entry-level small drone production is safer than manufacturing mortar bombs in your garage, eh?

Recruiting is broadly good but military retention has pockets of problems: "Critical experts in cyber, AI, and logistics are leaving for the private sector, with officer attrition rates in the Air Force skyrocketing 350-550% above the national average." I bet a warrant officer path rather than to officers would help. 

The coast guards of Japan and China are throwing elbows around Japan-administered territory. Beats the gray hulls hammering each other. 

Russia sent Tu-160 strategic bombers to patrol the Arctic

America isn't bullying India any more than India doing what suits them--and not America--is bullying America. But what really annoys me about articles like this is the complete lack of agency they give India. Everybody reacts to what America does--or doesn't do--and bear no responsibility for their actions. WTF?

This report doesn't make any sense at all. Why would we? Not saying it can't be true ... But there must be more to it. Are we expressing displeasure at suppressing freedom of speech there?

Good! "Now, as the world’s superpowers flex their muscles in a warming Arctic, the tiny town of Churchill, on Hudson Bay’s western shore, seems poised to play an outsize role as Canada prepares to move aggressively into one of the newest global arenas." Don't stink on ice there.

Fair: "Ukraine is trapped between the neo-imperial aggression of Russia and the posturing impotence of the Europeans." Europe calls America unreliable for not doing what Europe won't do to protect Europe. As I said, if there is a ceasefire the Europeans will be outwardly angry at America but quietly relieved. 

Is the Latin American Left--including Maduro--collapsing? If so, I'm jealous. 

If it is true that the Afghanistan Taliban threatened to murder the family of the shooter who shot (murdering one) National Guard members in Washington, D.C., I would expect the Taliban to get a midnight visit by stealth bombers. Tip to Instapundit. But I'll tag this as RUMINT for the moment.

I'm suspicious of stories sourced to "people familiar with" an issue. Maybe it is true. But lesson learned, no? And why did the Biden administration approve use of Signal? Honestly, the broad campaign against Hegseth seems politically motivated.

The U.S. sent a "clone" of the Iranian Shahed-136 suicide drone to the Middle East. But is the "Low-Cost Uncrewed Combat Attack System (LUCAS)" kamikaze drone really low cost? Or is the gold plating going to get out of hand?

I'll assume that is good: "The National Reconnaissance Office is seeing 'great output' from its constellation of proliferated low-Earth orbit satellites and is working with the Space Force and the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency to operationalize the capability[.]" 

Are Republicans more supportive of Ukraine, NATO, and being strong abroad? If so, I fully expect Democrats to reverse course and reject Ukraine, NATO, and being strong abroad.

I advised exactly this rather than directly retaliating against Russia: "One way to make Russia pay for acts of sabotage in Europe is to intensify military support for Ukraine, NATO’s top official said Wednesday following a meeting of top alliance diplomats." 

LOL! News from February 2022: "Putin told India Today TV that he planned to seize control of Ukraine’s eastern Donbas region by force[.]" 

More on China's mysterious trimaran semisubmersible craft: "In terms of its purpose, one of the most persistent theories is that it’s an arsenal ship." I've noted its potential role--if the theory is right--in an invasion of Taiwan. And I've separately discussed an external "magazine" for Navy warships.

Syria's new Islamist rulers seek better relations with America; and they restored relationships with the Russians, letting them keep their bases. I wonder if part of the deal with Russia involves Assad having a fatal accidental fall out of a second-floor window. The Islamists may do no better than Assad did.

I suspect this judgment about the shameful Congressional "disobey orders" video is right: "a juvenile, stupid, and transparent attempt at scoring political points against an administration they don’t like and have decided to resist at all costs. But there is no federal law against stupid and juvenile political stunts." 

I'm not sure what the AC-130 gunship provides in the Caribbean Sea that armed drones don't provide. Over land it requires a permissive air environment.

Russia and maybe China actually are conducting low-level nuclear tests: "As early as 2009, the bipartisan Strategic Posture Commission’s report stated that apparently 'Russia and possibly China are conducting low yield tests.'" I guess that was too inconvenient to publicize. We really need to test our new warhead.

I wonder if Trump's pardon of ex-Honduran president Hernandez was the price to get seriously good information about Maduro. Doesn't really make sense, otherwise.

The U.S. is upgrading the U.S. Coast Guard, including for the Arctic and INDOPACOM regions.

Practice makes perfect ... : "China is deploying a large number of naval and coast guard vessels across East Asian waters, at one point more than 100, in the largest maritime show of force to date, according to four sources and intelligence reports reviewed by Reuters." ... for what? 

I will highlight that "while Western observers were surprised by Putin’s willingness to sustain high levels of casualties to continue prosecution of the war in Ukraine, strategists should in fact have been surprised aggression did not occur sooner." I wasn't surprised Putin is willing. I was surprised Russians go along.

Was this article written six months ago? Iran may be on a Mission from God--and the mullah regime is dangerous as long as it exists--but I don't think the mullahs are confident He's actively helping at this moment.

Europe has declined as a global power for 150 years, with the linkage of European to American power obscuring that. I've noted the decline, but what obscured Europe's decline has been the fact that it is still a major objective to be fought over even as its relative power declines. America is a faux crisis for the EU.

They had the option of surrendering: "The IDF said that troops killed over 40 Hamas terrorists who were in tunnels below Rafah in southern Gaza, in an area now under Israeli control." 

Putin's Mini-Me has been troublesome: "Poland is prolonging the exclusion zone along its 400-kilometre eastern border with Belarus by another three months up to March 5 next year[.]" 

Next in line? "The prospect of a conflict in the Arctic is rising, Denmark’s Arctic commander has warned, with the expectation of Russia turning its attention to the High North if and when the Ukraine war ends." Could be

Good: "The UK and Norway have signed a defence pact that will see them operate a combined fleet to hunt Russian submarines in the North Atlantic." 

I'm calling BS on this: "The United States has positioned military assets that could potentially support an invasion of Venezuela[.]" The assets are overkill for drug boats. Completely inadequate for an invasion. And perhaps just right for something in between. Against someone. But the map is nice:

No "kill them all" order. Honestly, we saw efforts to push the war on jihadi terrorists into a law enforcement template. We are seeing the same now.

Oh? "Legal experts aren’t buying explanations for the U.S. military’s strikes on alleged drug-runners at sea ... " I'm no legal expert, but historically I think the issue is more nuanced than those "legal experts" say it is. Seriously, recall the Obama administration mental gymnastics on Libya.

Bounce the rubble: "NATO has released an updated maritime strategy that will shape Allied naval posture, capability development and readiness across the Euro Atlantic region[.]" I'm not worried about the Russians at sea. The problem area is ground power early in a war, as I worried about in Army magazine

As if the Sainted International Community® cares about Sudan!  

Venezuela is in our sights. Is Venezuela the target? Or is China--seeking to weaken us via Latin America--the target and Venezuela is just the battlefield: "Communist China was and remains the world's primary source of fentanyl." If so, Hezbollah could still be a secondary objective.

Whenever Putin speaks I want to give Ukraine tactical nukes: "Russian President Vladimir Putin reiterated his commitment to his original war aims from 2021 and 2022 and unwillingness to compromise during an interview with Indian media[.]" I wouldn't. But I'd really want to

The Dutch built a large fleet oiler: "Other ships of the Netherlands Navy include three submarines, six frigates, four ocean going patrol vessels, two LPD amphibious ships, one Joint Support Ship, 17 landing craft, three mine hunters and about fifty smaller craft." If you wonder why

Axis of Weasels: "There is a new hostile alliance, or Axis of Evil as some politicians like to call it. The new axis consists of China, Russia, Iran and North Korea." Hmm. But I readily concede the World War II Axis was loosely aligned, too. China has territorial ambitions. But it benefits from the global system. 

Sure, adaptivity and agility in the Army acquisition process for air defense would help. But I fear it seeks those qualities for silver bullet solutions. Get back to Army air defense basics as the foundation

Brief thoughts on Marine Force Design changes. Will they undo the damage done? 

Are drug smugglers who kill Americans repeating the demand of treating jihadis like criminals: "While this American missile raises the bar on avoiding collateral damage, I worry the spinning-blades AGM-114R9X Hellfire is one step from the 'read them their rights and cuff them' Hellfire." 

The new National Security Strategy of the United States. I'll need to read that.

Face it, Europe is on the path to not being worth the bones of a single West Virginian grenadier. Europeans with a contracting military horizon--it was a nice five-century run--need to do more to defend themselves and--as Vance reminded them--be free countries worthy of American help.

Do not become confused (to quote an old drill sergeant) as this author is, Ukraine is fighting its own war against Russia. We should help Ukraine win. But thinking NATO is really at war with Russia is a slippery slope to general war; and actually supports Putin's propaganda. 

Of course he is: "French President Emmanuel Macron is courting China as a prospective peacemaker in Ukraine after privately voicing concern that the U.S. will 'betray' Kyiv." Macron seeks to [ ... checks notes for latest reason ...] exploit the Bad Orange Man to get our of Dodge Paris while he can. 

Maduro is an illegitimate ruler. He has wrecked his country. And he has dispatched dangerous criminals to America in a form of warfare. Be he shows no sign of buckling under American pressure to just go any more than Assad showed when Obama told him to go. Turkey made Assad go. Who makes Maduro go?

Can Russia continue their war by drafting young men from the St.Petersburg-Moscow core of Russia after depleting their "deplorable" minorities and rural people? 

Lasers are the weapon of tomorrow, but will they every be the weapon of today? Fog and smoke interfere with them. And how expensive would it be to put ablative material on the anti-ship missiles or drones coming in hot? But although slow drone speed will make them more vulnerable, numbers may prevail.

The Navy has settled on a new ship that it will use to send anti-ship Marines to where they can die. Winning! Seriously, the Marines are screwed.

China seemingly wants a lot more nukes. But don't assume they would all be aimed at America

Germany needs America to rearm more rapidly: "Decades of low expenditure have left the Bundeswehr in a parlous condition. Its land forces are only at 50 percent readiness, and ...at one point in 2018 only four of the Luftwaffe’s 128 Eurofighter Typhoons were combat-ready... ." The German Question is unanswered.

I don't mind India buying Russian weapons to deploy against China. But this is a problem: "The Kremlin appears to be increasingly leaning on India to alleviate domestic labor shortages and is setting conditions for India to support drone production for Russia’s war effort." Is India onboard Russia's Plan B?

Won't disagree: "Latin America is heading in a bad direction, and taming the threat emanating from Venezuela could head off the region's slide." The region is crucial. But not with a land war. Just wonder what our military objective is. Is hitting Hezbollah and cartels lethal to Maduro? Tip to Instapundit.

Hamas still endures inside Gaza. Finish it off if its members won't surrender.

I assumed that this would happen (just as Iraqi Baathists organized after the overthrow of Saddam Hussein in 2003): "Former senior Assad regime officials are likely funding and equipping clandestine networks in Syria to conduct insurgent activity against the Syrian transitional government." Will Alawites fight?

My statistics package now allows paying customers to include AI hits in their statistics report. I am a lower grade free customer so I can't do that. But it does imply that I will no longer be swamped by what I assumed were millions of AI hits in the recent past on my stats reports.  

Saturday, December 06, 2025

Learning Army Lessons From the Winter War of 2022

Embracing drones as the key to warfare is a mistake. Think about what the Army needs to do and not what the Ukrainians and Russians need to do in the conditions of their war.

The Russian invasion of Ukraine could lead us astray in how to transform the Army:

Succeeding on the future battlefield does not necessitate the blind acceptance of new technologies and concepts, but rather a consideration of which innovation response leverages the state’s advantages and mitigates its strategic limitations. Seeking to counter recent drone innovations will provide the US Army with the capabilities to restore its asymmetric advantage on the battlefield—rapid maneuver, sustained by a high operational tempo and massed armored penetration forces. 

In my November Army article I looked at the World War I Western Front and advised that we not be hasty in drawing lessons for the Army based on the importance of small FPV drones to both sides in the specific environment of the Winter War of 2022:

If World War I is any guide for Army transformation, there will be no silver bullet to restore maneuver capabilities. The Army must integrate weapons and systems designed to cope with the Russia-Ukraine war stalemate and develop tactics and procedures for combined arms operations exploiting new capabilities—some not yet developed.

Learn from the war--don't just blindly copy it

NOTE: TDR Winter War of 2022 coverage continues here.

NOTE: You may also like to read my posts on Substack, at The Dignified Rant: Evolved. Go ahead and subscribe to it. It's the right thing to do!  

NOTE: I submitted my article back in the spring and I tensely waited for publication in the November issue that coincides with the end of World War I.