An online journal of commentary, analysis, and dignified rants on national security issues. Other posts on home life, annoying things, and a vast 'other' are clearly marked.
I live and write in Ann Arbor, Michigan. University of Michigan AB and MA from Eastern Michigan University. One term in the Michigan Army National Guard. Former American history instructor and retired nonpartisan research analyst. I write on Blogger and Substack. Various military and private journals have published my occasional articles on military subjects. See "My Published Works" on the TDR web version or under the mobile version drop-down menu for citations and links.
I have finally salvaged my pre-Blogger TDR archives and added them into Blogger. They are almost totally in the form of one giant post for each month. And the formatting strayed from the originals. Sorry.
But historians everywhere can rejoice that this treasure trove of my thoughts is restored to the world.
And for your own safety, don't click on any old Geocities links or any of their similar variations in my posts. Those sites have been taken over by bad and/or dangerous sites. Hover over links first!
Goodbye B-1 bomber. If we need every swinging stick in the air for INDOPACOM, doesn't a long-range plane that doesn't add to overloading air bases close to China worth the price of keeping it a bit longer?
In the next few years, the U.S. Air Force will say goodbye to the B-1 Lancer. The venerable bomber, known affectionately as the “Bone,” will be phased out, alongside the B-2 Spirit,
in favor of the forthcoming B-21 Raider. But the B-1 will be difficult
to replace, at least with respect to its specifications, which are
impressive on paper. Although, in an era where air defense systems are
becoming increasingly sophisticated, the non-stealth B-1’s ability to
survive behind enemy lines has become imperiled, reducing the value of
the strategic bomber in future conflicts against capable nation-states.
It's more than being non-stealthy given that the ancient B-52 clings to life as a bomb truck. I assume the issue is really operating cost compared to the B-52, notwithstanding the B-1's larger payload. The B-1's swing wing capability is no doubt a maintenance hog.
What will it do prior to being phased out "before 2035"?
Recent Russian aggression against NATO, commonly called "hybrid" war, has been most evident in the Baltic Sea where NATO is reacting to defend critical infrastructure from Russian attacks (that Russia denies carrying out). Will that aggression and denial come ashore at Narva, Estonia?
Moscow has long been waging a shadow war against the military alliance,
but the war in Ukraine has led to an escalation of hybrid, or gray-zone,
attacks on NATO since the conflict began. ...
"It is an inherent part of Russian strategic thinking. The military is
only part of it," Appathurai, the NATO secretary general's primary
advisor on hybrid threats, told BI. "Their aim is to achieve political
victory using the full spectrum of tools."
I worry that Russia could escalate their "little green men" attacks with an invasion of Estonia that captures Narva, posing as separatists pining for the embrace of Mother Russia. I explored in a recent Army article that threat and the necessary Army response within a NATO effort to deter or defeat such an invasion.
Failure to clearly win could break NATO by making the Article V defense guarantee appear hollow.
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.
We seem to be violating some basic terms of negotiating by ruling out things that Russia should fear if they don't agree to reasonable terms for ending Russia's war on Ukraine for good. But I admit that the image for diplomatic purposes can be different than the terms of a deal, whether that is America's military role in NATO or a peace deal in the Winter War of 2022.
In just one speech
by U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth this week, the most powerful
member of NATO has thrown the world’s biggest military alliance into
disarray, raising troubling questions about America’s commitment to
European security.
Hegseth told almost 50 of Ukraine
’s Western backers on Wednesday that he had joined their meeting “to
directly and unambiguously express that stark strategic realities
prevent the United States of America from being primarily focused on the
security of Europe.”
That said, we should not have given up negotiating assets--ruling out NATO membership for Ukraine, ruling out a NATO role to guarantee a "peace" deal, and minimizing the need for American troops in Europe or even Ukraine--before we
even talk to Russia about ending Russia's invasion of Ukraine. Sure, we don't want to be too tied down in Europe. And Russia surely knows that. But make Russia give concessions to get our concessions! Don't kneel before Russia bearing gifts! If we do, Russia will demand more.
That is not the Art of the Ukraine Deal. We have to be smarter if we want to provide
peace to keep Europe as an economy-of-force front rather than just get a period of Russia reloading to begin another war.
Although of course I recognize the need to at least appear to Russians as an honest broker so any deal doesn't look like America dictating terms. So I don't take administration language that doesn't scream "Hitler!!" at Putin as a sign that American policy is pro-Putin. Ditto on the need to appear willing to walk away to get our European NATO allies to do more.
So we'll see. I withhold judgment until I see details when diplomacy--with Russia and with our NATO allies--unfolds.
Sound advice that I believe I laid out above despite my own worries.
UPDATE: I really don't understand why Trump said Ukraine started the war or why he said Zelensky is not legitimate without a new election.
Putin ordered the invasion. And if you say Ukraine provoked it by not wanting Russia to dominate it, I don't know what to say.
And Ukraine's laws provide for the suspension of elections during a state of emergency, which the invasion certainly is. Obviously, free elections are good. But maybe talk to Putin about that first.
Unless Trump is really playing the part of being nice to Russia to get Russia to give concessions, I have no explanation. We'll see.
Russia is seeking to rebuild its military to prepare for conflict before 2030, but the slaughter of its ground forces over nearly three years of the ongoing Winter War of 2022 makes Russians less than eager to die for their country in a foreign land. If Putin does expand his military, who will it fight? I'm tired of thinking Russia might need an "exit ramp" out of the war. That train pulled out of the station by the end of 2022, as far as I'm concerned. Russia needs to be defeated in Ukraine. Or there will be another war that Russia starts, somewhere, and sooner than we hope.
Russia is preparing its combat forces for battles that might or might
not occur between now and 2030. Russian forces are still locked in
combat with Ukrainians and leader Vladimir Putin is vague about how and
when this war will end. The new American president wants to end the war
quickly but the Russians are not responding.
The Russians hope their silence will provoke Western concessions before ever sitting down across a table. Our response should be silence. And more weapons for Ukraine. Because Strategypage also notes this:
What Russia is doing is building a lot more weapons and trying to
recruit more troops. Few Russian men are willing to serve in the
military, despite high pay and large payments when they agree to enlist.
Potential Russian recruits know that going to Ukraine is often a death
sentence. They know this because so many Russian soldiers have come back
in coffins or not at all. The government makes large payments to
families of dead soldiers. Russian military age men are reluctant to
join the military, even with the financial incentives. Over a million
military age men have left the country and those still in Russia avoid
the recruiters, who often visit workplaces to arrest men who refused to
cooperate with recruiters.
Ukraine is suffering from an infantry shortage. But Russia clearly has problems, too:
There are still about 200,000 Russian troops in Ukraine and most are on
the defensive. Ukraine keeps its casualties down by using its armed and
camera- equipped drones for most of the fighting. Currently about 90
percent of Russian casualties are caused by Ukrainian drones.
Russia claws forward because Ukraine's drones don't hold ground. But Russia's "human wave" attacks are generally done in small groups. This isn't the "human wave" assault of your imagination of past massed assaults by armies that truly had no practical limits on manpower and didn't care about losses.
With only 200,000 Russian troops inside Ukraine, the idea that Russia can expend men without worry is clearly wrong. Russia wants to appear that way, but I suspect Putin has constructed a Potemkin Horde to bluff his way to a victory. And Russian talk of rebuilding its military is all about convincing the West that Russia must be unstoppable now if Russia is already planning for the next war.
I also suspect that Trump's talk of Putin caring about ending the bloodshed of the war and Trump's claim of "millions" of deaths rather than the hundreds of thousands in reality are an attempt to push past Putin's censorship that prevents the people of Russia from knowing about the high costs of the war they are waging.
Vance stated during a press conference following the meeting that the United States remains committed to ending the war and achieving a "durable, lasting peace" in Ukraine and not the "kind of peace that's going to have Eastern Europe in conflict just a couple years down the road."
But I'll wait to see the Definitions Section, of course.
We should make sure Russia loses this war so a next foreign war is less likely.
But yeah, at this point I would consider a deal that concedes Russian
control of pre-2022 occupied territory in parts of the Donbas and Crimea; and
NATO strengthening of Ukraine's ability to defeat Russia if Russia
attacks again--including battling Ukrainian corruption--as a victory for
the West. Face it, after three years of bloodshed and suffering, Ukrainians won't die to get 2014 borders. Hell, Ukrainians might accept a ceasefire-in-place. Ideally, a deal based on the pre-war line of control could include making Russia quietly (and deniably) pay to rebuild Ukraine.* Putin's control of the state's security apparatus and media will allow him to boast of this great achievement. And who will dispute him?
*When I wrote that post, Russia's offensive had basically culminated. Their ground forces were shattered. I wrongly hoped Ukraine had reserves to launch a counteroffensive. As weeks and then months passed without a counteroffensive I began to worry that Russia was getting the most valuable commodity in war--time. Russia got the time to recover and prepare, and the much-delayed and openly telegraphed Ukrainian counteroffensive failed in summer 2023. So we have what we have.
NOTE: ISW updates continue here. Also, I put war-related links and commentary in the Weekend Data Dump.
I post at The Dignified Rant: Evolvedon Substack. Help me out by subscribing and by liking and sharing posts. I continue posting 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.
Zelensky stated “on February 7 that thousands of North Korean troops have returned to active combat in Kursk Oblast after a brief pause.”
Hmmm: “Senior Iranian military leaders have urged Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei in recent months to approve the construction of a nuclear weapon, according to an unspecified Iranian official speaking to the Telegraph.” I suspect a decision to proceed means they already have nukes.
Russia will reconstitute its military: "A partially reconstituted Russian military will still pose a significant
threat to U.S. and Western interests in the European theater." That early threat is what I wrote about in Army magazine here.
Drone Line project: "the Ukrainian military will 'scale up' five existing drone regiments and brigades in the Ukrainian military and border guard service and will integrate infantry and drones into a single strike system, which will enable Ukrainian forces to create [defensive] kill zones 10 to 15 kilometers deep[.]"
Ponzi scheme? "China has numerous economic problems, but the worst has to do with real estate debt and 200 million unneeded housing units."
Crawl, walk, run? "The Missile Defense Agency is moving quickly to gather ideas for President Donald Trump’s proposed 'Iron Dome for America' and hopes to make progress on some within the next two years." The need is there.
Seeking modular anti-mine unmanned surface vessels: "The MCM Unmanned Surface Vehicle (USV) is central to this effort, a
diesel-powered craft designed for various operational launching
platforms, including the LCS, vessels of opportunity, or even shore
locations."
That's just swell: "A Chinese spy balloon that crossed over the United States in 2023 was packed with American technology that could have enabled it to spy on Americans, according to two sources with direct knowledge of a technical analysis conducted by the U.S. military." Why bother with TikTok already here?
Huh: "Canada and the Philippines are in the final stages of negotiating a key
defense pact that would allow their forces to hold larger military
drills, said the Canadian ambassador to Manila while raising concerns
over China’s 'provocative and unlawful actions' in the region." That's in addition, right!?
Remember when the Army's need to be light and airmobile led to the Stryker light, wheeled vehicle? Well, it's getting up-armored. "Agile" light vehicles can't out-agile guided weapons.
The busy dozen Ukrainian F-16s: "Because the air
defenses on both sides are so robust, no one has air superiority and
keep their aircraft out of range of enemy air defense systems. The F-16s
are most useful as another air defense weapon to destroy Russian cruise
missile attacks."
That's the big tragedy of the bloody war? "The consumption of aviation fuel has been significantly increased by the
on-going war in Ukraine, according to a journal report published on
Wednesday." FFS.
This involves using Purchasing Power Parity: "Based on one key economic metric, Russian
defense spending eclipsed all other European countries combined last
year and is projected to increase further in 2025, according to a
leading defense think tank."
Is Bangladesh the next failed state? It's long been a bastion of Islamic calm largely unaffected--until recently--by the Islamist radicalism that seeks to define all Islam in their murderous image.
China is a-hole: "A People’s Liberation Army Air Force J-16 fighter released flares 30
meters away in front of a Royal Australian Air Force P-8A Poseidon on
patrol in the South China Sea on Tuesday prompting the Australian
government to express its concern to China on such actions."
Good: "Within a year, the United States could
have a single integrated grid of sensors from under the sea to space to
bolster its air and missile defenses[.]" CONUS is not a sanctuary.
Sending old artillery shells to Russia paid off: "North Korea sought to acquire priceless combat experience, test weapons
systems, gain access to Russian military technologies, and secure
Moscow’s further assistance in countering economic sanctions." And they can rebuild their stockpile with new shells.
Potemkin Peter the Great: "The Kremlin reportedly ordered Russian government-linked media to reduce reporting about US President Donald Trump and portray Russian President Vladimir Putin as a strong and decisive leader after the February 12 Trump-Putin phone call."
I suspect HTS lets this drag on to leverage Western aid: "Russian cargo vessels have continued to evacuate military assets from the port of Tartus as Russia negotiates its presence in Syria with the interim government. "
Decades of rot aren't fixed overnight: "The German army's battle-readiness is less than when Russia invaded
Ukraine in 2022, military officials, lawmakers and defence experts told
Reuters."
Europe is not a bastion of freedom despite being the cradle of Western civilization, which is much broader than the democratic tradition identified with the West today. America was a major part in the modern view of the West and America is needed to preserve that definition of the Western tradition.
The danger signs in Europe aren't really from the grassroots right (allegedly "far right" as the proto-autocrats and apparatchiki of the ruling center-left political parties assert). The real threat is from the institutional and ruling left:
In a depressingly predictable judgment, the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) has essentially ruled that free speech stops where ‘hate speech’ begins. ...
The ECHR was originally set up to prevent states from carrying out
extreme actions that all decent people agree are outside the civilised
pale – including torture, death squads, wholesale suppression of
anti-government speech, and so on. Yet now it has effectively decreed
that governments should protect their citizens from any and all
unpleasant speech.
It is easy to forget--and this was a useful reminder to me--that Europe
with its autocracies and monarchies was not fully part of a free West
(although obviously part of the Western tradition) until we rebuilt
Western Europe in that template after World War II. And NATO expansion
after defeating the Soviet Union was more explicit in demanding
democracy and rule of law for new members.
In the last few centuries, China had endured periods when independent
warlords ruled portions of a divided China, and the communist Chinese
feared this might happen again. For thousands of years the large East
Asian area dominated by the Han variant of Chinese people was sometimes
united, but more often divided into separate kingdoms.
War is Hell for those who fight it and those caught in the crossfire. It's best to fight to win as quickly as possible. False compassion to alleviate war at the expense of battlefield victory will backfire.
The Trump administration is moving to
abolish a Pentagon office
responsible for promoting civilian safety in battlefield operations,
suggesting that incoming Defense Department leaders may attempt to
loosen restrictions on U.S. military operations worldwide.
This is actually the problem with the office that supposedly simply sought to"prioritize the
safety of noncombatants in conflict zones":
“This certainly doesn’t prevent you from ‘taking the gloves off,’” a
senior defense official said. “But what it means is, when you ‘put the
gloves on’ … you’ll hit what you want to hit, and not what you don’t.”
So are the figurative American gloves on or off? When you go to war, winning within the boundaries of the rules of war should be America's practice for use of military force.
To be clear, abolishing this office doesn't abolish the rules of war. They will remain part of how America wages war, notwithstanding hyper-ventilating over American military actions. And knowing our sensitivity to civilian casualties and the bias of our media, enemies simply lie about civilian casualties.
Civilian casualties are allowed in
the rules of war as long as the losses are proportional to the military objective sought. And that's aside from the issue of legal responsibility for civilian deaths falling on the side that hides behind human shields.
Of course civilian deaths should be minimized. Rest assured, the American military fought within the boundaries of the rules of war before that recently created office existed and will continue to do so after it is abolished.
Considering the scale, scope, and violence of LSCO—as envisioned by
TRADOC—the ROE will need to be permissive to effectively execute mission
command with the appropriate level of control.
We can't have commanders frozen into inaction because they can't get a military lawyer's opinion from higher command on the legality of a strike. Understanding the ability to take risks in ROE must be joined to understanding commander's intent in the operation.
Victory first will be ugly but still within the rules of war. And the alternative could be defeat with even uglier outcomes.
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.