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!
Is Belarus Putin’s last card to play in his invasion of Ukraine? The
potential for success seems low and the potential for disasters of
different varieties seems rather high.
NOTE: Also, I put war-related links and commentary in the Weekend Data Dump on Substack. You may read my posts on Substack, at The Dignified Rant: Evolved.
The
Weekend Data Dump is a compilation of short entries about the previous
week’s defense and national security news that I found interesting. I couldn’t possibly comment on
everything in my news flow or delve into everything that interests me.
So most news that interests me doesn’t make the cut for a post. The rest
go in the data dump. Enjoy!
Help me out by subscribing on Substack and by liking and sharing posts. I occasionally post short data dump-type items (or not-so-short) on my Substack "Notes" section.
My mom made this for me for the 200th anniversary*:
I will have my 50-star flag out on the flag pole. Of course. And I bought the most eye-catching 250 shirt I could find.
It is hard not to be an optimist about America.
My grandparents came here
from Ireland and the Austro-Hungarian Empire. One grandfather served in
World War I and the other served on the Mexican border mission prior to
World War I; my parents (my dad was barely old enough to enlist in the
Navy in World War II) built a solid blue collar life for me and my siblings in a
deteriorating Detroit, and told me I should go to college; I became the
first in my family (with two brothers serving during the Vietnam War,
one serving in Vietnam) to go to college (with a side trip to the Army
National Guard that somehow didn’t send me to the Persian Gulf) and then
got out of Detroit for a white collar career; and my children have
opportunity to thrive (one with a PhD and the other in medical school).
It’s the American dream over four generations. I’d have to be an ungrateful moron not to be an optimist! Or to fail to love this country which provides such opportunity.
I don't understand how people's patriotism can vary depending on what party holds the White House. Mine has never varied one bit based on mere politicians. Our country is far more than who we select to sit in the Oval Office. If your patriotism varies by that metric, you love your party and not your country.
Perhaps watch this if you hate your own country and can't bring yourself to celebrate this grand day:
I assume I will make it to celebrate 275. But absent serious advances in medical science, 300 is right out.
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: It is actually pretty big. It is stretched across my small sofa for the
picture. I have taken it to every place I have lived since heading off
to college. Thanks, mom! May she rest in peace.
Aerial suicide drones are just the explodey bits of an entire system built to create a kill chain from finding targets to destroying them. Suicide UAVs will become just one of many types of ammunition available to be selected by Artificial Intelligence (AI) for their needed capabilities to kill specific targets.
The AI orchestration software that fuses
sensor feeds, assigns targets, and sequences fires across hundreds of
platforms is already selecting and engaging in the functional sense. In
other words, the software pulling the strings is where the autonomy
lives, not the projectile.
We may say each drone is much cheaper than each shell or rocket.
But you must consider the training needed to fly drones and the cost of
the ground-to-space-spanning intelligence, surveillance, and
reconnaissance (ISR) network and communications network that allow both
FPV drones and precision artillery to find and attack the enemy. With
total costs considered, is the drone really lowering the total cost of
delivering strikes significantly compared to a precision shell or rocket?
Heck, as I observed in this essay, rather than AI making even slightly old weapons obsolete, "perhaps we are underestimating what AI can do with older weapons. Even
as new weapons and means of fighting are used in the Winter War of 2022,
old—ancient in some cases—weapons are being hauled out of storage to
fight."
The entire Reconnaissance Strike Complex system is the key. We can plug in lots of ammunition types into that RSC apart from suicide drones. And when we can do that, small suicide drones will be reduced in importance as other forms of ammunition prove they can do some things better than small suicide drones.
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!
With Iran's navy, air power, and surveillance crippled, America was able to use land-based forces to shepherd civilian shipping through the Strait of Hormuz.
It emerged this month that the US has begun guiding ships through Hormuz
with their signals off, by a route that hugs the Omani coast, helping
to boost oil and cargo flows.
The Navy wasn't needed and was able to act as a hammer from the distance in case the Iranians got too active. And the Marine threat kept the Iranians distracted, too, I bet.
That mission is why we had command and combat elements of the 82nd
Airborne Division there. And why we lost an Apache helicopter when it
was hit by an Iranian UAV.
The Strait wasn't fully open. But it helped to cushion the effect of Iran's effort to close the strait.
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!
[Britain used to focus] on what really matters: training, munitions and maintenance. … But since the post-Cold War drawdown that was underway by 1991, almost every European defense ministry has wasted increasing proportions of their diminishing defense spending to keep increasingly empty bases open — often just to preserve civilian janitors and ground-keepers in a job[.]
So what they have is a bloated organization and officer corps that maintain the base at the expense of the sharp edge of usable military power.
Protest:
“British Defense Secretary John Healey resigned on Thursday, accusing
U.K. prime minister Keir Starmer of skimping on defense spending at a
time of ‘rising threats.’” Britain’s budget is sizable. Much seemingly
supports an administrative base rather than the shrinking fighting
force.
Yes, the administrative base thrives. Never mind the purpose of the military is to fight and the administrative base is supposed to sustain the tip of the spear. That priority is inverted in Britain--and in too much of Europe.
Does anybody really think that the European Union could weld these pieces together into a cohesive force? It won't even be able to weld them into a cohesive bureaucratic entity. Nor does it care if it does.
Also, the initial article has a bonus slam against UNIFAIL UNIFIL.
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!
European air defenses are woefully inadequate to protect rear area assets from aerial attack. If Russia is having problems with their strong investment in ground-based air defense, how bad would air attacks be for European states?
In a serious near-peer conflict, Western countries can't count on their
homelands remaining safe while their militaries fight overseas, a top
NATO commander told Business Insider. ...
NATO's problem now is that cheap long-range drones, missiles, sabotage,
and mass air attacks mean the rear is no longer just theoretically
vulnerable. Instead, it could be routinely contested, and the West may
not have enough defenses to adequately protect everything, requiring
tough choices.
Around 3,000 pilots fought in the Battle of Britain,
but thousands of other people helped defend Britain in the summer of
1940. They were the Royal Air Force (RAF) ground crews who the pilots
depended on in order to get in the air and engage the enemy, the staff
in the Sector Station operations rooms who ‘scrambled’ the fighters into
action, and the teams operating defences on the ground.
Thousands of other people? That's off at least an order of magnitude from information on the site that stated that! The Observer Corps alone had 30,000 members at the outbreak of World War II.
Mind you, America needs to do much better, too. But we have oceans and friendly countries near us (except for more exposed Alaska, Florida, Puerto Rico, and Guam).
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!
Twelve years ago my basic advice to the Ukrainians should the Russian full invade was to preserve their army, send body bags back to Russia, and strike Sevastopol, the base Russia started the war in 2014 to secure by taking over Crimea.
NOTE: Also, I put war-related links and commentary in the Weekend Data Dump on Substack. You may read my posts on Substack, at The Dignified Rant: Evolved.