Saturday, November 22, 2025

Warfare is Bloody at the Best of Times

As Russia bashes its troops against Ukraine's defensive belt, we seek alternative in maneuver to avoid that bloody fate. War is an all-of-the-above sort of endeavor where three basic forms of ground warfare blend into each other and trade places in what is most possible in any given time and place.

The flavors of ground warfare:

Military Science nerds will inevitably quibble over the above definitions and conceptions. Nevertheless, I think it provides a rough shorthand guide to how these ‘forms’ of warfare are conceived, especially by western militaries on a day-to-day level.

Do read it all. I added my two cents for avoiding stalemate in this Army article based on learning to cope with and overcome attritional warfare on the World War I Western Front to restore maneuver.

Have no doubt that attrition is a part of ground warfare. But it should not be the totality of ground warfare.

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: Table from the cited article. 

Friday, November 21, 2025

The FPV Suicide Drone is a Winter War of 2022 "10" and Great Power "7"

Persistent intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (ISR) makes loitering FPV suicide drones effective. Loitering suicide drones are not the only means to exploit the surveillance. If your ISR is persistent, you can hit fleeting targets with other types of weapons.

Singing the praises of suicide drones

Loitering munitions are aerial weapons that can stay in the air while they search for a target, with some capable of returning to base in the case of unsuccessful target identification. While they operate similarly to armed drones, their self-destructive capabilities are what set them apart. Loitering munitions initially only played a limited role in the war in Ukraine, but the scope and scale of their use has grown dramatically such that they have become a key capability for modern militaries globally. 

If you have the information that the persistent battlefield ISR provides, couldn't other weapons provide the attack options? And might those weapons be superior to the FPV suicide drones once drone counter-measures spread through military formations?

Will it make sense to rely on manpower-intensive drone units that launch short-range FPV loitering munitions all along the front? Or will it make more sense to mostly use missiles from ground, air, and sea launchers as well as air-dropped glide bombs? High-altitude balloons could be a launch platform, too

These means of launching loitering munitions will provide the range to concentrate the loitering munitions and reach deep behind the lines, evading frontline short-range counter-measures.

Not that cheap FPV suicide drones--likely AI-flown--won't be part of a expanded combined arms effort

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: Image from the article credited to Sergey Dzyuba via Shutterstock.com.

Thursday, November 20, 2025

Spare a Little Nuance for Vietnam's Position

Vietnam is not aligning with Russia against America. China is the party that should worry.

Vietnam is buying Russian Su-35 fighter planes:

Vietnam has significantly increased its military purchases from Russia despite US efforts to counter Moscow’s war economy—and has done so using concealed financial channels, according to an investigation by The New York Times on October 27.

The probe, based on internal documents from Russian state exporter Rostec and interviews with officials from Vietnam, the US, and elsewhere, offers a rare view into how Vietnam’s willingness to buy Russian systems has quietly tipped its strategic alignment. ... 

Vietnam has historically depended on Soviet and Russian arms, but its current initiative is seen as a broader geopolitical shift: Hanoi is diversifying suppliers and hedging between Beijing, Moscow, and Washington as regional tensions intensify.

This is not an anti-American shift by Vietnam.Vietnam uses Russian weapons. It is difficult to switch suppliers rapidly. And Vietnam needs to counter looming China--not distant America. I see this arms deal as reinforcing Vietnam's anti-China posture

Breathe, people. And work up a little nuance.

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   Map from https://www.warhistoryonline.com/instant-articles/red-against-red.html with my country notations added.

Wednesday, November 19, 2025

Run Away: INDOPACOM Edition

Ah, nuanced and--dare I say sophisticated--retreat from China is on the menu today. For so many Americans, there is always a greater threat we must prepare to face than the one standing in front of us.

Blaming America's "pivot" to the Pacific for increasing tensions:

The United States does not need to increase its military footprint in Asia to secure its core interests: defending the homeland and assuring American economic prosperity. Instead, U.S. national and regional security would be better protected by a reduced U.S. military presence alongside continued investment to help allies take responsibility for their own defence burden. Such a strategy will have its detractors, in Washington and in the region, but it will benefit all parties while dramatically reducing the risk of major power war. 

That is insane. How are things better if China's neighbors alone are too weak to stop China's territorial ambitions? By averting our eyes and distracting ourselves on TikTok?

One, America's pivot has consisted of prioritizing forces in the Pacific and increasing their quality; while force levels in Europe and the Middle East declined

Two, passivity in the face of aggression (a form of retreat) looks like calm--until it doesn't

And three, did I call it, or what?

China is the problem in Asia--not 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! 

Tuesday, November 18, 2025

Friendly Net Fairies Are Not Real

Threats to America are not all military threats. Recognizing the need to fight those non-military threats is good. Vital even. Equally vital is not thinking the tools to fight those "4th generation warfare" non-military threats are the right tools to defeat military threats. Or thinking that optimizing the military to fight non-military threats is wise.

I'm good on defeating non-state and non-military threats to America that are being called 4th generation warfare:

Because 4GW is, at its essence, a battle for legitimacy, and Cultural Marxism is its domestic vanguard. External 4GW threats like narco-invasions or unassimilated migrations succeed only when they exploit internal fractures—precisely the fissures widened by cultural subversion. A military schooled solely in generations of war, without grasping how Cultural Marxism preconditions the battlespace, will treat symptoms (sinking boats, sealing borders) while ignoring the disease: a society whose loyalty to the state frays under relentless ideological assault.  

What I worry about is that calling the fight against that kind of threat a new type of "war" confuses people into thinking the means of fighting that threat translate to defeating peer enemy military threats. 

The whole 4G Warfare thing has a "let the net fairies win for us" vibe. [WARNING: High rant-to-dignified ratio]

Moving from first to third generation warfare did not change the armies that evolved through those eras into something other than armies. While many silver-bullet advocates through the ages have championed a single weapon system as the key to avoiding hard and bloody wars, I will at least grant credit to 4th generation advocates for creating a more amorphous networked "solution" that avoids an easy target for rebuke. 

Dispersing and networking our troops to fight with less physical contact is absolutely necessary. But they are still soldiers. Turning them into something other than soldiers is 1G suicidal.

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! 

Monday, November 17, 2025

The Winter War of 2022 Seeks to Escape Stalemate

Are the Russians and Ukrainians going to build the ability to move the front in wholesale scales as Russia initially did and as Ukraine did later in 2022? It doesn't really look like it. 

The war goes on. The hot spot of the week continues to be Pokrovsk and the nearly pinched Ukrainian salient east and southeast of that wrecked city. Russia is still trying to capture it. 

Russian and Ukrainian air campaigns take a toll as they expand in scope and volume. The Russians bleed heavily to claw their way forward at a pace so slow as to defy comprehension that their troops keep advancing into death. And Ukraine's infantry shortage continues, flaying my hope that Ukraine has been holding back infantry to form a strategic reserve. Is either side capable of breaking out of the ground stalemate somehow?

RUSI has a report on emerging method of restoring maneuver in the Winter War of 2022. The ability to mass effects to counter massed forces has crippled operations. 

Russia has responded with better controlled fires and infiltration of expendable poor quality infantry to slowly advance despite heavy casualties.

Ukraine has responded by going on the defensive (local counter-attacks excepted) to preserve scarce infantry with a thin front line and inflict losses on the attacking Russians using firepower with an emphasis on small drones that they can build themselves. 

Ukraine makes Russia pay a heavy price to attack; but Ukraine's response enables Russia's response to "work".

Clearly, Russia hopes to eventually overwhelm the Ukrainians; and Ukraine hopes to eventually exhaust the Russians. Despite these changes, I still don't know who will be proven correct.

To me, it doesn't seem like the Russians are trying to rebuild a mobile capability as it is trying to be a more effective bulldozer. Ukraine is trying to restore some movement (back to RUSI):

Ukrainian commanders have divided their operations to seize a contested sector into approximately seven phases, usually spanning five to 10 days of operations. This practice does not constitute doctrine but is rather a synthesis of how multiple officers described their approach to the author, although their exact language varied. To seize a contested sector, the force must survey it, isolate it, degrade the enemy, fix their forces, suppress them, close and destroy them, and then consolidate control of the sector. These phases are described below.

The illustration at the top from the report shows the enemy forces that help define this type of operation. But it doesn't seem that different--other than having armored vehicle support to reduce casualties--from Russia's new method of attack that uses air and ground fires plus drone strikes behind Ukrainian lines in order to disrupt supply and reinforcements for forward units, and make them vulnerable to attack.

What is missing is exploiting rather than simply consolidating the gains after destroying the enemy in the contested sector. We shall see. 

But what the combatants are doing nearly four years into the war reinforces my caution in Army magazine about drawing firm lessons for organizing, equipping, and employing the Army from a war that isn't even over yet. I based my warning on adaptations for the World War I Western Front.

But to be fair, the report is about emerging lessons. Work the problem. Let's not get over our skis in the PowerPoint presentations. 

UPDATE (Thursday): The idea that America is refusing to pressure Russia into ending the war is ridiculous given America's role in arming Ukraine and providing intelligence which results in massive Russian casualties, equipment losses, and economic hardship. No pressure? Seriously?? 

UPDATE (Friday): Zelensky has received the draft deal worked out with Russia's tilted details. Zelensky does not like it. I'm sure I wouldn't, too. 

But it is not an ultimatum to Ukraine. It seems like envoy Witkoff has the role of "good cop" will Secretary of State Rubio has the "bad cop" role of saying this is a garbage draft.

And I can't help but suspect that when Russia turns down a counter-proposal, Tomahawk cruise missiles will secretly arrive in Ukraine. 

Trump wants a deal that rules out NATO membership, cuts Ukraine's military, and concedes territory to Russia. That doesn't seem controversial. NATO membership can be withheld to get Russia to behave, obviously Ukraine will demobilize reserves to some extent, and I don't see Ukraine able to take back all--or even some--of its territory. But the latter doesn't mean legally recognizing the loss.

We'll see. 

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.  

NOTE: Image from the RUSI report.

Sunday, November 16, 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: A Crude Counter-measure to Drones

In case you missed it on Substack: Does the Navy Force Structure Match its Doctrine?

In case you missed it on Substack: We Will Detect Chinese Preparations to Invade Taiwan

In case you missed it on Substack: The Tip of the Spear is Not the Entire Spear

The Army must transform as it has in the past. Indeed. But don't mistake as solutions the technological delusions the Army had to reject to transform in the past. Maintain the foundation of combined arms fighting and examine the lessons of Ukraine for the Army's needs, as I cautioned in Army magazine.  

It takes a village to raise cannon fodder.

Adding AI to suicide drones

Japan is shifting automobile production from China to India. 

Boy, Islamist hate escalated quickly in Britain: "The crowd with the blood of Jews in its nostrils flew many flags tonight: that of Palestine, that of Lebanon, that of Kashmir. One that was notable by its absence was the flag of Great Britain[.]"(tip to Instapundit): 

 

I suspect the judge wrongly rejected the president's use of the National Guard to protect federal property in cities that fail to adequately protect them and their lawful activities.

If American threats to use military force prompts Nigeria to protect its Christians from Islamic violence, good. And "invasion" talk is silly. And Al Jazeera just says the killings are "right-wing" allegations rather than the ongoing murderous ethnic cleansing that has made most of the Islamic world Infidel-free.

Sh*t got real: "The Philippine Marine Corps unveiled its first BrahMos supersonic anti-ship missile battery and future plans to enhance coastal defense on Friday[.]"

I doubt the Royal Navy will get much bigger. But at least its surface combatants should get more lethal individually

Presidential tariff powers are under Supreme Court review. I suspect Trump exceeded his authority. I hoped he'd leverage better trade terms before it was struck down. Generally, I don't like tariffs. On the other hand, I'm often shocked not at what presidents do that violate the law but do what is perfectly legal. 

Can the Marines evolve away from Force Design and modernize through the wreckage of that radical transformation? Of course, there is a way to keep the ground-based anti-ship support the Navy needs. In less exposed positions, of course.

Will the French National Rally break up the European Union if it takes power? Will it reject NATO? France has long been rogue or absent in NATO. As for the EU, Stop. Don't. Come back:
 

Does Iran's Tehran problem represent what is coming for all of Iran?

Israeli strikes on Hezbollah shouldn't inspire fear of a new war. Hezbollah rearming to fight again and undermine Lebanon should inspire fear of a new war. 

The West still won't admit what drives Islamist terror. Sadly--and suicidally--the "Why do they hate us?" questions always end with the same answer in too much of the West--"We deserve their hate."

Insurrection with foreign assistance? Tip to Instapundit. You can say a lot of stupid things under our Constitution. I'm not sure what bringing in foreign actors to support your "talk" implies. 

How gangs go from a law enforcement problem to an insurrection problem: "A Latin street gang in Chicago is reportedly telling its members to shoot federal immigration officers on sight, escalating the already highly dangerous and volatile situation in Chicago." Big--if true. But be careful out there. 

Is Russia mobilizing reservists for border defense missions or is it an avenue to funnel cannon fodder into the frontline?

America is "chipping away" at Russian influence in Central Asia. Just don't turn it over to China. And maybe if Russia pulls it Putin out of its buttocks and stops attacking Ukraine and demonizing NATO, our role could be helping Russia resist China. 

To boldly go: "There might be solid tactical reasons to put Space Force personnel in orbit, argues a new report from the Mitchell Institute for Aerospace Studies." Bring on SMOD!

When you think about a "calculated" risk approach to defense acquisition, consider the risk we've had with the old approach that has given us cost-overruns and long develop times that have spent money without getting assets in a timely manner--or at all.

The persistent accusation that Trump's foreign policy is isolationist is just wrong. Mind you, some of his supporters are. As are some on the left.

Pentagon officers: "adversaries are likely to exploit a natural flaw in artificial intelligence chatbots to inject instructions for stealing files, distorting public opinion or otherwise betraying trusted users." Indeed

On the surface an American base in Israel to monitor a Gaza peace seems unlikely. On the other hand, it would be easier for Arab countries willing to help suppress Hamas if they operated out of an American rather than an Israeli base. [LATER: I heard that is not happening.]

New German P-8A ASW/maritime patrol aircraft will deploy to Iceland and Norway to prevent Russian forces from reaching the North Atlantic

When you are on a Mission from Allah, those deemed insufficiently holy are just as much an enemy as Westerners are: "As many as 200 terrorists were killed in a turf war on Sunday between rival jihadists in north-east Nigeria."

Just because the Army wrongly said super carriers are obsolete 80 years ago doesn't mean that carriers are fully relevant today. One, I reject the argument about carrier damage resilience; and two, super carriers are an asset in only one of two major missions they conduct

Ukraine uses their Western fighter planes for knocking down Russian missiles and and attack drones.

The Houthi claim their missile attacks on Israel and Red Sea interdiction campaign is over (for now). Have the interdiction and sanctions against the supply line to Iran following Western air strikes had an effect?

Cheap drones are an interesting form of cheap strike ammunition (that has vulnerabilities that shells and rockets don't have), but they can't do everything. Here's the really high end: "A Mach-6 ISR/strike jet could compress decision cycles, pierce dense air defenses, and bridge satellites, drones, and shooters." 

Russia showed off their Su-57 weapons bay fully loaded. Another super weapon?

Uh oh: "A car explosion near the historic Red Fort in India’s capital on Monday killed eight people and injured at least 19 others, police in New Delhi said." If Pakistan is behind this, adjust your pucker factor accordingly. Both have nuclear missiles.

Russia's 2016 election interference was crude, had limited appeal and reach, and wanted to sow chaos and undermine the appeal of democracy abroad. The government-owned BBC's 2024 election interference was slick disinformation that reached over 20% of Americans, seeking to defeat one candidate. Discuss.

If you wonder what the objective of Islam's murder, persecution, and ethnic cleansing of Christians around the world, recall that the modern Middle East was once the center of Christianity. Until Islamic armies swept in and began persecuting, murdering, and cleansing the Christians into oblivion.

Some time ago, I speculated on means to put small aerial drones near enemy air fields. Little did I know how easy it would be for our enemies to do that

This seems prudent: "American Marines and soldiers are once again rucking through the Panamanian jungle, for the first time in more than two decades."

Russia's Baltic Sea fleet will lead a short but exciting life if it leaves port. And then NATO states can project power into the Baltic Sea littorals. 

Plans to change the 2-man B-21 crew to have a pilot and a weapon system officer suggests a multi-mission role for the plane. That makes sense. Anti-ship capability would be extremely useful. And would there be a fighter version?

Will AI cause more chaos than benefits? I suspect that is so. An AI will need to be air-gapped, I suspect, with curated and screened information. That will make it less effective. But it will make it less vulnerable to sowing chaos by sucking in new information all the time. So advantage air gap. Tip to Instapundit.

How much advance notice do they need to defeat threats? "the U.S. Army’s Northern Command has formed an operational team to rapidly counter drone threats to military bases within the United States." 

CONUS is no longer a sanctuary. So yes, critical infrastructure at home must be resilient

Europe allowed itself to be reliant on Russian energy. Will this work now? "Britain recently sanctioned 135 oil tanker ships as part of a crackdown on Russian efforts to sell oil." 

Russia is a more corrupt version of Ukraine. The West pressures Ukraine to fight it: "Ukraine's energy and justice ministers resigned on Wednesday over their alleged involvement in a sweeping corruption scandal in the country's energy sector." Ukraine needs to be much less corrupt than Russia to survive.

If being run by mullahs lets Allah do this, what use are mullahs: "President Masoud Pezeshkian has cautioned that if rainfall does not arrive by December, the government must start rationing water in Tehran."

China tightens its economic grip on Venezuela. I'm not sure if I should worry about this or laugh at China pursuing fool's gold there.

'Uge. If true. Or did China proliferate the precursor production it once provided Fentanyl cartels?

Coast Guard recruiting is booming.

Given that the IAEA was only able to inspect certain Iranian facilities, I doubt we ever knew the level of Iranian uranium enrichment

SIGINT: "A Royal Air Force RC-135 surveillance aircraft was deployed today to monitor Russian forces in occupied Ukraine." This has long been key for Ukrainian targeting. 

Even if America does nothing, we are costing broke Venezuela money it doesn't have

Will China's next carrier be nuclear powered?  More evidence that China does not plan a war with America? With due respect for the reality that intentions can change rapidly, of course.

FFS: "Pakistan’s parliament has passed a controversial amendment to its constitution that will expand the powers of the army chief and grant him lifelong legal immunity while limiting the independence of the supreme court[.]" The parasite sucks on the host even harder.

Oh? "The European Union is working to establish an intelligence unit under Commission President Ursula von der Leyen[.]" What could possibly go wrong? To be fair, people don't suppress themselves.

The military delivers aid to the Philippines after typhoons. Disaster relief is something our military does. And it is good practice for unanticipated military crises. 

The EU is unhappy with Germany's planned rearmament. But as the article notes, I have doubts if Germany--or a lot of other European states--can recruit the personnel for their plans.

Taiwan upgrades its defenses. They should prepare like their lives depend on it.

Light bulb? "A recent Pentagon directive officially broadens the responsibility of irregular warfare (IW) well beyond the remit of special operations forces, in a move that former practicioners and experts said could be a significant development for America’s posture in the gray zone[.]" Well ... yeah. and hurry up.

Will China really practice on smaller targets before taking on the big mission of invading Taiwan? Sounds like it could be a comforting delusion. Remember, China needs to defeat Taiwan and only delay America to win that big mission. China might still lose, but we'll have the big war. [I might have noted this before]

The problem in Europe is the lack of an environment for innovation and not getting what they have at continental scale. For the European Union, every problem--whether real or imaginary--must be solved with more EU. FFS, America-led NATO prevents Europe from being carved up.

America and Saudi Arabia draw closer: "A strong U.S.–Saudi defense partnership helps deter hostile actors, protect shipping lanes and secure global energy supplies that sustain the world economy." Did I call it, or what?

Is America standing down in the Pacific to get China's help to end Russia's invasion of Ukraine? Perhaps there is a deal. But with America's Asian allies rearming, I don't see a practical difference between a "containment" strategy abandoned and a new "balance of power" strategy. Also, NATO is "weakened"??

No longer fixated on the DMZ: "Destroyers from the South Korean Navy’s new surface action formation held the first fleet-level maritime training exercise over the weekend in a demonstration of Seoul’s growing blue water naval capabilities." I noticed the shift long ago

Any problems with Russian influence in Kazakhstan are the fault of Putin for destroying Russia's military, economy, and reputation in his nearly four-year-old invasion of Ukraine. Chess master, my butt

Huh: "An Iranian man who set himself on fire after municipal workers shut down his family's food stand has died from his injuries, prompting the country’s president to order an investigation." This is how the Arab Spring started in Tunis

Germany seeks to overcome reluctance to enroll in Germany's military

Define "us" please: "Describing President Donald Trump as a 'barbarian' who 'wants to frighten us,' Petro, a former Marxist revolutionary ... , called the U.S. military buildup in the Caribbean 'undoubtedly an aggression against Latin America.'" As one would expect, we got more of what we rewarded

Whether or not the PLA Navy is strong, it looks strong. I've long said China's military is not as good as its shiny image projects. The question is whether it is good enough for its mission. Could the mission be looking strong?

The State Department designated four European Antifa groups as foreign terrorist organizations. We'll see how the ratlines across the Atlantic are followed. Tip to Instapundit.

I suspect that solving the problems of AWACs-type aircraft vulnerability in favor of the so-called safety of space is an illusion. The U.S. should not have abandoned support for the NATO E-7 aircraft program.

France unveiled the latest version of its ramjet-powered, nuclear-armed air-to-surface cruise missile

Not nice on ice: "Canada’s domestic spy agency says Russia and China have a “significant intelligence interest” in Canada’s Arctic, and are targeting both the country’s government and its private sector." Just don't stink on ice, Canada

This analysis is silly. Iran's pursuit of nukes is the cause of Western hopes for regime change--not the protection against it. And nukes aren't going to deter Israeli one-off strikes on those who host terrorists--Israeli nukes deter their nuclear weapons threats. If the Saudis want nukes, it's due to worry about Iran.

The mouse that roared on Russian oil export sanctions: "Norway is an enthusiastic enforcer of these sanctions because it has a growing list of complaints about Russian misbehavior." 

Fingers crossed: "Internet chatter about what was going on in Ukraine made it more difficult for Russia to obtain soldiers." 

South China Sea: "Marine Unmanned Aerial Vehicle Squadron (VMU) 1, an Arizona-based unit formation equipped with MQ-9A Reapers, was sent to the Southeast Asian nation to support 'Philippine regional maritime security[.]'" 

Does North Korea's commitment of troops to fight alongside Russia mean North Korea would help China fight Taiwan (and its allies)?  I'd say perhaps, but if Russia and North Korea are aligning to balance China, no.

Mali: "Advancing in Ukraine, Russia Troops Are Losing Ground to Al-Qaeda in Africa[.]" LOL. That "defeat" is a feature and not a bug. "Failure" sends migrants north to destabilize Europe. And Russia earns money while doing that. 

Can the West decisively squeeze Iran's mullah regime now? 

I'm relieved India wasn't behind that: "Pakistan has arrested four members of an Afghan cell over their alleged involvement in a deadly suicide bombing in its capital Islamabad earlier this week[.]" 

China knows if they can bully America into dialing back arms sales to Taiwan, few will defy China.

Russia creates Unmanned Systems Forces service to control all types of drones. Seems like it would be better to have air, naval, and ground services control their own drones to better integrate them. But sure, there's a danger in that of the new weapons getting ignored.

Despite my judgment that small drones are exploiting a counter-measures vacuum that will be filled, Ukraine needs them right now: "Each month nearly 400,000 drones are built in Ukrainian factories or home workshops." And Ukraine needs its own defense industry to avoid import reliance.

Cognitive warfare. Is it just me, or have we just slapped on a marketing label to the age-old practice of propaganda? 

Oh? "U.S. lawmakers are reportedly moving this week to formally establish a senior diplomatic role known as ambassador-at-large for Arctic affairs [.]" I say avoid the squishy stuff and establish POLARCOM. Also, in war the northern shipping route is easily cut at the Bering Strait, eh?

RUMORINT: "Some sources privately claim that Xi has lost real power and been sidelined. Others whisper that Xi’s health has deteriorated; the politician appearing in public, they say, is merely a lookalike, while a group of the party’s most venerable elder statesmen are actually calling the shots." Or Xi rules all.

Hmm: "Russia has launched its most modern Zircon anti-ship missile against targets in Ukraine’s Sumy region, using a weapon originally developed to counter U.S. naval forces." Real world test? Shortage of other weapons? A needed unique capability? Implicit threat to Western navies? Kitchen Sink strategy?

How much of the "division" in Latin America over American muscle flexing is from rulers that don't like us anyway? Doesn't refusal to deal with Maduro abandon allies? And if the price of muffling division is failure to defend our interests, I don't care. Still, speaking softly and wielding a big stick is probably wise.

We didn't really "bail out" Argentina, although we did help them: "The U.S. didn’t give Argentina money. It entered into a currency swap – and the U.S. has actually earned a profit on the transaction." Sounds more like we are betting on their recovery. Which we both could lose. But we want an ally's success.

Does Azerbaijan want all of Armenia more than it wants peace? Excellent question. If so, can Trump's promise of economic benefits from peace reverse that priority?

Colombia intends to buy 17 Gripen fighters from Sweden

This video describes American efforts to pressure Russia from the south and east while Russia is self-destructively focused on pounding Ukraine in the west. This might explain my observation on this Russian effort that on the surface embraces China.

Perhaps this is transactional: "Russian plans for roughly 12,000 North Korean workers to join the Alabuga Special Economic Zone (ASEZ) in the Republic of Tatarstan by the end of 2025 to work at Russia’s factory producing Shahed-type drones." But could it be more?

The mullahs don't care that Canada is "nice": "Canada's domestic spy agency this year foiled potentially lethal threats by Iran directed against people whom Tehran sees as enemies, the agency's head said in a rare speech on Thursday." 

I'm going to need some new information to believe the French government suppressed information about jihadis torturing victims during the 2015 Bataclan massacre. Isn't slaughtering 130 innocents in the entire series of murder sprees enough to fight jihadis until they are no more?

China has new prototype flying wing drones/loyal wingmen for land and carrier operations

Can AI enable and accelerate this ideal? "The armed forces that perform most efficiently follow five steps: acquire combat experience, analyze it, propose recommendations, distribute the recommendations and lessons throughout the force, and, finally, apply what has been learned throughout the forces."

I'm not worried about the Pentagon getting rid of senior officers despite some claims it hurts us--I agree we need it. And part of the problem is the sheer size. As for much of the rest of the author's claims? Not so much. More later.

A reminder that mullahs on a Mission from Allah can't be partly defeated or even mostly defeated. Alive and in power, they are relentless. Ultimately, the ideology must be discredited and marginalized in Islamic society. To support that change, make good jihadis.

Fair weather silver bullet wonder weapon: "Russian forces used weather conditions to exploit vulnerabilities in Ukraine’s drone-based battlefield defenses in the Novopavlivka direction, highlighting Ukraine’s need for traditional weapons systems." FPV drones have not repealed combined arms warfare.

Saturday, November 15, 2025

The Day of the Dead Government

Is Mexico rationalizing a slide into drug cartel governments? A decision not to fight the cartels is the first step. The Day of the Dead murder tragically symbolizes the death of government legitimacy in Mexico.

Mexico's government has decided to with the theory that the drug cartels are fiery but mostly peaceful organizations best left alone:

Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum ruled out a new "war on drugs" as a response to the assassination of a regional mayor who was shot at a Day of the Dead celebration, a brazen killing that has sparked national outrage.

"Returning to the war against el narco is not an option," Sheinbaum told reporters Monday, referring to the bloody anti-crime offensive launched almost two decades ago. "Mexico already did that, and the violence got worse."

The president spoke as the nation was reeling from the killing Saturday of Carlos Manzo, mayor of Uruapan in the west-central state of Michoacán, which has become an organized-crime battleground. She condemned the assassination as "vile" and vowed to track down his killers.

While Mexican mayors and other local officials are frequent cartel targets — scores have been assassinated in recent years as gangs fight for control of city halls, budgets and police forces — the killing of Manzo struck a nerve nationwide.

The nerve struck triggered a fetal position spasm. Mexico has adopted the "Let the Wookie win" theory

One day the cartels will decide it is easier to be the Mexican government than bribe or intimidate the government. Hell, the current government might believe it can invite the barbarians inside the walls in the belief that "hugging" the barbarians can control and civilize them.

America will have a major problem globally if that happens. Then it will be time to page General "Blackjack" Pershing

UPDATE: Does the government fear and/or value cartels or protesters more?

Several thousand people took to the streets of Mexico City on Saturday to protest crime, corruption and impunity in a demonstration organized by members of Generation Z, but which ended with strong backing from older supporters of opposition parties. 

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.