Wednesday, September 17, 2025

Is It Folly to Hold the First Island Chain?

Is holding the line at the First Island Chain folly that risks our hard-to-replace military assets? The Army, which can't sail or fly away with the same ease as Air Force and Navy assets is perhaps sensitive to this issue more than the other services. 


The larger PLA on interior lines with the ability to hit lines of supply threaten America and its allies

“Fading advantages in firepower, distributed forces, and the growing operational reach of China’s People’s Liberation Army (PLA) require an expansion of operational thought,” wrote Maj. Patrick Smith in a recent essay for Military Review, an Army professional publication. “The joint force must consider methods of retrograde to shape advantages in time, space, and force.”

Maybe the problems of War Plan Orange are too great to overcome despite today's different situation. The Army remembers Bataan. And I worry that penny packets of Marine SIFs will repeat that agony. This vulnerability may explain some capabilities that could self-deploy over significant water gaps--to fight or retreat--if necessary.

But some allies whose forces are vital to defeat China can't retreat. And we'd lose one advantage of maintaining forward positions

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 the linked Military Review article.

Tuesday, September 16, 2025

Sh*t Got Rail in NATO

NATO learned that wars can be long and require a lot more ammunition and supplies than they had been prepared to deliver. And of course, delivering those supplies has to be done. Enter the railroads.

Logistics become important when the Sh*t nears the fan

Belgium, the Netherlands and Germany are in talks to revive the Iron Rhine railway, a line dating back to the 19th century, aiming to boost military mobility in response to the growing Russian threat. ...

Iron Rhine, which once connected the Port of Antwerp in Belgium to Germany’s industrial Ruhr region, was pivotal for Allied forces during and after World War II. Largely unused for decades, parts of it have been abandoned since 1991.

Note that projects like this count toward the last 1.5 percentage points of the 5% of GDP NATO defense pledge.  

NATO didn't have the logistics to invade Russia. Putin provoked change. And then he provided a sense of urgency. Bravo.

#WhyRussiaCan'tHaveNiceThings 

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.

Monday, September 15, 2025

The Winter War of 2022 Wonders About a Hard Fall

Russia is stripping troops from other part of the front to reinforce the Donbas front for a fall offensive. Will that work? Will Ukraine exploit that focus by hitting a weakened part of the Russian line? Or will Russia fool us with a big push designed to win the war and not just a battle?

The war goes on. Of note, Russia tried to brush back NATO from the plate with a large drone incursion into Poland, escalating past pressure tactics:

But the flight of multiple Russian drones over Poland this week marks a clear escalation, experts say. NATO responded with overwhelming force.

I suspect none of the drones that were shot down or crashed had warheads. But rather than intimidate NATO into reducing support for Ukraine with a hollow threat to expand the war Russia is already struggling with against Ukraine, this will only speed up NATO efforts to rearm.

Bravo, Putin. You da man. 

Russia is also escalating aerial attacks on Ukrainian cities; Ukraine is escalating aerial attacks on Russian strategic targets. Russia still crawls forward yet its casualty rate had fallen in recent months, seemingly exploiting the thin Ukrainian front line:

Russian territorial gains have become less costly over the last four months compared to Spring 2025 as Russian forces are sustaining a lower casualty rate per square kilometer seized.

Yet Ukraine has mounted some significant local counter-attacks.  

I've read that Russian reinforcements allocated to a Russian fall offensive include a division from the Kherson front. Does that provide Ukraine with an opportunity? 

Is Russia really telegraphing their Big Push?

Russia is massing troops and tanks around the besieged fortress city of Pokrovsk in eastern Ukraine’s Donetsk Oblast, building up heavy forces for what Ukrainian drone operator Kriegsforscher described as a “last, final battle” for the east. But Ukraine isn’t just waiting around for Russia to attack. 

While the Ukrainian ground forces surge reserves into the Pokrovsk sector, the Ukrainian air force, drone branch and special services are bombarding the gathering Russian troops with drones and cruise missiles.

Ground reinforcement and aerial spoiling attacks are Ukraine's immediate response to Russia's troop movements and apparent intention.

Will Russia break Ukraine's ground forces with a Final Offensive in the Pokrovsk region? 

Or will Russia repeat Iran's 1987 Karbala V offensive intended to finally break the Iraqis after years of bloody Iranian offensives, but which actually broke the Iranians? 

But if Russia's ground forces do break, as I've noted repeatedly Ukraine has to attack to reveal and exploit that possible fact. Iraq was able to do that in 1988 because it had greatly enlarged its army, including expanding the Republican Guard regime protection loyalists into a large offensive force. That was key because much of Iraq's army was optimized to hold their fortifications line and incapable of carrying out offensive mobile operations.

Are we even looking for signs? Or do we take Russian bravado at face value and assume Russia's infantry will one day decide the war--on offense?

If Ukraine holds off Russia's fall offensive to finally win the long battle for eastern Ukraine, a broken Russian army might not be noticed in the relief of Ukraine not breaking. Could Ukraine launch a counteroffensive to exploit a culminated and possibly broken Russian army in the east?

I have speculated that Ukraine and NATO surely aren't counting on Ukraine remaining on the strategic defensive just exhausting Russia. I'd expect more in strategic thinking. And with NATO's help, Ukraine did build nine new brigades to attack in summer 2023. So Ukraine could do it again. And if the lesson is that new brigades need more than half a year of training, we've had more than two years pass since the failed summer 2023 Ukrainian counteroffensive. 

Is Ukraine preparing for such an offensive with its newly formed corps formations?

While Russian exhaustion could be how the war ends, I can't believe Ukraine's commanders and their NATO friends aren't trying to figure out how Ukraine could seize the initiative somewhere and launch a counteroffensive that will achieve a decisive victory on one section of the front.

Or at least a significant counter-attack to achieve a significant victory over those offensives such as the Poktrovsk region and drive the Russians back from several months worth of advances.

While I mentioned the Pokrovsk region in that post, I speculated that a post-Kursk (1943) style counteroffensive might cross the Dnipro River against a weaker Russian defensive line suffering from the effects of Ukraine's efforts against supplies and Crimea infrastructure:

After two years of rebuilding its army after the failed summer 2023 counteroffensive, could Ukraine be preparing for a river assault at the distant end of Russia's supply lines? With perhaps supporting operations across the now-dry Kakhovka Reservoir that may by now be able to handle the movement and supply of significant forces? 

That's my hope for a big win. I think a Pokrovsk region Ukrainian counter-attack would be less decisive as it pushes Russians back to their sources of supplies and reinforcements as well as fortification lines.

Do the Russians have tunnel vision on finally securing all of Donetsk province that Russia has been trying to capture since 2014? I can't help but wonder if the Russians are feinting at Pokrovsk while preparing for a big push elsewhere in the northeast or north. Russia started to take Vienna Kiev in 2022. Maybe they will finally make a serious effort to take the city in 2025. 

Putin pretends Russia could fight forever. He knows Russia can't. Yet Putin hasn't retreated from his objective of total victory. Maybe he will try to achieve total victory so the war just won't go on, week after week. 

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: Map from Warfare History Network.

Sunday, September 14, 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: Taiwan's Marathon Problem

In case you missed it on Substack: The Oxymoron UGV Enters the Arena

In case you missed it on Substack: Russia is Preparing For a Civil War

In case you missed it on Substack: The Siren Song of Urban Warfare

Somebody smells a (jihadi) grenade. Tip to Instapundit. I've been shocked that jihadis have not struck us at home so long after our defeat in Afghanistan over four years ago.

Invite Taiwan to RIMPAC. It's a step toward driving the PLA into the sea

Putin is worried: "there have been 56 deaths of successful businesspeople and officials under strange circumstances since February 2022. Many of them have fallen out of windows. More and more, people who have loyally served Putin’s system are being persecuted, mainly on the grounds of corruption." Hmm.

There is a subset of the right that forget that America fought on the side of the good guys in World War II. Stop that.

I'm not sure what I think about stopping "section 333" defense support, but the bigger picture is pushing Europe to bear more of the financial burden of defending Europe, no? Is the "signal" of ending that program really stronger than the reality of increased European capabilities?

I'm no expert, but that seems epically stupid. Or maybe just ordinary stupid. But still ...

Ten F-35s were deployed to Puerto Rico

Soldier killed on rifle range at Fort Wood. I assume the named battalion is a training-only "infantry" unit for administrative purposes at the basic training facility. I was in the 3-10 infantry but was not in any way an infantryman.

Sh*t happens--even to SEAL Team 6

Britain chooses quality over quantity for its new tank design

Yemen hits Israeli airport with suicide drone

Somebody hit Putin's nuke money, Medvedev, with a clue bat, please. Because you're damned right Finland is preparing for war with Russia!  Don't invade Finland and there won't be war.

Ukraine's NATO sanctuary expands. So far Russia limits itself to covert sabotage missions.

China's neighbors arm up and collaborate in response to China's rising power. Never forget that America's military strength allows them to band together rather than seek to be the last swallowed

It is somewhat comforting that Taiwanese have a will to resist: "The real obstacle is political polarization." But at the unit of analysis of the country, it may not matter why Taiwan is less prepared to resist an invasion. 

That would be 20% of the incoming: "Ukraine intercepted 150 Russian drones in one night with air defense drones, Zelenskyy said." The prophecy is fulfilled. 

Israel launched a brigade-sized operation in the West Bank after terrorists hit Jerusalem.  

The Army is trying out an Infantry Squad Vehicle-mounted laser designed to defeat small drones and other aerial threats.  

I doubt if this is more than a false spring of friendlier India-China relations. But you have to admit that India wins if China stops capturing Indian territory to maintain friendlier ties. Yet China won't stop.

Knowing the exercises will be observed, I suspect they will be Potemkin Storm disinformation: "Western observers will use Zapad 2025 to gauge the readiness of the Russian military three years after it attacked Ukraine." 

The secretary of defense and chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff visited a Puerto Rico Air National Guard base.

As long as firing a non-line of sight missile through the barrel doesn't foul the barrel for shells, I really like a NLOS missile for tanks.

America's allies step up: "A Canadian frigate and Australian destroyer sailed through the Taiwan Strait over the weekend, prompting protests from China." 

Sadly, jihadis thrive in the anarchy of Somalia: "U.S. Africa Command has now launched more annual airstrikes in Somalia this year than at any time in the organization’s nearly 20-year history." When the locals can't mow the jihadi grass, we need to make good jihadis.

Maybe reward success, eh? "Apparently, members of the U.S. Congress are discussing recognizing Somaliland as a state separate from Somalia. This would be a change in policy." Puntland has work to do. Formal Somalia is experiencing a dead cat bounce lately. Ethiopia would like an independent Somaliland.

[Cue foreboding music]: "President Vladimir Putin [is] viewing the prospect of an army returning en masse as a potential risk he wants carefully managed to avoid destabilising society and the political system he has built, three sources close to the Kremlin told Reuters." Here we go? 

Have a sense of urgency with AUKUS. Australian infrastructure to support their SSNs will sustain American SSNs, too. And the British if they make the long journey to INDOPACOM.

Will collapsing the Russian economy end Russia's invasion of Ukraine? Can the West collapse Russia's economy? If it can, will China simply prop it up more? And should we want China to expand its support?

Hamas weaponizes Western compassion by deliberately engineering Gazan suffering by stealing food and aid; and using civilians as human shields. And then claiming the suffering is a famine.

An American Army operation other than war in the complex post-World War I Balkans despite isolationist tendencies.

The Army drew 100 M2A3 Bradleys from APS-2 prepositioned stocks for a brigade's rotation into Poland. Good practice.

American home and business security systems are compromised by Chinese equipment. Could China distract America on the eve of war by opening all the doors and publicizing this on TikTok to start flash mobs for theft and home invasion?

Ah, science: "Comprehensive national power (CNP) is a central framework through which the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) measures its progress toward key strategic objectives." Does China accurately measure the correlation of forces? That is irrelevant if the CCP believes it has a scientific basis to attack.

Putin bows deeper to Xi and increases Russia's vassal status. How low can Putin bow?

Stories about a Ukrainian soldier pretending to be a Russian soldier to kill Russian troops are celebrating a war crime. Yes, Russia's war crimes are multiple orders of magnitude worse. But I refuse to celebrate when Ukraine does it.

Is China showing off its powerful Better-than-an-alliance no-name grouping? It is certainly not a China-Russia-North Korea alliance. It is China showing off its vassals. Which is useful to China as long as it has the power to compel obedience. 

OH NO! Not terrorist negotiators! "The Israeli army announced Tuesday that the Air Force launched a precise strike on Hamas's senior leadership in Qatar, with the Palestinian group claiming the IDF targeted negotiators." 

OH NO! "A French [debt] default, as an eventual result of a political limbo, could shatter Europe’s economy, dim the EU’s global star, and even dismantle the Union. " Anyway. But the threat is not imminent. 

Survivors' pucker factors skyrocket: "Hamas said on Tuesday that five of its members had been killed in an Israeli attack in Doha, including the son of Hamas's exiled Gaza chief Khalil al-Hayya." It's a good start. Did Israel open up Pandora's Box, however? Or did that ship sail when Qatar hosted terrorists?

Yes, Alger Hiss was a State Department spy for the Soviet Union

The U.S. military presumably detected the Israeli strike force before it hit Hamas in Qatar in time to alert the White House

CRS report to Congress on United States Strategic Command

The American Reaper drone is apparently capable of air-to-air combat

It is interesting that Air Force special forces practiced capturing an airfield. I guess the 82nd Airborne Division, Army Rangers, and Marine Expeditionary Units aren't enough. I don't like blurring service boundaries this much.

Is the Army encroaching on Space Force responsibilities? Or is Space Force failing to provide the Army with space capabilities? And if all services need to be in space, just what does Space Force do here?

The Philippines urged smaller nations to work together to stop China's subliminal offensive to expand territory it controls.

The president of Palau says China is trying to weaken the country

FFS: "[The F-35] has encountered another batch of upgrade inadequacies with expensive and time-consuming fixes – and the actual and potential damage to U.S. defense capabilities is very real." It's still a good plane. But good grief. And yeah, I was skeptical about a single-source engine.

Did Russia deliberately attack Poland with drones in a shot across the bow? And is that a cause to invoke NATO's Article V? If so, Russia's covert attacks already justified Article V. But Article V is not an automatic declaration of war. And Article IV talks may be enough.

In what alternate world of unicorns and candy canes does energy-exporting Russia have any interest in a stable Middle East. Being "passionate" about peace (seriously, it's in her bio) is irrelevant.

China, but with warm beer? Seriously, what was Vance even talking about?

How to avoid another civil war in Syria? Avoiding a civil war requires accepting an Islamist government, of course. "Reformed" indeed

Before we discuss what Lebanon's disarmament of Hezbollah could mean for Gaza, let's see how Lebanon's government does the job. And see if Israel is given the space to defeat Hamas. 

Some F-22s are getting technology and weapons upgrades

The Phalanx CIWS is being updated, I assume to shoot down small drones in defense of ships and land bases. 

When the Philippines told America to leave Subic Bay after the Cold War, we left. Now, we--and others--are back as China threatens the Philippines and its government is willing to resist

Despite much talk that Putin is getting away with murder since the Alaska meeting--with people losing their sh*t over the likely drone attacks on Poland (and I wonder if they had warheads)--I suspect Trump is quietly working to squeeze Russia militarily and economically. 

The Hudson Institute recommends eight targets that Ukraine should smash up to really cripple Russia's warfighting capabilities

Putin praised Kim Jong-Un at the Peking meeting, and Xi elevated Un's profile while possibly accepting North Korea's nuclear ambitions. The great game is on

Poland responded to the drone incident by moving some troops closer to the border with Belarus where Zapad-2025 exercises scheduled to be held. Are Belarusians willing to be used by Putin to intimidate--and one day to attack--NATO? 

I'm not going to assume that Charlie Kirk was assassinated by a left wing lunatic. We live in a big country and you never can tell. But if his murder is political, we need our own Je Suis Charlie resolve against political violence. And we mustn't let it fade as the French allowed it.

I don't assume social media posts pledging war after Kirk's murder are genuine. It is too easy to stand in the middle of social media and throw matches in both directions. Keep calm and react coolly. I remember the 1970s. Thank God we didn't have social media then. We can trust the government to investigate.

NATO's response to the Poland drone incident doesn't have to be kinetics. It can be more long-range weapons for Ukraine. Or more aggressive counter-intelligence to roll up Russian intelligence assets. Or something else that hurts Russia while we smile at them across a table.

At least some of the Russian drones that entered Poland's air space were decoy drones, and so without warheads. I suspect all we be found to be unarmed. But it sure seems deliberate.

We will need to keep some old Minuteman III nuclear missiles in operation until 2050

Russia's Zapad exercise that includes Belarus is under way. The last one was in 2022 just prior to Russia's invasion of Ukraine.

Dreams come true: "Europe’s defense and autonomy were front and center in Wednesday’s State of the European Union address by Commission President Ursula von der Leyen." EU "strategic autonomy" is a code word for ejecting America from Europe.

"Beijing, Moscow and Pyongyang are far from forming a cohesive bloc, the sources said." There is no honor among the Axis of Steal.

"What if China’s global port empire isn’t the master plan Washington fears, but a patchwork of messy deals shaped as much by local politics as Beijing’s ambitions?" I'd say, I believe it

The Saudis are frustrated with subsidizing Egypt's anti-free market, debt-generating machine. How long will Egypt be Saudi Arabia's military ally? Who might step in to subsidize Egypt? 

Are Europeans the baddies on free speech? Sadly, absolutely

What the Hell is going on in Nepal? "Curfews now cage the cities, and soldiers line the streets." And how are India and China maneuvering around this crisis? 

While this assault rifle-equipped Russian FPV drone could be useful for counter-drone work, it seems rather poor for ground support.  

CRS report to Congress on the PLA.

FFS: "The U.S. Army mismanaged equipment stockpiles for U.S. Central Command, according to a recent Department of Defense Inspector General audit." 

F-35s could get some 6th generation upgrades. Just talking, so far. Straighten out the F-35s we have right now, though, okay?

Will technology make submarines vulnerable in a transparent sea? If so, American SSBNs at least will have a lot of ocean to maneuver in. Eventually we'll need protected bastions, however. 

Should mines be delivered by missiles in a contested air environment? The author suggests ASROC adaptations. But would ASurROC be better?

Well, yes, sh*t happens. But we have a Thucydides pressure valve to vent steam.

No mere treaty can limit Russian nuclear weapons. Because Sir Nukes-a-Lot needs them too much

Seriously, dudes? Worse than during World War I? World War II? The Suez Crisis? Vietnam? Ostpolitik? The Reagan administration's military build up? The first Trump term that was Armageddon? LOL. Trans-Atlantic relations will be fine.

Has four+ decades of the Islamic Republic of Iran dealt a death blow to Islamic belief in Iran? Big, if true. Bigger would be if it spread to the rest of the broader Shia world. Biggest if it spreads to the dominant Sunni world. 

Interesting: "Indonesia has embarked on its most comprehensive military restructuring in decades[.]" It includes improving air and naval components. Funny that Indonesia never felt threatened during America's long naval dominance. But sure, Indonesia is "non-aligned."

I never understood why the Ultra-Orthodox in Israel were exempted from military service

Israel and Syria continue to talk about a security deal

The Houthi still attack Israel with missiles

A mercenary storm is gathering? No. That storm already hit

Israel hit Hamas leaders in Qatar using aircraft flying over the Red Sea and used air-launched ballistic missiles. Huh. 

Russia must be desperate to risk war with NATO with their drone incursion stunt. Stupidity on a grand scale in Moscow. What is their major malfunction?

Who wins a war over Taiwan? I'm really going to want to see the Definitions Section before answering that. 

Oh please, Israel never had the world to lose. All Israel can do is be secure enough to compel the world to accept it. Because if Israel is too weak to protect itself, the world won't rescue Israel.

Collateral damage to Russia in the Caucasus from Putin's insane drive for glory in Ukraine

Yes, Russia waages war on the West. Russia has been at war a long time. And at long last, the West is acting like Russia is at war with it. #WhyRussiaCan'tHaveNiceThings

Indeed: "'hybrid warfare' has served to obscure Russia’s nature as a revisionist, imperialist, and nuclear-armed adversary." As I wrote of Crimea 2014 in Army magazine, "Hybrid warfare in that case was simple: Russia attacked Crimea. Russia denied attacking. And the West went along with Russia's fiction." 

Can Ukraine decisively harm Russia's energy supplies? 

Five reasons the A-10 must be retired. Honestly, my issue has never been about the platform. It has been a matter of whether the Air Force would prioritize close air support that the A-10 built for that mission represented

The U.S. stands with the Philippines over China's aggression at Scarborough Shoal.  

The U.S. wants Europeans to stop buying Russian oil before imposing heavy sanctions on Russia. Europeans will not do that any time soon. 

Saturday, September 13, 2025

The Insatiable Desire for Information

No matter how much surveillance technology improves, you never have enough information. Yet commanders must act before it is too late to succeed.

The commander of Ukraine’s 82nd Air Assault Brigade which participated in Ukraine's August 2024 offensive into Russia's Kursk province faced a surprise after his troops advanced into Russia:

Voloshyn said Ukrainian intelligence had vastly underestimated the number of Russian troops in Kursk and probably “wouldn’t have even gone forward if we had known.”

You never have enough information to make plans. And you never will. Yet a good commander takes what he has and makes decisions without waiting for all gaps in knowledge to be filled and to verify all that he thinks he knows

Because an enemy with sufficient information that acts quickly and is able to adapt as new information comes in will stagger your forces. And make obsolete all the precious information you were collecting, poring over, and pondering to formulate the perfect plan considering all possible problems. Don't forget the staff officers who support the commander:

To win in large-scale combat, divisions require agile battle rhythms that support informative and collaborative running estimates to empower decision-makers to make timely and risk-informed decisions that maximize the effects of all elements of combat power at the decisive place and time. 

So fingers crossed on learning the right lessons:

NATO allies are expanding efforts to connect their technology and weapon systems, standardize data processes and induce more flexibility in combat formations to prepare for future conflicts[.]

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. You know you want to. 

NOTE: Photo from the article.

Friday, September 12, 2025

China's Barge-on-Stilts Isn't a "Game Changer" Invasion System

China doesn't need to build a "game changer" amphibious warfare system to invade Taiwan. But every little bit adds up.

From the Well, Duh files:

Since March, China has been making a splash with manoeuvres off its south coast involving a line of odd-looking barges with retractable legs that work like giant stilts.  ...

But analysts in Taiwan say that, for the moment, the barges are not helping China much in achieving a capability to invade the island. 

Obviously they aren't intended as a forcible entry enabler. Duh. The article even notes this further down. The barges are one more means to move PLA forces across the Taiwan Strait. Think of them not as the key system to crack Taiwan's defenses but as more grains of sand in the invasion beach China is creating.

In related news:

Changle and Xiang’an International are now military lily pads for large-scale air and drone attacks and airborne and air resupply operations against Taiwan.

U.S. sources note other activity that certainly looks like preparation for an attack.

Oh. 

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. You know you want to. 

NOTE: The image is from the first article.

Thursday, September 11, 2025

Canada at a Strategic Crossroads

Does Canada even recognize who its enemies are? Do that before rebuilding the military. FFS, the "51st state" taunt was political and not geopolitical. Get over it. Be a member and defender of the West.

Canada has not really adapted to the new era of great power competition:

Mired in the turbulence of shifting geopolitical tides and revived great power competition, Canada stands at a crossroads, this time on the question of whether to pursue membership in strategic partnerships like the Quad and AUKUS. These anti-China coalitions — created to balance against China’s rising power — may look tempting, but they mean engaging in strategic competitions that do not directly affect Canadians while limiting the country’s sovereignty. Instead of picking sides with the US and Europe in their geopolitical horse-trading, Canada should pursue a truly independent foreign policy, one centered on narrow self-interest. 

One, I find it interesting that Canada supposedly has no interest in defeating the Nexus of Evil; and instead should focus on their own sovereignty, social welfare, being an international "honest broker", peacekeeping (oh?), and maintaining trade with China. 

Focusing on such "narrow self-interest" actually counts on somebody else actually protecting Canada from those who hate the West. 

I think Canada could serve itself and its allies by simply not stinking on ice. Be able to project power into the Arctic and we'll all be fine. Indeed, if Canada can't at least do that, its sovereignty in far northern Canada is simply lines on a map.

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. You know you want to. 

NOTE: I made the image with Bing.

Wednesday, September 10, 2025

Putin Likes Big Booms, and He Cannot Lie (About That)

Russia leans even more heavily on nuclear weapons for its territorial defense.

The Russians like nukes. They like to threaten perceived enemies with them. Even tiny Norway.

Russia already violated the INF treaty on limits to less-than-intercontinental nuclear weapons. And now it has officially quit, blaming American plans:

Russia will no longer abide by a defunct treaty prohibiting the deployment of intermediate-range missiles, the country’s Foreign Ministry announced on Monday.

But Washington has accused Moscow of violating the pact for over a decade, and Russia has been known to use missiles with ranges banned by the treaty during its war against Ukraine.

In a statement, the Russian Foreign Ministry said that Moscow “no longer considers itself bound” by its “previously adopted self restrictions” under the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty, noting that the United States was moving to deploy intermediate-range missiles in Europe and Asia.

I suspect Russia's withdrawal from the INF treaty is based on China's growing nuclear arsenal. Not everything is about America

And blaming America and NATO is a convenient Russian excuse to avoid openly recognizing the threat China poses to Russia's territorial integrity. Especially now after immolating Russia's ground forces in Ukraine, nukes are even more vital for Russian 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. You know you want to. 

NOTE: I made the meme with imgflip.com.