Tuesday, January 27, 2026

Indian Security Moves to the Sea

China is a relatively larger threat to India than Pakistan is. "Relative" is the key.

I won't argue with this assessment:

For decades, South Asia's security logic has been grounded on land: the Line of Control in Kashmir, disputed borders, and crises that almost invariably began on land. Recent developments in the Indian Ocean and the Arabian Sea, however, suggest that the true center of gravity in the regional balance of power is gradually shifting toward the maritime domain. 

Yes. This has been increasingly true since India moved from seeing Pakistan as its main potential enemy to seeing China as its main potential enemy. Now, the Indian Ocean is where India has the best balance of power compared to China

Can the PLAN run India's gauntlet? But does the PLAN need to? And should India fight further east in the South China Sea?

India is already building a screen at its Andaman and Nicobar island chain. But Chinese nuclear subs have other paths to reach Indian home waters. Holding the line east of the Malacca Strait line will reduce China's ability to exploit their capability to rain down anti-ship ballistic missiles on Indian ports and home waters

Not that Pakistan isn't still a land threat, of course. Backed by nukes. 

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, January 26, 2026

The Winter War of 2022 Sure Looks Like a Stalemate

Russia's caviar imperial dreams can't be backed up by their borsch budget. 

The war goes on. Ukrainian civilians shiver in the dark and Russian troops die in huge numbers so Putin can claim glorious advances. Peace talks continue. Putin still insists with the confidence he had in February 2022 that he must have total victory.

Putin's big talk doesn't really match what his ground forces have achieved thus far:

Russian President Vladimir Putin continues to demonstrate that he will not be satisfied with a peace settlement that only pertains to Ukraine and does not radically restructure NATO. ...

The Kremlin continues to forward the false narrative that Ukraine’s defenses are on the verge of collapse, but data on Russian gains since the start of the full-scale invasion demonstrates otherwise. 

Big talk! You and what army? That graph sure looks a lot like a stalemate to me. And since Russia invaded and has the strategic initiative, that's more of a problem for Russia given its stated goal of conquering Ukraine and gelding NATO.

I know, some people vehemently say "stalemate" doesn't mean static and a lot is going on--so stop using that term! But I think everyone who says it is a stalemate fully understands the nuance of a raging and bloody war along a barely moving front. So yeah, it's a stalemate:

Russian military and political leaders are growing increasingly concerned at the slow, or no, movement of Russian forces in Ukraine. ... Pre-war Russian army planning documents, based on World War II experience, stipulated that Russian troops should be able to advance at between 1.5 and 3 kilometers a day. In Ukraine, the latest Russian offensive operations have been advancing at the rate of one or two kilometers a month.

I don't know how stable the ground stalemate is. But right now, the front is kind of not moving.

NOTE: ISW updates continue here

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.  

NOTE: Graph from ISW, obviously. 

Sunday, January 25, 2026

Weekend Data Dump

I'm duplicating the Weekend Data Dump on Substack. You can read it there if you prefer. Or if you really want to comment online.

Help me out by subscribing on Substack and by liking and sharing posts. I occasionally post short data dump-type items on my Substack "Notes" section

In case you missed it on Substack: Business Before Pleasure

In case you missed it on Substack: The Iraq War

In case you missed it on Substack: The Rumors of Maneuver's Death Are Greatly Exaggerated

In case you missed it on Substack: The Good Neighbor Policy 2.0

Consider that the Truman carrier strike group was in an active front that would have been given priority for deploying. Yet there were problems during its deployment.

Right now the Greenland Kerfuffle with NATO is posturing by all sides—about invading and the end of NATO. Negotiations will resolve this. In part, because I assume invading absent an imminent Chinese or Russian threat would result in bipartisan impeachment and conviction.

Huh: “China recorded its lowest birth rate on record in 2025, the statistics office in Beijing reported on Monday.” Honestly, we don’t even know what China’s population is right now.

The idea that America would invade Greenland is ridiculous. Especially when you consider there are tens of thousands of American support troops across Europe who would be taken prisoner rapidly if America goes to war with NATO. FFS, people. Breathe.

Huh: “Takaichi is likely to ​hold a news conference later on Monday ​to announce her intention to dissolve parliament and call a snap election in February, capitalising on her administration's strong approval ‍ratings.”

Israel is massing forces in reaction to Hezbollah rebuilding. I try to learn from reality. But I was premature in admitting error about my long-held belief that destroying Hezbollah requires a ground drive into the Bekaa Valley.

Did Saudi Arabia flex its power or is “disbanding” a fig leaf? “Yemeni politicians met Sunday in Saudi Arabia’s capital in their first public gathering since a southern separatist group backed by the United Arab Emirates was disbanded following weeks of clashes.”

If Israel slowed an American strike on Iran’s mullah regime, Israel is now ready to cope with Iranian acts: “As regional tensions rise, the IDF reassures the Israeli public that it is fully prepared for any scenario, urging reliance on official channels for updates.”

“It’s a joke”: “Army Secretary Dan Driscoll told soldiers during a town hall at Fort Drum, New York, this week that the Dronebuster — a handheld jammer designed to zap unmanned aerial systems out of the sky — is ‘fucking terrible’ in his experience.”

Coastal defense offense: “The U.S. Army is massively revving up its hypersonic weapons capability in the Pacific to enable U.S. forces to strike targets traveling at Mach 5 for ranges of roughly 1,700 miles.”

The Defiant-class BBG (a.k.a. Trump class) will spread hypersonic missiles throughout the fleet? I have my doubts about the volume of ships expected.

Well, the Navy has been confident about a lot of its failed ship plans: “The Navy is confident that it can put its new FF(X) frigate in the water by 2028, senior service officials said Jan. 15.”

GAO: “The Navy doesn’t have a clear plan for replacing the capabilities of an aging destroyer used to test the effectiveness of ship defense systems[.]” I didn’t even know about that ship.

Hmm: “A retired UK rear admiral, Philip Mathias, argues the UK share of AUKUS is at serious risk of collapse because Britain lacks enough skilled people to build and sustain nuclear submarines.”

Mutually useful: “The U.S. and Japan have pledged to further expand joint training across Japan’s southwest region, including the first island chain[.]”

Fulfilling a 2024 agreement: “U.S. forces have fully withdrawn from an air base in western Iraq in implementation of an agreement with the Iraqi government, Iraqi officials said Saturday.” The last time Iraq told us to pull our troops out, ISIL overran large chunks of Iraq.

Could a compact of free association between America and Greenland work? If Denmark and Greenland residents agree, of course.

Yeah, I’m also unclear about why Trump is being so aggressive toward European states in the Greenland Kerfuffle. I assume this is more pressure that will ultimately be withdrawn. But why be so verbally aggressive?

Yeah: “Truly, there is no more perfect union than the one between President Trump and the news media. They live for each other.” This panic may be a modern version of Yellow Journalism before the Spanish-American War. Breathe, people. I hope the alleged panic is mostly social media bots.

Cuba’s rulers will have some ‘splaining to do” without Venezuela’s free oil.

Interesting part of Putin’s regime threatens to get wobbly—again.

A destroyer and an oceanographic survey ship: “A pair of U.S. naval vessels carried out Washington’s first reported Taiwan Strait transit of 2026, according to Chinese and U.S. officials.”

Firing an air-to-ground missile from a vertical launch system on a ground vehicle.

Here we go: “The U.S. Supreme Court could rule on Tuesday that President Donald Trump’s trade tariffs are illegal[.]” I assumed huge tariffs were tools to get trade deals; and I hoped for success before the power was rightly struck down.

Britain retreats from east of Suez—again? “The Royal Navy is to turn its back on the Middle East as its last remaining ship in the region sails home.” For good?

Will the EU invoke its economic “Article 5” to fight American tariffs? Macron raised the possibility. The EU has ulterior motives. And Macron’s support for that is also self-serving. Of course, knowing that threat will be soon struck down by the Supreme Court is clarifying all around, no?

If you need a rifle on your yacht, don’t sail to Russia. He was going to meet a Russian “woman” he met online. Now we have to exchange an actual Russian spy for that idiot?

Sigh: “The US-backed, Kurdish-dominated Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) capitulated to the Syrian government in a ceasefire agreement on January 18.” Throwing victims to the jihadis won’t create tame Islamists.

Iran’s mullah regime is pretending to be willing to moderate its behavior to hold off American military power. Did the regime slaughter enough Iranians for this to seem like a good pretend deal to America?

I’m assuming more rhetorical pressure like this indicates that peak pressure is about to arrive before a Greenland deal is struck. It will be called TACO by his political foes, but it will be the plan. Hoping. Assuming. Whatever.

Huh: “US aviation authorities issued notices Friday warning airlines to ‘exercise caution’ in the airspace over Mexico and Central America due to ‘military activities.’”

1500 troops from the Army’s 11th Airborne Division in Alaska were alerted for possible movement to Fort Sumter Minneapolis.

Mowing the grass: “Nigerian air force strikes destroyed about 10 canoes and killed more than 40 militants preparing attacks in Borno state, the military said late on Sunday[.]”

Canada’s closer trade ties with China risk making them China’s 24th province. Or maybe just the 6th autonomous region.

China mocks the Trump-class (Defiant) battleship is an “easier target”. I agree. But as time goes on, will China try to keep up with the Joneses for status?

I didn’t link this the first time, assuming it was old news: “U.S. forces on Friday killed a terror leader in Syria who officials say had ties to the ISIS insurgent who carried out a Dec. 13 ambush there that killed two Iowa National Guardsmen and one U.S. civilian[.]”

Navy and Air Force assets are moving toward Iran. I’m more interested in the SSGNs we don’t see moving.

Trump offered to move Putin from the children’s table to the big boy Gaza Board of Peace. If Russia doesn’t end its war on Ukraine and recognize China as Russia’s foe, I assume his board duties will be providing refreshments and a light snack.

Well that’s boring: “Major airfield upgrades are in the works for the U.S. military’s base in Greenland even as a diplomatic crisis between the United States and NATO allies in Europe ratchets up …”

Some “analysts” are too narrowly focused. Nobody ever said solving one problem ends all problems. I’d rather cope with nuclear proliferation issues of a post-mullah Iran than let nutball mullahs get nuclear missiles.

Strategypage on the national security strategy: “The United States wants its allies, particularly the ones in Europe, to make more of an effort to defend themselves.” This is an understatement: “the President's unique deal-making skills…” You can read my take on the 2025 NSS here.

I didn’t understand why he was fine with it: “President Trump has called the U.K.'s decision to hand over the Chagos Islands to Mauritius — a deal his administration previously supported — an act of ‘great stupidity’[.]” Hard to argue with him now.

An updated CRS report to Congress on the “Trump” BBG(X). My thoughts.

For Kuwait or Jordan? The U.S. moved 278th ACR regiment Abrams tanks and Bradley Fighting Vehicles to CENTCOM. I hope they have drone defenses.

Linking a Greenland deal to helping Ukraine? Ukraine is killing more Russian troops than ever, at a better kill ratio. Ukraine’s problem isn’t lack of American aid (America still supports Ukraine), it’s lack of Ukrainian troops. Unless Ukraine is holding back units in reserve …

Hmm: “Senior leaders of the Hamas terror group are preparing a ‘safe exit’ from the Gaza Strip[.]” I assume they believe loyal subordinates will keep their seats warm in their absence.

Are America and China both fragile powers with internal divisions and debt that will cripple them? That’s a fair point. But who could replace either in the pecking order? Also, I think America is better able to adapt.

Internal security operations by ICE are “chaotic” in states that refuse to hold and turn over violent criminal aliens and that encourage “resistance” to law enforcement. Tip to Instapundit.

Could the Marine Corps deploy quickly to fight in a Korean War II that suddenly erupts—again? I think the ROK ground forces can handle another ground war. I worry about Marine offensive action to really hurt the PLAN.

The Orange Scare. Breathe, people.

A faux crisis: “Donald Trump’s voracious appetite for Greenland is breathing new life into the idea of Europe setting up the equivalent of the U.N. Security Council — a forum for top leaders to act swiftly in times of crisis.” So naturally the EU exploits the “crisis”.

China’s seven crises coming up in 2026.

What’s up with China’s Tehran Airlift?

More about Ukraine’s UUV attack on a Russian sub in a Black Sea port: “Ukrainian naval drones have revolutionized naval warfare that takes place within a few hundred kilometers of a coastline.” I respectfully disagree.

It is quiet and has a low thermal signature: “Ukraine has sent a hybrid hydrogen-powered drone into combat for the very first time.” The need to defeat counter-measures increases the drone’s price, I imagine.

As long as it is simple to operate the new Army tank, cool.

Well that’s boring: “NORAD confirmed that multiple aircraft are deploying to Pituffik Space Base in Greenland to support pre-planned operations coordinated with Denmark and Greenland.”

The SOP storm before the calm: “President Trump predicted that both the U.S. and NATO will be satisfied with a deal on the future of Greenland ahead of meetings with European leaders in Davos.”

Part II of Naval News’ review of the PLAN in 2025. With a link to Part I that I missed. Part I looks at the surface fleet. It is bigger and badder. I assume U.S. Navy training and command and control is superior. But I hope we can accurately assess that rather than assume it.

Americans who claim any American help for those resisting tyrants will “taint” the resistance and cause all Iranians to “rally around the tyrant’s flag” sure are eager to get foreign help against their domestic enemy.

No one wants a war with China over Taiwan—but America must prepare for one. In the short run, yes. But better yet, divert China’s attention inland.

Maybe, but AI is just the distillation of conventional wisdom available on the Internet: “Heritage Foundation researchers harnessed the power of artificial intelligence to argue in a new report that the U.S. is not prepared for a war with China.” But it may be useful nonetheless.

Good Lord, that’s still a tiny Army: “the Army will grow to 454,000, up 11,700 from last year[.]” Other active service levels—except the Marines—will grow, too; and reserve forces take a small hit, with increases and decreases across the services. If enacted, of course.

I’ve heard that mullah claims that 500 Iranian security troops have been killed relies on counting protesters as security troops in order to make this look more like a war than mass murder.

I have concerns about punishing a retired military officer who is a member of Congress; but claiming this will mute other retired officers ignores that the UCMJ places limits on the speech of active military members and retired officers.

Britain begins test firing the new 120mm smoothbore cannon on the Challenger 3 tank. Not that the British Army will get many.

Russia warns Britain not to intercept its shadow fleet tankers smuggling oil.

Canada’s best defenses are size, cold, and complete American disinterest in conquering Canada. But sure: “Canada’s military has modeled how it would respond to an American invasion[.]” Now do the far north.

I wonder if Trump would be as concerned about American use of Greenland for defending America (and other allies and friends) if not for Britain’s bizarre determination to shoot itself and America in the foot over Diego Garcia.

Well that’s boring: “President Donald Trump insisted he wants to ‘get Greenland, including right, title and ownership,’ but said he wouldn’t employ force to achieve that[.]”

The murders will continue until faith in Allah improves: “Gunfire echoed through Tehran Tuesday as heavily armed militias were deployed across the Iranian capital, transforming some districts into fortified zones under intense security.”

Yeah, Syria’s Kurds are being thrown under the bus. This will have collateral damage in Syria, Iraq, Turkey, and Iran.

Turkey, Saudi Arabia, and Pakistan are frenemies at best. Is an alliance between these rivals for regional dominance a case of wanting the others peeing outside from inside the tent rather than vice versa?

Oh? “Greenland Won’t Break NATO, But It Could Make Article 5 Feel Conditional[.]” Article V has always been conditional. It only seemed unconditional in the Cold War because many NATO armies lined up on the border with East Germany.

Please restore you pucker factor to its fully upright position and prepare for a hard landing.

Who’s got what in the Arctic.

People could have listened to me instead of consuming Greenland Invasion Porn: “Trump said he had agreed with the head of NATO on a ‘framework of a future deal’ on Arctic security, potentially defusing tension that had far-reaching geopolitical implications.” And tariffs canceled.

The European Union is the real bully in its zeal to strip away the prefix on its proto-imperial project.

It’s all effed up in Russia. But that situation is normal there. So Russia still endures.

Russia’s strategic bombing campaign (well, it’s mostly trying to freeze Ukrainian civilians) relies on upgraded Iranian drones.

How boring: “Thousands of U.S. Marines are deploying to Norway this month to begin training for a NATO military exercise as President Donald Trump’s push to control Greenland continues to unsettle European leaders.”

Better speed that up: “The U.S. military said Wednesday it began transferring detainees from the Islamic State group who were held in northeastern Syria to Iraq to ensure they remain in secure facilities.”

Calling BS on this one: “The Catholic archbishop responsible for U.S. military personnel said it is ‘morally acceptable’ for service members to disobey an order if it is against their own conscience[.]” If you enlisted, your conscience is fine with obeying lawful orders.

Zumwalt set sail with hypersonic missile launchers installed.

Reaction: “Trophy active protection systems will be integrated on the Leopard 2 A8 main battle tanks of Lithuania, the Netherlands, Czech Republic and Croatia[.]”

An American F-15 squadron with experience shooting down drones is back in the Middle East.

This assumes China captured the islands: “The U.S. Marine Corps and Japan Ground Self-Defense Force’s (JGSDF) bilateral exercise ‘Iron Fist 26’ will see approximately 1,550 troops carry out amphibious landings, air assaults and more across Japan’s southwest region next month.”

The U.S. Navy’s Military Sealift Command 2025 in Review. All I really know is that it is too old and too small.

Okay: “Trump meets Zelensky as US envoy says ending war with Russia down to one issue[.]” Unfortunately, the one issue is engineering how Russia can pull its head out of its Putin.

Air-droppable supply trucks for mobile brigade combat teams—including in Arctic operations. I have issues with the mobile brigade combat team.

The Abraham Lincoln strike group ordered to CENTCOM has Marine F-35Cs.

Is the Board of Peace for Gaza a tool to “pretty much” do what we want to do? Or is it a Trojan Horse for allies of Hamas to revive the terror organization?

The Kurdish-led SDF may fracture over joining jihadi-ruled Syria.

People think America doesn’t help Ukraine resist Russia: “The United States seized another oil tanker involved with shipping sanctioned Russian oil off the coast of Venezuela.” Add in secondary sanctions, weapons sales, and intelligence.

Apparently, the UAE was hammered in Yemen. And has suffered setbacks in Somalia, Sudan, and Libya. This is a reminder to me to look for information on the UAE’s shaky proxy empire to keep an eye on its oil export routes through the Red Sea.

Greenland is primarily needed for defenses against hypersonic missile and FOBS attacks—not minerals. Normally not a fan, but he may be right. Via Instapundit.

It is interesting that frontline Ukrainian troops are aware of “peace” negotiations—not that they have views on them. On the eve of going on an intense FTX, I heard a coup started in the USSR. Hello nuclear pucker factor. I didn’t hear the outcome for days. No more view through a straw?

Perhaps the crew could just launch the poo off the ship with EMALS.

How boring: “Major defense projects involving the United States, Canada, and Norway remain on track in spite of strained relations with traditional allies following the Trump administration’s push for Greenland.”

No rally ‘round the flag effect in Venezuela.

First Armored division remembers the Americans who died winning the hard Second Battle of Fallujah twenty years ago. They created a lot of good jihadis.

In World War II, widespread knowledge of vehicle engines was invaluable. Now: “The Georgia Army National Guard successfully launched a new program this month that aims to transform troops across the state into skilled drone pilots.”

Allies helped, too: “France says it has seized an oil tanker in the Mediterranean suspected of being part of Russia's sanction-busting ‘shadow fleet’.”

Shed some light on China’s subliminal war in the South China Sea: “The Philippine military is slated to receive surveillance aircraft and additional maintenance support from Washington through the U.S. Foreign Military Sales program,[.]”

I’ve heard that the mullah’s security forces have murdered thousands—if not tens of thousands—of Iranians. Don’t know much is RUMINT.

The Army will buy more M109A7 Paladin self-propelled howitzers and ammo resupply vehicles.

In for a penny, in for a pound? My related thoughts on a Navy battleship.

Gotta admit, I too don’t seen the purported value of an Arctic Sea trade route.

Sh*t got real: “The United States has quietly started repositioning high-value [Patriot and THAAD] air defense missile systems and naval assets to the Middle East[.]” The first line of defense will be lots of cruise missiles hitting Iranian missile-launch sites.

I would never say the Russians aren’t big enough bastards to do this. I’ll just say no convincing evidence has been offered over the decades for rounding up the usual suspect. Has that changed?

My worry about the Board of Peace is narrow. Some are panicking over broader issues. I’m just impressed Trump invited Putin and Lukashenko. Better to have them inside the tent pissing out, eh? Elevating Lukashenko to parity with Putin resists Putin’s Anschluss with Belarus.

Can ill-trained leaders exploit good plans? “[Russia is] seeking to use artificial intelligence [for tactical-level situational awareness] to compensate for the low level of junior officer training and initiative in the Russian military, among other things.”

Venezuela and Greenland and Congo. Oh my!

Jihadis get oil: “Syria’s new leader Ahmad al-Sharaa has forced the Kurdish Syrian Democratic Forces/SDF o ut of the area and is regaining control over the oil fields and natural gas extraction facilities in Deir ez-Zor and Al-Raqqah provinces.” Oil won’t tame them.

China’s priorities: “In late 2024 China stopped selling drones and drone components to Ukraine. … Eventually China relented and resumed shipments. It was either that or see the non-Chinese drone manufacturers grow even more competitive.”

Huh: “Additional US and international funding has been committed to Lot 5 and Lot 6 of the Tomahawk modernisation programme[.]”

In the debate over Trump’s sphere of influence strategy, it is easy to overlook it is no such thing. Yeah, I see the strategy as global—but less reliant on sustaining the system with American ground troops. Well, we want a sphere. But enemies vote, too.

Britain has slowed its rush to give away the Chagos Islands and risk the critical Diego Garcia base.

The West has abandoned the Kurds. Again. Hey, it’s not like they are the Queen of the Victims Prom! So no outrage from the Sainted International Community.®

If China wrests control of the seas from America, it won’t be for lack of American commissions! “This moment demands a fundamental rethink of US maritime strategy, the fleets that support it, and the industrial base that underwrites military power.”

Fingers crossed: “The United States threatened to limit the Iraqi federal government’s access to its oil revenue as part of a broader US effort to curb Iranian influence within the Iraqi government.”

Hmmm: “The PLA flew a surveillance drone through Taiwanese airspace over Pratas (Dongsha) Island on January 17, possibly the first confirmed PLA violation of Taiwan’s territorial airspace in decades.” Pratas, eh?

Russia recruits cannon fodder abroad.

China adopts wargames: “The Chinese now use their wargames in much the same way Western armies do. A lot of wargaming is just to train staffs and commanders to work together while at lower tactical levels officers and troops learn tactics and what to avoid in combat.”

LOL: “EU leaders reckon Donald Trump’s about-turn on Greenland happened because they stuck together.” There was ZERO chance Trump was going to invade Greenland. But the EU has incentive to pretend it was a crisis it won.

Mali’s jihadi problem now extends to fuel shortages.

RUMINT says Iran is stockpiling bodies of those it murdered to display after an American bombing campaign. Recall that Saddam Hussein prior to the 2003 war would save up corpses for dead baby parades and blame Western sanctions for them.

If America strikes Iran, I wonder what percentage of the strike missions have to be directed at Iranian air, naval, and missile assets that can threaten American units and our allies rather than hitting pillars of internal security?

Saturday, January 24, 2026

Freedom of Navigation in Action

The United States Navy defied China's unlawful claims to control the bulk of the South China Sea with activities consistent with a Freedom of Navigation Operation (FONOP).

Message sent to China and anyone else who claims that area as their own

The Abraham Lincoln, which deployed to the Indo-Pacific from its homeport of San Diego on Nov. 24, has been in the South China Sea since at least Dec. 26, according to photos posted to the Defense Visual Information Distribution Service website.

Since then, the carrier has kept busy with flight operations, replenishments-at-sea, damage control training and explosive ordinance disposal drills. Its escort ships, which include the guided-missile destroyer USS Spruance, have also participated.

This is not a provocation. Carrying out routine military activities in waters unlawfully claimed by China must be done to distinguish the ship's presence from "innocent passage" that does not challenge Chinese claims to own that part of the sea. 

Innocent passage concedes control to the other state and essentially involves buttoning up and quietly moving through the sea area when necessary in a straight path without delay. 

China knows the difference between a FONOP and innocent passage when they see it, although it is possible to be unnecessarily less clear about the distinction. 

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. 

Friday, January 23, 2026

Jihadis Are Still On a Mission From God

Islamist murderers still want to slaughter us in large numbers. What are they doing while we focus on great power competition?

It's too quiet. I smell a grenade

The claim that jihadism is in retreat relies on a dangerous misreading of silence. It treats reduced visibility as reduced belief. That misreading has consequences.

What has disappeared is not the ideology, but its showmanship: The black flags over cities, the choreographed brutality, and the violence designed to dominate screens and seize attention. Those signals have faded, and with them a sense of alarm. Yet movements built on conviction do not need savage theatre to survive. They need grievance, identity, and a story that explains failure and promises meaning. Jihadism still offers all three.

The author worries about neglecting jihadis overseas and the conditions that breed them, even as the threat of China grows and of Russia is active.I remain torn between seeing this era as mowing the grass and seeing it as the false peace of retreat

But that's an overseas problem. That is still real, but the article raises the additional threat of Islamists burrowing into the West and no longer needing support from remote caves to kill us because the threat is "taking shape online, in prisons, in fragile states, and across European cities."

Still, saying the "West still hasn't defeated jihadism" misses that we are only a supporting factor in what is an Islamic Civil War.

Have a super sparkly day. 

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: The photo is from the Wall Street Journal.

Thursday, January 22, 2026

Indonesia: Location, Location, Location

Indonesia has leverage against China's pressure to take control over the South China Sea in Indonesia's Exclusive Economic Zone. 

Leverage

The power dynamic between Indonesia and China is more complex than the one-way economic dependence that some experts assume, since China depends on Indonesian waters for ships carrying its exports and imports between the South China Sea and Indian Ocean.

If the United States blockaded China in response to an invasion of Taiwan, for example, continued access through the Malacca Strait and Indonesia’s archipelagic waters would be vital to the Chinese economy. To maintain this access, Beijing must preserve Jakarta’s goodwill.

This makes Indonesia a valuable ally for America and its friends--especially India.

And also for Russia. Should Russia pull its head out of its Putin

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 article. 

Wednesday, January 21, 2026

Light Infantry in Close Combat

Drones in infantry units don't replace closing with and destroying the enemy.

This observation about light infantry (or any infantry fighting on foot) is important:

Our weapons, night-vision goggles (NVGs), communications, ISR (intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance), optics, lasers, and small unmanned aerial systems (UAS) give us advantages in close-range direct engagements, but they DO NOT replace the need for fundamental fighting skills. Technology serves to enhance our capabilities as we execute FUNDAMENTALS better and faster than the enemy. Don’t think for a minute that technical improvements will ever replace the need for a strong foundation in drills at the team and squad levels. I expect NCOs and company-grade officers to drive this development within their training plans regardless of branch, unit, or mission. Up-close direct fire engagements and fighting is a historical strength of the American Warrior. [emphasis removed]

Technology advances and we keep hoping that infantry is no longer needed. But that hope is wrong.

We will always need trigger pullers. And while drones are useful, if they are pushed down to even squads making each of them a mini-Army air corps, who is left to close with and destroy the enemy?

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.

Tuesday, January 20, 2026

The EU Grudgingly Wants Total Control to Keep the Bloody Peasants From Unleashing War

The European fanboys (and girls) sure do think a lot of themselves. How convenient.


America would regret Europe without the European Union

“Be careful what you wish for, lest it come true,” Aesop’s fable goes.

And any American cheering alongside the administration of U.S. President Donald Trump, calling for the dismantling of the EU on the grounds that it’s a bureaucratic Moloch guilty of “civilizational erasure,” should take that lesson seriously. ...

In reality, divorced from the European project, the continent would resemble something akin to the Western Balkans following the former Yugoslavia’s disintegration: A place where all old grievances suddenly spring back to life. And that would be especially true if the EU’s imagined dissolution were to take place at the hands of the NATO movement’s supposed allies — the so-called “patriotic” forces in European politics. 

LOL. Yeah, I'll totally risk that

It's fun that the author uses post-Yugoslavia ethnic conflict as a defense of the EU. Really? The EU has to suppress democracy to force the people not to kill each other? 

To Hell with the EU. With power its hatred of America will be free to treat America as an enemy to that control. NATO is the solution for trans-Atlantic security. Do not bend the knee to Brussels.

And please Britain, do not reconsider Brexit

NOTE: TDR Winter War of 2022 coverage continues here

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

NOTE: I made the image with Bing.

Monday, January 19, 2026

The Winter War of 2022 Tracks the Life of a Tsar

Is Russia's use of intermediate-range ballistic missiles against Ukraine the flashy expansion of a dying red tsar before contracting to a white dwarf? 

The war goes on. The big recent new thing was Russia's addition of a big, expensive ballistic missile for one of its nightly barrages to hit western Ukraine:

The intense barrage and the launching of the nuclear-capable Oreshnik missile came days after Ukraine and its allies reported major progress toward agreeing on how to defend the country from further Moscow aggression if a peace deal is struck to end Russia’s almost 4-year-old invasion. 

European moves (with America seemingly an associated power rather than Allied power in this initiative) to stabilize Ukraine after the Winter War of 2022 ends seem to assume the post-war stabilization issue is no longer one that Russia can veto. That's a whole lot of interesting:

There is a story that has been going around about a physicist, a chemist, and an economist who were stranded on a desert island with no implements and a can of food. The physicist and the chemist each devised an ingenious mechanism for getting the can open; the economist merely said, "Assume we have a can opener"!

Economists can only look on in awe at these diplomats. What intelligence do the diplomats have on Russia's ability to wage war that makes them think that when push comes to shove Russia will have to go along with a ceasefire? I'm hoping that they know things that I can only suspect and hope for.*

On the other side, the Red Juggernaut that Moscow is presenting isn't persuading some Russians:

Russian milbloggers continue to loudly reject the alternate battlefield reality that Russian President Vladimir Putin and senior Russian military commanders are trying to create.  

Yeah, an alternate battlefield reality seems about right. 

Still, it seems that we can assume a can opener for the purpose of moving discussions forward. What's it going to do, make Russia mad?

But something has to open the can to get at the post-war stabilization part of this war.

And then we might get the answer to my big question

UPDATE (Monday): Russia ramps up its efforts to freeze Ukrainian civilians, including threats to power stations that support Ukraine's nuclear energy generation

*Well, to be precise, things I hope exist and that Russia recognizes the crisis in time to avoid catastrophic disintegration. 

NOTE: ISW updates continue here

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

NOTE: GIF from NASA

Sunday, January 18, 2026

Weekend Data Dump

I'm trying out duplicating the Weekend Data Dump 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: When You Lose a War, a Lot of Details Look Bad in Retrospect

In case you missed it on Substack: Globalize the Intifida? Focus the Punishment

In case you missed it on Substack: The 2025 National Security Strategy (final thoughts and table of contents)

In case you missed it on Substack: Which Empire in Europe Will Bite the Dust?

Venezuela is dragging its feet on releasing political prisoner. Why?. A virtual occupation is difficult. Fear will subside as the Great Raid fades from memory. Fear must be reinforced constantly.

Well: “A U-Haul driver allegedly plowed into a massive crowd of protesters at an anti-Iran regime rally in Los Angeles on Sunday — injuring at least two people in a chaotic scene caught on video.” Later I read the driver was pro-MEK who are communists who oppose the mullahs and the anti-mullah protesters.

Yeah, I assumed Iranians on the streets are getting professional help from abroad. That help doesn’t make the opposition fake. It just tips the balance away from the state with all its instruments of power. Hell, I don’t assume it has to be state-provided support. Tip to Instapundit.

You only need sufficient signal to support a revolution--not the volume needed to televise it in real time. Tip to Instapundit.

In the Caribbean Sea, America captured a fifth sanctioned Venezuelan tanker.

Homeland defense: “The U.S. Coast Guard closed out 2025 with record success in maritime drug interdictions, seizing more than 511,000 pounds of narcotics valued at more than $3.8 billion, the service announced in a news release.”

The M1E3 Abrams is being displayed at the Detroit Auto Show, which began on Wednesday.

F-35 pilots will be able to control several large CCA “wingmen” drones using tablets.

America and South Korea established a joint ground forces command as part of a long-held goal of transferring responsibility for fighting a war from America to the South Koreans.

We will likely know what was decided by the time this is published: “President Trump is scheduled to be briefed Tuesday on options to respond to the protests in Iran, according to U.S. officials[.]” And maybe before if this is a ruse.

The U.S. apparently used a sonic weapon during mission to capture Maduro. To be clear, this is a less-than-lethal weapon designed to reduce deaths while protecting American forces. Do we have an airborne area effects weapon now?

This reduces one avenue for Iran to strike Israel: “Following an evacuation warning to Lebanese civilians, the IDF confirmed that it had begun striking Hezbollah infrastructure in “several areas” of southern Lebanon on Sunday evening.”

This year, Finland will start receiving the 64 F-35s it purchased. It is not the most expensive plane on a per-plane basis. It is the most expensive total purchase price for all planes produced.

F-22 updates will keep it flying into the 2060s.

America doesn’t win its wars. I emphatically disagree, other than Afghanistan which we chose to lose: “It is also necessary to consider the point spread our military uniquely operates under in non-great power wars. And don’t forget the big picture context!

Ukraine’s effort to build its own long-range cruise missile.

An economic cold war. The national security strategy wants economic rather than military competition. Hopefully China sees mutual benefit to a purely economic competition. Good luck with that.

Spheres of influence are good? I reject that false solution to great power competition.

Is Cuba next? Well sure, it is more vulnerable to collapse without Venezuelan oil. And the fall of that hostile regime would be good for America. But China and to a lesser extent Russia could assume the financial burden of sustaining Cuba if having a Caribbean outpost is important enough to them.

Is this a revolution in Iran? Hard to say. The mullahs could ride out the surge of opposition as they have in the past. But I also ask whether a threat to the mullah regime if it pans out that way is a revolution or the fragmentation of the rump Persian Empire that we call Iran today.

Good: “Germany is planning to set up a joint Nato operation in the Arctic in an effort to dissuade Donald Trump from annexing Greenland.”

Venezuela isn’t free yet. That is the problem with a virtual invasion.

Huh: Northern and Southern Commands will become American Command, or AMERICOM; the European, Central, and African Commands will become International Command, and Indo-Pacific Command will not be changed. No Polar Command?

I have no problem with this path, as described, to getting illegal aliens legalized.

The proto-imperial EU can hardly strip away the prefix without an army! “European Union Defense Commissioner Andrius Kubilius has said the bloc should consider establishing a standing military force of 100,000 troops and overhaul the political processes governing defense.” Resist this danger to America.

Wow: “Venezuela’s much-touted antiaircraft systems were essentially not connected when U.S. forces entered the skies over Venezuela’s capital, and they may not have been working for years, former officials and analysts said.” Well, you don’t have to be great to win--just better than the enemy.

Perhaps my nervousness about the Artemis II path back to the Moon that I expressed last week is not justified.

Huh: “The Trump administration is nearing a trade deal with Taiwan to reduce its tariff rate to 15% and commit Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Corporation (2330.TW) , opens new tato building at least five more facilities in Arizona, the New York Times reported on Monday[.]” Who needs an Article 5 guarantee?

Trump was briefed: “Long-range missile strikes remain an option for a potential US intervention, but Pentagon officials have also presented cyber operations and psychological campaign responses, the sources said.” Non-kinetics are great. But people being shot need to see those murdering them killed, too.

Remember that the Cape of Good Hope route is the alternative to a blocked Red Sea route: “Warships from China, Russia and Iran amassed in the waters off South Africa to kick off a weeklong drill alongside the South African National Defense Force.”

Senator Kelly sued the Pentagon for reducing his rank and pension for his despicable “obey illegal orders” video. While I don’t think Kelly as a sitting U.S. senator should be restricted, the solution is for someone in elected office is to resign their commission and forfeit their military pension to escape the UCMJ.

I’m opposed to “perfidy” in war--usually practiced by unlawful combatants--but I’ve expressed my opposition to regular military assets disguised as civilians. But if the US plane not painted like a military plane that hit a drug boat had military insignia on it, was it really a violation of the rules of war?

Does this mean all the SFAB units will be eliminated? “The Army has formally inactivated the Security Force Assistance Command based in North Carolina, eliminating the headquarters that for years oversaw brigades tasked with advising foreign militaries.”

Ukraine is using vehicle-mounted Hellfire anti-tank missiles in an anti-UAV role.

Drone air defense: “Sweden has allocated €1.4 billion ($1.6 billion) to establish multiple dispersed air defense units equipped with short-range air defense weapons to guard cities and critical infrastructure against aerial threats.” A “new” threat requires an old priority.

Is refusal a reflection of confidence in Mexican capabilities or fear of cartel power? “President Claudia Sheinbaum said Monday she rejected an offer from President Trump to use the U.S. military against the country’s drug cartels[.]”

Sh*t got real: “The United States virtual embassy in Iran urged American nationals to ‘leave Iran now,’ citing protests that are ‘escalating and may turn violent.’”

Is Iraq moving toward the strong horse by inviting American oil companies to operate there “finally mark a decisive shift in Iraq’s geopolitical stance back towards the U.S. and its Western partners, away from Russia, China, Iran, and their allies?”

China is buying more Russian oil as India reduces its purchases. When America relied on Persian Gulf oil, it established the Rapid Deployment Force. Which evolved into CENTCOM. How will China react to relying more on Russian oil exports in order to reduce its vulnerability to a stoppage?

Iran has crossed America’s red line: “Hundreds of protesters have been killed by security forces in what may be the largest − and possibly most consequential − wave of protests in Iran since 2009, human rights groups say.”

I assume the hope is that this will be brief because the mullahs will feel more pressure and flee: “President Donald Trump said on Monday that countries that do business with Iran will face a new 25% tariff.”

Lock and load: “The Army’s updated solicitation signals a clear intent to expand domestic ammunition manufacturing capacity and secure a stable second source for key calibers used across U.S. forces.”

The U.S. should avoid “nation building” in Venezuela. Sure. But distinguish “nation building” from “state building.” Trying to make tribal Afghanistan or Somalia actual nations of unified people is folly. But a friendly government is necessary to prevent chaos and the trouble that can breed there.

From the journal of the echelon above reality’s conventional wisdom: “The Iranian Regime Could Fall But a U.S. Strike Would Prop It Up”. I reject that rally around the flag argument. Note that seven months ago America bombed Iran’s nuclear facilities. Iranians are burning and not rallying around the mullah flag.

Russians have noticed Russia’s multiple foreign policy failures: “’An entire era is coming to an end,’ wrote a pro-war military blogger under the pen name Maxim Kalashnikov on Sunday, reflecting growing criticism of the Russian leadership.” Indeed, I’ve noted the end of the Russian Decline Era already.

Canada is not hedging its broad and deep relationship with America by reaching out to China. Anybody who thinks that is possible--or wise--is delusional.

I’ve been resisting being hopeful about the chances of overthrowing the mullahs in Iran. My resistance is weakening.

I heard the son of the former Shah calling on Iranians to wage cyber-war on the mullah regime. I assume that at least partially runs cover for Western (including Israeli) cyber operations.

North Korea doubles down worse relations with America and South Korea, while embracing nukes. Can China really be happy with North Korea as a loose nuclear cannon on the deck of U.S.-China relations? But perhaps North Korea and Russia have decided to resist domination by China.

Someone on Substack wrote that small UAVs force infantry into trenches, tunnels, and other cover. This is true. Until it isn’t. Consider the World War I Western Front. Infantry was forced underground to avoid fires. But during the war, weapons, equipment, and tactics emerged that made World War II different.

I’m sure Trump would be happy with only this: “Greenland’s government said on Monday it will increase efforts to ensure the defence of the Arctic territory takes place under the auspices of NATO[.]” The threats to take Greenland are for achieving this.

Whether victorious or crushed, the Iranian people are staging a revolution: “When they say ‘Death to Khamenei,’ they have crossed that threshold and entered this new era of both hope and tragedy.” Well, maybe a dissolution. But it is definitely a death match with the mullahs.

My glimmer of hope for Iran has faded. I have said it depends on whether the mullahs have security forces ready to kill. The mullahs have that: “The Iranian regime is using an unprecedented level of brutality to suppress protests.” Can America effectively help? There are limits to aerial firepower and cyber war.

The Iraq War continues as “the United States will not engage with any prime minister or appointee to the Foreign Affairs Ministry, Defense Ministry, Interior Ministry, Counterterrorism Service, National Intelligence Service, or Iraqi Army Chief of Staff who has ties to Iranian-backed Iraqi militias[.]”

The Islamist Syrian government began a limited offensive against Syrian Democratic Forces west of the Euphrates River.

Havana Syndrome still unexplained even as the Pentagon investigates a potential device. If I had to guess--and I neither have to nor have any knowledge to bolster the guess--this is either a listening device or trying to impose a pattern on random afflictions. Okay, two guesses.

Speeding to disaster? “The U.S. Army will field the long-anticipated Bell MV-75 tiltrotor aircraft this year ahead of its former schedule[.]” I’m skeptical of the deep penetration mission of the aircraft formerly known as the V-280. I’ll make an exception for small, well-planned special forces missions.

Ah, two SFABs will be retained: “The 1st SFAB, regionally aligned to U.S. Southern Command, will stay at Fort Benning, Georgia, while the 5th SFAB, which is aligned to U.S. Indo-Pacific Command, is set to stay at Joint Base Lewis-McChord in Washington[.]”

To the shores of the Senkaku Islands: “The Marine Corps’ only permanently deployed expeditionary brigade stood up a new headquarters company on Tuesday, aligning it with a Japanese amphibious brigade to streamline joint humanitarian and warfighting missions in the Indo-Pacific.”

I’m skeptical you can avoid collateral damage--the only reason to defend this way--by netting an attack drone. If the drone falls to the ground and detonates anyway, was the target really defended?

China only wants to lull India for a future snatch and grab mission: “Top leaders in India and China want to maintain the peace along their border and are working to bridge a trust deficit between the militaries of the two countries[.]”

America struck jihadis in Nigeria in cooperation with Nigeria: “The US delivered critical military equipment to Nigeria, reinforcing security cooperation with Africa’s most populous nation as it seeks to curb terrorism, banditry and kidnappings that have destabilized large parts of the country.”

As I’ve long said, Trump isn’t pro-Russian. He’s been trying to calm a rabid pit bull. Russia will pay a price: “The United States accused Russia on Monday of a ‘dangerous and inexplicable escalation[.]’”

I once swore to defend against foreign and domestic enemies. Activists ignorant of rule of law and what Nazism is have edged from protest into low-level insurrection pushed by politicians and media. Those inspiring activism got a woman killed and will get more killed. For God’s sake, stop. Via Instapundit.

This is long overdue: “The Trump administration on Tuesday labeled Muslim Brotherhood branches in Lebanon, Jordan, and Egypt as terrorist organizations.” Via Instapundit.

Sh*t got real: the U.S. is withdrawing excess personnel from bases near Iran.

The decision to make the next Navy destroyers have guns and vertical launch cells rather than include hypersonic missiles led to the decision to build a battleship. I’m skeptical the BBG will be more than a CG.

Marine Force Design still insists it can wage combined arms warfare without the tanks, artillery, and other supporting assets the Marines ditched for missiles and drones. I’m skeptical.

I sure hope killing enemies and breaking their stuff doesn’t get lost in the ether: “Information operations, cognitive operations, and cyber operations as a ‘salient form of warfare’ are ‘meta trends’ that are reshaping modern conflict, [the INDOPACOM commander] said.”

Yeah, the willingness and ability of the mullahs to kill Iranians has sapped my brief moment of hope. Is there a level of outside help that can change the calculation? And if so, are America and our allies willing to provide it in time to do any good?

The EU fanboys have latched on to the Greenland kerfuffle as the latest faux crisis to justify a powerful EU that makes European nations mere provinces in the empire. Don’t give the EU power--or an army.

That model of mediocrity, Antony Blinken, says America is abandoning the world to dominate the Western Hemisphere. No, I think America focuses on repairing the Western Hemisphere as the foundation of power projection to support allies abroad who take the lead. There are problems with that, I admit.

Russia denies harassing Germany with small drones; and Germany pretends to investigate the problem.

Russia loses money for each jet it sells to China. But no worries! They’ll make up for that with volume of sales.

The mirage of spheres of influence: “the economic costs of imperialism, the lack of coercive capacity to hold territory, and the inevitable overlap of ‘backyards’ will lead not to orderly dominance, but to global chaos, instability, and endless warfare that will ultimately backfire on the instigators.” Heartily endorsed.

I’ve been skeptical about Iran’s regular army having a role in defeating the mullahs after nearly 50 years of mullah rule to shape their leadership. But I’m hearing they are still, in part, an option to get non-mullah rule. Hmm.

Trump’s threats to take Greenland to protect American security are directed at--with good reason--China and Russia, and not Denmark. And I wonder if our NATO allies are in on the sham threat against Denmark to make America’s threat to stop China and Russia more credible. Or maybe they’re just that skittish.

The effort to activate the War Powers Resolution over Venezuela failed in the Senate. I just want to note that in 2011 when America attacked Libya for months, the Obama administration argued the resolution didn’t apply because Libya wasn’t shooting back at America’s aircraft.

Minnesota is edging into insurrection with state and local officials inciting resistance to proper federal law enforcement. The incitement has led to an ambush of an ICE officer. There wouldn’t be “chaos” if local authorities turned over criminal aliens. False patriotism anti-Nazism is the last refuge of a scoundrel.

Top-attack mine: “A smart anti-tank munition that helps soldiers hold their own against tracked vehicles is being hurried to the force after successful testing in Bavaria.”

Promoting Europe’s defense industry: “The European Union said Ukraine must buy weapons and military platforms from European manufacturers under a new €90 billion ($104.8 billion) loan, unless they aren’t able to supply what Kyiv needs.”

Japan and the Philippines signed a defense agreement on logistics for joint military exercises and disaster response.

America’s military interest in Greenland has been active since 1941.

Not to be cruel, but you know America isn’t actually going to capture Greenland from Denmark when Macron warns America not to invade. This is just performance art for the next job Macron wants--Emperor of Europe.

Mowing the grass: “In 2025 the UN continued to maintain a peacekeeping force in Somalia. U.S. drones and warplanes continue to attack Islamic terrorist operations in various areas of Somalia. Islamic terrorist group Al Shabab continues to be active. Piracy returned to waters off the Somali coast.”

The Navy selected a new LST design.

This CLIP proposal sounds like my external magazine USV concept for “reloading” Navy warship VLS cells while in the fight.

The Army wants South Korea to develop a longer range 155mm cannon using a 58 caliber barrel for use on a wheeled vehicle.

These authors defend the aircraft carrier and claim Ukraine lessons for the Navy are apples and oranges comparisons. I agree with that. But defending the role of carriers in recent power projection missions to defend carriers is an apples and oranges issue for the carrier sea control mission.

Is it just me wondering this, but won’t traditional anti-tank shells and missiles just punch through those elaborate anti-drone screens being mounted on armored vehicles?

Replacing the Stinger anti-aircraft missile.

War is fundamentally a human endeavor. Your perfect strategy could fail because commanders get tired. Given the filters that already stand between your precisely calibrated diplomatic signal and the enemy leader that already make things dangerous in a crisis, enemy leaders get tired when interpreting that signal.

Well sure, America is in an economic war with China. The national security strategy was pretty clear about have that instead of a hot or “just” a cold war. But I find the 5,000-year old civilization knowledge claim rather silly. Their people live no longer than our people in a 250-year-old country.

I have no idea if the Iranian revolution (or counter-revolution if you refuse to accept 47 years of status quo) will succeed. But if it fails, will this crisis cripple Iran’s ability to attract jihadi fanboys abroad?

Is China a military or economic superpower? I have that book to read. I agree we over-estimate China’s military power (so far). Yet China only has to be able to project dominant power 500 miles from its borders to inflict global damage. As for the Cold War? The USSR was about 100 miles from the Rhine.

Sounds about right: “The regime will likely succeed in quelling this resistance if it can retain the loyalty of security forces and prevent those who are resisting the regime from acquiring the wherewithal to challenge the regime’s ability and willingness to sustain its crackdown.”

The elites of the mullah regime in Iran are moving gold and wiring money abroad in a sign that the possibility of the fall of the government is not negligible. My instinct is to strike when opportunity arises. But maybe time (and quiet moves) will work instead of missiles. Tip to Instapundit.

A Chinese line in the orbit? Tip to Instapundit.

Mission accomplished: “Troops from several European countries, including France, Germany, Norway and Sweden, are arriving in Greenland to help boost the Arctic island’s security[.]” Come for “stopping” Trump. Stay for actually stopping China!

Is China prying Thailand away from its long alliance with America? Hmmm. We’ve been allies a long time. I keep reading warnings but don’t know if they are realistic or extrapolations from Chinese desires to a future reality.

I almost get tired of advising people to just breathe when I see Europeans leaping on chairs in panic over every White House utterance: “Denmark, Greenland and the U.S. agreed to form a high-level working group ‘to explore if we can find a common way forward’” per the Danish foreign minister.

The united West is “dead”, say the EU fanboys. Another faux crisis to justify the proto-imperial EU ambition of erasing the prefix. If a united West does die, Brussels will be the one pulling the trigger.

Good: ““The Department of War is returning Stars & Stripes to its original mission: reporting for our warfighters,” Pentagon spokesman Sean Parnell wrote on X.” Maybe the editors of Early Bird Brief sponsored by Lockheed Martin could follow that example.

Huh: “One largely overlooked anti-Tehran foreign policy change cemented by Washington was a new trade agreement negotiated by the Trump administration between Azerbaijan and Armenia that’s putting a major economic squeeze on Tehran.”

I assume she will have a role: “Venezuelan opposition leader Maria Corina Machado gave her Nobel Peace Prize medal to U.S. President Donald Trump on Thursday during a White House meeting, in a bid to influence his efforts to shape her country’s political future.” Eventually.

This may be a good idea before we have a Blackhawk Down 2.0 in Minneapolis: “President Donald Trump threatened to deploy US military forces to Minnesota in order to quell protests in response to violent encounters involving federal immigration agents.”

The Golden Hour probably isn’t possible on a conventional battlefield: “The Army is testing the ability of its combat medics to keep critically injured soldiers alive on the future battlefield, where they no longer will be able to rely on quick medical evacuations.”

Shiny object: “The Pentagon on Thursday said it is moving a carrier strike group from the South China Sea toward the Middle East as tensions between the U.S. and Iran continue to rise.” If one or two of our SSGNs are in the region, CENTCOM could act before the Abraham Lincoln group arrives.

INDOPACOM ([sigh] not PAINCOM) commander: “When we operate with allies and partners, we multiply capability and we raise the threshold for aggression.” America has a big role in maintaining those allies and partners. So I commend Congressional interest.

Giving the cartels paid time off until the heat cools off isn’t “dismantled”: “The Venezuelan government said it dismantled the country’s main drug trafficking logistics routes during 2025, particularly in the western state of Zulia.”

Russia reorganizes its army from brigade-based to small divisions. Of note, the new motor rifle divisions have two mechanized regiments and one tank battalion. Cold War MRDs had three mechanized regiments and a tank regiment for maneuver units. I wonder if the naval infantry division is a potential mistake.

Iran resorts to cyber-war on Israel. Will this work out better than trading aerial bombardments?

We should be able to build them like Liberty ships: The Navy wants to build new frigates with modules built in other areas assembled in the shipyard. Crewing them is another issue, of course.

The U.S. awarded a contract for “base operating support services” on Diego Garcia. The British government faces unexpected obstacle to giving away Diego Garcia. Fingers crossed.

Peak protest, regrouping, waiting for America--or lack of visibility? “Iran’s deadly crackdown appears to have broadly quelled protests for now, according to a rights group and residents, as state media reported more arrests on Friday in the shadow of repeated U.S. threats to intervene if the killing continues.”

Is Trump trying “regime reorientation” rather than “regime change” in Iran? I don’t think you can get “tame” Islamist governments. I’m not sure it can be done in Venezuela.

Targets in Iran that America could hit. Don’t know if Iranian people and military can take advantage of that. But given Iran’s repeated attacks on America I don’t feel like we would be “escalating” the long war waged since the mullahs took our embassy in Tehran at the regime’s birth.

China’s record export surge may be BS. Relying on statistics from underlings eager to please--and fearful of disappointing--might have just crashed the CCP reporting system. Tip to Instapundit.

ISW says the Iranians have suppressed demonstrations for now--but that the maximum security mobilization is not sustainable.

His lips are moving: “Putin claimed on January 15 that Russia’s war in Ukraine is a ‘direct response’ to the West ignoring Russia’s interests by expanding NATO, despite alleged public promises to Russia not to do so.” So you know he is lying.

Is this insufficient? “The 1951 Defense of Greenland agreement granted the U.S. the right to expand its military presence in Greenland far beyond World War II levels.” While I suppose it might be nice to own Greenland if Denmark agrees, can’t this be amended? Or is the issue getting NATO to help defend it?

Sh*t got ... real? “Britain said on Thursday it would strengthen its military reserve forces by raising the maximum age at which former personnel could be called up by a decade to 65.” What kind of fight them on the beaches, streets, landing grounds, fields, and hills situation is expected?

Or ... getting the element of surprise: “President Trump is delaying a decision on striking Iran as the White House consults internally and with allies about the timing for such an operation and whether it would meaningfully destabilize the regime[.]”

I had briefly toyed with the idea of going to the Detroit Auto Show to see the new Abrams on display, but decided it wouldn’t be worth it. Cars honestly don’t thrill me so that is all I would be interested in. I figured someone would go to it--sure enough! Tip to Instapundit.

While America has had a long interest in keeping Europe out of enemy hands, this is a good question: “Why do 600 million Europeans insist they need the help of 326 million Americans to deal with 144 million Russians?” And also, too many Moslem migrants who hate Europeans.

Breaking ice for fun and illegal profit.

This is a good point. And in the past I’ve asked if excessive ship rust is separate from ship and crew readiness for combat; or a visible warning sign that the ship and crew are not ready for combat.

When the war in Ukraine ends, Ukrainian mercenaries with their skill sets could be an export much in demand. Hopefully if Russia continues to loom over Ukraine after a ceasefire, too many don’t seek fortunes abroad. But it could get ... interesting.

Good question: “War, diplomacy, or revolt: What comes next in Iran?” With Iran’s mullahs, if we choose diplomacy remember the quip that diplomacy is all about saying “nice doggie” to a snarling dog while reaching for a stick. With sanctions and luck, time may be the stick that brings down the mullahs.

I’ve been arguing this for a while: “The West should stop buying into Moscow’s bluff that Russia is invincible[.]” Indeed, I have a post on that coming up tomorrow on the TDR mothership.

Yes: “The death of U.S. primacy has been greatly exaggerated.” As I argued in my final essay on the 2025 American national security strategy, America is willing to use its power--but not precisely the way our allies would like America to use its power.

Since 2021: “Germany is already deeply entrenched in state censorship and attacks on free speech.” Gosh, what was Vance smoking, eh?

Iran’s mullahs aren’t putting out the Mission Accomplished banner yet.

Huh: “Insufficient infrastructure investments in Russia’s Far East are likely hurting Russian economic agreements with the People’s Republic of China (PRC).” Opportunity knocks.

Iran has called in its foreign Arab militias to kill Iranians: “Citing a source in Iraq, US broadcaster CNN reported on Thursday that in recent weeks almost 5,000 fighters from various militant groups travelled to neighbouring Iran to support the state authorities.”

Taiwan’s opposition parties again blocked a defense appropriations bill. To be fair, there is a backlog of purchases from America yet to be delivered. Still, I worry about Taiwan’s resolve to fight.

Zheng He weeps with envy: “The PRC led military exercises with Iran, Russia, South Africa, and the United Arab Emirates from January 9 to 16.”

Not sure what the angle is for securing Greenland for defense, including the Golden Shield, but this seems excessive: “President Donald Trump on Saturday vowed to implement a wave of increasing tariffs on European allies ​until the United States is allowed to buy Greenland[.]” But the EU wants a crisis.

It was not fully done. And Ukraine found alternatives: “A year ago, Russia persuaded China to stop selling Ukraine drones or drone components. The Chinese government said it would be done.”

Make it so: “American political and military leaders want to modify the way the industrial base of defense manufacturers and military planners work together. This will be done by improving flexibility, elasticity, and surge capacity.”

Good: “European countries appear to be cracking down against oil tankers associated with the shadow fleets of Russia and its allies.”

NOTE: I had second thoughts on simply moving Weekend Data Dump to Substack when I realized I rely on searching TDR for old stuff and that I'd lose a lot of sources by splitting them. So I will duplicate the posts on Substack.