Winds of Change.NET: Liberty. Discovery. Humanity. Victory.

Formal Affiliations
  • Anti-Idiotarian Manifesto
  • Euston Democratic Progressive Manifesto
  • Real Democracy for Iran!
  • Support Denamrk
  • Million Voices for Darfur
  • milblogs
Syndication
 Subscribe in a reader

USA: Grand Strategy Archives

Recently in USA: Grand Strategy Category

February 9, 2010

Strategy On A Budget - Guest Post

By Armed Liberal at 16:17

Guest post by Mark Buehner, in response to my "Can't Quit" post. An invitation to Coldtype for a guest post is still open.

"He who seeks to be strong everywhere will be strong nowhere." - Military truism

By Mark Buehner

The budget of the United States is on a collision course with its mounting debt. Entitlement and interest payments are set to overwhelm the budget, and no sector of government spending will be exempt from radical re-examination. The sooner we make difficult choices, the more thoughtful we can be, and the better result we can expect.

| Direct Link | 52 Comments | | Printer-Friendly

read the rest! »

  • Grim: We certainly have the ability to wage war that way, read more
  • Armed Liberal: This has been a fascinating exchange. The one place I'll read more
  • mark buehner: And to square the circle- if you design your defense read more

November 3, 2009

On Asymmetric Warfare: Byzantine Grand Strategy in the 11th and 21st Centuries

By Porphyrogenitus at 16:35
This follows my first and second posts in this series, as well as other related posts.

As is obvious by my web-name, it's no state secret that I'm into the Eastern Roman (aka "Byzantine") Empire. Back when I was a Freshman in Uni I read Edward Luttwak's excellent Grand Strategy of the Roman Empire, a work I highly recommend. Well he has completed the obvious sequel, a book on the Grand Strategy of the Byzantine Empire.

In Foreign Policy Luttwak has an article recommending the essential features of this strategy to the United States. I would argue that we already follow most of them, including a pernicious corruption of them that the Byzantines themselves engaged in during the 11th Century.
| Direct Link | 3 Comments | | Printer-Friendly

read the rest! »

  • Tom Grey - Liberty Dad: If our goal is to build a strong democratic state read more
  • Porphyrogenitus: Related, further on abuse of "international law", with political selectivity. read more
  • Marcus Vitruvius: Very useful information. I remember The Grand Strategy of the read more

April 21, 2009

Harman: Why Now?

By Armed Liberal at 06:18

So the media are all abuzz over a conversation my Congresswoman, Jane Harman, had regarding AIPAC in 2006.

| Direct Link | 2 Comments | | Printer-Friendly

read the rest! »

  • phantommut: When is the strong horse the wrong horse? When the read more
  • Joe Katzman: None of these reports seem to address the key question, read more

April 5, 2009

Obama's European Trip

By Armed Liberal at 20:44

I'm still digesting the news reports; my first reaction is that it went about as well as could be realistically expected as far as engaging other countries is concerned - there wasn't any real possibility that he'd do better than he did. And I worry about people who think that our interests and the world's would be magically aligned because we suddenly say we'd like them to be. But he made some critical mistakes which are going to hurt him domestically.

Bowing to King Abdullah was stupid, and the damage to Obama as the video circulates remains to be seen. For the defenders who suggest that GWB holding his had as they walked was equally bad - no it wasn't. Peers in Arab societies may hold hands. Peers don't bow to each other.

I don't know who's handling Obama's protocol, but they need to be replaced, like today.

And I was - and still am, on consideration - a little fuddled by his over-nuanced take on American Exceptionalism. This is a profound issue for me, which I am going to spend some time worrying through.
| Direct Link | 26 Comments | | Printer-Friendly

read the rest! »

  • Mike: Marc, Unrelated, but it's been quite some time since I read more
  • Mike: Marc, While I tho't the presser Q&A was the main read more
  • BooPear: Mark, You are right, both about the inherent irony and read more

March 11, 2009

Dodging A Bullet - In Chas Freeman's Own Disgusting Words

By Armed Liberal at 01:35

See the update below...

Laura Rozen has his own response to the controversy and explanation of his withdrawal. And I'll tell you that based on this one paragraph alone, we dodged a major bullet today:
The libels on me and their easily traceable email trails show conclusively that there is a powerful lobby determined to prevent any view other than its own from being aired, still less to factor in American understanding of trends and events in the Middle East. The tactics of the Israel Lobby plumb the depths of dishonor and indecency and include character assassination, selective misquotation, the willful distortion of the record, the fabrication of falsehoods, and an utter disregard for the truth. The aim of this Lobby is control of the policy process through the exercise of a veto over the appointment of people who dispute the wisdom of its views, the substitution of political correctness for analysis, and the exclusion of any and all options for decision by Americans and our government other than those that it favors.

| Direct Link | 13 Comments | | Printer-Friendly

read the rest! »

  • Joe Katzman: I wanted to check David's paraphrase of Joel Klein's article. read more
  • David Blue: Joe Klein's comment on the victimization and assassination of Mr. read more
  • Armed Liberal: Robo/David - I'm talking in no small part about the read more

March 7, 2009

Chas Freeman, In His Own Words

By Armed Liberal at 19:25

I just wrote my Congresswoman, Jane Harman, to ask her to aggressively support the IG investigation of Freeman's appointment as Director of the NIC, and I'd suggest you write yours as well.

I've been reading Freeman's writings and listening to his speeches. Here, Freeman talks about Taiwan and China.

Freeman_China.JPG
| Direct Link | 5 Comments | | Printer-Friendly

read the rest! »

  • Joe Katzman: Maybe Obama could auction off the position between the Saudis read more
  • Armed Liberal: That's great news. I'd like to see a brilliant iconoclast read more
  • The Great Satan: Well someone wised up and finally http://washingtonindependent.com/33232/freemans-out threw him under read more

February 10, 2009

Pakistan needs a MacArthur

By Nitin Pai at 14:05
Flying in to Japan on August 30 a few hours after he had received from Washington the text of the initial policy he was to carry out, he paraphrased the actions he was to take: First, destroy the military power. Punish war criminals. Build the structure of representative government. Modernize the constitution. Hold free elections. Enfranchise the women. Release the political prisoners. Liberate the farmers. Establish a free labor movement. Encourage a free economy. Abolish police oppression. Develop a free and responsible press. Liberalize education. Decentralize political power. Separate the church from state.[Winners in Peace]

Sounds like the songsheet for Richard C Holbrooke and General David Petraeus. I thought Winds readers will be interested in the argument I make over at Pragati--The Indian National Interest Review on what the US ought to do in Pakistan. Is the Obama administration audacious enough to face the reality: there's no solution to Afghanistan unless Pakistan is structurally transformed.


| Direct Link | 4 Comments | | Printer-Friendly
  • J Aguilar: I agree with the point that Pakistan needs a McArthur. read more
  • Joe Katzman: You have to wonder, sometimes, whether nuclear war might be read more
  • J Aguilar: If it were just Pakistan... read more

May 2, 2008

A Saigon Anniversary

By Armed Liberal at 01:44

Yesterday was the anniversary of the North Vietnamese conquest of South Vietnam.

I've been reading and thinking a lot about Vietnam recently, for relatively obvious reasons. While history never repeats itself, it's doubtless true that people look to history and model their behavior - for better or worse - on the models they have of history.

Watch for a post next week on this issue.


| Direct Link | | Printer-Friendly

November 1, 2007

What's Europe Worth? NATO in Afghanistan

By Joe Katzman at 03:52

This is from a recent speech given by Secretary of Defense Robert Gates to the Conference of European Armies on Oct 25/2007:

"Said differently, our progress in Afghanistan is real but it is fragile. At this time, many allies are unwilling to share the risks, commit the resources, and follow through on collective commitments to this mission and to each other. As a result, we risk allowing what has been achieved in Afghanistan to slip away."...."While there will be nuances particular to each country’s rules of engagement, the "strings" attached to one nation’s forces [JK: several nations have these, including caveats that more or less forbid them to enter combat] unfairly burden others, and have done real harm in Afghanistan. As you know - better than most people - brothers in arms achieve victory only when all march in step toward the sound of the guns."....

..."For example, a widely recognized benchmark is for Allies to spend 2 percent or more of GDP on defense. Yet currently, only 6 out of 26 NATO members have met that goal." [JK: and some of those are the nation's smallest members]....

"As it stands today, non-U.S. NATO nations have more than 2 million men and women in uniform, yet we struggle to maintain 23,000 non-U.S. troops in Afghanistan. This is partly a function of how NATO militaries are organized, and partly a matter of resources - but it is mostly a matter of will and commitment. The same is true for equipment and other resources. Consider that earlier this year the U.S. extended its Aviation Bridging Force in Afghanistan in Kandahar because the mightiest and wealthiest military alliance in the history of the world was unable to produce 16 helicopters needed by the ISAF commander. Sixteen.

Meeting commitments means assuming some level of risk and asserting the political will necessary to deploy armed forces beyond one’s borders - fully manned and equipped, and without restrictions that undermine the mission. In Afghanistan, a handful of allies are paying the price and bearing the burdens of allies to create the secure environment necessary for economic development, building civic institutions, and establishing the rule of law. The failure to meet commitments puts the Afghan mission - and with it, the credibility of NATO - at real risk. If an alliance of the world’s greatest democracies cannot summon the will to get the job done in a mission that we agree is morally just and vital to our security, then our citizens may begin to question both the worth of the mission and the utility of the 60-year-old transatlantic security project itself."

Which leads to the natural question: just what is NATO, or Europe, really worth these days?


| Direct Link | 20 Comments | | Printer-Friendly

read the rest! »

  • David Blue: "Another idea proposes to give tank crews cooling vests – read more
  • Ewt: @ #16 But we do have to see the negatives read more
  • J Aguilar: The EU contributed to fund Yassir Arafat and the Palestinian read more

April 5, 2007

Clausewitz in Wonderland

By Joe Katzman at 03:33

Tony Corn, in Policy Review, September 2006:

"In Iraq as in Afghanistan, real professionals have learned the hard way that - to put it in a nutshell - the injunction "Know Thy Enemy, Know Thyself" matters more than the bookish "Know Thy Clausewitz" taught in war colleges. Know thy enemy: At the tactical and operational levels at least, it is anthropology, not Clausewitzology, that will shed light on the grammar and logic of tribal warfare and provide the conceptual weapons necessary to return fire. Know thyself: It is only through anthropological "distanciation" that the U.S. military (and its various "tribes": Army, Navy, etc.) will become aware of its own cultural quirks - including a monomaniacal obsession with Clausewitz - and adapt its military culture to the new enemy.1

The first major flaw of U.S. military culture is of course "technologism" - this uniquely American contribution to the phenomenon known to anthropologists as "animism." Infatuation with technology has led in the recent past to rhetorical self-intoxication about Network-Centric Warfare and the concomitant neglect of Culture-Centric Warfare. The second structural flaw is a Huntingtonian doctrine of civil-military relations ideally suited for the Cold War but which, given its outdated conception of "professionalism," has outlived its usefulness and is today a major impediment to the necessary constant dialogue between the military and civilians.2

Last but not least, the third major flaw is "strategism." At its "best," strategism is synonymous with "strategy for strategy's sake," i.e., a self-referential discourse more interested in theory-building (or is it hair-splitting?) than policy-making. Strategism would be innocuous enough were it not for the fact that, in the media and academia, "realism" today is fast becoming synonymous with "absence of memory, will, and imagination": in that context, the self-referentiality of the strategic discourse does not exactly improve the quality of the public debate."

He has some good points, and is spot-on re: flaws #1 & 2. It's a wide ranging essay that goes far beyond Clausewitz as Corn asks, again and again, what Karl #2 has to contribute to key questions surrounding the war. Here's the link again. Sub-headers include:

-- Clausewitz in Londonistan
-- Clausewitz in America: Prussian fantasies, French realities?
-- The Revolution in Guerrilla Affairs
-- "Virtual States" and "Nonlinear Wars"
-- "Deep Coalitions" and "Soft Balancing": The Shiite crescent and the SCO
-- The "Permanent Campaign" and the "Long War"
-- "Lawfare": Clausewitz or Carl Schmitt?
-- Soldier, Statesman, Scholar: The lost battles of Clausewitz
-- Beyond Clausewitz and 4GW


| Direct Link | 30 Comments | | Printer-Friendly
  • Wolf Pangloss: I finally read the article (it was long and I read more
  • David Blue: This is an interesting article, but is it a problem read more
  • David Blue: All of those suggestions are reasonable, in terms of demographic read more

November 28, 2006

Go Native in Iraq

By Chester at 23:55

Joe Katzman suggested I post a link to my latest article about Iraq at TCSDaily, arguing against going big, going long, or going home, and instead recommending that the US should "go native."

You can read the article here. I welcome comments.


| Direct Link | 35 Comments | | Printer-Friendly
  • jeff: My friend who just returned from embedding 6 months with read more
  • M. Simon: #29 David Blue, No program of conversion? Then just what read more
  • SG: "(How on earth can a fellow American even IMAGINE our read more

November 24, 2006

Blegging

By Armed Liberal at 18:30

For the Iraq/Domestic policy post I'm working on, I'd love to collect cites that support or refute these two positions:

  • That the Administration and Republican Party have tempered their policies toward Iraq in order not to make the war too "apparent" to voters - and to try and maintain their electoral advantage.
  • That the Democrats have tempered their responses and positions on Iraq - and kept from fully formulating a policy on Iraq - in order not to risk this last election.

I'm digging, but any help is always appreciated....


| Direct Link | 1 Comment | | Printer-Friendly
  • mycat: Maintain their electoral advantage? You mean the one they used read more
Recent Comments
  • Marcus Vitruvius: I'm already irritated enough, bgates, so do me a favor. read more
  • bgates: he principles they're trying to (or, now, succeeding to) advance read more
  • Marcus Vitruvius: I'm up past my bedtime and should probably sleep before read more
  • bgates: Alchemist is right. Corporations should be prohibited from engaging in read more
  • Demosophist: Did Rep. Boehner say "...and return comedy to the nation," read more
  • Joe Katzman: Perry, you're correct, AND, unfortunately, the problem is not confined read more
  • mark buehner: This is not going to end well. read more
  • Glen Wishard: Stupak was campaigning to be of the elite few who read more
  • charris208.myopenid.com: I was saying in my imaginary/non-existent system a certain amount read more
  • PD Shaw: I can only gather that Stupak wants to be lied read more
  • Demosophist: I'm wondering if the current whip count (favoring the nos) read more
  • Alchemist: I think you misunderstood mark. I was saying in my read more
  • Demosophist: Roland: I have just never had a good feeling about read more
  • Roland Nikles: In his treatise, The Constitution of Liberty (1960), F. A. read more
The Winds Crew
Town Founder: Left-Hand Man: Other Winds Marshals
  • 'AMac', aka. Marshal Festus (AMac@...)
  • Robin "Straight Shooter" Burk
  • 'Cicero', aka. The Quiet Man (cicero@...)
  • David Blue (david.blue@...)
  • 'Lewy14', aka. Marshal Leroy (lewy14@...)
  • 'Nortius Maximus', aka. Big Tuna (nortius.maximus@...)
Other Regulars Semi-Active: Posting Affiliates Emeritus:
Winds Blogroll
Author Archives
Categories
Powered by Movable Type 4.23-en