Small Wars Journal

17 August SWJ Roundup

Wed, 08/17/2011 - 5:06am

Afghanistan

Clinton, Panetta Discuss Cooperation in Afghanistan - AFPS

US and Coalition Forces Try to Build Cadre of Afghan Leaders - S&S

Escape-proof prison in Afghanistan? Inshallah - S&S

Gunman Kills Afghan Woman Working for Government - AP

Afghan Cleaner Shot Dead Inside NATO HQ - Reuters

Motorcycle Bomb Kills 8 in Southern Afghan Market - AP

ISAF Chief Apologizes for Civilian Casualty Incident - AFPS

 

Pakistan

China Rejects Report of Bin Laden Raid Copter Access - Reuters

US Drone 'Kills Four' in Pakistan - BBC

Suspected US Drone Strike Kills 4 in Pakistan - AP

 

Iraq

Attacks in Iraq Heighten Political Tensions - NYT

Iraq's Bloodiest Day Revives Al Qaeda Fears - Reuters

7 Pulled From Iraqi Mosque, Killed Execution-Style - AP

Iraqi Military Capabilities Growing, General Says - AFPS

Arab Drama Stirs Sectarian Debate in Iraq - Reuters

 

Syria

Clinton Defends US Response to Crackdown in Syria - WP

Syrian Death Toll Continues to Climb - VOA

Syria Targets Port for Fourth Day - BBC

Gunfire in Syrian Coastal City; 35 Dead in 4 Days - AP

Syrian Troops Detain Dozens, 1 Dead in Northwest - AP

UN Cites Reports of Syrian Forces Shooting Defectors - WP

10,000 Palestinians 'Disappear' from Syrian Refugee Camp - VOA

Thousands Fled Assault on Palestinian Enclave in Syria - NYT

PLO Official Accuses Syria of Crimes Against Humanity - Reuters

 

Libya

Libyan Rebels Threaten to Isolate Tripoli - VOA

Libya Rebels Fight for Key Town - BBC

Libya's Rebels Deny Holding Talks With Gadhafi Aides - VOA

Rebels Scorn Talks With Isolated Gaddafi - Reuters

UN Envoy Meets With Both Sides of Libyan Conflict - AP

Gadhafi's Troops Use Hospital as Base, Doctors Say - AP

 

Yemen

Yemen's President Vows to Return Soon - VOA

Yemen’s Leader Vows to Return Soon - NYT

Yemen's Saleh Vows to Return Home - BBC

Yemeni President: 'See You Soon in Sanaa' - AP

 

Israel / Palestinians

Mideast Quartet Alarmed by Israel Settlement Plans - Reuters

Palestinian President to Submit Statehood Proposal to UN Chief - VOA

Israeli Air Strike Hits Gaza After Rocket Fire - NYT

Israel Kills 2 Palestinians in Gaza - AP

Israel Arrests Al-Jazeera Reporter - AP

 

Iran

Iran's Hard-Liners Seek Payback in Next Election - AP

Iran: Russia's Nuclear Proposal Is 'Good Strategy' - AP

 

Middle East / North Africa

Bahrain Unrest: Rights Panel Closes After Clash - BBC

Latest Developments in Arab World's Unrest - AP

Justice for Hariri’s Killers Requires World’s Support - WP opinion

 

US Department of Defense

Panetta: Congress Must Look at Whole Federal Budget for Cuts - AFPS

Panetta: Bigger Defense Cuts Would Be Devastating - AP

DOD to Audit all DARPA Contracts, Following Nepotism Reports - S&S

Policy Forces More Marines E-5 and Below Into Barracks - S&S

Army Cyber Command Focuses on Protecting Vital Networks - AFPS

Sharing Intelligence Helps Contractors Strengthen Cyber Defenses - AFPS

Could 20-year Retirement be a Casualty - S&S

No Changes to Military Retirement Any Time Soon, Officials Say - AFPS

A Gates Team at the Pentagon - WP opinion

 

United States

Top Contenders Emerge in Crowded Field of Presidential Candidates - VOA

Terror Suspect Linked to Al-Shabaab Appears in US Court - VOA

New Biofuels Market to Reduce Foreign Oil Dependence - AFPS

Senator Blasts Promotions for ATF’s ‘Fast and Furious’ - WT

 

United Kingdom

Police 'Prevented Olympic Site Riot' - BBC

Britain Will Force Convicted Rioters to Clean Up - NYT

 

Canada

Canada Restores Royal Names to Navy, Air Force - AP

 

Africa

Somalia: Aid Agencies Face Conflict, Shortages in Mogadishu - VOA

Allegations of Food Aid Theft Resurface in Somalia - NYT

WFP Outraged Food May Have Been Stolen from Starving Somalis - VOA

Scale of Reported Somalia Food Aid Theft Implausible - TG

UN: Aid Will Still Go to Somalia Despite Fraud - AP

World Bank Says Famine in Horn of Africa Is Manmade - Reuters

UN: Ethiopia Refugee Camp Child Death Rates 'Alarming' - BBC

S. Sudan Says Troops Will Be Future Peacekeepers - AP

Zimbabwe Ex-army Boss Mujuru Dies - BBC

Zimbabwe General's Death May Prompt Power Struggle - AP

6 Die as Gunmen Storm North Nigeria Police Station - AP

Organizers Call Off Malawi Anti-Gov't Protests - AP

Ivory Coast Reopens Jail After Political Violence - AP

Eritrean Leader Afewerki in 'Peace Trip' to Uganda - BBC

 

Americas

Mexico’s Youth Slips into Drug Violence - PBS

Mexico's Splintering Drug Gangs Pose New Security Risk - Reuters

Violence Threatens Venezuela Vote Outcome - Reuters

First Americans in Cuba Under Easier US Travel Rules - Reuters

 

Asia Pacific

China Top Paper Presses US Ahead of Biden Visit - Reuters

China Feels After-effects of Economic Stimulus - LAT

China Begins Security Crackdown in Western Region - NYT

China Launches Maritime Satellite - VOA

China’s Troubled Railway Ministry Fires Spokesman - NYT

US, South Korea Naval Drills Draw Threats From North Korea - VOA

N. Korea Anger at Military Drill - BBC

Corruption Case Poses Key Test for Indonesian President - VOA

Philippines Seeks to Strengthen Anti-Terror Law - AP

Bombings in Southern Philippines Draw Attention to Peace Talks - VOA

Filipino Muslim Rebels to Disown Radical Commander - AP

Malaysia Opens Door to Changes in Electoral System - NYT

In Indonesia, Scandals Tarnish Citibank - WP

 

Europe

Sarkozy and Merkel Call for More Fiscal Unity in Europe - NYT

Leaders Demand 'Euro Governance' - BBC

German Economy Slows - VOA

European Economies Brace as Germany Slows - WP

Russia Still Lags on Democracy 20 Years After Coup - Reuters

Prosecution Wants to Hasten Mladic Trial - AP

Student in Spain Plotted Attack on Anti-Pope Protesters - AP

Eight Turkish Soldiers Killed in Blast - Reuters

 

South Asia

India Detains Anti-Corruption Activist Before Planned Hunger Strike - VOA

Hundreds Arrested in India Over Planned Protest - NYT

Indian Activist Refuses to Leave Jail - WP

India Arrests Veteran Activist Anna Hazare - WP

India Holds Hundreds of Activists - BBC

Comments

Clausewitz2011

Sun, 08/21/2011 - 3:37pm

In reply to by Bill M.

Very well said. To ensure I am not sending any mixed signals I do not condone any form of unjustified hatred/persecution. I have no issue with homosexuals being human beings that have meaning. What I do have issues with are political groups using the homosexual community for some kind of  Machiavellian exploitation. Especially when there are serious issues with regards to their selected lifestyle. And from the small amount of research I have done with Doctors at NARTH who specialize in that profession it appears that there are serious issues that are being overlooked by political interests.  So I concur with your assessment - "I'm just not convinced we have thought this issue through, and rather the left simply forced it through."

Bill M.

Sun, 08/21/2011 - 2:43pm

In reply to by Clausewitz2011

Clausewitz2011,

I have no idea what the surveys actually revealed about the DADT policy, but apparently most of the younger military members didn't have an issue with gay's in the military, while us older folks had more than a few concerns. The gays have a power political and social movement, and their impact on the education system has been telling, which is why I think the younger generation was more receptive to the idea. I agree with GEN Powell's comments years ago when he said (loosely paraphrased from memory) you can't compare integrating homosexuals with integrating blacks. A person is born with the color of his skin, while homosexuality is a behavior. End paraphrase, and of course it is the behavior issue that is of concern to many of us. I don't hate gays, but many do and I think we're setting a lot of them up to be victims of hate crimes that far the left will use to their advantage some how, but more importantly what will the impact be on the force? Related, I saw an interesting documentary on how U.S. activists are pushing gay rights in Uganda (where it is NOT the norm) and now Uganda is cracking down even harder on gays. Interestingly enough, it is U.S. rightwing activitists that are mobilizing support for Uganda to crack down on gays. We are definitely not a nation that can mind its own business. The point is that this decision will repercussions beyond our military, but on international relations with nations that don't support these policies and may not want to work with our military. Perhaps that is an overstated fear, but I don't think it is out of the realm of the possible. I'm just not convinced we have thought this issue through, and rather the left simply forced it through.

Your comment on contractors is definitely appropriate in this case. Why the heck is OSD paying millions of dollars to have civilian business management consultants come in to revise our retirement plans when they know nothing about the military? Why can't a joint committee of military officers and NCOs work on revising retirement? Most of the corporate retirement plans using 401Ks have been failures, and now we want to push this onto the military?

Clausewitz2011

Sun, 08/21/2011 - 11:19am

In reply to by Bill M.

Bill, nice get, thanks.

Honestly, this is not too surprising given the absolute baffonery of logic that was applied to that report on reforming the military retirement. This, using "limited funds on expensive consultants" has got to be cleaned up. I think we have too many expensive consultants/contractors running the military show. Clean it up. Also, "suicides", I can't stand them. I keep thinking about that Camp David meeting between Bush, Cheeney, Condi, and Powell with regards to Iraq. Do we invade? Did they actually plan out the number of deployments that the force would have to endure to make it happen. I don't think so. I don't think the planners had a strategic clue as to what they were doing, except for the lone dissenting voice of Powell. I don't think they planned in detail that if we have a Lt or Pvt who joined the force in 2001 could potentially deploy 3-4 times during a 10 year span. These back to back to back deployments were not even factored into the strategic planing process. What a joke. And this reform military retirement idea is a joke too. The planners are shallow in their logical thinking. Lastly, while we are at it, let's investigate the whole repeal of DADT. That process was a joke too. Loved the survey that was sent out which wasn't about how we felt about it, but how we were going to suck that egg once shoved down our throats. There are numerous studies at NARTH, http://narth.com/ , that show that the homosexual community has some of the highest rates of suicides, personality disorders, drug use, bulimia, and depression. So why are we throwing them into an organization that already has some of the highest rates of suicides ever in our history due to the nature of war is beyond me.

Bill M.

Sun, 08/21/2011 - 12:07am

It appears all our worries were greatly exagerated, the OSD personnel policy ship is in good hands. I extracted this troubling article from the SWJ twitter section.

http://www.govexec.com/dailyfed/0811/081911nj-pentagon-ig.htm

Quotes from the article:

"The Pentagon inspector general is investigating Clifford Stanley, the official charged with overseeing the Defense Department's massive personnel bureaucracy, after a spate of highly detailed allegations of gross mismanagement and abuse of power. He's accused of firing respected senior staff, neglecting programs for wounded troops, and using limited funds on expensive consultants and a lavish new conference room.

Senior civilian and military officials filed at least four separate complaints with the IG's office and to Capitol Hill since May, alleging that Stanley, the under secretary of defense for personnel and readiness, has hurt the military's ability to deliver crucial services to troops and their families."

And this post indicates that the waste extends to the highest level of DOD:

" Others, meanwhile, have taken issue with Stanley's decision to build an expensive new conference room - whose price tag is estimated to be in the range of $360,000 to nearly $500,000 -- at a time when critical accounts, including programs for wounded warriors, have been cut. By one estimate, each chair in the new conference room cost about the annual salary of a lance corporal. "

All allegations for now, so we'll see if there is any substance to the personal attacks after the investigation.

Clausewitz2011

Sat, 08/20/2011 - 9:07pm

In reply to by bumperplate

LOL, good stuff bumperplate. Makes sense to me. BLUF, cut waste.

bumperplate

Fri, 08/19/2011 - 7:05pm

As far as the budget goes and the need for cuts...I'm all for it. We've been wasting money for over a decade, at decadent rates.

But, why don't we start where we KNOW we're wasting it: 1) Does every office in the Army now need a badass, color, two-sided, uber awesome printer? (PowerPoint Rangers obviously say yes) Of course we don't, but we have them. Why? Because our bosses have been telling us to buy stuff for almost ten years now. "Hurry, we have this GWOT money and we have to spend it by the end of this quarter." Wrong answer. Cut office supplies by 20% immediately.
2)In five years when we re-learn how to live without cc'ing everyone in the unit, and figure out how to survive without printing everything for multiple files, and just stop being so damn redundant, we can cut office supplies by another 20% and we'll all be just fine. Many of us remember the days when you never saw a computer accept in the PAC/Admin offices and perhaps a couple other offices around a unit. We don't need computers down to the squad level, but we currently have them in many units. I suspect by getting out of the "electronic paperless" military we'll actually start saving paper, and time. We can save millions, perhaps billions within a decade by getting more efficient with our paperwork and cutting out the purchasing of many of our computers and electronic convenience items.
3) All units (with few exceptions) need to go to a four-day work week. That should be an automcatic 20% reduction in utility costs and similar items that cut expenses. It also boosts morale. Additionally, it should force us to curtail some of the dog and pony activities, which, incidentally do cost a lot of additional money that no one seems to think about when it comes to military budgets. Take a minute to think about just food costs - for those that have ever worked or monitored activities of a Protocol office or been next to the head shed with the GOs.
4) Finally, get back to the basics. Get to the field, live in the field, do training - much of which does not necessitate large expenditures in fuel or ammunition. And, when we go to the field, don't be dragging along a $250k DRASH tent or similar item, with 50 plasmas etc. We don't need them.

That's where I think we should start: look at the obvious waste, rather than the morale killers and the issues that will assuredly push away our best and brightest.

Bumperplate,

Thanks for the insightful comments. I hope the decision makers are reading them and understand the impact of these discussions. I'm very recently retired and have serious concerns about the direction of the current discussions and their impact on the force in the short run. I think the long run the right decisions will be made, but probably after much damage has been done.

I emphasize with those that have to make these tough budget decisions, but keep in mind the threat to personnel isn't coming so much from Congress as it is civilian bureaucrats in DOD who are coming up with these proposals. We have a lot of bean counters with degrees in business management that confuse best practices in business as appropriate methods for reforming DOD. Some may be, but others are clearly detrimental to our culture and readiness.

I think the threats to your retirement pay are minimal in the short run (next 15 or so years), but the biggest threat to your retirement is the cost wise is Tri-Care. I'm not talking about paying more for coverage, that is expected when you live in inflationary times, but rather the reduction of Tri-Care payments to medical professionals, which in turn will mean that fewer medical professionals will honor Tri-Care and the cost difference will be passed on to the retired service member.

All that said cuts will have to be made, and of course when cuts are first discussed all options are on the table, both good and bad ones. I don't think some of the bad options currently being discussed will be passed into law and that it will workout in the long run, but the current noise on these topics is obviously alarming to those in the ranks now, and those considering making a career of the military.

bumperplate

Fri, 08/19/2011 - 10:19am

As a guy on active duty I can tell you the recent retirement restructuring talks are already sending out ripples throughout the Force. The incentive to stay in is now just about zero, except for those that already irrevocably committed themselves to a full 20+.
I think many on active duty examine it this way: the White House wants to be re-elected. The Republicans want to get the WH back. Both need votes. They will get more money and more votes from catering to our civilian contractors and the defense industrial complex. Those in uniform, plus their families, make a very, very small block of voters and will never swing an election or even one state. So, pay, benefits, and retirement monies will go on the chopping block. There will be some outrage from "Joe the plumber", however, in the end it's not Joe's retirement that will be affected. So, he will not vote with this issue front and center.
I heard a MAJ the other day say that retirement and pay will never be touched. I think that's wishful thinking. This MAJ said the issue we have to worry about is TRICARE/Medical. While I agree and I believe this will be the first thing to get adjusted, the rest will soon follow. If the current administration stays in power, beginning in the new term I think we'll see military pay frozen for senior NCOs and officers, I think TRICARE expenses will at least triple, and I think TSP/401k will be mandatory with 10 & 15 year retirement packages brought in for those at the midpoint of their careers. I also think 20yr retirement will be altered, reducing it to 35 or 40% with a "severance" type of payment given at retirement to offset the reduction.
Finally, I think the zero-tolerance mentality will come back full force. Any small blemish on your record is going to mean non-selection and we'll end up with more people hitting that retention control point or denied selective continuation. RTC and denial of promotion means severance, which is much cheaper than retirement/benefits.
A consequence of this is that many more people in the next five years or so will try the MEDBOARD route rather than deal with RTC and non-select status. This will overwhelm our medical system, the VA, etc - all of which are already overwhelmed. The burden this will place on commanders and their manning challenges will be frustrating.
All in all, our politicians are about to do some very bad things for the military, not the least of which will be the reduction in morale and trust in our civilian leadership.

Peter J. Munson

Wed, 08/17/2011 - 10:30pm

In reply to by Bill M.

Agreed on your points. I've had to deal with the "spend $XX,XXX" by the end of the week missions as a squadron opso and XO. People thought I was crazy when I went line by line and canned Eagle, Globe, and Anchor doormats and fancy pens and made them come back with stuff we could use for training and planning. Still, that's not the right answer. The right answer is to reward people not for spending every dollar, or spending the least, but for spending the right amount and giving some back if needed.

On platforms, part of our problem with old platforms is the mess our leadership made of things like F-22 and F-35 and transformation more generally. I think we need to stop being technologically transformational as a standard mode of operations. We need transformative technological advantages, but we also need to learn to use frugal, expendable, and more flexible platforms such as smaller CAS and utility platforms and UAS.

Completely agree with your anger on the support attitude, etc, but I don't know how that is ever going to change.

As for the conservative comment, it wasn't so much a jab at you as it was a more general irony. The military, especially the Marine Corps officer ranks - maybe other populations are different, is full of raging conservatives, yet they all love the military welfare state and defend it indignantly. I agree that we need to take care of our people and there is a lot of fat to cut elsewhere first, but if it comes down to it, I'm willing to take a little less sweet of a deal in order to maintain a fiscally sound and militarily capable nation.

Bill M.

Wed, 08/17/2011 - 10:24pm

In reply to by Peter J. Munson

Pete,

By all means we need to eliminate the fraud, waste and abuse, and there is billions of dollars that fall into that category; however, based on what I'm reading the leaders in OSD are looking at programs to cut, not fixing structural problems. A CPO wrote an article in the last issue of Proceeding (A Navy journal, so you can tell I was stuck in a waiting room also) where he pointed out a real problem that most of us senior folks have seen, which is a unit gets so much money (or a program gets so much money) each FY, and if they don't spend the money the money by the end of the FY they rush to spend it on nonsense like flat screen T.V.s, new furniture that isn't needed, etc. The structural problem is the belief/reality that if they turn the money in they'll get punished for it by receiving less money the following year. The reality is the real world (outside the government) doesn't always work nicely on our FY timelines, and while the money is needed for the project, we may have valid reasons why we can't spend it the year they gave it to us, so instead of recycling it back to the unit the following year (if it is needed) we end up pissing it away. That is structural waste built into the system.

I'm not a conservative, I'm an independent, and personally believe that Chenney was at least partly responsible for billions of dollars being wasted on contract fraud (services/products paid for, but not provided) in both Iraq and Afghanistan. The problems are not resident in just one party, there is plently of blame to go around. I hope most Americans outside of Congress and the White House are ready to move beyond the conservative and liberal ideology debate and focus on solutions for fixing the problems.

I am an advocate of wisely spending our citizen's tax dollars and cutting where appropriate, but when the first thing the bureaucrats go after is personnel benefits I'm a little concerned that we are not addressing the hard issues that need to get fixed, and instead focus simply on taking money from a relatively easy target group for cuts. Cuts are probably a needed reality, but if we fix the harder problems first, then we'll have a more realistic idea of how much we need to cut from personnel. Also, retirement isn't an entitlement program, it is a benefit that is earned. To see it discussed in the same light with Social Security and welfare is insulting.

Cut DOD spending, yes, but do so intelligently. There is a real need to rebuild our force after we pull out of Iraq and downsize in Afghanistan. Our helicopters, vehicles, and tanks need to be revamped and that will cost money. We also need to invest in future systems. The Air Force may have spent more money than they should have on Golf Courses, but that doesn't change the reality that the platforms they're flying are wearing out. The Navy has fewer ships now than we had during WWI, maybe that is the right size but I suspect we're a little shy of where we need to be.

Fixing and buying these platforms I suspect pumps more tax dollars back into our economy (jobs), but I'll leave that to the economists to determine. Regardless, one of the Government's undebatable roles is national defense, so I think we have to invest an adequate amount to ensure we can provide that capability. We can debate what that amount is based on what we think we need to fund, but I think we both agree we can save billions by addressing structural fraud, waste and abuse.

Peter J. Munson

Wed, 08/17/2011 - 9:31pm

In reply to by Bill M.

Bill M.,
"Looking at DOD for savings at this point in history is amoral." Huh? That is crazytalk. I want my retirement pay as much as the next guy, but I look around at the bloat and waste everyday and it makes me want to vomit. I sat at an inprocessing center the other day at a joint command looking at the large plasma screen TV, the JVC speakers professionally mounted on the wall on either side, and the DVD player next to it, all for a bunch of contractors and a few military people sitting around waiting to get badges to enter a bloated headquarters staffed with people who all to often aren't earning their pay. This is small potatoes, but add it up over and over and over again across the military and it is eating away at our national strength. DoD is eating itself to death, while people cry about it being targeted for cuts. I agree that the cuts shouldn't go too deep, but military leaders love to force people to pay their government travel card out of pocket if there was any delay in filing their travel claim, saying that "We have to make sure our house is in order first, before saying that the fiscal system is screwed up." They should hold themselves to the same logic they hold the troops to.

All that being said, we don't want to erase all the gains made in the past decade to get pay to a point where it helps retain quality people, but what is the point of a military that becomes its own socialist welfare state, full of staunch conservatives, and spending the equip and train money it needs to be ready to defend the nation?

The article on biofuels for DOD demonstrates an effort to go greener (and make our nation more secure by developing alternative energy sources), but I hope the team that is working this is really thinking this through. The Government subsidies for ethanol made from corn was nothing short of criminal. Without the subsidies the business was not profitable, so why do it? Worse yet, depending on your view, it contributed to food inflation and will continue to do so. I do think there may be some promise with rapidly growing grasses and algae, which should only have a limited impact on food supply (by taking up potential farm land to grow the grasses), and if these prove to be cost effective I think the biofuel concept for DOD should also consider developing biofuel plants in foreign countries in partnership to help develop their economies and lessen our logistical burden moving it to operational areas.

As for "new" and "improved" retirement plans that are "fairer" I have to agree with the previous post. The economy is shaken my uncertainty due to the inability of two idealist political parties to compromise, and now the Pentagon civilians are injecting that same uncertainty into the military ranks and the decision calculus of potential future recruits (especially officers). Retirement may be expensive, but that doesn't mean we should get rid of the 20 year retirement plan. Assuming a Soldier, Sailor, Marine, or Airman worked in a combat arms field for 20 years, deploying frequently, etc., and then retires at 20 years (but now must wait until he/she is 65 to draw retirement pay) misses the following points:

1. The skills developed during that time frame are very relevant and important for the military, but have limited application outside the military, so after 20 years of sacrifice dedicated themselves to their profession they're on the street with no relevant skills and no retirement pay.

2. If you're in combat arms you don't reach your peak utility at 20 years as some have stated, unless you move into a staff or senior leadership position. After 20 years under a ruck, deploying, sleeping in the mud, and eating crap your body will generally say no more. Not everyone can or should move up, or staffs and senior officer ranks are already bloated.

Looking at DOD for savings at this point in history is amoral, and sadly these bright ideas are being generated by number crunchers in OSD that should know better. We're more likely to garner more support from friends in Congress to protect the pay for future military members than from those working in OSD who are more concerned about purchasing future weapon systems. Both are important, and changes probably need to be made, but the proposals to date do not make much since for those who wear muddy boots. As the previous gentlemen commented, we're not a corporation, so the logic being applied just doesn't fit.

Clausewitz2011

Sat, 08/20/2011 - 9:03pm

The Current Proposal to Overhaul Military Retirement is a Joke.

The current proposal to overhaul the military retirement is a joke of an idea just like the Baby Boomer Generation is a joke. They will more than likely go down in US history as the worst generation. They ushered into American society the counter culture revolution, sexual revolution, homosexual revolution which has evolved to open homosexuality in the military, LSD revolution, Vietnam draft dodgers, 50% divorce rate, tens of millions of aborted babies, practical loss of US prestige in the world, and now a mountain of crippling dept that is going to affect future generations for decades. They are morally bankrupt and this is why this country is where it is today, and why this idiodic proposal to change the military retirement has surfaced. Morality comes from the Creator in the Declaration of Independence, not atheistic Greek god's Zeus/Apollo, or the atheistic Roman god Jupiter. Our ideas of government come from the Greeks, and Romans, but not our God who provided a natural blue print for a sense of morality.

You can not compare the US military to a Fortune 500 company. This is a joke of misapplied Aristotelian logic. 500 companies do not deploy to a foreign country, months on end away from loved ones to fight and die. On top of that families sacrifice in separations which lead to missed opportunities of seeing children grow up. Wives sacrifice in countless sleepless nights worrying whether their husband is coming home, or just being a single mother running the household while their husband is deployed. 

You have to give Soldiers an concrete incentive that will be there after suffering through decades of sacrifice. To give them a TSP/401K that suffers the ups and downs of the market is not concrete. Soldiers have no idea if that support for years of sacrifice will be there at the end. It's a joke. We will see a mass exodus of service members who will see the true realities of that brain dead concept for retirement.

Here's an idea to save money in the military. Get rid of the massive amounts of contractors who are being paid ten times more than a DOD guy in uniform. Get rid of the contracted teachers at our service schools and put uniformed officers in their place like it used to be. Get rid of all of the admin contractors at all of the military installation HQs and replace them with military personnel, and get rid of mercenary contractors at all levels from direct action to intel to information operations. Way too much contracting that is draining the military budget and forcing the retirement overhaul debate.

At this moment in our history it would be nice to have an effective military general who could truly stand up and put this brain dead idea of overhauling the retirement to rest. Of course the MacArthurs have faded so far into the landscape of history that we don't know what true strategic leadership is about, which is Vision - Past/Present/Future.

Returning to the peace time army, GEN Douglas MacArthur rose to Chief of Staff. MacArthur presided over the dispersal of the Bonus Marchers, an action which he staunchly defends in his book, "Reminiscences", and the defense of the Army from the Depression-era budget cutting knife. During one meeting with FDR, MacArthur responded with "The country's safety was at stake,...I spoke recklessly and said something to the general effect that when we lost the next war, and an American boy, lying in the mud with an enemy bayonet through his belly and an enemy foot on his dying throat, spat out his last curse, I wanted the name not to be MacArthur, but Roosevelt. The President grew livid. 'You must not talk  that way to the President!' he roared...I said I was sorry and apologized. But I felt my Army career was at an end. I told him he had my resignation as Chief of Staff. As I reached the door his voice came with that cool detachment which so reflected his extraordinary self-control, 'Don't be foolish, Douglas, you and the budget must get together on this.'"

Of course decisions made in the 30s under his visionary leadership led to the successes of WWII and the liberation of millions. Today's Baby Boomers who practically hold every leadership position in this country, whether civil or private, have no vision and instead of carrying on the US tradition of liberators they are turning this country, and the world, into various forms of enslavement. What a joke that 76 million Boomers could not produce decent leadership. An absolute disgrace to those who died victorious in the American Revolution, the 650,000 on US Civil War battlefields, or the countless US wars of the 20th and 21st centuries. 

"In the beauty of the lilies Christ was born across the sea,
With a glory in his bosom that transfigures you and me:
As he died to make men holy, let us die to make men free,"
The Battle Hymn of the Republic, 1862.