Small Wars Journal

Syria and R2P

Sat, 02/04/2012 - 6:48pm

I would very much like to receive some articles for the journal on "responsibility to protect" and the growing catastrophe in Syria.  If you have ideas, please submit them to submit@smallwarsjournal.com.

There is a growing clamor for an intervention in Syria from the likes of Anne Marie Slaughter and Steven A. Cook.

At my blog, I question the rosy thinking of those that support a responsibility to protect intervention in Syria:

I absolutely believe that in an ideal, linear, and rose colored world, we have a responsibility to stop the horrific loss of life in Syria.  However, in the real world, the dimensions of what is required to conduct even the "limited" intervention suggested by R2P fans is far greater than what they imagine. ... We all want peace, but it has eluded us since the dawn of time.  If we truly want to intervene, we must make an informed decision that counts the likely costs, rather than relying on facile assumptions and acronym imperatives to drive policy.  If an intervention is to be successful, it must be based on realistic assumptions and get a realistic investment from the get-go.

4 February SWJ Roundup

Sat, 02/04/2012 - 2:52am

US Naval Institute Daily - USNI

Real Clear World - RCP

Afghanistan

NATO: Forces Will Not Back Down During Afghan Transition - VOA

NATO Members Rattled by US Combat Plan on Afghanistan - LAT

Cost Drives NATO Bid for Smaller Afghan Army - Reuters

Petraeus, with Plenty of Practice, Sticks to Message - WP

Analysis: Politics Drives Exit from Afghanistan - AP

Obama Got Message Supporting Talks With Taliban - NYT

Taliban’s Omar Sent Letter to Obama - AP

Amid Peace Bid, US Got Purported Letter From Taliban - Reuters

UN: Afghan Civilian Deaths in War Hit 5-Year High - AP

Army Drops Last Stryker Murder Case - TNT

Afghan Soldier Forged Papers, Deserted Before Killing French Troops  - S&S

Driven Away by War, Now Stalked by Winter’s Cold - NYT

Air Force Camp to be Named for JTAC Airman - AFT

ISAF Operations Summary - AFPS

 

Pakistan

Pakistan PM to Visit Qatar to Talk Afghan Peace - AP

Pakistan PM to Discuss Afghanistan Reconciliation in Qatar - Reuters

Pakistani Taliban Kill 7 Soldiers, Abduct 4 - AP

 

Iran

UN Nuclear Inspectors’ Visit to Iran a Failure, West Says - NYT

Diplomats: UN Nuclear Agency Pressures Tehran - AP

US Concerns Grow Over Possible Israeli Strike on Iran - VOA

Panetta: Pressure Must be Kept on Iran - AP

Iran Threatens to Strike Back Against Sanctions, Attack - VOA

Khamenei: Iran Backs Foes of Israel - WP

Iranian Leader Warns US, Israel Against Strikes - AP

Iran Threatens Retaliation Over Oil Embargo - Reuters

Will Israel Attack Iran? - LAT

Israeli Official Says Iran Creating Missile that Could Reach US - LAT

BBC Accuses Iran of Intimidation - BBC

Iran Reports Launch of Small Satellite Into Orbit - AP

Trading Threats With Iran - NYT editorial

 

Syria

Activists: Syrian Troops Kill More Than 217 in Homs - VOA

Government Is Said to Kill 200 in Attack in Homs - NYT

At Least 200 Reported Killed in Syrian City - WP

Syrian Activists: 200 Dead in Government Assault - AP

Over 200 People Killed in Syria's Homs Before UN Vote - Reuters

Damascus Avoids Blood of Uprising, but Not Pain - NYT

UN to Vote Amid Syria Violence - BBC

UN Council Meeting Saturday to Consider Syria - AP

Russia Cannot Support Amended UN Syria Draft - Reuters

Syrian Colonel Defects and Joins Rebels - LAT

Emboldened Syrian Rebels Tear at Assad Power - Reuters

Uprising Finally Hits Syria's 'Silk Road' City - Reuters

Waiting in the Wings, Survivor of 3 Decades of Syrian Politics - NYT

Israeli Minister Says Assad's End May Be 'Long and Bloody' - Reuters

In Lebanon, a Refuge for Syria's Wounded - AP

Insight: Syria's Assad Set for Long Conflict - Reuters

 

Egypt

US Lawmakers Step Up Warnings on Egypt Military Aid - Reuters

Renewed Clashes Grip Egypt - VOA

Cairo Clashes Over Football Anger - BBC

Soccer Riot Becomes Metaphor for Gov’t Failure - NYT

Islamist Leader: West Ignoring Egypt - WP

Two US Women Freed in Sinai - WP

Sinai Gunmen Release US Tourists - BBC

Kidnappers Free 2 Americans, Egyptian Guide - AP

Egypt's Heavy Handed Military - LAT editorial

In Egypt, the Wrong Revolution - WP opinion

Can Egypt Avoid Pakistan’s Fate? - NYT opinion

 

Middle East / North Africa

Turkey Tries to Navigate Sectarian Divides in Middle East - VOA

Iraq's Sectarian Tensions Create Opportunities for Attacks - VOA

Kuwait Election: Islamist-led Opposition Makes Gains - BBC

Libyan Diplomat Omar Brebesh Dies 'Under Torture' - BBC

US Still Backing Mideast Autocrats - WP opinion

 

WikiLeaks

US WikiLeaks Soldier Gets Court-Martial - VOA

Army Orders Court-Martial in WikiLeaks Case - AP

Wikileaks Suspect to Face Trial - BBC

 

Anonymous

Hackers Release FBI-Scotland Yard Call - WP

Hackers Intercept FBI-Scotland Yard Call - AP

FBI Admits Hacker Group’s Eavesdropping - NYT

FBI Probes Anonymous Phone Hack - BBC

 

NATO

Senior Official Sums Up NATO Defense Meetings - AFPS

 

US Department of Defense

US Military Future: What Makes the Cut? - CNN

Panetta Outlines ‘State of DOD’ to Troops in Germany - AFPS

Air Force to Cut Nearly 10,000 Troops in Cost-saving Effort - S&S

Obama to Revamp Plan to Move Okinawa Marines to Guam - S&S

Army Interrogates Crime Lab Workers After Critical News Reports - McClatchy

Army IG Testifies to Congress on Arlington Cemetery Progress - AFPS

Congressmen Question Pace of Probe at Arlington - AP

Air Force Leaders Chart Service Changes - AFPS

Operation Deep Freeze Supports Antarctica Research Mission - AFPS

 

United States

Justice Department Lawyers Play Role In Guantanamo - NPR

Obama Seeks $6B to Hire Thousands of Vets for Public Service Jobs - S&S

US Government, Military to Get Secure Android Phones - CNN

More Cities Consider Parades for Iraq War Vets - AP

 

Africa

UN Declares End to Somalia Famine - WP

UN: Somalia Famine Ended, Crisis Isn’t Over - NYT

Famine 'Over' in Somalia, UN Says - BBC

Surveillance Drone Crashes in Somali Capital - AP

Shoot-out at South Sudan Peace Talks - BBC

Sudan's Bashir Says Tensions With South Could Spark War - Reuters

Sudan's President Warns of Possible War With South - AP

Sudan Rebels 'Seeking Way' to Hand Over Abducted Chinese - Reuters

Renewed Atrocities Threaten IDPs in Eastern DRC - VOA

 

Americas

Mexico's Ruling PAN to Choose Presidential Candidate - LAT

Mexico Former Ruling Party Fights Drug Link Report - AP

Mexico Activist in Juarez Women Killings Wounded - AP

Colombia Emerald Tsar Faces Paramilitary Probe - BBC

Colombia Rebel Undergoes Tests at Caracas Hospital - AP

Police Strike Hits Brazilian City Hard - AP

Cuba's Raul Castro Visits Venezuela's Chavez - AP

Cuban Blogger Denied Travel Visa - BBC

Cuban Dissident Blogger Says Exit Visa Denied - AP

 

Asia Pacific

Tibetan Group Releases Photos of Chinese Crackdown - VOA

More Leaks Found at Crippled Japan Nuclear Plant - AP

Army, Navy Ships Take Part in Tokyo Evacuation Drill - S&S

Burma: Karen Rebels Deny Signing a Cease-Fire - NYT

 

Europe

Panetta Tells Troops at Ramstein Europe Still Important - S&S

Europe Hit by Russia Gas Shortage - BBC

Russia’s Democracy Movement Faces a Test of Strength Saturday - VOA

Russians in Provinces Support Putin But Not His Party - LAT

Putin Aide Says Foreign Hands Are Behind Russia Protests - NYT

Russia’s Capital Braces For Protests - VOA

Low-key Oligarch Stumps in Siberia - WP

Italy: Berlusconi to Quit Frontline Politics - WP

Bosnia Passes Laws Key to EU Bid, Muslims Agree to Census - Reuters

Europe is No Socialist Nightmare - WP opinion

 

South Asia

Privacy Concerns Mount in India - WP

State Election Has Big Implications for All India - AP

Nepal Releases Thousands of Former Fighters as Part of Peace Deal - NYT

How Could Vietnam Happen?

Fri, 02/03/2012 - 6:54pm

In a blast from the past, Kennedy and Johnson staffer turned Harvard professor James C. Thompson looks at how the tragedy that was the Vietnam War unfolded.  This Atlantic article was originally published in April 1968.  He opens with a straightforward inquiry. "One question that will certainly be asked: How did men of superior ability, sound training, and high ideals—American policy-makers of the 1960s—create such costly and divisive policy?"  He goes into a lengthy and illuminating look at the institutional and historical factors that crippled the national security decision-making apparatus.  This is a fascinating read in and of itself.  But if you are to do nothing else, read the below excerpt with which he closed his essay and ask yourself if we will ever learn.

 

Long before I went into government, I was told a story about Henry L. Stimson that seemed to me pertinent during the years that I watched the Vietnam tragedy unfold—and participated in that tragedy. It seems to me more pertinent than ever as we move toward the election of 1968.

In his waning years Stimson was asked by an anxious questioner, "Mr. Secretary, how on earth can we ever bring peace to the world?" Stimson is said to have answered: "You begin by bringing to Washington a small handful of able men who believe that the achievement of peace is possible.

"You work them to the bone until they no longer believe that it is possible.

"And then you throw them out—and bring in a new bunch who believe that it is possible."

This Week at War: What is NATO Good For?

Fri, 02/03/2012 - 3:01pm

In my Foreign Policy column, I explain how the U.S. pivot to Asia could give the military alliance a chance to find a new identity.

 

BRUSSELS — In a briefing delivered at NATO headquarters on Jan. 30, Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen declared that "NATO is the most successful alliance in history." Rasmussen and his colleagues are hoping that success lies not only in the past but in the future, too. While 2011 was NATO's busiest year ever for military operations -- with ongoing stabilization missions in Afghanistan and Kosovo and a surprise seven-month air campaign over Libya -- the alliance still struggles to define a convincing organizing principle that will be relevant in the future, a problem it has struggled with since the collapse of the Soviet Union. Ironically, NATO's leaders may now find the compelling rationale for alliance's future, and the strongest motivation for long-needed institutional reform, on the far side of the world. The emerging security rivalry between the United States and China, and the U.S. government's "pivot" away from Europe to address this challenge, may now focus the minds of European statesmen on their own security shortcomings like nothing else has since the end of the Cold War.

Before NATO's leaders can give full attention to the alliance's future missions and strategy, they must first attend to a heavy backlog of unfinished projects. In May, NATO will hold a heads-of-government summit in Chicago in an attempt to clear away up some old business and make way for contemplating the alliance's future.

Afghanistan will naturally dominate the "old business" agenda. This week, on the flight to a preparatory meeting of NATO defense ministers in Brussels, U.S. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta may have preempted the upcoming discussion on Afghanistan when he revealed the Obama administration's intention to suspend direct combat operations by U.S. forces by mid-2013, up to 18 months earlier than previously assumed. This early switch to a purely training and advisory role for U.S. forces closely followed last week's decision by French President Nicolas Sarkozy to withdraw French troops from Afghanistan next year, instead of in 2014.

At the last NATO summit in Lisbon in November 2010, alliance leaders pledged to maintain the current military mission in Afghanistan through 2014, when they projected it would be possible to complete a transition to Afghan security forces. The Chicago summit will have to assess whether a new timeline is now required. Leaders will also have to discuss how NATO and the rest of the international community intend to support -- seemingly in perpetuity -- the large Afghan army and national police force after the transition is complete.

Speaking in Brussels this week, Rasmussen predicted that the Chicago summit will include a declaration that NATO's new ballistic missile defense capability will have achieved an initial level of capability. In spite of Russian complaints, he asserted that "NATO's decision to have a missile defense system has been taken and will be implemented." Rasmussen said that Moscow wants "guarantees" that NATO's missile defense program is not directed at Russia. Rasmussen did not see how he could provide such guarantees and implied more friction in the future over this issue.

Another major topic in Chicago will be NATO's "smart defense" initiative. "Smart defense" is another attempt by NATO leadership to improve efficiencies in defense procurement, maintenance, and training through better multinational coordination and planning. After 63 years of trying otherwise, decisions on what weapons to buy, how to maintain equipment and facilities, and how to train military forces, are still largely made at the national level. Defense budgets everywhere are political acts taken with the interests of contractors, defense industry workers, and voters in mind. For a military alliance like NATO -- composed of many relatively small countries -- uncoordinated defense spending leads to the fielding of incompatible equipment, non-economic production, and military forces that can't function together. The alliance has struggled with these problems since the 1950s and the latest "smart defense" initiative is one more attempt to make progress toward a solution.

Ivo Daalder, the U.S. Permanent Representative to NATO, provided two examples of how "smart defense" could efficiently improve the alliance's military capability. He noted how the Dutch government opted last May to disband all of its army's tank battalions, implicitly putting trust in the German Army and others to defend Dutch territory. In exchange, the Netherlands will invest the savings in new ballistic missile defense radars for four Dutch frigates, a capability that would benefit all alliance members. Daalder noted that the Dutch government's decision was logical only in the context of its membership in a larger alliance. Similarly, 13 alliance members are pooling their money to buy five high-altitude Global Hawk strategic reconnaissance drones, a platform the U.S. Air Force used last year over Libya to locate targets for NATO strike aircraft. With this purchase, European alliance members will acquire a critical capability that only the United States currently has.

The NATO staff has drawn up a list of 170 more ideas to further the goals of smart defense. But such a list makes one wonder what specific military capabilities NATO imagines it will need in the future. Defense budgets in Europe are under even more pressure than they are in the United States. NATO and European countries should undertake an assessment of future military threats and available resources and then set defense priorities and risks accordingly, as the Obama administration attempted to do with its defense strategy guidance.

Last year found NATO involved in a manpower-intensive ground war in Afghanistan and a relatively high-tech air and naval battle over Libya. The Libyan campaign revealed critical shortcomings in European defense capabilities which had to be patched by the United States. These included a lack of strategic reconnaissance platforms, inadequate intelligence analysis, a hole in command-and-control capacity, and several countries running out of precision-guided munitions in the middle of the campaign.

Did the wars of 2011 show what NATO should prepare for? Probably not. After Afghanistan, European leaders will be even less eager for another prolonged stabilization campaign than are U.S. officials. The Libyan campaign is also likely a one-off; Rasmussen gave a firm "no" to any thought of NATO intervention in Syria, even in the very unlikely event that the United Nations Security Council approves such a venture.

So what should NATO plan for? Primarily, it should consider how Europe will defend itself against likely future threats after the United States is no longer able to support the alliance to the extent European policymakers have become accustomed to over the past six decades.

The sharp decline in U.S. military support for European security began long before the Obama administration's pivot. Over the past decade, the U.S. Navy has permanently transferred more and more of its ships from the Atlantic to the Pacific, a trend that will continue as the Chinese fleet continues to expand. The United States still has a two-ocean navy, but those two oceans are now the Pacific and Indian. Last week, Panetta announced that two of the four remaining U.S. Army brigade combat teams in Europe will be removed. More U.S. bases in Europe will be closed, military staffs reduced, and headquarters downgraded. With China's cost advantages in shipbuilding and manufacturing, the United States will find itself hard-pressed to keep up should Beijing elect to ramp up production of warships and combat aircraft. The result will be even fewer U.S. military capabilities available to NATO.

The shift in U.S. priorities could provide NATO, especially its European members, with the organizing principle it has been looking for since 1991. First, with the U.S. pull-back from the continent accelerating, Europe's defense ministries should cooperate to defend their sea, air, space, and cyberspace "commons." U.S. attention on the Pacific and Middle East should provide a powerful incentive to Europe to use smart defense coordination to acquire the high-end naval, air, space, and cyber capabilities needed to defend their interests in the commons over the continent and in the Mediterranean, the North Atlantic, and the Arctic.

Without a conventional ground threat to the continent, Europe should reduce and fully professionalize its ground forces. In addition to a mobile crisis response force, Europe should develop a broad special operations adviser capability. These advisors would engage in security force assistance and foreign internal defense missions with partner military and police forces in Africa and central Asia, and thus help extend Europe's security perimeter far beyond the continent's borders.

The result of these moves should be an alliance less dominated by the U.S. and instead led by a Europe motivated to become more self-reliant. That need for self-reliance should energize the defense restructuring and reform Europe has long needed. Changes on the far side of the world will make NATO more important a decade from now than it is to today. But NATO will have to endure some wrenching change if it is to stay relevant.

 

3 February SWJ Roundup

Fri, 02/03/2012 - 7:18am

US Naval Institute Daily - USNI

Real Clear World - RCP

Afghanistan

US Combat Plan for Afghanistan Jolts NATO Members - LAT

US Will Keep Fighting as Afghans Take the Lead, Panetta Says - NYT

Panetta: NATO Ministers Agree Afghan Transition on Track - AFPS

NATO Ministers Review US, French Plans to End Afghanistan Combat Role - VOA

NATO Mulls Paying for Afghan Forces After 2014 - AP

Transition to Afghan Control a Prudent Step, Officials Say - AFPS

US, NATO Seek to Clarify Panetta Comments - WP

DOD: No Policy Changes, Despite Panetta Statement About Transition - S&S

US Seeks to Play Down Panetta's Afghan Comments - Reuters

In Winding Down Afghan War, a Different Challenge than in Iraq - WP

ISAF Operations Summary - AFPS

Panetta Adds a Few Details About US Step Back - WP opinion

The Hard Way Out of Afghanistan - NYT opinion

 

Pakistan

Supreme Court to Charge Pakistani PM with Contempt - AP

7 Pakistan Soldiers Killed - VOA

Militants Kill Pakistani Soldiers - BBC

Pakistan Clashes Kill 7 Soldiers, 18 Militants - AP

 

Iran

Senate Panel Approves Potentially Toughest Penalty Yet - NYT

Israeli Leaders: Iran Must be Stopped Soon - WP

Israel: More World Support for Possible Iran Hit - AP

US Plays Down Warning By Israeli Over Iran’s Missiles - NYT

Iran Warns of Retaliation Over Oil Sanctions - Reuters

Khamenei: Iran to Aid Anyone Confronting Israel - AP

Khamenei Warns Over Military Strike, Oil Embargo Threat - Reuters

Effort to Rebrand Arab Spring Backfires in Iran - NYT

Germany Seeks China's Help on Iran - VOA

Iran Says it Launched Homemade Satellite - WP

Iran Reports Launch of Small Satellite Into Orbit - AP

Attack Iran? - WP opinion

Israel's Profound Choice on Iran - LAT opinion

Envisioning a Deal With Iran - NYT opinion

The Latest Iran Frenzy - FP opinion

 

Syria

UN Talks on Syria Stall Again - VOA

UN Tentatively Backs a Plan for Syria - NYT

UN Diplomats Fail to Reach Agreement on Syria - AP

UN Envoys Debate Revised Syria Text; Hama Marks 1982 Massacre - VOA

US Says Syria's Assad Turns to Iran to Keep Power - VOA

Arabs, West Seek to Avert Russian Veto of UN Syria - Reuters

US Courts Russian Support on Syria - WP

Russia Will Not Stop Selling Arms to Syria - AP

Syrian Soldiers, Rebels Clash in the South; 1 Dead - AP

Syria: It’s Not Just About Freedom - WP opinion

Syria’s Outcome Has High Stakes for Entire Mideast - WP opinion

Why We Shouldn’t Attack Syria (Yet) - NYT opinion

 

Egypt

Egyptians Blame Military for Soccer Bloodshed - VOA

Police Kill 4 Protesters as Egyptians Unleash Fury Over Soccer Riot - NYT

Egypt Mourns Soccer Riot Victims; Thousands March in Cairo - LAT

In Egypt, Protesters Clash with Police - WP

Two Shot Dead in Egypt Violence - BBC

3 Die in Egypt Clashes Over Deadly Soccer Riot - AP

Egypt's Cairo Braced for More Football Unrest - BBC

 

Israel / Palestinians

Gaza Protesters Pelt UN Chief's Convoy With Shoes - VOA

Turkey and Hamas Grow Close - AP

 

Middle East / North Africa

Opposition Gains in Kuwait Vote - BBC

Kuwait Islamists Ride Opposition Election Surge - AP

Lebanon: Hariri Murder Suspects to be Tried in Absentia - BBC

Rights Group: Libyan Ex-Envoy Dies After Arrest - AP

 

NATO

NATO to Consolidate Air Command Operations at Ramstein - S&S

 

US Department of Defense

Obama to Revamp Plan to Move Okinawa Marines to Guam - S&S

Navy Undersecretary Says Service Essential to New Defense Strategy - S&S

Judge Delays Fort Hood Shooting Rampage Trial - AP

Some Top Military Brass Making More in Pension than Pay - USAT

Don’t Forget ‘Hard’ Power - WP opinion

 

United States

Intelligence Leaders Urge Congress to Act on Cyber Laws - AFPS

Obama Eeeks $6B to Hire Thousands of Vets for Public Service Jobs - S&S

 

World

Top Security and Defense Officials Meet in Munich - AP

 

Africa

African Union Considers Future Leaders After Election Failure - VOA

Britain Vows to Step Up Fight Against Somali Terrorism, Piracy - VOA

UK's Foreign Minister in Somalia - BBC

UN: Somalia Famine Over, but Millions Still Need Food Aid - VOA

Famine 'Over' in Somalia, UN Says - BBC

UN Downgrades Somali Famine; Situation Still Dire - AP

UN Official Warns of Looming Crisis in South Sudan - LAT

Senegal Opposition to Launch Election Campaigns - VOA

Liberia: Lawyers for Taylor Want to Re-open Defense Case - BBC

Mali Protests Over Tuareg Rebels - BBC

 

Americas

Mexican Army Sends More Troops to West - AP

Second Deadly Attack in Colombia - BBC

Brazilian Cities Minister Resigns - BBC

2 Chileans Held in Peru: Innocents or Spies? - AP

 

Asia Pacific

Self-Immolations in China's Tibetan Areas Mark Shift in Tibet Movement - VOA

Merkel Holds Talks with Top Chinese Leaders - VOA

China Considers Offering Aid in Europe’s Debt Crisis - NYT

North Korea Opens Door to Talks With South Korea - AP

Filipino Troops Still Search for JI Terrorist Leader - AP

US Military Back in Thailand for Flood Relief Efforts - S&S

Cambodia: Life Term for Khmer Rouge Jailer - BBC

Cambodia: Khmer Rouge Chief Jailer Gets Life in Prison - AP

 

Europe

Russia’s Opposition Movement Spreads Far Beyond Moscow - VOA

At Moscow Rally, Fighting the Cold and the Kremlin - NYT

Russia's Provinces Have Putin's Back - LAT

Russian FM Assails EU Foreign Policy Chief - AP

Is Russia’s Space Program Viable? - VOA

World Court Upholds German Immunity in Nazi Cases - AP

2 German Men Plead Guilty to Terror Charges in UK - AP

 

South Asia

India: No Show by Pakistan's Mumbai Team - BBC

No Apologies

Thu, 02/02/2012 - 6:08pm

What do I miss from Iraq?

Be not a slave of your own past. Plunge into the sublime seas, dive deep and swim far, so you shall come back with self-respect, with a new power, with an advanced experience that shall overlook and explain the old.  –Emerson, On Nature

Control- it’s not the killing, the war, or the violence.  It is the absolute respect, authority, responsibility and accountability that I was afforded and bestowed by the nation.  In Iraq, my bosses gave me their confidence to execute my mission.

In Iraq, I was Captain Few, Alpha Six, and Shadow Six.  You’ve seen this from meeting my men.  If I said that night was day, then so it was. I commanded 100 paratroopers and 200 Iraqi soldiers, and we were responsible for governing 125,000 people.

Even the al Qaeda sheik who was trying to kill me respected me.

Perhaps, that is what we’re all struggling with?  It’s not really the war; it’s just being the average Mike Few or Joe Smith when we come home?  The shepherd with no sheep to herd?

We come home to a nation that not only does not acknowledge our war, but dismisses who we are by immediately portraying us as victims and wounded warriors.

I am neither a victim nor a warrior.  I am a professional soldier.  As an officer, I took a sworn oath to defend the Constitution.

The garrison Army cannot even get the name right for those soldiers and marines wounded in battle.  The term warrior is the most disrespectful label.  Simply put, as LTC Robert Bateman states,

“Unfortunately, and I cannot nail down when this started, a trend started to take hold in the Army and the Marine Corps which blurred that distinction. Sometime in the mid-90s we started to hear senior officers (defined in my head as "Colonels and Up") calling us "warriors." At first the appellation was rare enough. Now and then you might hear it creep into a speech at a Change of Command ceremony, or perhaps at a Dining In (a formal dinner for the officers of a battalion or brigade). But slowly the term began to come into more common usage, even as it leaked into print in professional journals and in speeches coming from Air Force officers. This is a bad sign, and it does not seems to be stopping. I wish it would, because calling us warriors is not only inaccurate, it displays an ignorance about what a warrior is all about. The bottom line is that a real "warrior" is really just about himself. Indeed, the key difference between a Soldier (or a Marine, or an Airman) and a "warrior" is almost that simple. A serviceman does his job as a part of a complex human system, he does so with discipline and selflessness as his hallmarks. Courage also matters, of course, but it is but one of several values that are needed. The serviceman is the product of a Western society which, while it values individualism intrinsically, values subordination in pursuit of a collective objective as well. A warrior, on the other hand, is the product of a culture or subculture which is essentially purely honor-driven. That is not a good thing.”

I fought not for profit or personal gain; I fought for my men and my mission.  I was not a mercenary. And so, this is the world that we live in.  I accept that, but I will find my own control in this world. As it is, I refuse to go back into that other world and relive battles that I already won.  I refuse to feel sorry for the poor souls who chose hate and anger and death over living.

As Emerson told me, I grieve that neither grief nor fear will teach me nothing.

I’m tired of grieving. I am going to live.  I am going to lead.  I am going to empower those around me; we are going to find our own way.  The way ahead is simply listening and building relationships- overcoming the Us-Them and becoming the We without the use of force.

It is time.

If Animal Farm Had a Foreign Policy

Thu, 02/02/2012 - 12:38pm

If Animal Farm Had a Foreign Policy

R. Jordan Prescott

House of Marathon

originally posted at House of Marathon and cross-posted at Small Wars Journal with Full Permissions

Last November, a NATO-led multilateral coalition, enabled substantially by American military aerial and naval assets, succeeded in protecting the population of Libya and facilitating the overthrow of its megalomaniacal dictator, Col. Muammar Qaddafi.  The Obama Administration decision to establish a no-fly zone in March 2011 and the willingness to subordinate its activities under NATO command provided the capabilities needed for the operation.  Although criticized by defenders of congressional prerogatives and observers concerned with the operation’s objectives and costs, the eventual overthrow of the hated Qaddafi regime essentially redeemed the undertaking.  Moreover, the success has refurbished the national security credentials of the Democratic Party and has established the “responsibility to protect” (R2P) as a legitimate justification for intervention.  When contrasted with the enormous costs associated with the preceding Republican administration’s endeavors in Afghanistan and Iraq, the Democratic liberal approach may emerge as the preferred basis for future overseas interventions.  This new competing foreign policy thesis from American liberalism would be welcome if it were not for its unfortunate pedigree.  It has undergone an ideologically convenient conversion right out of George Orwell’s Animal Farm, and has embraced intervention.  Lamentably, it has done so on the same questionable premise used to justify its domestic agenda – the purported moral superiority of altruism.

Four Legs Good, Two Legs Bad

In Animal Farm, the pig leaders of the farm rebellion decided to summarize the principles of their revolutionary ideology into Seven Commandments, of which two declared:

  1. Whatever goes upon two legs is an enemy.
  2. Whatever goes upon four legs, or has wings, is a friend.
After a failed attempt to teach the sheep, hens, and ducks how to read and write, Snowball, one of the two principal pig leaders, decided the Seven Commandments could be encapsulated in the single maxim of "Four legs good, two legs bad." Orwell wrote the sheep in particular learned the mantra by heart and would lay in the field repeating the phrase for hours.

The passage provides a concise metaphor for American liberal foreign policy thinking subsequent to the Vietnam War.

After World War II, Democratic liberalism provided the foundation for American foreign policy during the Cold War between 1945 and 1991.  Presidents Franklin Delano Roosevelt and Harry S. Truman, applying the lesson of Munich (that accommodation only entices aggression), laid the basis for American internationalism, containment of the Soviet Union, and the championing of liberal democracy worldwide.  Under President Eisenhower, Democratic liberalism may have critiqued administration policies, but for their execution, not their content.  President John F. Kennedy famously promised to “pay any price, bear any burden, meet any hardship, support any friend, oppose any foe, in order to assure the survival and the success of liberty.”  Republican conservatism may have emerged the more aggressively anti-communist but, through 1968, Democratic liberalism fully supported the measures undertaken -- including intervention -- to counter the Soviet Union.

Amidst the Vietnam War and the collapse of the Democratic political coalition in 1968, American liberalism fractured between traditional anti-communism and New Left accommodationism.  American liberalism remained wedded to expanding welfare and entitlements, but thereafter, instead of containment, Democratic liberalism espoused conciliation with the Soviet Union and retrenchment from overseas commitments.  

Prominent liberals began decrying an “imperial presidency” at home and U.S. “imperialism” abroad.  New Left radicals extolled Ho Chi Minh and protested servicemembers returning from Vietnam.  In 1972, anti-war liberal insurgents thwarted in 1968 finally secured control of the Democratic Party and nominated South Dakota Senator George McGovern, whose foreign policy refrain was “come home America.”  In 1977, President James Carter declared the United States was “free of [its] inordinate fear of communism and proceeded to dismantle the intelligence community in response to revelations of its activities abroad.

During subsequent Republican Administrations, leading Democratic liberals thwarted efforts to undermine Soviet adventurism.  Democratic liberals denounced President Reagan’s strident rhetoric and vigorously opposed increased military spending and support to anti-communist rebels around the globe.  Senator Edward Kennedy reportedly reached out to Soviet Chairman Yuri Andropov with an offer to collaborate to ensure President Ronald Reagan’s re-election effort failed in 1984.  The reflexive opposition led Jeane Kirkpatrick, the U.S. Ambassador the United Nations and a former Democrat, to memorably castigate the Democratic Party as the “blame America first” crowd.

Any discussion of committing resources -- or worse, U.S. forces -- was met with vehement opposition and warnings of “another Vietnam.”  For Democratic liberalism, the Vietnam Syndrome (an aversion to intervention) superseded the lessons of Munich.  In 1991, a majority of Democratic Senators voted against the resolution authorizing President George H.W. Bush to use force against Iraq after its invasion of Kuwait.

To paraphrase Orwell’s sheep, Democratic liberals had gone from stalwart anti-communists to ideologues bleating “altruism good, intervention bad.”

Four Legs Good, Two Legs Better

Of course, as readers of Animal Farm well remember, Orwell closed the story by jumping into the future after the revolution has been consolidated.  Few animals remembered the core principles and Orwell explained how the pigs took advantage of this situation.  Betraying the First and Second Commandments, “[o]ut from the door of the farmhouse came a long file of pigs, all walking on their hind legs. … It was as though the world had turned upside-down. … just at that moment, as though at a signal, all the sheep burst out into a tremendous bleating of ‘Four legs good, two legs better! Four legs good, two legs better! Four legs good, two legs better!’”

American liberalism would have remain marginalized after the stunning victory over Iraq if a rupture had not emerged within American conservatism after the collapse of the USSR.  The subsequent debate within the Republican Party over how to approach the post-Cold War era (“a new world order” versus “America First”) contributed to President Bush 41’s failed re-election bid.

The incoming Democratic Clinton Administration preferred to focus on domestic issues and was unprepared for the welter of new international issues.  The result was an incoherent approach to foreign policy that led one scholar to liken Clinton’s team to a “little boys’ soccer team... [with] each player chasing the ball.”  A new course was eventually set by Madeline Albright, the U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations and the president’s secretary of state during his second term.  

Albright was unique among American liberals in that she held to the lesson of Munich and soon signaled a new and unexpected enthusiasm for intervention.  With the Vietnam Syndrome dispatched in the sands of Iraq, Albright was free to assiduously advocate the use of military force.  She infamously sparred with GEN Colin Powell, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, over the use of force on the Balkans peninsula, asking “What’s the point of you saving this superb military for... if we can't use it?”

Albright was contravening twenty-five years of liberal apprehension regarding the use of force, but President William Clinton endorsed her rhetoric.  He became an erstwhile interventionist and marked his term with the uses of force in Somalia, Haiti, Bosnia and Herzegovina, and Kosovo.  President Clinton justified the actions on humanitarian grounds, ranging from famine relief to preventing ethnic cleansing.

Where observers denounced American “hyperpower,” Albright simply retorted America was “indispensable.”

From “altruism good, intervention bad” to “altruism good, altruistic intervention better.”

All Animals Are Equal, But…

The Clinton Administration congratulated itself for substantiating humanitarian intervention in Kosovo, but the operation proceeded without United Nations approval.  The circumvention prompted U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan to issue a challenge to member states, asking them to define internationally accepted grounds for undertaking such interventions in the future.  The Government of Canada responded to the challenge in September 2000 by establishing an independent International Commission on Intervention and State Sovereignty (ICISS).

The subsequent December 2001 report# outlined “the responsibility to protect,” the proposition that “sovereign states have a responsibility to protect their own citizens … but when they are unwilling or unable to do so, that responsibility must be borne by the broader community of states.”

Prevention would be the most important priority:  “options should always be exhausted before intervention is contemplated.”  But, in the event military intervention is required, the framework would entail a just cause threshold (large scale loss of life), precautionary principles (last resort, proportional means), the right authority (the United Nations Security Council), and maximum coordination with humanitarian organizations.

Issued just after the attacks of September 11, 2001, report authors acknowledged R2P was not conceived with retaliation to terrorism in mind.  R2P was conceived “to provid[e] precise guidance for states faced with human protection claims in other states; it has not been framed to guide the policy of states when faced with attack on their own nationals, or the nationals of other states residing within their borders.” [Emphasis added]

This equivalence is the core of R2P – and its most controversial aspect.

In the report authors’ estimation, the dual missions of the United Nations to preserve member states’ sovereignty and to promote the welfare of member states’ citizenry establishes an equivalence between a state’s sovereignty and a citizenry’s sovereignty. “…two notions of sovereignty, one vesting in the state, the second in the people and in individuals.” The former’s failure to uphold or its intent to transgress the latter creates an obligation on another member state to intercede.

This conversion of sovereignty into responsibility mirrors the liberal perception of American domestic affairs.

In classically liberal America (from its founding up until the Great Depression), citizens were indeed sovereign.  Under President Roosevelt’s New Deal, the collection of initiatives undertaken to address the Great Depression, liberalism began impinging on the American citizen’s sovereignty, empowering the state to appropriate his or her income and wealth for redistribution to less fortunate citizens.  American liberalism justifies this appropriation on the basis of altruism.

Other states tackled the Great Depression by adopting more radically altruistic ideologies -- the government either yoked capital and labor together (fascism) or abolished private capital and labor outright (communism).  The results were totalitarianism, police states, international aggression, and crimes against humanity.

America’s saving grace was its reliance on the secret ballot, but the subsequent voting coalition favoring and benefiting from the turn to altruism survived, endured, and flourished.  Democracy was enough to ensure altruistic liberalism did not produce the same results as fascism and communism, but Austrian economist Friedrich von Hayek identified the thread common to each of them.  

Von Hayek explained how each relied on long-term government planning and coordination to achieve altruistic objectives.  Invariably, long-term government planning invariably robs the citizens of his or her autonomy.  Moreover, the appropriation of an individual’s autonomy via this long-term government planning inevitably induces a “fatal conceit” on the part of government decision-makers.  Not only will they plan for the long term, but they will conclude this authority confirms their judgment is inherently superior and justifies even greater authority over the citizen’s life.  

In short, the initial objective to better the lives of citizens degenerates into the pursuit of more power at the expense of the citizen’s well-being.  Eventually betterment is restricted to that is which attained by government decision-makers and supporting functionaries or those with privileged access to them.

So with altruism at home, so with altruism abroad.

In Animal Farm, Orwell underscores the contemptuous hypocrisy and blatant avarice of such a political elite in the pigs’ re-writing of the Seven Commandments into a single decree:

ALL ANIMALS ARE EQUAL

BUT SOME ANIMALS ARE MORE EQUAL THAN OTHERS

In the language of R2P:  all states are sovereign, but some states are more sovereign than others.  Originators of the responsibility to protect concept recognize all states are sovereign, but if another state’s citizenry are to be bettered, then a second state’s sovereignty entails a responsibility to protect and the right to impinge on the first state’s sovereignty.

The experiences in Afghanistan and Iraq have clearly demonstrated that the impulse to improve the welfare of others results in tremendous costs -- politically, economically, morally, and corporeally.  Just as the United States concludes a decade of operations attempting to reshape the future of two completely alien sovereign states, R2P would justify and obligate continued commitments.  

The impulse to altruism is indeed the “road to serfdom.”

A Responsibility to Protect... Itself

Unopposed, the prevailing liberal Democratic administration has carte blanche to explore and refine the R2P concept.  

In October 2011, the Obama Administration informed Congress it had authorized the deployment of approximately 100 U.S. armed forces to support efforts by Uganda to capture or kill the senior leadership of the Lord’s Resistance Army, a resistance group with a long history of atrocities.  Despite war-weariness on the part of the American public, liberals are presuming the pursuit of humanitarian ends will mute opposition.

Regardless of the intent, the action reflects a reflexive interventionism on the part of foreign policy decision-makers.  More astonishingly, especially in light of prevailing economic and fiscal challenges, the commitments represents an inexplicable readiness to intervene on behalf of foreign populations, while declining to ensure the safety and security of American citizens.

Adam Elkus, a security studies specialist, observed as much in discussing the latest lapse in America’s ability to protect its citizens – the detention of former U.S. Marine Amir Hekmati in Iran on accusations of espionage.  Elkus writes, “why [is the U.S.] apparently powerless to protect its citizens abroad but can protect -- or govern -- foreigners through expeditionary force of arms or whole-of-government.” Elkus additionally notes that, despite decades of bellicose statements and the use of force abroad, the United States lacks credibility when it comes to protecting its citizens.

In reviewing Hekmati’s predicament, Elkus writes approvingly of an approach submitted by Anna Simons of the U.S. Naval Postgraduate School.

In an essay adapted from one of her lectures, Ms. Simons# posits a simpler interpretation of sovereignty whereby states (and not states and citizens) are recognized as the “global unit of account” and the international community has no basis for enforcing accountability.  The United States would no longer dictate another state’s form of government or economy and would only intervene in another state’s affair if that state’s conduct enabled or permitted an infringement of American sovereignty.

Simons and her colleagues assert establishing sovereignty as a baseline would simplify decisions regarding the use of force.

“…we've been attacked, and you own the problem. What kind of relationship have you had with the United States? What kind of relationship do you want now? It's the future, not the past that matters. … Let a regime explicitly support attackers or do nothing to eliminate them, and that government invites the largest and loudest U.S. response: we target it. … we make an example of that government. It's gone, as are those who attacked us.”

While admittedly “harsh,” the approach would be consistent.  Adversaries would know American red lines and, with repetition, the approach would attain credibility.  Would-be attackers and their enablers would have to consider a credible threat of American retribution.  Lastly, by limiting the use of force to the defense of its citizens at home or abroad, the approach could count on unified popular support and might avoid the inevitable domestic divisions arising from recent interventions.

Tellingly, Elkus casts this alternative sovereignty solution as simply “self-help,” the exact opposite of altruism.


As American conservatives wage an energetic battle against altruism in domestic affairs, they should be prepared to do so in the realm of national security as well.

 

2 February SWJ Roundup

Thu, 02/02/2012 - 6:05am

US Naval Institute Daily - USNI

Real Clear World - RCP

Afghanistan

Panetta: Afghanistan Tops NATO Conference Topics - AFPS

Panetta: US, NATO Seek to End Afghan Combat Mission in 2013 - VOA

Panetta: US, Allies Will Shift Afghan Mission to Training Next Year - S&S

Panetta Says US Hopes to End Afghanistan Combat Mission in 2013 - WP

Panetta Says US to End Afghan Combat Role as Soon as 2013 - NYT

US and Allies Plan to Give Afghanistan Forces Lead Role in 2013 - LAT

US 'Will Cut' Afghan Role in 2013 - BBC

US Plans to Halt Afghan Combat Role Early - Reuters

NATO Ministers Mull Afghan Drawdown - AP

NATO Copes With Early French Afghan Withdrawal - VOA

Taliban Captives Dispute US View on Afghanistan War - NYT

Tighter Monitoring on Afghan Forces Planned After Attacks - S&S

Lawmakers Warn of Outcry Against Taliban Transfer - Reuters

Taliban Deny Ready for Afghan Peace Talks - AP

Inquiry Finds US Not to Blame for Australian Soldier's Death - S&S

Aussie Claim About Comrade's Afghan Death Rejected - AP

ISAF Operations Summary - AFPS

Panetta Suggests Earlier Afghan Withdrawal - WP opinion

 

Pakistan

Pakistan: 'No Hidden Agenda' in Afghanistan - VOA

Pakistan Denies Report of Taliban Links - WP

Pakistan Willing to Push Taliban to Make Peace - AP

Pakistan Willing to Push Afghan Militants to Pursue Peace - Reuters

Court to Charge Prime Minister With Contempt - NYT

Court Will Charge PM Gilani With Contempt - BBC

Supreme Court to Charge Pakistani PM With Contempt - AP

Pakistan Says PM Was Mailed Anthrax Spores - NYT

 

Syria

UN Calls for End to Syria Violence - VOA

Diplomats: Progress on Syria Resolution at UN - VOA

Diplomats at UN Haggle With Russia Toward a Compromise - NYT

'Progress Made' at UN Syria Talks - BBC

France Sees Possible UN Deal on Syria Next Week - Reuters

Russia Holds Firm Against Military Intervention in Syria - LAT

Russia Says Will Veto 'Unacceptable' Syria Resolution - Reuters

Soldier Says Syrian Atrocities Forced Him to Defect - NYT

Against Syrian Anger, Assad's Sect Feels Fear - Reuters

Syrian Refugees Struggle in Squalid Conditions on Lebanese Border - VOA

Russia’s Bad Bet on Syria - NYT editorial

 

Iran

UN Nuclear Experts Plan Another Visit to Tehran - VOA

UN-Iran Talks Yield Further Meetings - WP

UN Positive About Iranian Talks - BBC

Feinstein Offers Peek at US-Israeli Talks on Iran - WP

India Delegation to Go to Iran to Boost Oil Exports - Reuters

Iran Warns Currency Speculators - WP

Israel's Profound Choice on Iran - LAT opinion

 

Iraq

Al-Qaida Claims Attack on Iraqi Government Center - AP

Iraq Executions Despite UN Rebuke - BBC

Iraq Executes 17 After UN Rebuke - Reuters

Iraq Court Agrees Execution of Baghdad Church Attackers - Reuters

 

Egypt

At Least 73 Killed in Egypt Soccer Riot - VOA

Egyptians to Protest Lack of Security Following Soccer Disaster - VOA

Egypt's Army, Police Blamed for Deadly Soccer Riot - AP

Egypt Mourns Football Clash Dead - BBC

New Hope for Egypt’s Journalist - WP

Twitter Users Share Suspicions About Deadly Violence - LAT

How Allies Can Help Egypt Get Back on Its Feet - NYT opinion

 

Israel / Palestinians

UN Chief Urges Israeli 'Goodwill' - BBC

UN Chief Tells Palestinians State Long Overdue - LAT

Palestinians Hurl Slippers at Visiting UN Chief - AP

Israelis Decry Palestinian Praise of Killer - AP

Turkey and Hamas Grow Close - AP

Israel: Netanyahu Primary Win Prelude to Early Vote - WP

 

Middle East

Tense Bahrain Under Spotlight Again Over Uprisings - Reuters

Kuwait Opposition Seen Making Gains in Snap Election - Reuters

Kidnapped Aid Workers Released in Yemen, 5 Militants Dead - Reuters

 

US Department of Defense

Chairman Notes Transition Challenges in Years Ahead - AFPS

DOD Urges Troops, Civilians to Watch for Human Trafficking - AFPS

USS Essex Unable to Fulfill Mission for 2nd Time in 7 Months - S&S

Transport Vessel Isn’t Being Made SEAL Mothership - Bloomberg

Engineers Create 'Self-Guided' Bullet for Military Machine Guns - AP

 

United States

ACLU Sues for Drone Attack Records - WP

Where the National Security Debate Could Become Interesting - WP opinion

America's Waning Influence - LAT opinion

 

Canada

US, Canada Expand Joint Planning, Operational Options - AFPS

 

Africa

Nigeria Holds Boko Haram Militant Spokesman - BBC

Nigerians Mourn Christmas Victims - BBC

UN Chief Calls for Calm in Senegal - VOA

Deadly Clashes Over Senegal Poll - BBC

DRC: Kabila Party Loses Seats, Retains Majority - VOA

Congo Leader's Party Loses 45 Percent of Its Seats - AP

UK Appoints Ambassador to Somalia - AP

 

Americas

Mexican General Is Charged in Killings and Abuses - NYT

US Missionaries Slain in Mexico - BBC

2 US Missionaries Slain at Ransacked Mexico Home - AP

Mexico: Juarez Police Leave Their Homes After 5 Are Slain - AP

Deadly Bomb Attack on Colombia Police - BBC

Colombia Hostage Delay Condemned - BBC

Colombia Capital Tries Trial Ban on Guns in Public - AP

UK-Argentina Tension Builds Over Falkland Islands - WT

Bolivia Protest Revives Road Row - BBC

China Plants Bitter Seeds in South American Farmland - WT

Haiti’s Judicial Travesty - WP editorial

 

Asia Pacific

Chinese Say 'Trained Separatists' Responsible for Tibetan Violence - VOA

Residents Vote in Chinese Village at Center of Protest - NYT

Abduction of 29 Chinese Workers in Sudan Stirs Criticism of Beijing - WP

Japan Protests to China Over Undersea Gas Drilling - AP

New Name for South Korea Ruling Party - BBC

South Korean Indicted Over Twitter Posts From North - NYT

North Korea Renews Demands for Improved Relations With South - NYT

N. Korea Demands Preconditions for Talks With South - AP

To Sell New Leader, North Korea Finds Mirror Is Handy - NYT

Power Cuts Pitch North Korea Capital into Darkness - Reuters

Al-Qaeda Linked Militants Killed in Philippines - BBC

Philippines: 3 Most-Wanted Terror Leaders Killed - AP

Asian Nations Spending to Reduce Costs of Disastrous Floods - VOA

 

Europe

Merkel in China on Eurozone Talks - BBC

Russia: A Throwback to Soviet Vitriol - WP

Greeks Unsettled by Europe’s Demands - WP

Germany Intel Agency Criticized for Spying on Lawmakers - LAT

The Republic of War

Wed, 02/01/2012 - 9:49pm

@WJRue just tweeted a link to this post at the new blog Paradigm Cure.  It deserves reading.

 

The Conventional Wisdomites sigh and roll their eyes every time the likes of Andrew Bacevich give another talk about America’s global ambitions and the wrecking of Constitutional restraints in presidential war powers.  Respectable foreign policy journals and magazines hardly publish such irresponsible dreck.  But the fact is, we’re now “at war” hither and yon, with no end in sight; and what it means for the Nation, few care to investigate in serious ways.  And the issue now is that the problem looks ready to run utterly out of control.

“It’s time to think seriously about intervening in Syria,” writes Steven Cook in a piece at the Atlantic.  Which, regardless of the substance of this terrifying article, is a useful title, anyway, because you can shave off the last word, insert a blank, and get a pretty good sense of where we’re at as a nation.

Nothing Like a Good Maritime Raid

Wed, 02/01/2012 - 6:40pm

 

As the services work to figure out the shape of their future, many in the Navy and Marine Corps are inching together to "create synergies" (like a boss... on a boat).  Benjamin Armstrong writes about the virtues of maritime raiding in the February volume of Proceedings:

The Navy/Marine Corps team has a long and storied past, operating together in everything from ship versus ship combat in the Age of Sail to the mastery of small wars and the amphibious warfare that has become its staple over the past half century. Operationally, many of the successful missions conducted by the Navy/Marine Corps team have involved maritime raiding.

As the Navy welcomes the Marine Corps’ return to the sea in the 21st century following a decade of war ashore, the modern redevelopment of the historic maritime raiding capability is just as vital to the future of the Sea Services as sharpening the dulled skills needed for a full amphibious assault.