WAR 11-04-2017-to-11-10-2017___****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
(293) 10-14-2017-to-10-20-2017___****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...0-20-2017___****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****

(294) 10-21-2017-to-10-27-2017___****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...0-28-2017___****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****

(295) 10-28-2017-to-11-03-2017___****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...1-03-2017___****THE****WINDS****of****WAR****

---

Well isn't that just "special"....

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
https://scout.com/military/warrior/...e-Nuclear-WeaponsShould-India-Worry-109876924

Pakistan Says It's Ready to Use Nuclear Weapons

Pakistan is ready to use nuclear weapons against India, a senior Pakistani official confirmed on Monday. Appearing on the Pakistani television channel “Geo,”

Zachary Keck - 19 hours ago

Pakistan is ready to use nuclear weapons against India, a senior Pakistani official confirmed on Monday.

Appearing on the Pakistani television channel “Geo,” Pakistan’s Defense Minister Khawaja Asif*said that*[3]*Islamabad is willing to use nuclear weapons to ensure its survival.

“We should pray that such an option never arises, but if we need to use them (nuclear weapons) for our survival we will,” Asif said, according to Geo’s website. His remark was widely reported by Indian media outlets.

Asif went on to accuse India of supporting anti-Pakistani terrorist groups in a proxy war against Islamabad. “Fuelling terrorism directly or indirectly is India’s proxy war in Pakistan,” Asif said. He singled out Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), the Pakistani Taliban, and Baloch separatists as two of the groups that India is allegedly supporting.

Asif’s statement about Pakistan’s willingness to use nuclear weapons is in line with Islamabad's long-standing nuclear doctrine. In contrast to India and China, which both maintain no first use nuclear doctrines, Pakistan has always maintained that it could resort to nuclear weapons to blunt a conventional attack from India.

Nor is Asif the first high-level Pakistani official to threaten to use nuclear weapons. Former President Pervez Musharraf*issued a similar threat*[4]*(albeit, after he left office), when he stated: “We do not want to use nuclear capability but if our existence comes under threat, who do we have these nuclear weapons for?”

More tellingly, in an interview back in 2002, Lt. Gen. Khalid Kidwai, the first head of the Strategic Plans Division (SPD), which is responsible for Pakistan’s nuclear arsenal, outlined four scenarios where Pakistan would consider using nuclear weapons against India:

  1. If India conquers a large part of Pakistan;
  2. If India destroys large parts of Pakistan’s army or air force;
  3. If India tries to strangle Pakistan economically;
  4. If India tries to destabilizing Pakistan politically, including by creating large scale internal subversion.

Notably, in his interview this week, Asif seems to suggest that India is doing the fourth scenario by supporting terrorist groups inside Pakistan.

Pakistan has backed up its rhetoric by creating an operational nuclear force capable of making good on its threats. For example, when Indian officials began discussing a Cold Start doctrine—in which Indian forces would make quick and limited incursions into Pakistan in response to Islamabad-supported terrorist attacks in India—Pakistan began developing tactical nuclear weapons to thwart such attacks.

In 2011, Pakistan*first tested its Hatf-9 (Nasr) missile*[5], which it referred to as a “Short Range Surface to Surface Multi Tube Ballistic Missile.” The statement announcing the test elaborated: “NASR, with a range of 60 km, carries nuclear warheads of appropriate yield with high accuracy, shoot and scoot attributes. This quick response system addresses the need to deter evolving threats.”

It went on to add that “the test was a very important milestone in consolidating Pakistan’s strategic deterrence capability at all levels of the threat spectrum.”
It has continued to test the Nasr missile in the years since, including using firing it in four missile salvos using a “state-of-the-art multi-tube launcher.”

Earlier this year, Marine Corps Lt. Gen. Vincent R. Stewart, the director of the U.S. Defense Intelligence Agency, confirmed that Pakistan is continuing to build up a tactical nuclear weapons force. In testimony before the Senate Armed Services Committee in February, Stewart said: “We anticipate that Pakistan will continue [its] development of new delivery systems, including cruise missiles and close-range ‘battlefield’ nuclear weapons to augment its existing ballistic missiles.”

Zachary Keck is a former managing editor of*The National Interest. You can find him on Twitter:*@ZacharyKeck*[6].
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Sorry everyone, but with all the stuff that's been going on this week I missed this one....:shk:

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.newsweek.com/saudi-arabia-wants-nuclear-energy-there-risk-696718

Nuclear Saudi Arabia Risks Inflaming Middle East Tensions

By Cristina Maza On 10/30/17 at 9:20 PM

Tensions in the Middle East are about to go nuclear.

Saudi Arabia will begin extracting uranium and build its own nuclear power program, Saudi officials announced Monday, a development that could lead to nuclear weapons and heightened regional discord.*

The country's top nuclear official, Hashim bin Abdullah Yamani, said his oil-rich country aims to become “self-sufficient” through the development of a nuclear power program, part of the nation's larger social and economic transformation that aims to diversify the economy and move away from the finite resource of*oil.

He told attendees at an energy conference in Abu Dhabi that the goal was "to introduce nuclear power for peaceful purposes.”

But nuclear reactors can also be used to enrich uranium to weapons-grade levels, and Saudi Arabia's entry into the nuclear club comes as*Saudi Arabia's foe, Iran, remains barred from developing nuclear weapons under its pact with the United States.

That has some analysts worried that a nuclear Saudi Arabia will tip the balance of power*in the region.

“The pursuit of a nuclear energy program is *a strategic choice following the nuclear deal between U.S. and Iran, as an expression of the continued regional rivalry between the two states,” Harrison Akins, a researcher at the Howard Baker Center, told Newsweek.

The*U.S. has not yet announced its official position on Saudi Arabia’s plans for nuclear power development, but Saudi Arabia is a close ally of the United States.*If Washington backs Riyadh, it could heighten tensions between Saudi Arabia and Iran, especially given President Donald Trump's hostility towards the Iran nuclear pact,*Akins said.

“A position of support by the United States towards the Saudi nuclear program could put further strain on the current nuclear deal with Iran,” he added.
*
Amanda Kadlec, a national security expert with the Rand Corporation, added that the fear of a nuclear Saudi Arabia is real, but also too early to worry about.

“Fears about Saudi Arabia developing a weapons program at this stage would be understandable given the heightened state of instability in the region, but to draw this immediate conclusion about its intentions and capacity to do so would be extremely premature,” Kadlec said.

Currently, the United Arab Emirates is the only country in the Gulf area developing a nuclear power program, and its first nuclear reactor is set to go online next year.

Saudi Arabia will award a construction contract for its first two reactors by the end of 2018, Yamani noted Monday. Saudi Arabia has reportedly contacted potential bidders from South Korea, China, France, Russia, Japan, and the United States.
*
Israel is the only country in the region to possess nuclear weapons, which many analysts believe has helped Israel maintain its own balance of power in the region.
 

Shacknasty Shagrat

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Thanks for the raw meat for comments, HC.
Your posts are always appreciated.
So, per the article, the trouble starts when the Saudis may develop nukes ..after Irans gigantic and successful program?
Sort of like violence starting in the Mid East when Israel strikes back at attackers.

And on the sub continent..
Scrubbing off the piety, India and Pakistan are, in my opinion, the real continual quick flash point for nuclear war.
Other nations may have capacity and a willingness to deliberately go nuke, but these two hate each other and will punch buttons at the drop of a hat.
Tactical nukes are as seductive and deadly as the cobra. When the first 'tactical nuke' goes off, it is immediate BOB time, home to see the folks, gas up everything, buy batteries, more metals and arm the kids.
My understanding is that in the 1980's, when the US had a lot of capacity and credibility, these two nations were within minutes of going the big dirty, irrespective of the consequences. The US talked them down but that was then. Now is now.
SS
 

mzkitty

I give up.
No pictures yet. This can't be good.........


Saif Saleh Al-Oliby‏ @SaifOliby 53s54 seconds ago

People of #Riyadh confirm the #explosion caused #ballistic #Burkan h2
launched from #Yemen



News Breaker‏ @NewsBreaker101 6m6 minutes ago

#BREAKING: Massive Explosion followed by gunfire rocks #Riyadh city, Saudi Arabia - eyewitnesses


CESÎM ZEYDAN‏ @cesimzeydan 51s52 seconds ago
Replying to @washingtonpost

#Yemeni #forces fire #ballistic missile at #KingKhalid International Airport in #Riyadh


Sadegh Ghorbani‏Verified account @GhorbaniSadegh
Sadegh Ghorbani Retweeted Amichai Stein

Minutes after Yemeni forces announced that they have fired a ballistic missile toward Riyadh.


Nidalgazaui‏ @Nidalgazaui 1m1 minute ago

#BREAKING: Pro #Iranian Houthi militants in #Yemen reportedly fired several Ballistic Missles towards the capital of #SaudiArabia, #Riyadh


Omar Ghraieb‏Verified account @Omar_Gaza 2m2 minutes ago
Replying to @Omar_Gaza

Viral videos are actually showing #KSA defense intercepting four ballistic missiles coming from #Yemen over #Riyadh
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Thanks for the raw meat for comments, HC.
Your posts are always appreciated.
So, per the article, the trouble starts when the Saudis may develop nukes ..after Irans gigantic and successful program?
Sort of like violence starting in the Mid East when Israel strikes back at attackers.

And on the sub continent..
Scrubbing off the piety, India and Pakistan are, in my opinion, the real continual quick flash point for nuclear war.
Other nations may have capacity and a willingness to deliberately go nuke, but these two hate each other and will punch buttons at the drop of a hat.
Tactical nukes are as seductive and deadly as the cobra. When the first 'tactical nuke' goes off, it is immediate BOB time, home to see the folks, gas up everything, buy batteries, more metals and arm the kids.
My understanding is that in the 1980's, when the US had a lot of capacity and credibility, these two nations were within minutes of going the big dirty, irrespective of the consequences. The US talked them down but that was then. Now is now.
SS

Yeah, the Saudi nuclear/MENA tensions article from Newsweek reads like "Scientists find water wet..."

Despite the "quality" of the writing in the article, it dovetails with the thread we were running awhile back...

Saudis admit they have nuclear weapons
Started by*alchemike‎,*02-22-2016*12:36 PM
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/showthread.php?485255-Saudis-admit-they-have-nuclear-weapons
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
No pictures yet. This can't be good.........


Saif Saleh Al-Oliby‏ @SaifOliby 53s54 seconds ago

People of #Riyadh confirm the #explosion caused #ballistic #Burkan h2
launched from #Yemen



News Breaker‏ @NewsBreaker101 6m6 minutes ago

#BREAKING: Massive Explosion followed by gunfire rocks #Riyadh city, Saudi Arabia - eyewitnesses


CESÎM ZEYDAN‏ @cesimzeydan 51s52 seconds ago
Replying to @washingtonpost

#Yemeni #forces fire #ballistic missile at #KingKhalid International Airport in #Riyadh


Sadegh Ghorbani‏Verified account @GhorbaniSadegh
Sadegh Ghorbani Retweeted Amichai Stein

Minutes after Yemeni forces announced that they have fired a ballistic missile toward Riyadh.


Nidalgazaui‏ @Nidalgazaui 1m1 minute ago

#BREAKING: Pro #Iranian Houthi militants in #Yemen reportedly fired several Ballistic Missles towards the capital of #SaudiArabia, #Riyadh


Omar Ghraieb‏Verified account @Omar_Gaza 2m2 minutes ago
Replying to @Omar_Gaza

Viral videos are actually showing #KSA defense intercepting four ballistic missiles coming from #Yemen over #Riyadh

Hummm....The IRGC has been busy....
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Hummm.....

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
https://thediplomat.com/2017/11/quantum-communications-and-chinese-ssbn-strategy/

Flashpoints

Quantum Communications and Chinese SSBN Strategy

China’s quantum lead may have important implications for its SSBN force.

By Raymond Wang
November 04, 2017
*****
China has been making significant advances in quantum technology, and it is important to understand the strategic implications of these developments as they enter military use. One area that merits close analysis is how quantum communications technology may influence the sea-based leg of China’s nuclear deterrent, the People’s Liberation Army Navy’s (PLAN) ballistic missile nuclear submarine (SSBN) force. Quantum technology has important implications for SSBN launch pre-delegation and patrol strategy. These implications are not alien to Chinese strategists and shipbuilders, who have already started interacting with top quantum physicists in China.

In short, quantum communication uses photons to transmit information. As such, its underwater performance is affected by water quality.* By comparing the relative clarity of the bodies of water surrounding China, certain areas appear to be significantly clearer than others, meaning that signals can penetrate deeper. This will influence ballistic missile submarine (SSBN) patrol strategy if quantum communication technology is deployed with the SSBN force. Furthermore, because of the nature of quantum mechanics, these communications are “unhackable,” which will decrease technical pressures for launch authority pre-delegation, and increase crisis stability.

Quantum Communications and Water Quality
Quantum communications use the quantum states of photons to transmit information. Photons are bundles of electromagnetic energy that make up light. The only principle required for this discussion is that photons are light of a particular wavelength, which affects their penetrative ability in different types of water.

The PLAN has long sought to improve its ability to securely communicate with SSBNs on patrols. It was reported in 2013 that the PLAN’s Extremely Low Frequency (ELF, 30-300 Hz) communication systems went online, which represents the adoption of a “classical” submarine communications network using radio waves. ELF systems can communicate to around 100 meters in depth. Note that China defines 30-300Hz as Super Low Frequency (极低频/SLF), whereas the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) defines it as ELF.

The next step toward more secure communications could be quantum communications. On August 30, 2017, the CEO of China Shipbuilding Industry Corporation, which produces China’s SSBNs, met with Pan Jianwei. Pan Jianwei is one of the leading quantum physicists in China. During the meeting, they reaffirmed cooperation on “quantum communication, quantum navigation and quantum sensing (radar).”

Recently, a team of Chinese scientists successfully maintained the entangled state of a pair of photons through seawater by developing a method of “filtering out” depolarized photons at the receiving end. This represents a significant step toward developing a quantum communication capability for Chinese SSBNs.

The scientists from the study chose water samples from six points spanning 36 km in the Yellow Sea, which happens to be one of the areas identified by Chinese analysts as a probable site for Chinese SSBN patrols. There are also technical reasons for choosing the Yellow Sea. The authors remark that the water there was Jerlov type I, which is the clearest category under the Jerlov water classification scheme.

This shows that the adoption of quantum technology would introduce water quality as a new factor that will affect the capabilities of a submarine communications network. To be sure, any quantum underwater communication will experience attenuation — signal loss due to travel in water — and it is reasonable to assume there will be measures to compensate for such problems. However, it is also reasonable to assume that even with such measures, there will still be an attenuation threshold at which quantum communications become unfeasible. Certain quantum communication protocols can tolerate up to 70db of loss, but there is currently no available open-source information to determine the kind of protocol that will be used in such an SSBN communication system.

The Jerlov scheme classifies seawater into different types, each with its distinct attenuation coefficient (Kd) curve. Kd is inversely proportional to the Z90 value (Kd = 1/Z90), which represents the depth at which 90 percent of a signal is lost. In a nutshell, the lower the Kd value, the clearer’the water, and the deeper a quantum signal can penetrate. Another property of water types is that its clarity for light at different wavelengths*is*transferable – that is, if water type A is clearer than water type B at a given wavelength, then it is clearer than type B at all wavelengths.

Figure 1 Variation of Z90 with wavelength, taken from Liu Ying & Li Guosheng, Study of attenuation depths for MODIS bands in the Bohai Sea in China, Acta Oceanologica Sinica 2009, Vol. 28, No. 5, p. 44.

Figure 2 Variation of Kd with wavelength, taken from Northam, Donna et al, High repetition rate frequency-doubled Nd: YAG laser for airborne bathymetry, Applied Optics, Vol. 20, No. 6, 1981, p. 969.
SSBNs can patrol in “murky” areas and go to “clear” areas to receive signals.
Alternatively, they can use buoyant antennas similar to the ones used to receive VLF signals — this would allow the SSBN to remain submerged at its operating depth, while trailing an antenna that floats to a depth with stronger signal. However, the Chinese ELF report observes that this will “limit the SSBN’s speed to 4 knots, and there is still a chance that the antenna could be detected.” This suggests that, doctrinally, the PLAN hopes to move away from using buoyant antennas. However, very clear water with around 0.01Xm-1 Kd is very rare, especially in coastal regions. Indeed, even at the clearest points identified in the analysis below, the average clarity would only translate to a Z90 of around 40*meters, which means only 10 percent of the quantum signal would remain at 40 m. As such, despite its doctrinal reluctance, the PLAN may have to occasionally deploy buoyant antennae. This will face the same issues of water quality, unless the antenna goes above the surface; something the PLAN would hope to avoid.

It is beyond the scope of this article to take into account the effect of the air-water interface, an important factor for which I am indebted to Dr. Richard Garwin. Suffice it to say that makes sending signals accurately difficult due to the refractive properties of seawater, especially when taking surface ripples into account. One interesting consequence is that it will be much harder for the SSBN to send signals accurately back to the satellite than vice versa, as the signal has to travel farther to reach the satellite than the SSBN, therefore magnifying any deviations resulting from the refractive effect.

Analysis of the Four Bodies of Water
Figure 3 is taken from a study that used remote sensing data to calculate the K*d values at a signal wavelength of 490 nm. It is common practice to denote the Kd value at a particular wavelength as Kd(wavelength). The study encompasses the Bohai Gulf, the Yellow Sea, and the East China Sea. These results were compared with other studies that collected in situ data from the Bohai Gulf and the Yellow Sea, and proved to be consistent. Note that the Chinese scientists in the quantum study used photons at a wavelength of 405 nm, and Kd values in the 400-500 nm range increase as the wavelength decreases. As such, Kd(405) values would be slightly higher than the ones discussed below, which are measured at Kd(490).

Bohai Gulf and Yellow Sea
Figure 3 shows that the Bohai Gulf is not a favorable area for quantum communications, with Kd(490) values mostly at around 1.00 m-1, meaning 90 percent of the signal will be lost at 1 m. *The Yellow Sea is clearer, with lower Kd(490) values between 0.01 – 0.1 m-1. China would probably prefer to conduct patrols in the northern part of the Yellow Sea, defined as the area above the 38th parallel, despite it being slightly murkier than the area below. This is because the northern part is bounded by the Chinese and North Korean border, whereas the latter would put Chinese SSBNs close to areas that likely contain South Korean and U.S. anti-submarine assets.

East China Sea
The East China Sea is significantly affected by the discharge of the Yangtze River, which carries a lot of sediment. The coastal areas surrounding the outlet have extremely high Kd values going up to 6.00m-1, meaning 90 percent signal loss at 0.17 m. The “plume” effect of this discharge affects a large part of the coastal area of the East China Sea, and in order to get to comparable water qualities (light blue/deep blue), SSBNs would have to go to areas close to the South Korean Jeju Island, or away from the coast in the southeastern part, where Japan and the United States*“most likely deploy a variety of anti-submarine assets.”


Figure 3 Adapted from Son and Wang using the annotation tool szoter.com, The Diffuse Attenuation Coefficient Model in the Yellow Sea for the Korean Geostationary Ocean Colour Imager, Proceedings of SPIR, Vol. 7861, p. 5.

South China Sea
The northern South China Sea encompasses Hainan Island, where the South Sea Fleet is based at Yulin Naval Base. Figures 4 and 5 are taken from a study comparing the coastal waters of Guangdong and the northern South China Sea (NSCS), and demonstrate that the waters south of Hainan Island have low Kd values while being close to the Chinese coast, and is also the deepest among the four bodies of waters. The Kd values in northern South China Sea remain close to 0.01 from l=400-500 nm, as shown in Figure 5.

More specifically, it determines that Kd(490) at the NSCS range from 0.034-0.193 m-1, with an average of 0.073 m-1, with most samples less than 0.092 m-1. *This is reflected in the one outlier data line for the NSCS in Figure 5. *Using an empirically derived formula provided in the study, Kd(412) can be estimated to be 0.018m-1 at the clearest point in the NSCS, representing 90 percent signal loss at around 55 m. We can expect Kd(405) to be around this number. This gives a sense of the relative clarity of the NSCS.

As such, should the PLAN adopt quantum technology and a coastal patrol strategy, the northern South China Sea and the northern Yellow Sea are the most favorable areas. The PLAN will likely adopt a coastal patrol strategy for the near future, given the noisy nature of its Type 094 SSBN. At the time of writing, the PLAN has*four active Type 094 SSBNs in service, all based at the Yulin base in Hainan.

Figure 4 Sampling stations in the northern South China Sea in 2004(•) and 2005(Δ), taken from Wang et al,. Variation in downwelling diffuse attenuation coefficient in the northern South China Sea p. 3.

Figure 5 Kd values of NSCS cruises, taken from Wang et al., Variation in downwelling diffuse attenuation coefficient in the northern South China Sea p. 4.
This analysis leads to one more observation: since oceanic waters generally have lower Kd values than coastal waters, adopting quantum communications channels implies a trade-off – in order to get to clearer waters, submarines have to move farther away from the coast, i.e., farther away from the protection coverage of friendly land-based assets.

Quantum Key Distribution (QKD) or Pure Quantum Channel
There are two methods of deploying quantum communication channels. QKD is a hybrid model in which the message is transmitted via a classical channel but is encrypted with a key, which is then transmitted via a quantum channel. There are various QKD protocols, but the photon signal will be affected by water quality regardless of which is used.

A QKD model for land-to-submarine communications could be: the message would be transmitted via the Extremely Low Frequency (ELF) classical channel, and the key would be transmitted via a quantum channel, such as through a satellite. Attaining the shared key will require a “public” discussion on the classical channel. China has already successfully used the Micius satellite to entangle photons and transmit each twin to two receiving stations on land. More recently, it was used to make the first intercontinental quantum phone call from China to Austria, proving the feasibility of the world’s first space-to-ground integrated quantum network.

Under this model, China would still face some challenges associated with using ELF, such as low bandwidth and the need to use large antennas, which would make such sites vulnerable targets. However, due to quantum encryption, the channel would be secure in the sense that the message, that is the key, in the quantum channel cannot be read, making SIGINT collection by adversaries impossible. Due to the very nature of quantum mechanics, any attempt at eavesdropping on the channel would introduce “disturbances into the system… and cause the quantum state of the key to change, and the information being intercepted will self-destruct.” This clarifies a popular misconception as to the reason quantum channels are “unhackable.” It is impossible to read an intercepted message, as the very act of intercepting will change the state of the message. However, it is still possible to interrupt a quantum channel and thereby block a message, although the interruption will be detected.

A pure quantum channel solves problems related to a classical ELF channel, and has the same level of quantum security. It is possible that China can eventually produce such a channel, given a recent experimental success using direct counterfactual communication, which transmits a quantum state without any particles being physically sent between the two parties. However, the set-up from the experiment cannot utilize “a strong coherent state (classical) light,” and there is not enough available information to assess how this could be operationalized. In contrast, the aforementioned space-to-ground model is an existing operationalized QKD system. Therefore, a QKD system is a likely next step.

Both models will offer China increased confidence in the security of their SSBN communications. This would decrease technical pressure to pre-delegate launch authority, and increase crisis stability.

Crisis stability in part depends on both sides believing that there are no significant advantages to be gained by initiating nuclear war. Without QKD, the Chinese leadership might worry that at some point in a crisis, its commands can be spoofed or altered to cancel or interfere with SSBN launches, creating a “use it or lose it” scenario where there may be incentives to launch early. With QKD, they can be assured that messages will not be spoofed, altered, or read, thereby removing this pressure. This security will also reduce pressures to pre-delegate launch authority. That said, since QKD still requires ELF facilities, Chinese perceptions of their vulnerability to counterforce strikes — strikes by an adversary to destroy ELF facilities — will still affect crisis stability.

Policy Implications and Conclusions
This analysis shows that water quality will become a new factor in underwater communications. A technical and strategic analysis of the waters surrounding China show that the northern Yellow Sea and the northern South China Sea are more favourable toward quantum communication. This leads to a few policy implications.

First, water quality is by no means the only factor influencing the area of deterrence patrols. Other factors such as depth and salinity, which affect the detectability of SSBNs, will also play a role. SSBNs could patrol in murky areas and regularly go to clear areas to receive signals. That said, knowing certain areas are overall more favorable toward quantum communications would create “watering holes,”, whereby monitoring clear areas will give a good probability of locating an SSBN. It is also important to remember that water quality is affected by seasonal changes and other variables.

Second, the fact that oceanic waters generally have lower Kd values increase incentives to achieve open water patrols. This partially depends on when China will develop a quieter SSBN.

Third, as mentioned in the previous section, the adoption of quantum communications will increase confidence in the security of submarine communications, which will decrease technical pressures to pre-delegate launch authority, and increase crisis stability.

In the final analysis, developments in underwater quantum communications are a significant technological breakthrough. Further research in this area is needed to determine its full strategic implications.


Raymond Wang is a Graduate Research Assistant at the James Martin Centre for Nonproliferation Studies, and an MA candidate at the Middlebury Institute of International Studies at Monterey.
 

Shacknasty Shagrat

Has No Life - Lives on TB
No pictures yet. This can't be good.........


Saif Saleh Al-Oliby‏ @SaifOliby 53s54 seconds ago

People of #Riyadh confirm the #explosion caused #ballistic #Burkan h2
launched from #Yemen



News Breaker‏ @NewsBreaker101 6m6 minutes ago

#BREAKING: Massive Explosion followed by gunfire rocks #Riyadh city, Saudi Arabia - eyewitnesses


CESÎM ZEYDAN‏ @cesimzeydan 51s52 seconds ago
Replying to @washingtonpost

#Yemeni #forces fire #ballistic missile at #KingKhalid International Airport in #Riyadh


Sadegh Ghorbani‏Verified account @GhorbaniSadegh
Sadegh Ghorbani Retweeted Amichai Stein

Minutes after Yemeni forces announced that they have fired a ballistic missile toward Riyadh.


Nidalgazaui‏ @Nidalgazaui 1m1 minute ago

#BREAKING: Pro #Iranian Houthi militants in #Yemen reportedly fired several Ballistic Missles towards the capital of #SaudiArabia, #Riyadh


Omar Ghraieb‏Verified account @Omar_Gaza 2m2 minutes ago
Replying to @Omar_Gaza

Viral videos are actually showing #KSA defense intercepting four ballistic missiles coming from #Yemen over #Riyadh

Today, it is getting scary to get on the internet.
There are a lot of balls in the air, and I don't mean just President Trump.
SS
 

mzkitty

I give up.
It's that doofy hat, I tells you.


Alqalaam.com‏ @AlqalaamENG 39m39 minutes ago

#BREAKING

Shake-up in #SaudiArabia

Dozens of royalty arrested including prince Walid, major twitter shareholder and nr 6 on Forbes 500 '06
 

Attachments

  • saudi 1.jpg
    saudi 1.jpg
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mzkitty

I give up.
Al Arabiya English‏Verified account @AlArabiya_Eng

#BREAKING: 10 princes and tens of former ministers implicated and detained in #Saudi #AntiCorruption probe


Donut Shorts‏ @DonutShorts 14m14 minutes ago
Replying to @AlArabiya_Eng

The prince is purging anyone that can challenge him. Dissent must be building.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/saudi-arabia-intercepts-missile-targeting-main-airport-yemen/

CBS/AP November 4, 2017, 5:23 PM

Saudi Arabia says it intercepted missile fired from Yemen

Last Updated Nov 4, 2017 5:50 PM EDT

RIYADH, Saudi Arabia -- Saudi Arabia said its forces intercepted Saturday evening a ballistic missile fired from Yemen toward one of the kingdom's major international airports on the outskirts of the capital, Riyadh.

The missile was fired from across Saudi Arabia's southern border by Yemen's Houthi rebels, who are at war with the kingdom. Several Houthi-owned media outlets, including Al-Masira and SABA, reported the rebels had launched the missile.

The missile was shot down by Saudi air defense forces, with fragments of the missile landing in an uninhabited area north of the capital. Saudi Arabia's Civil Aviation Authority said the missile did not cause any damage to the King Khalid International Airport and that flights were not disrupted.

Saudi forces have claimed to shoot down missiles fired by the rebels before, but none have flown as close to a population center, BBC News reports.

This is the first time that a Houthi missile has come this close to a heavily populated area, and it appears to be the farthest that such a missile has reached inside Saudi Arabia. Riyadh is around 620 miles, or 1,000 kilometers, north of the country's border with Yemen.

A Saudi military spokesman condemned the attack in a statement, saying the missile was fired "indiscriminately" toward a populated civilian area.

Saudi military forces have intercepted missiles fired from Houthis several times since March 2015, when a Saudi-led coalition launched a war against Houthi rebels and their allies after they captured northern Yemen and ousted the Saudi-backed president from power. The kingdom has also imposed an air and sea blockade on Yemen.

The stalemated war has killed more than 10,000 civilians and displaced 3 million others, pushing the Arab world's poorest country to the brink of famine

The U.S., which is one of the kingdom's most important military suppliers, has backed the coalition with logistical support.

In the past, Saudi Arabia has accused its rival, Shiite power Iran, of training and helping arm the rebels. Iran denies that it has provided material support, though it acknowledges its political support of the Houthis.

News outlet Al-Masira said the missile launched Saturday evening was made in Yemen and was the third to be fired toward Riyadh this year. It reported the rebels saying the missile was fired in response to "Saudi-American aggression and crimes against the people of Yemen."

Earlier this week, a suspected airstrike by the Saudi-led coalition killed at least 29 people, including children, in northern Yemen.

-----

saudi_arabia_pol_2003.jpg

http://www.lib.utexas.edu/maps/middle_east_and_asia/saudi_arabia_pol_2003.jpg

f8b79cfe7f1f466db4451299cd0f2d92_6.jpg

http://www.aljazeera.com/mritems/Images/2017/7/5/f8b79cfe7f1f466db4451299cd0f2d92_6.jpg

--

Ok so assuming it came from around Sanaa, that would mean a missile with a range of 665 miles = 1070 km. The longest range "regular" SCUD Yemen had before the fighting was the SCUD D with a range of about 430 miles. So what did they shoot at Riyadh?...
 

northern watch

TB Fanatic
zerohedge‏ @zerohedge · 2h2 hours ago

Saudi Helicopter Carrying 8 High-Ranking Officials & Prince Bin-Muqrin Crashed Near Yemen Border - All Dead
 

northern watch

TB Fanatic
Michael Horowitz‏Verified account @michaelh992 · 2h2 hours ago

Replying to @michaelh992

Saudi outlets now confirm Prince Mansour bin Muqrin, the deputy governor of the Asir Province was killed in the crash of a helicopter #KSA

 

northern watch

TB Fanatic
Gregor Peter‏ @L0gg0l · 1m1 minute ago

BREAKING - SAUDI COALITION: HOUTHI MISSILE ATTACK "BLATANT MILITARY AGGRESION AND COULD RISE TO ACT OF WAR"
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Gregor Peter‏ @L0gg0l · 1m1 minute ago

BREAKING - SAUDI COALITION: HOUTHI MISSILE ATTACK "BLATANT MILITARY AGGRESION AND COULD RISE TO ACT OF WAR"

Considering what's going on already in Yemen involving the "Saudi Coalition" v AQAP and v the Houthi, I'd say they're all way past that....
 

Housecarl

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Hummm.....

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
https://jamestown.org/program/as-ru...-war-ebbs-kremlin-mulling-new-hybrid-tactics/

As Russian Support for Ukrainian War Ebbs, Kremlin Mulling New ‘Hybrid’ Tactics

Publication: Eurasia Daily Monitor Volume: 14 Issue: 141
By: Paul Goble
November 2, 2017 09:35 PM Age: 3 days

Vladimir Putin’s Anschluss of Crimea gave him a big political boost, and Russians still overwhelmingly support the annexation of that Ukrainian peninsula. But support for Russian forces and their clients in Donbas is declining, with ever more Russians against backing these breakaway groups and expressing fears that the conflict there could grow into a major war with the West (Levada.ru, October 30). These attitudes, especially on the eve of presidential elections, have prompted Putin to adopt what one Russian commentator calls “a fake demilitarization.” Specifically, the Kremlin suggests it will do what it can to end Russian military losses and risks abroad (Rosbalt, Windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com, October 30).

But there is little evidence that Putin’s new “peace offensive” reflects a fundamental change in his plans to destabilize, undermine and ultimately ensure Russian dominance over Ukraine. Some Kyiv commentators even argue that he will soon launch a new, full-scale attack on the country (Apostrophe.ua, October 20). Such a move is highly unlikely until after the March elections for at least two reasons. First are concerns over the presidential campaign itself. Putin might discover that armed escalation now, especially if it results in massive Russian losses, would hurt more than help him with Russian voters. Second, the season is wrong: attacking in the winter would be difficult and give many advantages to Ukrainian defenders.

What then is Putin likely to do? The most probable answer is that he will seek to develop and apply new “hybrid” forms of aggression in order to weaken the Ukrainian state and thus reduce the likelihood that the West will decide to provide Kyiv with the lethal arms it needs and seeks. That was the logic behind his use of “little green men” in Crimea, in 2014. And it remains the basis of his policies both in Donbas, where Moscow continues to deny it is running the show, and elsewhere in Ukraine, where the Russian government is using both corruption and targeted violence against its opponents (UAWire, November 1).

One such new “hybrid” form apparently under consideration is the promotion of atamanshchina, both as a scarecrow designed to frighten Ukrainians and put off their Western supporters, and as a means of spreading Russian influence beyond the confines of occupied Crimea and Donbas. The term is not familiar to most in the United States, but it occupies an important place in Russian and Ukrainian thought. According to US historian Canfield F. Smith, the term “connotes in one word” in Russian “what it takes several words in other languages to describe” (Canfield F. Smith, “Atmanshchina in the Russian Far East,” Russian History/Histoire Russe, 6:1 (1979): 57).

In general, Smith writes, the suffix “-shchina” “means ‘the evil deeds of’ the name that precedes it,”—thus, the “Pugachevshchina” for the peasant revolt against Catherine the Great, led by Yemelyan Pugachev, and the “Yezhovshchina” for the bloodiest period of Joseph Stalin’s repression in the 1930s. But its most frequent application has been to the partisan leaders (“atamans”) on both sides in the Russian Civil War, 1917–1922, especially in what is now Ukraine and the Russian Far East. Many of the atamans at that time were little more than brigands who maintained their power by brutal means. They often had little attachment to any ideology—many of them changed sides. By their actions, these small-time warlords often drove the population over which they aspired to rule into the hands of whatever side they were not on at any particular time.

A year ago, some Russian writers were expressing concern that problems within the chain of command in separatist Donbas were leading to the rise of atamanshchina there, which they insisted Moscow should suppress (Iarex.ru, July 3, 2016; Windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com, July 4, 2016). Now, however, several Russian observers are viewing this phenomenon not as a threat to Russian interests but as a tactic that can advance them—and at relatively little cost or risk to Russian lives.

In a commentary for Tsargrad television, the Moscow Patriarchate’s official and influential channel, Dmitry Pavlenko argues that “A New Atamanshchina Awaits Ukraine,” one not in Donbas but across the country, nominally organized by local people with arms and an anti-Kyiv agenda (Tsargrad.tv, October 25). His enthusiasm for something Ukrainians and others have good reason to fear as a result of their earlier experiences suggests that Moscow at a minimum welcomes this trend. And quite possibly, the Kremlin is doing what it can to promote it by leaking arms and money to those who might aspire to regional power as updated versions of the atamans of the Russian Civil War.

Pavlenko argues that an “Atamanshchina 2.0” would conform to the Hegelian principle that when history repeats itself, what once was a tragedy comes back as a farce. Moreover, he says that this revival would not only remind everyone of the brutalities of the first atamans, many of whom were notoriously anti-Semitic, but also lead to the complete fragmentation of Ukraine—something Kyiv and the West oppose but that Moscow has already shown it is prepared to promote.

Consequently, in the coming weeks and months, the appearance of ataman-like figures in parts of Ukraine is quite likely, especially since it appears they now will enjoy not the backing of the Ukrainian people but of the powers that be in the Kremlin.

----------

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
https://jamestown.org/program/russi...gic-perceptions-kaliningrad-oblast-2013-2017/

Russia’s Changing Military-Strategic Perceptions of Kaliningrad Oblast Between 2013 and 2017

Publication: Eurasia Daily Monitor Volume: 14 Issue: 140
By: Sergey Sukhankin
November 1, 2017 09:36 PM Age: 4 days

Last September’s massive strategic-level Zapad 2017 exercise provided analysts and observers with a number of important conclusions about the state of Russia’s military readiness, capabilities and Russian military thought (see EDM, September 14, 20, October 3, 6); though the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) is reportedly still parsing through the lessons learned (Nezavisimaya Gazeta, October 26). Yet, relatively little attention has focused specifically on the role, place and perception of Kaliningrad Oblast in Russian military strategy, which has undergone at least three important changes between Zapad 2013 and Zapad 2017.

first change involves a new emphasis on “first strike” and a reevaluation of “future warfare” as they relate to Kaliningrad. Russian understanding of the shape of future war is based on a combination of recent and more distant military conflicts. Zapad 2017 specifically underscored the return of the concept of an “initial period” of warfare, traceable to the 1920s (Diplomaatia.ee, Number 170, October 2017). Due to its exposed geographic location, the role played by the Russian exclave of Kaliningrad is expected to be pivotal in the initial stage of a conflict with the West. In this regard, it is instructive to recall the words of the chief of the General Staff of the Armed Forces of Russia, Valery Gerasimov, who argued that Russian armed forces “must be prepared for both conventional and hybrid warfare… [W]e need to remember the experience of guerrilla warfare during the Great Patriotic War and the experience of war in Afghanistan” (Vpk-news.ru, March 7, 2016). In fact, this is exactly what was trained in Kaliningrad during Zapad 2017, when “territorial defense units” were introduced and used in conjunction with other branches of service (see EDM, September 18). This point is inseparable from the next one.

The second noticeable difference between the Zapad exercises in 2013 versus 2017 involve the formulation of Kaliningrad this year as a “new” (rather than “classical”) type of anti-access/area-denial (A2/AD) bubble. Russia’s current A2/AD strategy is based on a combination of information/cyber security (which sometimes includes Electronic Warfare), strategic air operations, an integrated air defense system, as well as modern precision-strike capabilities (and apparently naval capabilities). Within this approach, Kaliningrad, as a Russian A2/AD zone, does not need to be filled with large numbers of military personnel, as used to be the case during the Soviet period. A “classical” A2/AD bubble implies its defensive nature and a reliance on asymmetric capabilities by a weaker party against a stronger opponent. This type of posture, however, is not apparent in the case of Russia’s westernmost oblast.

Indeed, the portions of the Zapad 2017 exercise carried out in Kaliningrad demonstrated the presence of all the abovementioned key elements of a “new” type of A2/AD bubble:

– The integrated and highly coordinated use of the “branches of the Armed Forces,” “separate troop branches” (Tvzvezda.ru, September 11; Tvzvezda.ru, September 15), and “territorial defense units” (securing the rear of the regular Armed Forces);
– A high level of EW capabilities. Russian sources boast that “Russia’s EW troops occupy leading positions in the world” (Vpk-news.ru, September 25);
– And finally, the increasing potential of Kaliningrad in terms of “strategic air operations,” which is to be further boosted by the end of 2017 with a newly operational air base (capable of accepting virtually all types of aircraft) (RIA Novosti, October 7).

At this juncture, it is worth recalling the words of retired United States General Philip Breedlove, who considers “all Russian A2/AD zones to be inherently offensive in nature” (National Interest, June 29, 2016). This statement draws on to the fact (frequently ignored in Western scholarship) that, from Moscow’s perspective, Kaliningrad’s functions must not be reduced to a defensive role. In fact, it bears underscoring that during Zapad 2017 counter-offensive capabilities were put to a serious test, shifting the perception from either purely “defensive” or “offensive” tasks.

The recently released Russian New Generation Warfare Handbook (written by the US Army Asymmetric Warfare Group) points to a number of deficiencies in Russia’s A2/AD strategy (Publicintelligence.net, September 18). But the example of Zapad 2017 exercises in Kaliningrad actually demonstrates that Russia has made serious progress in overcoming these limitations. Today, Russian forces in Kaliningrad are capable of jeopardizing NATO’s current strategy (based mainly on air forces and aviation assets) concerned with dealing with “classical” A2/AD bubbles.

Finally, compared to 2013, the September 2017 Zapad maneuvers in Kaliningrad put significantly greater focus on reflexive control, demonstrations of force and military psychology. Reflexive control is defined as “a means of conveying to a partner or an opponent specially prepared information to incline him to voluntarily make the predetermined decision desired by the initiator of the action” (Journal of Slavic Military Studies, 2004). Since 2014, Russia’s use of “informational-psychological” operations has reached a qualitatively new level, dramatically gaining in sophistication. For instance, during Zapad 2013 (as well as in 1999 and 2009), the Russian side actively employed sabre rattling and crude intimidation of its simulated opponents; whereas, Zapad 2017 manifested a dramatic departure from this course (see below).

Through the use of sophisticated “informational-psychological” operations, Moscow secured victory in an information battle with the West long before Zapad 2017 even commenced (RIA Novosti, September 14; Tvzvezda.ru, October 15). Notably, through disinformation and cleverly planted stories, Russia was able to fan a great deal of speculation and rumors about the actual number of troops that would be involved (see EDM, September 5, October 10), the nature of the exercises (Novostiua.org, September 25), the issue of Russian troops in Belarus, and the role Kaliningrad might play in a hypothetical Russian attack on the “Suwałki Gap.” The confusion this sowed highlighted a lack of cohesion, solidarity and even mutual trust within the camp of Western Allies, giving Moscow the upper hand in the ongoing “information confrontation” (carried out on a permanent basis) with the West. Sensing this, the Kremlin attempted to deepen the fissure between the two main parts of the Alliance (the European Union and the United States) by trying to separately appeal to Brussels (TASS, August 3).

Reportedly, Kaliningrad (specifically, Baltiysk) is to become one of the main centers in Russia where military psychologists will be trained in the use of the most advanced techniques. According to the defense ministry, the curriculum will take into account experience from the Syrian compaign and Zapad 2017 (Mil.ru, October 14).

In conclusion, Zapad 2017 demonstrated Russia’s perception of Kaliningrad as an entity tasked with hindering NATO’s air and naval operations during the “initial period” of war and with disrupting further activities via active defense and limited-scale counter-attacks. Indeed, in comparison with 2013, Russia’s current strategy regarding Kaliningrad is much more coherent and comprehensive.
 
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Housecarl

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Tick, tick, tick....

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/arti...ium=social&cmpid==socialflow-twitter-politics

Saudi Arabia Blames Iran for Attempted Missile Attack on Airport

By Zaid Sabah and David Tweed
ýNovemberý ý5ý, ý2017ý ý6ý:ý19ý ýPMý ýPST

- Missile was intercepted by Saudi Arabian missile defenses
- Saudis say Iran supplied missiles to Yemen’s Houthi rebels


Saudi Arabia blamed Iran for an attempted missile attack on Riyadh’s international airport, saying it could be considered an act of war.

The missile was a direct military aggression by Iran,*according to a statement early Monday from the Saudi military coalition carried by the state-run Saudi Press Agency. The kingdom has the right to defend its land and people, it said.

Iran provided Yemen’s Houthi militia with ballistic missiles, launchers, explosive-laden drones and sea mines, Turki al-Maliki, spokesman for the Saudi-led coalition in Yemen, said earlier on state-run television.

Saudi Arabia’s state-run media said Saturday the kingdom’s air defenses had intercepted a missile northeast of Riyadh, with no damage to the airport. The Houthi rebels said the same day they had*targeted the airport with a ballistic missile.

Saudi Arabia has lead a coalition of countries against the pro-Iranian militias, which overthrew Yemen’s government in 2015. The Saudi coalition said in a statement it had decided to temporarily close all Yemeni land, sea and air crossings except for aid and rescue teams.

President Donald Trump told Saudi King Salman in a phone call on Saturday he would support the purchase of American military equipment to keep Saudi Arabia safe. Trump and Salman discussed the “continuing threat of Iranian-backed Houthi militias in Yemen” and the intercepted missile attack, according to a readout provided by the White House.

In comments on Monday to business leaders in Japan, Trump praised the Saudi missile defenses, saying they “took the missile right out of the air. Blew it up.”

— With assistance by Jennifer Jacobs
 

Housecarl

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For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.bbc.com/news/av/world-mi...tion-releases-footage-of-riyadh-bound-missile

Yemeni TV station releases footage of 'Riyadh-bound missile'

Video

Footage distributed by Yemen's pro-Houthi Al-Masirah television station has shown what it said was the launch of a ballistic missile aimed at Riyadh's King Khaled airport.

Saudi Arabia confirmed it had intercepted a device fired from Yemen on Saturday.

Witnesses reported seeing parts of the missile in the airport's car park, Saudi broadcaster Al-Arabiya reported.

Saudi Arabia is leading a campaign to defeat the Houthis, and is the biggest power in an international air coalition that has bombed the rebel group since 2015.

05 Nov 2017
From the section
Middle East
 

cooter

cantankerous old coot
so I take it the patriot batteries , have been up graded, ?

since they had such luck in the past with hitting scuds part of the time, :whistle:
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
:dot5:

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
https://www.nbcnews.com/news/world/...destroy-north-korea-s-nuclear-arsenal-n817651

Ground Invasion Only Way to Destroy North Korea’s Nuclear Arsenal, Pentagon Says

by Yuliya Talmazan and Associated Press
Nov 5 2017, 5:34 am ET

The only way to locate and destroy with complete certainty all components of North Korea’s nuclear weapons program is through a ground invasion.

That blunt assessment from the Pentagon is in response to a letter from two Democratic congressmen asking about casualty assessments in a conflict with North Korea.

Rear Adm. Michael J. Dumont of the Joint Staff offered the assessment in response to a letter from Reps. Ted Lieu of California and Ruben Gallego of Arizona.

In a joint statement issued Saturday, 15 Democratic lawmakers and one Republican — all military veterans — called the assessment that a ground invasion would be required to destroy the North’s nuclear arsenal “deeply disturbing” and said that such an action “could result in hundreds of thousands, or even millions of deaths in just the first few days of fighting.”

The statement goes on to say that entering into a protracted and massive ground war with North Korea would be disastrous for U.S. troops and allies.

"There are no good military options for North Korea. Invading North Korea could result in a catastrophic loss of lives for U.S. troops and U.S. civilians in South Korea," the statement reads. "It could kill millions of South Koreans and put troops and civilians in Guam and Japan at risk."

The revelation comes as President Donald Trump starts his Asia trip, where the subject of North Korea's nuclear ambitions is expected to be high on the president's priority list.

The Pentagon letter to lawmakers also points out that North Korea may consider the use of biological weapons despite its international obligations, and is likely in possession of a chemical weapons stockpile.

It suggests a classified briefing would be required to discuss the details of how to eliminate North Korea's nuclear weapons located in deeply buried, underground facilities and counter North Korea's ability to retaliate with chemical and biological weapons.

A report by the Congressional Research Service released last month estimates as many as 25 million people on either side of the border, including more than 100,000 U.S. citizens, could be affected by an escalation of a military conflict on the Korean peninsula.

The members of Congress say it's their intent to have a full public accounting of the potential cost of war, so the American people have a solid understanding of what the commitment to military action entails.

"We must pursue every other option before even considering a massive ground invasion," their statement reads.

But the Pentagon says coming up with even the roughest casualty estimates can be challenging, adding that casualty estimates will vary significantly depending on the nature, intensity and duration of a North Korean attack, the readiness of alliance forces as well as how much advance warning there would be.

Dumont's letter points out the Joint Force fully supports economic and diplomatic pressure campaigns led by Secretary of State Rex Tillerson with regard to North Korea.

However, President Trump has previously told Tillerson that he was "wasting his time" trying to negotiate with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, belittling previous negotiation efforts and adding that "only one thing will work."

But aside from provocative statements against North Korea's leadership on his personal Twitter account and threats to unleash "fire and fury" on the rogue state, the administration has not explicitly talked about the possibility of a ground invasion before.

The lawmakers say if President Trump does intend to pursue a military option against North Korea, he must come to Congress as required by the Constitution.

"The stakes are too high and the potential outcome too grave for President Trump to violate his constitutional duty to come to Congress to authorize and oversee use of force," their statement reads.
 

Housecarl

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Hummm.....

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...sures-in-scenario-study-spiegel-idUSKBN1D5121

#World NewsNovember 5, 2017 / 12:10 PM / Updated a day ago

German army contemplates EU fissures in scenario study: Spiegel

Reuters Staff
2 Min Read

FRANKFURT (Reuters) - The German army contemplated fissures in the European Union and a rise in global conflicts as one of six scenarios that might play out by 2040, German magazine Der Spiegel wrote in this week’s edition.

The EU experienced a damaging debt crisis in 2010-12 and is now navigating Britain’s departure from 28-country club, the first country to choose to lose the bloc.

In their scenarios, the German army’s strategists envisaged a situation where more countries follow Britain’s footsteps and the world becomes “increasingly disorderly”.

“The EU enlargement has been largely abandoned, more states have left the bloc,” they wrote in the study cited by Der Spiegel.

“The increasingly disorderly, sometimes chaotic and conflictual world has dramatically changed the security policy environment for Germany and Europe.”

The magazine said the study would be followed by concrete armaments plans to be developed in the coming years.

A Defence Ministry spokesman said on Sunday the study, labeled Strategic Perspective 2040, made “robust predictions” but did not attach probabilities to them or trigger decisions.

He declined to comment about the content of the report, which is confidential.

The five other scenarios cited by Der Spiegel include one where some eastern European states halt progress in EU integration and others enter the “Eastern bloc”, a likely reference to Russia and its allies.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel has said the EU risked running into trouble unless it allowed members to participate at varying levels of intensity, with those using the euro currency pulling closer together.

Two scenarios in the army’s study saw a comeback of Russian-style “state capitalism” in some EU countries and a halt in globalisation. A further two envisaged a more peaceful world.

Reporting By Francesco Canepa; Editing by Edmund Blair
 

Housecarl

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Hummm....."Dot" anyone?.....

For links see article source.....
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https://news.usni.org/2017/11/06/7-u-s-aircraft-carriers-simultaneously-underway

UPDATED: 7 U.S. Aircraft Carriers Are Now Simultaneously Underway

By: Sam LaGrone
November 6, 2017 1:49 PM • Updated: November 6, 2017 5:56 PM

Seven out of 11 U.S. nuclear aircraft carriers are underway simultaneously for the first time in several years, USNI News has learned.

Three are on operational deployments in the Western Pacific with full air wings and carrier strike groups — USS Ronald Reagan (CVN-76), USS Nimitz (CVN-68) and USS Theodore Roosevelt (CVN-71).

Four more are out for short training missions as part of training operations or workups ahead of deployments. USS Carl Vinson (CVN-70) and USS John C. Stennis (CVN-74) are operating in the Eastern Pacific. USS Abraham Lincoln (CVN-72) and the Navy’s newest carrier USS Gerald R. Ford (CVN-78) are operating in the Atlantic.

A Navy official confirmed the basic details of the carrier moves on Monday, to USNI News.

The Reagan, Nimitz and Roosevelt strike groups are all operating in the U.S. 7th Fleet area of operations. Reagan is operating in the Sea of Japan near the Korean peninsula while Nimitz is returning to its homeport at Naval Station Kitsap-Bremerton, Wash. after a deployment to the Persian Gulf to conduct air strike against ISIS targets. Roosevelt deployed from San Diego, Calif. on Oct. 7 set to replace Nimitz as part of the continued U.S. operation against ISIS.

The carriers in 7th Fleet could converge for the first simultaneous three-strike group training operations in a decade, defense officials have told USNI News.

“These three carriers are not there specifically targeting North Korea,” Chairman of the Joint Chiefs Gen. Joseph Dunford said last week.

“This is a routine demonstration of our commitment to the region.”

The exercise would likely overlap with President Donald Trump’s 12-day Asia trip and be set against a backdrop of smoldering tensions between Washington and North Korea.

Vinson is conducting a planned sustainment exercise and flight tests with the F-35C Lighting II Joint Strike Fighter, while Stennis left Kitsap-Bremerton last week for training after coming out of a repair period. A sailor on*Vinson was injured Friday after being struck with a plane being towed on the flight deck.

Lincoln is undergoing a series of qualifications following the completion of a mid-life refueling and complex overhaul and return to the fleet in May.

Ford is continuing years of tests and training before the ship will be fully integrated into the U.S. fleet and leave on its first deployment sometime in the early 2020s.

“Naval aviation is supporting the requirements of combatant commanders forward while building our capabilities for future deployments–and qualifying new pilots–with training near our shores,” Vice Adm. Michael Shoemaker, commander Naval Air Forces said in a Monday statement provided to USNI News.

“The addition of USS Gerald Ford is exciting, as we test the capabilities for the future. This optempo is not ordinary, but the demand for carriers remains as high as ever.”

While the Navy is quick to ascribe coincidence and overlapping training schedules often to a certain number of ships underway, leaders also use the number of ships deployed as a metric of how well the service is doing.

In 2016, six carriers were underway in a combination of training and deployments that Chief of Naval Operations Adm. John Richardson at the time called a “milestone event.”

In 2004, the service deployed seven carrier strike groups as part of the Summer Pulse 04 exercise to demonstrate the surge capacity of the carrier force.

“The near-simultaneous deployment of seven carrier strike groups provides the Navy and the joint combatant commanders an opportunity to exercise the [fleet response plan] while maintaining the ability to respond to crises around the globe, enhance regional security and relationships, meet combatant commander requirements including forward presence, and demonstrate a commitment to allies and coalition partners,” read a statement from June 3, 2004.
 

Housecarl

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For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
https://thediplomat.com/2017/11/india-successfully-test-fires-indigenous-nuclear-
capable-cruise-missile/

India Successfully Test Fires Indigenous Nuclear-Capable Cruise Missile

A test flight of the nuclear-capable Nirbhay cruise missile was successfully conducted on November 7.

By Franz-Stefan Gady
November 08, 2017

India’s Defense Research and Development Organization (DRDO) successfully test-launched a nuclear-capable Nirbhay cruise missile, the country’s first indigenously designed and developed long-range cruise missile on November 7, the Indian Ministry of Defense (MoD) announced in a statement.

The test took place at the*Integrated Test Range on Abdul Kalam Island off the coast of Odisha. “The flight test achieved all the mission objectives completely from lift-off till the final splash, boosting the confidence of all scientists associated with the trial,” the MoD said.

“The missile took off in the programmed manner and all critical operations viz. launch phase, booster deployment, engine start, wing deployment, and other operational parameters demonstrated through autonomous way point navigation,” the MoD added.

“The missile majestically cruised for a total time duration of 50 minutes, achieving the range of 647 km. The missile was tracked with the help of ground based radars and other parameters were monitored by indigenous telemetry stations developed by DRDO.”

The Nirbhay is a subsonic long-range land attack cruise missile that can be armed with a 300-kilogram warhead. The missile is capable of reaching speeds of*0.6-0.7 Mach and has an estimated strike range of around 1,000 kilometers. The Nirbhay, designed to be launched from air, sea, and land, reportedly is highly maneuverable and has loitering capabilities.

The recent test is good news for the Nirbhay program. The indigenous cruise missile project was kicked off in 2004 and projected to be completed by the end of 2016.*However, the program has been plagued by many difficulties including technical problems with the missile’s flight control software and navigation system.

Since the inception of the program, DRDO engineers have*repeatedly voiced their concern over the tight timeline of the project and lack of funding.

The last Nirbhay test launch in December 2016 ended in failure as the missile had to be destroyed in mid-air after it deviated from its course. “So far, only a flight trial of the missile conducted on October 17, 2014 met all test criteria. The missile reportedly traveled 1,010 kilometers while being monitored by the ground station and an Indian Air Force fighter jet,” I*explained*in December 2016.

As I noted:

Various analysts have questioned the Indian military’s requirement for a subsonic cruise missile given that the BrahMos supersonic cruise missile, capable of traveling at speeds of up to Mach 3.0 and available in surface-launched, ship-launched, and air-launched variants, is already entering service (See:*“India to Test Fire Nuclear Capable Missile From Fighter Jet”).

The BrahMos has a much shorter maximum range than the Nirbhay. Nevertheless, there are still serious discussions with the Indian government about scrapping the latter program. In January, the Indian MoD agreed to let DRDO continue to work on the Nirbhay program until June 2018.*Until then, substantial progress will have to be shown; otherwise the Nirbhay project will likely be axed next year.

As I noted last year, “the cancellation of the Nirbhay program would in particular be bad news for India’s first domestically*developed and built ballistic missile nuclear submarine (SSBN) class, the*Arihant-class, which was slated to be fitted with India’s domestically produced cruise missile.”
 

Housecarl

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Hummm.....

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
https://www.lowyinstitute.org/the-interpreter/why-south-kore-japan-not-go-nuclear

Japan | South Korea | Nuclear Weapons

Why South Korea and Japan should not go nuclear

6 November 2017
14:55 AEDT

By David Vallance, an intern in the Lowy Institute's International Security Program, and Euan Graham, Director of the International Security Program.

The road to nuclear Armageddon is not straight.

The North Korea crisis has led commentators to reassess the conventional wisdom that, when it comes to nuclear weapons, fewer is better. Unsurprisingly, South Korea and Japan are at the centre of this discussion. In a provocative piece in the Washington Post, Singapore’s Bilahari Kausikan recently made the case for nuclear proliferation (bar Taiwan) to stabilise the fractious region. At the other end of the spectrum, the Nobel Peace Prize-winning International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons maintain that the spread of nuclear weapons undermines international security.

Both positions are missing something. Were Seoul or Tokyo to acquire nuclear-weapons capacity, abandoning their reliance on extended deterrence from the US, the region would not instantly become any more or less secure.

Could South Korea go nuclear?

In South Korea, the desire for nuclear armaments stems from the understandable desire for military parity with the North. Since Donald Trump was elected US president, after a campaign criticising freeloading allies, that desire has taken on a new urgency. While the South has deterred full-scale aggression by the North since 1953, it has had to restrain some of its more hawkish instincts to do so. Seoul tried to gain a nuclear capability covertly under President Park Chung-hee in the 1970s, has clashed repeatedly with the North at sea and across the DMZ. Even the current, left wing administration has been negotiating with the US to loosen restrictions on its ballistic missiles, while training 'decapitation teams' to infiltrate the north and kill its leadership.

This mixture of heightened threat and longstanding rivalry is why South Korean media, the political opposition and some government officials have raised or backed the idea of nuclear parity with the North, either with their own arsenal or through the redeployment of US tactical nuclear weapons to the Peninsula.

But for a number of reasons it would be difficult for South Korea to develop a nuclear arsenal. First, there is the constraining effect of agreements with the US and the Non-Proliferation Treaty. Then there are technical constraints. South Korea has 24 nuclear reactors, with nuclear energy providing about one-third of its electricity, but it lacks enrichment facilities to produce the fissile material needed for a weapon. In August, President Moon Jae-in announced the gradual phasing out of nuclear energy in South Korea, aiming to replace it with natural gas and renewables. In response to public pressure, he has since announced that two plants under construction will be completed by the early 2020s, but this will still leave Seoul’s nuclear ambitions further from being realised than they are today.

Moreover, there is the risk to Seoul's relations with Beijing. China’s sustained opposition to America's deployment of THAAD missile-defence batteries in South Korea already indicates anxiety. Despite a strong trade relationship, relations between China and South Korea are strained, and moves towards acquiring nuclear weapons would strain them further. If a pro-nuclear president should take office in Seoul and reverse the nuclear energy reforms, Beijing's reaction would be swift and strong.

South Korea’s interest in acquiring a nuclear capacity is parochial, since it is focused almost entirely on its northern neighbour. Beyond the goal of catching up with the North, those advocating for a South Korean nuclear weapons capacity have not thought through a nuclear strategy, including the flow-on effects beyond the Peninsula. But even if the situation on the Peninsula could be isloated from the region, the risk of low-intensity conventional conflict between Seoul and Pyongyang would not cease if both sides had nuclear weapons. In fact, they would become more fraught with danger. This is the so-called stability-instability paradox, whereby large conflicts are avoided out of the fear of mutually assured destruction, but limited conflicts are not similarly deterred. A proliferation of small conflicts can then undermine the supposedly stabilising architecture of nuclear security.

What if Japan developed nuclear weapons?

Conjecture about a nuclear-armed Japan happens more in the US* than in Japan itself, unsurprising for the only country to have experienced the devastation of nuclear weapons. However, discussion has increased in Tokyo in light of the Korea crisis. Shigeru Ishiba, a former defence minister and potential successor to Shinzo Abe, has called for a more open debate on Japan’s non-nuclear stance.

Japan is one of the few states without nuclear weapons to have an enrichment facility, and has a domestic stockpile of 10 tons of plutonium, with 37 tons stored overseas. Unlike South Korea, if the government desired, it could probably produce a device within a year. Japan would eventually be likely to develop submarine-launched ballistic missiles for a credible second-strike capability against North Korea and China.

Bear in mind that the US alliance with the UK did not shatter when the latter developed nuclear arms, nor did the US abandon France in the face of de Gaulle’s nuclear force de frappe. Could Tokyo be a new London, and Seoul a new Paris?
If we believe the structural realism of Kenneth Waltz, then the answer is 'yes'. However, Beijing and Tokyo are in conflict over broad questions of regional order and identity, as well as over territory. Kausikan points out that since Japan’s invasion of Chinese-aligned Korea in the 16th century, it has refused to be part of a Sino-centric order, and hence Tokyo needs a nuclear arsenal. But the opposite is true. Such weapons would in fact only intensify that historical rivalry.

How much security would nuclear weapons buy for South Korea and Japan? Less than widely assumed. They would provide a guarantee against large-scale invasion, but little else. Flashpoints such as the Senkaku Islands could trigger armed conflict not quite serious enough to warrant a nuclear response, or we could see a brushfire conflict across the DMZ, or the western maritime border, against a nuclear backdrop. If this becomes a new norm, the implications for regional security are obvious.

Though the likelihood and consequences of South Korea and Japan joining the nuclear weapons club are very different, one thing is true for the whole region: proliferation of nuclear weapons in Asia will not make the region more secure. At best, it is an expensive chimera; at worst, it will strike at the foundations of peace.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Hummm.....

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://thehill.com/opinion/national...s-on-terrorism-non-kinetic-warfare-that-works

US Treasury takes on terrorism: Non-kinetic warfare that works

By Jonathan Schanzer, opinion contributor — 11/06/17 07:20 AM EST
1
The views expressed by contributors are their own and not the view of The Hill

America’s foreign policy challenges are mounting. From North Korea and Iran to ISIS and Russia, the news cycle churns with reports of new threats and new concerns.

President Donald Trump has called for an increase in defense spending. Congress went even further than Trump expected, in recognition of the challenges that lie ahead. But somehow, Congress and the administration may be poised to cut funds from an office on the front line of America’s most important battles: the U.S. Treasury.

Treasury’s Office of Terrorism and Financial Intelligence (TFI) has been the non-kinetic first response of the last three presidents when faced with a new crisis. TFI wields a variety of financial national security tools, from targeted sanctions on individuals and companies to broader punishments on banks and jurisdictions. Presidents Bush, Obama and Trump have all relied on these tools consistently, which has made TFI a crucial noncombatant command.

Sometimes TFI’s measures are a stopgap until new policies are formed, but oftentimes they become the strategy, itself. Consider TFI’s footprint today:

  • Tensions with North Korea are soaring. TFI has issued several tranches of sanctions aimed at Pyongyang’s ballistic missile program, proliferation networks and illicit finance mechanisms, with many more to come.
  • The Trump administration has a tough, new Iran strategy. TFI will figure prominently in that strategy, particularly after the designation of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, which controls roughly one-third of the Iranian economy, and other policies designed to halt Iran’s support for terrorism across the Middle East.
  • Meanwhile, the war against the Islamic State is entering a new phase where TFI figures to play a key role. Sure, the so-called Caliphate is collapsing, but the terrorists are now scattering across the globe, making the interconnected global web of funding channels more crucial to shut down than ever.

Yet, right as TFI gets set to fight these crucial battles, its funding may be cut. In fiscal year 2017, the office had 421 employees with a budget of $123 million. The new 2018 budget has the office slated to shrink to 386 employees, with a budget of $116 million.

Of course, $116 is not chump change. But now is not the time to scale back on TFI funding or manpower. Not while there is still a chance of gaining financial leverage on some of these nasty actors.

Treasury’s new undersecretary for TFI, Sigal Mandelker, is slated to appear before the House Financial Services Committee’s subcommittee on Terrorism and Illicit Finance on November 8. Legislators will get an unclassified account of the strategies that TFI is set to deploy on a range of tough issues. And even if the sensitive issue of the budget is not discussed, the challenges of significantly ramping up the sanctions programs on Iran and North Korea with fewer resources should become abundantly clear, given the hard work that lies ahead.

Treasury’s task is even harder in the wake of congressional sanctions on actors like Hezbollah and Russia. Those sanctions are incredibly important to our national security interests, but have unintentionally burdened TFI with additional paperwork that figures to draw analysts away from their core job of targeting America’s enemies with sanctions.

Even if the subcommittee sees fit to allocate some additional funds to TFI after next week’s hearing, the battle will not be over. Treasury will then need to make its case to the Office of Management and Budget (OMB), the White House office that holds the purse strings and oversees Trump’s efforts to streamline our bloated bureaucracy.

OMB’s job is not easy. Paring back the federal government is long overdue, and there are 4 trillion reasons to cut funds wherever and whenever possible. That even includes some of the offices involved in sanctions, such as the Coordinator for Sanctions Policy office, which was cut by Secretary of State Rex Tillerson in a State Department overhaul (with sanctions responsibilities now being absorbed by the Office of Policy Planning).

But the White House can reduce federal waste without cutting across the board. Sanctions and other financial tools promise to play a crucial role in America’s foreign policy challenges for the foreseeable future. Now is not the time to cut corners on a program so vital to our national security.

Jonathan Schanzer, a former terrorism finance analyst at the U.S. Department of the Treasury, is senior vice president at Foundation for Defense of Democracies.
 

Housecarl

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For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://smallwarsjournal.com/jrnl/art/the-future-of-contract-soldiers

The Future of Contract Soldiers

by Davis Narwold
Journal Article | November 6, 2017 - 6:56am

By the end of July 1994, between 500,000 and 1,000,000 Rwandans had been killed in a hundred-day period historians refer to as the Rwandan genocide.* Blocked by U.N. regulations and lengthy international deliberations, the United Nations Assistance Mission for Rwanda failed to save lives. Early in the genocide, the British company Sandline International, staffed largely by former British military, offered to deploy 1,500 employees to Rwanda to create safe havens and prevent further killings, at the cost of $150 million. To put that number in perspective, $150 million would have accounted for roughly 10% of the estimated $1.4 billion emergency assistance funds donated the following year by the international community for Rwandese refugees and displaced persons. Had the U.N. acted decisively, Sandline International could have provided safe zones that would have saved thousands of lives for a relatively low cost while reducing the number of displaced Rwandans.

Private military companies (PMCs) like Sandline International provide comparatively cheap and rapid solutions in warzones, while side-stepping messy political and international ties. Current humanitarian crises develop in low scale, indefinite duration conflicts requiring rapid response and involving messy diplomatic maneuvering unsuited to modern militaries. By employing private companies, the United States will increase the flexibility of its foreign policy while reducing taxpayer obligations.

By design, PMCs are international.* They draw employees from a number of countries based on qualifications, not nationalities. The United States’ checkered international reputation can degrade the effectiveness of its soldiers in conflicts, by undermining the willingness of the locals to work with them. International companies carry less baggage, with their reputations based on their actions, not their leadership. In civil wars, international companies are better suited to act as impartial peacekeepers.* National militaries and their governments often lean too far to one side and the U.N. frequently becomes paralyzed by powerful members with conflicting goals.

Those motivated by cost savings will find the use of PMCs equally advantageous. The benefits of contracting are already well known to the federal government.* Open markets for contracts drives down prices.* Well-structured contracts cap expenses. Competition drives innovation.

PMCs provide one crucial advantage over traditional militaries: rapid arrival in the theater. In cases such as Rwanda, the sooner the contractors arrive, the fewer lives lost. This can be difficult for modern militaries that find themselves stretched thin. Contractors bypass this issue entirely, as a requirement of the bidding process is the ready deployment of their employees.

Unfortunately, the first name that comes to mind when discussing private military companies is Blackwater, the company responsible for the Nisour Square massacre of Iraqi civilians in Baghdad. However, the individuals involved are no more representative of private contractors than the soldiers involved in the My Lai massacre represent the American military. The soldiers involved in Nisour Square were arrested, and are currently being prosecuted in American court, a far cry from the public perception of them acting without consequence.

Instead, policy makers should focus on the success of MPRI, a contractor employed to help train friendly forces in Bosnia, or the successes of Executive Outcomes in combating rebels in Sierra Leone and Angola. In both these cases the companies stepped in and succeeded after local governments failed.* MPRI was hired by the United States government to assist friendly forces where the American military was unable. Executive Outcomes was hired by the local governments to combat insurgent forces after domestic military forces failed. Their intervention curbed death tolls and shortened conflicts.

Private military contractors suffer for their comparison to mercenaries, but nothing could be farther from the truth. These contractors operate within a strict regulatory framework and with loyalty to those who employ them. It was within this framework that punishment for the Nisour massacre is currently developing.

This is not a call for the end of modern militaries and their replacement with private companies.* Rather, it’s a call to expand U.S. values/interests/etc by allowing the country to take on peacekeeping operations in distant lands. These interventions will save lives.

International opinion is unified in*opposition*to genocide. Despite*this unity, the international community continues to struggle with preventing and responding to cases of genocide.*The question of how to respond to genocide is playing out in real time in Myanmar, where military forces have killed over five hundred Rohingyas and displaced half a million. *If the U.N. remains paralyzed and the international community doesn’t want to get their hands with deployment of forces, why not give the private sector a chance to do better?

About the Author

Davis Narwold is currently*finishing*a Master’s Degree in Security Policy Studies through the Elliott School at George Washington University. His focus is in non-traditional*militaries and transnational security.

---

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by Warlock | November 7, 2017 - 10:45am
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This article is full of bad assumptions and errors. First and foremost, PMCs are not independent actors -- they are employed by someone, and through their employer, subject to the same rules of national sovereignty as any nationally-backed military force...there's no "side-stepping messy political and international ties". Thus, no PMC will waltz into Myanmar and get between the local military and the Rohingyas. PMCs are not "international by design", although it may work out that way due to the available labor pool. Not sharing a national or ethnic background with their employers may occasionally prove advantageous, but unless hired from the local populace, they're just as often regarded as foreign invaders. If in-country by host-country invitation (or acquiescence), they're often still subject to local laws, restricting their operations.

There is nothing magical about PMC capabilities...their rapid strategic movement is due to their ready supply of people, being relatively lightly equipped and thus rapidly deployable via any commercial airline.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
https://www.voanews.com/a/nato-taliban-bases-pakistan-afghan-peace/4104502.html

Asia

NATO Sees Taliban Bases in Pakistan 'Big*Challenge' to Afghan Peace
*
November 07, 2017 8:08 AM
Ayaz Gul

ISLAMABAD —*NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg said Taliban bases in Pakistan pose a “big challenge” to efforts aimed at bringing peace and stability to Afghanistan.

Stoltenberg told reporters Tuesday at the alliance’s headquarters in Brussels that he regularly raises the issue in meetings with Pakistani leaders and will continue to do so.

“We have to address the big challenge that [the] Taliban, the insurgents are working also out of bases in Pakistan. And we have raised that several times. It is extremely important that all countries in the region support efforts of the Afghan national unity government and that no country provide any kind of sanctuary for the terrorists,” said the NATO chief.

Stoltenberg insisted if regional countries deny sanctuaries to insurgents the fight against the Taliban and terrorist groups in Afghanistan “will gain so much.”
He spoke just hours after a top Pakistani Foreign Ministry official again rejected allegations terrorists are operating out of her country.

Pakistan denies presence of safe havens

Foreign Secretary Tehmina Janjua while briefing a parliamentary committed on foreign affairs said Islamabad told Washington in recent high-level bilateral talks that all areas in Pakistan have been cleared of terrorists.

Janjua reiterated Pakistani forces will take immediate action if the United States provides “actionable intelligence” regarding the presence of terrorists in the country. She went on to assert terrorists are operating not out of Pakistan, but from across the Afghan border.

"In Afghanistan, 45 percent of the country is not under government control, which is why the Haqqani network and other terror groups do not need a safe haven in Pakistan," Janjua said.

NATO to boost support for Afghanistan

Stoltenberg reiterated NATO will continue and strengthen its financial and military training support to Afghanistan, saying the number of foreign troops in the country will be increased from currently around 13,000 to a new level of around 16,000 troops.

“We will not go back in combat operations but we need to strengthen the train and assist and advise mission, the Resolute Support mission, to help the Afghans break the stalemate, to send a clear message to the Taliban, to the insurgents that they will not win on the battleground,” asserted Stoltenberg.

The only way the Taliban can achieve anything, he noted, is by sitting down at the negotiating table and be part of a peaceful negotiated political solution to the Afghan war.

The Islamist insurgency, however, has refused to engage in talks until all foreign forces withdraw from Afghanistan. The Taliban has instead intensified its attacks against Afghan security forces, particularly since U.S. President Donald Trump announced his new strategy for breaking the military stalemate in Afghanistan.

Insurgent attacks on Afghan forces have killed hundreds of army and police personnel in recent weeks.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Well I guess the Finns are going to "join" NATO one way or the other....

For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news...ter-focused-on-russia/?utm_term=.27c4006b9a0f

Checkpoint

In Finland, Mattis backs creation of a hybrid warfare center focused on Russia

By Dan Lamothe November 6 at 12:35 PM

HELSINKI — Defense Secretary Jim Mattis appeared at the presidential palace here Monday, praising a country that once clashed with Soviet forces to preserve its independence for now establishing a new center dedicated to countering the unconventional forms of warfare that Russia is fond of using.

Mattis called the European Center of Excellence for Countering Hybrid Threats that Finland established*earlier this year “an institution fit for our times.” He did not mention Russia, but Finland shares an 830-mile border with Russia and pays keen attention to Moscow’s actions.

Hybrid warfare can include conventional combat, but it often seeks to achieve goals through other means, by targeting computer networks, for example, manipulating people through propaganda, or using clandestine operations to avoid retribution for aggressive actions. Russia has been accused of using all three in recent years.

The center has participation from Finland, Estonia, France, Germany, Latvia, Lithuania, Norway, Poland, Spain, Sweden,*Britain and the United States. European Union countries and those in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization are able to join.

Mattis, appearing alongside Finnish President Sauli Niinisto, said the United States sees a lot to admire in Finland, including its peacekeeping operations, stance on human rights and involvement in arms control. It also has contributed to the coalition to counter the Islamic State.

“I think that your tactically skillful and ethically sound troops have brought courage and competence to the battlefield against terrorism in the same manner in which your country has brought compassion to the humanitarian fields on so many occasions,” Mattis said.

Mattis’s stop in Finland comes during*a trip in which he also plans to meet with NATO allies in Brussels and with Britain’s new defense secretary, Gavin Williamson, in London. Williamson replaced Michael Fallon, who unexpectedly resigned from the post last week amid sexual harassment allegations. Mattis had planned to meet with Fallon but instead will meet his successor.

On Tuesday, Mattis will meet in Helsinki with senior officials from Finland and other nations who are involved in what is known as the Northern Group, a gathering of nations that includes Britain, Poland, Germany, the Netherlands, the Nordic states and the Baltic states.

Mattis, speaking on the flight from Washington to Helsinki, said the visit is an opportunity to show that the United States stands by friendly nations in Europe “if any nation, including Russia, seeks to undermine the rules-based international order.”

Finland, he noted, has “had to fight to hang on to their freedom.”

The country declared its independence from Russia 100 years ago next month, but it was invaded by the Soviet Union in 1939, after it signed a neutrality pact with Nazi Germany that divided northern Europe into spheres of influence. Finland repelled the assault in a bloody fight and preserved its independence, but it ceded a fraction of its territory along its eastern flank.

More from Checkpoint:
Pentagon identifies Special Forces soldier killed in Afghanistan

Trump says the U.S. will hit Islamic State ‘10 times harder’ after the New York attack. That will be hard to do.

Pope Francis’s ominous, emotional message about a world preparing to go ‘forcefully into war’
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Regional Cold War Intensifies as ISIS fades
Started by*Troke‎,*Yesterday*04:15 PM
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/showthread.php?527043-Regional-Cold-War-Intensifies-as-ISIS-fades

Reuters: U.S. official met Syrian security chief in Damascus - official, report
Started by*Possible Impact‎,*11-03-2017*01:19 PM
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...an-security-chief-in-Damascus-official-report

(Busy Day!) PM resigned from Saudi Arabia;Many Saudi princes and former officials arrested....
Started by*Buick Electra‎,*11-04-2017*03:07 PM
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...inces-and-former-officials-arrested..../page4

Jerusalem Post: Saudi Arabia says Lebanon has declared war on it
Started by*Possible Impact‎,*Yesterday*03:26 PM
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...di-Arabia-says-Lebanon-has-declared-war-on-it

Saudi Arabia intercepts ballistic missile over capital
Started by*Ragnarok‎,*11-04-2017*10:39 PM
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...bia-intercepts-ballistic-missile-over-capital

Saudi Prince Mansour bin Muqrin dies in helicopter crash
Started by*geoffs‎,*11-05-2017*12:42 PM
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...e-Mansour-bin-Muqrin-dies-in-helicopter-crash

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For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
https://www.yahoo.com/news/saudi-reopens-lebanon-front-struggle-iran-160423933.html

Saudi reopens Lebanon front in struggle with Iran

By Tom Perry and Laila Bassam,Reuters
November 7, 2017

BEIRUT (Reuters) - Saudi Arabia has opened a new front in its regional proxy war with Iran, threatening Tehran's powerful ally Hezbollah and its home country Lebanon to try to regain the upper hand.

With Iranian power winning out in Iraq and Syria, and Riyadh bogged down in a war with Iran-allied groups in Yemen, the new Saudi approach could bring lasting political and economic turmoil to a country where Tehran had appeared ascendant.

The resignation on Saturday of the Saudi-allied Lebanese prime minister Saad al-Hariri, announced from Riyadh and blamed on Iran and Hezbollah, is seen by many as the first step in an unprecedented Saudi intervention in Lebanese politics.

"The Saudis appear to have decided that the best way to confront Iran is to start in Lebanon," a European diplomat said.

Riyadh is blaming Hezbollah for the resignation of Lebanon's preeminent Sunni politician, accusing it of "hijacking" Lebanese politics. But Saudi Arabia is also widening blame to Lebanon as a whole, saying it too has declared war on the Kingdom.

A Saudi minister has made the near impossible demand that Lebanese act against a group that is a major part of Lebanon's political fabric and far more powerful than the weak state, with a guerrilla army that out guns the national military.

Coinciding with a major anti-corruption purge of top Saudis, Hariri's shock announcement has given rise to suggestions from Hezbollah and others that his Saudi business interests had embroiled him in the probe and he was forced to resigning.

Saudi Arabia and Hariri's allies deny that, and assertions that Hariri is under house arrest. They say his hand was forced by Hezbollah interventions in Arab countries in service of Iran.

POWER VACUUM
Saudi Foreign Minister Adel Jubeir said Hezbollah had been "calling the shots" in the Hariri government, which included two Hezbollah ministers and was formed last year in a political deal that made Michel Aoun, a Hezbollah ally, head of state.

Hezbollah and its allies will struggle to form a government without Hariri or his blessing, leaving Lebanon in a protracted crisis that could eventually stir Sunni-Shi'ite tensions, though there is no sign of this yet as all sides urge calm.

Announcing his resignation, Hariri cited an assassination plot against him and slammed Iran and Hezbollah for sowing strife and trying to "kidnap" Lebanon away from the Arab world. The declaration came as a surprise even to Hariri's aides.

It is not clear what comes next: Saudi-backed efforts to weaken Hezbollah in Lebanon failed badly a decade ago, ending with a bout of Sunni-Shi'ite fighting on the streets of Beirut that only underlined Hezbollah's military dominance.

The regional struggle moved elsewhere in recent years, notably neighboring Syria where years of Saudi investment in rebel groups fighting President Bashar al-Assad failed to withstand direct military intervention by Iran and Hezbollah.

In Iraq, Tehran-backed militias and Iranian commanders have often seemed as powerful as the U.S.-backed Iraqi military, most recently in an operation to retake Kirkuk from Kurdish forces.

So emboldened was Iran that top Iranian official Ali Akbar Velayati trumpeted his regional alliance's success from Beirut last Friday, declaring victories in Iraq, Syria and Lebanon. His statement to the media after a meeting with Hariri was seen as a major provocation to regional Sunni powerhouse Saudi Arabia.

Hariri left for Saudi Arabia immediately afterwards, cancelling previously scheduled engagements and catching even his closest advisors off guard the next day with a declaration first broadcast by Saudi-owned media.

The regional standoff flared in the Gulf hours later, with Iran-allied groups firing a ballistic missile at Riyadh from Yemen. Saudi Arabia says it was launched by Hezbollah.

Hezbollah has not responded to the accusation.

Neither Hezbollah nor the Lebanese government responded on Tuesday to the Saudi accusation, voiced by Gulf affairs minister Thamer al-Sabhan, a top aide to Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, that both Lebanon and Hezbollah had declared war.

"The Lebanese government will be dealt with as a government declaring war on Saudi Arabia, and all Lebanese must realize these dangers and work to resolve the issues before we reach the point of no return," he said in an interview with Al-Arabiya TV.

Crown Prince Mohammed told Reuters last month the war in Yemen would continue to prevent the Iran-allied Houthi movement from becoming another Hezbollah at Saudi's border.

SANCTIONS CALL
Hezbollah was established by Iran's Revolutionary Guards in 1982 to fight Israeli troops in Lebanon. Its last major war with Israel was in 2006, since when Hezbollah has grown stronger.

While Sabhan vowed that Hezbollah would be forced back into "its caves" in southern Lebanon, any Saudi military action in Lebanon - such as air strikes - would come as a major surprise.

Political paralysis and tension is however a big threat to an already stagnant economy, and could derail next year's parliamentary elections - Lebanon's first since 2009.

Policymakers have scrambled to calm concern over the financial stability of the heavily indebted state. They say the Lebanese pound - pegged against the dollar at the same rate for 20 years - is stable.

Hariri was spearheading efforts to garner international aid to help Lebanon deal with the strain of hosting 1.5 million Syrian refugees, or a quarter of the population.

Leaders on all sides say there should be no further escalation. Both Hezbollah and Hariri's Future Movement have worked to contain Sunni-Shi'ite tensions during the war in neighboring Syria.

Hezbollah leader Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah has called for calm and patience in the face of Hariri's resignation. Okab Sakr, a member of Hariri's Future Movement, noted that protests in solidarity with Hariri had been canceled to avoid trouble.

Sabhan, the Saudi minister, has called for "real sanctions" and alliances "to find a fundamental solution to this cancerous disease", saying Hezbollah should be disarmed and kept out of government.

Hariri, who was thrust into politics by the 2005 assassination of his father, Rafik al-Hariri, led years of political struggle with Hezbollah in Lebanon. But his Saudi-backed "March 14" coalition failed to make any progress toward Hezbollah's disarmament as demanded by U.N. resolutions.

Echoing the Saudi position, the United States has also taken new measures targeting Hezbollah in recent weeks, as President Donald Trump takes a tougher stance toward Iran.

It has offered a bounty for two Hezbollah officials, and the House of Representatives has backed new sanctions targeting entities found to support it.

(Additional reporting by John Irish in Paris; writing by Tom Perry; editing by Philippa Fletcher)

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Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
https://thestrategybridge.org/the-b...ome-adapting-to-the-nimbleness-of-new-threats

Mimicking Rome: Adapting to the Nimbleness of New Threats

Will Staton
November 8, 2017

The Romans built one of the ancient world's largest empires, stretching from Spain eastward into the Middle East abutting Persia, and running from the provinces of North Africa to the forests of Germany and northern Britain. This empire was built on the backs of massive armies. During Hannibal's invasion of Italy during the Second Punic War, the Romans lost tens of thousands of soldiers at the battles of Cannae and Lake Trasimene, respectively, and yet continued to field large armies. Caesar took over 100,000 men with him during his invasion of Gaul. At the battle of Philippi, a Roman vs. Roman affair, both Octavian and Pompey brought armies of nearly 100,000 soldiers to the field of battle. The Consul Crassus led a failed invasion of Parthia that ended with the destruction of his army, a force numbering nearly 50,000 men. Even during the early imperial period, Trajan led armies upward of 150,000 men into Dacia.[2]

If the empire was built by massed legions, however, it was sustained and defended by much smaller forces. During the late imperial period, the Romans suffered a disastrous defeat at Adrianople; their total force numbered between 20,000-30,000 men. The empire's massive borders were porous, and maintaining them required speed, agility, and flexibility, not the sheer volume of men that formed earlier armies of conquest. Germanic and other tribes could coalesce into large bodies of armed soldiers, but Rome's borders faced more threats from smaller raiding parties, local tribesmen living near or inside the empire's borders, and the agile horsemen of the Asian steppes than they did large forces such as those they stared down during the Punic Wars or other major conflicts. The logistical nimbleness and smaller armies trained to deal with the unique threats along the empire's borders allowed Rome to sustain her western empire for hundreds of years after expansion had stopped.

The western world today—the United States and Europe—finds itself in a position similar to that of *the late Roman Empire. Despite renewed threats from Russia and an ascendant China, the chances of another great power or world war are small. Technological advances and the realities of a global economy upon which all the great powers depend make such unpalatable, even for the most bellicose.[2] While we ought to be prepared for the possibility of such a conflict, it cannot be the primary focus. Take, for example, Russia's newfound antagonism in Georgia and more recently the Ukraine. Their strategy is not rooted in the overwhelming numbers of men that characterized its armies in the First and Second World Wars, but rather the use of combined technologies to create instability that allows relatively small numbers of soldiers to capitalize on the chaos. Similarly, the so-called War on Terror, now over a decade and a half old, requires the use of intelligence gathering and drones to conduct precise tactical strikes. Tank battalions may have helped keep the peace on the streets of Baghdad, but they can neither roll into the caves of Afghanistan, nor police cities across the United States and Europe. Ours is a world of cyber weapons and special forces, not one of the massive field armies that dueled across Europe and Asia during the 20th century.

The United States, protected by two oceans, only needs to equip large forces only to fight abroad, as they did during the World Wars or as is happening now in Iraq and Afghanistan. But occupation and nation-building efforts have proven ineffective applications of large forces, and a large defensive army for a conflict in Europe or Asia supposes an offense from a foe like Russia or China inconsistent with their respective efforts in Georgia, Ukraine, or the South China Sea. Such considerations must still be made, but they no longer represent the most likely, or most harmful, threat. Though Europe is not afforded the defensive geographic advantage America has, a large enough American force coupled with deterrence should prevent a wholesale invasion of the continent from Russia, but neither a nuclear shield nor an American presences can protect against the offense underway in eastern Ukraine.

As Western nations struggle with military budgets, politicians—particularly in the United States—need to consider what military dominance looks like in the 21st century, and in this regard they can learn from Rome. Valuable pieces of this puzzle have already appeared, describing how NATO's minnows can contribute to its collective defense, and how the United States can adapt to the role of the weaker foe. The bottom line, though, is that Rome sustained hegemony through adaptation, and western powers can too.

Some of these changes are already occurring, but in silos and absent an overarching strategic vision for how to combat the unique threats of the 21st century. The U.S. military, so long designed to conduct two full-scale conflicts in distinct geographic regions, now faces new types of enemies. In the current geopolitical environment, do military planners foresee a prolonged conflict against Russia AND China in the future? Do they envision two wars requiring the full might of the U.S. military, perhaps one in Africa and one in Asia? In fact Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Joseph Dunford’s 4+1 strategic framework imagines the threats from Russia, China, Iran, and North Korea—along with the shifting adversarial form of terrorism in the realms of land, air, sea, space, and cyberspace. Even Europe, fearful of a Russian invasion, is more likely to face the same type of border threats of the late Roman Empire. Russian meddling in Georgia and Ukraine is more akin to the quick and confusing strikes of tribesmen than the invasion of large army. Today’s foes threaten to undermine the global order carefully established and maintained in the aftermath of the Second World War the same way outlying tribes threatened the stability of the Roman world.

Sustaining today's global order requires new forms of fighting. Information has become weaponized. Intelligence gathering—always important—is now paramount as militaries, militias, and non-state actors, are equipped to strike immediately when they see opportunity rather than having to wait for the build-up and deployment of large bodies of soldiers. In many conflicts, members of the military are hundreds or even thousands of miles from the fighting, piloting drones remotely or hacking into electronic databases, meaning, as Albert Palazzo put it, “every nation’s homeland is now militarily in play.” Even when protected by oceans, a society is susceptible to cyberattacks. Evolution of weapons and tactics make it unlikely there will ever be another battle like Kursk, but there will absolutely be many more special forces raids and cyber attacks.

Western strategists need to understand that maintaining a pro-western status quo does not involve turning back a Russian onslaught. It requires combatting Russian propaganda. Disinformation operations are a bigger threat to the liberal democratic order than tanks, and pending priorities ought to reflect this. With eleven aircraft carriers afloat as compared to two for Russia, is the United States preparing for another Midway? If so, no doubt they'll win. When such a battle fails to materialize, however, one wonders if the money spent to outfit such a fleet might have been better spent on more and better-equipped special forces, or on satellite weaponry to disable communications and weapons system without endangering a single life. In our modern society, with so much personal information available to nefarious actors around the globe, and within the particular context of the Russian cyberattack on the 2016 American election, where are defense initiatives aimed at partnering with private sector companies to protect society from new, chaotic, and unimagined attacks like those espoused in the Gerasimov doctrine?

Rome was able to deploy small, adaptive forces that struck at tribes outside the border, disrupting them militarily, economically, and politically before they became a threat. These troops could cover far larger stretches of the border than could much larger armies due to their speed, training, and a degree of independence from a centralized command structure atop which sat an emperor thousand of miles away from the borders they defended. An army of 80,000, similar to the one Hannibal annihilated at Cannae may have deterred bands of Germanic raiders...from crossing the border at the point it was stationed. But those raiding parties would and could have outpaced it to a weak spot in the line, crossing and wreaking havoc. The Romans understood that protecting their world order required a shift in strategic priorities away from overwhelming use of force to smaller but more tactically adroit units that were equipped to deal with the needs of the time.[3] Will western politicians come to this same realization and pursue military spending that creates responsive forces suited to the needs of a new type of warfare? Or will we continue to maintain the illusion of safety relying on forces best suited for conflicts most likely confined to the past?

Will Staton is the Director of Scholar Support for Democracy Prep Congress Heights in Washington, DC. When he's not traveling the country to deliver professional development to teachers and other education professionals, Will nurses a deep interest in international and domestic politics. He contributes to The Strategy Bridge and other publications about domestic and international politics, and recently published his first novel, Through Fire and Flame, a modern rethinking of Dante's Inferno.

-

Notes:
[1] For an accessible and wide-ranging history of these battles and Roman warfare in general, see Adrian Goldsworthy, Roman Warfare (New York, NY: Harper Collins, 2005).
[2]Thomas J. Christensen, The China Challenge: Shaping the Choices of a Rising Power*(New York, NY: W. W. Norton & Company, 2016), 40-49.
[3] Adrian Goldsworthy, Roman Warfare (New York, NY: Harper Collins, 2005)..
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Hummm.....

For links see article source.....
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https://thestrategybridge.org/the-b...al-warfare-its-the-political-willpower-stupid

The Death of American Conventional Warfare: It’s the Political Willpower, Stupid

Strategy Bridge
November 5, 2017
Jahara Matisek & Ian Bertram

Earlier this year,*The Strategy Bridge*asked university and professional military education students to participate in our first annual writing contest by sending us their thoughts on strategy.

Now, we are pleased to present one of the essays selected for honorable mention, from Jahara Matisek of Northwestern University and Ian Bertram of the U.S. Air Command and Staff College.


Conventional warfare is officially dead. This has become an obvious trend with innumerable adversaries engaging the American military and its allies in unconventional ways with unconventional means. The long-held notion of the decisive battle that brings the combat power of two nations against each other for a winner-take-all slugfest lies in the next grave. Even wars of attrition, in the model of the American Civil War, First and Second World Wars, and Korea are gone. If America hopes to remain strategically significant, its political and military leadership must adapt to the new reality that no adversary wants to fight the United States in a symmetrically conventional fashion.

Admitting the passing of America’s dear friend conventional war is proving difficult for the U.S. military, but there finally appears to be an awakening. The Director of the Defense Intelligence Agency, Lieutenant General Vincent R. Stewart (U.S. Marine Corps), recently lamented the demise of American military might to the Senate Armed Forces Committee:

Adversaries have studied the American way of conflict and have developed, and will continue to develop, capabilities to mitigate or directly challenge longstanding U.S. military dominance in all war fighting domains…Competitor states will employ all diplomatic, economic, political, and covert mechanisms of influence and coercion available to them in advancing regional agendas, with the implied or actual use of military force acting as the amplifier that allows these whole-of-state efforts to resonate.[1]

General Stewart’s explicit omission of* the military from the mechanisms available to influence and coerce in pursuit of regional agendas is illustrative of the fact that foes no longer use military power first. Instead, adversaries utilize military force merely as an amplifier to whole-of-state efforts.*Translated into laymans terms, adversaries no longer rely on conventional military force—solely, firstly, or bluntly—to pursue narrow political objectives in their region of influence. Thus, no near-peer country is openly challenging America’s globally constructed world order of norms, rules, and institutions created through decades of American blood, sweat, and tears. Such adversaries are operating in a peripheral and indirect fashion, however, to secure limited gains helpful to their own interests. These efforts chip away at American strategic interests in such a way that it is difficult for political and military leaders to justify the mobilization of American political willpower and military resources to prevent and/or reverse adversary gains.

Indeed, U.S. strategy is caught in a paradoxical situation in which the conventional warfare concept is needed for overall deterrence, but is dead because no adversary wants to engage directly with conventional American military might. Additionally, the precept of what the U.S. and its allies believe is conventional warfare is an illusion. As a theoretical construct, conventional warfare is historically dependent on time and context, as Clausewitz stated, and determines how major political powers profess to the best and most effective forms of waging war.[2]*The traditional narrative within this social construct of warfare was one of territorial wars based on maneuver, a form at which the U.S. has excelled and dominated. No country dares to use its military forces in such an explicit fashion against the U.S. anymore. From this standpoint, it should be no surprise that potential foes are seeking to disrupt America’s hegemonic position—or at least the perception of hegemony—by circumventing America’s military strength altogether through indirect non-military actions. Such actions look to shape narratives and perceptions, making it difficult for the U.S. to adequately respond.

Moreover, the U.S. and its allies face the problem of how to conceptualize 21st century war, because most adversaries engage in fringe activities to weaken American influence and power and undermine U.S.-built narratives. This effectively neuters the perception of U.S. military power, rendering it practically irrelevant in stopping the attainment of political objectives by Russia, China, and others. It is almost as if Edward Luttwak’s paradoxes of strategy are showing empirically now as America’s greatest strength—conventional military dominance in the ground, sea, and air domains—is evaded by hostile state and non-state actors, making the U.S. look like a lumbering giant that lacks the nimbleness, energy, or long-term willingness to deal with insurgents, terrorists, and gray-zone conflicts initiated by near-peer states.

Adversarial Testing of American Political Willpower

Perceptions on the lack of American willpower to deploy its military are not just a contemporary problem. In 1950, U.S. Secretary of State Dean Acheson gave the infamous Perimeter Speech, in which he mentioned the defense of the Pacific without mentioning Korea.[3]*Six months later, North Korea invaded the South, and within two months the South Korean Army and government were on the precipice of defeat when the U.S. intervened along with a large United Nations military force. The overwhelming U.S.-led intervention eventually reestablished the 38th parallel political border between the two states.[4]*Conventional battles like the Korean War, and others like them, go against the wisdom of Geoffrey Blainey’s assertion that “wars usually begin when two nations disagree on their relative strength, and wars usually cease when the fighting nations agree on their relative strength.”[5]*Since the end of the Cold War, there has been almost no direct contestation of American conventional military might other than Saddam Hussein’s actions throughout the 1990s. Still, the Butcher of Baghdad did not miscalculate the strength of the American military; rather, he misjudged American political willpower.

In 1990, Hussein had come to believe the George H.W. Bush administration would tolerate his invasion of Kuwait. This was based on a meeting with the American ambassador to Iraq, April C. Glaspie, where she stated, “We have no opinion on the Arab-Arab conflicts, like your border disagreement with Kuwait.”[6]*Shortly thereafter, Hussein’s army invaded Kuwait, plundering its main cities. Within a year, however, Hussein’s forces were ousted from Kuwait, and routed in a U.S.-led ground campaign lasting a mere 100 hours. The overwhelming American military response occurred because Bush believed that tolerating Hussein’s actions would turn him into a modern-day Neville Chamberlain appeasing a latter-day Hitler at new Munich Conference.[7]

In 2003, Hussein thought the U.S. would not follow through with martial threats not because of his belief in his own military strength, but because he believed the George W. Bush administration lacked political strength. Hussein believed the Bush administration would “not fight a ground war because it would be too costly to the Americans.” This time, the Bush administration viewed the Iraqi state as a terrorist state with intent to disseminate and use weapons of mass destruction, which radically changed U.S. political calculus.[8] Within three weeks of ground combat, the Iraqi government and military collapsed, and major combat operations ended four weeks later. Thus, confronting American military power is not based on perceptions of relative strength, but rather on (mis)calculations of U.S. political resolve to fight.

Even the Taliban believed it could decisively engage NATO/ISAF forces in a conventional battle for the purposes of undermining Western credibility and political resolve. During Operation Medusa in September 2006, the Taliban launched a conventional attack against NATO/ISAF troops in the Panjwai district, which was “akin to the Vietcong’s Tet Offensive of 1968…the Taliban force effectively tried to hold ground.”[9] While the Taliban eventually lost, it was“a phony victory for NATO/ISAF, as the Taliban changed their strategy and tactics to those of a classical Maoist insurgency. The Taliban problem continues to flummox American strategists and persists because of the Taliban’s appraisal, including local Afghan perceptions, of American resolve (or lack thereof). Fundamentally, the Taliban understand time horizons; they know they can out-wait American political willpower in the long-term while avoiding U.S. military firepower in the short-term.[10]

In each example, adversaries made a political miscalculation about a conventional military engagement with U.S. armed forces (and allies) and were easily routed. The only difference with the Taliban is they have figured out how to circumvent American attempts to project power beyond major cities, because they understand U.S. policy will dither over size of assistance and time frames. Thus, they can coerce local communities outside the major cities into supporting them, because Kabul cannot project state capacity there and significant doubt exists about long-term Western security pledges.[11]*The Taliban understand there will never be an Afghan Marshall Plan, because no American politician (or Western leader) has the willpower to make such a commitment. Such American strategic dithering allows the Taliban to make side-deals with wavering warlords and vacillating tribal chiefs, since the American commitment to the country is merely a myopic attempt to not lose, and an at-best half-hearted attempt to defeat the Taliban. Worse yet, attempts to rely on drone strikes in the long-term to contain the Taliban do not cure the underlying causes and structural conditions that permit the insurgency to thrive.[12]

How did America get here?

So how was this possible, and how can America adapt? First, proper warfare discussions necessitate clear definitions. According to scholars John Mearsheimer and Barry Posen, conventional warfare was perfected in the Second World War, and is best described as a conflict between at least two states, in which uniformed soldiers, tanks, artillery, and aircraft are maneuvered to defeat and destroy adversary troops and weapon systems.[13]*These conventional operations are intended to maximize capture of enemy territory, which can then be later annexed or utilized as a bargaining chip in negotiations. Such notions have reigned supreme in U.S. doctrinal thinking since at least the Second World War, even as American (and allied) forces have fought decidedly long-term unconventional conflicts from Vietnam to Afghanistan. One need only look at the misapplication of force in Vietnam, or to the pushback against counterinsurgency (COIN) in Iraq, to understand our love of the fallen comrade: conventional war.[14,15]

Nonetheless, conventional warfare has become a lifeless entity through three processes. First, as identified by Martin van Creveld, nuclear weapons have resulted in decreases in the scale and scope of conventional military force being used abroad.[16] This has been a product of dyadic nuclear-armed states trying to limit escalation. This strategic logic of many nuclear armed states has driven them to limit the intensity of wars, while pursuing alternative forms of war, such as the use of proxy armies, contractors, drones, etc.[17]

Second, as the Soviet Union collapsed economically under its own administrative and military burdens, the U.S. emerged victoriously from the Cold War as the sole hyper-hegemonic military force and economic power in human history. This dominant position makes it a fruitless endeavor for near-peer states to compete through build-up of conventional weapons, as the American military budget is equal to the combined military budgets of the next largest eight states combined.[18]*What is the point of trying to build an expensive conventional military force when a competitor-state can invest in cyber, space, and A2/AD (anti-access/area denial) weapon systems to produce a strong strategic effect on the cheap? It should be no surprise that Russia, China, North Korea, and Iran have pursued such non-conventional military capabilities to permit freedom of strategic maneuver in their regions, creating the perception of a higher-cost to a possible U.S. military intervention.

Finally, there is an the increasing perception that domestic American audiences do not want to deploy their military, created by the aversion to boots on the ground rooted in the disaster of the Vietnam War.[19]*However true this might seem, in terms of political elite perceptions, a cursory analysis of presidential foreign policy performance since 1990 gives the impression that positive and negative outcomes in the use of military force do not result in electoral punishment or gains. The empirical proof is in the pudding.

Successful uses of American military power during the Persian Gulf war did not lead to the reelection of President George H. W. Bush. This occurred despite an 89 percent approval in a Gallup poll just weeks after the war ended.[20]*Contrarily, the overly publicized Black Hawk Down mission conducted under President Clinton, in which 18 U.S. service members were killed, caused a 13-point drop in his approval ratings but did not hamper his reelection campaign in 1996. Nor was he punished for keeping American troops out of Rwanda during the genocide there.[21]*Clinton’s successful use of airpower in the Balkans did not help the Democratic Party or his vice president win the presidency in 2000, despite an approval rating that hovered around 60% after Operation Allied Force.[22]*Likewise, the apparent chaos in Iraq and Afghanistan did not prevent President George W. Bush from winning a second term in 2004. In 2008, Obama’s election over the Republican candidate, John McCain, was based more on economic concerns, even though polls consistently showed Americans trusting McCain more with national security.[23]*Other issues regarding the civil wars raging in Afghanistan and Libya in 2012 did not stop President Obama from smoothly sailing through the presidential election process. Presidential candidate Trump’s campaign rhetoric of increasing the ability of the American military to fight the Islamic State hardly aided his election. A poll conducted by Fox News several weeks prior to the 2016 presidential elections indicated that potential voters viewed Hillary Clinton as the more trusted candidate on issues such as terrorism and national security.[24]

What does this all mean? American presidents should not refrain from the proper application of military force just because they believe it could jeopardize reelection chances for themselves or their party. Hence,*American military commitments should not center on efficiency or political expediency; instead they should be made through long-term commitments that prevent adversaries from pursuing strategies undermining American political resolve and/or outwaiting U.S. assurances. When presidential administrations worry about domestic perceptions concerning long-term military and political commitments to a fledgling nation, this creates a strategic dithering scenario in which adversaries increase their own commitments in hopes of making American involvement look costlier.

Defanging American Military Power

The debatable failures of COIN, and the growing adversarial actions by Russia, China, and North Korea, seem to imply conventional warfare is the type of strategy needed to deter or confront those threats. But that hypothesis is wrong. Conventional war as described above is nothing more than a Weekend at Bernie’s*solution to those problem sets. We are propping up a dead concept, and our foes do not respect the façade. In fact, each of these states are already employing strategies to negate any applicability of our conventional war concept, and have carefully crafted parochial strategies that make it difficult—domestically and internationally—for American political and military leaders to commit a credible amount of force to repel such activities.

For example, Russian General Valery Gerasimov described a new approach to warfare in a 2013 article in Military-Industrial Courier. In it, Gerasimov argued for a new Russian strategy where his country could employ various resources so that “a perfectly thriving state can, in a matter of months and even days, be transformed into an arena of fierce armed conflict, become a victim of foreign intervention, and sink into a web of chaos, humanitarian catastrophe, and civil war.”[25]*This new form of warfare was basically the strategic blueprint for the crisis in the Ukraine where little green men*infiltrated Crimea and Donbas. The ability of the Russia government and military to act as an information juggernaut in unison has effectively allowed Russia to sway neighboring populations to its cause (e.g., Crimea, South Ossetia, etc.) before Russian troops or little green men even arrive.[26]*Such operations soften the battlefield and prevent the international community from effectively responding with the correct instruments of national power, complicating an effective conventional military response.

Reorienting American Strategy

A common refrain since the 18th century is that “God always favors the big battalions.”[27]*But what happens when the size and strength of your military no longer matters relative to the way a military organization perceives and strategizes for war. It has been theorized by Hans Morgenthau that the rise of great powers (e.g., the United Kingdom and the U.S.) was a function of advantageous geography. Such geography enabled natural defenses, while providing adequate natural resources to sustain population and economic growth,*both vital components in creating military power.[28]*However, geography and the size of one's military matter less now that technology enables greater capacity and reach with weapon systems. At the same time, technology allows adversaries to engage in information warfare and cyber attacks as a way of weakening and degrading American institutions and national interests without fearing a kinetic response from the U.S. military.

It is essential to recognize this change in warfare. American strategy can no longer be based solely on its conventional military might. Instead, strategy must embrace tactics and equipment that deters enemy attempts to circumvent U.S. military power, while at the same time upholding a strong conventional deterrent. This necessitates the creation of American political willpower; otherwise strategic dithering makes adversaries more likely to redouble their efforts. Here we again have the unfortunate paradox.*The U.S. cannot simply rely on conventional strength as it has in the past, but it must retain the capability. The U.S. still needs to prepare, train, and equip for conventional combat operations, lest the concept put forth an ill-begotten progeny that goes to war Jomini-style because the U.S. is not prepared. If America completely abandons its arguable supremacy in that style of warfare, it will open the door for someone else to use it, but political and military leaders also need to make it obvious the U.S. has the political capital to mobilize resources in the long-term for another kind of war.

Conclusion

Overseas contingency operations focused on fighting non-state actors seems to be par for course for American military operations for the foreseeable future. While General H. R. McMaster did write “clear thinking about war costs nothing. What we can afford least is to define the problem of future war as we would like it to be, and by doing so introduce into our defense vulnerabilities based on self-delusion,” there does need to be an understanding that the American military budget—in relative terms of being substantially larger than near-peer states—is unsustainable in the long term.[29]*The U.S. must prepare for multiple styles of warfare, but with a balanced approach that requires long-term American political commitments to make military strategies credible and effective. We cannot abandon conventional warfare any more than we can continue to completely embrace it.

Additionally, it is necessary to understand that political willpower and military firepower must work in unison. Upon returning from a failed trip to China to negotiate a settlement between the Communists and Nationalists, U.S. Secretary of State George C. Marshall lamented in 1947, “We are in the middle of a world revolution—and I don’t mean communism…The revolution I’m talking about is that of the little people all over the world. They’re beginning to learn what there is in life, and to learn what they are missing."[30]*Consider for a moment that a superpower could not negotiate a settlement in one of the poorest countries in the world in 1947, despite the U.S. having the largest economy in the world, possessing nuclear weapons, and fielding one of the world's strongest militaries. Who are we to think the Chinese, or any other non-compliant country, will do our bidding if we do not at least give the perception of political willpower and commitment to properly employ military force, and other instruments of national power in a credible and strategic fashion? The fact that former President Obama could diplomatically negotiate a deal with Chinese President Xi to drastically reduce cyber espionage between their two countries provides an alternative blueprint to de-escalating future conflicts with other countries, to include China.[31]*This is especially important when we consider that China is slated to overtake the American economy by 2030.[32]*If we accept the proposition that GDP ultimately decides the military strength of a country, then the U.S. will need to conceptualize new forms of American military power that rely less on the economic strength of society, and instead utilize institutions, human capital, and doctrine, to keep the American military formidable in the long-term.[33]

Conventional warfare is not the answer to contemporary and future conflicts. While the ability to wage such warfare remains essential to world stability, if the United States wants to win wars, it needs to truly adapt to the new world and find non-conventional methods to wage war and muster the necessary political strength to deter future contenders. This will allow the U.S.to fight unfairly (because everyone hates fair fights), and allows the U.S.*to once again understand and out think its adversaries. Time and economics are no longer on America’s side; U.S. strategy needs alternative forms of power to deter and repel future adversaries. Continued strategic dithering on threats to American national security and worldwide interests only emboldens foes to fight harder or outwait the U.S. American strategy, ad strategy that only works or matters if U.S. politicians and military leaders wholeheartedly make long-term commitments obvious and credible.

Jahara “FRANKY” Matisek is an officer in the U.S. Air Force and PhD student at Northwestern University. He has served as an instructor pilot on the T-6 and C-17, flying over 200 combat missions in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Ian Bertram is an officer in the U.S. Air Force with operational experience in nuclear defense and as an air advisor deployed to Afghanistan. He graduated from the United States Air Force Academy with a B.S. in History and holds an M.A. in Military History from Norwich University.

The views expressed are the authors’ alone and do not reflect the official policy or position of the U.S. Air Force, the Department of Defense, or the U.S. Government.

Notes:
[1] Vincent R. Stewart, “Statement for the Record: Worldwide Threat Assessment,” Senate Armed Services Committee, May 23, 2017, http://www.dia.mil/News/Speeches-an...t-for-the-record-worldwide-threat-assessment/
[2] Carl Von Clausewitz, On War, trans. Michael Howard and Peter Paret, (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1989), 78-80.
[3] Dean Acheson, “Speech on the Far East,” Speech given at the National Press Club, Washington, DC, January 12, 1950, https://www.cia.gov/library/readingroom/docs/1950-01-12.pdf
[4] Bruce Cumings, The Korean War: A History (New York: Modern Library, 2010).
[5] Geoffrey Blainey, Causes of War, (New York: The Free Press, 1988), 293.
[6] Glenn Kessler, “Ex-Envoy Details Hussein Meeting,” Washington Post, April 3, 2008, http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/04/02/AR2008040203485.html; “Confrontation in the Gulf; Excerpts from Iraqi Document on Meeting with U.S. Envoy,” The New York Times, September 23, 1990, http://www.nytimes.com/1990/09/23/w...-on-meeting-with-us-envoy.html?pagewanted=all. For a deeper discussion and analysis of what how Saddam Hussein interpreted his meeting with U.S. diplomats, reference this article: Stephen M. Walt, “WikiLeaks, April Glaspie, and Saddam Hussein,” Foreign Policy, January 9, 2011, http://foreignpolicy.com/2011/01/09/wikileaks-april-glaspie-and-saddam-hussein/
[7] Jean Edward Smith, George Bush's War (London: Macmillan, 1992), 6-8.
[8] David Bruce MacDonald, Dirk Nabers, and Robert G. Patman, The Bush leadership, the power of ideas, and the war on terror (New York: Routledge, 2012), 124-127.
[9] Sten Rynning, NATO in Afghanistan: The Liberal Disconnect (Palo Alto, CA: Stanford University Press, 2012), 113.
[10] Hassan Abbas, The Taliban Revival: Violence and Extremism on the Pakistan-Afghanistan Frontier (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2014).
[11] A. B. O'Connell, (Ed.) Our Latest Longest War: Losing Hearts and Minds in Afghanistan (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2017).
[12] Jahara W. Matisek, “Drones and Airpower: A Lack of Deterrence in Unconventional Warfare?” Small Wars Journal, September 2, 2015, http://smallwarsjournal.com/jrnl/ar...-lack-of-deterrence-in-unconventional-warfare
[13] John Mearsheimer, Conventional deterrence (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2017); Barry R. Posen, Inadvertent Escalation: Conventional War and Nuclear Risks (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2013).
[14] Michael McClintock, Instruments of Statecraft: US guerrilla warfare, counterinsurgency, and counter-terrorism, 1940-1990 (New York: Pantheon Books, 1992).
[15] Thomas E. Ricks, “Our Generals Failed in Afghanistan,” Foreign Policy, October 18, 2016, http://foreignpolicy.com/2016/10/18/our-generals-failed-in-afghanistan/; Daniel L. Davis, “COIN Is a Proven Failure,” The American Conservative, December 1, 2014, http://www.theamericanconservative.com/articles/coin-is-a-proven-failure/
[16]*Martin Van Creveld, “Modern conventional warfare: An overview,” National Intelligence Council Workshop, 2004.
[17] Vipin Narang, “What does it take to deter? Regional power nuclear postures and international conflict,” Journal of Conflict Resolution 57, no. 3 (2013): 478-508.
[18] “U.S. Defense Spending Compared to other Countries,” Peter G. Peterson Foundation, June 1, 2017, http://www.pgpf.org/chart-archive/0053_defense-comparison
[19] For an intellectual and historical explanation of the “boots on the ground” phrase refer to: BBC, “Where does the phrase 'boots on the ground' come from?” BBC: Magazine Monitor, September 30, 2014, http://www.bbc.com/news/blogs-magazine-monitor-29413429
[20] Michael R. Kagay, “History Suggests Bush's Popularity will Ebb,” The New York Times, May 22, 1991, http://www.nytimes.com/1991/05/22/us/history-suggests-bush-s-popularity-will-ebb.html
[21] Helene Dieck and Richard J. Finneran, The Influence of Public Opinion on Post-Cold War US Military Interventions (New York: MacMillan, 2016).
[22] “Presidential Approval Rankings,” NSC Decision Making and Operation Allied Force, 2013, https://sites.google.com/a/georgeto...ubordinate-data/presidential-approval-ratings
[23] “CNN poll: Obama trails McCain on national security,” CNN, August 27, 2008, http://www.cnn.com/2008/POLITICS/08/27/poll.security/index.html?_s=PM:POLITICS
[24] Fox News Poll, September 15, 2016, http://www.foxnews.com/politics/interactive/2016/09/15/fox-news-poll-sept-15-2016.html
[25] Вале́рий Васи́льевич Гера́симов (tr. Valery Vasilevich Gerasimov), “НОВЫЕ ВЫЗОВЫ ТРЕБУЮТ ПЕРЕОСМЫСЛЕНИЯ ФОРМ И СПОСОБОВ ВЕДЕНИЯ БОЕВЫХ ДЕЙСТВИЙ ОЕВЫХ ДЕЙСТВИЙ” (tr. “New Challenges Demand Rethinking Forms and Methods of Combat Action”), военно-промышленный курьер (tr. Military-Industrial Courier), February 27, 2013, http://vpk-news.ru/sites/default/files/pdf/VPK_08_476.pdf, p.2.
[26] Ian Bertram, “We need effective operations in the realm of social media,” Foreign Policy: Best Defense, April 21, 2016, http://foreignpolicy.com/2016/04/21...tive-operations-in-the-realm-of-social-media/
[27] Many attribute this phrase to Napoleon and Voltaire, however its origin has been traced back to Roger de Rabutin in 1677. For more discussion on this, see: Ralph Keyes, The quote verifier: Who said what, where, and when (New York: Macmillan, 2007,) 79.
[28] Hans Morgenthau, Politics Among Nations (New York: Knopf, 1960).
[29]*H. R. McMaster, “The Pipe Dream of Easy War,” The New York Times, July 20, 2013, http://www.nytimes.com/2013/07/21/opinion/sunday/the-pipe-dream-of-easy-war.html
[30] George C. Marshall quoted in: Elizabeth Cobbs Hoffman, All You Need is Love: The Peace Corps and the Spirit of the 1960s (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1998), 79.
[31] Andy Greenberg, “Obama Curbed Chinese Hacking, But Russia Won't Be So Easy,” Wired, December 12, 2016, https://www.wired.com/2016/12/obama-russia-hacking-sanctions-china/
[32] Geoff Colvin, “Study: China Will Overtake the U.S. as World’s Largest Economy Before 2030,” Fortune, February 9, 2017, http://fortune.com/2017/02/09/study...he-u-s-as-worlds-largest-economy-before-2030/
[33] James D. Fearon and David D. Laitin, “Ethnicity, Insurgency, and Civil War,” American Political Science Review 97, no. 1 (2003): 75-90
 

Housecarl

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https://www.thecipherbrief.com/arti...il&utm_term=0_b02a5f1344-45d34a36bd-122460921

Maskirovka: Russia’s Gray Zone Between Peace and War

November 8, 2017 | Levi Maxey

While all militaries seek to lead enemies astray, Russia’s military doctrine of deception – known as maskirovka, Russian for “masking” or “camouflage” – is a foundational component of the Russian military and intelligence mindset. With maskirovka, the fog of war is not merely the natural byproduct of combat, but a deliberately manufactured feature of military operations intended to increase ambiguity and indecision in opposing forces. Using decoys, clandestine actions and disinformation, maskirovka facilitates military resilience, surprise action and increases doubt in an adversary while concealing Russian weaknesses.

  • The tools of maskirovka broadly include psychological operations, manipulation of media, disinformation and propaganda, electronic and cyber warfare, irregular forces not in uniform, private military contractors, proxies and physical deception through camouflaged military maneuver.
  • While not necessarily a new doctrine of warfare, maskirovka in its modern iteration takes place at the seams of conventional conflict – the gray zone between peace and war.

Russia’s use of deception in battle goes back centuries, but modern technologies act as a force multiplier, making it more complex and harder to counter. The confluence of old school Russian maskirovka and digital technology primarily seeks to infect an adversary’s decision cycle with constant doubt – hindering timely or well-informed action.

  • Old-school tactics include: decoys such as dummy tanks as used by the Serbian military during the NATO air campaign in Kosovo in 1999; confusing demonstrations of capability, such as the Zapad wargame; occasional “buzzing” of U.S. naval vessels or near contested borders to determine response protocols; deployment of “patriotic” or “volunteer” unconventional forces, such as the “little green men” deployed to annex Crimea in 2014; the clandestine delivery of military supplies camouflaged as humanitarian convoys to support proxy and clandestine forces; incessant denial of military presence or disingenuous narratives behind military operations, such as acting as peacekeeping force to protect ethnic and expatriate Russians.
  • Offensive cyber and electronic warfare capabilities allow Russia to insert doubt into their enemy’s faith in digital systems. Fake command and control facilities emit fake radio frequency signals to deceive enemy intelligence assets, while manipulating or jamming radio frequency or GPS signals could undermine a military commander’s faith in the accuracy of precision-guided munitions.
  • With modern communications technology, automated bots on social media platforms amplify targeted disinformation to both divide populations and entice susceptible groups to favor Russian-produced narratives. State-sponsored media – such as RT and Sputnik – can guide the conversation and help legitimize Kremlin propaganda.

At the same time, modern communications technology is also a great vulnerability for Russian use of maskirovka. Open source platforms can be used to discredit the Kremlin’s disinformation, potentially causing unforeseen political backlash. However, successfully countering the narrative requires swift and agile reaction.

Maskirovka creates uncertainty and plausible deniability regarding Russian responsibility for operations, dulling the West’s response. This has helped the Kremlin sidestep international norms without meaningful repercussions.

  • Because Russian “patriotic hackers” executed the electronic denial of service attacks against Estonia – a NATO member – in 2007, Russia maintained plausible deniability, complicating Estonia and its allies’ ability to retaliate.
  • The disinformation campaign and troop buildup near South Ossetia ahead of the 2008 invasion of Georgia (and repeated before the 2014 annexation of Crimea) allegedly involved Russian special operations forces with no insignia clearly identifying them as Russian military, later dubbed “little green men.”

Maskirovka often goes beyond fostering doubt and presents an alternative – and often false – narrative. Russia has used this to pursue geostrategic objectives under the guise of international cooperation. Perhaps the most prominent example is Russia’s positioning itself as a counterterrorism partner in Syria – and Libya to a lesser extent – as it seeks to extend its global influence to the Middle East.

Russia’s high-profile air campaign over Syria provides a convenient distraction from its military operations in Ukraine – and clandestine ground forces in Syria.

  • It also allows Russia to present itself to the world – seemingly convincingly to U.S. President Donald Trump – as a strategic ally to the international community in the war against ISIS, a potential foundation for the alleviation of sanctions initially imposed on Moscow for its annexation of Crimea.
  • But while Russia may occasionally target ISIS in Syria, its primary objectives in the country have been to bolster the Assad regime and destroy the Western-backed opposition so that it does not create a pro-U.S. entity in Syria.
  • “In 2015, Russia began a military intervention in Syria claiming it was waging war on ISIS and international terrorism,” Ted Poe (R-TX), said at a House Foreign Affairs subcommittee hearing on “Russia: Counterterrorism Partner or Fanning the Flames?” yesterday. “To some, this was welcome news. It seemed that there may be a rare moment that the cooperation between the former Cold War foes – Moscow and Washington—would be able to work together to combat terrorism. This was fantasy.”

The Russian Embassy did not respond to a request for comment.

Levi Maxey is a cyber and technology analyst at The Cipher Brief. Follow him on Twitter @lemax13.

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Housecarl

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http://smallwarsjournal.com/jrnl/art/multi-domain-battles-impact-on-civil-infrastructure

Multi-Domain Battle's Impact on Civil Infrastructure

by Kyle Borne
Journal Article | November 8, 2017 - 12:13am

The concept of Multi-Domain Battle (MDB) recognizes the fundamental shift in how potential adversaries of the United States engage in geostrategic means with which to achieve geopolitical goals via means below-armed-conflict. MDB employs all the warfighting domains to achieve these ends. There are numerous aspects to MDB and to be honest I’m still learning what they are and how they interrelate. While reading all of this preliminary, non-doctrinal, unofficial literature one key question can be identified: Given the nearly total reliance of the military on civilian infrastructure, how do we achieve the objectives of securing the Strategic and Operational Support Areas?* Senior leaders and planners within the military have relied on unfettered access to the internet for the last 16 years to conduct operations, this assumption is no longer guaranteed in MDB.

Civilian infrastructure required to move big pieces of military hardware around the world rides on the non-secured (or civilian secured) internet. From submission of contracts to loading containers onto freighters, all of this traffic is secured (or not) in the civil domain. The MDB construct classifies this infrastructure as part of the Strategic Support Area and puts the impetus on the military to secure it as a means of achieving national security objectives. Through the MDB lens, potential adversaries can be expected to be conducting cyber-ISR (and indeed are) on these civilian networks. If adversaries were monitoring and suspected the US to launch some sort of conventional attack, they could use the increase in traffic between known contract companies and the Department of Defense (DoD) as an indicator and warning (I&W) of “strange things being afoot at the Circle K”. They could then use this reliance on infrastructure to delay US strategic deployment.

In addition to functioning as an indicator and warning, these civil targets are legitimate below-armed-conflict targets for threat actors. Once identified as a threatening activity, adversaries could move to delay and disrupt our ability to mobilize forces through cyberspace. This could come in the form of manipulating orders to have incorrect information, coding equipment to ship to Abu Dhabi instead of Busan, or crashing the software which operates the loading cranes at the port. It may be subtle or overt in nature, ranging from disrupting traffic lights to crashing the Supervisory Control And Data Acquisition (SCADA) systems at a power plant or distribution center.

Not just the obvious are targets for nefarious cyber actors. As a grad student studying at the University of Kansas, we learned about numerous instances of cities and counties automating infrastructure to achieve efficiency. From sewer overflow systems to power distribution to traffic control, large and small cities alike use these networked SCADA systems to handle everyday tasks. This creates additional problems which MDB takes into consideration. Imagine a cyber-attack on a power plant which supplies power to not just a major city, but the local military base as well. Many bases rely on civilian power for most of their needs. If we can’t get power to our server stacks, it’s going to be nearly impossible to mobilize for operations. The power goes down and we lose internet and cellular communications, our primary means to talk stateside.

MDB accounts for other-below armed-conflict acts, such as the use of information warfare to affect civil discourse. There are numerous protest groups already operating across the country which are hostile to US foreign policy objectives, the military, the defense industry, or even just the President which could be mobilized to interfere with a mobilization. As we have recently seen, Russian involvement through fake social movement accounts on social media reached over 126 million Americans during the campaign season. The themes and messages therein focused on the divisions Americans have and encouraged action based on these fears.* Part of a below-armed-conflict campaign would logically use a similar tactic to try and motivate already existing indigenous protest groups to demonstrate out of military gates or blockade interstates, further delaying or ensnarling movement. This begs the question, does the DoD have a legitimate interest in somehow securing the Social Media Environment? How does it do this? Through the Public Affairs Officer and the Information Officer?

Inclusive to MDB is the security of space assets. The DoD has several communications constellations in orbit, but still relies on commercial satellites to route a fair amount of traffic. These become targets of Support Area activities as well. The extent to which commercial satellites have been compromised is not yet publically known, but routing traffic on a satellite that anyone can rent bandwidth from creates a hazard for secrets to spill or a degradation in throughput.

These concerns beg the question of how we can secure these Operational Support Areas. The common thread linking all of them is cyber infrastructure. This is obviously a matter of import for the DoD, but it poses problems. As Susan Brenner points out “Cyberspace** transcends** spatial** boundaries** and** thereby erodes the distinction between ‘inside’ and ‘outside’ threats” (Brenner, 2013). The Posse Comitatus Act essentially split security matters between inside (criminals in society) and outside (foreign militaries, terrorists) to be dealt with by police and military entities respectively. *If we militarize the security of the cyber domain, we run the risk of violating this act. This begs the question implied by Brenner, does this act even apply to cyberspace or is it even appropriate given the unique nature of the threat? A military solution alone seems impractical.

The next plausible course of action is to rely on civilian infrastructure alone to secure itself. Following the attacks of September 11th, 2001, the Homeland Security Act of 2002 created the Department of Homeland Security and established the Director of Information Analysis, and Infrastructure Protection (IAIP). This director is responsible for the security of cyber and critical infrastructure protection (Hildick-Smith, 2005). Despite the creation of this directorate, cyberattacks on SCADA infrastructure continue to increase (examples can be found here). There is also a problem with having unity of effort across the increasingly interconnected number of SCADA systems. On the one hand decentralized efforts reduce common vulnerabilities, but it also makes updating security against known threats harder. A civilian-lead approach seems slightly less impractical, but still not sufficient.

The logical solution seems to be some sort of private-public partnership. The Director of the National Security Agency (DIRNSA) Navy Admiral Mike S. Rogers thinks this is the way ahead. After the Sony cyberattack perpetrated by North Korea, there was significant cooperation between the NSA and Sony (Pellerin, 2016). Not only does he think it’s a good idea, but the scholars at the Wharton Public Policy Initiative do as well (Jagasia, 2017). Given the private sector controls a majority of the cyber backbone it has the necessary access to systems the DoD needs. The DoD has a unique advantage in its ability to collect cyber intelligence from foreign nations. The private sector has a majority of the skilled experts in cyber security while the DoD has the authorities and intelligence infrastructure to reach across international boundaries. Sharing resources between the two entities, it makes the most sense to really begin to get at securing the Operational Support Area of the homeland cyber infrastructure.

As we have seen, Multi-domain battle has a nexus in the Operational Support Area of cyberspace. Often taken for granted, freedom of maneuver in the cyber domain is not guaranteed. This space is contested at all times (as you can see Here), not just times of declared hostilities. People have been discussing and sounding the alarm over this particular vulnerability essentially since the internet was made public. With a shift in doctrinal emphasis potentially going towards MDB, it becomes imperative the DoD makes a concerted effort to figure out how to achieve Operational Support Area Cybersecurity (OSAC) within the MDB construct. This will require private-public partnerships which will need to be worked out on the policy level, but could be executed as a portion of community relations (COMREL). How this will be achieved is uncertain. What is clear however, is we need to put deliberate effort into working with community and business partners to secure our critical cyber infrastructure soon, or else the next war might be over before we can even get tanks on ships.

The opinions presented here are the author’s and do not necessarily reflect those of the U.S. Army or U.S. Department of Defense.

Works Cited
Brenner, S. W. (2013). Cyberthreats and the Posse Comitatus Act: Speculations. Journal of International and Comparative Law, 26-36.
Hildick-Smith, A. (2005). Security for Critical Infrastructure SCADA Systems. SANS Institute.
Jagasia, A. (2017, April 18). A Look Into Public Private Partnerships For Cybersecurity. Retrieved from Public Policy Intiative: https://publicpolicy.wharton.upenn.edu/live/news/1815-a-look-into-public...
Pellerin, C. (2016, November 16). Cybercom Commander: Public-Private Partnerships Needed for Cybersecurity. Retrieved from U.S. Department of Defense: https://www.defense.gov/News/Article/Article/1006807/cybercom-commander-...
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Tags: cyber operations cyber security MDB Multi-Domain Battle SCADA Supervisory Control And Data Acquisition
About the Author

Kyle Borne
CPT(P) Kyle Borne is an Electronic Warfare Officer with the 17th Field Artillery Brigade. He has been in the Army EW community since 2009, graduating from the Army Operational Electronic Warfare Course and the EW Officer Qualification Course. The views expressed are his own and do not reflect the official policy or position of the United States Army, Department of Defense, the 17th Field Artillery Brigade, or the U.S. Government.

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Housecarl

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https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/worl...in-syria/ar-BBEL497?li=AA4Zpp&ocid=spartanntp

IS militants evacuate last stronghold in Syria

By SARAH EL DEEB, Associated Press
54 mins ago

BEIRUT — Islamic State militants withdrew Thursday from their last stronghold in Syria, a strategic town near the border with Iraq, following a government offensive that has effectively left the extremist group's fighters dispersed in villages and small towns in the desert.

The Syrian military declared the town liberated after intense battles that killed a large number of militants, including leaders. The military said they are still chasing other IS militants in different directions in the desert.

"The liberation of Boukamal is of great importance because it is a declaration of the fall of this group's project in the region generally and the collapse of its supporters' illusions to divide it, control large parts of the Syria-Iraq borders and secure supply routes between the two countries," Army spokesman Gen. Ali Mayhoub said in a televised statement.

Syrian pro-government media said Syrian troops had clashed with remnants of IS militants in the town after they entered it late Wednesday. On Thursday, they reported the town clear of IS fighters.

Pro-Syrian media reported the town was liberated. Al-Ikhbariya TV's journalist reported from the road to the town, joyfully breaking out on camera: "Daesh is finished. Live."

The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said government forces and allied troops, including Iraqi forces who linked from across the border, are combing through Boukamal after IS militants withdrew.

With the collapse of IS in Boukamal, Islamic State militants have no major territorial control in Syria and Iraq and are believed to have dispersed in the desert west and east of the Euphrates River. U.S. officials estimated that there were between 2,500 and 3,500 IS militants around Boukamal and that leading members of the group were also believed to have taken refuge in the town. The group has a small presence near the capital, Damascus.

IS has suffered consecutive defeats at the hands of separate but simultaneous offensives in Iraq and Syria by the Russian-backed Syrian forces and allied militias as well as U.S.-backed Iraqi and Syrian fighters.

Despite its fall, the group's media apparatus has remained active and its fighters are likely to keep up their insurgency from desert areas.

The swift fall of Boukamal in eastern Deir el-Zour province was accelerated after Iraqi forces seized Qaim, the town across the border, last weekend, also controlling a strategic crossing between the two countries.

A senior Iraqi official said there was an agreement on Tuesday to send Iraqi paramilitaries to Syria to take part in the Boukamal operation, adding that the Syrians were to supply them with weapons and gear. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to reporters.

An Iraqi spokesman for the Popular Mobilization Forces told The Associated Press last week that his forces, part of the Iraqi security forces, will participate in the operation and will head north to protect the borders and secure the road from Iran to Lebanon.

Boukamal is the last urban center for the militants in both Iraq and Syria where Syrian troops —backed by Russia and Iranian-supported militias — and U.S.-backed Syrian Democratic Forces are vying for control of the strategic border town.

Washington is wary of increasing Iran influence in the area and has backed the SDF in their bid to uproot IS from the borders with Iraq. The proximity of forces in the area has raised concerns about potential clashes between them as they approach Boukamal from opposite sides of the Euphrates River, and now from across the border with Iraq.

It was not clear if the government seizure of the town means the end of the race for control of territory previously held by IS.

So far the Kurdish-led SDF have focused on the area east of the Euphrates, seizing a number of oil and gas fields and securing large swathes of areas along the border with Iraq, as well as the newly liberated Raqqa city.

Associated Press writer Sinan Salah in Baghdad contributed to this report
 

Housecarl

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Facing Russian threat, NATO boosts operations for the first time since the Cold War

The Washington Post
Michael Birnbaum
12 hrs ago

The moves came as tensions with Russia remain the highest they have been in the nearly three decades since the end of the Cold War. U.S. Defense Secretary Jim Mattis briefed fellow defense ministers Wednesday morning about Russian violations of the*Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty, underlining the nuclear risk that is a worst-case consequence of the bitter back-and-forth.

Defense ministers approved plans that would bolster their ability to keep an eye on Russian submarines in the Atlantic Ocean, where crucial undersea communications are at risk of being cut. They committed to establishing a command dedicated to sweeping away barriers preventing their forces from being deployed quickly across Europe in the event of war. And they said that cyberweapons would now have as big a role in NATO planning as guns and tanks.

The efforts seek to revamp a war-fighting structure that atrophied in the peacetime years after the Cold War. NATO was once a sprawling organization of 22,000 people and 33 commands. Following cuts in this decade, it shrank to 7,000 people and seven commands.*

"Those decisions will ensure that NATO continues to adapt for the 21st century so that we can keep our people safe in a more challenging world," NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg said Wednesday at the meeting of ministers.

The holes that opened in NATO's defense came as the alliance shifted in the years following the 1991 demise of the Soviet Union. Until Russia's 2014 annexation of Ukraine's Crimean Peninsula, NATO had turned into an alliance focused on limited deployments and operations far from its own territory. Now, with a conflict in eastern Ukraine still burning, leaders have returned to planning for a conventional war with Russia.

NATO commanders worry that even though their militaries are significantly stronger than those under the command of the Kremlin, Russia's ability to rush its troops across its own territory give it a formidable practical advantage. U.S. tanks were held up for hours over the summer as they waited for border clearance in Central Europe on the way to a military exercise. In some countries, requests to move troops and equipment need to be submitted up to 30 days in advance.

"We are now much more focused on moving heavy equipment across Europe. Because after the Cold War, we didn't pay so much attention to that," Stoltenberg said.

The decision, which was widely supported by NATO's 29 member nations, would establish two new regional bases, bolstering NATO's total number to nine. No decisions were made about personnel numbers or where to station the new commands, although Germany and Poland are favorites for the logistics command and Portugal, the United States and France are possibilities for the sea-focused one.

The NATO nations that are most vulnerable to Russian attack said that the initiative would help improve their defenses. NATO nations deployed about 4,000 troops this year across the three Baltic nations of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania, as well as Poland, which all share borders with Russia.

Any delay in speeding troops and materiel across Europe "means more casualties, additional risks and losses" in the event of war, Lithuanian Defense Minister Raimondas Karoblis said.*

"Time is very important here," he said, adding that the speed with which NATO can respond to any Russian aggression could make the difference between fighting to defend NATO borders and a much more grinding effort to retake territory that has already been lost.

The decision to establish a *cyber-operations center will widen NATO's ability to act not only against Russia but also other adversaries, such as the Taliban in Afghanistan and the Islamic State in Iraq.

NATO military commanders could use a cyberweapon to disable a Taliban website, for example.

Russia is suspected of using jamming technology in August to disable part of Latvia's cellular network ahead of its massive Zapad military exercises. And in the past, Estonia and Ukraine believe they have been targeted by Russian cyber tools.

"We now can strengthen NATO missions and operations also with cyber capabilities," Stoltenberg said.*"We know that cyber will be an important part of any potential military conflict."

On Thursday, defense ministers are expected to discuss U.S. and NATO operations in Afghanistan and the effort to fight the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria. Troop commitments to NATO's Afghan operation are expected to go up by about 3,000, with half of the soldiers pledged from the United States and half from other NATO nations and partners.
 
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