Veteran of four wars, four enlistments, four branches: Air Force, Army, Army Reserve, Army National Guard. I am both an AF (Air Force) veteran and as Veteran AF (As Fuck)
Thursday, July 28, 2016
Soviet Armor vs. American Armor, Israel 1973
In July and August 1975, I went to the U.S. Army Armor School in Fort Knox, Kentucky, after three years in missile weapons testing.
We learned the basics of armor and about our tank, the M60A1. We also learned about a serious flaw in our tanks that was fixed at great cost by the Israeli Army. The Israelis fought and defeated the armies of Egypt, Syria and Jordan using the M60A1 among other tanks. It turns out the hydraulic fluid in our tanks was prone to catch fire. After the Israelis lost crewmen to these fires, the hydraulic fluid was changed.
We also learned how important mechanical reliability is to combat tank crews. The Arab countries used Soviet tanks, primarily the T-55 and T-62 main battle tanks. We learned the difference between "live" and "dead" track. Soviet tanks used dead track, like bulldozers that does not use rubber bushings. In hard use, especially at high speeds, dead track is more prone to break. According to one report, the Syrian Army lost one-fourth of its tanks before they reached the battle in the Golan Heights due to automotive failure.
After the 1973 War, the Israelis installed American-made drive lines in captured Soviet tanks to make the Soviet armor more reliable.
To people who have never trained and lived in a tank, they can seem like the indestructible behemoths of movies. But real life in a tank is a life of wrenches and rags. As a tank commander of one of the most reliable tanks of its time, my crew and I spent five hours or more maintaining our 54-ton tank for every hour of operation. Each of the 80 track blocks on each track were held together with a center guide and two end connectors. Each of the 160 center guides and 320 end connectors could work loose and had to be checked, often. The center guides ran between six pairs of road wheels, three pairs of return rollers, the drive sprocket and front idler wheel for adjusting track tension. Each of the wheels had inner steel plates bolted to the aluminum wheels. The road wheels were attached to torsion bars.
We tightened bolts all the time. Our tanks would received major service at 6,000 miles of operation, usually including a refurbished V12 diesel power plant and transmission.
And our tanks were so much more reliable than the Soviet counterparts that the Israelis ditched their drivelines and installed American-made drivelines to make the Soviet tanks more reliable.
War shows strengths and weaknesses. Reliable, effective armor is definitely an American strength.
Monday, July 25, 2016
Laurus, Book 19 of 2016: A Tale of Old Russia that Stretches to Florence and Jerusalem
Eleven of the books I have read so far this year are by
Russian authors writing about life in Russia from the present back through the
last two centuries. This book goes several centuries further back into Russian history.
Laurus by Eugene Vodolazkin showed me a Russia that I have
seen only in fleeting glimpses. We follow the title character, Laurus, from
when he loses his parents as a child until the end of his long life as a healer
and a holy man between the mid 1400s to the 1520s.
This is a medieval book by setting and by the parade of
wretched, reverent, hopeful, fearful and foul characters that people the pages
of this wonderful book. After Laurus
(Arseny in his early life) loses his parents he moves in with his grandfather,
a healer named Christopher. Arseny
follows his grandfather and becomes a healer, but as his life progresses,
Arseny relies less on the herbs and lore of Christopher and more on the healing
gift he has from God.
Arseny becomes adept at healing plague victims. He heals a young woman from far away named
Ustina. They fall in love and live
together. Ustina gets pregnant then she
and their son die in childbirth.
At that point, Arseny becomes an itinerant “Holy Fool” in
the city of Pskov. (Pskov is the northwest corner of modern Russia.) He shares Pskov with
two other Holy Fools. One is Holy Fool
Foma, who is very territorial. Foma is
one of the many brilliant bits of comic relief we get on the long life of
suffering of our very Russian hero Arseny/Laurus (also at various times Ustin
and Ambrosius).
In the middle of the book, we meet Ambrogio, an Italian from
Florence with a gift of Prophecy as strong as Arseny’s gift of healing. Ambrogio is convinced the world is ending
soon and the only place he can get exact knowledge of the coming Apocalypse is
in Pskov. In 15th Century
Florence, Ambrogio finds a trader willing to teach him Russian. Ambrogio learns Russian with an accent
perfect for Pskov in short order and sets out for Pskov.
In Pskov, Ambrogio meets the mayor. The mayor introduces the Italian to Arseny
and bankrolls their trip to Jerusalem.
All the horrors of the road befall them.
Ambrogio is killed near Jerusalem; a sword but lives and return to Pskov
slash Arseny.
Late in life Arseny goes to a monastery and finally lives in
a cave. He takes the blame for a sin he
did not commit and dies rejected by thousands who he healed. But when he finally dies, more than 100,000
people mourn his passing.
Laurus shows from beginning to end that the life of true
faith, the life truly given to others, means poverty, rejection and
suffering. Arseny, like the Bishop in
Les Miserable rejects this world out of habit and choice. Arseny, like the Bishop, illustrates the
passage called the Beatitudes in the Gospel of Matthew. I am adding that passage at the end of this
review.
Laurus is the Book of Acts set in Russia with the
unrelenting suffering of the Apostle Paul set in a colder climate. Any televangelist who read and understood
Laurus would burn his mansion, his private jet and his TV studio to the
ground.
This book shows what the Christian life looks like and it is a good story well told.
Matthew
Chapter 5
The Beatitudes
10 f“Blessed are those who are
persecuted for righteousness' sake, forutheirs is the kingdom of
heaven.
11 g“Blessed are you when others revile you and
persecute you and utter all kinds of evil against you falsely hon my account. 12 iRejoice and be glad, for
your reward is great in heaven, for jso they persecuted the prophets who were before
you.
Thursday, July 21, 2016
"Wrong War" Conservatives: “Patriots” Who Dodged the Draft
Just 99 years ago, this was America's view of draft dodgers.
Many strange things make America unique in the history of the world. One of the strangest to me is that Draft Dodgers can let another man serve and maybe die in his place, and yet they can be “Patriots” later in life. And more ironic than that, they can be patriots in the conservative party.
I know a guy who is a life-long conservative, is three years older than I am, and never served in the military. He said the Vietnam War was the “Wrong War.” (Really? Who decides what is the "Right War?" You?) In his mind, those who have the means to avoid the war are free to do that. So he went to college and got four deferments that got him through the effective end of the draft in 1973. He considers himself a true conservative and a patriot and has no lingering guilt about avoiding the Vietnam War.
More importantly, he believes if it was the "Right War" he would have served. Usually with this kind of assertion, there is no way to test if it is true. But in America, we have so many wars we can validate the experiment. America was attacked on September 11, 2001. America invaded Afghanistan within a month and was making plans to invade Iraq within a year. In the USA where upwards of 100 million people claim to be conservative, the government had trouble maintaining a force of just two million. By 2007, the Army National Guard let me re-enlist at 54 years old. The Army, in a failed three-year experiment, raised the enlistment age to 42. I got in with 11 years of prior service and a waiver. Where were all those conservatives? Was Iraq another "Wrong War?"
In most any country in the world through most of history, dodging the draft was treated as treason. The draft dodger went through life known as a coward.
In most any country in the world through most of history, dodging the draft was treated as treason. The draft dodger went through life known as a coward.
Yet in modern America, the party that wants to “Make America Great Again” does not want any part of the real path to greatness, which involves suffering and sacrifice.
With the glaring exception of John McCain, every nominee of the Republican Party in this century has avoided combat service while blaming the Democrats for the ills of the nation. A nation that is looking back to the what they consider the best days of America, would not nominate, let alone elect, a draft dodger to be commander in chief. There is a moral dimension to greatness. The sort of man who will let another serve in his place as a young man will not suddenly become a brave leader as an old man.
When Donald Trump addresses the Republic Convention tonight he will stand in front of the largest gathering of rich draft dodgers in America: the coward in chief telling thousands of other cowards how he is going to “Make America Great Again.”
I wish I was making this up.
I wish I was making this up.
Sunday, July 17, 2016
Army Times Reports Army is Downsizing Public Affairs
I had a good laugh this morning reading an editorial by a career public affairs sergeant bemoaning the fact that the Army is downsizing Public Affairs.
When I spent a year in Public Affairs on my first enlistment in the late 70s, most PA soldiers wanted to be journalists. We wanted to be writers, photographers, broadcasters and film makers. We wanted to be journalists or artists. Our heroes were the best journalists. We saw ourselves as storytellers who were sharpening our skills in the Army to go out and use out skills in the big, wide world.
The current Public Affairs soldier, as I noted recently, hates the media as a rule.
This is partly a matter of who is in the career field. During the draft era and immediately after, the military was a place to learn a skill before moving on to "real life." Career soldiers were much more rare than the current force. So the PA soldiers I knew on my first enlistment were in their early 20s. And they planned to get out.
Everyone I know in Public Affairs on my current enlistment is a career soldier. They never plan to be journalists. They don't pretend to be journalists as we used to do, and they don't even pretend to like journalists.
So now the Army is finding that Public Affairs can be downsized. Of course it can. It should have been done long ago. It is the curse of public affairs in civilian life that if you really succeed, you lose the client. When I worked at an agency, I got one of our clients on the cover of the biggest magazine in their industry. We lost the client the next month. I was stunned. My boss was not. He told me about the other times it happened. In the mind of the client, once they were on the cover, they were set. Why pay us?
The public trusts the military more than almost any other institution in America. A civilian client with an eye on their budget would cut back public affairs.
Friday, July 15, 2016
Military Privilege: The Camouflage Exception to Rules
Privilege of any kind is when you get to bend and break
rules others don’t. I have enjoyed many
aspects of Military Privilege since I re-enlisted in 2007. But I got the best part of this type of privilege
when I returned from Iraq in 2010. I went a title and tag company with proof of
my deployment and paid $20 for an Iraq Veteran license plate. Since then, the Return on Investment of this
$20 has been like owning the first shares of Berkshire-Hathaway or Apple.
Until last year I worked in Philadelphia. I only occasionally drove to work, but also I
regularly made trips to DC and New York in my car for business. I drive fast.
In addition, rolling through thousands of stop signs and traffic lights
on a bicycle leaks over into car driving some times. Did I mention that I occasionally park in the
wrong place?
I am not justifying any of this. But given my inclination to make up for
lateness by speeding, the Iraq Plate is like an enabler in a bad
relationship. Since getting the plate I
have seen a patrol car speeding up behind me on the turnpike with its lights
on, get close enough to see the Iraq plate, then pull off. I have been stopped and then let go by a
fellow Iraq veteran. And in Center City
Philadelphia, I parked my car to run an errand and came back to watch cars on
both sides of me get tickets, but not mine.
Today one of my former commanders posted on Facebook a
perfect example of Military Privilege.
In his words:
Pulled over last
night on my way home from the airport...I was doing 70ish in a 55...pulled over
right away when I saw his lights, turned on my dome light put my hands on my
steering wheel where they could be seen...the trooper asked if I knew why he
was pulling me over and I told him "yes sir I was speeding"...he said
it was 55 up until Hamburg and to keep it down and be safe...that was it...ok
maybe my ACU cover with Lieutenant Colonel on the back seat helped....or maybe
just maybe it was also that I was respectful and admitted I was wrong...
Polite, respectful and Army is a whole bunch better than polite
and respectful without Army.
Military Privilege, like every kind of privilege leads to
guilt on the part of the privileged (sometimes) and envy on the part of those
without the privilege (always).
Military Privilege unlike White Privilege is available to
anyone in the military and more so for veterans. Soldiers of all races and religions can bolt
a Veteran Plate on their car and feel like they have a bit of societal body
armor. In fact, the plate would seem a
particularly good idea for dark-skinned veterans to mark themselves out as
defenders of our nation.
Because most of our nation does not serve, Military
Privilege does not generate the kind of Envy that White Privilege does. Anyone can get Military Privilege by joining
the military and get even more privilege by serving in one of our current
wars.
In general, if you ever wonder if privilege exists, use the
Envy Test.
Envy is wanting what someone else has AND wanting to deny
them of the same thing. Jealousy, by
contrast, wants what someone else has, but does not need to take it from them.
I am jealous of anyone who owns a Ferrari. I want one.
I am not envious. They can have
theirs too! If I wanted their Ferrari to
be stolen or wrecked, that would be envy.
Envy always destroys community. Envy is always bad. Envy is the second worst of the Seven Deadly
Sins. Only Pride is worse.
Really, if you want to go to Hell and feel like greed, lust
and gluttony aren’t enough, stick with Envy.
Accuse someone else of having something you are entitled to then insist
you get yours and also insist that what they have is taken away. You should be able to smell sulfur soon.
Thursday, July 14, 2016
My Next Adventure: Ride South to North Across Russia and Former Soviet and Warsaw Pact Countries
In mid-August of next year I am planning to ride north from Odessa, Ukraine, to Helsinki, Finland, by way of several former Soviet and Warsaw Pact states.
The trip is in honor of my paternal grandfather. He escaped the Cossack slaughter of Jews under the Tsar at the end of the 19th Century, got to America, then returned to Odessa in August of 1914. The biggest mistake of his life. He was going to drafted into the Army and only escaped by walking from Odessa to Finland. It took six months and he barely got out of Russia alive. The story is here.
I am hoping for an easier trip, which is why I am not traveling by the shortest route north through eastern Ukraine and western Russia. Currently, my route has no active conflicts. But I am going to write to every U.S. Embassy along the route to let them know an American tourist will be riding through these countries in August of next year.
Here is the route: From Odessa, I will ride northwest through Moldova and eastern Romania. Then I will ride north through western Ukraine and eastern Poland. From there I ride northeast through Belarus, then into the three Baltic States: Lithuania, Lativia and Estonia.
From Estonia I will take a ferry to Helsinki, Finland, then another ferry to St. Petersburg, Russia.
From Finland I will take a ferry to Sweden then ride into Norway and take another Ferry to Denmark. From Denmark I will go to Germany, Belgium, Luxembourg and France to see friends then fly back home. The entire trip should take a month.
If you have advice, besides stay home, I am listening.
Tuesday, July 12, 2016
Book 18 of 2016, "SIN" by Zakhar Prelepin
One hundred and fifty years later Zakhar Prelepin fought in the War in Chechnya in a Russian Special Forces unit. In 2007, barely three years after returning from the war, Prelepin published the Novel in short stories, "Sin."
Amazon has a excellent summary:
In the episodes of Zakharka’s life, presented here in non-chronological order, we see him as a little boy, a lovelorn teenager, a hard-drinking grave-digger, a nightclub bouncer, a father, and a soldier in Chechnya. Sin offers a fascinating glimpse into the recent Russian past, as well as its present, with its unemployment, poverty, violence, and local wars – social problems that may be found in many corners of the world. Zakhar Prilepin presents these realities through the eyes of Zakharka, taking us along on the life-affirming journey of his unforgettable protagonist.
At the end of the series of stories that make up most of the book are several poems and one final story about several soldiers in a lonely outpost. Although the entire book was vivid to the point I could almost smell some of the scenes, this final story puts the reader right in the middle of a group of soldiers who are cut off from their unit, have no orders and no information. They don't know whether to stay in the outpost or return to the base that is clearly under attack. Their relief unit is hours overdue. The sound of fighting gets more intense.
Do they have a unit to return to? They are running out of food, running out of options. The sergeant in charge of the detachments leads his men back to the base. They confront and kill a group of Chechens on their way back. They now have a truck. They return to the base and the story ends with a twist that I did not expect, but after I read it seemed like the perfect ending to a Russian war story.
The poetry that preceded the final story also gave me a sense of Prelepin's control of language. I am sure the final story was even better with the images from the poems in my head.
So I recommend this book highly, especially to soldiers, especially those who have had trouble returning to civilian life after war service. I also recommend reading the poetry and the last story first. The view of war we get at the end makes the stories of peace more intense, and more sad.
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