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)
Saturday, January 28, 2017
Band of Brothers: Book and Video
One of my favorite memories from the 1-70th Armor barracks in Wiesbaden, West Germany, was the night we watched "The Green Beret" starring John Wayne on the dayroom TV. We hooted, hollered, and threw rolled up socks and popcorn at the TV for most of the two hours. The "Green Berets" may be the worst war movie ever made. As a rule, soldiers make fun of war movies or angrily say, "That shit is wrong...." then explain why.
But not the HBO series "Band of Brothers." Soldiers I knew who thought "Saving Private Ryan" was bullshit after the first 15 minutes or who were shushed making smart-ass comments during the "Hurt Locker" had not one bad thing to say about "Band of Brothers." In the nine years I served in the Army National Guard between 2007 and 2016, I never heard anyone disparage the 10-part series about Easy Company 2-506th Airborne.
I saw the video several times. I finally read the book. I finished it today. The book is well-written and tells the story accurately, filling in details that could not be easily included in the fast-moving video--like Dick Winters decades-long anger about a trip to America General Taylor (101st Airborne Commander) took during the Battle of the Bulge. Although the book is very good, the video series is better.
The video follows the book faithfully, but the actors add a dimension the book cannot. They can give life to the relationships among the men that author Stephen Ambrose can only report. There is a terrible beauty in the video that only the finest fiction can portray in print.
Usually if there is a book and a movie/video, my recommendation would be read the book first. But in this case, I would recommend seeing the video series first, then read the book to fill in details.
Then watch the video again, which is what I am going to do.
Friday, January 27, 2017
Blood and Money: The NATO Alliance
No one in the world is less able to make that accusation than the current President. Whatever the state of their monetary payments, most of the 28 member nations of NATO have fought in America's wars. And their men, some of them draftees, have died in the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Our Draft-Dodger-in-Chief, who avoided the Vietnam War, feels free to attack allies who sent men to die in wars we started.
The issue with NATO should be blood as well as many. The NATO charter includes a mutual defense clause, what is essentially a "Three Musketeers" clause: All for One and One for All. The ONLY time that clause was invoked was on September 11, 2001, when NATO nations came to our defense.
An honorable man would know that when men serve and die for you, you owe a debt of honor. Only a coward would reduce that debt to money. Character is Destiny, said Aristotle 2,500 years ago. He is still correct. Only a man who let another man serve in his place could see NATO as another "Let's Make a Deal" transaction.
Wednesday, January 25, 2017
Of Course I am Happy! I Know Who the Enemy Is!
In October 1976, I was on patrol on the East-West German border at Fulda. I saw Soviet tanks on the other side of the border. We had arrived from Colorado less than 48 hours before and had a full combat load of 63 cannon shells on board our M60A1 tanks.
I was scared. But I was also happy. I knew who the enemy was, where the enemy was, and what I was supposed to do if the enemy attacked.
This morning, a good friend asked me about how I was handling the news since Friday. I told her about going to the march in Philadelphia on Saturday and to the "Tuesdays with Toomey" protest in Philadelphia yesterday. I told her about some of the stuff I had been posting on social media. She thought I looked happy, a lot happier than she expected.
I said, "Of course. I'm a soldier. I know who the enemy is. I am happy."
It's true. The hypotheticals are over. Trump is not a candidate or a president-elect. He is a Birther who discredited President Obama for five years every chance he had. He has given the head of Breitbart News an office in the White House. Our President, not some guy, is whining about crowd size at his inaugural and instructing his press secretary to lie.
This is not a drill. I am a citizen. I am a patriot who actually served in our nation's wars. I am ready to fight.
And I am happier than I have been for months!
Have a nice day!
Friday, January 20, 2017
The Rommel Effect
On social media and in news commentary, there is near universal agreement that making General James Mattis Secretary of Defense if a great thing for America and the Trump Regime. Not only is Mattis arguably the best living general in America, maybe in the world, but he is also seen as willing to stand up for what is right.
But the meteoric rise and fall of the World War II German General Erwin Rommel shows that great generals can make ultimate defeat worse. And it shows that soldiers are lousy conspirators.
The common view of the first year of World War II is that the British and French armies were routed and defeated in six weeks by a superior German armored force using Blitzkrieg tactics. The truth is, the invading Germans were outnumbered and outgunned by the defenders of France. They won because Erwin Rommel commanded 7th Panzer Division at the front of the invading German Army carrying out a brilliant invasion plan.
The British and French had a combined 3,000 tanks, all of which had cannons capable of destroying any of the German medium tanks in the invasion force. The Germans had 2,000 tanks, hundreds of them armed with just machine guns. But the Germans concentrated nearly all their armor on a 20-mile invasion front, while the British and French spread their tanks from the Swiss border to the English Channel. Rommel punched through the allied lines. He personally waded into rivers when his engineers were making bridges for his tanks. Rommel broke through the allied lines and captured huge formations.
Without Rommel carrying out a brilliant invasion plan by General Heinz Guderian, the allied army could have stopped or slowed the German advance and dragged out the war in France. The great early success of Rommel, Guderian and the German Army led Hitler to invade Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union.
Four years later when Allied armies were back in France after D-Day and Soviet armor was in Poland headed for Germany, Rommel joined a plot to assassinate Hitler. Rommel took his own life after being caught. Honorable soldiers are lousy conspirators.
General Mattis could be great for America. His job is to make the American military the best weapon possible. He could make the American military an even better fighting force. But Trump, not Mattis decides who that weapon will be pointed at, just as Rommel fought where Hitler told him to.
Generals decide HOW to fight, not WHO to fight.
Wednesday, January 18, 2017
Book Report 2016, Part 6, Politics
Of the fifty books I read in 2016, just four are in the category Politics, but every book about war is to some extent about the politics that leads one nation to fight with another.
The first book I read on politics was New Czar: Rise and Reign of Vladimir Putin by Steven Lee Myers. This long, thorough book traces the entire life of Putin and the improbable path to his present place at the among the top world leaders. He has been on top of Russian politics for all of this century, all the more amazing because he was truly as another biography calls him The Man Without a Face by Masha Gessen. Masha Gessen's book is on my list for 2017.
Boris Yeltsin picked Putin for leadership in 1999 partly because Putin was the only man in Yeltsin's government who was not on the take. The year before, Putin's house burned down. While it was burning Putin ran back in the house to get a briefcase with 5,000 rubles in it. After the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, many top government officials were taking millions from the failing economy for themselves. If Putin would risk his life for just 5,000 rubles, he could not have millions stashed in Switzerland. But the corruptions of power corrupted Putin as power corrupts everyone. And now Russia is ruled by an authoritarian government keeping some appearance of democracy. Putin now is reputed to have more than $30 billion stashed in overseas accounts.
In the spring I re-read The Prince by Machiavelli. I just got a new translation and will be writing about that later in the context of military leadership. I use the Prince to keep score on the leadership of Presidents. In a few months it will be interesting to compare Presidents Obama and Trump on how they followed (or not) Machiavelli's council.
In the Fall as it began to look as if Trump had a chance to win, I re-read Why I Write by George Orwell. In the main essay of this short book, Orwell says that everything he writes will be to bring about Democratic Socialism in Great Britain. Orwell lived only a few years after this essay was published in 1946, and his dream never came pass. At the end of this volume is "Politics and the English Language" Orwell's most famous essay describing the language used by "Big Brother" in Orwell's book 1984. The whole text of the essay is here. In the past 30 years since I first read the essay, I heard echoes of Newspeak in many political statements. But now, the time of Newspeak has fully arrived.
Which brings me to A World Split Apart, the dual-language edition of Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn's address at Harvard in 1978. Solzhenitsyn had recently come to America, exiled from the Soviet Union for his books chronicling the horrors of Soviet life. Yet his address is not a grateful refugee basking in freedom after a decade in a Soviet GULAG after heroic service in World War II. Solzhenitsyn says the west has sold its soul for materialism and crushing its own soul for comfort and wealth. He lived in seclusion in Vermont for almost 20 years, then returned to Russia after the fall of the Soviet Union.
This year, I will be reading Machiavelli and a biography of Putin as I noted above. I will also be reading about the years leading up to The Holocaust. Every genocide begins when some minority is declared non-persons by the majority. All through history mass murder and deportation begin with revoking rights, then revoking citizenship. I will be looking for that in 2017, because that is where the next war will follow.
The first book I read on politics was New Czar: Rise and Reign of Vladimir Putin by Steven Lee Myers. This long, thorough book traces the entire life of Putin and the improbable path to his present place at the among the top world leaders. He has been on top of Russian politics for all of this century, all the more amazing because he was truly as another biography calls him The Man Without a Face by Masha Gessen. Masha Gessen's book is on my list for 2017.
Boris Yeltsin picked Putin for leadership in 1999 partly because Putin was the only man in Yeltsin's government who was not on the take. The year before, Putin's house burned down. While it was burning Putin ran back in the house to get a briefcase with 5,000 rubles in it. After the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, many top government officials were taking millions from the failing economy for themselves. If Putin would risk his life for just 5,000 rubles, he could not have millions stashed in Switzerland. But the corruptions of power corrupted Putin as power corrupts everyone. And now Russia is ruled by an authoritarian government keeping some appearance of democracy. Putin now is reputed to have more than $30 billion stashed in overseas accounts.
In the spring I re-read The Prince by Machiavelli. I just got a new translation and will be writing about that later in the context of military leadership. I use the Prince to keep score on the leadership of Presidents. In a few months it will be interesting to compare Presidents Obama and Trump on how they followed (or not) Machiavelli's council.
In the Fall as it began to look as if Trump had a chance to win, I re-read Why I Write by George Orwell. In the main essay of this short book, Orwell says that everything he writes will be to bring about Democratic Socialism in Great Britain. Orwell lived only a few years after this essay was published in 1946, and his dream never came pass. At the end of this volume is "Politics and the English Language" Orwell's most famous essay describing the language used by "Big Brother" in Orwell's book 1984. The whole text of the essay is here. In the past 30 years since I first read the essay, I heard echoes of Newspeak in many political statements. But now, the time of Newspeak has fully arrived.
Which brings me to A World Split Apart, the dual-language edition of Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn's address at Harvard in 1978. Solzhenitsyn had recently come to America, exiled from the Soviet Union for his books chronicling the horrors of Soviet life. Yet his address is not a grateful refugee basking in freedom after a decade in a Soviet GULAG after heroic service in World War II. Solzhenitsyn says the west has sold its soul for materialism and crushing its own soul for comfort and wealth. He lived in seclusion in Vermont for almost 20 years, then returned to Russia after the fall of the Soviet Union.
This year, I will be reading Machiavelli and a biography of Putin as I noted above. I will also be reading about the years leading up to The Holocaust. Every genocide begins when some minority is declared non-persons by the majority. All through history mass murder and deportation begin with revoking rights, then revoking citizenship. I will be looking for that in 2017, because that is where the next war will follow.
Thursday, January 12, 2017
Forty Years Later: U.S. Armored Brigade from Fort Carson Reinforces Europe
Today an Armored Brigade from Fort Carson, Colorado, arrived in Poland as a show of force to Russia. More than three thousand mechanized soldiers will spread across Poland and the Baltic States as well as Romania, Moldova and Hungary to the south.
The unit deployed is the 3rd Armored Brigade, 4th Infantry Division, including 1st Battalion, 68th Armor.
Forty years ago, in October 1976, the 4th Brigade, 4th Infantry Division (Mechanized), including 1st Battalion, 70th Armor was sent to Wiesbaden, West Germany, as a show of force against the Soviet Union. I was a tank commander in Bravo Company of the 1-70th Armor.
Today's news was certainly deja vu for me. Forty years ago and today, troops from Fort Carson waving a finger in the face of the Russian/Soviet leader. One big difference is that all the countries where the 3rd ACT, 4th ID will be training are places that were under Soviet control 40 years ago.
In a further coincidence, after I left active duty, I joined an Army Reserve Armor unit: Company A, 6th Battalion, 68th Armor. All of my service in armor was in these two units. Now they are together in former Soviet states, resisting Russia.
Wednesday, January 11, 2017
Obama's Gonna Take Our Guns
With just nine days left till the inauguration of Donald Trump as President, the current President has less than nine days to take away our guns! He needs to get those black helicopters revved up really soon if he is going to complete the campaign promise that he never said, but "everyone" knows. By everyone, I of course mean the listeners of Alex Jones and Breitbart News. Also Glenn Beck in 2009 and the always reliable rumor monger and current lover of Russia Sean Hannity. Fox News did not come out and say it, but......
Eight years ago, I was getting ready to go to Iraq. The inauguration of Barack Obama was just days away and many of the soldiers I would deploy to Iraq with at the end of January 2009 were quite sure "Obama's gonna take away our guns while we are in Iraq."
Those soldiers still have their guns, but they did not leave their conspiracy theories behind when they returned to America. Every few months on training weekend or during annual training in the summer, I would hear an intense conversation about how the confiscation would actually happen. Sadly, one occasion was the days after the massacre at Sandy Hook Elementary School. Another was the re-election of the President in 2012.
Part of my military experience from January 1972 to May 2013 has been rumors and conspiracy theories. I was in the Air Force testing missiles, including the Minuteman missile, during the 1973 Arab-Israeli War when there were rumors that the war would go nuclear while the Israelis were losing. I was in the military when President Nixon stepped down and when Saigon fell. I had just left the military when the Soviet Union invaded Afghanistan which was supposed to be cover for a Soviet invasion of Europe.
Crazy rumors are just part of the atmosphere of the military. But the "Obama taking our guns" rumor has hung stuck like a barnacle on a battleship. Part of the persistence was the Birther lie pushed by the TEA Party and then by the President Elect. Alex Jones could already be telling his gullible minions that President Obama will still carry out the confiscation somehow even after leaving office. Maybe a cabal of Kenyan socialists is waiting and ready in black helicopters......
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