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1/11/2021 News & Commentary - Korea

Mon, 01/11/2021 - 11:45am

News & commentary by Dave Maxwell. Edited and published by Duncan Moore.

1. N. Korea crowns leader Kim Jong-Un as party's general secretary

2. Demotion of N.K. leader's sister at party congress raises questions over her status

3. Signs detected of N. Korea staging military parade in Pyongyang late Sunday: JCS

4. Press release of 8th Congress of WPK

5. 1st Plenary Meeting of 8th WPK Central Committee Held under Guidance of General Secretary of WPK Kim Jong Un

6. In-depth analysis needed to decide development of nuke-powered submarine: Seoul ministry

7. S. Korea to 'actively' consider joining CPTPP this year

8. South Korea president promises stronger alliance with US under Biden administration

9. Moon says all S. Koreans will be given free COVID-19 vaccines

10. The cost for politicians kneeling down to authority

11. 42 USFK-affiliated people test positive for coronavirus

12. Kim Jong-Un proves Moon's hopes are pipe dreams

13. Party congress participants told to take off masks during main event

14. Entire management at Chagang Province labor camp replaced due to human rights abuses

15. Kim Jong Un appears to hold military parade after blasting U.S.

16. Moon underlines last-minute diplomacy with North Korea in New Year speech

17. Kim says North Korean efforts will focus on bringing US 'to their knees'

 

1. N. Korea crowns leader Kim Jong-un as party's general secretary

Yonhap News Agency · 최수향 · January 11, 2021

One man, one vote, one choice, one elected leader with no opponent: North Korean democracy with Juche characteristics.

But does renaming the Ministry of People's Armed Forces as the defense ministry really make the North a "normal" state?

Also, some interesting personnel moves that may indicate policy direction. Personnel is often policy.

 

2. Demotion of N.K. leader's sister at party congress raises questions over her status

Yonhap News Agency · 이원주 · January 11, 2021

I do not think we should jump to any conclusion about Kim Yo-Jong. Yes, it does seem significant that she was not listed as a senior member of the regime. But I still believe she is the person Kim trusts the most and she is a key member of the family and the Paektu bloodline. She appeared to be present throughout the 8th Party Congress in the photos that were provided by KCNA.  So, I am going to reserve judgment on her status.

 

3. Signs detected of N. Korea staging military parade in Pyongyang late Sunday: JCS

Yonhap News Agency · 오석민 · January 11, 2021

This may provide us some insights into future regime actions.

 

4. Press release of 8th Congress of WPK

KCNA Watch · January 11, 2021

Here is the list from KCNA for all the hardcore Korea watchers. Some may want to turn this into a scorecard and match this with all the leadership positions.

 

5. 1st Plenary Meeting of 8th WPK Central Committee Held under Guidance of General Secretary of WPK Kim Jong Un

KCNA Watch · January 11, 2021

A summary of the plenary meeting.

It is all about regime/party control.

Recall the question: who does Kim fear more–the US or the Korean people in the North? This is one indication of how paranoid is Kim.

 

6. In-depth analysis needed to decide development of nuke-powered submarine: Seoul ministry

Yonhap News Agency · 오석민 · January 11, 2021

It would be a waste of time and resources for the South to build a nuclear-powered submarine. Seoul would be better served in investing the resources in meeting the conditions for OPCON transition if it truly wants to have a chance of meeting Moon's desired timeline. If it chooses to invest in a developing a nuclear-powered submarine simply because the North says it is going to develop one, then Seoul has no business pursuing OPCON transition as its priorities are skewed.

 

7. S. Korea to 'actively' consider joining CPTPP this year

Yonhap News Agency · 김수연 · January 11, 2021

An interesting development.

 

8. South Korea president promises stronger alliance with US under Biden administration

Stars & Stripes · Matthew Keeler & Yoo Kyong Change · January 11, 2021

Regardless of administrations in both nations we need a strong alliance for each country to protect, sustain, and advance their strategic interests in Northeast Asia.

 

9. Moon says all S. Koreans will be given free COVID-19 vaccines

Yonhap News Agency · 이치동 · January 11, 2021

 

10. The cost for politicians kneeling down to authority

Dong-A Ilbo · [email protected] · January 11, 2021

This op-ed is from a Korean journalist from the South serving in our nation's capital and she provides a Korean perspective on what took place.

 

11. 42 USFK-affiliated people test positive for coronavirus

Yonhap News Agency · 최수향 · January 11, 2021

 

12. Kim Jong-Un proves Moon's hopes are pipe dreams

Chosun Ilbo · January 11, 2021

Thank you to the Chosun Ilbo editorial board. The Moon administration must reassess its strategic assumptions about the nature and objectives of the Kim family regime.

 

13. Party congress participants told to take off masks during main event

Daily NK · Jang Seul Gi · January 11, 2021

Perhaps the 8th Party Congress will someday be known as a historical super spreader event.

 

14. Entire management at Chagang Province labor camp replaced due to human rights abuses

Daily NK · Ha Yoon Ah · January 11, 2021

Is this act one of the regime trying to give the appearance that it is going to stop human rights abuses? If that were the case, the regime would close all the camps and free all the prisoners without further harm. But the regime is not changing and we should not be duped by its actions.

 

15. Kim Jong Un appears to hold military parade after blasting U.S.

Bloomberg · Jeong-Ho Lee & Jon Herskovitz · January 10, 2021

But what was in the parade? I want to know what the regime put on display. Will they release video?  I will be on the lookout for it of course as it may help us determine Kim's intent for a provocation.

 

16. Moon underlines last-minute diplomacy with North Korea in New Year speech

Korea Times · Do Je-hae · January 11, 2021

I fear the Moon administration and the ruling party are delusional. Certainly, Kim Jong-Un does not share their vision.

 

17. Kim says North Korean efforts will focus on bringing US 'to their knees'

Hill · Jordan Williams · January 9, 2021

Oh, the regime rhetoric. At least it is admitting it is conducting political warfare to support the revolution.

Perhaps the US need to get on its knees because North Korea is such a little country and Kim Jong-Un is such a little man—so we have to get on our knees to address him like the child he is (note: sarcasm).

 

"As we bring up our children, we have to remember that we are caretakers of the future. By improving their education, we improve the future of mankind, the future of this world."

- Immanuel Kant

"For if a person shifts their caution to their caution to their own reasoned choices, they will at the same time gain the will to avoid, but they shift their caution away from their own reasoned choices to things not under their control, seeking to avoid what is controlled by others, they will then be agitated, fearful, and unstable."

- Epictetus

"When an arrow does not hit its target, the marksman blames himself, not another person.  A wise man behaves in the same way."

- Confucius

01/10/2021 News & Commentary - National Security

Sun, 01/10/2021 - 1:35pm

News and Commentary by Dave Maxwell. Edited and Published by Riley Murray.

 

1. Lifting Self-Imposed Restrictions on the U.S.-Taiwan Relationship

2. US Ends Curbs On Official American Contacts With Taiwan

3. How antisemitic conspiracy theories fueled the Capitol Hill riots

4. Facts won't fix this: experts on how to fight America's disinformation crisis

5.  World Shouldn't Laugh at U.S. Too Soon

6. Insurrection and misinformation is tearing the country into three Americas

7. Who is Jack Ma? Where the Alibaba co-founder came from and disappeared to

8. Months ahead of Capitol riot, DHS threat assessment group was gutted: Officials

9. Why the West Isn't Confronting China Over Coronavirus

10. Riots Shine Light on 'Infamously Opaque' Capitol Police

11. US Congressman Andy Kim helps clean up Capitol

12. China's underwater drones seized in Indonesia expose tech, routes and potential submarine plans

13. Mass Delusion in America: What I heard from insurrectionists on their march to the Capitol

14. US intelligence agencies have 180 days to share what they know about UFOs, thanks to the Covid-19 relief and spending bill

15. Before Mob Stormed the Capitol, Days of Security Planning Involved Cabinet Officials and President Trump

16. Capitol Hill violence was not a 'victory' for Putin: In reality, Russia fears consequences of political instability in US

17. Chinese censorship invades the U.S. via WeChat

18. Inside the Capitol siege: How barricaded lawmakers and aides sounded urgent pleas for help as police lost control

19. America's Authoritarian Adversaries Seize the Moment

20. Analysis | Most Americans reject the attack on the Capitol - but millions empathize with the mob

 

1. Lifting Self-Imposed Restrictions on the U.S.-Taiwan Relationship

state.gov · by Michael R. Pompeo, Secretary of State

Fascinating timing.

 

2. US Ends Curbs On Official American Contacts With Taiwan

Barron's · by AFP - Agence France Presse

How does this impact the incoming administration? Does it provide flexibility or top cover to allow continued high-level engagement with Taiwan by US officials?  Or will the incoming administration rescind this and appear to be kowtowing to China?

 

3. How antisemitic conspiracy theories fueled the Capitol Hill riots

codastory.com · by Isobel Cockerell · January 8, 2021

We have so many who are influenced by propaganda couched as conspiracy theories that are simply anti-Semitic and racist.

 

4. Facts won't fix this: experts on how to fight America's disinformation crisis

The Guardian · by Lois Beckett · January 1, 2021

This was published on New Year’s Day before last week's insurrection.

 

5. World Shouldn't Laugh at U.S. Too Soon

Bloomberg · by Mihir Sharma · January 10, 2021

This is an OpEd with which I want to associate myself.  To borrow from Nietzsche: "That which does not kill our democracy will make our democracy stronger."

Excerpts:

Now, a lot of this is entertaining and some of it is understandable. Certainly, nobody who lives in an emerging nation likes to hear shocked liberal Americans declaring their country's turmoil similar to events "in the Third World." In India, for example, we manage to conduct much larger elections than the U.S. endures with far fewer complications.

But I think all of us busy mocking the U.S. and declaring the end of American exceptionalism also need to take a deep breath. The fact is that America has survived its populist moment in far better shape than most of the rest of us.

 

6. Insurrection and misinformation is tearing the country into three Americas

Axios · by Jim VandeHei

It sure looks like this: "America, in its modern foundational components, is breaking into blue America, red America, and Trump America - all with distinct politics, social networks and media channels."

 

7. Who is Jack Ma? Where the Alibaba co-founder came from and disappeared to

New York Post · by Dana Kennedy · January 9, 2021

Excerpts:

But for all his shrewdness, Ma failed to see what should have been obvious to him and everyone around him, Navarro said. "Xi's been consolidating power for the last four to five years."

"He's doing the same thing to Chinese oligarchs as Putin did to Russian oligarchs. They get money and fall in love with the West and forget where they come from. Then they get slapped down. There's a Chinese expression called 'kill the chicken, scare the monkey' which means to make an example of someone. That's what they're doing to him. They'll probably let him come back but his marching orders will be to just shut up and make money."

Singleton agreed.

"He will re-surface and will have to publicly repent but not on his terms," Singleton said. "But I bet Jack Ma will comply because he doesn't want to see this massive thing he built blew up. He's a strategic thinker and he's still someone to be reckoned with."

 

8. Months ahead of Capitol riot, DHS threat assessment group was gutted: Officials

ABCNews.com · by ABC News

Sometimes too small a government is not good.  We need a correctly resourced government.

 

9. Why the West Isn't Confronting China Over Coronavirus

The National Interest · by Andrew A. Michta · January 9, 2021

Excerpts:

The challenge that China poses for the United States and the democratic world, in general, is orders of magnitude greater than the threat posed to NATO by the Warsaw Pact during the Cold War. China's rise is occurring at a time when the United States is coming off two decades of continuous wars in secondary theaters, which not only consumed trillions of dollars but also restructured its military away from large scale combat operations against another great power. During the Cold War the United States faced only one near-peer military competitor: the Soviet Union-Maoist China was a regional player at best. The Nixon-Kissinger gambit that pulled it closer to the United States in effect lowered the cost of containment and contributed to America's victory in the Cold War. In contrast, today we are confronted by two near-peer competitors in the military arena, for Russia is aligned with China in its opposition to the United States. Moscow remains determined to revise the post-Cold War settlement while Beijing wants to completely replace it with one built around its own power and geostrategic priorities.

The lack of consensus across the West about the threat that China poses to the international order is likely to remain the most intractable problem for NATO and transatlantic relations going forward, presenting a fundamental obstacle to building a workable joint strategy to outcompete China and preserve our dominant position. So long as such a consensus is missing, Beijing will be able to leverage the policy differences and divergent economic priorities of the United States and Europe to its benefit.

 

10. Riots Shine Light on 'Infamously Opaque' Capitol Police

defenseone.com · by Courtney Bublé

I remember serving in the Army in the early 1980s with a former Secret Service agent who had been on duty during the Reagan assassination attempt.  And to this day I remember him describing the complex jurisdiction problems and the numerous law enforcement and public safety organizations that overlap and most importantly compete with each other for limited federal resources.

 

11. US Congressman Andy Kim helps clean up Capitol

https://www.donga.com/en/home/article/all/20210109/2358427/1/US-Congressman-Andy-Kim-helps-clean-up-Capitol - 9 January 2021

Servant leadership.

 

12.  China's underwater drones seized in Indonesia expose tech, routes and potential submarine plans

scmp.com – by Kristin Huang

I hope we are able to exploit this intelligence with the Indonesians.

 

13. Mass Delusion in America: What I heard from insurrectionists on their march to the Capitol

The Atlantic · by Jeffrey Goldberg · January 7, 2021

An event of "mass delusion."  That seems to be quite an apt description.  The comments heard are very important to understanding what happened.

 

14. US intelligence agencies have 180 days to share what they know about UFOs, thanks to the Covid-19 relief and spending bill

CNN · by Harmeet Kaur

I am glad we have our priorities straight.  The real threat may be UFOs.  We need to rally against that real "external enemy."

 

15. Before Mob Stormed the Capitol, Days of Security Planning Involved Cabinet Officials and President Trump

ProPublica · by Joshua Kaplan

The DOD memo is at this link: https://media.defense.gov/2021/Jan/08/2002562063/-1/-1/1/PLANNING-AND-EXECUTION-TIMELINE-FOR-THE-NATIONAL-GUARDS-INVOLVEMENT-IN-THE-JANUARY-6-2021-FIRST-AMENDMENT-PROTESTS-IN-WASHINGTON-DC.pdf?fbclid=IwAR2LvVfsPL8by9V7cgl2tq-y7nSi4RIKj8Bn5l7QcG9UmlNrVJKn5N7N_bU

 

16. Capitol Hill violence was not a 'victory' for Putin: In reality, Russia fears consequences of political instability in US

rt.com

From the Russian propaganda mouthpiece: RT - Russia Today.

 

17. Chinese censorship invades the U.S. via WeChat

The Washington Post – by Jeanne Whalen - January 7, 2021

Excerpts:

Teng, a dissident who fled China after clashing with the authorities over his human rights work, said he often censors himself on WeChat, avoiding political posts and mostly sticking to personal photos and news so his friends back home "might know I am still alive."

He agrees that banning WeChat would "bring a lot of inconvenience" to Chinese speakers. But ultimately Teng said he supports the idea.

"I think WeChat should be banned because it is a censorship tool and also a propaganda and misinformation tool," he said. "WeChat is controlled by the Chinese authorities. It's not like another Twitter or Facebook."

 

18. Inside the Capitol siege: How barricaded lawmakers and aides sounded urgent pleas for help as police lost control

The Washington Post - By Karoun Demirjian, Carol D. Leonnig, Paul Kane and Aaron C. Davis - January 10, 2021

 

19. America's Authoritarian Adversaries Seize the Moment

National Review Online · by Jimmy Quinn · January 10, 2021

Key Point: "These observers and others are right to lament the damage that this does to U.S. democracy promotion efforts and the gift that it's been to foreign authoritarian regimes. Still, the precise extent of that harm remains to be seen. This depends on how - and whether - Americans remedy the ills wrought by the mayhem and confront the political forces and disinformation epidemic that enabled it. In the short term, though, these efforts should be accompanied by a forceful rebuttal of foreign authoritarian efforts to exploit the moment."

Conclusion:

So the immediate reaction should be to discredit foreign propaganda and expose the anti-democratic motives behind it. This alone won't be enough, though. Messages for an international audience to protest measures to punish human-rights abusers stand less chance of swaying people than do similar messages designed for domestic consumption that can erode the efforts of pro-democracy forces in those countries. The president's conduct and the Capitol mobs handed them a news cycle that's crowded out talk of everything from Beijing's Hong Kong crackdown to Iran's obstruction of the investigation into the civilian airliner taken down by the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps over Tehran last year.

There's little disputing that this assault on the peaceful transfer of power seems likely to have severe consequences for America's global credibility unless the downward spiral slows.

 

20.  Analysis | Most Americans reject the attack on the Capitol - but millions empathize with the mob

The Washington Post · January 9, 2021

The headline is the paradox we cannot grasp.

 

"I do believe that political arrangements which are based upon violence, intimidation and theft will eventually break down - and will deserve to do so." 

- Margaret Thatcher

 

"You can justify, from a political standpoint, any type of violence you want to use." 

- Jerry Vlasak

 

"When we use the word domestic [terrorism], we discount its actual impact as political terrorism, which is, of course, political violence meant to impact an audience outside of the immediate victims." 

- Malcolm Wrightson Nance

01/10/2021 News & Commentary - Korea

Sun, 01/10/2021 - 1:20pm

News and Commentary by Dave Maxwell. Edited and Published by Riley Murray.

 

1. N.K. highlights importance of defense capabilities in revised party rules

2. Workers' Party Congress adopts defense rules

3. Kim Jong Un Finally Offers His Response to U.S. Election: More Nukes

4. Kim Jong-un has been bringing women into the spotlight in a way his father and grandfather never did

5. Latest message from North Korea's Kim meant to light 'a fire under' Biden administration, experts say

6. Is North Korea on the Brink of Starvation?

7. Kim Jong Un says North Korea is developing tactical nukes, new warheads and a nuclear-powered submarine

8. Kim Jong Un casts doubts over Korean unification, acknowledges 'serious situation'

9. New virus cases stay below 700 for 3rd day despite steady cluster infections

10. US Congressman Andy Kim helps clean up Capitol

11. How 'Assassins' Director Obtained CCTV Footage of Kim Jong-nam's Murder

12. Kim Jong Un's big plan to grow North Korea's economy faces harsh reality

13. The North Korean Dictator's Birthday Seen from the Free World

 

1. N.K. highlights importance of defense capabilities in revised party rules

en.yna.co.kr · by 이원주 · January 10, 2021

There should be no doubt that Songun (military first politics) reigns supreme in the Kim family regime and the party despite statements and pundit analysis speculating otherwise.

 

2. Workers' Party Congress adopts defense rules

koreajoongangdaily.joins.com

As I mentioned on VOA I think Kim may think he is challenging President-elect Biden to implement a different policy toward north Korea and to break with all past administrations to include the Trump administration.  He is saying to Biden - "dare to be different" and then we will talk.  But we should not be duped by Kim's continued long con and political warfare strategy.  And he is acting similarly toward South Korea.  He is blaming the failed north-South engagement on the South (and the Minister of Unification has responded predictably and as Kim desires - the South will double down on engagement despite Kim's anti-South rhetoric.  The subversion of the South continues).

Excerpts:

Calling the United States the North's "foremost principal enemy," Kim concluded his dayslong report to the 8th Party Congress on Friday by swearing off any talks with Washington until the new occupant of the White House withdrew a "hostile policy" toward Pyongyang.

Setting a range of objectives for its nuclear weapons industry, including enhancing the accuracy of its intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBM), Kim warned he was compelled to continue augmenting the regime's nuclear arsenal "without interruption."

The declarations marked an emphatic first response by the regime to the incoming Joe Biden administration, coming after silence since U.S. electors in November voted the incumbent and Kim's self-styled "good friend" Donald Trump out of office.

Whoever takes office in the United States, "the real intention of its policy toward" North Korea "will never change," Kim said in a glum assessment of his regime's negotiating possibilities with Washington. Claiming U.S. policy toward the North is becoming "more violent" in spite of his goodwill, Kim vowed to answer force from Washington "with toughness and good faith in kind."

 

3. Kim Jong Un Finally Offers His Response to U.S. Election: More Nukes

The Daily Beast – by Donald Kirk - January 9, 2021

My comments, among others, below.

 

4. Kim Jong-un has been bringing women into the spotlight in a way his father and grandfather never did

ABC.net.au · January 9, 2021

An enlightened Kim Jong-un? Finally waking up to the importance of women? Is he trying to appear to be a modern leader?

A section heading below: 'Cute but poisonous'

 

5. Latest message from North Korea's Kim meant to light 'a fire under' Biden administration, experts say

The Week · January 9, 2021

"Light a fire?" Like turning Seoul into a "sea of fire?" I do not know if light a fire is the best analysis but it is certainly meant to influence him.  

 

6. Is North Korea on the Brink of Starvation?

The National Interest · by Hazel Smith · January 9, 2021

I think we had some knowledge of what was happening inside north Korea during the Arduous March of the great famine of 1994-1996. We were tasked by SECDEF Cohen in 1996 to develop contingency plans for north Korean instability and potential regime collapse. This had to be based on some understanding of what was happening inside north Korea. Certainly, we did not have knowledge to the level we have today, but I recall USAID providing a detailed map of north Korean infrastructure and famine impacts in 1996-97 to support our planning.  Why did the north fall into instability and eventual regime collapse? The simple answer is the election of Kim Dae Jung and the implementation of the Sunshine Policy and the later Peace and Prosperity Policy of his successor, Roh Myoo Hyun, which transferred billions of dollars in aid to the regime.

That said, I think Dr. Smith is correct in that this time could be different.  I think the suffering could soon be far worse that what happened during the Arduous March.

 

7. Kim Jong Un says North Korea is developing tactical nukes, new warheads and a nuclear-powered submarine

CNN · by Joshua Berlinger and Yoonjung Seo, CNN

I know I am beating the dead horse but just think about the resources that are required to build a nuclear powered submarine. This is an example of the deliberate policy decisions Kim Jong-un makes that result in the suffering of the Korean people living in the north.

Excerpts:

South Korea's Unification Ministry said Seoul would not alter its policies toward denuclearization or inter-Korean peace in response to Kim's comments.

"South Korea hopes the talks between North Korea and the United States can resume as soon as possible as the start of a new administration," the ministry said in a statement.

But the Biden administration may be forced to deal with this sooner than it would like, as North Korea conducted provocative missile tests during the first 100 days of both the Trump and Obama administrations.

 

8.  Kim Jong Un casts doubts over Korean unification, acknowledges 'serious situation'

republicworld.com – 10 January 2021

We should not misunderstand these statements and the analysis.  Kim Jong-un absolutely wants unification.  It is just that he wants to dominate the peninsula under the rule of the Guerrilla Dynasty and Gulag State to ensure the survival of the Kim family regime. His comments are really intended to undermine the legitimacy of South Korea and its engagement strategy as well as its relationship to the US with its hostile policies.

 

9. New virus cases stay below 700 for 3rd day despite steady cluster infections

en.yna.co.kr · by 남광식 · January 10, 2021

A little bit of good news. But problems persist.

 

10. US Congressman Andy Kim helps clean up Capitol

https://www.donga.com/en/home/article/all/20210109/2358427/1/US-Congressman-Andy-Kim-helps-clean-up-Capitol - 9 January 2021

Servant leadership.

 

11. How 'Assassins' Director Obtained CCTV Footage of Kim Jong-nam's Murder

The Hollywood Reporter · by Scott Huver · January 9, 2021

I still have not been able to find this movie on any streaming service.  I really want to see it.

 

12. Kim Jong Un's big plan to grow North Korea's economy faces harsh reality

straitstimes.com

Unfortunately, Kim's real plan to fix the economy rests on blackmail diplomacy - the use of tensions, threats, and provocations to gain political and economic concessions.  Kim is pressing for sanctions relief. He is not going to implement "Chinese style economic reforms."  In fact, he is doing everything he can to shut off the lifeblood to the 400+ markets - cross border trade (legal and illicit) and the use of foreign currency.  And most importantly Kim could relieve the suffering of the Korean people if he would prioritize the economy and not his nuclear and missile programs and the 4th largest army in the world.

 

13. The North Korean Dictator's Birthday Seen from the Free World

A lot of detail for Korea watchers.  Please go to the link since it will not format for this message.  https://www.hrnkinsider.org/2021/01/the-north-korean-dictators-birthday.html

 

"I do believe that political arrangements which are based upon violence, intimidation and theft will eventually break down - and will deserve to do so." 

- Margaret Thatcher

 

"You can justify, from a political standpoint, any type of violence you want to use." 

- Jerry Vlasak

 

"When we use the word domestic [terrorism], we discount its actual impact as political terrorism, which is, of course, political violence meant to impact an audience outside of the immediate victims." 

- Malcolm Wrightson Nance

01/09/2021 News & Commentary - National Security

Sat, 01/09/2021 - 12:06pm

News and Commentary by Dave Maxwell. Edited and Published by Riley Murray.

 

1. ‘With So Much At Stake’ SASC Rushes To Confirm Biden’s SecDef

2. Behind the Strategic Failure of the Capitol Police

3. Extremists vow to return to Washington for Joe Biden's inauguration

4. US lawmakers say police downplayed threat of violence before Capitol siege

5. Breaking: Computers with Access to Classified Material Stolen from Capitol

6. An Air Force Combat Veteran Breached the Senate

7. US Space Force Becomes 18th Member of U.S. Intelligence Community

8. Most Covid-19 Patients Have At Least One Symptom 6 Months On: Study

9. Wuhan COVID Infections 3 Times Higher Than Official Figure, China Study Says

10. Open-source sleuths are already unmasking the Capitol Hill mob

11. ‘We are in danger of losing our republic,’ Air Force strategy chief says in wake of Capitol attack

12. Department of Defense Announces New Appointments (Commission on Naming Bases)

13. Ideology or interests? China's strategy to deceive the West

14. Yes, you can still get infected with Covid-19 after being vaccinated. Here's why

15. Parler users call Trump's concession video "deep fake," and worry he'll "sell us out"

16. How disinformation evolved in 2020

17. Biden’s NSC to focus on global health, climate, cyber and human rights, as well as China and Russia

18. Military Most to Blame for Helicopter Noise Around DC, New Study Finds

19. The Importance of Civic Education in a Creedal Nation

20. How to reduce the spread of fake news -  by doing nothing

21. U.S. Diplomats Draft Dissent Cable Following Storming of Capitol by Pro-Trump Mob

22. 2020 tied with 2016 for Earth’s hottest year, as global warming overpowered La Niña

23. Is Graphic Design the C.I.A.’s Passion?

24. Patriots of Pineland | Our State

 

1. ‘With So Much At Stake’ SASC Rushes To Confirm Biden’s SecDef

breakingdefense.com · by Paul McLeary

 

2. Behind the Strategic Failure of the Capitol Police

Politico – by Garrett M. Graff – 8 January 2021

The postmortem will go on for some time (until the next event/crisis).

 

3. Extremists vow to return to Washington for Joe Biden's inauguration

NBC News · by Anna Schecter · January 8, 2021

I hope there is a red team doing the pre-mortem analysis now before the inauguration. And one thing I would include in the analysis is what if there is a left-wing extremist component "competing" at this inauguration?

And then the foreign influence possibility needs to be understood and addressed.

 

4. US lawmakers say police downplayed threat of violence before Capitol siege

rappler.com

All military (and security) failures are from a failure to learn, failure to adapt, and failure to anticipate (Cohen and Gooch).

 

5. Breaking: Computers with Access to Classified Material Stolen from Capitol

sofrep.com · January 8, 2021

Hmmm....Very troubling on many levels if this report is accurate.

 

6. An Air Force Combat Veteran Breached the Senate

The New Yorker · by Ronan Farrow · January 9, 2021

It is social media that may also bring down these insurrectionists.  For the next event what are they going to do about social media and how will they execute better OPSEC?

I also saw a CNN report noting that the zip ties were taken from an emergency box inside the capitol building and were not brought with them so the allegations of a premeditated intent to hold hostages may not be an accurate assessment.

 

 

7. We have to change our lexicon and now say 18 agencies in the intelligence community.

defenseone.com · by Patrick Tucker

 

8. Most Covid-19 Patients Have At Least One Symptom 6 Months On: Study

Barron's · by Kelly Macnamara

Almost every friend I know who has had COVID says they have persistent symptoms and some of them are quite debilitating and others are just very annoying.  But it is the long-term damage that we still have to learn about.  This is not the effing flu.

 

9. Wuhan COVID Infections 3 Times Higher Than Official Figure, China Study Says

english.chosun.com – 9 January 2021

No surprise unless it is only 3.

 

10. Open-source sleuths are already unmasking the Capitol Hill mob

Wired · by Matt Burgess · January 8, 2021

This is what will bring down the insurrectionists.  They will want to film themselves for their strategic messaging.  So, the next time I expect we will see everyone wearing masks, and not masks to prevent the spread of COVID but masks to prevent identification.

 

11. ‘We are in danger of losing our republic,’ Air Force strategy chief says in wake of Capitol attack

airforcetimes.com · by Stephen Losey · January 8, 2021

Wow.

This is quite a statement from a serving officer.

But the bottom line from a wise friend is: "You either believe in the peaceful transition of power after free and fair elections, or you don’t."

The problem is the losing side of an election does not think the elections were free and fair despite there being no credible evidence of widespread fraud that would change the outcome of the election.

 

12. Department of Defense Announces New Appointments (Commission on Naming Bases)

defense.gov – 8 January 2021

These four are going to be the subject of much ire and probably a lot of hate mail.

 

13. Ideology or interests? China's strategy to deceive the West

The Hill · by Bradley A. Thayer and Lianchao Han · January 3, 2021

Conclusion:

In reality, the distinction between ideology and interest is false. Ideology largely defines interests. Ideology defines why the CCP brutalizes the Uighurs, Tibetans and other ethnic peoples, and the Hong Kong and Chinese democracy activists. It defines why the CCP must destroy liberal democracy and confront the U.S. Equally, it is ideology that explains why the U.S. must defend itself from China’s aggression.

Liberal democracy is foundational for the U.S. — the cause of its revolution, the source of its strength, a symbol for people around the world. Liberal democracy provides a future vision for international politics that is inspiring, in sharp contrast to China’s vision. Yet China has launched an ideological battle for the future — who gets to define the world’s values is now contested space. This is a war between two value and political systems, between freedom and tyranny, between right and wrong, good and evil. It is in the interest of the U.S. to win it.

 

14. Yes, you can still get infected with Covid-19 after being vaccinated. Here's why

CNN · by Eric Levenson

 

15.  Parler users call Trump's concession video "deep fake," and worry he'll "sell us out"

Newsweek · by Daniel Villarreal · January 7, 2021

Delusional? Dangerous?  Or both?

 

16. How disinformation evolved in 2020

The Brookings Institution · by Josh A. Goldstein and Shelby Grossman · January 4, 2021

Conclusion:

Information operations and impact

The extent to which social media influence operations pose a threat is still an open question. On a tactical level, some of the operations clearly have limited impact. For example, in a recent operation attributed to the Royal Thai Army targeting Thai Twitter users, the average number of engagements per tweet (calculated as the sum of likes, comments, retweets, and quote tweets) was just .26 engagements. At the same time, on a broader strategic level, the threat may be more significant. Social media manipulation has second-order effects—citizens may believe these operations are successful, which erodes trust in the larger information ecosphere. As governments work to develop responses, it is imperative to begin with an understanding of how these operations work in practice, and to think through likely tactical innovations to come.

 

17. Biden’s NSC to focus on global health, climate, cyber and human rights, as well as China and Russia

The Washington Post · January 8, 2021

I want to know who is going to be the "Asia Czar?"  And of course, who will be the Special Representative for north Korea as well as the Ambassador for north Korean human rights?

 

18.  Military Most to Blame for Helicopter Noise Around DC, New Study Finds

military.com · by Oriana Pawlyk · January 8, 2021

Unbelievable.  I live less than 1 mile from the Fort Belvoir airfield and while we have some helo overflights once in a while there are no low-level flights and I see the flight route from Ft Belvoir to the Pentagon and DC to be along I95/395.  There are no significant noise issues.

 

19.  The Importance of Civic Education in a Creedal Nation

realclearwire.com · by Mike Sabo

Excerpt: "Citizens, however, can give their “allegiance to a set of principles as embodied in a constitutional order” only if they understand “those principles and that order.” George worries that too many younger Americans are “woefully ignorant not only of their national history but also of the principles and institutions of the American constitutional order,” a situation that suggests “a profound failing of civic education at every level.”

It is not just younger Americans who are woefully ignorant (or at least as I observe the discourse on social media - you can just start with the invocation of the first amendment by those who are banned from Twitter and Facebook as an example - we do not even understand the basic concepts of the 1st Amendment).

 

20. How to reduce the spread of fake news - by doing nothing

Nieman Lab · by Tom Buchanan · January 5, 2021

An interesting argument.

Conclusion: "So to reduce the effects of false information, people should try to reduce its visibility. Everyone should try to avoid spreading false messages. That means that social media companies should consider removing false information completely, rather than just attaching a warning label. And it means that the best thing individual social media users can do is not to engage with false information at all."

 

21. U.S. Diplomats Draft Dissent Cable Following Storming of Capitol by Pro-Trump Mob

Foreign Policy · by Robbie Gramer, Colum Lynch · January 8, 2021

 

22. 2020 tied with 2016 for Earth’s hottest year, as global warming overpowered La Niña

The Washington Post – by Andrew Freedman - January 8, 2021

 

23. Is Graphic Design the C.I.A.’s Passion?

The New York Times · by Ezra Marcus · January 8, 2021

 

24. Patriots of Pineland | Our State

ourstate.com · by Kevin Maurer 

An old story but is making the rounds on social media for some reason.

I am a proud graduate of Pineland University.

 

"Extremism in defense of liberty is not a vice, but I denounce political extremism, of the left or the right, based on duplicity, falsehood, fear, violence and threats when they endanger liberty."

- George W. Romney

 

"Non-violence is not a passive idea. It is ethical activism at its political best."

- Ela Bhatt

 

"I am deeply disturbed by the senseless violence instigated by some leaders in pursuit of their personal political agenda."

- Mwai Kibaki

01/09/2021 News & Commentary - Korea

Sat, 01/09/2021 - 11:08am

News and Commentary by Dave Maxwell. Edited and Published by Riley Murray.

 

1. On Report Made by Supreme Leader Kim Jong Un at 8th Congress of WPK

2. Fourth-day Sitting of 8th WPK Congress Held

3. VOA: [Washington Talk/English] Kim Jong-un "America's 'largest enemy'... Continued development of 'super large nuclear warhead'"

4. N. Korea's Kim calls U.S. 'our biggest enemy,' says its hostile policies never change

5. North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has threatened to expand his nuclear arsenal in response to what he calls US hostility

6. Why COVID-19 could signal change on the Korean peninsula

7. Did North Korea Just Signal It Wants to Talk?

8. Kim Jong Un's goal: 'enhance nuclear preemptive and retaliatory strike capabilities'

9. S. Korea reaffirms commitment to implementing inter-Korean agreements

10. N. Korea's military parade may be postponed due to heavy snow

11. S. Korea should find diplomatic solutions to resolve wartime sex slave issue

12. FM calls for Japan not to respond excessively to court ruling on 'comfort women'

13. South Korea in dilemma over joint military drill

14. Kim calls U.S. 'biggest enemy,' vows to continue nuclear development

 

1. On Report Made by Supreme Leader Kim Jong Un at 8th Congress of WPK

kcnawatch.org

Here is KJU's translated final report to the 8th Party Congress. It ends with "continue" so there may be more (it does not have a decisive ending); however, I could not find a part 2 on the web site.  Perhaps we will get updates over the weekend, I have already provided my initial assessment.  There is still a lot more to parse from this.  But I want to really highlight one key excerpt because this gives the most important insight into the true nature of the Kim family regime and the fact that KJU has no intention to give up nuclear weapons and instead will continue to develop them.

 

“The peculiarities of the Korean revolution, which has to be carried out in centuries-old direct confrontation with the aggressor forces of the U.S., the world's first user of nukes and war chieftain which divided the Korean territory and nation, and the geopolitical features of our state called for pushing ahead with the already-started building of the nuclear force without interruption for the welfare of the people, destiny of the revolution, existence and independent development of the state.

The Party Central Committee headed by the Supreme Leader planned a breakthrough operation for carrying out the great cause of building the nuclear force, inspired the entire party and all people to implementation of the line of simultaneously pushing forward the two fronts and organized and launched an intensive ideological campaign for preparing the national defence scientists and nuclear scientists as genuine revolutionaries, patriots and members of death-defying corps.”

 

I also am including Duyeon Kim's excellent initial twitter analysis.  Notice there are differences in the English and Korean translations.  When she publishes her detailed analysis in the Atomic Bulletin I will of course forward that as well.  But I think this twitter thread provides some important insights. If you do not follow Duyeon on Twitter you should but I doubt, there are any Korea Watchers who do not follow her.

 

Duyeon Kim

@duyeonkim

 

KJU's Party Congress report carried by Rodong Shinmun (in Korean) is 34 pages long.... At first glance of KCNA's short summary report (in Korean), nothing new or different in NK policy toward the US and SKorea. More to come (after several morning errands)..1/

7:31 PM · Jan 8, 2021·Twitter for Android

 

Alas, life on a Saturday took over and I'm finally reading the original Korean text. Correction, 28 pages pasted in Word (not 34). Here are some thoughts in no particular order; my upcoming

@BulletinAtomic column will be more organized, coherent, and focused..2/

 

KCNA's English summary (KJU's words in Korean via Rodong Shinmun), they left out a huge section on South-North relations. Frustratingly, many sections aren't graph-by-graph translations so it's hard to match up. Nuke plans section in English is missing several details..3/

 

We should remember that these Reports (aka KJU's words) are largely for domestic consumption to encourage his people and consolidate unity around him, so there's always rhetorical "fluff" (exaggeration). So we shouldn't overestimate or underestimate his words/declarations..4/

 

As expected and in line with a series of NK official comments over the past several months, NK put the ball in US & S Korean courts to improve relations. It reiterated that its core policies & positions won't change regardless of who's in the White House..5

 

It reiterated everything depends on the US dropping 'hostile policy' first, whose definition recently expanded to include combined milex, sanx, deployed strategic assets, name-calling. Says its 'strong military power' will guide its diplomacy in the 'right direction'..6/

 

He justifies the push for stronger defense capabilities because 'imperialism still exists in the world' & 'danger of war of aggression from our enemies.'

 

Someone needs to teach NK how to run threat assessments or this line is just an excuse to continue military modernization..7/

 

List of weapons (English version omits details like range) is noteworthy but not surprising: makes sense & expected from what we have known about NK's nuke plans/strategy/goals. Some declarations are exaggerated cuz capability doesn't yet support, but still shows goals..8/

 

Still, weapons list in such detail plus reiterating its byungjin strategic line (parallel military/nuke-econ dev) foreshadows strategic provocations to come & shows NK isn't sophisticated in conducting diplomacy. Maybe it's also intentional to show strength & to pressure..9/

 

Although it's not new NK would resume provocations at some point--depending on time & circumstance--his words & tone suggest NK won't be the first to budge on talks. When NK provokes, we can assume all doors would shut with the US tougher measures NK reactions tensions..10/

 

On inter-Korean relations, NK again spoke very arrogantly & put pressure on  to acquiesce. NK has nukes & announced plans to perfect tac nukes that target, yet it demanded Seoul end milex with, halt weapons purchases, stop calling NK actions 'provocations'..11/

 

Basically, NK is again calling on S. Korea to return to pan-Korean roots & break from the US. His remarks are another reminder that Moon's peace plans before leaving office are bleak. Seoul will likely feel more pressured to facilitate US-NK talks asap, but the bar is high..12/

 

All his tough talk doesn't necessarily mean there's no chance for &  talks this year. It means the price is very high for talks & higher for negotiating agreements. NK's Party Congress isn't over & we will have to see what more comes out of it. To be continued..13/

 

2. Fourth-day Sitting of 8th WPK Congress Held

kcnawatch.org

Here is a report about the 4th Day of the 8th Party Congress from KCNA.

Ponder this conclusion (with appropriate "revolutionary zeal"): The fourth-day sitting of the 8th Congress of the WPK helped all the participants fully display their revolutionary zeal to suit to the character of the congress for work, struggle and progress and harden their firm faith and transparent resolution to fulfill the sacred responsibility and duty in the course of implementing the fighting programme set forth in the report on the work of the Party Central Committee.

 

3. VOA: [Washington Talk/English] Kim Jong-un "America's 'largest enemy' ... Continued development of 'super large nuclear warhead'"

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ae2ScZFEQ5E

At the link is the 20 minute Voice of America weekly talk show, "Washington Talk."  The target audience for this broadcast is the regime elite in Pyongyang and. of course the Korean people in the north.  

Young Gyo Kim hosted Scott Snyder and me to discuss the final report of the KWP's  8th Party Congress. Again, because the target audience is in the north a number of my comments are focused on attacking (objectively I hope) the legitimacy of Kim Jong-un and exposing his bankrupt policies and poor decision making and the suffering he is causing the Korean people living in the north.

 

4. N. Korea's Kim calls U.S. 'our biggest enemy,' says its hostile policies never change

The Washington Post – by Simon Denyer - January 9, 2021

There will be a lot of reporting on the 8th Party Congress and Kim Jong-un's rather provocative concluding statements.

 

5.  North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has threatened to expand his nuclear arsenal in response to what he calls US hostility

Chicago Tribune · by Hyung-Jin Kim

There should be no doubt that Kim Jong-un has no intention to denuclearize.  This is why we recommended changing strategic assumptions in our proposal for a new strategy.  Here was our "Plan B" recommendation much of which I think is still applicable, perhaps more than ever.  https://www.fdd.org/analysis/2019/12/3/maximum-pressure-2/

In a forthcoming strategic assessment of the past four years my colleague Mathew Ha and I provide these recommendations:

Recommendations:

By ramping up diplomacy and pressure at this pivotal moment, the Biden administration may be able to strengthen ties with South Korea and force Kim Jong-un to accept denuclearization. This appears to be his goal. In October 2020, then-former Vice President Joe Biden wrote:

"As President, I'll stand with South Korea, strengthening our alliance to safeguard peace in East Asia and beyond, rather than extorting Seoul with reckless threats to remove our troops. I'll engage in principled diplomacy and keep pressing toward a denuclearized North Korea and a unified Korean Peninsula, while working to reunite Korean Americans separated from loved ones in North Korea for decades."

The following recommendations can assist that vision:

* Develop an alliance strategy for the Korean Peninsula.

* Impose a "maximum pressure 2.0" campaign integrating not only sanctions but also other critical levers of U.S. and allied power.

* Make human rights a priority.

* Despite past failures, continue efforts to establish a substantive working-level dialogue between the United States and North Korea.

* Encourage Chinese and Russian support for denuclearization while holding them accountable for ongoing violations of UN sanctions they claim to support.

* Strengthen allied military posture.

* Stabilize the Special Measures Agreement (cost sharing) process:

* Coordinate a comprehensive strategy for North Korean cyber-attacks: 

 

6. Why COVID-19 could signal change on the Korean peninsula

weforum.org · by Angela Kane

What do you do when Kim Jong-un and the KWP does not prioritize human security?  How can we want it more than Kim Jong-un?  The international community has offered help in multiple forms and thorough multiple venues.  Kim Jong-un has not been willing to accept any substantive assistance especially from South Korea which has been very willing to provide it.

We must understand that Kim fears the Korean people in the north more than he fears any threat from the US.

Conclusion: Prioritizing human security for the DPRK in the current situation facing the country holds the potential for a new path for peace and eventual Great Reset on the Korean peninsula. This requires courage to overcome fears and distrust, and willingness to make strategic choices by the leadership of North Korea. It also requires international openness, especially by the United States South Korea and Japan, to take advantage of the opportunity at the present moment as the world reimagines many aspects of global life in the aftermath of the pandemic, to also make strategic choices to pursue new approaches in relations and negotiations with the DPRK to seek sustained peace and prosperity for the Korean people and the Northeast Asia region.

 

7. Did North Korea Just Signal It Wants to Talk?

The National Interest · by Daniel R. DePetris · January 8, 2021

Perhaps, but...

Some premature analysis obviously written before the final statement from the 8th Party Congress.  But I think Kim is signaling it wants to talk. But on its terms and from a perceived position of strength that makes the regime appear to be negotiating on an "equal footing" with the US.

 

8. Kim Jong Un's goal: 'enhance nuclear preemptive and retaliatory strike capabilities'

Newsweek · by Tom O'Connor · January 8, 2021

Yes. He has no intention of completely denuclearizing. 

 

9. S. Korea reaffirms commitment to implementing inter-Korean agreements

en.yna.co.kr · by 이원주 · January 9, 2021

With all due respect to Minister Lee, this is insanity. Kim is not going to accept South Korea's version of engagement. What is worse when it does accept it the regime will do so because it thinks its political warfare strategy is working and giving the north an advantage.  But engagement by the South is not going to result in any change in behavior by the north and it is not going to result in improved relations and certainly not denuclearization.  And the Propaganda and Agitation Department will eventually spin South Korean offers as kowtowing to the regime.

 

10. N. Korea's military parade may be postponed due to heavy snow

donga.com – by Kyu-Jin Shin – 9 January 2021

It isn’t over till it's over. We have to see what will be displayed in the parade.  I think the "new" ICBM and SLBM will be the exclamation point to KJU's remarks and may foreshadow some kind of test launch (assuming they are operational or at least ready for primetime testing.

 

11. S. Korea should find diplomatic solutions to resolve wartime sex slave issue

donga.com – 9 January 2020

The recent court decision is probably going to be overshadowed by the recent news from north Korea. But this is going to obviously cause more friction in the ROK-Japan relationship.

 

12. FM calls for Japan not to respond excessively to court ruling on 'comfort women'

en.yna.co.kr · by 송상호 · January 9, 2021

I am afraid the Japanese will regard this as a tone-deaf response by the Foreign Minister and this will further inflame rather than tamp down tensions.

 

13. South Korea in dilemma over joint military drill

The Korea Times – Kang Seung-woo - January 9, 2021

The OPCON transition issue is growing on the Korean side.  The Biden administration is going to have to deal with this quickly.  It is imperative we get this done right but also in as timely a manner possible that conditions will allow.  The question for both the ROK and US militaries that the civilian leaders should be asking are:

1) Is everything being done to meet the conditions?

2) What resources does the ROK military need to meet the conditions?

3) Is the ROKG willing to provide the necessary resources for the ROK military to meet the conditions?  (or is it only interested in a transition to meet a political timeline?)

 

14. Kim calls U.S. 'biggest enemy,' vows to continue nuclear development 

en.yna.co.kr · by 최수향 · January 9, 2021

https://www.yna.co.kr/view/AKR20210109017600504?section=nk/news/all

Here it is.  Now that Kim knows that President-elect Biden will be the next President Kim has decided to state his policy. (I believe Kim may have been usure of the US political situation and may have believed Trump would remain in power and so he refrained from making a policy declaration until now)    

Here is my initial (hasty) analysis.

At first read it is an apparent hardline policy and a continuation of KJU's political warfare resting on the foundation of blackmail diplomacy - the use of increased tension, threats, and provocations to gain political and economic concessions.

He believes the US policy will remain hostile despite the transition of administrations.  We should keep in mind his demands for the removal of the US hostile policy.  KJU defines an end to the US hostile policy as the end of the alliance, removal of troops from South Korea, and an end to extended deterrence and the nuclear umbrella over the ROK and Japan.  And the purpose of this pursuit of the end of the hostile policy is to support KJU's long term strategy and objectives which can be described as the seven decades old strategy of subversion, coercion-extortion (blackmail diplomacy), and the use of force to achieve unification dominated by the Guerrilla Dynasty and Gulag State in order to ensure the survival of the mafia like crime family cult known as Kim family regime.

That said KJU seems to be willing to negotiate but it will likely be from an arms control perspective with the US and north Korea as "equals" much like the US-USSR SALT and START talks.  Kim wants to be treated as a nuclear power.

A key point is that it is apparent that Kim has no intention of giving up his nuclear weapons.  He claims he will be a responsible nuclear power and will refrain from use if he is not targeted.  

Note also that KJU blames South Korea for the lack of progress on north-South engagement.  That is really amazing since South Korea has tried so hard to engage with the north. It is the north that has not responded.  And the comments about the Comprehensive Military Agreement are particularly disingenuous as South Korea has faithfully implemented the agreement and the north has not reciprocated in any substantive way.  

In the end, the north is going to continue its hardline policy, will not denuclearize, will talk to the US but on what KJU perceives as an equal footing as a nuclear power, and he blames the South for the lack of north-South engagement.

So, what should the ROK and US do?

First and foremost, the ROK and US must reassess the fundamental strategic assumptions about the regime.  The regime will not seek peace and reconciliation based on President Moon's vision.  The Biden and Moon administrations should use the MOFA-DOS strategy working group and the military committee to develop a strategic political-military approach based on new assumptions about the regime that is focused on the long-term solution which is the answer to the "Korea question."

Again, there is no silver bullet to the north Korea problem. This is why we need to focus on the long-term solution to the security and prosperity challenges on the Korean peninsula.  Again, that is to focus on resolving the Korean question, "the unnatural division of the peninsula."   Solve that and the nuclear issues and the human rights abuses and crimes against humanity will be ended.  The question to ask is not what worked and what did not, but whether our combined actions will advance our interests and move us closer to the acceptable, durable political arrangement that will protect, serve, and advance US and ROK/US alliance interests?  
The way ahead is deterrence, defense, denuclearization and solving the "Korea question" (e.g., unification) with the understanding that denuclearization of the north will only happen when we resolve the Korea question. 

Below is the English Yonhap article.  KCNA has not yet published KJU's remarks in English.  They will probably come out overnight.

Here are some (hastily translated) excerpts from a longer Yonhap article in Korea (thanks to one of our great VOA journalists who provided these to me):

 

 

"Extremism in defense of liberty is not a vice, but I denounce political extremism, of the left or the right, based on duplicity, falsehood, fear, violence and threats when they endanger liberty."

- George W. Romney

 

"Non-violence is not a passive idea. It is ethical activism at its political best."

- Ela Bhatt

 

"I am deeply disturbed by the senseless violence instigated by some leaders in pursuit of their personal political agenda."

- Mwai Kibaki

01/08/2021 News & Commentary - National Security

Fri, 01/08/2021 - 10:22am

News and Commentary by Dave Maxwell. Edited and Published by Riley Murray.

 

1. Putin's disinformation campaign claims stunning victory with Capitol Hill 'coup'

2. Donald Trump's Final Days (WSJ editorial)

3.  Why the search for the real origin of the coronavirus is a global concern

4. Domestic Terrorism Strikes U.S. Capitol, and Democracy

5. Iraq Issues an Arrest Warrant for President Trump

6. Statement by Acting Secretary of Defense Christopher Miller on Yesterday's Violence at the Capitol

7. How to deal with China

8. "Baby-making machines": Chinese tweet on Uygurs not against Twitter rules

9. A year after Wuhan, China locks down another city of 11 million people to contain a coronavirus flare-up

10. The Most Reliable Pandemic Number Keeps Getting Worse

11. Capitol Rioters Planned for Weeks in Plain Sight. The Police Weren't Ready.

12. Why Plainclothes Police Had Striped Reflective Tape On Their Glocks During The Capitol Siege

13. The Making of QAnon: A Crowdsourced Conspiracy - bellingcat

14. Neil Sheehan, N.Y. Times reporter who obtained Pentagon Papers and chronicled 'Bright Shining Lie' of Vietnam, dies at 84

15. Leadership & Strategy: A conversation between Secretary James Mattis & The Honorable Michael Vickers

16. State Department sets up new bureau for cybersecurity and emerging technologies

17. The EU just sold human rights down the river for minor commercial gains in China

18. China, Russia, Iran Spin Capitol Insurrection

19. In Washington Riot, Echoes of Post-Soviet Uprisings

20. Senate Armed Services sets confirmation hearing for Austin

21. Exclusive: How the Space Force foiled an Iranian missile attack with a critical early warning

22. Tehran's 20 percent enrichment is designed to extort Washington

23. Opinion | Matthew Pottinger exits, but his China strategy is here to stay

24. Capitol rioting: Rep. Crenshaw blasts fellow Republicans for 'lying' to Trump supporters

 

 

1. Putin's disinformation campaign claims stunning victory with Capitol Hill 'coup'

haaretz.com · by Omer Benjakob

A fascinating analysis that is contrary to the agenda of some in the US.

Here is a key point (among many in this essay): As the chaotic scenes played out on Capitol Hill, I also recalled what researchers at the Rand Corporation said after completing a massive study into disinformation efforts on Twitter ahead of November's election: The Russian campaign's goal was never to push out a coherent, pro-Trump message, but instead to subvert America's democratic institutions and sow distrust. President Donald Trump was just a means to that end.

 

2. Donald Trump's Final Days (WSJ editorial)

WSJ · by The Editorial Board

It is really amazing to read this editorial.

Like when LBJ was President during the Vietnam War when Walter Cronkite turned against him:  "If you have lost Cronkite you have lost America"

Here we have the Wall Street Journal editorial board (owned by Rupert Murdock and generally has always been supportive) calling for POTUS to resign.  "If you have lost the Wall Street Journal...."

If you accept the Russian disinformation article above this plays right into Russian objectives for its malign influence.

 

3. Why the search for the real origin of the coronavirus is a global concern

The Washington Post – by Adam Taylor - January 7, 2021

Conclusion:

By placing political rivalry above scientific discovery, both China and the United States have undermined research. Some experts think it is now unlikely that the WHO team will have the support to complete a credible investigation.

That would be a massive missed opportunity. As the WHO's own emergencies chief Mike Ryan said last week, the coronavirus is not the only pandemic humanity will face. "This is not necessarily the big one," he said.

 

4. Domestic Terrorism Strikes U.S. Capitol, and Democracy

cfr.org · by Bruce Hoffman

Excerpts:

Where does the country go from here?

Until yesterday, many believed that the peaceful transition of power, the hallmark of U.S. governance for over two centuries, could never seriously be threatened. These events have undermined faith in the sanctity of American institutions and constitutional values. America is now at an epochal moment, which calls for strong moral leadership and sober reflection. The U.S. image as a bastion of democracy, rule of law, and respect for institutions has perhaps been irrevocably tarnished.

The United States has always been a place of prophetic destiny and hallowed mission-a beacon for the principles of democracy and rule of law. These beliefs are enshrined in the preamble of the Constitution: "We the People of the United States, in Order to form a more perfect Union, establish Justice, ensure domestic Tranquility..." After yesterday's shameful events, the country should rededicate itself to the building of a more perfect union, through civility and respectful debate and discourse so that it can reestablish domestic tranquility and secure the blessings of liberty for all Americans.

 

5. Iraq Issues an Arrest Warrant for President Trump

Bloomberg · by The Associated Press · January 7, 2021

Pretty bold move.  I have no knowledge of Iraq but this makes me think Iran must be behind this and must have a lot of influence over the Iraq government.

 

6. Statement by Acting Secretary of Defense Christopher Miller on Yesterday's Violence at the Capitol

defense.gov - Jan. 7, 2021

"Yesterday's violence at the Capitol was reprehensible and contrary to the tenets of the United States Constitution. In the midst of this tragedy, I was proud of the professionalism of our Department of Defense personnel. I want to specifically recognize the service of the District of Columbia National Guard. They performed with honor, integrity, and alacrity to protect people and property from unlawful acts.

"Our Republic may have been disrupted yesterday, but the resolve of our legislators to conduct the people's business did not waver. Due to their efforts, supported by local and federal law enforcement and the National Guard, the attempts of those who tried to stop our government from functioning failed.

"I strongly condemn these acts of violence against our democracy. I, and the people I lead in the Department of Defense, continue to perform our duties in accordance with our oath of office, and will execute the time-honored peaceful transition of power to President-elect Biden on January 20."

 

7. How to deal with China

The Economist – 9 January 2021

Excerpt: Even before Europe's snub this was a daunting task for the incoming Biden administration, on a par with the creation of NATO or the world trading system after the second world war. And unlike back then, America's prestige has been battered. Yet public opinion in the rich world is now wary of China. Mr. Trump failed to deal with it partly because of his incompetence and contempt for allies. Mr. Biden will take office on January 20th on a wave of global goodwill. It should be possible to create a grouping of democracies, for example an enlarged G7, that will act on China. There is still a chance to reassert the values of open societies and free markets, but it will not last forever. Faced with an assertive autocracy, dithering and division are not enough.
 

8. "Baby-making machines": Chinese tweet on Uygurs not against Twitter rules

Ars Technica · by Timothy B. Lee · January 8, 2021

What an ugly and sick tweet.  I am torn about deleting tweets. On the one hand I do not think even private companies should be censoring speech.  Then again, we have to be concerned with hate speech and speech that incites violence. Then even more again, comments like the one in this Chinese tweet are useful to illustrate the evil nature of the Chinese Communist Party and it is important that such nature be exposed so the world can know what kind of threat it poses.   Then there is the double standard of Twitter. It will suspend POTUS but not take down this ugly tweet.  There are just no easy answers for dealing with social media, speech, information, and influence.

 

9. A year after Wuhan, China locks down another city of 11 million people to contain a coronavirus flare-up

CNN · by Nectar Gan, CNN

I thought China had COVID 19 under control???

 

10. The Most Reliable Pandemic Number Keeps Getting Worse

defenseone.com · by The COVID Tracking Project – 7 January 2021

A record number of deaths yesterday, more than 4000 in the US.

 

11. Capitol Rioters Planned for Weeks in Plain Sight. The Police Weren't Ready.

defenseone.com · by Lydia DePillis

This is very surprising.  It was very easy to observe the plans for this event.  I saw so much discussion on social media.

Now the question is what are we observing in terms of indications and warnings for January 20th and the inauguration?  And then how are we preparing for that? (yes, I have seen reports of all the new fencing going up around the Capitol - including supposedly "unclimbable" fencing - which I think is simply a challenge for some to try to climb it!)

 

12. Why Plainclothes Police Had Striped Reflective Tape On Their Glocks During The Capitol Siege

thedrive.com · by Joseph Trevithick and Tyler Rogoway · January 7, 2021

Here is a nice and useful pro-tip for the opposition.  There are no TTPs that can be protected.  

 

13. The Making of QAnon: A Crowdsourced Conspiracy - bellingcat

bellingcat.com · January 7, 2021

Very much worth reading and pondering. This is one of the domestic challenges we face.

These excerpts provide some understanding of the problem - the "demand side:"

But Q's message is that "good government" can arrive only in the form of a purge - because every prominent Democrat, and most Republicans who don't show enough fealty to Trump, is part of a cabal of Satan-worshipping pedophiles. True justice and "good government" can only exist after the Storm, when Trump - and Trump alone - rules the country, with all his opposition dead or imprisoned.

Three years ago, Q stitched together the most widely-held beliefs of one of the darkest corners of the internet. Drop by drop and stitch by stitch, the right-wing media scandals, the racist conspiracies and LARPs of bygone days grew into something greater than the sum of their parts. Q has eclipsed them all.

The story told above can only be incomplete. It addresses the supply side of the QAnon phenomenon, but the demand side is where the problem lies. To explore that would be to tell a story about the deepest fissures in American society - through the dangerous succor of conspiracy.

 

14. Neil Sheehan, N.Y. Times reporter who obtained Pentagon Papers and chronicled 'Bright Shining Lie' of Vietnam, dies at 84

The Washington Post · January 7, 2021

Rest in peace. I was very influenced by this book and in particular the story and work of John Paul Vann.

 

15. Leadership & Strategy: A conversation between Secretary James Mattis & The Honorable Michael Vickers

RSVP at this link: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/an-oh-so-social-conversation-between-sec-jim-mattis-and-dr-mike-vickers-registration-135727517659?

Thu, January 28, 2021

6:00 PM - 8:00 PM EST

About this Event

Join The OSS Society for a very special event with two leading figures from the national security community: Secretary James Mattis and The Honorable Michael Vickers. This is the first installment in The OSS Society's 2021 "Oh So Social" Conversation Series.

 

16. State Department sets up new bureau for cybersecurity and emerging technologies

The Hill · by Maggie Miller · January 7, 2021

There is some criticism here:

Christopher Painter, the former State Department cybersecurity coordinator under both the Trump and Obama administrations, criticized the move to set up the new office Thursday.

"Laughable that this is done @ the 11th hr when this was not adequately resourced or prioritized for 4 yrs," Painter tweeted. "Also, this formulation only preserves stovepipes rather than coordination."

Painter noted that both the Cyber Diplomacy Act and the Cyberspace Solarium Commission, a congressionally created group that issues recommendations to defend the U.S. in cyberspace, "called for a broader and more integrated scope and a higher level in the Department," and pointed to the short time frame before President-elect Joe Biden takes office.

"At this point the new administration should decide how best to structure this issue and where it should be placed," Painter tweeted.

 

17. The EU just sold human rights down the river for minor commercial gains in China

New York Post · by Jorge González-Gallarza · January 8, 2021

Conclusion:

Yes, the deal won't come into force for another year, but two weeks is all the time Biden has to figure out how to react - not an enviable position for the leader of the free world. Biden might take a page from his predecessor. President Trump's China-skeptic instincts and his distrust of the Europeans appear vindicated: Xi is as bad as he insisted, and Angela Merkel's Eurocracy has been exposed as a blob of sellouts.

The democratic West needs a single spine. Let's hope Biden has it.

 

18. China, Russia, Iran Spin Capitol Insurrection

defenseone.com · by Patrick Tucker

Even though we are coming to the end of the administration, our National Security Strategy is still in effect. These words still matter:

"A democracy is only as resilient as its people. An informed and engaged citizenry is the fundamental requirement for a free and resilient nation. For generations, our society has protected free press, free speech, and free thought. Today, actors such as Russia are using information tools in an attempt to undermine the legitimacy of democracies. Adversaries target media, political processes, financial networks, and personal data. The American public and private sectors must recognize this and work together to defend our way of life. No external threat can be allowed to shake our shared commitment to our values, undermine our system of government, or divide our Nation."

Access NSS HERE

 

19. In Washington Riot, Echoes of Post-Soviet Uprisings

The New York Times · by Andrew Higgins · January 7, 2021

 

20. Senate Armed Services sets confirmation hearing for Austin

Politico – 7 January 2021

As an aside, how many cabinet officials will be confirmed by the inauguration?

 

21. Exclusive: How the Space Force foiled an Iranian missile attack with a critical early warning

c4isrnet.com · by Nathan Strout · January 7, 2021

Interesting story. Can we give the Space Force a battle streamer for its new colors? (apologies for my attempt at humor).

 

22. Tehran's 20 percent enrichment is designed to extort Washington

Newsweek · by Behnam Ben Taleblu and Andrea Stricker · January 7, 2021

north Korea is not the only country that practices blackmail diplomacy or uses a strategy of subversion, coercion/extortion and force to achieve its objectives or conducts political warfare.

 

23. Opinion | Matthew Pottinger exits, but his China strategy is here to stay

The Washington Post – by Josh Rogin - January 7, 2021

 

24. Capitol rioting: Rep. Crenshaw blasts fellow Republicans for 'lying' to Trump supporters

foxnews.com · by Yael Halon

Hmmmm....

 

 

"As to the members of a Democracy, they are the best sort of people in the world; but then they are but a puny sort of gentry, as to strength, put them all together; and apt to be a little defective in point of understanding."

- Jeremy Benthem

 

"As I would not be a slave, so I would not be a master. This expresses my idea of democracy. Whatever differs from this, to the extent of the difference, is no democracy."

- Abraham Lincoln

 

"Every word has consequences. Every silence, too."  

- Jean Paul Satre

01/08/2021 News & Commentary - Korea

Fri, 01/08/2021 - 10:04am

News and Commentary by Dave Maxwell. Edited and Published by Riley Murray.

 

1. FDD | Opening of Eighth Party Congress Shows Kim Jong Un Stays True to His Roots

2. N.K. leader reviews inter-Korean ties, vows to 'comprehensively' expand external relations

3. KIM JONG-GUN Kim Jong-un shows off new white military uniform

4. Kim vows to boost North Korea's defence capabilities

5. Is North Korea's dictator losing his touch?

6. North Korean hackers launch RokRat Trojan in campaigns against the South

7. South Korea's Moon vows push for 'denuclearization of Korean Peninsula'

8. Poll: Most South Koreans Are Wary of China

9.  S. Korean court orders Tokyo to pay damages to wartime sex slavery victims in landmark ruling

10. Kim Jong Un vows to expand foreign relations ahead of Biden era

11. DPRK leader vows to advance social construction, external relations at party congress - Xinhua

12. S. Korea ships another 2 million coronavirus masks to Korean War vets

13. State security agency arrests key figures involved in North Korea's nuclear and missile development

14. Kim Jong-un's Party Congress Speech Sends Rumor Mill Spinning

15. Is North Korea Jamming Radio Signals?

16. Supreme Leader Kim Jong Un Continues Report on Work of 7th Central Committee of WPK Third-day Sitting of Eighth Congress of WPK Held

 

1. FDD | Opening of Eighth Party Congress Shows Kim Jong Un Stays True to His Roots

fdd.org · by David Maxwell and Mathew Ha · January 7, 2021

From my colleague, Mathew Ha and me.

 

2. N.K. leader reviews inter-Korean ties, vows to 'comprehensively' expand external relations

en.yna.co.kr · by 이원주 · January 8, 2021

This is a very important statement though it is vague enough that we should not overreact as some might and think this may be an indication of some kind of breakthrough. Kim may be continuing to execute his political warfare strategy and is setting the conditions to either extract concessions and resources from the South or drive a wedge in the ROK/US alliance (or at least test it).  Or it could be intended to accomplish both objectives.

But we will still have to wait until the end of the Congress and the release of the final statements.

 

3. KIM JONG-GUN Kim Jong-un shows off new white military uniform

https://www.thesun.co.uk/news/13679634/kim-jong-un-military-uniform-new-portrait/ - by Jon Lockett – 7 Jan 2021

The party constructed one helluva an "I love me wall."  But since Kim has never served a single day of his life in the military, can we charge him with north Korean "stolen valor" for wearing a military uniform and impersonating a military officer?  Maybe that can be one of the charges when the truth and reconciliation meets during the unification process (note my sarcasm).

 

4. Kim vows to boost North Korea's defence capabilities

straitstimes.com

The military is the most important institution for Kim, the regime, and the party.  Kim will prioritize the military ahead of the welfare of the people because it is key to regime survival.  This is an indication that helps provide answers to the two key questions:

1. Do we believe that Kim Jong-un has abandoned the seven decades old strategy of subversion, coercion-extortion (blackmail diplomacy), and use of force to achieve unification dominated by the Guerrilla Dynasty and Gulag State in order to ensure the survival of the mafia like crime family cult known as Kim family regime?
2. In support of that strategy do we believe that Kim Jong-un has abandoned the objective to split the ROK/US Alliance and get US forces off the peninsula?  Has KJU given up his divide to conquer strategy - divide the alliance to conquer the ROK?

 

5. Is North Korea's dictator losing his touch?

The Economist – 9 January 2021

I concur with Andrei (though there are estimates that as many as 3 million people died from the effects of the famine) - the conditions now could be far worse than during the Arduous March of the great famine of 1994-1996.  That said I am not predicting imminent regime collapse, but I will say that one of the major contributing factors to preventing collapse was the election of Kim Dae Jung and then 10 years of the Sunshine Policy and the Peace and Prosperity Policy that provided billions of dollars to the regime.  The question is whether the regime can extort a similar level of resources this time.  Again, I am not predicting collapse. But I will predict that if there is collapse it will be catastrophic for the South, the alliance, and the region.

Excerpts:

Mr Lankov reckons the regime faces its greatest test since a famine more than 20 years ago brought on by the incompetence of Mr Kim's late father and grandfather. The regime survived that test despite the deaths of more than 500,000 North Koreans. Today, though, the people know much more about the outside world. They have grown less deferential to authority. And they are used to coping without the state: they might react angrily to the reimposition of central control.

That is not to say that the Kim dynasty is on the brink of collapse. But even small disturbances may be seen, both at home and abroad, as a sign of unravelling. The regime's rituals project Mr Kim-morbidly obese, smoking heavily and cosseted in his palaces-as the irreproachable bearer of a heavenly mandate. It is a message he may soon need to reinforce.

 

6. North Korean hackers launch RokRat Trojan in campaigns against the South

ZDNet · by Charlie Osborne

Beware of Kim's all purpose sword.

 

7. South Korea's Moon vows push for 'denuclearization of Korean Peninsula'

upi.com – by Elizabeth Shim

This statement would seem to be somewhat in line with President-elect Biden's October 30th Yonhap Oped (except President Moon left out unification).  https://en.yna.co.kr/view/AEN20201030000500325

"...Seoul is ready to commit time and effort to realize the "denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula, permanent peace, and the development of inter-Korean relations," Donga Ilbo reported."

 

8. Poll: Most South Koreans Are Wary of China

The National Interest · by Timothy S. Rich · January 7, 2021

A positive sign.  A good portion of both Americans and Koreans in the South are very supportive of the ROK/US alliance.

 

9. S. Korean court orders Tokyo to pay damages to wartime sex slavery victims in landmark ruling

en.yna.co.kr · by 우재연 · January 8, 2021

One step forward and two or three steps backward.

 

10. Kim Jong Un vows to expand foreign relations ahead of Biden era

Stars and Stripes – by Jeong-Ho Lee – 8 January 2021

Again, we should not overreact to this.  My assessment is that he is continuing his political warfare strategy.  If he does desire to expand foreign relations it is likely part of a strategy to gain political and economic concessions.  We should be wary.

That said this is also an opportunity to observe Kim's actions.  We can give him an opportunity to demonstrate sincerity and test to see if he wants to make substantive changes to how it conducts its foreign affairs.

However, there is one thing we should also not forget that the nature of the Kim family regime will likely never change. Don't get fooled again. 

 

11. DPRK leader vows to advance social construction, external relations at party congress - Xinhua

English.news.cn

xinhuanet.com

Interpretation of the KWP's 8th Party Congress from China.

An interesting phrase: "...playing to the full advantage of the country's social system..."

Doubling down???  Excerpt: "Kim and the congress attendees also doubled down on the Party's general stance to comprehensively expand and forge external relations."

 

12. S. Korea ships another 2 million coronavirus masks to Korean War vets

Stars and Stripes – by Matthew Keeler – 7 January 2021

 

13. State security agency arrests key figures involved in North Korea's nuclear and missile development

dailynk.com – by Jeong Tae Joo - January 8, 2021

If accurate this is very significant.  Nuclear scientists and technicians are among the most respected and protected within north Korea.  But despite the priority for developing nuclear weapons if they broke the law for watching foreign media then we can say that ideological control is more important that even nuclear weapons development.

Who does Kim fear more: the US or the Korea people in the north?  It is the Korean people armed with information.

So how do we end the north Korean nuclear programs?  Target all nuclear scientists with information and let them be compromised and arrested and then that will cause the nuclear program to collapse (note my comments are only half sarcastic - it will not collapse the program but information and influence operations can have effects).

 

14. Kim Jong-un's Party Congress Speech Sends Rumor Mill Spinning

english.chosun.com – 7 January 2021

How many "Kimologists" (cousins to Kremlinologists) do we have and how are they assessing the look of Kim Jong-un?

 

15. Is North Korea Jamming Radio Signals?

The National Interest · by Stephen Silver · January 7, 2021

Yes they are. But as noted electricity is a problem.

Excerpt: "Jamming Watch reported back in 2008 that "since it is illegal for North Koreans to listen to anything other than state-run radio, all legal radio receivers are sold fixed so they can play only channels approved by the government. The report also said that due to electricity shortages "radio jamming activities are not always consistent and are sometimes interrupted by power failures."

We know they try to jam Radio Free Asia and Voice of America as well.  But our transmitters can over power their jammers and it takes more power (and electricity) to try to jam our transmitters.

As an aside I will be participating in Voice of America's weekly Washington Talk this morning. The primary target audience is the elite in Pyongyang. Soctt Snyder and I will be discussing the 8th Party Congress with Kim Yong Gyo. This is one of the very important initiatives of VOA.

 

16. Supreme Leader Kim Jong Un Continues Report on Work of 7th Central Committee of WPK Third-day Sitting of Eighth Congress of WPK Held

kcnawatch.org

The members are excited by the impassioned report from KJU.

Excerpt: "The impassioned report of the Supreme Leader of our Party, state and armed forces, which greatly inspires the entire Party and all the people to the struggle for achieving a new victory of the next stage, increasingly excites the participants in the congress and redoubles their revolutionary enthusiasm and spirit to surely implement the important tasks facing the Party and the revolution."

 

 

"As to the members of a Democracy, they are the best sort of people in the world; but then they are but a puny sort of gentry, as to strength, put them all together; and apt to be a little defective in point of understanding."

- Jeremy Benthem

 

"As I would not be a slave, so I would not be a master. This expresses my idea of democracy. Whatever differs from this, to the extent of the difference, is no democracy."

- Abraham Lincoln

 

"Every word has consequences. Every silence, too."  

- Jean Paul Satre

U.S. Army War College War Room Podcast: Evolutionary Strategy to Combat Strategic Atrophy

Thu, 01/07/2021 - 6:23pm

Podcast: https://warroom.armywarcollege.edu/podcasts/usasoc-strategy/

In the realm of national security very few elements ever remain stagnant, and those that do are relegated to irrelevance. As the environment changes, capabilities are developed, motivations shift, loyalties fade, new players rise and old players fall. In order to account for those changes new guidance flows downward from the highest levels of leadership increasing in detail and specificity as it descends to the lowest echelons of the military. Bryan Groves joins A BETTER PEACE editor Ron Granieri to discuss U.S. Army Special Operations Command’s (USASOC) latest iteration of its command strategy. In the words of the Commanding General, LTG Francis Beaudette, this strategy “charts our course to drive evolutionary changes in how we man, train and equip our formations in the Information Age.” Bryan and Ron examine how USASOC forces intend to execute their mission in support of the national defense amongst general purpose, joint and coalition forces against ever changing adversaries.

The Army Special Operations Forces Strategy can be found online here or a PDF can be directly downloaded here.

LTC(P) Bryan Groves is the Chief of the Strategic Planning Division, U.S. Army Special Operations Command.

Ron Granieri is an Associate Professor of History at the U.S. Army War College and the Editor of A BETTER PEACE.

The views expressed in this presentation are those of the speakers and do not necessarily reflect those of the U.S. Army War College, U.S. Army, or Department of Defense.

01/07/2021 News & Commentary – National Security

Thu, 01/07/2021 - 2:46pm

News and Commentary by Dave Maxwell.  Edited and published by Daniel Riggs.

1. China wages cognitive warfare to topple Taiwan government: report

2. Taiwan and US set for sensitive dialogue - and reveal the timing in advance

3. China as a Composite Land-Sea Power: A Geostrategic Concept Revisited

4. National security adviser, deputy weigh resigning after Wednesday's chaos

5. Trump's deputy national security adviser resigns as other top officials consider quitting over Capitol riot

6. China Uses Capitol Violence to Cast Narrative of U.S. Hypocrisy

7. Asia delights and despairs in Trump’s Capitol siege

8. Fauci sees greater China role in COVID-19 spread, looking back one year later

9. This Is a Coup

10. This is Not a Coup

11. Former SecDef Jim Mattis Denounces Pro-Trump 'Violent Assault' on US Capitol

12. ‘Once You Engage in Political Violence, It Becomes Easier to Do It Again’

13. Biden Plans to Build a Grand Alliance to Counter China. It Won’t Be Easy.

14. U.S. Considers Adding Alibaba, Tencent to China Stock Ban

15. America's Pacific Strategy Needs an Update

16. The World Is Watching Us

17. China's "Unrestricted War" On The United States

18. Pentagon must continue military support to CIA's counterterrorism operations

19. A Cyber Opportunity: Priorities for the First National Cyber Director

20. What is the role of Information Operations in supporting training missions? Or, when is a tweet more than just a tweet?

21. The Two Special Operations Trinities

 

1. China wages cognitive warfare to topple Taiwan government: report

Newsweek · by John Feng · January 6, 2021

Excerpts:

“Released last week, INDSR's 200-page report makes special mention of China's online cognitive warfare—part of its larger "hybrid warfare"—which it conducts through Taiwan's mainstream media platforms, including popular forums and ubiquitous mobile messaging application LINE.

The aim, the authors say, is to create division and internal conflict, and to change the public's voting behavior in favor of a more preferred candidate. The tactic was taken straight from Russia's cyber operation playbook, according to a report chapter describing Beijing's attempts to influence public opinion and thought.

 

2. Taiwan and US set for sensitive dialogue - and reveal the timing in advance

scmp.com· by Lawrence Chung

Excerpts:

“It is being held by the outgoing Donald Trump administration before Joe Biden [becomes president this month], meaning the mandate given by the Trump government to the event is limited,” Sung said.

He said the Biden administration could control the scope of the dialogue in future to have flexibility in response to Beijing’s protests about breaching the one-China policy and the three communiques that underpin US-China relations.

Sung said he expected this week’s dialogue to touch on strengthening Taiwan’s regional role in partnership with neighboring countries, in addition to political and military cooperation with the US.”

 

 

3. China as a Composite Land-Sea Power: A Geostrategic Concept Revisited

cimsec.org · by Tashi Yoshiara · January 6, 2021

Conclusion: A theme that runs through the Chinese discourse is a clear-eyed sense of the limits on China’s geostrategic choices. Chinese strategists who possess a tragic sensibility about great power politics understand that favorable circumstances are never permanent. They recognize that Beijing must strive to cultivate conditions conducive to its outward orientation and that hostile great powers, especially if they were to coalesce against China, could undo its global plans. As the PLA goes global, it behooves allied policymakers to adopt a similarly tragic worldview and revisit age-old geostrategic dilemmas that will likely prove as nettlesome to China as they have for past aspiring land-sea powers.

 

4. National security adviser, deputy weigh resigning after Wednesday's chaos

Politico· January 6, 2021

 

5. Trump's deputy national security adviser resigns as other top officials consider quitting over Capitol riot

CNN · by Kaitlan Collins, Vivian Salama, Jake Tapper and Kylie Atwood, CNN

Matt Pottinger resigns.

 

6. China Uses Capitol Violence to Cast Narrative of U.S. Hypocrisy

Bloomberg · by Bloomberg News · January 7, 2021

Revisionist and rogue power propaganda departments are going to have a field day with the insurrection.

Who is working on developing a superior US narrative? (and the actions that would back up the necessary narrative)

 

7. Asia delights and despairs in Trump’s Capitol siege

asiatimes.com · by David Hutt · January 7, 2021

Again, who in our government is working the counter narrative and developing the superior American narrative?

We are playing right into our enemies' hands:

But some of America’s authoritarian opponents, many lambasted by Washington for years for their lack of democracy and rights, responded with thinly-veiled mockery and triumphant finger-pointing.

Analysts and observers suggest that America’s prestige in many parts of Asia will take time to recover from the chaotic events, and that its reputation as a beacon and defender of democracy could be permanently tainted by the siege.

“It’s certainly a black eye for the United States – there’s no way around it,” said Bradley Murg, senior advisor and distinguished senior research fellow at the Cambodian Institute for Cooperation and Peace in Phnom Penh.

“I expect authoritarian regimes in Asia at present are more concerned with preparing for engagement with the new Democratic administration than attempting to score short-term political points for domestic audiences,” he added. “And if they aren’t, they should be.”

 

8. Fauci sees greater China role in COVID-19 spread, looking back one year later

Axios · by Eileen Drage O'Reilly

This might have a little more impact on another news day.

The bottom line: The pandemic has demonstrated that "the unimaginable can happen" Fauci says. But, he hopes "we're very, very much back to normal a year from now."

 

9. This Is a Coup

defenseone.com · by David A. Graham

This pairs with the next article that argues this was not a coup.  Discuss among yourselves.

 

10. This is Not a Coup

defenseone.com · by Kevin Baron

Counterpoint:

“Mob. Riot. Terror. Extreme. There are lots of words to describe this dark day. Coup, is not one of them.”

 

11. Former SecDef Jim Mattis Denounces Pro-Trump 'Violent Assault' on US Capitol

military.com · by Hope Hodge Seck · January 6, 2021

 

12. ‘Once You Engage in Political Violence, It Becomes Easier to Do It Again’

I do fear those who are willing to use violence may be emboldened by yesterday's attack.  There is political defiance, political resistance, and political violence.  Did we cross the Rubicon yesterday?

 

defenseone.com · by Naomi Schalit

As I posted on social media last evening: I can only hope and pray “that which does not kill our democracy will make it stronger.”  I hope we can find an opportunity in this that will show us a path forward and that in time we will be stronger from what happened — If we still believe in our oath to support and defend the Constitution of the United States.  We need a greater love for our Constitution, our country, our ideals and values, and all our fellow Americans than we have hatred for those with whom we have political disagreements.  God bless America.

 

13. Biden Plans to Build a Grand Alliance to Counter China. It Won’t Be Easy.

WSJ · by Bob Davis and Lingling Wei· January 6, 2021

All news will be overshadowed by yesterday's attack. But we have to move forward and we cannot be consumed by those events. We have to continue to debate and discuss the national security issues.

The question is can we lead and harness the power of a "coalition of democracies?"

 

14. U.S. Considers Adding Alibaba, Tencent to China Stock Ban

WSJ · by Dawn Lim, Jing Yang and Gordon Lubold· January 6, 2021

Excerpts:

“Major U.S. asset managers including T. Rowe Price Group Inc., BlackRock Inc. and Vanguard Group are among the top public shareholders of Alibaba and Tencent through funds, according to FactSet data.

Asset managers are lobbying to prevent a situation in which companies such as Alibaba could become blacklisted, said a person familiar with large financial firms’ conversations with U.S. regulators.

Last week, the Treasury Department published guidelines that include subsidiaries in the ban if a company named on the list holds ownership of 50% or more in them. Derivatives, bonds and depositary receipts, as well as exchange-traded funds, index funds and mutual funds holding securities issued by these entities in any jurisdiction will also be restricted to U.S. investors.”

 

15.  America's Pacific Strategy Needs an Update

The National Interest · by Dan Goure · January 7, 2021

Dr. Goure is arguing to make the case for a large US ground force in Asia.

Conclusion: "A Biden administration will certainly articulate a new National Security Strategy that differs in many respects from that of the Trump administration. But it will be impossible to deny the basic reality of great power competition and the continuous growth of the Chinese military. It is up to the Army’s senior leaders to articulate the value of large land forces for deterrence and warfighting in the Indo-Pacific region."

Actually, the ultimate goal is not controlling or denying critical land. The ultimate goal is achieving the political object.  The question is what is the political object of our strategy?  What is the acceptable, durable political arrangement that will protect, serve, and advance US and allied] national interests.

 

16. The World Is Watching Us

thebulwark.com · by Shay Khatiri · January 7, 2021

Yes, the world is looking up to the city on a hill.

 

17. China's "Unrestricted War" On The United States

ZeroHedge· by Doug Dodge · January 7, 2021

A short review.

 

18.  Pentagon must continue military support to CIA's counterterrorism operations

washingtontimes.com · by Abraham Wagner· January 7, 2021

From what I understand from talking to people who know these things, the media and pundits are blowing this out of proportion.  This is about reviewing the agreements between the Pentagon and the CIA.

 

19. A Cyber Opportunity: Priorities for the First National Cyber Director

warontherocks.com · by Mark Montgomery and Robert Morgan· January 7, 2021

Conclusion:

“Moore’s law, familiar to many in the cyber world, posits that the number of transistors on a circuit board will double every 18 months, and with it, our computing power. Cyber policy follows a similar law, wherein circumstances constantly shift and new policies and laws are required roughly every 18 months. The White House should be agile enough to keep pace. The Office of the National Cyber Director is a step in the right direction, but its first 18 months will be critical for ensuring not only its success, but also that of the nation. The national cyber director should construct the office, develop a new strategy, and possibly work with lawmakers on further laws.

In sum, the national cyber director should be ready and equipped to lead the executive branch through the next set of cyber security challenges, whatever they may be.”

 

20. What is the role of Information Operations in supporting training missions? Or, when is a tweet more than just a tweet?

Small Wars Journal·  Scott Fisher · January 7, 2021

Conclusion: "The J39 (IO) team identified shortcomings in IO doctrine for missions occurring in locations outside of Title 10, specifically in Africa. To overcome these shortcomings, we developed and implemented several field-expedient methods, as outlined above. It is unlikely that these methods represent the ‘best’ or most effective way forward, though we hope others find them useful. Instead, this paper is meant to signal that further work needs to be done to update doctrine and training to better reflect the challenges facing IO planners across the full spectrum of deployed environments."

 

21. The Two Special Operations Trinities

Small Wars Journal Dave Maxwell · January 7, 2021

I've been waiting for months for this to be published by JSOU as part of a conference publication but I was informed by the editor that it would not be included due to space limitations.  But I wanted to offer my views on what I like to describe as the two SOF "trinities."

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"Democracy washes its dirty linen in public ... but it gets it clean."

- Frank Crane

 

"Remember, democracy never lasts long. It soon wastes, exhausts, and murders itself. There never was a democracy yet that did not commit suicide. It is in vain to say that democracy is less vain, less proud, less selfish, less ambitious, or less avaricious than aristocracy or monarchy. It is not true, in fact, and nowhere appears in history. Those passions are the same in all men, under all forms of simple government, and when unchecked, produce the same effects of fraud, violence, and cruelty."

- John Adams

 

"Although our interests as citizens vary, each one is an artery to the heart that pumps life through the body politic, and each is important to the health of democracy."

- Bill Moyers