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10/04/2020 News & Commentary - Korea

Sun, 10/04/2020 - 10:54am

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

 

1. Pompeo cancels visit to S. Korea after Trump's virus diagnosis

2. Speculations mount that North may reveal new weapon during parade

3. Bracing for all possibilities (Korean OpEd on Trump with COVID)

4. N. Korea seen moving intercontinental ballistic missile: report

5. Trump's COVID-19 infection casts shadow over Moon's peace efforts

6. North Korea Arms State-Run Farms and Businesses to Prevent Theft

7. North Korea is likely to start acting up again during the US presidential election  - but this year might be different

8. These deepfake videos of Putin and Kim have gone viral

9. S. Korea to maintain toughened virus curbs this week

10. New infection cases under 100 for 4th day; post-Chuseok virus fight in focus

11. North Korean human rights organization of the United States that advocates'Jeon Kwang-hoon' ... How are they connected

12. The Defector Crisis: Made in America

 

1. Pompeo cancels visit to S. Korea after Trump's virus diagnosis

en.yna.co.kr · by 장동우 · October 4, 2020

It appears the Quad is the priority. 

 

2. Speculations mount that North may reveal new weapon during parade

koreajoongangdaily.joins.com

We will be hearing this for the next 6 days.  I wonder if the oddsmakers in Vegas are following this. What are the odds we will see a new weapons system?

 

3. Bracing for all possibilities (Korean OpEd on Trump with COVID)

koreajoongangdaily.joins.com

The whole world is speculating on the President's health.  A lot in this short OpEd.  The conclusion notes probably what is the worst case for South Korea - being forced to take sides in the China -US dispute.  I know from my Korean friends that Korea made this choice in 1953 with the Mutual Defense Treaty and there is no question as to the choice.  But given the economic relationships and geography they need to be able to trade with China walk a tightrope and they ask that we respect their position.  But the bottom line there is no question which side Korea is on.  Unfortunately there are voices in the South that do not necessarily agree with that reality and sometimes those voices are loud.

 

4. N. Korea seen moving intercontinental ballistic missile: report

koreaherald.com · by The Korea Herald · October 4, 2020

This is a very curious statement.  "Seoul maintains a missile defense network in which the Patriot is used to intercept missiles flying at low altitudes and the THAAD takes down ones at high altitudes. The THAAD has much longer-range radars than the Patriot."  It seems like Seoul is participating in an integrated missile defense system.  It sounds like THAAD belongs to Seoul.  If Seoul is claiming responsibility for THAAD I hope it will solve the basing problem for it and allow it to be resupplied and supported logistically without interference from the protestors the government has allowed to blow support operations.

 

5. Trump's COVID-19 infection casts shadow over Moon's peace efforts

The Korea Times · October 4, 2020

I fear an overreaction by Seoul. Yes, we all have to be concerned with the health of the President.  However, if he had not contracted COVID I do not see that President Moon's peace efforts would have had any more chance of moving forward.  I seriously doubt there was any serious chance of a 4th Kim-Trump meeting before the election.  The problem with the peace efforts is not Moon or trump.  It is Kim Jong-un.  Now of course the real problem could be that if Kim Jong-un senses an opportunity for mischief to support blackmail diplomacy, he could conduct a provocation and this could lead to a miscalculation. 

 

6. North Korea Arms State-Run Farms and Businesses to Prevent Theft

rfa.org – 2 October 2020

The Korean people in the north are becoming desperate.  Unless the regime reopens the border and allows the 400+ markets to operate things will only get worse.

 

7. North Korea is likely to start acting up again during the US presidential election - but this year might be different

Business Insider · by David Choi

An article based on recent work by CSIS.  There is no doubt north Korea studies and follows our politics. And the regime knows US politics affects the regime.

 

8. These deepfake videos of Putin and Kim have gone viral

https://fortune.com/2020/10/02/deepfakes-putin-kim-jong-un-democracy-disinformation/ - by Jeremy Kahn – 2 October 2020

You have to admit regardless of your partisan view these videos are very well done.

The Putin video he here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sbFHhpYU15w

The Kim video is here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ERQlaJ_czHU. The voice is how I would imagine Kim speaking English 

 

9. S. Korea to maintain toughened virus curbs this week

en.yna.co.kr · by 강윤승 · October 4, 2020

 

10. New infection cases under 100 for 4th day; post-Chuseok virus fight in focus

en.yna.co.kr · by 강윤승 · October 4, 2020

But we will not know the effects of Chuseok for a couple of weeks.

 

11. North Korean human rights organization of the United States that advocates 'Jeon Kwang-hoon'... How are they connected

https://newstapa.org/article/J6w6K – by Tim Shorrock – 29 September 2020

What a hit job by Tim Shorrock.  The problem with him is that supposedly the Moon administration admires and listens to him.  This is a machine translation so it is not perfect, but you get the gist of the insulting work by Shorrock.  He is attacking many of my personal friends and colleagues who are doing great work on behalf of freedom and human rights and the Korean people in the north and South.

 

12. The Defector Crisis: Made in America

https://newstapa.org/article/J6w6K – by Tim Shorrock – 29 September 2020

Again, another hit job by Shorrock attacking personal friends and colleagues who are doing important work for human rights and freedom and escapees from the north.  I would ask all my Korean friends to not allow Shorrock to have the influence he does in Korea.  He is no friend of Korea and no friend of the US.

 

"No one knows better than I the bitter denials of life.

But I have made my limitations tools of learning and true joy.”

- Helen Keller

 

"Another flaw in the human character is that

everybody wants to build and nobody wants to do maintenance.”

-  Kurt Vonnegut

 

"If we had no winter,

the spring would not be so pleasant:

if we did not sometimes taste of adversity,

prosperity would not be so welcome.”

- Anne Bradstreet

10/04/2020 News & Commentary - National Security

Sun, 10/04/2020 - 10:40am

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

 

1. America is having a code red moment. Which of its enemies is likely to strike first?

2. China Task Force Report

3. This Overlooked Variable Is the Key to the Pandemic

4. East Asia allies likely to bide time as U.S. election looms over Pompeo trip

5. Twitter banished the worst QAnon accounts. But more than 93,000 remain on the site, research shows

6. Remember Trump’s trade deal with China? So far they are buying half what was promised

7. Lawmakers introduce bill targeting foreign disinformation on social media

8. Japan to push for one-year cost-sharing deal on U.S. troops in country

9.  Geopolitical forces pushing Russia, China closer together

10. Saving Uighur Culture From Genocide

11. Veterans Feel Betrayed as U.S. Immigration System Fails Imperiled Iraqi Allies

12. Six whistleblowers allege misconduct by government media boss

13. Philippine troops rescue man seized by suspected militants

14. Opinion | Americans Increasingly Believe Violence is Justified if the Other Side Wins

15. A Theory About Conspiracy Theories

16. Harrowing tale of Green Beret’s Vietnam valor drives push for Medal of Honor

 

1. America is having a code red moment. Which of its enemies is likely to strike first?

The Guardian · by Simon Tisdall · October 4, 2020

I know this is heresy and likely an unpopular statement but given the national security implications perhaps there should be a transfer of power to ensure the stability and continuity of our government.  Confusion and uncertainty about US governance surely can give the wrong idea to our adversaries.  Can we put national security and the safety of the nation above politics (or more specifically election politics)?

 

2. China Task Force Report

You have to read the 141 page report on Scribd at this link: https://www.scribd.com/document/478104010/China-Task-Force-Report?

 

3. This Overlooked Variable Is the Key to the Pandemic

The Atlantic · by Zeynep Tufekci · September 30, 2020

For those who follow the science.  Those who believe COVID is a hoax or just a flu will want to avoid this. This is a difficult read for a layman like me but it provides some very interesting information about the spread.

 

4. East Asia allies likely to bide time as U.S. election looms over Pompeo trip

Reuters · by Humeyra Pamuk, David Brunnstrom · October 3, 2020

As noted, SECSTATE will not travel to South Korea and Mongolia and oly to Japan for the Quad meeting.

 

5. Twitter banished the worst QAnon accounts. But more than 93,000 remain on the site, research shows

The Washington Post – by Craig Timberg - October 3, 2020

I fear QAnon has reached a pandemic level.

 

6. Remember Trump’s trade deal with China? So far they are buying half what was promised

https://fortune.com/2020/10/03/trump-china-trade-deal-war-results-so-far/ - by Shawn Tully – 3 October 2020

 

7. Lawmakers introduce bill targeting foreign disinformation on social media

The Hill · by Maggie Miller · October 1, 2020

Excerpts:

Spanberger, a former CIA officer, said Thursday that “our nation is always under siege from foreign adversaries who seek to sow division and spread false information. However, social media networks remain especially vulnerable to foreign campaigns.”

“Disclaimers on social media posts are often non-existent, particularly when content is shared or linked,” Spanberger said in a statement. “This means that social media can serve as an ideal rumor mill for disinformation, as nefarious actors are able to leverage the rapid transfer of information from person to person.”

 

8. Japan to push for one-year cost-sharing deal on U.S. troops in country

japantimes.co.jp · October 3, 2020

Deja vu all over again?  Is Japan going to play hard ball like South Korea?

 

9. Geopolitical forces pushing Russia, China closer together

asiatimes.com · by MK Bhadrakumar · October 4, 2020

Looking at it from Russia and China's view point: "The answer is that what brings Russia and China closer together is the challenge posed by the alliance systems that the US is assembling on their borders to “contain” them."

So the problem is us, the US, and our alliance structure.

 

10. Saving Uighur Culture From Genocide

The Atlantic · by Yasmeen Serhan · October 4, 2020

Such a tragedy.

 

11. Veterans Feel Betrayed as U.S. Immigration System Fails Imperiled Iraqi Allies

Rolling Stone · by Shoshana Akabas · October 4, 2020

I am not a regular reader of Rolling Stone but this article caught my eye since it is such an emotional issue as well as a national security one.

 

12. Six whistleblowers allege misconduct by government media boss

Politico – 30 September 2020

More terrible news from the US Agency for Global Media.

 

13. Philippine troops rescue man seized by suspected militants

Stars and Stripes – 1 October 2020

The son of an American.

 

14.  Opinion | Americans Increasingly Believe Violence is Justified if the Other Side Wins

Politico – by LARRY DIAMOND, LEE DRUTMAN, TOD LINDBERG, NATHAN P. KALMOE and LILLIANA MASON – 1 October 2020

I would like to know from those who espouse violence on the right and left how what is your strategy?  How do you intend to use violence to "save" our country?  Explain to me your campaign plan, your objectives?

But most importantly I have two questions:  Do you still believe in our Constitution and that we must support and defend the Constitution against all enemies, foreign, and yes, domestic.  Second, what have you done to ensure the Constitution works?  And I guess a third question, have you exhausted all the political means to ensure protection of the Constitution?

Do our partisan differences have to result in violence and what good will that violence do to protect our Constitution?  It seems to me the extremists on both sides have extreme political views of the other side: The extreme left believes the right wants to institute a fascist government while the extreme right believes the other side wants to destroy our government and institute a socialist/communist system.  What is paradoxical is that if either side had their way (the way the other side believes) it would lead to totalitarian dictatorships taking away our individual liberty and freedom which of course is fundamentally what our Constitution is designed to prevent.  

In my mind the majority of Democrats and Republicans both want our federal democratic republic to continue to flourish. Yes, they have different worldviews and political ideas, but the majority believe in our Constitutional form of government.   Yet it is the extreme right and extreme left that dominate the narratives, and this is what appears to be the catalyst for talk of the use of violence.

But again, I ask, how do you intend to use violence to protect our country.  Most simply how does the use of violence ensure the rule of law which is of paramount importance to American democracy?

 

15. A Theory About Conspiracy Theories

The New York Times · by Benedict Carey · September 28, 2020

Yep, those who believe in these outlandish conspiracy theories must have personality disorders.

 

16. Harrowing tale of Green Beret’s Vietnam valor drives push for Medal of Honor

armytimes.com · by Todd South · October 2, 2020

Another story that makes us ask where do we find such incredible Americans and soldiers?  I hope we can make this right.

 

"No one knows better than I the bitter denials of life.

But I have made my limitations tools of learning and true joy.”

- Helen Keller

 

"Another flaw in the human character is that

everybody wants to build and nobody wants to do maintenance.”

-  Kurt Vonnegut

 

"If we had no winter,

the spring would not be so pleasant:

if we did not sometimes taste of adversity,

prosperity would not be so welcome.”

- Anne Bradstreet

10/03/2020 News & Commentary - Korea

Sat, 10/03/2020 - 11:58am

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

 

1. FDD | UN Report Highlights How North Korea's Embassies Help Pyongyang Flout Sanctions

2. Three Things the U.S. Government Can Do Now to Ruin Kim Jong-un Financially

3. What Should Be on the Agenda for US-Korea Relations?

4. A practical approach to North Korea for the next US president

5. Post-election U.S. likely to see changes in N. Korea policy: experts

6. 3 mysteries cloud South Korean's shooting death by North Korea

7. North Korea's Short-Range Ballistic Missiles: They Can't "Evade Detection" and Are Still Vulnerable to Interception

8. Top DPRK leader wishes U.S. president recovery from COVID-19

9. [VOA: Washington Talk/English] The murder of the Korean people...

10. New Eighth Army commander seeks 'rigorous, realistic' training for US, South Korea troops

11. Pompeo's visit to Seoul to focus on regional cooperation: Stilwell

12. 'She has not been demoted': Kim Jong-un's sister Kim Yo Jong makes first appearance since July

13. South Korea Doesn't Need U.S. Military Babysitting

14. Unusual Submarine Likely To Increase Threat From North Korea

15. Nobody ever said Kim Il-sung could teleport | East Asia Forum

 

1. FDD | UN Report Highlights How North Korea's Embassies Help Pyongyang Flout Sanctions

fdd.org · by Mathew Ha · October 1, 2020

Important analysis from my colleague Mathew Ha.

 

2. Three Things the U.S. Government Can Do Now to Ruin Kim Jong-un Financially

https://www.nkhiddengulag.org/blog/three-things-the-us-government-can-do-now-to-ruin-kim-jong-un-financially – by Jeune Kim – 1 October 2020

More excellent work from the HRNK team.

Excerpts:

The three following recommendations specify what the U.S. government can do now to ruin Kim Jong-un financially:

1. Federal Recognition and Regulation of Cryptocurrency

2. Raise the Legal Stakes for North Korea's Enablers

3. Penalize Chinese Banks and Financial Institutions for Violating or Failing to Enforce International Sanctions

My thoughts from four years ago for a strategic strangulation campaign: https://www.fpri.org/article/2016/03/a-strategic-strangulation-campaign-for-north-korea-is-the-international-community-ready-for-what-may-come-next/

 

3. What Should Be on the Agenda for US-Korea Relations?

thediplomat.com · by Troy Stangarone · October 2, 2020

Some interesting findings and data about US attitudes toward Korea.

 

4. A practical approach to North Korea for the next US president

https://thebulletin.org/2020/10/a-practical-approach-to-north-korea-for-the-next-us-president/ - by Joseph Yun and Frank Aum – 2 October 2020

I expect both Joe and Frank will have prominent positions in a Biden administration.

Key excerpts:

What might work? A significant impediment for the United States is that it continues to narrowly limit its policy options while North Korean capabilities expand unabated. Washington's window of discourse on North Korea policy largely consists of: Pressure the Kim regime through sanctions; don't legitimize or reward it until preconditions are met; and don't make any concessions until the North takes significant denuclearization measures first. To achieve any sustained results, these policy boundaries must be substantially widened to include more realistic and practical measures. We, along with our colleagues at the United States Institute of Peace, explored many of these issues in a recent report, "A Peace Regime for the Korean Peninsula."

Prioritize peace in parallel with denuclearization. 

Ensure reciprocity and proportionality.

Emphasize realistic, short-term security payoffs while playing the long game on denuclearization. 

Enhance buy-in from regional partners.

 

5. Post-election U.S. likely to see changes in N. Korea policy: experts

en.yna.co.kr · by 변덕근 · October 2, 2020

This is probably likely: "They also noted the North Korean issue would likely be put aside in the early stages of the new administration, which they said will be too caught up in dealing with its own domestic issues such as the COVID-19 pandemic."  Ironically you could make a similar statement about north Korea though I think we still might see a "welcome or congratulatory gift from the Kim family regime to the election victor whether it is Trump or Biden.

 

6. 3 mysteries cloud South Korean's shooting death by North Korea

asia.nikkei.com – by Sotaro Suzuki – 2 October 2020

I really wish the ROK government would not continue the narrative of defection or put the blame for the murder of a Korean civil servant on the shoulders of the victim.

Key questions:  Despite a rare apology from North Korean leader Kim Jong Un that averted a further deterioration of bilateral relations, the family and others seek answers to three questions: Was the official really defecting to North Korea? Why was no rescue attempt made? And why did it take President Moon Jae-in days to address the slaying publicly?

In defense of the ROK Navy - the timing and capabilities are key - when did they know about a man overboard?  Did they have ships in the area that could respond? If their knowledge of the incident came from SIGINT with no knowledge of the man overboard it logically and naturally took time to analyze those intercepts and hindered any possible response.  And lastly searching for a man overboard is inherently difficult and unfortunately too often we lose men at sea when they do go overboard.

 

7. North Korea's Short-Range Ballistic Missiles: They Can't "Evade Detection" and Are Still Vulnerable to Interception

38north.org · by Michael Elleman · October 2, 2020

 

8. Top DPRK leader wishes U.S. president recovery from COVID-19

Xinhua | English.news.cn

xinhuanet.com

A savvy move by Kim.

 

9. [VOA: Washington Talk/English] The murder of the Korean people...

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YEbb0vrB2JE

At the link is the 20 minute video of this week's edition of the Voice of America's Washington Talk.  The primary target audience of this VOA broadcast is the elite in Pyongyang.

Jean Lee (the former AP Bureau Chief in Pyongyang) and I speak with VOA broadcaster and host Kim Young Gyo about the recent murder of the South Korean civil servant at the hands of the north Korea military.

It is broadcast in English with Korean subtitles.

 

10. New Eighth Army commander seeks 'rigorous, realistic' training for US, South Korea troops

Stars and Stripes – by Kim Gamel – 2 October 2020

 

11. Pompeo's visit to Seoul to focus on regional cooperation: Stilwell

en.yna.co.kr · by 변덕근 · October 3, 2020

Regional cooperation is important but the alliances first and always.

 

12. 'She has not been demoted': Kim Jong-un's sister Kim Yo Jong makes first appearance since July

nationalpost.com – by John Herskovitz – 2 October 2020

How many times are we going to keep getting excited about such "disappearances?"

 

13. South Korea Doesn't Need U.S. Military Babysitting

Foreign Policy · by Doug Bandow · October 2, 2020

Sigh... such an insult to the alliance and the ROK and US militaries. I know Mr. Bandow is a former defense official but I do not think he understands the military alliance and the relationship between our two militaries.  We are not babysitting the South.  That is simply insulting.

Yes, Seoul is rich and it should be able to deter Pyongyang by itself.  The problem with that is deterrence is in the eye of the target of deterrence. My concern, which comes from knowledge from escapees (defectors) that what deters Kim the most is the presence of US forces.  The regime knows the north cannot win a war if the South has the support of the US.

And most importantly it is in US interests to deter war on the Korean peninsula. 

Yes, circumstances change and the alliance must evolve.  That is why we are pursuing OPCON transition which will result in a change of command with a ROK general officer assuming command of the ROK/US Combined Forces Command, the command charged by both nations with deterrence and defense of the ROK.

 

14. Unusual Submarine Likely To Increase Threat From North Korea

https://www.navalnews.com/naval-news/2020/10/unusual-submarine-likely-to-increase-threat-from-north-korea/ - by HI Sutton – 2 October 2020

Interesting.  I would like to hear from naval and intelligence experts.

 

15. Nobody ever said Kim Il-sung could teleport | East Asia Forum

eastasiaforum.org · by Martin Weiser · October 3, 2020

An interesting critique of how we interpret north Korean news and information.

 

"The battlefield is a scene of constant chaos. The winner will be the one who controls that chaos, both his own and the enemies."

- Napoleon

 

"The soldier who fights to death never dies, but the soldier who fights for existence never truly exists."

-Admiral Yi Sun-shin

 

"Education should implant a will and a facility for learning; it should produce not learned but learning people. In times of change, learners inherit the earth, while the learned find themselves equipped to deal with a world that no longer exists."

- Eric Hoffer

10/03/2020 News & Commentary - National Security

Sat, 10/03/2020 - 11:41am

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

 

1. Public Service Announcement - We're in This Together. Disinformation Stops with You.

2. Former USSOCOM Commander and Former Top Air Force Intelligence Officer Join Primer's Advisory Board

3. Can AI Detect Disinformation? A New Special Operations Program May Find Out

4. Why the Pentagon needs to fully embrace influence operations

5. Irregular Warfare Annex to National Defense Strategy Made Public

6. US Army To Dissolve Rapid Equipping Force, Asymmetric Warfare Group

7. Irregular warfare strategies must move beyond special forces, Pentagon says

8. What leaders can do now to strengthen US special operations forces

9. Policy Chief Outlines Changes to U.S. Defense Postures in Germany, European Theater

10. FDD | Ransomware Rising: Steps for The Public and Private Sector to Address the Growing Threat

11. Trump team on watch for adversaries to exploit the president's illness

12. US military pilots must not use PH aircraft codes: Esperon

13. 'Got to fix that': Some unit ops tempos higher than peaks of Afghan, Iraq wars, Army chief says

14.  Chinese general says Korean War shows how to defeat America

15. China should effectively enhance ability to fight, win wars (and lessons from the Korean War)

16. MDA and Army see successful Patriot and THAAD test after failure

17. Wolf Warriors Blow Hot Before Cooling Down (China)

18. The Covid Information War Is Entering a Frightening New Phase

19. Public Diplomacy and the New "Old" War: Countering State-Sponsored Disinformation (2020)

20. America is a maritime nation, and we need to start acting like it

21. India to lose more than it gains from the Quad

 

1. Public Service Announcement - We're in This Together. Disinformation Stops with You.

A two-page PDF from the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency on countering disinformation.  It can be downloaded here: https://www.cisa.gov/sites/default/files/publications/election-disinformation-toolkit_508.pdf

My reminder from our 2017 National Security Strategy:

"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."

 

2. Former USSOCOM Commander and Former Top Air Force Intelligence Officer Join Primer's Advisory Board

PR Newswire · by Primer AI · October 1, 2020

 

3. Can AI Detect Disinformation? A New Special Operations Program May Find Out

defenseone.com · by Patrick Tucker

I hope this works and helps.  But the best detection "tool" is still the human mind and critical thinking. And the best defense comes from within the human mind.  But I am all for trying to enlist technology to help.  But when we think we have the silver bullet of a technological solution we had beet watch out because our adversaries will surely figure out how to turn that silver bullet to their advantage. 

And I think I have heard this before:

"It's no stretch to say it was easier to drop a Hellfire on someone or do something kinetic than it was to do something offensively in the information domain. It's antithetical to us. ... but if your adversaries are playing in that space, you have to respond," he said.

 

4. Why the Pentagon needs to fully embrace influence operations

Defense News · by Mark Pomerleau · October 2, 2020

Good to read this statement.  Influence operations are critical. And they play a key role in political warfare which must be a national effort.  We need an American Way of Political Warfare as we recommended here two years ago: https://www.rand.org/content/dam/rand/pubs/perspectives/PE300/PE304/RAND_PE304.pdf

We have to understand that our adversaries have a different view of warfare than we do.  But we can adapt and fight in the same domain.  My thoughts:

  • What is the major difference in the views of conflict, strategy, and campaigning between Russia, China, Iran, nK, AQ, and ISIS and the US?
  • The psychological takes precedence and may or may not be supported with the kinetic.
    • Politics is war by other means
  • For the US kinetic is first and the psychological is second.
    • War is politics by other means.
  • Napoleon: In war, the moral is to the physical as three is to one.
  • In the 21st Century the psychological is to the kinetic as ten is to one.
  • The US has to learn to put the psychological first
  • Can a federal democratic republic "do strategy" this way?
  • Or is it only autocratic, totalitarian dictatorships that can "do strategy" this way?

Problem
We face threats from political warfare strategies supported by hybrid military approaches.
Solution:
Learn to lead with influence
Learn to counter and conduct political warfare campaigns
Cultural and/or organizational change

 

Keep this in mind about Russia's New Generation of Non-Linear Warfare:

"Thus, the Russian view of modern warfare is based on the idea that the main battlespace is the mind and, as a result, new-generation wars are to be dominated by information and psychological warfare, in order to achieve superiority in troops and weapons control, morally and psychologically depressing the enemy's armed forces personnel and civil population. The main objective is to reduce the necessity for deploying hard military power to the minimum necessary, making the opponent's military and civil population support the attacker to the detriment of their own government and country. It is interesting to note the notion of permanent war, since it denotes a permanent enemy. In the current geopolitical structure, the clear enemy is Western civilization, its values, culture, political system, and ideology."

http://www.naa.mil.lv/~/media/NAA/AZPC/Publikacijas/PP%2002-2014.ashx

 

5. Irregular Warfare Annex to National Defense Strategy Made Public

defense.gov · by David Vergun

Here is the link to the Unclassified 12 page summary of the  Irregular Warfare Annex. https://media.defense.gov/2020/Oct/02/2002510472/-1/-1/0/Irregular-Warfare-Annex-to-the-National-Defense-Strategy-Summary.PDF

 

I find the timing very coincidental that the army announced today that it is disbanding the Asymmetric Warfare  Group (AWG): https://www.armytimes.com/news/your-army/2020/10/02/the-army-is-shutting-down-its-much-lauded-asymmetric-warfare-group/

 

The IW annex makes clear many important points:

Irregular warfare is an enduring, economical contribution to America's national security, and will remain an essential core competency of the U.S. Department of Defense.

We must not - and will not - repeat the "boom and bust" cycle that has left the United States underprepared for irregular warfare in both Great Power Competition and conflict. Americans expect their military to do more than react to crises, they expect us to compete and maintain our advantages.

IW is a persistent and enduring operational reality employed by non-state actors and increasingly by state actors in competition with the United States. Past U.S. approaches to IW have been cyclical and neglected the fact that IW - in addition to nuclear and conventional deterrence - can proactively shape conditions to the United States' advantage in great power competition. This reactive cycle fails to prepare the United States to conduct traditional warfare or irregular warfare effectively. All of these conditions are reversible.

 

6. US Army To Dissolve Rapid Equipping Force, Asymmetric Warfare Group

defenseone.com · by Patrick Tucker

Quite a coincidence with the new IW annex coming out today.  

 

7. Irregular warfare strategies must move beyond special forces, Pentagon says

Defense News · by Aaron Mehta · October 2, 2020

The key word is strategy.  If we develop sound strategy and effective campaign plans we will use the right forces for the right missions.  You must campaign in the irregular warfare space.

Here are my eight points of irregular/special warfare.

Eight Points of Irregular Warfare:

https://maxoki161.blogspot.com/2018/07/eight-points-of-special-warfare.html

Special Warfare is the execution of activities that involve a combination of lethal and nonlethal actions taken by a specially trained and educated force that has a deep understanding of cultures and foreign language, proficiency in small-unit tactics, and the ability to build and fight alongside indigenous combat formations in a permissive, uncertain, or hostile environment.

-If there is an indigenous solution or an indigenous contribution to the solution for a complex political military problem conduct special warfare - the essence of which is "through, with, and by" as developed by Mark Boyatt

1.  Instead of an end state must determine the acceptable, durable, political arrangement that can achieved. (per LTG James Dubik) Without this clearly articulated and understood there is no way to achieve unity of effort or to judge mission success. I think Congress must demand this from the Administration.

 2. Eliot Cohen & John Gooch: Military Misfortune:  All military failures are a result of a failure learn, failure to adapt, and failure to anticipate. We must learn to anticipate and that is done through thorough and ongoing assessments and heeding the expert practitioners on the ground. Look at Mali and Yemen.  Did we anticipate the Turegs and the Houthis?  I would submit that SOF on the ground reported on the growing threats to Mali and Yemen yet our myopic focus on CT blinded us at the strategic level.

3. Larry Cable (the discredited COIN theorist who wrote Conflict of Myths) The three P's: Presence, Patience, Persistence.  You have to be present to make a difference.  You have to be patient because it takes a long time to influence indigenous forces and develop indigenous capabilities. You must have cultural respect without going native and you must have an aptitude and desire for living and working in a foreign culture.  It takes persistence because mistakes will be made, every operation will include discovery learning and we will have to learn and adapt.

 4. Assessment - must conduct continuous assessment to gain understanding - tactical, operational, and strategic.  Assessments are key to developing strategy and campaign plans and anticipating potential conflict.  Assessments allow you to challenge assumptions and determine if a rebalance of, ways and means with the acceptable, durable, political arrangement is requiredUnderstand the indigenous way of war and adapt to it.   Do not force the US way of war upon indigenous forces if is counter to their history, customs, traditions, and abilities.

5.  Assure US and indigenous interests are sufficiently aligned.  If indigenous and US interests are not sufficiently aligned the mission will fail.  If the US has stronger interest than the indigenous force we can create an "assistance paradox" - if indigenous forces believe the US mission is "no fail" and the US forces will not allow them to fail and therefore they do not need to try too hard.  They may very well benefit from long term US aid and support which may be their objective for accepting support in the first place.

 6. Employ the right forces for the right mission. US SOF, conventional, civilian agency, indigenous forces.  Always based on assessment and thorough understanding of the problem and available resources and capabilities.  Cannot over rely on one force to do everything.  

7.  Learn how to operate without being in charge.  If we usurp the mission indigenous forces will never be successful on their own.  You cannot pay lip service to advising and assisting.  This is why operations in Colombia and the Philippines achieve some level of success. This is not "leading from behind."  This is the appropriate understanding of the relationship between USSF/SOF and indigenous forces in a sovereign nation or indigenous forces seeking self-determination of government.

 8. Campaigning  - We have to develop the campaign plan based on Design thinking to determine the resources and authorities - and then execute the campaign - we have to get good at campaigning and it has to be more than a military campaign. (USSOCOM Design: Appreciate the context, understand the problem, and develop an approach). While disrupting terrorist attacks and attacking terrorist networks and their finances and auxiliaries are important they are not a strategy. They can be part of a strategy and campaign but they are not sufficient.  We have to campaign beyond counter-terrorism with a campaign focused on attacking the enemy's strategy.  This requires deep understanding to include especially understanding the enemy's political objectives.  Once we understand the enemy, ways and means can be employed to counter the enemy's strategy and his political objectives. Campaigning is important because it will orchestrate all the activities to achieve the strategic objectives or the acceptable, durable political arrangement we seek.   Campaigns identify the resources necessary (forces, bases, funding).  Campaigns identify the authorities necessary.  Although many in the military and government desire blanket authorities that is not the right way to operate.  However, establishing programs and funding lines such as 1206, 1207, 1208, and 1209 and now 127E are not effective either.  Authorities need to be specifically applied to each campaign. And with an approved campaign plan Congress can more effectively provide oversight rather than managing funding programs.  Campaigns must also account for transitions (and demobilization in UW) when working with indigenous forces because we cannot advise and assist and provide support indefinitely. Focusing on effective campaigning can discipline the application of the military instrument of power.  Of course, it would useful for other elements of national power to be able to "campaign" as well.  We perhaps need to take another look at the 1997 PDD 56 which was for the management of complex contingency operations in the interagency - a disciplined process to orchestrate US government agencies and harmonize the instruments of power.

 

8. What leaders can do now to strengthen US special operations forces

taskandpurpose.com · by Lt. Col. Stewart Parker and Emma Moore

Key points from the authors:

Clearly articulate and enforce SOF team priorities

Nurture health and resilience

Ruthlessly manage operations tempo

What leaders can do now to strengthen US special operations forces

 

9. Policy Chief Outlines Changes to U.S. Defense Postures in Germany, European Theater

defense.gov · by Terri Moon Cronk

Excerpt: "The realignment concept includes consolidating headquarters to strengthen operational agility, repositioning some forces in the United States to focus on readiness, and to prepare for rotational deployments and deploying rotational forces to the Black Sea region, NATO's southeastern flank, to improve deterrence," Anderson said.

 

10. FDD | Ransomware Rising: Steps for The Public and Private Sector to Address the Growing Threat

fdd.org · by RADM (Ret) Mark Montgomery CCTI Senior Director and Senior Fellow Trevor Logan Cyber Research Analyst· October 2, 2020

Conclusion: These seven steps are all key both to building more resilient networks that are less susceptible to ransomware attacks, and to establishing greater government capacity for cyber collaboration to prevent or mitigate attacks when they do occur. The use of ransomware is on the rise; cybercrime writ large is on the rise; and both will continue to grow until companies and municipalities take appropriate steps to secure their, and our, data from exposure and theft.

 

11. Trump team on watch for adversaries to exploit the president's illness

Politico – 2 October 2020

We must be vigilant. I had a good conversation with my good friend and mentor, Bob Collins who is one of our nation's experts on north Korean leadership decision making.  He is rightly concerned with north Korean miscalculation in the coming weeks.  My counter was the regime is focused on its multiple internal crises.  But Bob points out Kim may see an opportunity for coercing South Korea for concessions with a provocation while they assess the US is distracted and will not respond.  Of course the regime's first action was to send well-wishes to President Trump.  Perhaps they are setting the groundwork for something.  Kim may be trying to inoculate himself from a US reaction to a provocation against South Korea because he is giving the appearance of trying to sustain his relationship with the President. 

 

12. US military pilots must not use PH aircraft codes: Esperon

canadianinquirer.net · October 1, 2020

What the h.....?  I am very skeptical of this allegation.

 

13. 'Got to fix that': Some unit ops tempos higher than peaks of Afghan, Iraq wars, Army chief says

armytimes.com · by Kyle Rempfer · October 2, 2020

Everyone thinks SOF, the infantry, and the Navy have high OPTEMPOS but check out our air and missile defenders.

 

14. Chinese general says Korean War shows how to defeat America

Washington Examiner · by Tom Rogan · October 2, 2020

The referenced article is at this link but I will include it separately as well. https://www.globaltimes.cn/content/1202566.shtml

 

15. China should effectively enhance ability to fight, win wars (and lessons from the Korean War)

globaltimes.cn

There is a lot to parse from this.  It is a very interesting read from a Chinese Lieutenant General.  We should pay close attention to what senior leaders are writing.  There is obviously a message for us, perhaps as simple as China will stand up to the US and beware of the strength of the PRC.

 

16. MDA and Army see successful Patriot and THAAD test after failure

Defense News · by Jen Judson · October 1, 2020

These are obviously critical systems and capabilities for the INDOPACIFIC and around the world.

 

17. Wolf Warriors Blow Hot Before Cooling Down (China)

globalasia.org

Excerpt: "This essay covers the controversial and significant period of "wolf-warrior" diplomacy in China in 2020 - rising in March, resisted in April and receding in May."  Has it receded?  

 

18. The Covid Information War Is Entering a Frightening New Phase

Wired · by Gilad Edelman

We need to understand this (or the White House needs to): Communication from the White House about Donald Trump's infection will be opaque at best. Into that vacuum, misinformation will flow.

 

19. Public Diplomacy and the New "Old" War: Countering State-Sponsored Disinformation (2020)

This is an important report.  The 62 page PDF can be downloaded here: https://www.state.gov/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/Public-Diplomacy-and-the-New-Old-War-Countering-State-Sponsored-Disinformation.pdf

My one critique is the graphics of the report. The theme throughout is 1's and 0's.  To me that emphasizes too strongly the cyber and technical aspect;.  But in this the human remains central and most important. Cyber is neither the blame or the solution.  It is just a medium and tool.

But I think the recommendations from the report are very useful and important with, I think, number three the most important and our biggest weakness:

1 DEFINE. Define the CSD challenge with a Department-wide lexicon of disinformation.

2 INVEST. Invest more in digital capabilities, but not at the expense of long-term person-to person initiatives. 

3 COMPETE. Compete in the information space by restructuring overseas PD sections with teams dedicated to modern digital communications.

4 SPECIALIZE. Create a job series for mid-career CSD specialists.

5 EXPERIMENT. Develop mechanisms to rapidly redirect funding to seed programs and allow them to scale or fail-fast.

6 EVALUATE. Evaluate, monitor, and assess the impact of CSD programs.

 

20. America is a maritime nation, and we need to start acting like it

Defense News · by Rep. Rob Wittman · September 30, 2020

Even as a former soldier, I concur with the Congressman.  We are a maritime nation and our Navy and our Coast Guard are critically important.

 

21. India to lose more than it gains from the Quad

asiatimes.com · by More by Bhim Bhurtel · October 2, 2020

This is a very negative critique of the "QUAD" concept.

 

"The battlefield is a scene of constant chaos. The winner will be the one who controls that chaos, both his own and the enemies."

- Napoleon

 

"The soldier who fights to death never dies, but the soldier who fights for existence never truly exists."

-Admiral Yi Sun-shin

 

"Education should implant a will and a facility for learning; it should produce not learned but learning people. In times of change, learners inherit the earth, while the learned find themselves equipped to deal with a world that no longer exists."

- Eric Hoffer

10/2/2020 News & Commentary - National Security

Fri, 10/02/2020 - 9:57am

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

1. Russia’s Fancy Bear hackers likely penetrated a US federal agency

2. Mike Pompeo should visit Taiwan

3. Marine Corps activates first new base in nearly 70 years

4. No matter who wins in November, budget cuts and domestic politics will crimp America’s China strategy

5. Facebook, Twitter flounder in QAnon crackdown

6. ‘We’re not taking a knee’: training under pandemic conditions could better prepare soldiers for the big fight

7. The Asia inheritance: Trump and US alliances

8. Kremlin orders 2-week virus quarantine for all Putin visitors – Reports

9. Trump tweets that he will overturn recent changes to the Navy SEAL ethos

10. Two more reasons to worry about China

11. Why downplaying China's election interference could backfire

12. What if Sherman Kent was wrong? Revisiting the intelligence debate of 1949

13. Pentagon urges caution in linking steep increase in Army suicides to pandemic

14. A solarium for presidential transition teams

15. 50 U.S. senators call for talks on trade agreement with Taiwan

16. How Russia targets U.S. elections

17. The United States has repatriated 27 Americans from Syria and Iraq including ten charged with terrorism-related offenses for their support to ISIS

18. British Army to become force of ‘boots and bots’: CGS

19. Why Trump’s retreat from US allies could have nuclear consequences

20. The truth about today’s anarchists

 

1. Russia’s Fancy Bear hackers likely penetrated a US federal agency

Wired · Andy Greenberg · October 1, 2020

I wonder what agency.

 

2. Mike Pompeo Should Visit Taiwan

National Interest · Michael Rubin · October 1, 2020

This would really raise tensions to a boiling point.

But I am not really clear what critical strategic effect we would be trying to achieve with such a visit.

 

3. Marine Corps activates first new base in nearly 70 years

Marine Corps Times · Philip Athey · October 1, 2020

Will we shift more forces from Okinawa to Guam?

 

4. No matter who wins in November, budget cuts and domestic politics will crimp America’s China strategy

Diplomat · Jacob Parakilas · September 30, 2020

And I think the effects of COVID-19 are going to be felt for years to come.

 

5. Facebook, Twitter flounder in QAnon crackdown

AP News · Amanda Seitz & Barbara Ortutay · October 1, 2020

This QAon conspiracy is just crazy. But it still amazes me how any sane or normal person could fall for it.

 

6. ‘We’re not taking a knee’: training under pandemic conditions could better prepare soldiers for the big fight

Stars & Stripes · Corey Dickstein · October 1, 2020

The military must "fight through" this pandemic. If we fail to do so, we not only damage readiness, we also telegraph our weakness to our adversaries, and they will surely try to develop biological weapons that will cause our military to halt operations.

 

7. The Asia inheritance: Trump and US Alliances

Diplomat · Abraham M. Denmark & Shihoko Goto · October 1, 2020

Some apparent good news. We need our alliance structure. Without it we are vulnerable, and we will be unable to protect our national interests.

 

8. Kremlin orders 2-week virus quarantine for all Putin visitors – Reports

Moscow Times · September 30, 2020

Very interesting timing of this order (this report is from Wednesday). Did the Kremlin know something before we did?

 

9. Trump tweets that he will overturn recent changes to the Navy SEAL ethos

Navy Times · Geoff Ziezulewicz · October 1, 2020

We just do not need this.

 

10. Two more reasons to worry about China

FDD · Thomas Joscelyn · October 1, 2020

Don't we have enough already? 

 

11. Why Downplaying China's Election Interference Could Backfire

FDD · by Craig Singleton · October 1, 2020

 

12. What if Sherman Kent was wrong? Revisiting the intelligence debate of 1949

War On the Rocks · Zachery Tyson Brown · October 1, 2020

 

13. Pentagon urges caution in linking steep increase in Army suicides to pandemic

ABC News · Luis Martinez · October 1, 2020

 

14. A solarium for presidential transition teams

War On the Rocks · Benjamin Jensen · October 1, 2020

A useful tutorial on the transition process.

 

15. 50 U.S. senators call for talks on trade agreement with Taiwan

Reuters · Patricia Zengerle & David Gregorio · October 1, 2020

 

16. How Russia targets U.S. elections

RAND · Marek N. Posard et al.

 

17. The United States has repatriated 27 Americans from Syria and Iraq including ten charged with terrorism-related offenses for their support to ISIS

US Department of Justice · October 1, 2020

 

18. British Army to become force of ‘boots and bots’: CGS

Army Technology · Harry Lye · September 30, 2020

 

19. Why Trump’s retreat from US allies could have nuclear consequences

Defense One · Eric Brewer · October 1, 2020

A cautionary note.

 

20. The truth about today’s anarchists

New York Times · Farah Stockman · September 30, 2020

 

"The nation that will insist on drawing a broad line of demarcation between the fighting man and the thinking man is liable to find its fighting done by fools and its thinking done by cowards."

- Sir William Francis Butler

"The history that lies inert in unread books does no work in the world. If you want a new idea, read an old book. `Tis the good reader that makes the good book. A book is like a mirror. If an ass looks in, no prophet can peer out."

- The "maxims” quoted from Clark Becker, Lord Lytton, Ralph Waldo Emerson, and Georg Lichtenberg quoted in Jay Luuvas' Military History: Is It Still Practicable?

“The world has achieved brilliance without conscience. Ours is a world of nuclear giants and ethical infants.”

- General of the Army, Omar Bradley, rendered on Veterans Day 1948 (then called Armistice Day)

10/2/2020 News & Commentary - Korea

Fri, 10/02/2020 - 8:58am

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

1. N.K. leader inspects flood recovery efforts together with sister

2. Kim Jong Un’s sister reported in public for 1st time since July

3. What an 'October surprise' from North Korea might actually look like

4. North Korea imports of refined fuel plummet amid COVID-19

5. Mini nuclear reactors with key South Korean parts cleared by US

6. Alleged North Korean sanctions violations in DRC draw scrutiny

7. Exclusive: New poll shows few Americans approve of Trump’s handling of North Korea

8. N. Korea-China trade plummets 70 pct during Jan-Aug on-year amid pandemic

9. How Donald Trump is building a new alliance to counter China and North Korea

10. Trump blocks assistance to N. Korea over human trafficking

11. Post-election U.S. likely to see changes in N. Korea policy: experts

12. Russia is responsible for most nation-state cyberattacks, followed by Iran, North Korea, and China, according to a new Microsoft report

13. Pyongyang must pay

 

1. N.K. leader inspects flood recovery efforts together with sister

Yonhap News Agency · Yi Wonju · October 02, 2020

As an aside some Korea watchers on twitter are commenting on the size of Kim's trousers - #KimJongUnTrouserWatch.

 

2. Kim Jong Un’s sister reported in public for 1st time since July

Bloomberg · Jon Herskovitz · October 1, 2020

She's back!

 

3. What an ‘October surprise’ from North Korea might actually look like

Atlantic Council · Markus Garlauskas · October 1, 2020

I am hoping all the discussion about an October surprise has reduced the element of surprise, which will not allow Kim to achieve an October surprise! Certainly, if we see some new weapons on October 10th, it should not be a surprise. I am just wondering how they intend to have the submarine march in the parade so they can show us an SLBM (apologies for the poor attempt at humor).

 

4. North Korea imports of refined fuel plummet amid COVID-19

UPI · Elizabeth Shim · October 1, 2020

 

5. Mini nuclear reactors with key South Korean parts cleared by US

Nikkei Asia · Kotaro Hosokawa, Azusa Kawakami, & Shuhei Ochiai · September 29, 2020

 

6. Alleged North Korean sanctions violations in DRC draw scrutiny

VOA · Salem Solomon · October 1, 2020

Follow the money.

 

7. Exclusive: New poll shows few Americans approve of Trump’s handling of North Korea

VOX · Alex Ward · October 1, 2020

It is unlikely this will have any impact on the election. North Korea and Kim Jong-un are just not significant election issues and will not change any votes.

 

8. N. Korea-China trade plummets 70 pct during Jan-Aug on-year amid pandemic

Yonhap News Agency · [email protected] · October 2, 2020

 

9. How Donald Trump is building a new alliance to counter China and North Korea

National Interest · William Jeynes · October 1, 2020

A troubling conclusion.

 

10. Trump blocks assistance to N. Korea over human trafficking

Yonhap News Agency · Byun Duk-Kun · October 2, 2020

 

11. Post-election U.S. likely to see changes in N. Korea policy: experts

Yonhap News Agency · Byun Duk-Kun · October 2, 2020

Regardless of who wins in November, it is likely Korea will not be a top priority after the inauguration.

 

12. Russia is responsible for most nation-state cyberattacks, followed by Iran, North Korea, and China, according to a new Microsoft report

Business Insider · Ben Gilbert · October 1, 2020

Interesting order of the countries.

 

13. Pyongyang must pay

Korea Joong Ang Daily · Nam Jeong-Ho · September 29, 2020

 

"The nation that will insist on drawing a broad line of demarcation between the fighting man and the thinking man is liable to find its fighting done by fools and its thinking done by cowards."

- Sir William Francis Butler

"The history that lies inert in unread books does no work in the world. If you want a new idea, read an old book. `Tis the good reader that makes the good book. A book is like a mirror. If an ass looks in, no prophet can peer out."

- The "maxims” quoted from Clark Becker, Lord Lytton, Ralph Waldo Emerson, and Georg Lichtenberg quoted in Jay Luuvas' Military History: Is It Still Practicable?

“The world has achieved brilliance without conscience. Ours is a world of nuclear giants and ethical infants.”

- General of the Army, Omar Bradley, rendered on Veterans Day 1948 (then called Armistice Day)

10/01/2020 News & Commentary – National Security

Thu, 10/01/2020 - 10:24am

News & commentary by Dave Maxwell. Edited and published by Daniel Riggs

1. FDD | Beijing Seeks to Evade U.S. Restrictions on Technology Imports

2. How to Trim the Defense Budget Without Harming U.S. Security

3. The right debate question for Trump, Biden: How do we fight our next war?

4. The Army Rolls Out a New Weapon: Strategic Napping

5. Pandemic has not flattened the 'terrorism curve'

6. China's Leaders Can't Be Trusted | by Chris Patten

7. New Policy Makes U.S. More Competitive Partner

8. Duterte's China gambit fails to deliver the goods

9. House report: U.S. intelligence agencies have failed to adapt to China threat

10. Palantir Awarded $91 Million Contract R&D for the US Army Research Laboratory

11. U.S., Taiwan to team up on infrastructure in pushback against China

12. Attacker Dwell Time: Ransomware's Most Important Metric

13. Social Media Bots: Implications for Special Operations Forces 

14. GOP Lawmakers Hammer Trump's Germany Troop Withdrawals

15. Palantir, the controversial data company, makes its Wall Street debut

16. Trump Thinks America Should Go It Alone. Americans Disagree.

17. Pentagon needs 'Gray Zone' weapons

18. After "the War that Never Was"-The Real Beginning

19. US 2020 election: Social media's nightmare scenario

20. It's Raining Blood: Air Force Tests New Way to Resupply Battlefield Medics

21.A Far-Right Militant Group Has Recruited Thousands of Police, Soldiers, and Veterans

 

1. FDD | Beijing Seeks to Evade U.S. Restrictions on Technology Imports

fdd.org · by Craig Singleton Adjunct Fellow · September 30, 2020

 

2. How to Trim the Defense Budget Without Harming U.S. Security

Foreign Policy · by Elbridge Colby, Mackenzie Eaglen, Roger Zakheim · September 30, 2020

What does the US want its military to do? We do have an NSS and NDS.

 

3. The right debate question for Trump, Biden: How do we fight our next war?

The Hill · by Sean McFate, opinion contributor · September 28, 2020

A very important and powerful question from Sean McFate: "So how does the United States fight secretive wars without losing our democratic soul? This is the most important national security question today, not how many F-35s are needed."

My thoughts (which are focused on SOF in IW and Great Power Competition):

  • Competition equals Political Warfare
    • Most likely
  • State on state warfare less likely
    • Most dangerous
  • Consider lessons from the OSS to operate in the modern era of the Gray Zone and Political Warfare
  • Major theater war will include political warfare and the gray zone.
  • Problem
    • We face threats from political warfare strategies supported by hybrid military approaches.
  • Solution:
    • Learn to lead with influence
    • Learn to counter and conduct political warfare campaigns
    • Cultural and/or organizational change
    • Exploit lessons from the OSS (positive and negative)

 

4. The Army Rolls Out a New Weapon: Strategic Napping

The New York Times · by Dave Philipps · October 1, 2020

Hmmm....Never pass up a chance to fill your canteen or take a nap!   I think all military personnel know this.  Have you ever seen how fast a trooper can fall asleep in the back of an aircraft?  And "hurry upland wait" is translated as "hurry up and nap."

 

5. Pandemic has not flattened the 'terrorism curve'

asiatimes.com · by More by Dnyanesh Kamat · September 29, 2020

Two key points:

The factors that fuel terrorism are still very much in play worldwide. Under the guise of combating Covid-19, governments from Tanzania to Colombia and from India to Sudan are clamping down on civil liberties. This will fray the unwritten contract between societies and law-enforcement agencies, the bedrock upon which intelligence agencies rely to block terrorist incidents.

In some instances, ruling regimes have actively fed identity politics and fueled ancient tribal hatreds as a way of diverting attention away from their mishandling of the pandemic. This has damaged the social fabric in these countries and could be fertile ground for terrorists.

Pandemic has not flattened the 'terrorism curve'

Amid the fight against Covid-19, some governments have actively fed identity politics and fueled ancient tribal hatreds

 

6. China's Leaders Can't Be Trusted | by Chris Patten

project-syndicate.org · by Chris Patten · September 28, 2020

The bottom line: "One thing is clear: the world cannot trust Xi's dictatorship. The sooner we recognize this and act together, the sooner the Beijing bullies will have to behave better. The world will be safer and more prosperous for it."

 

7. New Policy Makes U.S. More Competitive Partner

defense.gov · by C. Todd Lopez

Defense Security Cooperation Agency.

 

8. Duterte's China gambit fails to deliver the goods

asiatimes.com · by Richard Javad Heydarian · September 30, 2020

I guess you cannot trust Chinese leadership.

 

9. House report: U.S. intelligence agencies have failed to adapt to China threat

Axios · by Zachary Basu

The 37 page report (with some redactions) can be downloaded here

 

10. Palantir Awarded $91 Million Contract R&D for the US Army Research Laboratory

news.clearancejobs.com · by Katie Keller · September 29, 2020

Follow the contractor information to know the direction of the US military.  Even recent reporting on Palantir and the Army's relationship with DCGS-A and Palantir there is some irony in this contract.

 

11. U.S., Taiwan to team up on infrastructure in pushback against China

Reuters · by Ben Blanchard and Jeanny Kao · September 30, 2020

Great Power Competition includes political and economic warfare.

 

12. Attacker Dwell Time: Ransomware's Most Important Metric

darkreading.com

 

13. Social Media Bots: Implications for Special Operations Forces 

96 page report here  · by Megan K. McBride, Zack Gold, and Kasey Stricklin

 

14. GOP Lawmakers Hammer Trump's Germany Troop Withdrawals

defenseone.com · by Katie Bo Williams

This is not something you want to say in a Congressional hearing: "Acting Defense Undersecretary for Policy James Anderson repeatedly told lawmakers that he was unable to answer detailed questions about the withdrawal, both because he was not involved in the initial decision-making process and because planning is ongoing and many decisions simply have not yet been made."

 

15. Palantir, the controversial data company, makes its Wall Street debut

CNN · by Sara Ashley O'Brien, CNN Business

 

16. Trump Thinks America Should Go It Alone. Americans Disagree.

Bloomberg · by Hal Brands · September 30, 2020

Trust the wisdom of the American people.  But these three fault lines are troubling.  And third I think stems from a lack of understanding about what is American exceptionalism.  (And as an aside I think many proponents would be shocked to know the connection of American exceptionalism to the US Communist PArty, Stalin, and the USSR - see this article. But few of us know our history.  I also wrote an article "Putin is Afraid of American Exceptionalism" with my views on the concept.  

Key Points from Professor Brands:

And overwhelming majorities of both parties favor giving precedence to Washington's relations with its Indo-Pacific allies over its ties with China. The American public is warming up to great-power competition.

Look a bit more closely, however, and a broad consensus starts to fray. In particular, there are three partisan fault lines in how Americans view world affairs.

Trump Thinks America Should Go It Alone. Americans Disagree.

Polling shows three major fault lines between the parties on foreign policy.

 

17. Pentagon needs 'Gray Zone' weapons

washingtontimes.com · by Bill Gertz

What are "gray zone weapons?"  How about a strategy first and some campaign plans to conduct political warfare in the gray zone?

Excerpt:  "Gray Zone" warfare capabilities include better cyberweapons, information warfare capabilities, economic and commercial warfare tools and new multidomain military systems, the Pentagon advisory panel stated in an executive summary.

 

18.  After "the War that Never Was"-The Real Beginning

usni.org · September 29, 2020

Time for a little fiction to spur some creativity and critical thinking (as well as being entertaining).

 

19.  US 2020 election: Social media's nightmare scenario

BBC · by James Clayton

Be afraid.. Be very afraid.  We should all be.

 

20. It's Raining Blood: Air Force Tests New Way to Resupply Battlefield Medics

news.yahoo.com · September 29, 2020

That is an interesting title for an article with an important capability.

 

21. A Far-Right Militant Group Has Recruited Thousands of Police, Soldiers, and Veterans

The Atlantic · by Mike Giglio

This will stir up a lot of ire on the proverbial "both sides."

 

----------------------

 

The truth is cruel, but it can be loved, and it makes free those who have loved it."

- George Santayana

 

"It is one thing to show a man that he is in error, and another to put him in possession of truth."

- John Locke

 

"A single lie destroys a whole reputation of integrity."

- Baltasar Gracian

10/01/2020 News & Commentary – Korea

Thu, 10/01/2020 - 8:23am

News & commentary by Dave Maxwell. Edited and published by Daniel Riggs

1. North Korea prepares to flex its muscle at military parade

2. New virus cases drop below 100 again, but country braces for potential flare-up during extended holiday

3. As Kim wooed Trump with ‘love letters,’ he kept building his nuclear capability, intelligence shows

4. U.S., S. Korea form 'better foundation' for declaration of war's end: S. Korean envoy

5. North Korea has tried to hack 11 officials of the UN Security Council

6. Pompeo urges religious leaders to speak up for people in N. Korea

7. An apology ricochets in the Koreas

8. Kim Jong Un statement 'not an apology.' U.N. investigator says

9. Handwriting Checks for Whole Neighborhoods After ‘Down with Party Officials’ Graffiti Appears in North Korea

10. N. Korea's spy chief demoted to colonel general

11. Defector rape case highlights widespread abuse of North Korean women

12. Coronavirus Changes South Korean’s Thanksgiving Traditions

13. The Committee for Human Rights in North Korea (HRNK) Launches Its Third Report Based on Satellite Imagery of North Korea’s Kyo-hwa-so No. 12, Jŏngŏ-ri – Update 3

14. India’s Ties to North Korea: Can New Delhi Overcome Challenges to Its Maturing Engagement?

15. North Korea admits ‘faults’ in its fight against Covid-19.

16. Donald Trump Would Continue to Try and Talk With North Korea in a Second Term

17. North Korea: If Reelected, Donald Trump Needs a Step-by-Step Deal With Kim Jong-Un

18. Kim Jong Un’s New Look Is More Man Than Superhuman

 

1. North Korea prepares to flex its muscle at military parade

DW · by Jon Shelton

And give us a fireworks show as well.  (Recall Kim Yo-jong asking for a DVD of the US independence Day celebration.  There have been reports that there will be a huge fireworks show on October 10th as well as the parade)

But of course we will be on the lookout for any unusual military activity.

 

2. New virus cases drop below 100 again, but country braces for potential flare-up during extended holiday

en.yna.co.kr · by 박보람 · October 1, 2020

 

3. As Kim wooed Trump with ‘love letters,’ he kept building his nuclear capability, intelligence shows

The Washington Post · September 30, 2020

Our good friend Chunn Yung-woo makes an important point - the regime has continued to develop nuclear weapons.  We should be under no illusion the regime intends to give them up (but we should still give him the opportunity to do so but without lifting sanctions.).

Excerpts:

“There have been a lot of efforts, but in substance, I see no progress at all,” said Chun Yung-woo, a former South Korea national security adviser who participated in nuclear talks with North Korea in the mid-2000s.

“North Korea is more dangerous. It has more nuclear warheads, or fissile materials with which to produce nuclear weapons,” Chun said. “In that regard, at least, North Korea has more capability to destroy peace on the Korean Peninsula. I wouldn’t describe that as any progress.”

 

4. U.S., S. Korea form 'better foundation' for declaration of war's end: S. Korean envoy

en.yna.co.kr · by 변덕근 · October 1, 2020

This excerpt must be fully understood.: "...declare an official end to the 1950-53 Korean War, which he said would provide a security guarantee the North has long sought..."  An end of war declaration is not a security guarantee (for either the north or South).  The security guarantee the regime demands is not found on a piece of paper.  The regime wants an end to the US "hostile policy" as the security guarantee. But it is the definition of the end of the US hostile policy that should concern us.  It is an end of the ROK/US alliance, removal of US troops from the peninsula, an end of extended deterrence and the nuclear umbrella over the ROK and Japan.  This is one of the main objectives of the Kim family regime's political warfare strategy.

 

5. North Korea has tried to hack 11 officials of the UN Security Council

ZDNet · by Catalin Cimpanu

The regime's "all-purpose sword" strike again. The regime's cyber capability is one of its most practical and important capabilities.  North Korean cyber capabilities (or its all-purpose sword) provide key support to the Kim family regime (North Korean leadership) and an integral part of its strategy in the gray zone (below the threshold do strategic response). The regime controls all cyber activities, there are no private entities or rogue elements conducting cyber operations. While we focus on the North Korean nuclear and missile threats and the 4th largest Army in the world, its cyber capabilities pose an immediate threat and play a key role in supporting the regime with funds, with information through espionage, subversive activities against the South, and with the capabilities that someday may be used for advanced operations during conflict or when the regime is desperate to achieve strategic effects against South Korea or the US.  Most importantly, it poses a threat to governments, international organizations, the military, banks, and businesses, the media, think tanks and academia, and individual citizens.  We all must be vigilant.

The question is what are we going to do about it?  

 

6.  Pompeo urges religious leaders to speak up for people in N. Korea

en.yna.co.kr · by 변덕근 · October 1, 2020

We must remain focused on human rights as well as security.

 

7.  An apology ricochets in the Koreas

The Christian Science Monitor · by The Christian Science Monitor · September 30, 2020

This is a non-apology apology.  No one should be duped by the regime's political warfare strategy.

 

8. Kim Jong Un statement 'not an apology.' U.N. investigator says

upi.com· by Elizabeth Shim· September 30, 2020

Correct.

 

9. Handwriting Checks for Whole Neighborhoods After ‘Down with Party Officials’ Graffiti Appears in North Korea

rfa.org· by Hyemin Son · September 30, 2020

Low level perhaps but an indicator of resistance potential.

More importantly it brings to light the answer to Dr. Jung Park's question: Who does Kim fear more, the US or the korean people living in the north?  It is the Korean people he fears the most.

Thanks to RFA for this report as this is reporting that can only come from a handful of media organizations (VOA being another one).

 

10. N. Korea's spy chief demoted to colonel general

en.yna.co.kr · by 김광태 · September 30, 2020

I wish we had a Colonel General rank!  But the point is he is still a Colonel General and does not appear to be sent to a gulag.

 

11. Defector rape case highlights widespread abuse of North Korean women

The Telegraph · by Nicola Smith

Such a tragedy.  South Korea must protect escapees from this kind of abuse.  Their human rights must be protected.

 

12. Coronavirus Changes South Korean’s Thanksgiving Traditions

learningenglish.voanews.com

This is quite a change for Korea.  One thing I know from my time in Korea is never to travel on Chuseok (or the Lunar New Year).

As an aside I am sending this to call attention to one of the many important roles of VOA and that is providing some English language exposure to target audiences.

 

13. The Committee for Human Rights in North Korea (HRNK) Launches Its Third Report Based on Satellite Imagery of North Korea’s Kyo-hwa-so No. 12, Jŏngŏ-ri – Update 3

hrnk.org

One of the many important contributions the Committee For Human Rights in North Korea (HRNK) makes is research on and exposure of the north Korean prison system. Those who follow north Korea (in government, in international organizations, and in academia) benefit greatly from this research.

The 59 page report can be downloaded here and it is described in the press release.

Two key points:

“A former prisoner provided HRNK with a gruesome account of the crematory operation: ‘Every Monday, we burned the corpses at Bul-mang Mountain. There’s a place that looked like a house, and we piled up the corpses in the round tank in it.’”

“According to Bermudez, ‘This imagery report takes us another step closer to understanding the cruel system of imprisonment in North Korea and highlights a real place where we know people are suffering beyond imagination. The atrocities committed throughout North Korea’s vast system of unlawful imprisonment, including Kyo-hwa-so No. 12, require the immediate attention of the international community.’"

 

14. India’s Ties to North Korea: Can New Delhi Overcome Challenges to Its Maturing Engagement?

38north.org · by Jagannath Panda · September 30, 2020

An unusual relationship.

 

15. North Korea admits ‘faults’ in its fight against Covid-19.

The New York Times · by Choe Sang-Hun · September 30, 2020

But Kim Jong-un himself will never be blamed. Yet he is responsible.  It is his policy choices that make the people suffer.

 

16. Donald Trump Would Continue to Try and Talk With North Korea in a Second Term

The National Interest · by Miyeon Oh · September 30, 2020

I wish pundits and scholars would stop planting the seeds of a deal to trade US troops in a deal with north Korea. Such a deal would be on a scale of failure that would make Dean Acheson's statement on Korea pale in comparison.

 

17. North Korea: If Reelected, Donald Trump Needs a Step-by-Step Deal With Kim Jong-Un

The National Interest · by Patricia Schouker · September 30, 2020

How many step-by-step deals have we tried?  How many have worked?  Why have they failed?  One reason and one reason only: The nature of the Kim family regime and its strategy.

 

18. Kim Jong Un’s New Look Is More Man Than Superhuman

WSJ · by Andrew Jeong

The importance of the Propaganda and Agitation Department.  But this comment from our good friend Cheon Seong-whun is a critically important assessment.

 

---------------

 

"The truth is cruel, but it can be loved, and it makes free those who have loved it.”

- George Santayana

 

"It is one thing to show a man that he is in error, and another to put him in possession of truth.”

- John Locke

 

"A single lie destroys a whole reputation of integrity.”

- Baltasar Gracian

9/30/2020 News & Commentary – Korea

Wed, 09/30/2020 - 12:59pm

News & commentary by Dave Maxwell. Edited and published by Daniel Riggs

1. FDD | Don't Trust Kim Jong Un's Unexpected Apology Over Murder of South Korean Official

2. Seoul to promote joint Olympics with North Korea

3. north Korean Speech at the UN General Assembly

4. Defense ministry verified N. Korean order to burn body of dead official: opposition leader

5. American public bucks Trump on troop withdrawals from Korea

6. North Korea on virus threat: 'Under safe and stable control'

7. Asia Today: South Korea has virus jump before holiday period

8. North Korea tells U.N. that now it has 'effective war deterrent' it will focus on economy

9. Nuclear threat against North Korea 'continues unabated', UN ambassador tells Assembly

10. A roundup of FinCEN Files reporting from North America

11. North Korea Arrests 20 Remittance Brokers for Using Illegal Chinese Mobile Phones

12. No Signs North Korea Moving Toward Denuclearization

13. N. Korean IT specialists disguise nationality to earn foreign currency, says UN report

14. Minerals, Minds, and Accommodation: U.S. Options Against China

15. N. Korea places western and eastern coast maritime patrol units on "top combat posture"

16. Kim Jong Un orders military to "rigorously" handle violations of territorial waters

17. North Korean killing of South Korean official deepens internal division

18. Top US diplomat to visit Korea next week amid Seoul's push for peace regime

19. Kim Jong-Un's Apology: Can It Spark a Diplomatic Breakthrough?

20. China Needs to Answer for Its North Korea Policy

21. Kin of South Korean killed by North rebuffs claim he tried to defect

22. Russia and China Reject U.N. Report on North Korean Sanctions Violations

23. South's military overheard order to kill fisheries official

24. Gov't says no shooting-related remarks in initial intelligence

 

1. FDD | Don't Trust Kim Jong Un's Unexpected Apology Over Murder of South Korean Official

fdd.org · by David Maxwell and Matthew Ha · September 29, 2020

The latest from Mathew Ha and me.

 

2. Seoul to promote joint Olympics with North Korea

upi.com· by Elizabeth Shim · September 29, 2020

The timing of this could not be worse.  Can you say "tone deaf?"  I do not think this will go over well with the Korean people in the South.

 

3. north Korean Speech at the UN General Assembly

Link for Speech

Here are my thoughts:

This is north Korea living up to its political warfare strategy (with Juche characteristics)

It is telling the world how benevolent a country the north is - even though it incarcerates some 200,000 political prisoners in its gulags.

It is criticizing the US and world powers for threatening nK sovereignty.

It has no intention of giving up its nuclear weapons because they are key to protecting the regime (and of course they couch that in terms of defending sovereignty)

It touts peace through strength (President Reagan is turning over in his grave).

It wants all of us to shift our focus to the north's economic development and humanitarian assistance and disaster relief.  Pay no attention to our continuing nuclear and missile development.

It wants to exploit international organizations for its own benefit (following in the footsteps of China).  

It wants to use the UN Charter against the US.

It appears to want to be a leader among the non-aligned rogue nations and non-state actors of the world. 

 

4. Defense ministry verified N. Korean order to burn body of dead official: opposition leader

en.yna.co.kr · by 박보람 · September 29, 2020

SIGINT confirmed?  

 

5. American public bucks Trump on troop withdrawals from Korea

Financial Times · by Edward White · September 30, 2020

Some good news (except for the 20%).  The American people get the importance of US alliances and deterring war.  The presence of US troops in Korea contributes to deterring war on the Korean peninsula which is a national interest of the US because war in Korea will have global effects.

 

6. North Korea on virus threat: 'Under safe and stable control'

AP · by Ted Anthony and Kim Tong-Hyung · September 29, 2020

north Korea doth protest too much.  It is only a matter of time before the regime cannot suppress the information about outbreaks.

 

7. Asia Today: South Korea has virus jump before holiday period

AP · September 30, 2020

So what happened 10-14 days that is causing this spike?  What will it be like in another 2 weeks after Cheusok?  (hopefully reports of limited travel will reduce the potential for spikes).

 

8. North Korea tells U.N. that now it has 'effective war deterrent' it will focus on economy

Reuters · by Michelle Nichols, David Brunnstrom · September 29, 2020

While we focus on the anti-epidemic situation regarding COVID 19 we should remember the other epidemic the regime fears: information proliferation.  That epidemic may be under control by getting the South to crack down on the escapees' (defectors) information warfare operations.

But the regime cannot focus on the economy unless it lifts the restrictions on cross border trade and allows the 400+ markets to flourish. That is the economic indicator we must observe. How well are the markets functioning?

 

 

 

 

9. Nuclear threat against North Korea 'continues unabated', UN ambassador tells Assembly

news.un.org · September 29, 2020

north Korea is a grievance based regime. Everyone is out to get them (starting with the Korean people in the north) to the south to the US.  Everybody is a threat to the Kim family regime in Kim Jong-un's mind.  Then again there is the maxim: "Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean that they aren't out to get you."

 

10. A roundup of FinCEN Files reporting from North America

icij.org · by Spencer Woodman · September 29, 2020

This is pretty amazing.  Who would have thought financial files could be so "entertaining:" Excerpt: North Korean cash flowing through U.S. banks, the complex schemes of Russian money launderers, adult film actors seeing their savings disappear in an offshore banking scandal - these are just a few of the revelations made by North American partners on the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists FinCEN Files investigation published last week.

 

11. North Korea Arrests 20 Remittance Brokers for Using Illegal Chinese Mobile Phones

rfa.org· by Sewon Kim

Important implications here from information warfare to internal corruption.  Excerpts: "The source said that some of the arrested phone brokers are city or provincial secret intelligence agents, who were supposed to have been the "eyes and ears of the state," but acted as phone brokers themselves for years." They made money by selling internal information to South Korea or by working as remittance brokers while on duty as secret intelligence agents," the source said."

 

12. No Signs North Korea Moving Toward Denuclearization

voanews.com · By Margaret Besheer · September 29, 2020

I hate to beat the dead horse but I have to repeat my beliefs: 

The root of all problems in Korea is the existence of the mafia- like crime family cult known as the Kim family regime that has the objective of dominating the Korean Peninsula under the rule of the Guerrilla Dynasty and Gulag State.

The only way we are going to see an end to the nuclear program and security threats as well as the human rights abuses and crimes against humanity being committed against the Korean people living in the north by the mafia-like crime family cult known as the Kim family regime is through achievement of unification and the establishment of a United Republic of Korea that is secure and stable, non-nuclear, economically vibrant, and unified under a liberal constitutional form of government based on individual liberty, rule of law, and human rights as determined by the Korean people.  In short, a United Republic of Korea (UROK).

 

13. N. Korean IT specialists disguise nationality to earn foreign currency, says UN report

donga.com · September 30, 2020

There is still a lot to parse from the UN PAnel of Experts report.  But the regime's cyber capabilities and activities are critical to survival and is a domain in which we must fight the regime because it is doing damage to countries, businesses, and people around the world.

 

14. Minerals, Minds, and Accommodation: U.S. Options Against China

divergentoptions.org · by Peter Foran · September 30, 2020

Three options for consideration:

Option #1: The U.S. could attempt to carefully decouple its critical minerals relationship and defense-industrial base needs in a neo-Hamiltonian way, referring to the Secretary of State Alexander Hamilton and his belief in infant industry support and fostering research and development to build competitive industries.

Option #2: The United States creates a sister channel to Radio Free Asia that exclusively highlights the horrors of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP).

Option #3: A perhaps counterintuitive option involves the U.S. could taking a long-term accommodation strategy

 

15. N. Korea places western and eastern coast maritime patrol units on "top combat posture"

dailynk.com· by Jeong Tae Joo · September 29, 2020

Remember that it was an innocent South Korean civil servant who was brutally murdered by the nKPA.  But it is the regime that is raising tensions with the intention to place the blame on the South.

 

16.  Kim Jong Un orders military to "rigorously" handle violations of territorial waters

dailynk.com · by Jang Seul Gi· September 29, 2020

A not so veiled threat to the South.

 

17. North Korean killing of South Korean official deepens internal division

The Korea Times · September 29, 2020

We should remember that a key part of the regime's strategy is subversion of the ROK.  The murder of an innocent South Korean civil servant is contributing to the regime's subversion line of effort.

What is subversion? The undermining of the power and authority of an established system or institution.
As in: "the ruthless subversion of democracy"

 

The Kim family regime engages in active subversion of the ROK as well as the ROK/US Alliance.

 

18. Top US diplomat to visit Korea next week amid Seoul's push for peace regime

The Korea Times · September 30, 2020

I hope there is a frank discussion about the strategic assumptions on which alliance policy and strategy is based.  Does Kim Jong-un seek peace in line with President Moon's vision?  This assumption must be examined and it if is proven to false then the alliance policy and strategy must be adjusted.

 

19. Kim Jong-Un's Apology: Can It Spark a Diplomatic Breakthrough?

The National Interest · by Daniel R. DePetris · September 29, 2020

Diplomatic breakthrough based on murder?  Do not be duped by the regime's non-apology apology.

This is quite a conclusion: "In the end, the U.S. possesses more than enough military power to live with a nuclear-armed North Korea. What it can't afford is an environment where tension is considered normal along the most militarized border in the world."

 

20. China Needs to Answer for Its North Korea Policy

WSJ · by John Bolton· September 29, 2020

Ambassador Bolton's warning to China and challenge to the US: "North Korea hasn't pursued nuclear weapons in a vacuum. China knows it, and it needs to understand that the U.S. knows it too."

 

21. Kin of South Korean killed by North rebuffs claim he tried to defect

NBC News · by Reuters · September 29, 2020

One of the tragedies surrounding this murder is the denigration of the victim.

 

22. Russia and China Reject U.N. Report on North Korean Sanctions Violations

freebeacon.com · by Jack Beyrer · September 29, 2020

But booth countries have representatives on the Panel of. Experts.  They helped water down the report.  But even with their obstructionist efforts the report still shows Russian and Chinese complicity in north Korean sanctions evasion.

 

23. South's military overheard order to kill fisheries official

 koreajoongangdaily.joins.com · by Han Youngik and Ser My-Ja

Again, the military confirmed SIGINT capabilities.

 

24. Gov't says no shooting-related remarks in initial intelligence

en.yna.co.kr · by 김광태 · September 30, 2020

You do not need a specific order to kill if the rules of engagement, standing orders and SOPs are to

shoot infiltrators.  To the ROKG, please do not water down this murder.

 

--------------------

 

"Unconventional Warfare (UW) ... remains uniquely Special Forces'. It is the soul of Special Forces: the willingness to accept its isolation and hardships defines the Special Forces Soldier. Its training is both the keystone and standard of Special Forces Training: it has long been an article of faith, confirmed in over forty years of worldwide operations, that "If you can do the UW missions, you can do all others." The objective of UW and Special Forces' dedication to it is expressed in Special Forces' motto: De Oppresso Liber (to free the oppressed)"

- Robert M. Gates, Remarks at dedication
of OSS Memorial, 12 June 1992


 

"And where is the Prince who can afford to so cover his country with troops for its defense, as that ten thousand men descending from the clouds, might not in many places do an infinite deal of mischief, before a force could be brought together to repel them?"
- Benjamin Franklin

 

"We have to face the fact that either all of us are going to die together or we are going to learn to live together and if we are to live together we have to talk."

- Eleanor Roosevelt

9/30/2020 News & Commentary – National Security

Wed, 09/30/2020 - 12:58pm

News & commentary by Dave Maxwell. Edited and published by Daniel Riggs

1. How China Is Taking Over International Organizations, One Vote at a Time

2. Defense Experts Throw Warning Flags As Congress Mulls Tighter Buy-American Rules

3. Out: 'information warfare.' In: 'information advantage'

4. How the US Army Fits into America's Indo-Pacific Strategy

5. McMaster: Strategic competitors probably view the US as 'weak'

6. Deepfake Putin is here to warn Americans about their self-inflicted doom

7. Opinion | China's Xi is doubling down on genocide

8. Thinking Strategically About Sino-American Crisis Management Mechanisms

9. 'Deepfake' Political Ads Banned At Last Minute By Local Fox, CNN and MSNBC Affiliates

10. Vaccine Chaos Is Looming

11. Chinese Communist party asserts greater control over private enterprise

12. A Potentially Deadly Blow to NATO

13. How new network tools can help find paratroopers faster and improve situational awareness

14. QAnon, Blood Libel, and the Satanic Panic

15. The Façade of Chinese Foreign Policy Coherence

16. The Navy has updated the SEAL ethos with gender-neutral language

17. New book recreates harrowing siege of Green Beret camp in 1965 Vietnam

18. Air Force to Reduce Tuition Assistance for Troops

19. The Dumbass Chronicles: Lessons Learned from a Lifetime of Idiocy

20. Why Men Love the Story of the Great Escape

 

1. How China Is Taking Over International Organizations, One Vote at a Time

WSJ · by Yaroslav Trofimov, Drew Hinshaw and Kate O'Keeffe· September 29, 2020

The international organization space is a domain of Chinese political warfare.  It is key terrain for its strategy.   My assessment of Chinese political warfare strategy: China seeks to export its authoritarian political system around the world in order to dominate regions, co-opt or coerce international organizations, create economic conditions favorable to China alone, and displace democratic institutions.

 

2. Defense Experts Throw Warning Flags As Congress Mulls Tighter Buy-American Rules

defenseone.com · by Marcus Weisgerber

 

3. Out: 'information warfare.' In: 'information advantage'

c4isrnet.com · by Mark Pomerleau · September 29, 2020

More definition and terminology paralysis?  Rearranging the deckchairs?  One thing we are very good at is coming up with new names.

My thoughts: Carl von Clausewitz, the Prussian philosopher of war so often cited here at War on the Rocks, wisely counseled that before you embark on war you must first understand it. In American military circles, we have flipped that on its head and instead first rush to brand it with an acronym-friendly term to fight it before we truly grasp the characteristics of the conflict. The great strategic thinker, Colin Gray once wrote "The American defense community is especially prone to capture by the latest catchphrase, the new-sounding spin on an ancient idea which as jargon separates those who are truly expert from the lesser breeds without the jargon." 

 

4. How the US Army Fits into America's Indo-Pacific Strategy

thediplomat.com· by Francis P Sempa · September 29, 2020

Excerpt: "Finkelstein's article should dispel the commonplace notion that American power and credibility in the Indo-Pacific wrests exclusively on U.S. naval and air power. The geography of the Indo-Pacific certainly requires a strong U.S. naval and air presence to project power and protect its security interests in the region. The series of island chains and marginal seas running along Asia's east coast from Siberia to Indochina highlight the geopolitical importance of sea and air power. But Finkelstein contends that future deployments to the region should adhere closely to the "multi-domain operations concept."

 

5. McMaster: Strategic competitors probably view the US as 'weak'

militarytimes.com · by Diana Stancy Correll · September 29, 2020

We should reflect on LTG McMaster's thoughts here.

 

6. Deepfake Putin is here to warn Americans about their self-inflicted doom

Technology Review · by Karen Hao

Video at the link

 

7. Opinion | China's Xi is doubling down on genocide

The Washington Post · by Editorial Board · September 29, 2020

The true nature of the CCP in China.

 

8. Thinking Strategically About Sino-American Crisis Management Mechanisms

warontherocks.com · by Jacob Stokes and Zach Cooper · September 30, 2020

Key point: "We agree with the need for better communications between the United States and China. The question that remains unclear, however, is which types of mechanisms would actually decrease the likelihood of conflict and avoid inadvertent escalation. Answering this question requires assessing what mechanisms already exist, explaining where they fall short, and asking whether new mechanisms would work better. This article starts to address these issues, providing some recommendations for improving crisis management along with a healthy dose of practical caution about what it will take for these efforts to succeed in their overarching goal of preventing conflict."

 

9. 'Deepfake' Political Ads Banned At Last Minute By Local Fox, CNN and MSNBC Affiliates

mediapost.com · by Larissa Faw· September 29, 2020

Interesting. The videos are fascinating and well done.

 

10. Vaccine Chaos Is Looming

defenseone.com · by Sarah Zhang

A sober warning: "The good news is that more deployable vaccines are moving fast through the pipeline too. The race to a vaccine has dominated hopes for an end to the pandemic. But the first COVID-19 vaccine may not ultimately be the most important COVID-19 vaccine."

 

11. Chinese Communist party asserts greater control over private enterprise

Financial Times · by Tom Mitchell · September 28, 2020

One key point: "Under the new guidelines, party committees that previously wielded little power at private companies are supposed to play a role in personnel appointments and other important decisions."

 

12. A Potentially Deadly Blow to NATO

defenseone.com · by R.D. Hooker, Jr.

 

13.  How new network tools can help find paratroopers faster and improve situational awareness

c4isrnet.com · by Andrew Eversden · September 29, 2020

Find paratroopers?  Technology is great but we should never forget the rule of LGOP - Little Groups of Paratroopers

Use the technology but do not forget these rules and do not lose this spirit.

This effect is known as the Rule of LGOPs. This is, in its purest form, small groups of 19- year old American Paratroopers. They are well-trained, armed-to-the-teeth and lack serious adult supervision. 

They collectively remember the Commander's intent as "March to the sound of the guns and kill anyone who is not dressed like you..." ...or something like that. Happily they go about the day's work...

The Rule of LGOPs is instructive:

- They shared a common vision

- The vision was simple, easy to understand, and unambiguous

- They were trained to improvise and take the initiative

- They need to be told what to do; not how to do it

 

14. QAnon, Blood Libel, and the Satanic Panic

New Republic · by Talia Lavin · September 29, 2020

More on this sick conspiracy.

 

15. The Façade of Chinese Foreign Policy Coherence

thestrategybridge.org · September 29, 2020

Recommendation:

To be more effective, U.S. foreign policy responses to China's rise need to recognize the fragmentation of and sometimes contradictory actions of Chinese foreign policy entities. Antagonistic zero-sum competition with China only serves to limit its options, pushing it to act in the aggressive manner of the belligerent rising power American policymakers fear it already is.

China's Belt and Road Initiative projects may increase some states' dependency on Beijing, but they are not designed to create long-lasting, deep ties between Chinese actors and their counterparts. Conversely, many Indo-Pacific states are seeking greater balancing cooperation in response to recent aggression from Beijing. Recognizing the problems with its current blinders, the U.S. should begin developing a new strategy focused on enhanced regional engagement to dampen China's latent hegemonic capacities in Asia, without the overt confrontation that would force Beijing to play the role of a hostile rising power its grand strategy narrative of strength and power demands.

 

16. The Navy has updated the SEAL ethos with gender-neutral language

Business Insider · by Paul Szoldra

 

17. New book recreates harrowing siege of Green Beret camp in 1965 Vietnam

taskandpurpose.com · by Matt Soergel

 

18. Air Force to Reduce Tuition Assistance for Troops

airforcemag.com · by Jennifer-Leigh Oprihory · September 29, 2020

This is probably a tweet away from being overruled and fixed.

 

19. The Dumbass Chronicles: Lessons Learned from a Lifetime of Idiocy

soflete.com · by September 29, 2020

Some humble self criticism.  We should all be self-reflective.

 

20. Why Men Love the Story of the Great Escape

The Art of Manliness · by Brett and Kate McKay · September 24, 2020

Now I understand why I loved the great Escape. From my childhood there are four movies that influenced me.  My father took me to each of them:

Lawrence of Arabia

Von Ryan's Express

The Great Escape

The Green Berets

 

---------------

 

“Unconventional Warfare (UW) ... remains uniquely Special Forces'. It is the soul of Special Forces: the willingness to accept its isolation and hardships defines the Special Forces Soldier. Its training is both the keystone and standard of Special Forces Training: it has long been an article of faith, confirmed in over forty years of worldwide operations, that "If you can do the UW missions, you can do all others." The objective of UW and Special Forces' dedication to it is expressed in Special Forces' motto: De Oppresso Liber (to free the oppressed)"

- Robert M. Gates, Remarks at dedication
of OSS Memorial, 12 June 1992


 

"And where is the Prince who can afford to so cover his country with troops for its defense, as that ten thousand men descending from the clouds, might not in many places do an infinite deal of mischief, before a force could be brought together to repel them?"
- Benjamin Franklin

 

"We have to face the fact that either all of us are going to die together or we are going to learn to live together and if we are to live together we have to talk."

- Eleanor Roosevelt