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Friday, 19. July 2002
mld, July 19, 2002 at 1:17:00 AM CESTThrough A Glass, Darkly - Gulf War II I need to get these predictions in about our coming war with Iraq, aka "Saddam's Last Dance," before events overtake them, and morph them into hindsight. Yeah, I call it a dance - not out of any feelings of flippancy on my part, but in recognition of the intricate timing, communication, and coordination it takes to run large-scale combined arms operations, and do it right. If you've ever witnessed the precision choreography of things such as a front-door, back door SEAD (Suppresion of Enemy Air Defense) mission, where fire from disparate artillery batteries that may be miles apart, is laid on multiple targets to keep a fighter-bomber safe on the way to it's target, then briefly suspended to create a shrapnel-free window while it makes it's run, then resumed along a completely different set of targets along the plane's egress route from the target area, often requiring that artillery shells be in the air as the plane is actually dropping it's ordnance, you would too. Multiply that little operation about ten thousand times throughout the theater of the war, and there you have the reason that the modern US war machine is so much more than the simple sum of it's parts, and Paper Tigers like the Iraqi army curl and blacken in our oh-so-unfriendly fire. When Do We Dance?I believe the war with Iraq will begin in the late fall, or the earliest months of 2003.The most likely month is November. I will be amazed if it doesn't go down by the end of Febuary. It could go as early as September, if Dubya wants to make a statement to the world, and start it on 9/11. There are a few good reasons for this. First, it's going to take some time to replenish our stocks of smart weapons. By all accounts, we used enough of them in Afghanistan to make an all-out war now impossible. Unfortunately, now that the US, and only the US, has demonstrated the ability to conduct military operations with near-surgical ability to avoid collateral damage, and civilian casualties, both the world community and our domestic peaceniks will scream in horror if we reverted to dumb bombs and the like, though the rest of the world still employs them. We're stuck with precision warfare, nailed to it by our own success.. No doubt the world would be running to the ICC the first time some F-18 pilot overshot the target with a Mk-82, and took down an apartment building that happened to be next door to an Iraqi command center, and try to get everybody from the pilot to the President jailed for genocide. We need to attack in cooler weather, as the troops will be in their NBC suits. I think we can count on Saddam to use whatever WMD he has left to go out with a bang, as he knows this one won't stop before his head is put on a pike. He'll probably toss a good fraction of them toward Israel, in fact, as many as his long range delivery systems will allow, but more on that later. We could actually get it done sooner, were the need urgent, but Saddam isn't going anywhere, and the planners in the Pentagon will want to give themselves every advantage. Dance PartnersThis is going to be a solo performance by the US, with token support by our British allies. They really can't provide more than a few aircraft and some symbolic ground forces, at any rate. Any other support will be limited to provision of bases for staging troops and overflight rights, primarily from Jordan, Turkey, and Kuwait. Thesee forces will be supplemented by carrier battle groups and amphibious forces operating from the Persian Gulf.The International FrontThe Euros will launch themselves into paroxysms, calling for further rounds of diplomacy, sanctions, appeasement, negotiations, blah-blah-blah, while condemning the unilateral attitude of the US, who will proceed to bell the cat anyway. The Euros will caterwaul for the public consumption of their collective Middle Eastern minorities, while secretly being glad that this threat is being removed without them having to spend much of either blood or treasure. Similarities to their behavior during the Cold War, during which they relied on Uncle Sam to provide the lion's share of their defense, thus allowing them to expend their tax receipts on their socialist utopias, will be apparent to the objective.This is the most trivial and obvious prediction I will make. Our former partners in GWI, the Saudis, are going to sit this one out, as it dawns on them what an Iraq free of Saddam is going to do for their clout with the US, and their odds of being able to maintain their oppressive, reactionary regime. No matter. It will let them get used to the idea that we don't need them anymore. The only other country in the Middle East that has any juice whatsoever is Egypt, but they will remain too firmly attached to the two billion a year we send them to offer anything more than sputtering indignation. Russia will protest, until such time as some bright boy in Washington offers to ensure that the eight billion dollars or so that Iraq owes them for arms sales on credit will be paid out of the oil export revenue of the follow-on regime. Iran will need to be watched, so that they do not attempt to exploit the disintegration of Iraq, and grab some of the land on the border either during the war, or immediately after. I suspect that a few stern missives from Washington will suffice to prevent this. Neither India or China are in any position to do anything other that squawk, though I suspect they won't do even that. Israel will, of course, back us. No other country matters. The Domestic FrontIt will not be a surprise attack, as both the US public and the world will be seeing TV images of the trains moving combat equipment from Fort Hood down to the port of Houston. It will be impossible to conceal the mobilization, as many critical combat service support units are now to be found almost entirely in the reserve components of the armed forces.This callup will generate numerous human interest stories about these military families, some with both the husband and the wife in uniform, forced to leave their small children with family and friends as the DoD cruelly sends them off to do what they actually get paid for. (If you're thinking I think it's the height of parental irresponsibility for both of them to be in the service at the same time, if they've minor children, you'd be absolutely correct) Professional demagogues like Sharpton and Jackson will rush to the nearest microphone to point out that once again, minorities are being forced to go and fight in unfair proportions the White Man's War, for Big Oil, and/or the military-industrial complex, and/or Wall Street. (I wonder if they'd agree to only allowing minority enlistment in the services to the exact proportion of their makeup of the overall population?) Congress will try to walk the fine line, wetted fingers in the air to detect the faintest changes in the current of public opinion, showing support for the President, (or at least, "for the troops") while simultaneously carping that they haven't been consulted enough about the ways and means of waging the war, as if a group composed largely of attorneys has some special insight that the generals in the Pentagon that have made this sort of thing their career do not, and should have. The legislators don't know a five paragraph order from a hole in the ground, but they need to feel like they are protecting their turf, and making the Executive come and smooch their asses to get permission to deploy the troops is the only way they can do it. Remember all their dire predictions about our first dance with the Iraqis, or more recently, the Dire Afghan Winter that was gonna get us bogged down in the mountains against the invincible mujahideen? They sure hope you don't. If I were Dubya, I'd bring Biden and the rest of the leadership in, give them an extremely detailed plan of attack for them to leak to the press and Saddam, and then at the last minute, decide that this other plan, (the real one) was what we needed to do instead. I'd use the leaks as an excuse for the change, and the word treason a few times in the process. Not that it will really matter - we'll do what we want to do, and a complete copy of the final marching orders faxed to Saddam's secret HQ Of The Day won't help him do a thing to stop it. What Would Saddam Do?His conventional forces, while formidable on paper, are battleworn, suffering from lack of training, and critical shortages of spare parts and maintenance that make them unlikely to be able to conduct effective manuver under fire, especially in light of our undoubted total air superiority. They will, as before, be simply hung on the cross of US airpower, and be completely combat ineffective, if he attempts to use them as he did in GWI. (the first Gulf War)I will be surprised if the regular Iraqi infantry divisions offer more than token resistance before surrendering. The collapse this time will be even more rapid than in GWI, as though that's possible. They remember what happened last time, of course, and are surely not as inclined to go down in martyrdom as Saddam would like them to be. His air defense network will last a bit longer, as the missile crews will hang around long enough to light the fuse on a few SA-8s before they skeedaddle or get blown away by the HARM missiles off a Wild Weasel. Their Command and Control systems have been rebuilt since GWI, with hardened fiber-optic communications, but still lack the early warning, tracking and co-ordination features to make their numbers on the ground representative of their real-world defensive abilities. As in GWI, This will leave Saddam to rely on his WMD, Weapons of Mass Destruction. He still has some, and I think we can count on him using them in his wargasmic death throes. Latest estimates of his WMD capability have him still in possession of hundreds of tons of mustard gas, various nerve agents such as VX, Tabun, and Sarin, along with stockpiles of anthrax, botulism toxin, and several other minor biological agents, one of the more curious of which is aflatoxin, which is only known now to be a carcinogenic agent with only long-term effects, and no immediate ability for incapacitation. He's got a few problems with long range delivery. He's got plenty of artillery shells and rockets with chemical and/or bioweapon capability, but not so many of the longer range rockets needed to hit targets in Saudi Arabia and Israel, not that he's likely to be firing at the former this time around. Sources agree, though, that he's got enough pieces to have built at least a few more SCUDs, and he only needs one or two to hit Israel and create terror there, and try to goad Sharon into launching his own retaliation. He's got a few aircraft fitted with tanks for dispersing sprays, with the range to get to Tel Aviv, but it's very unlikey that they'd survive the trip to get there. Still, reports are that in the last few years, he's tested using some of his obsolete fighters as remotely-piloted drones in low-altitude, single aircraft runs that would attempt to sneak in under our air defenses. Neither the size and nature of his stocks, nor his delivery methods at hand, are enough to be more than an annoyance to the US forces, but they are capable of terror attacks, especially if he can get them into Israeli territory. Now, I don't claim to understand that man's mind, but whatever else you can say about him, the man is not stupid. Surely he knows that his regular forces are going to fold about seventeen nanoseconds after the first bomb lands on Iraqi soil. He knows he has no hope of delaying, much less defeating, the US in a standup fight. His meager stock of WMD are not lethal or extensive enough to stop US forces. But there is a strategy that I fear that he is smart enough to use, and it should give out planners pause. It's based on a few facts. One, urban combat greatly favors the defender, and largely nullifies US command of the air. It also levels the field as regards the quality of American armor. The M1s that outrange and outfight the Iraqi T-72's in the open desert have nothing like that same advantage when engagement ranges are measured in dozens and not thousands of meters. Furthermore, urban close combat allows infantry to ambush armor from above and behind, allowing them to be much more effective. Urban combat is one of the few areas that largely remains a battle of attrition. This plays into Iraqi strength, and US weakness. Should Saddam choose to let his conscript infantry divisions on the outlying areas collapse, as they surely will in any case, and choose to defend only the major cities, especially Baghdad, with his Republican Guard divisions, it will prove to be a bloody task to root them out. This of course, presupposes that the Republican Guard units will remain loyal and fight. I am afraid that they will. Though they were pounded in in GWI, they never routed the way the Iraqi regulars did. Given the immense advantages urban combat gives the defense, and the greater morale that fighting from prepared defensive fortrifications gives the defender, I doubt they'll fold before giving at least some strong resistance. The Republican Guard units have been given special urban combat training, as their missions include internal security. Much of the Republican Guard, the Special Republican Guard, (which alone can mobliize up to 25,000 men in four brigades) and Saddam's myriad other intensely loyal security forces, to include his police and internal security forces, are stationed in Baghdad, or close to it. The next fact to consider is Saddam's demonstrated lack of regard for his own civilians, and his propensity to use both them, and foriegn nationals as "human shields." Has anyone forgotten his broadcast interviews with those little British kids, where he so avuncularly patted them on the head? These things - the nature of urban combat, his ability to use chemical weapons, his use of hostages, and the stationing of the only troops likely to be loyal to him in the area of Baghdad, and the knowledge that he will not survive this conflict, all, to me, signify that he will use a hellish strategy that looks something like this:
How do we prevent this scenario from happening? I see only one way - to undermine the will of the his most loyal troops. We must, before the war starts, make it clear that it is Saddam and his inner circle that we're after, and let the Iraqi defenders know that they will suffer in direct proportion to their willingness to fight. They must also be told that any complicity on their part in the release of WMD will after the war be prosecuted by military tribunals. I truly have no clear idea whether or not this subversion of morale is possible. One way or the other, however, we must get the job done. The AftermathThere will be much less of a problem setting up a liberal democratic regime in Iraq than in the feudal sinkhole that is Afghanistan. The appearance of this regime will accelerate the rejection of the theocratic regime in Iran, if they indeed even manage to hang onto power until then. Per recent news, this seems unlikely. In any event, I would not expect that regime to last six months past the end of GWII.The appearance of stable, liberal democracies in both Iran and Iraq mean the doom of the Middle Eastern oil theocracies. The Saudis will soon realize that pro-Western regimes in those states, along with our closer economic ties to Russia, will mean that our tolerance for their repressive regime is at an end, as we will no longer need their oil. We'll sit and wonder, as we come face to face with the prospect of a whole new region of the world beginning to move from repression and ignorance to freedom and enlightenment, "Why didn't we do this ten years ago?" Sometimes the sins of the father are visited upon the son. Bush 43 has to clean up the mess Bush 41 left behind. ... Link (2 comments) ... Comment Thursday, 18. July 2002
mld, July 18, 2002 at 11:05:00 PM CESTThey Say Bush Is A Poor Speaker And they're right. But for some truly tedious rhetoric, he can't touch Iraq's Maximum Leader. Here's a sample quote from his speech on the anniversary of the coup (he refers to it as a revolution) that brought him into power... "Rather, it is ascension, ascension and ascension, in which enthusiasm and potential which constitute, before any other step, the spring-board for other measures corresponding to renewed energy and enthusiasm, more sublime and pure in the service of the principles of our nation and people, thus ensuring continued ascension and increasing the accurateness and capability to relate the measures of action to the great principles. The rest of the speech, and I suffered with slogging through it all looking for any useful info regarding the mindset of the man, and or how he will attempt to survive the coming campaign against him, is virtually void of any real semantic content. ... Link (1 comment) ... Comment Wednesday, 17. July 2002
mld, July 17, 2002 at 8:15:00 PM CESTTexas Sized Gator This gator was caught a few weeks ago at Kitty Hollow Park in Missouri City, TX. on Highway 6. (suburban SW Houston) A construction worker found it laying in one of the concrete pipes. The animal control officers said it weighed just under 2100 lbs and was 18 1/2 feet long. It was taken to Brazos Bend State Park, and released.
I'm thinkin' a coupla things here. First, I'm not gonna be taking the wolfhounds, Shelby, or any kids to that park anytime soon. In fact, I don't think I'll be planning too many trips there my own damn self. Second, that monster woulda made quite a few pairs of good-looking cowboy boots. Actually though, I'm happy. Gators had a rough go of it there for a while, and the sightings of ones like this just reaffirms how well they've come back. There are success stories in wildlife preservation, though you'd have a hard time getting some of the more radical tree-huggers to admit it. The gator was lucky. If they'd have nabbed him in Louisiana, he'd a been the all-you-can-eat buffet at the nearest Cajun eatery. :-) ... Link (6 comments) ... Comment ... Next page
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