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Recommended Reading

Monday, January 12th, 2009

A heavy mil-theory day….

Top Billing! Captain Nathaniel T. Lauterbach, USMC at Chicago Boyz Clausewitz, On War, Book 1: Clausewitz on Military Genius

Capt. Lauterbach is posting as a member of the The Clausewitz Roundtable, hosted at Chicago Boyz and his post is exceedingly good and worth your time to read whether you have delved into On War or not.

CTLab unveils their new Spatial Forces Index 1:2 

Tom Barnett is going on Milt Rosenberg’s show. I may just have to call in 😉

He’s an education report that really grabbed my attention:

Tough Choices for Tough Times by The New Commission on the Skills of the American Workforce

Kings of WarWars over Future Wars and Point/Counterpoint

SWJ BlogSECDEF Gates Meets with COCOMs, USMC Makes Case…

DNIWhen Sun-tzu met Clausewitz: John Boyd, the OODA Loop, and the invasion of Iraq

Rethinking SecurityThe Crisis of 4GW and More Thoughts on 4GW

That’s it!

New Year Recommended Reading

Friday, January 2nd, 2009

Open The Future2008 in Review

Fabius MaximusAn important thing to remember as we start a New Year

The Glittering EyeTracking My 2008 Predictions

Coming AnarchyMark Your Calendars and ComingAnarchy in 2008: Contributor’s Choice

CTLab2008 In Review

The NewshoggersMy favorite ‘Auld Lang Syne’

Kotare “That untravell’d world” – Happy New Year from Kotare

MountainRunner Year-End Review

That’s it!

Recommended Reading….Christmas Holiday Edition

Tuesday, December 23rd, 2008

Ho…Ho…Ho !

Top Billing ! Outside The Beltway’s The Schuler- Finel Debate…”Pulling Out: Debating Middle East Disengagement”

Pulling Out: Debating Middle East Disengagement (Neg. Rebuttal) – Schuler 

Pulling Out: Debating Middle East Disengagement (Negative) – Schuler

Pulling Out: Debating Middle East Disengagement (Affirmative) – Finel

Pulling Out: Debating Middle East Disengagement (Neg. Cross) – Schuler

Pulling Out: Debating Middle East Disengagement (Intro) – Schuler

Pulling Out: Debating Middle East Disengagement (Rebuttal) – Finel

Pulling Out: Debating Middle East Disengagement (Aff. Cross) – Finel

This was a very enjoyable exchange both for it’s civility as well as the erudition of the debaters ( Pundita opines at length here on the discussion) Dave Schuler and Dr. Bernard Finel. The former may not seem remarkable but by contrast, HNN, a site with an audience that is heavy in professional and aspiring historians and social scientists, cannot run an article related to either Israel or Islam (or George W. Bush) without provoking outbursts of (at times) maniacal vituperation and flaming in the comments section.

Fabius MaximusThe State Department needs help, stat!

Fabius was kind enough to link to me and here is a key excerpt from his post:

State is the natural counter-weight to DoD.  In a parochial society such as ours the State Department staff should be those best able to understand the outside world in any fullness, in a multidimensional fashion. It has experts with a depth of foreign experience unmatched by other Government agencies – unlike the academics in the CIA or the military professionals in DoD.

Deep knowledge of foreign cultures and their leaders is necessary for success in a multi-polar world.  We’ll need people like Robert Clive and Sir Richard Burton, and State is where they’re most likely to find a home in our bureaucracy.  But not, of course, in today’s State Department. Nor anywhere in the US Government apparatus, which often rejects people with great initiative and expertise as surely as your body rejects foreign bacilli.

That’s the news; here is the bad news

My analysis from August and Zenpundit’s today, plus those he link to are all – in a sense – irrelevant.  They ignore the two key aspects of the problem.

First:  American history offers no precedent for institutional changes of this magnitude.  The recent re-organization of the Homeland Security agencies – a much smaller project – does not provide grounds for optimism.  There might be no precedents for reform of such large, entrenched organizations.  Growing an organization, as Charles Hughes did for State, is far easier.

Second:  there are good reasons that American Presidents do not attempt institutional reform on a large scale. 

  • There are usually operational priorities.
  • There is seldom a powerful “constituency” for reform.
  • They consume vast amounts of political capital. 
  •  They have a high risk of failure. 
  • They produce no visible results that help win the next elections in 2, 4, or 6 years. 
  • Benefits go to the next Administration, who inherits the renewed institution.

Stating the need for reform is the easy part.  It has been done well and repeatedly for the Defense Department over several generations – to no effect.  Describing how to effect reform is the challenge.

DNI HONORÉ AS THE HEAD OF FEMA

By special request from Project Whitehorse. I agree, by definition and experience, General Honore is well qualified. Thus, it is with some irony that I present the next link.

Armchair GeneralistMilitary Leaders in Non-Military Leadership Positions

Evidently, military talent being used in other fields is starting to rub some folks the wrong way. J. gives a balanced assessment but I think those complaining would better spend their energies addressing why civilian agencies and their leadership are frequently less than outstanding (Hint: excessive numbers of lawyers and multiple levels of lawyering issues is one reason).

Chicago Boyz (Jonathan) – Human Networks and Single Points of Failure

I have a feeling that there are plausible sociobiological/evolutionary psychology reasons for this to be the case.

SWJ Blog (John Sullivan & Adam Elkus) – The COIN Graduate Seminar

A cool COIN reading list and the reasons why. Enjoyed sifting through it to see what I have on my shelf already and what I might want to pick up down the road.

That’s it!

Recommended Reading Part I.

Sunday, November 30th, 2008

                     In solidarity with the people of India

No “top billing” today. I thought perhaps I would separate this edition into Mumbai and non-Mumbai sections, gathering some of the most interesting posts on the former and giving the reader a break from that topic with the latter.

Part I: On the Mumbai Massacre:

Naxalite Rage –  Mumbai Overrun

Shlok Vaidya deserves high praise for being all over this story with unique insights and explanations generally unavailable anywhere else, on his blog, twitter and other forums.  The rest of the blogosphere was following in his wake.

PunditaMumbai Massacres: At the intersection of piracy and terrorism , Nov 30 John Batchelor Show on The Battle of Mumbai and More on “A disquieting response to India’s 9/11 from Bush and Obama”

Pundita’s call to pick the brains of Lt. Gen. Paul van Riper makes me think that, like the Roman Senate commissioning Pompey to destroy the pirates of the Aegean, it would simply be easier and quicker to give van Riper an anti-Piracy command on the Horn of Africa. Unfortunately our system does not work like that. Also note in the second post by Pundita, she draws attention to Shloky’s radio appearance on the John Batchelor Show.

SWJ BlogHow the Mumbai Attack Differs

Analysis by Bill Roggio.

Abu Muqawama –  It was “Gangsta Gangsta” at the top of the list, then I played my own s*** it went something like this

AM catches some heat in the comments.

Kings of WarSome Answers… And a Few Burning Questions

First rate commentary on Lashkar-e-Taiba.

HG’s World –  Mumbai Questions?

Round-up and commentary by HG99.

Chicago BoyzMumbai Musings

Looking at Mumbai from a different perspective.

WhirledviewMumbai: A Roster of the Horrified-and the (Evidently) Not So Horrified

As opposed to the Turks,  Iranians, Malaysians and Indonesians, the Sunni Arab states (Kuwait excepted) are conspicuously silent  on the massacre in Mumbai.

That’s it.

Delayed Recommended Reading

Wednesday, November 19th, 2008

I’m up to my neck in work, including a chapter for Michael Tanji’s book project. That said, I can’t let the blog die on the vine while I slave away.

 On Somali Piracy:

Robert PatersonPirates seize supertanker – What does this mean? , PunditaWar at sea, continued: Is anyone still buying that “Somali pirates” are simple fishermen? Time to crack out the microwave guns   Information DisseminationPiracy Escalation to VLCC in Somalia,

Free the Norfolk Four

This is your Brain on…neurons ( Hat tip to Dave at Thoughts Illustrated)

Don’t ask, don’t tell but it’s ok to drop a “Gay Bomb“. WTF ?

The Climate in Pakistan

Some intel analytical history for the mathematically inclined

Happy Blogiversary to HistoryGuy99 !

That’s it!


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