Monday, December 18, 2017

Pentagon finally admits conventional warfare is obsolete, recommends deep cuts

 


I do not necessarily agree with all the blanket statements made here, but it is impossible to be a modern state and also conduct a major war against a similar enemy without destroying the state root and bough as we showed in Iraq..
 
The main reason  massed land forces have become obsolete happens to be the most closely guarded secret of the USA.  The USSS or US Space Service presently deploys a fleet of planetary bombardment ships able to control gravity and use kinetic bombardment and powerful rapid fire microwave lasers able to turn a human soldier into a pile of carbon.  Targeting software has been perfected using so called crop circles since the early 80,s.

Those 'missing' 40,000 forces personnel are not camping in Niger but manning facilities and ships off planet including Mars as has been also shown through one whistle blower
 
Of course, none of this is true.

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Pentagon finally admits conventional warfare is obsolete, recommends deep cuts

http://dailycaller.com/2014/02/26/pentagon-finally-admits-conventional-warfare-is-obsolete-recommends-deep-cuts/

The Pentagon announced yesterday that it would shrink the U.S. Army to pre-WWII levels. It’s about time.

They say that generals always fight the last war. The Pentagon has rendered that an understatement. 

They’ve been refighting WWII for almost 70 years, accomplishing very little in the process. Of all its military adventures, the Korean War, which remains a stalemate after six decades, is the best it has to show for trillions in debt and tens of thousands of lives.

That the Korean War was a success is a matter of opinion. Rather than containing Pyongyang, there is a good argument to be made that the U.S. presence on North Korea’s border is what has kept that nation’s communist government in power. It would seem no coincidence that the only other truly communist regime is Cuba’s, against whom the U.S. has taken a similar stance.

Even giving the Pentagon Korea, it must be measured against the unmitigated disasters in Vietnam, Iraq, and Afghanistan. A decade hence, the latter two will be viewed in much the way Vietnam was by the 1980’s.

It isn’t that the U.S. military has failed to execute. On the contrary, they’ve executed conventional warfare admirably. It’s just that conventional warfare is obsolete. It has been for a very long time.

With over 1.4 million men and women in uniform, the American military is built to fight a first world power in a conventional war where two armies honorably bomb, strafe and otherwise reek destruction on one another. When one side gains the advantage, its ground troops surge forward, breaking the enemy’s line. In the end, the victor marches into the capital and the enemy surrenders. A peace treaty follows.

We saw this fairy tale play out in 2003 Iraq. Then, the war started.

There isn’t going to be a war between First World powers that ends anything like that. Neither Moscow nor Washington is going to let a triumphant general ride into town with thousands of troops before resorting to nuclear weapons – which means there isn’t going to be a war between first world powers, at least while a shred of sanity remains.

We certainly don’t have to worry about war with China. They’d never lend us the money.

That means there is little use for most of America’s conventional army or navy. How long would surface ships last against 21st century missile technology? Do the math.

The only thing the massive U.S. military force is good for is getting America entangled in third world boondoggles like the one mercifully coming to an end in Afghanistan, against third rate powers that don’t pose the kind of threat that makes conventional warfare obsolete.

That’s why smaller countries without nuclear weapons are the only ones that get invaded.

Anyone with a grade school sense of proportion can see where federal dollars get spent. There is no way to talk about avoiding fiscal disaster, much less balancing the budget, without deep cuts to Social Security, Medicare and the Pentagon.

Cutting the military will not jeopardize American security. It will strengthen it. Bankrupt nations aren’t secure. It’s time to resize the U.S. military for the 21st century and adopt that humble foreign policy we were promised 14 years ago.

Tom Mullen is the author of A Return to Common Sense: Reawakening Liberty in the Inhabitants of America.
 

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