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Government Corruption
The Silent Insurrection: General Milley's Hand On January 6
2024-09-22
Much more at the link.
[ZeroHedge] In the days and weeks leading up to January 6, the nation's highest-ranking military officer, then-Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff General Mark Milley,
…for a general he went to the right schools, ticked the right career boxes, and looks good in a uniform. Unfortunately, nobody required reality-based insight of him, so he never thought to question the assumptions of his class — and so moved himself from patriot to effectively a traitor…
was moving in lockstep with the political anxieties of top Democratic leaders.

These Democrats grew anxious as over 140 House Republicans planned to contest the election results during the electoral college certification that day. Milley was then deeply engaged with a circle of confidants including
... his Chinese counterparts…
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer, former Obama National Security Advisor Susan Rice, and former Defense Secretary Robert Gates, among others—all of whom shared a unified disdain for President Donald Trump.

At a House Oversight Committee hearing in April addressing the 3-hour and 19-minute delay in mobilizing the D.C. National Guard on January 6, Colonel Earl Matthews, one of four Department of Defense witnesses, testified about an “irrational” fear among a “clique” of senior military officers concerning the potential misuse of the National Guard by the president. He indicated that these concerns were influenced behind the scenes by Milley, who often made disparaging remarks about the president and regularly referred to his fear of a so-called potential “Reichstag moment.”

Meanwhile, Milley has insisted he maintained a posture of strict neutrality, vocally distancing his leadership of the military from the political turmoil surrounding the 2020 presidential election. "My job is to stay clean by ensuring that the uniformed military remains out of domestic politics," Milley stated during his testimony before the January 6 Select Committee. "The United States military has no role in domestic politics, period, full stop."

Nevertheless, accounts of Milley’s approach to the unfolding situation during the late days of the Trump administration, as detailed in Carol Leonnig and Philip Rucker's I Alone Can Fix It and Susan Glasser and Peter Baker’s August 2022 report in The New Yorker, present a picture of Milley that is much different from the disinterested persona he has disingenuously cultivated.

Some excerpts follow:

  • Considering resigning in the summer of 2020 during the height of the George Floyd riots, Milley ultimately decided against it. “Fuck that shit,” he told his staff, “I’ll just fight him.” Despite assurances to confidants that he would never openly defy the president—a move he considered illegal—he was “determined to plant flags.” Milley envisioned a scenario involving either a declaration of martial law or a presidential invocation of the Insurrection Act with “Trumpian Brown Shirts fomenting violence.”

  • Embodying a self-styled narrative of heroic defiance, Milley was prepared to face severe consequences to counter what he perceived as a grave threat. “If they want to court-martial me or put me in prison, have at it,” Milley told his staff, “but I will fight from the inside.”

  • Milley saw himself as “tasked” with safeguarding “against Trump and his people” from potentially misusing the military, something he confided in a “trusted confidant” to ensure he remained true to this plan. “I have four tasks from now until the twentieth of January,” he affirmed, “and I’m going to accomplish my mission.”

  • MILLEY’S COHORT OF CONFIDANTS
    I Alone Can Fix It highlights how Milley, as the joint session approached and more than 140 House Republicans were pledged to contest the election results, shared his anxiety with “senior leaders” in Congress who sought his “comfort” amid fears of “attempted coups.” The New Yorker’s August 2022 report further reveals Milley’s communications with key Democrats, specifically Pelosi and Schumer.

    Additionally, the New Yorker report describes Milley’s continued outreach to "Democrats close to Biden," which included “regular” interactions with Susan Rice, former Obama national security advisor. Known for her role in helping to orchestrate the Trump-Russia collusion hoax, Rice’s expertise in activities aimed at undermining the former president raises this question: What was it about her that made Milley want to seek her guidance in the days leading up to January 6?

    The report also references Robert Gates, former Secretary of Defense during both the Obama and Bush administrations, as another key figure in Milley’s circle of confidants. Gates reportedly advised Milley to remain in the Pentagon as long as possible, citing President Trump’s “increasingly erratic and dangerous behavior.” I Alone Can Fix It also depicts Gates as a mentor to Milley, urging him not to resign during the final months of the Trump administration. He’s quoted advising Milley, “Don’t quit. Steel your back. It’s not going to be easy, but you’re the right guy in the right place and at the right time.”

    LIZ CHENEY AND MILLEY’S “NIGHTMARE SCENARIOS”
    During Trump’s final months in office, the New Yorker report notes that Milley had two “nightmare scenarios” running through his mind: One was that Trump might spark an external crisis, such as a war with Iran, to divert attention or to create a pretext for a power grab at home, and the other was that Trump would manufacture a domestic crisis to justify ordering the military into the streets to prevent the transfer of power.

    On December 26, 2020, the two “nightmare scenarios” then preoccupying Milley transitioned from his personal concerns to the public domain in a column by Washington Post reporter David Ignatius—a journalist with close ties to both (you guessed it) the Obama and Bush administrations.
    Link


    Home Front: Politix
    Is Democrats' Mr. Perfectly Fine a reelection disaster?
    2023-06-28
    [THEHILL] When Democrats settled on Joe The Big Guy Biden
    ...46th president of the U.S. We get to suffer the consequences...
    as their candidate in 2020, they seemed to think he would be perfectly fine. He wasn’t completely crazy, he seemed moderate, he was happy enough to hide away in his basement to make the campaign all about President Trump, and he had enough experience in Washington to go along the established order that the nabobs of the capital city prefer.

    But like Taylor Swift pointed out in her 2008 hit song, sometimes Mr. Perfectly Fine turns out to be a disaster. Or as one friend of mine likes to put it, everything is fine until it is not fine.

    Biden has had some bad breaks in his life, and we should acknowledge the tragedy that he has had to endure up front. But when it comes to politics, Biden has been far luckier than good.

    He is prone to wide exaggerations about his own life experiences and has a penchant for at times stealing the words of another. He often says things that have no possibility of being true. Because voters seemingly grade on a curve, Biden’s gift for gab and Irish charm has carried him to a position of power that just about nobody saw in his future. That includes his former boss, President Obama, who talked him out of running in 2016 and who made clear to anybody who would listen that he didn’t think Biden was up to the job.

    Biden has a habit of making exactly the wrong decisions. On international issues, former Defense Secretary Robert Gates said of Biden, "he has been wrong on nearly every major foreign policy and national security issue over the past four decades."

    From his vaccine mandates to his mask mandates, from his reckless spending plans that helped to spur inflation to his embrace of the defund the police crowd, from his doubling down on the climate change hysteria to his confusing rhetoric on Ukraine before the conflict started, Biden has consistently made bad situations immeasurably worse.

    Three things are now confronting Biden as he seeks reelection, outside his less than stellar performance. First, his age. Second, very real questions about how he got elected in the first place. Third, his corrupt business deals with his son, Hunter.

    Biden’s geriatric bearing has long concerned voters, and it frequently is one of most cited reasons why voters voice discomfort with his reelection. He was old when he ran for vice president. He will be the oldest president by close to a decade should he win reelection and serve out his second term. And despite the aviator sunglasses and cool sports car, Biden is not a young old man. The voters notice and they don’t like it.

    The latest revelations that people inside the intelligence community put their hands on the scale to tip the election in Biden’s favor makes his election appear to be illegitimate in the eyes of many voters. Did the CIA and FBI pressure Big Tech to suppress stories that would have hurt Biden in the closing stretch of the 2020 campaign? Should we take the allegations of whistleblowers seriously when they say that the Bidens are not playing by the same sort of rules as everybody else?

    And at what point can we just ignore how Joe Biden got so wealthy mostly on a government salary? How come so many of the roads to Hunter Biden’s wealth lead to hotspots like China and Ukraine?

    The Democrats can pretend all they want that Mr. Perfectly Fine is going to walk into the nomination and easily dispatch either Trump or Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis. But just remember: Everything is fine until it’s not fine.
    Link


    Home Front: Politix
    Delusional Joe Biden takes victory lapse
    2023-02-26
    [NY Post] To mark the anniversary of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, President Biden made a surprising visit to Kyiv, where he promised continued American aid and international support. There, and in a second stop in Poland, his speeches sounded like declarations of victory.

    "President Putin is confronted with something today that he didn’t think was possible a year ago," Biden said in Warsaw. "The democracies of the world have grown stronger, not weaker. But the autocrats of the world have grown weaker, not stronger."

    Even allowing for Ukraine’s remarkable tenacity, the assertion of large geopolitical gains for the West is premature at best. The war in Ukraine is far from won, and claiming victory at halftime is a fool’s errand.

    In fact, the second year is already shaping up as far more complicated than the first. Iran is expanding its drone supply to Russia and China aims to play a bigger role, with President Xi Jinping planning to meet with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky. More alarming, China might supply Russia with arms, creating a new axis of evil that could spark a world war.

    Meanwhile, Vladimir Putin is preparing to launch a new, larger offensive within weeks.

    Despite these developments, Washington acts as if nothing has changed. It continues to drag its feet in helping Ukraine match Putin’s weaponry even as most of NATO has pulled its usual disappearing act.

    Although the US has committed a staggering $113 billion to the war without serious auditing of where the non-military aid goes, it is still slow-walking military equipment Ukraine says it needs. The pattern is that first, the administration says no to a request, then weeks or months later says yes, and weeks or months after that, makes a delivery.

    TWO-YEAR WAIT
    The habit is reaching new levels of absurdity over Zelensky’s push for Abrams tanks. The White House agreed to the request on Jan. 25, according to The Wall Street Journal editorial page, but now says it might take up to two years for the 31 tanks to make it to the front lines.

    In wartime, two years means never. Zelensky’s push for fighter jets is still in the "no" stage, so presumably, he will get those sometime after he gets the tanks.

    The possibility that China will compound Russia’s offensive power should be a wake-up call to Washington. Instead, officials comfort themselves by repeating wishful talking points.

    The always-unimpressive Jake Sullivan, Biden’s National Security Adviser, declared on CNN last week that "Russia has already lost the war" and sneered at a larger China role by insisting, without evidence, that many Chinese officials already find it "difficult to deal with" Russia’s assault on Ukrainian civilians.

    "They’re just trying to get through," he said of the Chinese officials, "they’re trying to find a way in a very awkward space to not oppose Russia but to not fully support them either."

    Samantha Power, head of the US Agency for International Development, echoed Sullivan’s view of a reluctant China, saying: "What Russia is doing is bringing them into circumstances that I think fundamentally are not in their economic interests, not in their — the interests of, again, expanding their standing" in the world.

    Both hailed the impact of sanctions on Russia’s economy until anchor Fareed Zakaria reminded them of estimates "that the Russian economy is actually going to do better this year than the British economy or the German economy."

    The Biden team’s happy talk strikes me as a dated, self-serving view of Chinese motives and goals. It’s as if the officials are talking about the China of 25 years ago when it was emerging as a modern power.

    But what if they are totally misreading the communist regime’s agenda now? What if China is using the war and America’s involvement to make a move toward its goal of global dominance?

    Count historian Niall Ferguson among those who believe the US is missing the big picture. Speaking on Dan Senor’s podcast, "Call Me Back," Ferguson expressed fears that Chinese leaders "are on a path to war and we don’t yet realize that. We still think this is just about speeches at Davos and sending Secretary of State Blinken to Beijing."

    BALLOON BOY
    He cited the spy balloon that crisscrossed America as a "classic Cold War strategy," and worries Chinese President Xi Jinping has concluded a military showdown with the US is "inevitable."

    Ferguson also fears our massive military aid to Ukraine has reduced our ability to help defend Taiwan if China moves against the island.

    "The military industrial complex has withered away," he said. "It’s startling to realize how much capacity we’ve expended in Ukraine and how long it will take to replace it."

    Recall that the Pentagon early on bragged that America aimed to wear down Russia’s military capability by constantly resupplying Ukraine. Ferguson calls this a "strategic error" because Washington "failed to realize that China is the bigger beneficiary" of the policy.

    "We’re not ready for prime time and all the tough talk about defending Taiwan is from an alternate reality," he said.

    Given developments, that sobering perspective makes far more sense than the nonsense coming from the White House. Biden’s notorious history of being "wrong on nearly every major foreign policy and national security issue over the past four decades," as former Defense Secretary Robert Gates famously put it, does not inspire trust.

    Moreover, there remains a possibility — no, make it a probability —that the Biden family’s corrupt deals with China tie the president’s hands. His response to the spy balloon suggests he was pulling his punches.

    He tried to keep the balloon secret from the public so Blinken could go to Beijing to try to reset relations. After civilians spotted the balloon, Biden let it meander across America for four more days until it was shot down.

    It was an extraordinarily brazen act by China, and officials there followed the shoot-down by demanding that America apologize! Thankfully, Biden didn’t, but days later, shrugged off the incident as "not a major breach."

    Of course, he also said the fatal withdrawal from Afghanistan was a success and he had stopped inflation. And that Hunter’s laptop was Russian disinformation, that he never talked to his son about his foreign business and on and on.

    The big guy says a lot of things that aren’t true. Why trust his assurances now about China?
    Link


    Home Front: Politix
    FLASHBACK : Robert Gates Said He Felt Pressured to Swear Loyalty to Obama
    2017-06-08
    Critics of President Trump say that asking a high ranking official like former FBI Director James Comey for loyalty is unprecedented for a U.S. president.

    But Obama Defense Secretary Robert Gates told CBS News anchor John Dickerson last month he had a discussion about loyalty with Obama at the beginning of his first term, the Ace of Spades blog notes.

    "In the reporting about the F.B.I. director, there was a report that the president asked him for his loyalty. Help people understand the line between duty, loyalty, and personal conscience," Dickerson said.

    Gates replied, "I think in the context of senior government positions, I think an anecdote of what I told President-Elect Obama when we had our first meeting. And I said, ’You don’t know me. Can you trust me? Why do you think you can trust me?’ and so on. But at the end, I said, ’You can count on me to be loyal to you. I will not leak. I will keep my disagreements with you private. And if I cannot be loyal, I’ll leave.’"

    Gates went on to say, "Loyalty means doing what you think is in the best interest of that person as well as the country. And often, that loyalty means telling them things they don’t want to hear. It’s not being sycophantic, it’s not telling them how wonderful they are every day. It’s being willing to tell them the days they’re not wonderful. And when you think they’re making a mistake."

    However, CBS News anchor Bob Schieffer in 2014 accused Gates of not being loyal to the president, according to Gates’s memoir, Newsbusters noted.

    "I think there’s a certain loyalty to the presidency. And I think when you make it harder for a president while he is still in office I think -- I have problems with that," Schieffer said.

    Link


    Home Front: Politix
    What You Don't Know About Gen. John Kelly
    2016-12-08
    [Defense One] The four-star Southie boy from Boston brings to DHS the grief of losing friends to America’s drug epidemic and a son to the war on terrorism.

    In retired Marine Corps Gen. John Kelly, President-elect Donald Trump has nominated for the Department of Homeland Security an outspoken, media-friendly combat veteran who lost a son to the war on terrorism and dozens of childhood friends to the war on drugs.

    If you think Gen. Jim Mattis is a gruff talker, wait ’til you get a load of Kelly. The Southie boy from Boston was basically muzzled by President Obama’s Pentagon in his final months as the leader of U.S. Southern Command. But he rose to the top exactly because of that frank talk and advice, previously serving as the three-star senior military aide alongside Defense Secretary Robert Gates and commanding troops through the crucible of Iraq’s Anbar province.

    As the commander of all U.S. troops south of Mexico, Kelly called border security an "existential" threat ‐ not for the people crossing but because of the economic instability rife across Central and South America driving trafficking and instability. He begged Congress for more attention to transnational organized crime, trafficking, and the root causes for America’s ills from the south. He was as close with liberal human rights groups as he was with grizzled Marine fighters. And he was motivated at his core by the fallacies of men.
    Link


    Home Front: WoT
    Donald Trump dubs EgyptAir crash ‘another terrorist attack’
    2016-05-20
    [ENGLISH.ALARABIYA.NET] US presidential hopeful Donald Trump called Thursday’s deadly EgyptAir plane crash "another terrorist attack," on his Twitter account.

    His comments came after the flight from Gay Paree to Cairo carrying 66 people on board crashed in the Mediterranean sea early on Thursday morning.

    Egyptian and Greek Sherlocks are scrambling to locate debris and find out the causes of the crash.

    The de-facto Republican nominee, referring to the plane crash, wrote: "Looks like yet another terrorist attack. Airplane departed from Gay Paree. When will we get tough, smart and vigilant? Great hate and sickness!"

    Egypt’s minister of civil aviation said Cairo would not rule out the possibility of a terrorist attack behind the missing plane. Around the same time, Russia’s domestic intelligence chief said that "apparently, it is a terrorist attack."

    It is not the first time the Republican frontrunner has linked a tragedy to terrorism. After the mass shooting in Caliphornia, an impregnable bastion of the Democratic Party, in December, which killed 14 people, Trump blamed "radical Islamic terrorism" and called for temporary ban on Muslims entering the US.

    In a press statement at the time, the tycoon-turned-politician called "for a total and complete shutdown of Muslims entering the United States until our country's representatives can figure out what is going on."

    Former US Defense Secretary Robert Gates, a Republican who served in Democratic President Barack Obama
    teachable moment...
    ’s administration, said Trump’s tweet came too soon before officials had a chance to discover what happened.

    "It prejudges the outcome," Gates told MSNBC. "It’s always better to wait until you act - know what the facts are before you open up. I realize that’s a very unusual thing in American politics, but it ought to be tried occasionally."
    Link


    Africa North
    0bean Cites Lack of Intelligence 'Day After' Plan in Libya as Biggest Mistake
    2016-04-11
    Oops. Next time.
    A failure to adequately plan for the aid and governing of Libya after the U.S.-led NATO attacks in 2011 "probably" was his biggest error in office, President Barack Obama said in an interview on "Fox News Sunday."
    What about the total ignorance which is your normal operating state? Does that fit in anywhere?
    Asked by host Chris Wallace about the "worst mistake" of his soon-to-end White House years, Obama listed the aftermath of the ouster and death of Moammar Qaddafi, even as he defended the intervention.
    How did he manage to just pick one? What about the agreement with Iran? Obamacare? Dissing Poland? The Apology Tour? Jeebus, where do I begin? Not supporting the rebellion in Iran? The border disaster?
    "Probably failing to plan for the day after," Obama said in the session, which was taped at the University of Chicago on April 7. He added that intervening in Libya "was the right thing to do."
    Maybe. If only you had one of them 'day-after' plans.
    The Libya operation and its chaotic aftermath has been resurrected in the 2016 presidential campaign. That's in part because of the increasing presence of the Islamic State there, and U.S. airstrikes to disrupt its operation.

    Democratic contender Hillary Clinton, as Obama's secretary of state, strongly supported the intervention. In a 2011 interview with CBS News when still secretary, Clinton said of Qaddafi, "We came. We saw. He died."
    So did a lot of other good people. And while he was no good man, Qadaffy wasn't as bad as he was made out to be.
    At a March 7 town hall meeting, Clinton said what has happened since then "is deeply regrettable. There have been forces coming from the outside, internal squabbles that have led to the instability that has given terrorist groups, including ISIS, a foothold in some parts of Libya."
    Yeah. That's why we couldn't foresee the obvious.
    "I think it's fair to say, however, if there had not been" an intervention "we would be looking at something much more resembling Syria now, than what we faced in Libya," she said in March.
    Bull$hit. Your ignorant policy of having your cake and eating it too in Syria effed up things beyond all recognition.
    Army General David Rodriguez, head of U.S. Africa Command, told reporters last week that the Islamic State presence in Libya has doubled since 2015 to as many as 6,000 fighters.
    I understand we kill about 50/day. It won't be long before they're all demoralized and dead, right?
    Former Defense Secretary Robert Gates told Yahoo News in January that he thought Clinton's "influence was pivotal in persuading the president to broaden the goal in Libya beyond just saving the people in Benghazi" from Qaddafi's forces and "essentially focusing more on regime change. The president told me that it was one of the closest decisions he'd ever made, sort of 51-49, and I'm not sure that he would've made that decision if Secretary Clinton hadn't supported it."
    Saving which people in Benghazi? The embassy staff, or the terrorists?
    The Congressional Research Service this month wrote that Libya's "political transition has been disrupted by armed non-state groups and threatened by the indecision and infighting of interim leaders" after the armed uprising toppled Qaddafi's regime.
    You mean the toppling that happened right after 0bean called it one of his big success stories?
    "Interim authorities" have "proved unable to form a stable government, address pressing security issues, reshape the country's public finances, or create a viable framework for post-conflict justice and reconciliation," according to CRS, the public policy research arm of the U.S. Congress.
    Maybe you shouldn't have left Inshallah in charge?
    A United Nations-sponsored unity government led by Fayez Serraj assumed office last month and has won support from politicians and militias, offering hope that Libya may begin to emerge from the turmoil that has uprooted nearly half a million people since Qaddafi fell in 2011 after more than four decades in power.

    Obama told Fox News that his best day in office was the one on which his signature health care plan was passed, and his worst was "the day we traveled up to Newtown," after the shooting deaths of 20 children and six adult staff members at an elementary school in Sandy Hook, Connecticut.
    Only because the former didn't interfere with your tee time, I'm sure.
    Link


    Government
    Former Defense secretary: Obama 'double-crossed' me
    2016-04-03
    [The Hill] Former Defense Secretary Robert Gates says he felt President Obama "double-crossed" him during his tenure over budget cuts to the Pentagon.

    In a Fox News report Friday that explored the president’s approach to the military, Gates said Obama had promised him that there wouldn’t be any "significant changes" in the defense budget for a while. When asked by Fox whether Obama kept to his word, Gates replied, "Well I think that began to fray. ‘Fray’ may be too gentle a word."

    According to the report, Gates was told to cut hundreds of billions of dollars from the defense budget after already having slashed it.
    Link


    Home Front: Politix
    Gates: Champ '€˜Has Centralized Power' In An '€˜Unparalleled' Way [VIDEO]
    2016-01-23
    [Daily Caller] Former Defense Secretary Robert Gates says President Barack Obama "has centralized power and operational activities of the government in the White House to a degree that I think is unparalleled."

    Tuesday on MSNBC's "Morning Joe," Gates, who served under both George W. Bush and Barack Obama, affirmed host Joe Scarborough's claim that Obama has to think that he is the smartest guy in the room.

    Scarborough asked Gates, "President Obama has actually been criticized for always thinking he's the smartest guy in the room... Did Barack Obama always think he was the smartest guy in the room?"

    "You know, the president is quoted as having said at one point to his staff, 'I can do every one of your jobs better than you can,'" Gates claimed.
    Link


    Home Front: Politix
    Former Sec Def Bob Gates: Obama Thinks He's The Smartest Person In The Room
    2016-01-22
    ...which is, to the discerning, proof positive of where he actually ranks.
    [DAILYCALLER] Former Defense Secretary Robert Gates, who served during the B.O. regime, has turned into a harsh critic of the president, saying that Barack Obama
    The point I was making was not that Grandmother harbors any racial animosity. She doesn’t. But she is a typical white person...
    always thinks he's the smartest person in the room.

    Gates also bashed Obama for bringing on advisers who do little else but constantly agree with his proposals, fostering a group-think environment where dissenting opinion essentially does not exist, The Free Beacon reports. In other words, there are no "strong" people around the president. And when there is dissent, Obama tries to crush it. Back in October, Politico reported that Obama's advisers urged him to deal with Syria more aggressively, but the president refused to listen to advice. Now, the administration has been forced to acquiesce to Russian demands that Syrian Hereditary President-for-Life Bashir Pencilneck al-Assad
    The Scourge of Hama...
    remain in power. Additionally, Russian Arclight airstrikes, which have proved to be far more effective than U.S. strikes, continue to stomp on the B.O. regime's foreign policy objectives.

    "You know, the president is quoted as having said at one point to his staff, 'I can do every one of your jobs better than you can,'" Gates told Joe Scarborough, host of MSNBC's Morning Joe, on Tuesday.
    Link


    Home Front: WoT
    Peralta: Ship christening 'bittersweet'
    2015-11-03
    Days before he died in combat, Marine Sgt. Rafael Peralta wrote a letter to his younger brother saying, "Be proud of me, bro, I'm going to make history."

    Ricardo Peralta remembered the letter aloud Saturday in Maine during the christening of the new Navy destroyer named for his fallen brother.

    "I've been reading this letter for over a decade. It was right after I got off the USS Rafael Peralta that I felt, that's the history he was talking about," Ricardo Peralta said Monday, after returning home to San Diego.

    "I thought I was witnessing that history ... that ship that holds the fighting spirit that he held in combat," he said.

    It was a long and emotional road to Maine's Bath Iron Works for the Peralta family, who immigrated to San Diego from Mexico.

    Rafael attended Morse High School and reportedly enlisted the day he received his Green Card in 2000. He was killed in November 2004 during a house-to-house clearing operation in Fallujah, Iraq.

    Peralta is credited with scooping a live grenade under his body to save his brothers in arms.
    hero
    The Marine Corps nominated the sergeant for the nation's top military award, the Medal of Honor. But then-Defense Secretary Robert Gates downgraded the medal after a special panel of experts opined that Peralta's head wounds rendered him incapable of conscious thought in his last moments.
    "Like a politician"? This panel of experts didn't consider his physical action? RTWT
    Link


    -Short Attention Span Theater-
    Everyone Who Wanted More F-22s Is Being Proven Right
    2015-09-26
    Click link to see some cool pictures of the F-22 being right.
    And some other links going into the details about why the F-22 is right.

    As if they suddenly came to an epiphany, the United States Air Force brass is now admitting what many of us have been screaming about for so long. We didn't build nearly enough F-22s, and the F-35 will never be able to cannot simply pick up the slack. So why aren't those who pushed so hard to cancel the F-22 program held accountable?

    By the mid 2000s, the F-22 was finally entering the fray as the world's first true stealth fighter, offering a quantum leap in capability and performance when compared with anything else on the battlefield. It was a thoroughbred weapon system meant to shape the battlefield by vanquishing anything in the skies and neutering enemy air defenses, so that less capable combat aircraft could survive over the battle space. It was a high-end door kicker, the ultimate "anti-access" fighter.

    At the same time that the Raptor was coming online and proving itself, Defense Secretary Robert Gates, of both the Bush and Obama Administrations, was calling for the F-22's demise. This was said to be due to the aircraft cost and use as "only" an air-to-air, destruction of enemy air defense, and deep strike platform.

    Gates's push for the Raptor's demise came at the same time as the cost of examples of the jet were rapidly dropping. For the last batch of 60 of the super-fighters, the unit cost per jet was $137 million, which is pretty close to the cost of an "affordable" F-35A today -- at a time when a similar number of F-35s have been built as F-22s, about 165 compared to the F-22's 187.

    Costs were slated to have continued to drop if another lot of about 53 jets were built to meet the Air Force's stated minimum fleet size requirement of 243 airframes. But it never happened.

    Instead the F-22 was cast off and all of the USAF's fighter chips were put into the very much unproven F-35 bucket. Gates justified chopping the F-22 as he wanted aircraft to "fight the wars we are in today, and the scenarios we are most likely to face in the years ahead." Considering air superiority and destruction of enemy air defenses is an absolute must for any conflict (aside for ones with totally permissible airspace), this was a very near-sighted evaluation, and as it turns out, prediction of the future.

    Gates further rationalized his decision:

    To sustain U.S. air superiority, I am committed to building a fifth generation tactical fighter capability that can be produced in quantity at sustainable cost. Therefore I will recommend increasing the buy of the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter.

    A misleading statement if there ever was one, as it's impossible to build something in quantity at a sustainable cost when you're not willing to build it in great enough numbers so that a sustainable cost is achievable. It's a bit of a chicken-and-egg scenario, but at some point, the costs eventually balance out.

    For the F-22, that point was rapidly approaching.

    The F-22 was by many accounts on the verge of a cost breakthrough that would have sent its unit cost plunging well below the $100 million line. Gates later said:

    We have fulfilled the program. It's not like we're killing the F-22. We will have 187 of them... The military advice that I got was that there is no military requirement for numbers of F-22 beyond 187.

    Considering that the minimum the Air Force said they could operate with was 243, this statement seems less than true. And that number was last ditch compromise, the real bottom-line fleet size the USAF required of the F-22 was around 339 jets, which itself was dropped drastically from the original number of around 750 jets originally envisioned. At 339 examples it was hoped that the F-15C/D force could have been retired.

    Yet Gates was not alone in the push to cancel the F-22. The Bush administration was guilty of it too, although they were able to punt the final decision to the Obama administration, who demanded it be cancelled with a sharp veto threat.

    Key Congressional figures like Senator John McCain also wanted the Raptor line shutdown. Their justifications ranged from the program's expense, which was largely sunk costs for research and development over the aircraft's 30-year gestation period, to statements proclaiming that China would not unveil a stealth fighter until late in the next decade, with no chance of it being operational until the mid to late 2020s. Today, China has two stealth fighters flying, the first one, the J-20, getting airborne well before the last F-22 even left the production floor. The timing of the J-20's first flight also occurred while Secretary Gates was in Beijing meeting with top-level government officials. The event was a well planned propaganda affair that aimed to make Gates look bad for underestimating Chinese technological capabilities.

    For F-22 supporters it was an unwanted vindication.

    Another common argument against the F-22 was that the idea of America meeting Russian, or any near-peer state fighter aircraft, head-on in battle was a relic of the Cold War, and had no place in 21st century. Because of this, less potent, multi-role platforms were more of a necessity. Fast forward a half decade, and that statement is far from accurate. In fact, the F-22 just made its first deployment to Europe as part of a security package to deter Russian aggression and to reassure our NATO allies. The F-22 has also been regarded as a force multiplier in the air war against ISIS, itself attacking many targets with great precision from the first night of air strikes in Syria on.

    Back in the Gates years, naysayers, like embattled Air Force Chief of Staff General Michael Mosley and Secretary of the Air Force Michael Wayne, both supporters of the F-22, were gotten rid of. Mosley has since reiterated his frustration with the F-22 decision, stating that the shutdown of the F-22 program "will prove to be one of the most strategically dislocated decisions made over the last 20 to 25 years."

    He also said that follow-on batches of F-22s were quoted as costing well below $90 million per copy fly-away cost, which is about 25 percent less than the cost of an F-35A today.

    Nowadays it seems that everyone laments the premature F-22 line shutdown, from late-to-the-scene defense commentators to those at the very top of the USAF, including Air Combat Command chief Herbert "Hawk" Carlisle, whoe was quoted in National Defense Magazine as saying:

    "We don't have enough F-22s, that's a fact of life. We didn't buy enough; we don't have enough." However, the Air Force is going to make do with the Raptors it does have, Carlisle said. "You're going to need the Raptors" for a high-end fight, he said. "So you're still going to have to do that and we're going to do it with the 180 or so F-22s we have."

    Because only 187 F-22s were built, with only about 125 of the jets setup for assignment to combat units at any given time, even fullfilling small detachments of F-22s to the Pacific, Middle East and European theater may be troublesome. As such, the F-15C/D force, which less than a decade ago was suffering from mid-air breakups resulting in a year-long grounding, has had to stay online to supplement the relatively tiny F-22 force.

    At the time of the F-15C/D fleet's grounding, the talk was that the Eagles needed either deep and costly refurbishment or replacement. Now these jets are slated to serve for decades to come in an attempt to fill the gap left by a curtailed F-22 production run. In order to do so, the "Golden Eagle" fleet of around 200 aircraft will require billions worth of upgrades, including both structural and major capability enhancements.

    With all this in mind, if we built enough F-22s to eradicate the enemy's defenses, both in the air and on the ground, and improved the aircraft over time, perhaps even stretching it into an FB-22 with F-35 like avionics, would the USAF need an F-35A at all?

    Instead, the force could be filled in by other high-end capabilities currently in the works, like a new long-range stealth bomber, stealthy standoff weapons and unmanned combat air vehicles. On the low-end side of the equation, plentiful, relatively cheap and proven platforms, like the F-16 and A-10, among others, could be available once air dominance has been achieved, or for lower-end conflicts that do not require the F-22's high-end anti-access capabilities.

    What makes things worse is that the floundering F-35 program has sucked funds for much needed upgrades on existing systems, including the F-22. In fact the F-22 lacks relatively standard technologies found on all of America's fighter fleet, thus needlessly handicapping America's "tip of the spear" fighter.

    So what exactly happened here? If we clearly do not have enough F-22s today and it seemed nobody really thought we had enough at the time of its cancellation, aside from those with the power to kill the program, and the jet was passed over for the F-35, an aircraft that the USAF itself admits cannot fill the high-end role like the F-22, somewhere along the line disinformation was passed along to decision makers, or worse. So why don't we pull those key decision makers in and have them explain exactly how they understood the situation at the time, what information and intelligence were they going off of, and who gave them that information and when?

    The F-35 is said to be the biggest weapons program of all time, literally a $1.5 trillion income proposition over its lifetime. As such, it has a tremendous amount of special interest, Congressional and corporate "momentum" behind it. During the period of the F-22's cancellation, the F-35's problems were just becoming so serious that they could no longer be denied. Any competition threatened its existence, including the F-22, Lockheed's own product. For the USAF, why dive into a pit of unknowns and cost and timeline overruns when you already had the best fighter in the world in production?

    Yet given what we know now now publicly, the limitations of the F-35, especially in the air-to-air realm, could have made the decision to end the F-22 production much tougher. Especially as claims about the jet's maneuverability were far more exaggerated compared to reality. Which is something even the Air Force has admitted to now.

    Since there appears to be little will in Washington to correct the error in judgement that ended the F-22 line by putting an improved F-22 back into production, we need to learn from this very expensive mistake. This is especially relevant considering nearly $30 billion of the F-22's nearly $70 billion program cost was spent to just develop the fighter. By better understanding what they knew and when they knew it, and above all else, where the information for their conclusions came from, we can at least try to avoid such procurement and strategy blunders in the future.
    I wonder how many Raptors we could have bought with the money we pi$$ed away on F-35 vaporware.
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