Washington Times – Navy officials confirmed that an aircraft carrier battle group failed to detect a Chinese submarine that surfaced within weapons range of the USS Kitty Hawk.
Washington Times – Admiral says sub risked a shootout.
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Washington Times – Navy officials confirmed that an aircraft carrier battle group failed to detect a Chinese submarine that surfaced within weapons range of the USS Kitty Hawk.
Washington Times – Admiral says sub risked a shootout.
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Nearly 5 years after the Taliban were toppled, Al Qaeda and the Taliban continue to use Pakistan as a de facto base, virtual unchallenged and far out of America’s reach.
Here is the Transcript.
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Washington Times – A Chinese submarine stalked the USS Kitty Hawk aircraft carrier battle group in the Pacific last month and surfaced within firing range of its torpedoes and missiles before being detected.
Marine Corps Gazette – War has a way of teaching us hard lessons, some of which we learned in previous conflicts but, for various reasons, forgot and are having to relearn now in Iraq.
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Foreign Affairs – After dispelling myths about Tehran — that the regime is unitary, evil, and about to collapse — Ray Takeyh’s skillful book on U.S.-Iranian relations offers pragmatic prescriptions to Washington: against regime change and for more engagement.
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Daily Telegraph – Are battlefield conditions worse for the modern soldier, or are today’s veterans not as tough as their predecessors? To mark Remembrance Day, The Daily Telegraph has assembled a unique panel of veterans with experience of all the major conflicts over the past 65 years.
Daily Telegraph – The veterans.
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International Journal of Naval History – The most ambitious and effective defense project undertaken during the Cold War next to the hydrogen bomb succeeded completely, made not a sound, and remained invisible for a half-century. Dreading an increase in the capability and geographical reach of a Soviet deep-water submarine force, the U.S. Navy decided in 1950 to turn the ocean itself against the Soviet Navy. Over the next three decades there emerged a sophisticated surveillance network with global reach that used the oceanís own characteristics to identify submarine activity. SOSUS, as the sound surveillance system became known, gradually made it impossible for the Soviets to sortie a submarine anywhere in the world without detection. The present historical analysis of this system highlights the importance of the environment in naval warfare, further illuminates the relationship between naval and civilian ocean science, and reveals significant challenges to naval culture and habits directly related to the nature of SOSUS.
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Daily Telegraph – W.F. Deedes on the meaning of Remembrance Day.
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New York Times – Michael Gordon on the demise of Donald Rumsfeld.
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Washington Post – Thomas Ricks on the demise of Donald Rumsfeld.
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Washington Post – David Ignatius on the demise of Donald Rumsfeld.
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Daily Telegraph – John Keegan on the demise of Donald Rumsfeld.
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PBS Frontline – They came to rebuild and bring democracy, but soon were hardened by the postwar realities. When it came time to leave, they left behind lawlessness, insurgency, and economic collapse.
Read the Transcript and look at the excellent Interviews.
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Washington Post – A long-standing legal wrangle between the United States and Canada could complicate future shipping through the Arctic as global warming melts the ice in the Northwest Passage.
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Defense and the National Interest – William Lind points out how an attack on Iran will endanger US troops in Iraq.
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National Security Archive – The Desert Crossing wargame for how to manage a post-Saddam Iraq, performed by CENTCOM in 1999 when General Zinni was its chief, has been declassified. Fascinating in how presecient it was. A pity General Franks, General Zinni’s successor, was not interested in it???
Associated Press – 1999 War Games Foresaw Problems in Iraq
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The Times – Is the US planning a raid on North Korean nuclear facilities?
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Daily Telegraph – John Keegan on why Israel will attack Hezbollah again, soon.
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Naval War College Review – Uniformed officers have an obligation to stand up to civilian leaders if they think a policy is flawed. But once a policy decision is made, soldiers are obligated to carry it out. The idea that a general or admiral should publicly attack government policy and its civilian authors in time of war is dangerous.
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USA Today – Yet another tipping point? Ralph Peters checks out on Iraq.
See also: FrontPageMag – A Military Solution for Iraq.
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Leatherneck – “A hard-boiled crowd” of old Corps warriors in Santo Domingo broke in the new lieutenant.
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New York Times – Michael Gordon reports that a classified briefing prepared two weeks ago by the United States Central Command portrays Iraq as edging toward chaos, in a chart that the military is using as a barometer of civil conflict.
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BBC – Taiwan has formally commissioned into service two US-built naval destroyers aimed at boosting the island’s defences against any attack from rival China.
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Radio New Zealand – Australian warships are sailing towards Fiji amid speculation of another coup. The amphibious support ship HMAS Kanimbla left Townsville last night and HMAS Newcastle, a frigate, began its journey to the area on Wednesday night.
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New York Times – A look at the corpsman’s job in Iraq.
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