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History is Rhyming

“One day the great European War will come out of some damned foolish thing in the Balkans (1888).”  — Otto von Bismarck

99 years ago this month, the First World War started.  The balance of terror on the European continent had been maintained since the Prussians beat the French like a rented mule in 1870, but Britain, Russia, France, Austro-Hungary, and Germany had spent the 40 years of ‘peace’ re-arming and maneuvering.  There were little brush fire wars in the Balkans and a few other places, but the big countries were keeping their eyes on each other as they reloaded.

The spark for the Great War was, of course, the assassination of the heir to the Austo-Hungarian throne by a Serb nationalist.  Austria declared war on Serbia, Russia declared war on Austria, Germany declared war on Russia and France, and Great Britain joined in to complete the royal flush.  By the time all was said and done, millions were dead and wounded, centuries old governments and countries were wiped from the map, and the world had begun its long swim in the blood of millions killed in future wars and the attrocities of Nazism and Communism.

Now, we seem to be heading down an eerily similar path.

Someone, either the Assad regime or the Islamic forces who are trying to overthrow him, lobbed chemical weapons shells at civilians the other night.  Hundreds are dead, and the world is lining up on one side of the battlefield or the other on whether or not to ‘punish’ Assad for this despicable incident.  Because making idle threats is what you do when you want to be seen as acting but don’t want to risk actually doing something, President Obama painted a big, bright red line around the use of WMD’s in the Syrian Civil War.  Now that his line has been crossed, he’s having to rattle the saber and publicly threaten to…. do something.

In the event that he makes more than a token show of force so that he can beat his Nobel Peace Prize against his chest and proclaim that he has avenged those who were killed, here’s how I see things rolling out:

  1. The U.S., with or without our allies, does something that critically damages Assad.  Maybe a short but sharp aerial bombardment of military installations such as air defense, air force, or tank parks happens.  Whatever it is, it’s something that Assad can’t easily afford to lose while he tries to keep from being forced into retirement in Tehran.
  2. Regionally, Iran uses this as an excuse to do…. something.  My guess is to start sinking ships in the Straits of Hormuz or just start sending Iranian army units into Syria to augment the Syrian army, Hezbollah, and the Republican Guard units that are already fighting there.  It’s possible they could even start a campaign of attacks against the soft underbelly of the American and European civilian countries – their civilians.
  3. Globally, Russia reacts.  Maybe they just make diplomatic and economic noises, but quite possibly, Russia could reinforce its naval base and other forces in Syria, especially if any ‘advisors’ or ‘trainers’ are hurt in the initial American attacks.  That would up the chances of more conflict with either the American supported anti-Assad forces or incidents where Russian forces tangle with American forces in either the sky or on the sea.  Russia could also shut off the natural gas taps for any European country that assisted the Americans, either with forces, flyover, or basing.  Nothing encourages a nation to get into a war fever than watching pensioners die of cold because another country cut off their heat just before winter.
  4. Tensions mount, Syria turns into even more of a flaming wreck, and the war there gets even bloodier.  It possibly spreads to neighboring, multi-ethnic and multi-faith countries (Turkey, Iraq).
  5. As the dominoes start to wobble and fall, the major powers start propping up their client states with more and more direct aid, probably including direct military intervention.  Would we stand by as an Iranian-backed revolution in Turkey destabilized a NATO ally?  Would Russia stand by as we repeatedly smacked Iran and Syria upside the head?
  6. Russia and the United States eventually come to blows, either in and around Syria, or in other areas.  China also might get dragged into this, which could spread the conflict to the Pacific, where they have been sparring with Japan, the Philippines, and Korea over resources.
  7. Of course, like everything else in the madhouse of the Levant, the joker in the deck is Israel.  Would Hezbollah, Hamas, and every other wild-eyed pissant in the region let a war break out without trying to push the Israelis into a grave?  Would Israel retaliate against them, even if it meant being drawn into a growing regional conflict?

Now, this is only one way this could go, and like all predictions, it’s possibly not worth the electrons it took to make it.  But the probability of an Iranian or Russian response to a major attack against Assad by the United States and her allies is pretty high.  Would it become a proxy war between Putin and Obama, or maybe even a shooting war between the great powers?  One would hope not, and also hope that rational thinkers would avert such a thing.  But rationality is not known to be common in these things.

There are only a couple of ways I can see this not blossoming into something ugly:

  1. If indeed it was the Syrian government that carried out the attack, then Assad could avert this by giving up his subordinates who carried it out.  I doubt he would allow them to be arrested and tried at the Hague, but nothing calms the waters like a quick show trial and a public execution.
  2. Obama reaches out to Russia and makes them a partner in getting to the bottom of this and punishing the bad actors.  Russia supports Assad, but if Putin put his approval on a plan to investigate and prosecute, especially if the Russians are given an equal footing in the endeavor, then that would deescalate things between the great powers.  That could also allow the U.N. to be useful, for once.
  3. Obama makes a meaningless show of force, Putin and Obama bluster at each other until the next shiny object comes up for review, and the Syrians, Iranians, and Islamists keep ripping each other’s guts out for the foreseeable future.
  4. Obama is forestalled from acting precipitously, and the crisis is resolved by those who actually have a dog in the fight.

I see 1 and 3 as being the most likely.  Assad is a survivor, and Obama is all about public shows with nothing to back them up.

Of course, number 4 would require that someone in Congress actually read the Constitution and realize that it’s not for the President to start a war.  Currently, my Congressman and one of my Senators are lonely voices in the wilderness on this, but they need to be joined by their colleagues.   President Obama abused his war powers when it came to Libya, and now it appears that he is going to do it again.  Nothing that has happened in Syria poses a threat to the United States, and if force is necessary, then Congress, not the President nor the U.N., needs to be the one to authorize it.

History is rhyming, and I am convinced that if the next Great War is to begin in the near future, it will be precipitated by some damned foolish thing in Syria.  Here’s hoping that we get luckier this time than we did in 1914.

Thoughts on the Day

  • If you’re not going to use the proper tool to do a job, you better be a master at using the improper tool to do it.
    • Analogy – If you’re going to use a Mosin-Nagant to shoot sporting clays, you better be able to break the clays with it.
  • If you don’t have the manners to show up for the meeting on time, at least have the manners to know what the meeting is about.
  • Dropping off and picking up in the carpool at school is a delicate balance between cooperation between loving human beings who are all working toward a common goal and the overwhelming wish to harm your fellow human being if he doesn’t remove his head from his lower alimentary canal.
  • The drive to Boo’s school ends with about a mile going down a narrow, two-lane road, with high bushes growing right up to the road.  Boo used that setting to reenact the trench scene from Star Wars with me this morning.
    • I’m so proud.

Today’s Earworm

 

Stevie Ray Vaughn, October 3, 1954 to August 27, 1990.

Schadenfreude

Alternate title – Own it

Apparently the shine on the Obama presidency is rubbing off a bit, at least when it comes to America’s labor unions.  First, Obamacare is pushing employers to cut full-time positions to strictly part-time status, or eliminate them entirely.  People who have their hours cut in half or have their jobs erased don’t pay as much in union dues, now do they?  Second, President Obama decreed that we shall not create thousands of jobs in the mid-west, with many of them going to union labor, when he refused to authorize construction of the Keystone XL oil pipeline.  Those construction workers, teamsters, and manufacturers ought to be building windmills and unicorn feeding stations anyway.  And finally, his Department of Justice has filed suit to block the merger of American Airlines and US-Airways, which puts the continued competitiveness and survival of both companies in jeopardy.  Those highly unionized pilots, flight attendants, and pilots aren’t going to be paying into union coffers if their airlines go belly up.

So what we have is the most radically leftist administration in my lifetime thumbing its nose at those who put it in office.  Without the support of the labor unions, not only would Obama still be the least industrious Senator in our history, but most of the Democrat members of Congress who either swept in on his coat tails or held onto their jobs because of his victories would be out doing something more commensurate with their skills and work ethic, like sweeping up cigarette butts from the gutter.

And now that the unions have everything they asked for in two major elections, they’re complaining about the bite marks on their feeding hand.  For those of you who can see me writing this, the tears that are running down my face are from the grief I feel at their misfortune.

Oh, gee.  Oh, golly gosh darn.  How horrible that through their support of a naval gazing neophyte of a wind-up politician, they are now getting bitten right in the member(ship).  What will they do without all of those millions of dollars in dues that those who have their jobs either cut, eliminated, or never even created would have funneled into union coffers?

How absolutely sad it would be for the AFL-CIO, Teamsters, and SEIU to wake up and realize that they’ve been used in the same manner that I used to use baby wipes on Boo?

My advice to them is to look themselves in the mirror, admit that the bruises don’t come from falling down steps and walking into doors, and find a way to remove their attachment from their abuser.  They need to look deeply at their own actions and realize that their poor choices in politics led them to this circumstance, and they need to become more than the Pavlovian piggy bank and voting bloc of the Democrats.  I’m not under any illusions that they will become a truly apolitical organization that only supports politicians that have a track record of keeping their word and not hosing the American worker, but maybe, just maybe, they’ll take the time to examine whomever the Democrats pimp out in 2016 before the unions and their members step into their yokes for them.

How’s Your Day Going?

Life’s been tumultuous lately, but at least it’s been going better than it has for this poor paratrooper:

 

 

I guess you could say that he had a good day, because his gear kept his reserve on his body after the shock of his main not opening.

And people wonder why I never went airborne.

Attention to Orders

The President of the United States of America, authorized by Act of Congress, March 3, 1863, has awarded in the name of Congress the Medal of Honor to

Staff Sergeant Ty M. Carter

United States Army

For conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of his life above and beyond the call of duty:

Specialist Ty M. Carter distinguished himself by acts of gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of his life above and beyond the call of duty while serving as a Scout with Bravo Troop, 3d Squadron, 61st Cavalry Regiment, 4th Brigade Combat Team, 4th Infantry Division, during combat operations against an armed enemy in Kamdesh District, Nuristan Province, Afghanistan on October 3, 2009. On that morning, Specialist Carter and his comrades awakened to an attack of an estimated 300 enemy fighters occupying the high ground on all four sides of Combat Outpost Keating, employing concentrated fire from recoilless rifles, rocket propelled grenades, anti-aircraft machine guns, mortars and small arms fire. Specialist Carter reinforced a forward battle position, ran twice through a 100 meter gauntlet of enemy fire to resupply ammunition and voluntarily remained there to defend the isolated position. Armed with only an M4 carbine rifle, Specialist Carter placed accurate, deadly fire on the enemy, beating back the assault force and preventing the position from being overrun, over the course of several hours. With complete disregard for his own safety and in spite of his own wounds, he ran through a hail of enemy rocket propelled grenade and machine gun fire to rescue a critically wounded comrade who had been pinned down in an exposed position. Specialist Carter rendered life extending first aid and carried the Soldier to cover. On his own initiative, Specialist Carter again maneuvered through enemy fire to check on a fallen Soldier and recovered the squad’s radio, which allowed them to coordinate their evacuation with fellow Soldiers. With teammates providing covering fire, Specialist Carter assisted in moving the wounded Soldier 100 meters through withering enemy fire to the aid station and before returning to the fight. Specialist Carter’s heroic actions and tactical skill were critical to the defense of Combat Outpost Keating, preventing the enemy from capturing the position and saving the lives of his fellow Soldiers. Specialist Ty M. Carter’s extraordinary heroism and selflessness above and beyond the call of duty are in keeping with the highest traditions of military service and reflect great credit upon himself, Bravo Troop, 3d Squadron, 61st Cavalry Regiment, 4th Brigade Combat Team, 4th Infantry Division and the United States Army.

Thoughts on the Day

  • Crash is well on his way to making himself at home.
    • He is truly Siamese.  We had a conversation this morning about whether or not he deserved a portion of the lunch meat I was using to make Boo’s lunch.
  • If you need a brush-up on your defensive-only hand-to-hand skills, try eating a chicken-based pasta dish while balancing a laptop on your knees, all in the same room with a Siamese kitten.
  • Being on steroids means the diet either becomes much harder or gets forgotten completely.
  • One side effect of being at home and working from the living room is being able to watch the first few seasons of Doctor Who from the 1960’s and 1970’s.
    • Irish Woman is irritated that she can’t watch her syndicated crime dramas, but I won’t be here forever.
  • Irish Woman is considering getting a Ford Flex instead of another Focus. Never thought I’d see her volunteer for minivan duty.
  • Boo’s score for the week – two not so hot and two outstanding days at school.  At this point, I’ll accept .500.
  • Boo seems to enjoy his hippotherapy.  That’s basically where he bareback rides a horse that’s led at a walk around an arena while he does Pilates and free weights on its back.  It’s supposed to do a lot for kids who have issues with balance and motor skills, so here’s hoping.
    • And hey, he gets to ride a horse once a week.
  • We stopped by Starbucks on the way to take Crash to the vet this morning.  It wasn’t packed, but it certainly wasn’t deserted.  Guess the boycott didn’t work.
  • Had to disappoint the guy at Starbucks when I told him I wasn’t interested in buying their $300 coffee machine.  If I’m going to spend $300 on coffee, it better be prepared by a tall Nordic goddess with braids in her golden tresses and a dagger in her belt.
  • Crash checked out fine at the vet.  I guess it’s a good thing that our vet gives a discount for families with three or more pets.  This is starting to get expensive.
    • It occurred to me that going to the vet is probably the way that taking your kids to the doctor should be.  You pay a small fee for the service, and insurance is there to cover the big stuff.  Doctor charges only what they need to, you have an idea how expensive things really are, and Obama keeps his nose out of it.
  • Tonight I saw evidence of the breaking of the myth that women need small guns.  A lady at the 5 Counties Friends of the NRA banquet paid $1775.00 for a Thompson and a 1911.
    • And no, they weren’t pink.
  • I got to meet and spend some time with my Congressman at the banquet tonight.  Mr. Massie impressed me with his candor and his conviction in doing what’s right instead of what’s easy.  He’s definitely one to keep an eye on.
    • OK, I’ve been a fan since he wrote back to me that he collected Class III weapons a few months ago, but meeting him just reinforced what I suspected.
  • Irish Woman helped a young man propose to his sweetheart in front of 3000 people tonight at the Louisville Zoo’s brewfest.  I’m really glad that went as planned.

A National Disgrace, and A Texas Honor

Yesterday, Nidal Hasan, a commissioned officer in the United States Army Medical Corps, was convicted of 45 counts related to a murderous rampage at Fort Hood in Texas.  This bastard son of an inbred Algerian goat rapist murdered 13 people, 12 of them soldiers who took the same oath as he did and wore the same uniform, and wounded 32 more.  Since then, it has come to light that he had been in regular communication with jihadist religious leaders overseas and had counseled soldiers under his care that they were to blame for their own injuries and troubles, and that their comrades that were killed in combat deserved what they got.

In the aftermath of the massacre, even after Hasan freely admitted that he committed the crime as part of a global jihad against us and those like us, the Obama administration and their uniformed lapdogs in the Pentagon have refused to call the deaths and injuries from the attack combat related.  By so doing, they are denying those who were harmed and the families of those who were killed benefits from the Department of Veterans Affairs.  This brings shame on all of us.

It is a national disgrace that the people that that jihadist piece of crap shot and their survivors aren’t being given the combat benefits that they so richly deserve. Here’s a hint: When the guy who shoots up the SRP facility freely admits to being an Islamist terrorist, that means that the people he hurt and killed were involved in combat, no matter where they happened to be.

Since the federal government has turned its back on them, the state of Texas is stepping up.  Rather than treat our wounded veterans and their widows and orphans like trash that needs to be hidden from public view, they are extending benefits to those who survived and the survivors of the fallen the same benefits in the state Veteran’s Land Bureau.  This will help them own a home and continue the lives that Hasan tried to destroy and that Obama and his ilk are ignoring.

Good on Texas for doing what’s right, even if the President and his toadies don’t have the guts to follow their example.  When we ignore those who pay the price for our defense, we cheapen their lives and discourage their efforts.  Hopefully President Obama changes his mind and his heart, but no matter what he and his cabal of weak-willed individuals do, it is up to us to do the right thing.

Musings

  • I finally met an orthopedist with a good attitude.  I’ll have to circle this day on the calendar.
  • Of course, what the orthopedist had me do with my shoulder in order to diagnose what was wrong with it ought to be against the Geneva Convention.
    • I was ready to admit to being on the grassy knoll, knowing where Hoffa was buried, and divulging who wrote the book of love before he was through putting me through contortions.
  • It has been decided that I have a separated shoulder from the accident, and should be OK after a couple of weeks of steroids, anti-inflamatories, and some physical therapy.
    • Considering the damage that was done to the car, I can’t complain that all I came away with was a minor injury to one part of my body.
  • The car has been deemed a total loss.  We are in the process of signing it over to the insurance company.
    • The settlement was pretty much the price we paid for the car.  It will pay off the loan and give us a pretty healthy down payment for the replacement.
  • Of course we can’t find the title to the car when we need it.  Who would think to put it somewhere logical and easily remembered?
  • Boo has been through his first few days of kindergarten.
    • The first day we were told that he was ‘licking’ the arms of other children, which is a bad habit he picked up from one of the boys in his preschool.  It’s also a habit we thought we’d broken.  Oh well, I needed something to talk to him about anyway.
    • Day two brought a note from teacher saying that when he came into conflict with another child, he snorted air at the other child.  My bad.  It’s one of the things I do with him when we’re play fighting.
    • We also had to make a new house rule that when one of us wants to speak to someone, we have to raise our hand and wait to be told we can speak.  It’s a bit silly, but it’s a skill he needs at school.
    • Day 3 was characterized as ‘spectacular’.  That did our hearts good.
  • Girlie Bear is enjoying her classes so far.  I helped her a bit with her first German homework assignment, which is to recite, by rote, the Pledge of Allegiance in German.  If she can stop rolling her R’s so much, she might do OK.
    • Words to work on – vereigneten, unteilbar, and Gerechtigkeit.
  • Boo had his first soccer practice this evening.  His defensive move can be best described as “shield wall”.  He runs up to the guy with the ball, then stands as erect as he can and uses his body to block a kick.  Actually, it’s usually his chest or gut that blocks the kick, facilitating a moment laying in the grass, looking up at the clouds.
    • Watching 5 year olds play soccer is a lot of fun.  It’s like watching a pack of puppies try to catch a rabbit.

New Addition

A few days ago, a friend of ours put out the word that he had a stray kitten that needed a permanent home.  The poor thing had been found up a tree, and he and his family had tried for several days asking around their smallish town to see if anyone could claim it.  They had no luck, so he started looking for a place the little furball could call home.

Being a soft touch, I  headed on down there.  The kitten is a Siamese, a breed I’ve always liked, is very affectionate, and is already litter trained.

Meet Crash*:

552702_549917808390658_80882521_nHe’s quite vocal, and talked to me through the airholes in the cat carrier all the way home.  He’s been thoroughly checked out by Moonshine and Bluegrass, and they seem to be OK with him.  Not sure how the kitten liked the two big sniffing things, but they’ll work it out.  Koshka gave him a quick sniff, but after a hiss, sulked her way down to the basement for the night.  Annya hasn’t met him yet, but I expect it will take her quite a while to accept him.

So there we are.  Yet another mammal in our home.

 

*Yes, we named him after the big event this week.  It seemed fitting.