Saturday, April 10, 2021

Bonhomme Richard will be decommissioned in San Diego next week before being towed elsewhere to be scrapped

 


via Los Angeles Times

After extensive cleanup and reclamation in the wake of a July inferno, the amphibious assault ship Bonhomme Richard will be decommissioned in San Diego next week before being towed elsewhere to be scrapped, the Navy said in a statement.

Navy officials said in November that although the Bonhomme Richard was salvageable, the time and price of repair — five to seven years at an estimated $2.5 billion to $3.2 billion — were too steep to warrant saving the 22-year-old ship.


The Navy plans to hold a small decommissioning ceremony Wednesday with limited attendance. Then the ship will be towed to a scrapyard, said Cmdr. Nicole Schwegman, a Naval Surface Force Pacific spokeswoman.

She died from maintenance, not enemy action.  



How much did we lose in treasure? via Wikipedia...Cost of replacement was estimated about $4 billion (2020 dollars).[13]

Friday, April 09, 2021

Discussion. What is China's intent? Are we up against a modern day "Monroe Doctrine" in Asia but this time by the Chinese?

 


Time to put the blogs brain power behind a question I've had and need help to solve.

What is China's intent?

It's not expansion of their "doctrine".  At least not in the model of the old Soviet Union.  I don't see foreign conquest...at least not yet.  I do see market expansion but everyone on the globe is trying to do that.

I DO see a push for fishing and other natural resources (I still believe that will be the flashpoint with its smaller neighbors) but that could be forestalled with the purchase of oil from Iran, a push for other than oil power sources (refuse to call it green tech because nuclear power is the most efficient alternative power source but the West still won't embrace it) and a natural conservative approach to power usage in that nation.

So what is the goal within the next 50 years.

As weird as it might sound I believe it could be acknowledgement that they're a power.  Not by the UN or the EU but by the US.

So what explains the power plays in the S. China Sea?

My guess is that we're looking at a twisted Monroe Doctrine.

Flip the script.

The year is 2030 and the Chinese have a naval base and have stationed thousands of Marines in Venezuela.

They're conducting exercises in the Gulf Of Mexico and they're running freedom of navigation exercise up and down the coast of the US.

How would the American people react.

I personally would lose my shit.  

I'd probably be demanding whatever party is in power to sink every ship, to launch an invasion and displace every Chinese Marine in that country.

In other words if our positions were reversed I'd probably feel the same kind of nationalism that many Chinese netizens currently feel.

Can we pull back?

I don't think so.

Does our current posture in the region make sense if war were to actually come?

Hell no.

Am I right?  If I am then we need to completely rethink our drink.  If I'm wrong then I'd love to hear your theory. What is China's intent?


China's massive fishing fleet flexed its muscles off the Philippines and makes a lie of our "forward deterrence"...

 




via Defense News.

The fishing vessels arrived one and two at a time, dropping anchor off the disputed Whitsun Reef near the Philippines. As the Chinese-flagged fleet grew larger, the vessels tethered themselves together, hunkering down for a gray zone standoff that has captured policymaker interest throughout the Pacific region.

And with that, Beijing burst Washington’s deterrence bubble.

In congressional testimony last month, officials advocated for new, multibillion-dollar investments in long-range strike capabilities and a sophisticated missile system in Guam. These new platforms, it was argued, are essential to reassuring our regional allies and deterring China.

And yet, the Whitsun spectacle lays bare that Washington’s continued embrace of a costly, conventional deterrence strategy is alone unlikely to prevent Beijing from achieving many of its security objectives.

What’s more, China is banking on America’s prioritization of traditional deterrence at the expense of a robust, and potentially more effective, asymmetric strategy.

No doubt, American military supremacy has deterred China from achieving many of its goals. Nevertheless, Beijing has continued its incremental march forward in Hong Kong, in the Taiwan Strait and at various overseas ports.

Here 

The article is being kind but I want to point out a couple of things...

1.  The Chinese have gone beyond the first island chain.  Any thoughts of bottling them up is "old" thinking and not dealing with the reality today.

2.  Our attempts to use "what's worked" has already failed.  Penny packets of forward deployed troops is worthless, especially in the Pacific.

3.  China is using a "whole of govt" approach in its dealing across the globe.  The USA has TOO OFTEN relied solely on the military.  While the Pentagon has welcomed this and sought to establish itself as the leader in foreign affairs its a bankrupt way of doing business.  We must relearn TRUE DIPLOMACY and learn to offer more than weapon systems to potential allies.

4.  The idea of labeling the Chinese a "near peer" competitor is a lie.  They're a full fledged superpower.  Economically we deal with them as a partner while militarily we see them as a foe.  That disconnect needs to be eradicated and we need to pick a direction.  Either partner or enemy.  They can't be both.

5.  The idea of dividing our attention between Russia and China is fraught with peril.  NATO as an organization should have died DECADES ago.  If the EU is incapable of defending itself against Russia then they should cease to exist as a union.  Regardless we are no longer capable of participating in Europe's defense with the glaring threat of China (assuming we decide they are indeed an enemy) looming.

6.  The political and economic ramifications of a break with China have to be dealt with.  If we declare them an enemy then the shocks to the global economy will be fierce.  We will need to rally the American people to that reality.  Additionally we should be prepared to see many current allies take a neutral instead of supporting stance.

7.  The idea of limiting casualties in a fight with China should be banished from thought.  Any conflict with them will be fierce, with a high body count, large number of ships, tanks, aircraft and other equipment lost and national treasure expended.  We must wrap our heads around the fact that a war will be bloody and difficult.

Finally I want to add this.

Once again it becomes obvious that Berger's concept is dead on arrival.  This fishing fleet alone will make targeting difficult and our forces will be shadowed no matter how we attempt to deploy them.

In other words we will be easily found, fixed and destroyed.  Probably before we launch our first ground based missile.

Russian Heavy Artillery @ Work...

 Thanks to Rob Lee for the link!

Soldiers of the 25th ID attend the Jungle Operations Training Course

 





The Army is becoming what we used to be.  The Army is getting hard while I can literally feel the softness creeping into the Marine Corps.

So the MQ-9B is survivable in a high threat environment now?

I don't understand the thinking!

So now the Mq1-9B is survivable in a high threat environment?  Everything I'm reading about this new Marine Corps construct leads me to believe that its a force that's designed to be destroyed.

It's combat power in the scheme they're developing is NEGLIGIBLE, not at all survivable and seems to be simply a target for enemy fire so that they don't shoot at our capital ships.

In other words, it appears that these Marines are expendable.  It's harsh and I could even live with that if they were at least honest about it!

New Generation Ekranoplane, the A-700

Boeing CMV-22B arrives at Naval Air Station North Island

French Forces @ Exercice WAKRI 2021

Spain's Army @ work...

AV-8B Harriers take off

 

S. Korea rolls out their semi-stealth fighter. I'm impressed...

 




You've seen it by now cause its all over the net, but the S. Koreans have rolled out their semi-stealth fighter.

I'm impressed.

They've cracked the code and I fully expect a few nations to be a bit miffed.

Just saw a blogger from Finland try and pump up the F-35 and one of the talking points was (again) the electronic attack potential of the plane.  Once again he muddied the waters by failing to acknowledge that the EA potential comes from the AESA array.  Nothing unique.  Nothing fancy.  Just the same type radar that's flying on most fighters today.

If the S. Koreans can get this right, and get the price right then they have a world beater on their hands.

The F-35 had the field to itself for 20 plus years and still didn't deliver.  Now new contenders enter and I'm afraid that the US and (some) its allies will be flying to least advanced, most expensive and most maintenance airplane in the skies.

We have fallen far just cause we chased dreams instead of dealing with reality.