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Author: TriSec    Date: 09/28/2021 10:14:46

Good Morning.

We're about a month post-Afghanistan now, and the navel-gazing continues unabated.


We did indeed reap what we sowed - although it's still somewhat surprising that it all fell apart as rapidly as it did. But like far too many previous American debacles, the warning signs were there. It's just that nobody was really paying attention.


On July 29, the Pentagon’s independent inspector general for Afghanistan told a group of reporters that with 20 years in and trillions dollars spent, Afghan security forces were not confident enough to do basic route clearance or checkpoint management.

Two weeks later, the Taliban had taken nearly all of Afghanistan and was preparing to launch its campaign into Kabul, the capital. Video would show Afghan forces laying down their weapons as the insurgents rolled into city after city, shocking many, but certainly not everyone.

“You know, you really shouldn’t be surprised if you’ve been reading our reports for at least the nine years ... that I’ve been there,” John Sopko, the special inspector general for Afghanistan reconstruction, said in late July. “We’ve been highlighting problems with our train, advise and assist mission with the Afghan military.”

After the Taliban took Kabul on Aug. 15, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff stood in the Pentagon briefing room and said that no one saw the country unraveling in that way.

“... the timeframe of a rapid collapse, that was widely estimated and ranged from weeks to months and even years following our departure,” Army Gen. Mark Milley said. “There was nothing that I or anyone else saw that indicated a collapse of this army and this government in 11 days.”

Milley, along with Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin, will be forced to revisit that assessment this week, as the two take questions from both the House and Senate Armed Services Committees.


The Taliban, of course, want the rest of the world to recognize their rule. International flights have actually tentatively returned to Kabul, and they're trying to get a seat at the UN. As for us, I think we'd do well to make like Vietnam, and leave them be for the next 25 years or so until they figure it out. But that's just me.

Moving on, and looking to the "future"...have you heard about the Space Force uniforms? This experiment in Trumpian vanity continues to move forward. This is yet another thing that President Biden should have cancelled on day one. Is it already past the point of no return?


The Space Force, which unveiled a prototype model of its new service dress uniform last week, plans to lock down the design by the end of this year and start wear-testing soon afterward.

In an online panel discussion Monday as part of Defense One's State of Defense conference, Chief of Space Operations Gen. Jay Raymond said the service will take the design on the road over the next few months to meet with Guardians at bases and listen to what they think.

While the immediate online reaction after the prototype unveiling Sept. 22 at the Air Force Association's Air Space & Cyber Conference was largely positive -- if riddled with jokes about a certain resemblance to science-fiction uniforms -- it showed that more work remains to be done.

The uniform pants were panned by multiple commenters as being baggy and shapeless, and in need of more tailoring to match the coat's crisp lines. Raymond did not address the reaction to the pants in Monday's conference, but the military typically considers such feedback as it finalizes new designs.

Based on the input from troops, the Space Force plans to make the final adjustments to the uniform design around the end of the year, Raymond added. It then will produce a limited number of uniforms for wear-testing.

During that phase, participating Guardians will wear the uniform on a day-to-day basis and offer feedback on its comfort, durability and other factors. Eventually, the uniform will go into wide-scale production.

The Space Force sought a "futuristic-looking design" while reviewing 150 designs, Raymond said. This marks a break from other branches of the military that like to emphasize tradition -- particularly the Army, which in recent years revived its World War II-era "pinks and greens" service dress uniform.

In an atypical move, the Space Force designed the women's uniform first and only created the male version after getting the female version right.

"Historically, what we do is we build a uniform for males, and then we tell the females, 'Hey, go fit into this,'" Raymond said. "And it doesn't fit all that well."


Maybe we should start looking the other way, and encourage Jeff and Elon to become Bondian Super Villians and build lairs in orbit. At least they can pay for some of this stuff.

Finally today - be prepared for Afghans to become the latest in a long line of bogeymen in this country. There is news today that a female soldier has been assaulted at Fort Bliss in Texas by "Afghan refugees". While I will not doubt the veracity of the story - it is extremely short on any details. Sure feels like the latest version of Yellow Journalism to me at this point.


A female soldier at Fort Bliss reported she was assaulted by a group of male Afghan refugees, officials said Friday.

"We can confirm a female service member supporting Operation Allies Welcome reported being assaulted on Sept. 19 by a small group of male evacuees at the Doña Ana Complex in New Mexico," Lt. Col. Allie Payne, director of Public Affairs for Fort Bliss and the 1st Armored Division, said in a statement to ABC-7.

Payne said extra security measures will be taken at the Doña Ana Complex, such as better lighting, and that the soldier has received medical care and counseling. She also said the FBI is investigating.

Sources with knowledge of the incident told ABC-7 the assault was not sexual in nature and that the soldier was attacked near her car after arriving for duty.







 
 

8 comments (Latest Comment: 09/28/2021 15:55:52 by Raine)
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Comment by Scoopster on 09/28/2021 12:49:53
Mornin all...

Got the news yesterday that someone from back in CT died due to a drug overdose..

Comment by Raine on 09/28/2021 13:21:03
Good morning!

Comment by Raine on 09/28/2021 13:21:21
Quote by Scoopster:
Mornin all...

Got the news yesterday that someone from back in CT died due to a drug overdose..



Comment by wickedpam on 09/28/2021 13:31:52
Morning

Comment by Will in Chicago on 09/28/2021 13:41:31
Quote by Raine:
Quote by Scoopster:
Mornin all...

Got the news yesterday that someone from back in CT died due to a drug overdose..



I am so sorry to hear this.


Comment by livingonli on 09/28/2021 14:27:18
Good morning.

Comment by Raine on 09/28/2021 15:05:21
Dave Grohl almost joined GWAR!. also:
When Grohl and the Foos began working on a cover of Rick Astley’s “Never Gonna Give You Up” – which they ended up performing with Astley himself – they noticed a startling resemblance to another song.
At the Summer Sonic Festival in Japan, the band decided to play “Never Gonna Give You Up” after noticing that Astley was on the line-up. “We started kind of learning it true to the original,” Grohl says. “And then I start to realize that the arrangement is exactly the same as ‘Smells Like Teen Spirit.’ The chord progression has an uncanny resemblance. It’s true. There’s a riff and then the drums kick in, and then there’s a verse… there’s a lot. I’m like, ‘Oh my God.’ So we start joking around playing it in that same style, and it was so funny that we did it ten times in a row. And then we walk out on stage and fucking Rick Astley is standing on side stage. Had we gone through all of the typical logistics that you would go through to ask a famous musician to jam with you, it wouldn’t have been as fun. I walked over to him. I’m like, Hey, ‘I’m Dave.’ He’s like, ‘I’m Rick.’ I’m like, ‘Do you want to do it?'”




Comment by Raine on 09/28/2021 15:55:52
Gen. Mark A. Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told a Senate panel Tuesday that his first call to reassure his Chinese counterpart that President Donald Trump had no plans to attack China late in his administration was directed by Defense Secretary Mark T. Esper. Milley said 11 people were present for the second call and that he later informed Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows of it.

Also appearing before the Senate Armed Services Committee are Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin and Gen. Kenneth McKenzie, commander of U.S. Central Command. Lawmakers are grilling the military leaders about tactical decisions made during the rushed evacuation from Afghanistan and pressing them on plans for future counterterrorism operations without a presence in the country.