Tuesday, February 18, 2025

Sheriff Chad Bianco for CA Governor


Sheriff Chad Bianco

A Republican Trump-supporting sheriff in Riverside County has officially put his name in the California gubernatorial race, becoming the first GOP candidate to enter the Golden State’s 2026 gubernatorial race. 

On Monday, Sheriff Chad Bianco announced the launch of his campaign, hoping to replace Democrat Governor Gavin Newsom — who is term-limited. 

James Meyers, OANN 

BREAKING : Riverside Sheriff Chad Bianco officially announces he is running for California Governor for 2026.

He was joined today by state legislators like Leticia Castillo and Bill Essayli,  and many grass root organizers, law enforcement, tribal leaders, and more.

In 2024, Riverside, an inland city in the blue state south of Los Angeles, was won by President Donald Trump by just over one point.

Bianco, 58, declared to hundreds of his supporters in Riverside that the California dream has “turned into a nightmare” for Golden State residents — being hindered by Democrat policies that put more emphasis on criminal reform and climate change than fixing the roads, highways, and growing homelessness problem, as well as putting illegals and drug addicts above hard-working Californians.

“What is it that they have given us?” Bianco said regarding the state’s Democrat leaders. “Rampant crime, higher taxes, the highest cost of living in our nation, tent encampments in every major city, more fentanyl deaths, catastrophic fires, a broken homeowners’ insurance market. … Californians deserve better.”

During his rally, Bianco also noted that he would work to get rid of one state law that protects illegal immigrants from being deported. 

“The best thing would be to completely abolish SB 54 and repeal it because it does absolutely nothing for public safety,” Bianco told Politico. “It does absolutely nothing for immigrant communities. The only thing SB 54 was designed for was to keep criminals from being deported.”

SB-54, which is referred to as the “California Values Act,” prohibits local law enforcement from using its resources for illegal immigration enforcement, with some exceptions. The law has been in effect since January 2018. 

“[I’m] tired of my friends leaving the state. I’m tired of watching my friends’ kids leave this state,” Bianco said, the Times reported.

During the COVID-19 pandemic, Bianco explained that he purposely did not enforce vaccine mandates for sheriff’s department employees, as he understood that it was an experimental vaccine that was developed in a short time. Bianco also added that he supported Prop 36, which created harsher criminal penalties for theft and fentanyl dealing in the state. 

“We won that fight, and we won it big,” Bianco said, adding that California voters rejected Democrat leaders who “tried their best to keep it off our ballot, to prevent all of you from forcing them to do what was right.”

Previously, the last Republican to become the governor of California was Hollywood actor Arnold Schwarzenegger, who served from 2003- 2011.

Friday, February 14, 2025

A Sobering Munich


A Sobering Munich


Mike Walker, Col USMC (ret)

The last time world leaders tried to obtain European peace in Munich was 1938 and it did not go well.

Back then, a ruthless but beguiling dictator out maneuvered the West who gave the dictator what he wanted while betraying the country that, while outnumbered and outgunned, had the courage and determination to face its attacker.

It was called appeasement and the term of the hour was "Peace in our time."

But all the Munich agreement really accomplished was to start the clock winding down until the ruthless but beguiling dictator started the next war of aggression.

 That ended in World War II.

Ever since, the world has looked upon Munich as the city where dictators humiliated appeasing Western leaders which ensured the future only would be worse.

The lesson: Appeasing only works when the dictator not only feels but fears the other side's strength and the consequences of a double-cross.

But this is NOT America's moment. This is Europe's test.

If Europe cannot stand firm in the face of this crisis then maybe (and tragically) all the critics are right.

Saturday, February 08, 2025

Obscene $8M Politico Payoff

Obscene $8M Politico payout just one way feds reward
their lapdog media

Benjamin Weingarten, New York Post 

As the federal government’s outrageous spending draws the Trump administration’s hugely deserved scrutiny, one of this week’s many scandals is that We the Taxpayers have been shelling out millions to buy bureaucrats subscriptions to left-leaning media sources.

Yet as offensive as these expenditures are — and as grotesque as is the appearance of government rewarding its friendly propagandists with our money — it’s just a footnote to a far graver and more consequential scandal: That the feds have showered incalculably greater benefits on de facto regime media outlets by seeking to systematically suppress conservative and independent competitors through the Censorship-Industrial Complex.

To be sure, it’s perverse that (per USASpending.gov), we’ve forked over $8.2 million over the last 12 months across a bevy of agencies — including for pricey premium subscription services — to Politico, the chosen conduit for the notorious letter from 51 former intelligence officials seeking to discredit The Post’s Hunter Biden laptop story for the benefit of then-candidate Joe Biden in 2020.

Likewise the hundreds of thousands of dollars a year lavished on The New York Times, rewarded with a Pulitzer for unquestioningly printing the leaks and lies fed to it by government officials to spin up the Russiagate hoax .

Same goes for the Associated Press, which raked in more than $600,000 in taxpayer cash over the last year, and well over $10 million from 2021 onward.
Simply put, the American people should not be on the hook for news subscriptions to biased sources, or arguably to any sources at all.

For those in conservative and independent media, these payments to competitors just add insult to injury. 

As has been revealed over the last eight years, the feds have leveraged the power of the government — and hundreds of millions of dollars in government funding — to pressure social-media companies to purge disfavored news and views, and crush the business models of the conservative and independent media companies producing them.

Seeking to cancel en masse competing media companies through censorship, shadow-banning and cutting off the ad revenue that is their lifeblood provided a benefit worth many multiples of the funds taxpayers have been doling out to favored media outlets.

The unspoken quid pro quo is that these outlets will faithfully attack conservative and independent media, serve as witting conduits for government officials to run information operations via leaks and lies and refuse to lay a glove on the political establishment that butters their bread.

On top of all that, for conservative and independent media outlets, sums like the $8 million Politico payout is the cherry on top of this broader government-media scandal.

Meanwhile, Americans are getting a window into USAID’s funding of media entities abroad, sometimes in service of regime-change efforts.

Reporters Without Borders, a Paris-based non-governmental organization, reported that Congress allocated $268,376,000 for 2025 for “training … for 6,200 journalists, assist[ing] 707 non-state news outlets, and support[ing] 279 media-sector civil society organizations dedicated to strengthening independent media” to bolster “the free flow of information.”

Beyond the question of whether this work actually serves the national interest, the feds have lost the benefit of the doubt: We cannot assume that such initiatives are all above board, and neither wasteful nor potentially nefarious.

Stories like one recently reported by Michael Shellenberger and Alex Gutentag in the Public substack is one reason they have lost our trust. They found that at least one purportedly independent but actually US government-funded and -directed outlet, the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project, created critical “research” that was cited in the so-called CIA whistleblower complaint used to generate the first impeachment of Donald Trump.

Sickeningly, it appears our own government used derogatory information generated from a putatively foreign outlet — one allegedly responsible for taking down political figures abroad — to try to topple a duly elected US president here at home.

The fact of the matter is the feds have in myriad ways been monkeying with our First Amendment through co-opting and colluding with friendly media that do its bidding in service of its power.

Trump started to right that wrong with his Day 1 executive order launching a missile at the Censorship-Industrial Complex, prohibiting the government from any further participation.

His orders to freeze the Politico funding, and on Thursday to cut “every single media contract,” represents the next leg of an effort to restore our freedom of speech by further separating the media and the state.

Benjamin Weingarten is a contributor at RealClearInvestigations.


 

Monday, February 03, 2025

Ten Problems with DEI That Frighten the Public

 

Ten Problems with DEI That Frighten the Public

Victor Davis Hanson, American Greatness

The diversity, equity, and inclusion project, often seen as a major element of the so-called “woke” creed along with green fanaticism, keeps popping up as a possible subtext in a variety of recent tragedies.

In the case of the Los Angeles fires, Mayor Karen Bass, who cut the fire department budget, was warned of the mounting fire dangers of the Santa Anna winds and parched brush on surrounding hillsides. No matter—she junketed in Uganda. When furor followed, on cue, her defenders decried a racialist attack on “a black woman.”

Her possible stand-in deputy mayor for “security” was under suspension for allegations that he called in a bomb threat to the Los Angeles city council—a factor mysteriously forgotten.

The fire chief previously was on record mostly for highlighting her DEI agendas rather than emphasizing traditional fire department criteria like response time or keeping fire vehicles running and out of the shop.

One of her deputies had boasted that in emergencies, citizens appreciated most of all that arriving first responders looked like them. (But most people in need worry only whether the first responders seem to know what they are doing.) She further snarked that if women allegedly were not physically able to carry out a man in times of danger, then it was the man’s fault for being in the wrong place.

The Los Angeles water and power czar—culpable for a needlessly dry reservoir that could have provided 117 million gallons to help save Pacific Palisades—was once touted primarily as the first Latina to run such a vital agency. But did that fact matter much to the 18 million people whose very survival depended on deliverable water in the otherwise desert tinderbox of greater Los Angeles?

In all these cases, the point is not necessarily whether the key players who might have prevented the destruction of some 25,000 acres of Los Angeles were selected—or exempted—on the basis of their race, gender, or sexual orientation.

Rather the worry is that in all these cases, those with responsibility for keeping Los Angeles viable, themselves eagerly self-identified first by their race, gender, or sexual orientation—as if this fact alone was synonymous with competence and deference.

In fact, racial or sex identity has nothing to do with whether a water and power director grasped the dangers of a bone-dry but vital reservoir; whether the fire department must know how many fire hydrants remain in working order; or whether a mayor understood that in times of existential danger she must stay on the job and not fly on an optional junket to Africa.

As of yet, we have no idea exactly all the mishaps that caused a horrific air crash at Reagan Airport in Washington. The only clear consensus that has emerged is that the horrific deaths could have been easily preventable—but were not because, in perfect storm fashion, there were multiple system failures. In that sense, both the Los Angeles and Washington, DC, disasters are alike.

When a military helicopter crashes into a passenger jet in Washington, DC, airspace—an area that has not seen such a disaster for 43 years—the likely cause is either wrongly altered protocols or clear human error, or both.

So, it is vital to discover what the causes of the disaster were to prevent such a recurrence. As in the Los Angeles cataclysm, the role of DEI—the method of hiring regulatory agency administrators, air traffic controllers, or pilots on bases other than meritocracy—becomes a legitimate inquiry.

To dispel such worries, authorities must disclose all the facts as they do when there are no controversies over DEI. Yet we never learned the name of the Capitol police officer who fatally shot unarmed Ashli Babbitt for months, nor received evidence of his spotty service record. The same initial hesitation in releasing information marked news about the ship that hit the Francis Scott Bridge near Baltimore and why traffic barriers were not up in the French Quarter before the recent terrorist attack in New Orleans.

In the Washington, DC, crash, two questions arise about the conduct of pilots, air traffic controllers, and the administrators responsible for hiring, staffing, and evaluating such employees.

The first issue is whether hiring, retention, and promotion in the airline industry or the military is not fully meritocratic. That is, were personnel hired on the basis of their exhibited superior education, practical experience, and superb scores on relevant examinations in matters relating to air travel? Or were they instead passed over because of their race, gender, or sexual orientation?

Was the shortage of controllers a direct result not of an unqualified pool of applicants but rather because of racial restrictions place upon it to reduce its size?

Second, were the promoters of DEI confident that they could argue that “diversity, equity, and inclusion” were as important criteria for the operation of a complex aircraft system as the past traditional criteria that had qualified air traffic controllers, pilots, and administrators?

Not only did DEI considerations often supersede past traditional meritocratic requirements for employment, but DEI champions had also argued that “diversity” was either as important to, or more important than, traditional hiring and retention evaluations.

The answers to these first two questions make it incumbent to ask further whether DEI played a role in the Washington, D.C., crash, similar to how it may have in the Los Angeles wildfires.

It is not racist, sexist, or homophobic to ask such legitimate questions, especially because advocates themselves so often give more attention and emphasis to their race, gender, and sexual orientation than their assumed impressive expertise, proven experience, and superior education. In other words, had one’s race, sex, or orientation been incidental to employment rather than essential, such questions from the public might never have arisen.

Finally, what are the problems with DEI that have not just lost its support but put fear into the public that, like the Russian commissar system of old, it has the potential to undermine the very sinews of a sophisticated, complex society?

1- DEI is an ideology or a protocol that supersedes disinterred evaluation. In that regard, ironically, it is akin to the era of Jim Crow, when talented in that regard, ironically, it is akin to the era of Jim Crow, when talented individuals were irrationally barred from consideration due to their mere skin color. Like any system that prioritizes identity over merit—whether Marist-Leninist credentials in the old Soviet Union or tribal bias in the contemporary Middle East—a complex society that embraces tribalism inevitably begins to become dysfunctional.

2- DEI does not end at hiring. Rather, once a candidate senses he is employed on the basis of his race, sex, or sexual orientation, then it is natural he must assume such preferences are tenured throughout his career. Thus, he will always be judged by the same criterion that led to his hiring. In other words, DEI is a lifetime contractual agreement, an insurance policy of sorts once DEI credentials are established as preeminent over all others.

3- The advocates of DEI rarely confess that meritocratic criteria have been superseded by considerations of diversity, equity, and inclusion. Instead, to the degree that they claim such criteria are not at odds with meritocracy, they argue that the methods of assessing talent and performance are themselves flawed. Tests then are unsound and systemically biased and therefore largely irrelevant. Few DEI advocates make the argument that diversity is so important that it justifies lowering the traditional standards of competence.

4- Once DEI tribal protocols are established, they are calcified and unchanged. That is when supposed DEI demographics are overrepresented in particular fields such as the postal service or professional sports, then such “disproportionality” is justified on “reparatory” grounds or ironically on merit. If other non-DEI groups, by DEI’s own standards, are deprived of “equity” and “inclusion” or “underrepresented,” it is irrelevant. DEI is, again, a lifetime concession, regardless of changes in status, income, or privilege. An Oprah Winfrey or a Barack Obama—two of the most privileged people on the planet—by virtue of their race, at least as it is defined in the Western world—are permanently deserving of deference.

5- DEI is also ossified in the sense that it makes no allowance for class. Asian Americans, when convenient, can be counted as DEI hires even though, in terms of per capita income, most Asian groups do better than so-called whites. Under DEI, the children of elites like Barack Obama or Hakim Jeffries will always be in need of reparatory consideration but not so the children of those in East Palestine, Ohio.

6- Because DEI is an ideology, a faith-based creed, it does not rely on logic and is thus exempt from charges of irrationality, inconsistency, and hypocrisy. The belief system feels no obligation to defend itself from rational arguments. For example, are not racially separate graduations or safe spaces contrary to the corpus of civil rights legislation of the 1960s? There is no such thing as DEI irony: the system contrived to supposedly remedy the de jure racism of some 60-70 years ago itself hinges on de jure racial fixations as the remedy—now, tomorrow, forever.

7- As in all monolithic dogmas such as Sovietism or Maoism, skeptics, critics, and apostates cannot be tolerated. So, in the case of DEI, logical criticism is preemptively aborted by boilerplate charges of racism, sexism, and homophobia. And the mere accusation is synonymous with conviction, thereby establishing DEI deterrence, under which no one dares to risk cancellation, de-platforming, ostracism, or career suicide by questioning the faith.

8- DEI is also incoherent. It is essentially a reversion to tribalism in which solidarity is predicated on shared race, sex, or sexual orientation, not through individual background, particular economic status, or one’s unique character. No DEI czar knows why in the pre-Obama era, East Asians did not qualify for DEI status, though they seem to now, or when and how the transgendered were suddenly not statistically still traditionally .01 percent of the population but, in some campus surveys, magically became 10-20 percent of polled undergraduates. No one understands what percentage of one’s DNA qualifies for DEI status, only that any system of the past that fixated on ascertaining racial essentialism, such as the one-drop rule of the old South or the multiplicity of racial categories in the former South Africa, or the yellow-star evil of the Third Reich, largely imploded, in part by the weight of its own absurd amorality.

9- DEI never explains the exact individual bereavement that justifies preferentiality. All claims are instead collective. And they are encased in the amber of slavery, Jim Crow, or homophobia or sexism of decades past. Social progress does not exist; the malady is eternal. The candidate for DEI consideration never must ascertain how, when, or where he was subject to serious discrimination or bias. And that may explain all the needed prefix adjectives that have sprouted up to prove these -isms and -ologies exist when they otherwise cannot be detected, such as “systemic,” “implicit,” “insidious,” or “structural” racism rather than just “racism.”

10- DEI never envisions its demise or what follows from it, much less whether there are superior ways to achieve equality of opportunity rather than mandated results. The beneficiaries of DEI seldom ponder its efficacy, much less whether resources would be better allotted to K-12 education during the critical years of development. And they certainly show little concern about those often poorer and more underprivileged who lack the prescribed race, gender, or orientation for special DEI considerations.

In sum, because of these inconsistencies, Donald Trump may well be able to end DEI with a wave of an executive order—simply because its foundations were always built of sand and thus any bold push would knock over the entire shaky edifice.

 

Friday, January 31, 2025

The First Unknown Soldier

 

The First Unknown Soldier

Mike Walker, Col. USMC (ret)


All,

Here are a couple facts about the first Unknown Soldier who was selected after World War I.

There actually were four unknown soldier candidates. 

A decorated veteran who had been wounded and still in France in 1919 was chosen to select one of the caskets by placing white roses on it.

He later stated he was consumed with other-worldly force which directed to the casket he selected.

The other three were interned in a US cemetery in France.

The selected soldier was sent with full honors by warship back to the United States.

The burial ceremony was held on 11 November 1919 (then Armistice - now Veterans - Day). 

The eight pallbearers (all World War I veterans) consisted of 5 soldiers, 2 sailors and 1 Marine.

The Marine and two of the soldiers had been awarded the Medal of Honor. One of the sailors had received the Navy Cross and two other soldiers the Distinguished Service Cross.

The most highly decorated amongst them was Corporal Thomas Saunders USA who had been decorated with the Medal of Honor, Distinguished Service Cross, and Croix de Guerre. 

He was the war's most highly decorated soldier in the Army. 

He also was a Cheyenne even though Native Americans were not considered citizens at that time. What also is not well known is that a number of Native American tribes jointly declared war on Germany in 1917 and the US Army accepted their enlistments.

Also of note, the last person to honor the casket at the burial was Chief Plenty Coups, America's senior Crow chief.

It was a bit ironic as he too could not be a  US citizen and in his youth had fought many times against Corporal Saunder's Cheyenne.

The word "coup" also is important. Amongst the Crow (and other tribes) a coup was a battle staff and upon being recognized for an act of a valor, a white eagle feather was attached.  

As his name implies, Chief Plenty Coups was highly decorated and he placed his coup on the coffin in shared honor of the many Native Americans who had died in the war.

Additionally, Chief Plenty Coups also placed his war bonnet which also was full of white eagle feathers (it is estimated that the chief had received well over 50 feathers for feats of courage and valor).

By the way, Native Americans were given full citizenship rights in 1924. That was due to the  Snyder Act had been passed just a few months before the Unknown Solider ceremony in 1921 and the distinguished Native American role in World War I (as witnessed during the ceremony) played a part.

Today, Chief Plenty Coups' presentations are on display at the Arlington National Cemetery not far from the Tomb of the Unknown Soldiers.

One final note. there was a deeply felt understanding that the unknown also had forever forfeited their identity in the War -- known but to God.

That led to a special act awarding them a posthumous Medal of Honor as the totality of their sacrifice surely was above and beyond the call of duty.

Wednesday, January 29, 2025

The great unwokening at Davos

 

The great unwokening at Davos

 
A former corporate exec explains why the world’s CEOs are suddenly sucking up to Trump and ditching DEI.

Jennifer Set, Spiked Online 

 
Every January, world leaders and CEOs gather in the Swiss mountain town of Davos for the annual week-long meeting of the World Economic Forum (WEF). There they discuss the big issues of the day and present themselves as global agenda setters.

But there was something very different about this year’s confab. All the reports from the WEF suggest that the attendees have started to warm to US president Donald Trump and many of his policies. Which has come as a shock to those accustomed to Davos bigwigs talking up workplace diversity, promising to fight climate change and denouncing the rise of ‘authoritarian’ populism.

As someone who was once part of corporate America, I wasn’t actually surprised in the least. Why? Because Davos attendees are not the green, woke zealots – determined to impose their vision on the world – that so many imagine them to be. They are followers of political fashion, not trendsetters. They just want to be in with the cool kids – and maintain their obscene wealth. Those two priorities trump any political concerns, including resistance to their old foe, Donald Trump.

Now that professional athletes are doing the ‘Trump dance’ on the playing field, and Snoop Dogg is performing at inauguration festivities, being for Trump confers more cool-kid status than being against him. This is why, despite all of the handwringing about Trump being a danger to democracy since his first election win in 2016, the globalists are now on board with his presidency. Or at least they want to appear to be in public.

Speaking at the 2017 WEF, Frans van Houten, the then CEO of Phillips, was concerned about Trump’s presidency. ‘I would worry about disruptive measures and new-found nationalism closing borders’, he warned. Fast forward eight years and Jamie Dimon, the CEO of JPMorgan Chase, is wishing the new Trump administration all ‘the best’.

It’s quite a shift. Every year, since 1971, these unelected, self-appointed leaders have spent a week in the Alps discussing how the rest of us should live. They fly into the exclusive mountain resort on private jets to discuss the need for the rest of us to use LED lightbulbs, drive electric cars, stop using oil and eat bugs. These rich white guys tell us we need to disavow our white privilege. Or at least they did talk about these things, until Trump’s win.

The WEF has been scorned by populists and conspiracy theorists alike. They all believe that this unelected body works overtime to hijack democratic processes around the world, setting its own agenda on climate change, DEI and anything else it deems of the highest importance.

Of course, democracy should and must decide how our nations are run, rather than corporate kings and their diktats. But to say the WEF actually rules the world is to misunderstand what it is really about.

An invite to Davos is the hot ticket for any CEO. It is invitation-only and is the ultimate signifier of insider status. When I was in corporate America (I was chief marketing officer at Levi’s until she resigned in 2022), there would always be a flurry of activity each year in the late autumn when the invitations were handed out. The CEOs act like hordes of freshman girls awaiting their acceptance into the popular sorority. There’s angling and jockeying by corporate-communications leads to get their bosses a coveted invite.

Davos signifies ‘you’ve made it’ status. If you’re the CEO of Fortune 500 Company No498, and you’re invited to sit next to WEF chairman Klaus Schwab or Salesforce CEO Mark Benioff, or Justin Trudeau or Jacinda Ardern, you have surely reached the big time. Even if you don’t get to speak during the forum, you can still be in the room where it happens.

Make no mistake, these CEOs are obsessed with status. For all their talk about woke causes, they really don’t care about the details. All of that was just PR for their companies and for themselves.

Their concern with being seen to be woke largely stemmed from the fact that being rich and powerful ceased to be deemed admirable. It instead became the ultimate mark of ‘privilege’ – a slur in a DEI-dominated world. So the CEOs had to do something to make sure people still liked them and their companies. The solution? Market how social justice-y you are! Suddenly, they could remain rich and still be liked by their woke kids and young employees. Woke capitalism was more a bulwark against cancellation than a firm ideology.

But with the most powerful leader in the world now disavowing DEI, executive-ordering it out of the federal government within hours of taking office, the tables are turning.


I have long argued that these CEOs would abandon wokeness at the first sign of it having a detrimental effect on their brand and profitability. Bud Light’s ‘hiccup’ with trans TikTok influencer Dylan Mulvaney, and the brand’s subsequent loss of share and stock value, was early evidence of that. Today, Bud Light is back to bro marketing, with not a transwoman in sight.

Conspiracy theorists would argue with me. ‘The WEF is pulling the strings’, they say. ‘There are dark forces at play that have nothing to do with money!’ But they’re wrong. CEOs care mostly about money and status. If they have to abandon wokeness because it turns out to be a money loser, they will. They aren’t giving up their millions or private jets.


Now these titans of industry are listening to Donald Trump and others like him. Speaking at the WEF last week, Argentinian president Javier Milei denounced ‘the mental virus of woke ideology’ as the ‘great epidemic of our time that must be cured’. ‘This ideology has colonised the world’s most important institutions’, he said. ‘It is essential to break these ideological chains if we want to usher in a new golden age.’

When Trump was livestreamed into Davos, he broke WEF protocol by declaring fossil fuels a priority and diversity initiatives ‘absolute nonsense’. Yet the CEOs just nodded along.

It makes for an incredible about-face on the part of the global leadership class. The views previously held by the insiders are out, and they are now pretending they never enthusiastically advocated for censorship or hated Donald Trump. They would have you believe they are pro-merit, anti-DEI devotees, and always have been.

The great unwokening of the corporate elites has begun.


Jennifer Sey is founder and CEO of XX-XY Athletics. She was formerly the chief marketing officer of Levi Strauss and Co.

Thursday, January 16, 2025

DRONE WARFARE BASICS

DRONE WARFARE BASICS

Mike Walker, Col USMC (ret)

OVERVIEW:

Drone Warfare in the Russo-Ukraine War has jumpstarted a new Revolution in Military Affairs.

I write with confidence that one thousand US Marines with ten thousand drones and appropriate logistical support can single-handedly defeat one-on-one the large majority of the world’s militaries.

It is a stunning turn of events as we stare deeply at new battlefields which are changing faster than onlookers can keep up. It truly is dizzying in it advances.

The changes also are incredibly dynamic. It is not simply a matter of fielding new and better drones – which is indeed happening. But simply upgrading software or electronics or avionics or batteries or sensors or payload or any combination on existing tactical drones, allows the old weapons to be reinvented – to make an immediate quantum leap in battlefield lethality.

And just to pile on, the emerging power of AI in drone warfare is just beginning to be felt and it too looks to be game-changing.

What to do? To lay a foundation we will take a snapshot mostly centered on United States drone capabilities. Hopefully that will get you into the game but remember, at best this discussion will only enable you to ask better questions.


MISSIONS:  

Combat

Surveillance- Reconnaissance

Logistical

Covert/Clandestine Intelligence

Subsurface

Anti-Drone Defenses

 

Combat

Strategic-Operational Level

MQ-20 Avenger (Predator C) – King of the Combat Drones 

Speed: 400/460mph (cruise/max speed)       Endurance: 18 hours

Range: +15,000 miles (aerial refueling)

Payload: 3,500lbs with internal weapons bay and up to six (6) external hardpoints carrying precision guided munitions (from 250 to 2,000 lbs)

Extra: Uses stealth and reduced signature technology

MQ-9 Reaper (Predator B) – Hunter-Killer UAV

Tactical Level

Switchblade Loitering Attack [Kamikaze] Munition (AKA Low-altitude Stalking & Strike Ordnance/LASSO)

    Model 300 antipersonnel

Speed: 100mph           Endurance: 10-20 minutes

Range: 15 miles 

Payload: 40mm grenade 5m casualty radius

Extra: Uses stealth and reduced signature technology

    Model 600 antitank

Speed: 400/460mph   Endurance: 18 hours

Range: +15,000 miles 

Payload: 3,500lbs with internal weapons bay and up to six (6) external hardpoints carrying precision guided munitions (from 250 to 2,000 lbs)

Extra: Uses stealth and reduced signature technology

Endnote 

The major on-going evolution in tactical combat drones is the transition from human-guided kamikaze drones to fully robotic killer drones that reduces and ideally will eliminate the need for trained and skilled drone operators.

But drones are not perfect. They can malfunction and – like any airborne platform – suffer from the vagaries of the environment. Wind, rain, snow, mist and fog effect drones. Operation at night is challenging and terrain can matter. Urban areas present obstacles to drone flight, triple-canopy jungle can be impenetrable, and flying inside wooded areas a nightmare.

 

Surveillance-Reconnaissance 

Tactical Level

RQ-7 Shadow

Speed: 81/130mph 

Endurance: 7.5 hours

Range: 70 miles 

Payload: Stabilized electro-optical/infrared tracking cameras

Logistical

When it comes to logistical drones, payload is everything. And by everything we mean small. Logistical resupply by drone at this time is limited by payload to urgently needed supplies in small amounts. That means either some uniquely critical item(s) or more generally, support for small teams in the reconnaissance-intelligence gathering/ unconventional warfare/special operations realm.

Covert/Clandestine Intelligence

In addition to military surveillance and reconnaissance missions, a whole host of drones are specifically designed for intelligence gathering and to achieve their mission, many of these are extremely small. So small that the next generation of clandestine operators might will be AI-driven drones that pass as horse flies.

Subsurface (Unmanned Undersea Vehicles or UUVs)    

Subsurface drones have been around a long time but many were limited by cable connections. That is no longer an issue as you will note below.

Ghost Shark (Australia)

Herne (UK) Payload: surveillance/reconnaissance sensors

Endurance:  3 days 

(working on a next-generation 45-day endurance/3,000-mile cruising range version)

Manta Ray (US) 

Long endurance and range as it can both swim and hibernate for extended periods on the sea floor.

Wide range of missions with classified hunter-killer capabilities

Marichka (Ukraine) Payload: “kamikaze” combat/attack munition

Orca (US Extra Large UUV (XLUUV))

In essence, an unmanned conventional submarine with hunter-killer, minelaying, and reconnaissance-surveillance-intelligence gathering missions

Endurance: Months

Cruising Range: 7,500 miles (nearing the capability of World War II U-boats)

                        

Anti-Drone Defense

For now, detection and RF jamming remain the primary components of anti-drone defenses. Tactically, the Marine Corps is fielding a portable Anti-Drone System that uses RF detection and audio sensors that cross reference a changeable library. Ideally future libraries can be updated/improved using AI to work with limited data and Id the target. The Marine operator wears a “touch” haptic device on his body (akin to a smart phone vibrator) to discretely alert the Marine. That at provides critical warning time to take cover and disperse.

At that point, integrated Radio Frequency (RF) jamming (broadband, spot, and barrage) takes over. Unsurprisingly, there is a full range of pretty effective off-the-shelf drone jammers ranging in price from $2,000 to $18,000 (and some really impressive stuff if you have deep pockets).

Therein lies the rub. To counter the detection-jamming defenses, the drone radio networks are employing smart frequency hopping technology to avoid jammers. That makes them even harder to find and attack and another counter-drone hurdle is IFF. Identify-Friend-or-Foe systems prevent friendly fire but there is nothing out there even remotely similar to the highly effective IFF systems used in conventional air war operations. Finally, under current conditions with its overcrowded frequency bands, autonomous jammers are as likely to jam friend as foe. Finally, drones are employing vastly more capable microprocessors and expanded data storage. As a result, drone flight control is getting away from jammable GPS (an advanced throwback to terrain navigating systems developed in the 1980s).

Then there is the future. A tactical counter-drone idea being explored is to deploy swarms of loitering “hornets” that will seek out and kill hapless drones before they become a threat.

CONCLUSIONS

It is hoped this short treatise has given both a useful overview of drone warfare and blunt insight into its complexities. Most of all, it should shock you into understanding that 21st century warfare is changing dramatically and if you think you have mastered it then you don’t understand it at all. But if you think this is something you MUST get smarter about then you are on the right course.