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 Tuesday, April 8, 2003
Intel and Others Back the Wireless MAN. The 802.16a standard for wireless broadband today got major backing from several new member of WiMAX, the consortium pushing the use of wireless for last-mile connections. [allNetDevices Wireless News]
comments < 8:12:17 PM        >

"Claims that man-made pollution is causing "unprecedented" global warming have been seriously undermined by new research which shows that the Earth was warmer during the Middle Ages." The 9th through 14th centuries were significantly warmer than today, says this report. Which means that forecasts for catastrophic doom from rising temperatures are false - because we have already gone through much warmer temperatures without catastrophe. [Edward Mitchell: Common Sense Technology]
comments < 7:46:34 AM        >

Jonathan Schwartz: Open source vs open standards. [Scripting News]
comments < 7:43:36 AM        >

My comments on the Schwartz piece. [Scripting News]
comments < 7:43:25 AM        >

Adobe to Release Version 6 of Acrobat. The Register has an article noting that Adobe is updating Acrobat for the XML era.  Adobe has melded its Portable Document Format (PDF) and XML, updating its Acrobat family of PDF creation tools to version 6.0 in the process. [Ernest Svenson: PDF for Lawyers]
comments < 7:40:56 AM        >

I don't know about you, but I know enough about small arms tactics to know that I wouldn't want to be in the center of Baghdad.  Why?  With buildings surrounding me, I would be a prime target for a rapid fire RPG or a mortar in the relatively clear area of a Presidential compound.   By the time I ID them, they would be gone. My thinking if I was there:  am I a sycthed chariot waiting to be cut up by irregulars? [John Robb's Radio Weblog]
comments < 7:40:33 AM        >

One question:  why don't we have an Arab Division (or infantry battalion) in the US military?  Or perhaps attached brigades that can be allocated to divisions in the fray.  This is a wild thought, I know, but it makes sense.  Language and religious skills are as important as mastery of certain weapons in many operations.  The US military has a long history of recruiting soldiers that are intersting in gaining citizenship in the US (they will do a lot more to earn their status in the US than lots of the schmucks that live here).  A unit like this would go a long way to enabling us to operate in places close to Islamic holy areas and deal with the arab populations.  We already pay a premium for language skills, this would likely be a premium assignment -- all volunteer of course.  If Rumsfeld wants to reinvent the military, he needs to really think outside the box instead of regurgitating the old saws of light, reponsive forces we mulled over in the 70's (when he was defense secretary under Ford). [John Robb's Radio Weblog]
comments < 7:40:24 AM        >

How do we win the peace in Iraq?  We need to help and not just with money.  It can also not only be self-help.  Where are the hordes of educational experts, health experts, (non-exploitive) business experts, agricultural experts, etc.. ready to enter Iraq after the war is over?  Why are we only willing to send oil experts, american corporations working on contract, and ex-military managers?  We need a Peace-Corps on steroids -- not kids that are straight out of college (which is almost the equivalent of useless), but smart and experienced people that want to make a difference.  Remember, Iraqi oil revenues aren't even close to dealing with the costs of this (not only are the oil revenues paltry -- 0.03% of US GNP -- but Saddam has run up a huge national debt buying weapons).  The US is in this up to the eyeballs financially in this venture.  We declared war on this country and it is our responsibility to them and to our long-term financial future to help them succeed. [John Robb's Radio Weblog]
comments < 7:39:59 AM        >

Assassination?  Here is an interesting question:  do we really want Saddam's generals or party faithful to kill him in a coup?  Sure, Saddam may already be dead so this may be moot (I tend to think he is dead).  However it is interesting to think through the possibility we would ever deal with a self-installed post Saddam leadership on anything other than an unconditional basis.

To analyze this it is interesting to look at the parallels and differences between the assassination/coup plots against Hitler in WW2 and one that could be made against Saddam.  After the battle of Stalingrad in January of 1943 (where a quarter of a million German soldiers lost their lives to Hitler's military incompetence), the majority of the German General Staff (including most of its Field Marshals) decided that Hitler must be eliminated or replaced.  The general's cabal approached the Allies through a secret communication delivered via Norway asking for the terms of the surrender if Hitler was eliminated or replaced.  The Allies didn't respond directly.  They opted later to make a public pronouncement that they wanted unconditional surrender with the Germans and that no other option existed.  The ideological intransigence of the Allies resulted in 2 more years of war and the Soviet domination of Eastern Europe. 

The parallels between these two situations are as follows: 

  • Both Saddam and Hitler suffered humiliating military defeats.  In contrast, Saddam caused three Iraqi Stalingrads (the war with Iran, the disaster in Kuwait during the first Gulf war, and the most recent disaster throughout Iraq).  Therefore the motivation for a coup in both cases is high.
  • The allies are much closer to victory against Saddam that against Hitler at the point of the first attempt at negotiation.  This promotes a need for the allies to not give in at all with victory so close at hand.  2 months of war vs. 2 years.
  • Both Saddam and Hitler have been ideologically characterized as super-villains.  Additionally, their parties have been characterized as intrinsically evil.  This makes negotiation with anybody in the party that would desire a change in leadership difficult to do despite the advantages to an end of hostilities.  Ideology drove the Allies of WW2 to reject the offer and it would likely drive to do the same today -- they couldn't distinguish between the generals in that actually anti-Nazi opposition within the German leadership and the party loyalists.
  • Saddam's generals are not a professionals, rather they are relatives and henchmen.  As such, these generals do not view themselves as valuable due to their skills but rather due to their relationship to Saddam.  This makes them unlikely to take any action.
  • There is little common cultural ground between Saddam's generals and our leadership.   This is in contrast with the German general staff which was highly educated and of similar cultural background to the allies.  This would make the Allies much less likely to deal with Saddam's generals as equals or even rational negotiating partners.
  • Both the Allies of today and the Allies of WW2 have very little sense of what the post-war world will look like.  Both had strong desires but the number of variables and the complexity of the situation is well beyond easy prediction.  The Allies of WW2 did fail.  They didn't anticipate the Soviet occupation of Eastern Europe.  This would tend to point to a situation where we keep the devil we know in power (the Baathists) minus Saddam rather than the devil we don't know.  This approach would limit downside surprise.  However, it is unlikely we will take this approach given our ideological view re: the current regime and its members.
[John Robb's Radio Weblog]
comments < 7:39:41 AM        >

John Robb:  How to Defeat an Urban Phalanx.   Some thoughts and ideas on how to fight urban combat in Baghdad. [John Robb's Radio Weblog]
comments < 7:39:16 AM        >


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