RSS/XML | Add to My Yahoo!| Essays | Main Page | Disclaimer | |

March 8, 2007

What if Holland wars against Venezuela?

by

Venezuelan dictator Hugo Chavez has been making noises about “Greater Venezuela,” meaning taking control of the south Caribbean islands of Dutch West Indies, lying near Venezuela’s coast.

What if the nutcase running Venezuela actually made a grab for the islands? Is it farfetched to anticipate? Venezuela’s economy is in the pits, wrecked by Chavez-flavored socialism. Hearken back to 1982, when Argentina was headed by a military junta, controlled by General Leopoldo Galtieri. Faced with economic crisis and growing opposition to the regime, Galtieri launched an invasion of the British territory of the Falkland Islands, about 400 km east of the country. Argentines have long considered the Falklands actually to be Argentine territory, las islas Malvinas, and Galtieri played on this sentiment in invading.

Could something like that be running through Chavez’s head? Like Britain of today, but unlike Britain of 1982, Holland has practically no power-projection capability. There is a modest Dutch military force stationed in the Dutch West Indies, but it would quickly be outmatched by Venezuela’s military.

In 1982, Britain sent a naval task force of two aircraft carriers, submarines and surface combatants to retake the Falklands. Other vessels brought Royal Marines and British Army troops. It was a bitter, hard-fought struggle and the British suffered significant losses, especially from Argie air power. However, the conscripts of the Argentine army in the Falklands were no match in the end for the Brits and the islands were returned to British control.

So what if Chavez moves against the DWI? Strategy Page analyzes the situation.


Posted @ 9:55 am. Filed under Foreign Affairs, Military, Europe & NATO

March 6, 2007

Wanna see something really scary?

by

Just watch this video.


Posted @ 7:08 pm. Filed under War on terror, Military

March 4, 2007

Stops your heart

by

If the rocket doesn’t kill you, a heart attack will - video at Strategy Page.


Posted @ 5:24 pm. Filed under Military

January 18, 2007

US warships should also fly the Union Jack

by

Strategy Page explains why:

Continuing budget problems have already forced Britians Royal Navy to mothball (put into inactive reserve) 13 of its 44 warships. Now it has been decided to mothball another eight, and to cancel construction of two Type-45 destroyers. That will leave only six new Type-45s, plus two new aircraft carriers being built. The government is also considering closing one of the three bases the navy maintains. The budget problems are caused by cost overruns in procurement problems for new ships (destroyers and nuclear subs) and aircraft (the new Eurofighter), as well as training costs associated with troops being sent to Afghanistan and Iraq. The government believes it can get away with these cuts because, well, the U.S. Navy is more powerful than all the world’s navies combined, and a close ally of Britain. So if there’s an emergency requiring warships…

Whenever people complain that the US defense budget is so large compared to every other nation, I point out that we are paying for their defense as well as our own, and have been for some decades. Probably the only nation under America’s security umbrella that is mostly pulling its own freight is Japan, whose navy long ago surpassed Britain’s in size and power. Australia, too, can likely handle any conventional threat, though the US provides strategic deteerrent for both it and Japan. Britain, almost as steadfast an ally as Australia, has been near-completely dependent on American power since 1940, especially our seapower.


Posted @ 7:04 am. Filed under Military

December 20, 2006

Project Thor, reborn

by

Not going to spend much time on this, but Glenn Reynolds linked to Popular Mechanics’ article about a potential non-nuclear warhead for ICBMs, scenarioed thus:

When the order comes, the sub shoots a 65-ton Trident II ballistic missile into the sky. Within 2 minutes, the missile is traveling at more than 20,000 ft. per second. Up and over the oceans and out of the atmosphere it soars for thousands of miles. At the top of its parabola, hanging in space, the Trident’s four warheads separate and begin their screaming descent down toward the planet. Traveling as fast as 13,000 mph, the warheads are filled with scored tungsten rods with twice the strength of steel. Just above the target, the warheads detonate, showering the area with thousands of rods-each one up to 12 times as destructive as a .50-caliber bullet. Anything within 3000 sq. ft. of this whirling, metallic storm is obliterated.

Actually, the tungsten warheads wouldn’t detonate “just above the target,” but when they hit it. And they would be much more destructive than the strike of a big bullet because their speed, gained in the fall from outer space, would cause them to shatter with high-explosive force.

Thuis isn’t a new idea. It first came up in the 1950s and was originally envisioned as an orbiting platform from which the rods would be decelerated to suborbital speed, calculated to hit the target after a fiercely fast freefall. Wikipedia explains,

The time between deorbiting and impact would only be a few minutes, and depending on the orbits and positions in the orbits, the system would have a world-wide range. There is no requirement to deploy missiles, aircraft or other vehicles. Although the SALT II treaty (1979) prohibited the deployment of orbital weapons of mass destruction, it did not prohibit the deployment of conventional weapons.

The weapon inflicts damage because it moves at orbital velocities, at least 9 kilometres per second. The amount of energy released by the largest version when it hits the ground is roughly comparable to a small nuclear weapon or very large conventional bomb. Smaller weapons can deliver measured amounts of energy as small as a 500 lb conventional bomb.

The “pole” shape is optimal because it enhances reentry and maximises the device’s ability to penetrate hard or buried targets. The larger device is expected to be quite good at penetrating deeply buried bunkers and other command and control targets. The smaller “crowbar” size might be employed for anti-armor, anti-aircraft, anti-satellite and possibly anti-personnel use.

The weapon would be very hard to defend against. It has a very high closing velocity and a small radar cross-section.

No fallout, no hazard from duds and no toxic residue - it’s the environmentally friendly weapon!.


Posted @ 12:19 pm. Filed under Military

December 8, 2006

“There are no atheists in foxholes”

by

Or, apparently, on the floor of buildings coming under mortar attack.


Posted @ 7:34 am. Filed under War on terror, Iraq, Military

December 7, 2006

Thank you, whomever you are

by

I had lunch today with a colleague at Dalt’s Grill on White Bridge Road in Nashville. When I returned to my car I found this anonymous note placed under a windshield wiper, written on the torn-off back of an envelope.

(Click on photo for full-size image.) Whether that today is Pearl Harbor Day has anything to do with the writer deciding to leave this note I cannot know. But whomever you are, thank you for being so thoughtful. My family and I much appreciate it!


Posted @ 1:53 pm. Filed under Military
Email is considered publishable unless you request otherwise. Sorry, I cannot promise a reply.

Blogroll:

News sites:

Washington Times
Washington Post
National Review
Drudge Report
National Post
Real Clear Politics
NewsMax
New York Times
UK Times
Economist
Jerusalem Post
The Nation (Pakistan)
World Press Review
Fox News
CNN
BBC
USA Today
Omaha World Herald
News Is Free
Rocky Mtn. News
Gettys Images
Iraq Today

Opinions, Current Events and References

Opinion Journal
US Central Command
BlogRunner 100
The Strategy Page
Reason Online
City Journal
Lewis & Clark links
Front Page
Independent Women's Forum
Jewish World Review
Foreign Policy in Focus
Policy Review
The New Criterion
Joyner Library Links
National Interest
Middle East Media Research Institute
Institute for the Secularisation of Islamic Society
Sojourners Online
Brethren Revival
Saddam Hussein's Iraq
National Coalition Against Legalized Gambling
Telford Work
Unbound Bible
Good News Movement
UM Accountability
Institute for Religion and Democracy
Liberty Magazine

Useful Sites:

Internet Movie Database
Mapquest
JunkScience.com
Webster Dictionary
U.S. Army Site
Defense Dept.
Iraq Net
WMD Handbook Urban Legends (Snopes)
Auto Consumer Guide
CIA World Fact Book
Blogging tools
Map library
Online Speech Bank
Technorati
(My Tech. page)

Shooting Sports

Trapshooting Assn.
Nat. Skeet Shooting Assn.
Trapshooters.com
Clay-Shooting.com
NRA
Baikal
Beretta USA
Browning
Benelli USA
Charles Daly
Colt
CZ USA
EAA
H-K; FABARM USA
Fausti Stefano
Franchi USA
Kimber America
Remington
Rizzini
Ruger
Tristar
Verona
Weatherby
Winchester
Blogwise
Excellent essays by other writers of enduring interest

Coffee Links

How to roast your own coffee!

I buy from Delaware City Coffee Company
CoffeeMaria
Gillies Coffees
Bald Mountain
Front Porch Coffee
Burman Coffee
Café Maison
CCM Coffee
Coffee Bean Corral
Coffee Bean Co.
Coffee for Less
Coffee Links Page
Coffee Storehouse
Coffee, Tea, Etc.
Batian Peak
Coffee & Kitchen
Coffee Project
HealthCrafts Coffee
MollyCoffee
NM Piñon Coffee
Coffee is My Drug of Choice
Pony Espresso
Pro Coffee
7 Bridges Co-op
Story House
Sweet Maria’s
Two Loons
Kona Mountain
The Coffee Web
Zach and Dani’s

Roast profile chart

Links for me

Verizon text msg
HTML special codes
Google Maps
Comcast
RhymeZone
Bin Laden's Strategic Plan
Online Radio
The Big Picture
SSM essay index
See my Essays Index!
Web Enalysis

categories:

Other:

Internal links:

An online news and commentary magazine concentrating on foreign and military policy and religious matters.
Donald Sensing, editor
John Krenson, columnist.

Google Search
WWW
This site
Old Blogspot OHC

Fresh Content.net

Sitemeter

Fight Spam! Click Here!

Archives

April 2007
S M T W T F S
« Mar    
1234567
891011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
2930  

Archives for Jan 03-Mar 05.

19 queries. 1.053 seconds