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Audio Review - South Caucasus News

Is Sending US Military Advisors To Ukraine A Good Idea? – OpEd


Is Sending US Military Advisors To Ukraine A Good Idea? – OpEd

By Dave Patterson

There is the kernel of an idea bubbling up in some foreign policy circles advocating for US ground forces to be dispatched as advisers to assist Ukraine’s troops with fundamental soldiering skills and training in leadership. The title of this piece poses the merit of such ideas as a question. Spoiler alert: This is a bad idea. Sending US military advisers to Ukraine is specious at best and madness at its worst. Do the words “slippery slope” and South Vietnam ring any bells? The notion is truly scary. But it is how foreign policy lunacy gets its foot in the US national security door.

War Starts With a Few US Advisers

To the Biden administration, which has yet to posit a practicable strategy with clearly articulated goals, a recommendation to send advisers to Ukraine, ostensibly to bring the conflict to a more rapid conclusion, might be considered a plausible solution. It isn’t. Taking a walk down memory lane makes the reason palpable. During the last years of his presidency, President Harry Truman saw a red scourge of communism take root in North Korea and China. “Fearing that Vietnam, too, would become a communist state, he sent over transport planes and jeeps, along with 35 military advisers, as part of a multimillion-dollar aid package,” Jesse Greenspan wrote for History. France struggled to defeat the Viet Minh insurgency and retain control of its colony. “By the end of Truman’s presidency, the United States was funding more than one-third of France’s war costs.”

When Dwight D. Eisenhower became US president, he initially refused to get involved in the Vietnam conflict, but he soon succumbed to the notion of communism spreading like falling dominoes. There was a reasonable logic to that belief. US aid to Vietnam increased to almost $2 billion during Eisenhower’s administration, and the number of military advisers grew from 35 to 1,000. When John F. Kennedy became president, “the number of advisers rose to about 16,000, some of whom began engaging in clandestine combat operations,” Greenspan explained.

The progress of the slippery-slope US involvement in South Vietnam is evident in the number of American service members posted to the conflict. President Kennedy’s term saw 16,300 soldiers, Marines, airmen, and sailors involved in the country by the end of 1963. That number reached its zenith in 1968 at a whopping 536,100 under President Lyndon Johnson’s administration. Richard Nixon’s administration began the drawdown in 1969 to just 50 advisers, slightly more than Truman’s going-in figure. Over ten years of combat and 58,220 dead Americans followed the initial cadre of 35 advisers.

Vietnam Holds the Lessons to Understand Ukraine

Volumes have been written on the lessons that should have been learned from the US experience in the thinking and events leading to America’s involvement in South Vietnam. Yet those lessons have fallen on deaf ears for some. In a May 2023 commentary published in War on the Rocks, Zachary Griffiths argues from a historical perspective that US observers during combat operations in which Americans were not involved provided valuable insights, improving US tactics, strategies, and choice of weapons to develop. Lessons learned from the Yom Kippur War in 1973 are prominent in Griffiths’ case for sending US observers to Ukraine. “Diplomatic concerns kept American observers out of Israel until the war ended, but the Department of Defense’s senior leaders rushed observers in to learn immediately after,” Griffiths explained – but it’s important to point out there were no boots on the ground during the war.

Nonetheless, Griffiths asserts: “The war in Ukraine offers another opportunity to galvanize investment around a reform agenda, but only if we send a team of observers to learn.” Griffiths’ advocacy for observers on the ground in Ukraine fails to address the inevitable: Observers move closer to the fighting to get better observations. If they are indeed seasoned experts, as Griffiths suggests, then observers become advisers in short order. When the bullets and artillery impact close by and imminent danger presents itself, advisers become fighters. And it’s game on.

Only five months from the publishing of the War on the Rocks piece, Alexandra Chinchilla, assistant professor at the Bush School of Government and Public Service at Texas A&M University; and US Army Lieutenant Colonel Sam Rosenberg, a Ph.D. candidate at the LBJ School of Public Affairs, University of Texas published September 23, 2023, in Foreign Affairs: “Why America Should Send Military Advisers to Ukraine.” The military pundit class went from observers to advisers in less than half a year. Chinchilla and Rosenberg suggest:

“The United States is accustomed to providing on-the-ground military advice. It has entire organizations —the Army Security Force Assistance Brigades, Special Forces, and the Ministry of Defense Advisors Program—dedicated to providing guidance to other countries, and it should send these soldiers to Ukraine.”

The authors reassure the readers: “Critically, none of these advisers would accompany Ukrainian troops into active combat zones or help call in airstrikes.” What Chinchilla and Rosenberg have apparently failed to account for is the dynamic nature of a battlefield. What American advisers may consider a relatively safe rear echelon cantonment one hour may be a Russian envelopment demanding a survival fight by everyone to escape the next hour. It is the nature of warfare.

Russian Escalation Is Not the Escalation to Fear

Chinchilla and Rosenberg attempt to assuage fears that US advisers will cause a corresponding Russian escalation by asserting: “Despite saber-rattling that followed Western shipments of lethal aid, Russia has done almost nothing in response.” Moscow escalating the war in Ukraine as a response to US advisers on the ground is not the escalation Americans need to worry. The escalation Americans should be frightened of is the escalation by the Biden administration when the first American soldier-adviser is killed. There will be an instant call that the number of advisers is increased to ensure fewer Americans die because the war will be shortened.

Then there is the conundrum created when a NATO member, the US, has combat troops in harm’s way and experiences combat casualties inflicted by the Russians. Some will suggest invoking Article Five of the NATO charter, which states that an attack on one is an attack on all. It is what will happen as sure as night follows day.

Some writers use more recent conflicts like the Gulf Wars, Afghanistan, Iraq, or Syria as analogous measures of merit for sending US troops in harm’s way. In this case, the Vietnam War is the experience that should light the way for the US not to send advisers to Ukraine. The question is, will anyone see the light?

About the author: National Security Correspondent at LibertyNation.Com. Dave is a retired U.S. Air Force Pilot with over 180 combat missions in Vietnam. He is the former Principal Deputy Under Secretary of Defense, Comptroller and has served in executive positions in the private sector aerospace and defense industry. In addition to Liberty Nation, Dave’s articles have appeared in The Federalist and DefenseOne.com.

Source: This article was published by Liberty Nation


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Audio Review - South Caucasus News

Indonesia: President’s Influence In Son Being Named Small Party’s Leader – Analysis


Indonesia: President’s Influence In Son Being Named Small Party’s Leader – Analysis

By Nazarudin Latif and Pizaro Gozali Idrus

A small Indonesian political party’s move to name the youngest son of President Joko “Jokowi” Widodo its chairman shows the Indonesian leader plans to influence national affairs after leaving office next year, some observers said.

On Monday, political newbie Kaesang Pangarep, 28, was named Indonesian Solidarity Party (PSI) chairman just two days after joining the party.

Jokowi had no significant role in his own Indonesian Democratic Party of Struggle (PDIP), and so was no longer comfortable there, Ujang Komarudin, executive director of the think tank Indonesia Political Review, told BenarNews.

“Jokowi’s blessing and intervention are likely behind the appointment of Kaesang as PSI’s chairman,” he said, adding that the party would do anything for the popular current president.

“The plan has been not for Kaesang to join PDIP, but for him to become PSI chairman,” he said.

PSI was banking on the president’s popularity – the so-called “Jokowi effect” – when it made Kaesang its chairman, said Denny Januar Aly, founder of polling agency Lingkaran Survei Indonesia.

“He has no experience in public office or any key role in a political party. So what was the reason for PSI leaders to pick him as chairman? The answer is simple – they were hoping for a ‘Jokowi effect’,” Denny said.

Other analysts have noted that Jokowi has been distancing himself from the PDIP and its interests as he prepares to leave office and he tries to create his own political force. 

Jokowi has not released a statement on Kaesang’s appointment.

Kaesang said his father is one of his inspirations.

“He is someone I love and respect very much and I want to follow his footsteps in politics for the good of the country,” Kaesang said in a statement Monday.

“I hope PSI can become a political home for young people who want to participate in politics and make a positive change for Indonesia,” he said.

PSI was founded in 2014, shortly after Jokowi’s first presidential victory and claims to represent the interests of women, youth and minorities. It also supports Jokowi’s policies and endorsed him in the 2019 presidential elections.

Jokowi will be out of office in 2024 because presidents cannot serve more than two terms.

PSI has not achieved significant electoral success at the national level. It failed to secure any seats in the national parliament in the 2019 election, but managed to win some in the provincial and district legislatures.

Kaesang would face a tough challenge making PSI a parliamentary party, said Wasisto Raharjo Jati, a political researcher at the National Research and Innovation Agency.

“It requires a lot of effort and a long process,” he told BenarNews.

Deteriorating relations?

Some analysts said Kaesang’s decision reflected a rift between Jokowi and his party, the PDIP, which is the largest party in the ruling coalition.

Jokowi wouldn’t have let his son join PSI otherwise, said Hendri Satrio, a political analyst at Paramadina University.

“Few expected Jokowi to act like this. PDIP supported him twice as mayor of Solo, governor of Jakarta, and twice as president. It turns out that Jokowi took an unexpected political step,” he told BenarNews.

The PDIP had also backed the president’s other son, Gibran Rakabuming, who is the mayor of Solo in Central Java province, and his son-in-law, Bobby Nasution, who is the mayor of Medan in North Sumatra.

Said Abdullah, a PDIP executive board member, said his party was not affected by Kaesang’s political move.

“We have many people who can replace members who leave. There are dozens, hundreds, thousands and even millions of them,” Said told BenarNews.

Analysts have said Jokowi’s relationship with PDIP has deteriorated in recent months and the rift has become more apparent as supporters pressure him to endorse a successor who can continue his policies and programs.

Many Jokowi supporters have expressed their disappointment with the PDIP, accusing the party of being too controlling and interfering with the president’s agenda.

For its part, the PDIP has repeatedly denied there is any tension between Jokowi and its chairwoman Megawati Sukarnoputri, a former president who is widely regarded as the kingmaker in Indonesian politics.

As a party that traditionally appealed to nationalists in Indonesia, PDIP placed absolute power in the hands of Megawati, the daughter of Indonesia’s founding father and first president Sukarno, said Ujang of Indonesia Political Review.

The Feb. 14, 2024, presidential election is expected to be a race among PDIP candidate and former Central Java Gov. Ganjar Pranowo; Defense Minister Prabowo Subianto; and ex-Jakarta Gov. Anies Baswedan.


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Audio Review - South Caucasus News

North Korea To Expel US Soldier Over Illegal Border Crossing


North Korea has decided to expel American soldier Travis King who it said has admitted to illegal intrusion into the country and was “disillusioned about unequal U.S. society,” state media KCNA said on Wednesday.

KCNA released the final results of an investigation into King’s border crossing in July, after saying in its interim findings that he wanted refuge in North Korea or elsewhere because of maltreatment and racial discrimination within the army.

“King confessed that he illegally intruded into the territory of the DPRK as he harbored ill feeling against inhuman maltreatment and racial discrimination within the U.S. army and was disillusioned about the unequal U.S. society,” KCNA said.

DPRK is the initials of the North’s official name, the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea.

Authorities have decided to expel King under the country’s law, KCNA said, but did not specify how, when or to where he would be expelled.

The U.S. State Department and the White House could not be immediately reached for comment.

King, an army private, made a sudden dash into North Korea from the South on July 18 while on a civilian tour of the Joint Security Area on the heavily fortified border between the neighbors.

There have been several attempts by U.S. soldiers stationed in South Korea to desert or defect to North Korea, but King’s expulsion came relatively quickly compared to others who have spent years before being released from the reclusive country.


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South Caucasus News

North Korea To Expel US Soldier Over Illegal Border Crossing


North Korea has decided to expel American soldier Travis King who it said has admitted to illegal intrusion into the country and was “disillusioned about unequal U.S. society,” state media KCNA said on Wednesday.

KCNA released the final results of an investigation into King’s border crossing in July, after saying in its interim findings that he wanted refuge in North Korea or elsewhere because of maltreatment and racial discrimination within the army.

“King confessed that he illegally intruded into the territory of the DPRK as he harbored ill feeling against inhuman maltreatment and racial discrimination within the U.S. army and was disillusioned about the unequal U.S. society,” KCNA said.

DPRK is the initials of the North’s official name, the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea.

Authorities have decided to expel King under the country’s law, KCNA said, but did not specify how, when or to where he would be expelled.

The U.S. State Department and the White House could not be immediately reached for comment.

King, an army private, made a sudden dash into North Korea from the South on July 18 while on a civilian tour of the Joint Security Area on the heavily fortified border between the neighbors.

There have been several attempts by U.S. soldiers stationed in South Korea to desert or defect to North Korea, but King’s expulsion came relatively quickly compared to others who have spent years before being released from the reclusive country.


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South Caucasus News

EBRD First Vice President visiting Armenia – Yerevan – Armenia News


EBRD First Vice President visiting Armenia – Yerevan  Armenia News

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Georgia: Liberación de las regiones ocupadas por Rusia siguen … – Anadolu Agency | Español


Georgia: Liberación de las regiones ocupadas por Rusia siguen …  Anadolu Agency | Español

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Marele exod din Nagorno-Karabah: Peste 47.000 de oameni au … – HotNews.ro


Marele exod din Nagorno-Karabah: Peste 47.000 de oameni au …  HotNews.ro

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Kremlin says it has no information about Karabakh former official Ruben Vardanyan’s arrest by Azerbaijan


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Azerbaijan confirms Karabakh ex-minister of state Ruben Vardanyan’s arrest


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Armenia, EU discuss possible cooperation directions as part of Common Security and Defense Policy, Nagorno-Karabakh – ARMENPRESS


Armenia, EU discuss possible cooperation directions as part of Common Security and Defense Policy, Nagorno-Karabakh  ARMENPRESS