Kitbag Conversations - Proto Kitbag 9: Lethal Minds Journal
Episode Date: May 2, 2024This week we are joined by Graham, the curator and one of the leading members behind Lethal Minds Journal. Lethal Minds aims to deliver information and intelligence to the community through a militari...stic angle. Meaning, Lethal Minds looks to collect both current and prior service members to assist in delivering the information that they would have wanted while they were in. We discuss: - The mission statement for the Lethal Minds Journal - The war in Ukraine - Personal stories and backgrounds while active in the U.S. Military - And the way war continues to change
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello everyone, welcome back to the Cro-Tone Report.
This week we are joined by Graham, the curator from We Full Minds Journal, an Instagram page
and a journal that is dedicated to delivering focused information, getting it out to everyone in the world. And before
I kind of butcher a lot of the narrative, I'm just going to hand it over to him so we can elaborate on
what his organization is. Hey man, thanks for having us on. I'm Bram. I started Luka Minds,
a couple of you guys on Instagram. Our real goal is to establish an umbrella where independent media journalism can happen without having to deal with censorship that basically derives from someone saying, I don't like what you're saying, it scares me.
It's not something I want to hear. We're out there trying to put out information that is factual, honest, and more importantly,
needs to be heard.
Okay, and just looking at the Instagram, it seems like you're only or predominantly
just hiring or just scooping up military veterans.
Is that kind of the goal or is there an alternative motive?
So first and foremost, the journal exists to support the veteran and service member
community.
I'm a service member in the army about five years.
I've just completed my separation from the army, separated as a captain in the EOD community.
Another one of our partners is an active duty Marine.
He's a senior officer, another is a major.
We have a Marine Sergeant Major as part of our leadership team.
And we wanted to create something that, you know, junior level guys really don't get told
a lot.
Most junior soldiers in the United States military, the military around the world, they're
sort of told shut up, sit world, they're sort of told, shut up,
sit down, do what you're told. And over the course of the war on terror, we're seeing
that more often than not, it's junior soldiers having to make decisions, having to make,
you know, being the guy in the arena at that moment. And the less informed they are, the
worst decision they make. So we're creating something that, you know,
the boys in the barracks can really use, and they can really benefit from. So they're always going
to be our first focus. We're starting to expand out as there are people in the veteran community
are saying, you know, this is really useful. I wish I could show this to a civilian colleague and be like, Hey, look at this, this will explain it.
This will make it make sense. You know, and I think over time, we're going to grow into
a sort of a larger audience. But right now our audience is the military and that community.
You're gonna step back. I definitely remember because I was a junior analyst in the Marine
Corps. I was, you know, 19 years old, but I was the one in the know. So every time I would leave like an op meeting or something, all the juniors would grab me. They're like, what do you know? Because nobody tells us anything. We're just told to pick up cigarette butts. And I was like, yeah, what do you need? So building on that narrative of keeping the lower enlisted informed really helps in the big picture because the Marine
Corps had that strategic corporal policy where it's not a lieutenant and it's not a gunning
calling for fire on a building. It's some 19, 20 year old corporal with like his four-man
fire team going, okay, what are we doing? Like this is, this is it. So the better informed they are,
the better essentially you make better decisions you make.
And honestly, just a better well-rounded warrior is a good way to put it, because, you know,
you're a philosopher on one side, you're well read, but also you know how to conduct military
tactics. And so just well-rounded individuals is a good way to put it. So I really appreciate
the direction you're taking the journal.
To that point, one of the things that really started this idea for me is
the EOD community is this weird animal where everyone has authority, right? Because you're
the EOD tech on the scene, it might just be you, right? And I had a staff sergeant, really good
friend of mine named Jarrett Salter, big mentor of mine as a
junior officer when he was an E four, he was one of two EOD techs available to
the U S military in Eastern Afghanistan.
He was it.
And one of his, his team leader at the time was on mission.
And he was back and they were like, hey, we need to give an IED insum brief to the commander
of this province.
Who do we have?
Like, what major can you produce to give this brief?
And my staff sergeant, then an E4 was like, well, I'm it, you know, and what we do in our communities, we give that guy that knowledge, that authority and that training.
And clearly he succeeded. He didn't get fired, given a bad brief. So why don't we do that with everybody? Makes sense.
That's rather you're a grunt or a motor T operator or any tech or an Intel analyst or
an aviation mechanic, you should be pretty dialed into what's going on in the world around
you.
Because if you're supposedly going to Eastern Afghanistan, you should know what's going
on in the country because it's does nobody any good if you go there
blind. So, or at least be well spoken, you have to put a sentence together intelligently
and brief and in his case like an O or a field grade officer because they're the ones making
the decisions. And if you botch what you're trying to talk about, they're just going to
throw you away. And well, if you're the number one guy in the country for this information,
you just gave a community a huge disadvantage into they're like, they'll never look at you again.
So it's a set first impressions mean a lot. So it's really beneficial to be informed and well spoken.
Yeah, absolutely.
So I guess you just mentioned like EOD background, but if you want to talk about your background a little bit, because I know the page is getting awfully popular and people seem to be interested
in like in my case, I talked to Tesseron News before and I get a lot of messages like, hey,
can you and Tesseron talk about your military background?
Because the Instagram niche community is either like college kids or veterans.
It's just kind of set aside.
So if you want to build on your past just a little bit,
so give everyone kind of informed.
Yeah, absolutely, I can do that.
So I went to one of the UCs for college.
I studied Russian foreign policy, specifically security policy.
How does Russia interact with its neighbors?
How does it do what it tries to achieve its objectives? How does Russia interact with its neighbors? How does it do what it try to achieve its objectives?
How does the America interact with that?
Studied Russian language.
Following that, I commissioned out of RPC,
became an EOD officer, attended
the Naval Explosive Ordnance Disposal School,
the Naval School of Explosive Ordnance Disposal,
NAVSCOL EOD, which is the finest EOD school in the Naval School of Explosive Ordnance Disposal, MAPS-FEL-EOD, which is the finest
DOD school in the world.
Graduated there, went to a unit, spent some time on the line as a platoon leader, spent
some time in an office as an operations officer.
I came into the military, the deployments were winding down, this was 2018-2019. And especially for our community, the only guys catching deployments were in
very specific companies.
So there are a couple of companies that are directly tasked with special mission
units, and they were the guys getting the work.
So a lot of what we ended up doing was intelligence and analytics in support of
LISCO, large scale combat operations, which is the new hotness.
And as a Russian guy, I spent most of my time
reading Soviet technical diagrams about ordinance.
One of the functions EOD serves beyond just
blowing things up, creating breaches for special operators,
being special operators and dealing
with IEDs is we're weapons technical experts. If it shoots, is shot, or in some ways deployed in war,
the UD community probably has somebody who knows everything about it.
Right, like I've got a couple guys in my phone who are UD? Techs in the 60s. These are old dudes.
But they used to memorize guided missiles. And these guys can describe everything about them, how it works, who made it creating products for armor officers, etc. on the capabilities of
the Russian military, what it can and cannot do in the field with the weapon systems it has.
Right. And you've worked in the analytics world. So like, what our mindset is, is if you can
understand the tools the enemy has to play with. You can understand the tactics
that they're going to use, because their tools reflect their tactics. Their tools reflect
their mindset. I'm separating. I'm heading out to DC to work federal. And that's where
I am right now. It's really interesting background, man, because I'm glad you touched on the overall,
I guess, quality of an EOD tech,
because I know when I was in,
because I was a marine background,
and working with our EOD techs when I was deployed,
they were the most dialed in, focused.
All they would do is read,
and then they would go to the chow hall and eat,
and come right back from the mess deck and keep reading. And regardless of the background, whether it was an assaultman or an aviation mechanic or someone straight out of the academy, these guys were very
dialed in could very put a sentence together, build the narrative. And like you just said, they're like, I don't give a, I don't care why. Like why they put a device on the side of the road, I want to get into the psychology of why they did this and why they're using this specific tool, why don't care why, um, like why they put a device on the side of the road.
I want to get into the psychology of why they did this and why they're using
this specific tool.
Why don't you use, you know, the anarchist cookbook because a, it doesn't work,
but to the IRA tried it and they were like, Oh, who are we talking to?
Yeah.
We know where they got their trainers.
It's not going to work.
They're not going to, they're not going to do that.
So it's really cool, especially because you mentioned the war on terror that
you can't, and especially looking at analytics, you can't just put the same.
It's not the same puzzle everywhere you go.
There's some of the same pieces where say like in IED trainer was trained in Yemen,
but he came from Iran, but his trainer came from Afghanistan from the 80s, you know, one
of those guys.
So you can kind of see a pattern, but there's no way to take the same concept and apply it across the board.
But looking at very simple, I guess, in your case, IEDs or in my case, like just TTPs or trends tactics and procedures going, OK, there's definitely a picture being formed here.
here. And then from there, you can take it a step further and go, all right, well, I've read a lot about, say, insurgent cells from Gaza to Sinai to Yemen to Ethiopia. And you're going, okay, I
think there's a pattern, I think I know where this is coming from. And then from there, because we're
built the narrative. But it's, it's, there's a lot of pieces that go into it. And so going back from
my Marine Corps background, it was the EOD guys that I worked with were pretty, pretty A1. It was, they were good guys.
I mean, just to give a shout out, there's a page, financial enabler and his partnership
with Explosive Ordnance Disposal team. They're both on Instagram. Jamie Andras is an incredible
EOD tech, a giant of our EOD community, Marine EOD. And I've had conversations with him. And he was like, I can tell looking
at an ID on an incident, who made it? Because he got that
dialed in. And he was looking at, hey, this is a simple
pressure plate. This is definitely an Afghan bombing.
And the stuff they make is to work, right? They stay simple.
And then he could look at another one and be like, wow,
that's some import guy. That's a farmer. That's Pakistani, Iranian, whatever, because it's got all these bells and whistles and
extra shit and fail saves and anti-tamper.
And that Afghan is making a device, basically just building a mind.
They step on it.
Great.
They don't.
They don't.
I want it to work 100% of the time.
And it was just, you could see that psychology in the TTPs
behind decision making. And it's the same thing with conventional ordinance. When you really look
at how a country like Russia develops its weapon systems, where it puts its money,
what does it want to use these tools for? What is its intent?
want to use these tools for what is its intent? You know?
So going on that just looking at a simple ID picture on Instagram and going, I know exactly where this comes from,
kind of reminds me of 2005 era Iraq, where the Iraqi army got
routed, and our guys were moving into Baghdad, but our guys, the
West NATO, whatever, we're going into Baghdad. But that's
where Al Qaeda started getting popular. And they were the ones doing the insurgencies across the
country and across the Eastern side of the country. And they're like, these, these VBI IDs,
and these IDs look awfully similar to the ones we're seeing in Afghanistan. And so, you know,
from there they go, well, we know that Al Qaeda is in Afghanistan. But then from there you're going,
oh, hold on, no, let me go read the bare one over the mountain. Oh, the Russians had the same thing. It's the same
guys. So it's, it's just drawing that linear narrative of, or progression, rather, just
moving down the road going, I know who did this. And then you can go down to say, like,
reading the TTP of an Islamic insurgent called, um, Management of Sabagery, where they have a whole chapter dedicated to how to make an IED.
And it's completely different to what the
the IRA in Northern Ireland were doing or...
Right.
If you want to get really interesting, you can look at Soviet
improvised explosive manuals that they gave to the Vietcong
in the 60s. And then you can
look at the IEDs being given by the Pakistanis to the Afghans during the Soviet-Afghan War.
They're effectively the same thing. So really, you know, we talked about blowback, the Soviets
invented the bomb makers that trained the bomb makers
that were killing their guys in Afghanistan. It's a horrible self-licking ice cream cone.
Yeah, it's a horrible self-licking ice cream cone. Sorry, there's noise.
It is completely a self-licking ice cream cone and you can sort of, if you go back far enough,
you can see where are these initial errors.
Like, oh, this will be fine.
We'll give them this.
Nothing bad will happen, man.
You can't even begin to estimate how the bad things that could happen.
What's, you could either apply that to either a, like just Soviet short-term site, like a
50 meter target going, this is going to work right now.
We'll get to the rest later.
It can be applied to the exact same thing with the U S going, who were
the Mujahideen fighting the Russians?
All right, let's just give them stingers.
Oh, we're going to Afghanistan in 2001.
Guess we have a job for all these stingers.
So, or, um, yeah, I mean, it's that mindset.
It's that mindset of, I don't care who wins.
I just want this guy to lose, you know, and like, there's this whole period in American foreign policy where we were saying
anywhere communism is, we support the other guy.
And what that demonstrated is just a lack of education about the world.
Americans aren't necessarily very good at knowing about the world. We're getting better. And you know, and stuff like this pro tone of work that's fixing that slowly. But
there's enough not understanding that, yeah, but understanding that Pinochet was a bad guy to give money to, you know, in South and Central America, and that supporting, you know, anti-San Diniz, anti-San Diniz forces, anti-liberal forces in South America would contaminate American reputation in South America for 50, 100 years.
That's short-sighted. We saw communism, we're like, we'll support always that third option of that outlier who's kind of just right outside of the black and the white, that gray area where you could look at South Africa and Rhodesia in the 70s and the 80s, where they're like, the Cubans are here, the Soviets are here.
We know they are because we keep catching them and everyone's like, now we're not talking to you. And they're like, no, no, no, no, you're not listening. Like all your bomb makers from around the world and all your
TTPs and tactics are being used against you in Vietnam. They're here. Like they're getting
trained here in the jungle. It's the same thing. And so it's just, just Americans. I don't want
to say like, you know, cause South Africa and Rhodesia had that whole stigma against them
because obvious reasons, but I don't know if it's a stigma if the
Rhodesians are like black people aren't people. There's a dynamic there that is concerning
to someone who has to report to Congress. Right? Exactly. So they're going, Hey, we've
caught the same guy in Vietnam, who was also in Malaysia fighting the British who was also
in Vietnam fighting the French who was just captured in was just captured in Angola with the Cubans training to fight South Africans.
And someone's going, I don't want to talk about that. And so that just completely across the
board goes where you're just cutting out that piece of the puzzle. That's just the face on
the puzzle that you need to help build that international web where I guess, Cold War,
I'm supporting the other guy outside of Com or opposed to communism.
Could be applied to the war on terror where they're going, who's doing what the Sunnis are oppressed and suit or she is on top. Let's just flip that.
Oh, now I have a Shia uprising going on and you know, Western Iraq. So it's exactly. There's a book, I don't know if you've read it, it's by this former KGB officer,
Alexey Mitrokin, it's called The World Was Going Our Way.
Um, and it was written about this sort of the hot, what he calls the golden
day of the Soviet KGB system, which is the sixties to the eighties and you know,
how they didn't really see the collapse coming.
But one of the things he touches on
is there were a couple of Rhodesian
and South African intelligence officers and field guys
who were reporting whole networks of KGB assets
across Africa to Western partner forces.
And like they could name names, they could prove everything.
And they weren't listened to
because the government of those countries were saying you can't associate with Burdisha.
You know, that's unacceptable, right? You can't support them. But we were perfectly willing to support guys like Pinochet because no one looked, right?
We backed up, you know, the government of Panama because no one was really paying attention to what was happening
with Noriega until we burned this country down.
The legislature made a whole other mess outside of that.
Absolutely.
It contaminated our relationship in South America completely.
There was, are you familiar with the British Malaysian emergency or Mele emergency from the 40s?
A little bit. I know a little about it.
So when it comes to, I guess, just drawing a line, like every country has their Vietnam, essentially, you know, the Afghans were in the Soviet or the Soviets had Afghanistan, the French had Algerian, of course Vietnam, we had Vietnam, but the British weren't in
Vietnam because they were fighting Chinese communist insurgents in Malaysia. And at first
they were very gung-ho, shock and all, burn everything down, just blow up villages and they're
like, hold on, this isn't working. They're like, we just need to change every TTP we have because
we're not fighting Germans on the Western front and we're not fighting, you know, Frenchmen in North Africa.
We're fighting a completely different beast.
So the way they, they just rewrote the entire book and gave it to the
Americans or like, this is how you win.
And so the Americans were like, yeah, I'm not doing that.
I'm just going to level every single city in Vietnam.
And so they gave it to the Australians and the New Zealanders and they use that.
And they were very successful in their coin.
But I don't want to sound too just negative about American short-sightedness, but it's if they listen for a few little bit.
There's a very interesting analysis by Nguyen Van Gap, who is the commander of the North Vietnamese army.
He wrote an after action report in English, which he actually apparently mailed to General
Critton Abrams.
But yeah, I think it's funny, you know, because I, the Vietnamese don't think of the Vietnam
wars ago, America's so evil.
They view it sort of as, look, the French were our colonial master.
They had an ally called America.
They call their ally,
had the Americans do what they had to do.
You know, and then the evil Chinese invaded
and America armed us, right?
Their war of independence is not with France,
it's with China.
But it was a little further back with,
it was the French, then it was the Japanese,
and then it was the French,
no, then it was the British,
then it was the French again,
then it was the Americans,
then it was the Chinese,
and they had 50 years of conflict where they were like, bro, just please, please calm down.
Yeah, but the great thing is that the Vietnamese were willing to cooperate with American
military assets and intelligence assets immediately after the Vietnam War,
right? They became incredibly cooperative. And one of these gaps says is, look,
And one of these gaps says is look, the Tet Offensive was actually our last gas. That's all we had left in the tank.
We couldn't do anything else.
And if America had basically not had, you know, the war in Vietnam is lost moment, you
know, when a major news reporter gets on TV and says that we've lost the war in Vietnam, and if we hung tough, they'd have surrendered.
Because what we were doing was effectively reducing the fighting made fighting male population in Vietnam to zero.
You know, and it's a method. It's not a good method, but it's a method and to your point about Malaysia the British have
always maintained a little bit of a colonial army right they have ethnic minorities in fighting
regiments in their military which also means they retain cultural knowledge you know the
Gurkhas aren't that and the Indians in their army aren't that far away from Cambodia Malaysia Vietnam
far away from Cambodia, Malaysia, and Vietnam. Right. There's going to be some cultural overlap there. You know, and I think that played a big role in them being able to be like, wait,
you're doing the wrong thing. Let's, let's go ask someone that lives like these people live
about how to get along with these people.
There was also a difference. And there's a book called learning to eat soup with a knife by
John Nagel. And it's a old T. Lawrence. Lawrence quote where he's like, to understand the Arab, like they're not,
because, you know, T.E. Lawrence was in World War I and fought in the Middle East, you know, Jordan
and all that. But he's like, you have to- He invents his special operations. 100%. He's like,
we have taken Aqaba. Like who? Like our people, our side. But anyways, in the book, John Nagel keeps, he starts directly from day one.
He's like both the Americans and the British tried Shokinah and they're like, this isn't
working.
So quickly the British went, okay, I have a different idea.
They're a British dominion, but they're not citizens.
So they rounded up, they burned all the, essentially they got rid of all the food and they were
handing out bags of rice and they would walk
into a village with like a company instead of where Americans would roll in with like a brigade
or a regiment reinforce plus or minus but the British would roll in with like a company maybe
a platoon plus and just go to a little village and they're like I have a bag of rice you get a
bag of rice if you hand it yeah they're like you give me one communist and you get a bag of rice
you give me two communists and you get five bags rice. You give me two communists and you get five bags of rice.
You give me five communists and you get British citizenship and you can go to
England if you want.
And so immediately they just started turning them in because the Brits and they
call it draining the swamp.
That's their, their big thing.
They're like, Oh, there's a problem.
Let's just drain the swamp.
You can't have mosquitoes if there's no water.
So they've got water.
It's yeah.
Have you heard of the, the Russian Revolution, the December is going to the peasants?
Not a little obscure. So in the 1800s, there was a revolution
of young. They're not quite socialists yet. They're like
French revolutionaries, sort of. And there are young
aristocrats and they feel that they can go to the peasants of Russia and they can educate them and
then they can get them to rise up against the Tsar and free themselves, right? So what the Tsar does
is he says, oh really? If you give me one of these people, I will give you 10 acres of his land
of these people, I will give you 10 acres of his land from his noble family to have. And uniformly across Russia, all 3000 of these guys are rounded up and turned in by possibilities.
But they arrest them themselves. And the czar just turns the bill in. It's the same thing. He just
incentivizes cooperation with the government and problem sorts itself out.
So taking a step back and thinking about, and this podcast is definitely all over the place,
but just taking a step back, like we're leaving Vietnam. And so there's a very large
Vietnamese community in Texas. Because after I got was falling, we put all the Vietnamese that were pro US or the South Vietnamese rather, put them on ships and just drop them off in Texas. Because after I got him was falling, we put all the Vietnamese that were pro US or the South Vietnamese rather,
put them on ships and just drop them off in Texas.
They're like, figure it out.
It's almost like the Americans,
when we were leaving Afghanistan,
picked up all these Afghans that were supporting the US for 20 years.
We dropped them in Arlington,
we were like, figure it out.
It's like I see him walking around the DC area.
I was like, I know where these kids, I know where these kids are from.
Like I know what language they're speaking.
And it's just, it's completely different than in the Malaysian case where the Brits are
like, no, we'll give you a place to live.
We'll make you a British citizen.
The Americans were like, oh, figure it out.
This is America, but so, and again, I don't want to seem like I'm talking on the U S but
it's just that, that real short side of like, Oh, Afghanistan is not sexy anymore.
If we're not going to talk about that.
And nobody likes Vietnam anyways, we're not going to talk about that.
So America thinks in four year periods, you know, Oh, 100%.
It's almost like the military, of course.
And it's almost like our military makes two to three years smeeze.
And what is a smear subject matter expert?
How can you be a subject matter expert on Russian foreign policy in three years when a third of the time you're in the field and
the other half of the time you're like picking up cigarette butts in the list? So it's really hard.
Sorry, that's when my unit was doing this stuff. They actually went and asked who's done any,
you know, what officers do we have that have actually done anything involving Russia? And I was able to put my hand up because I had four years of academic study and language skill. Right. So again, I'm by no means a smith, but I had that and they looked for it. But that's a community specific thing. For the most part, the Army's like, you're the guy that's the subject matter expert now,
because we say so. Go get read up.
It's exactly, I just know that I went from, I bounced around the Marine Corps a lot within five years, I was in five different units, you know, and or five and a half years, whatever. But I went to Japan and I was supposed to be the Smeon China.
I was like, I just got here.
I was like, how do you expect me to know
every single inch of this,
the second largest country in the world?
And I'll-
The oldest country on earth.
Yeah, next to Egypt.
I was like, how do you expect me to do this in two weeks?
And they're like, oh, by the way,
you have to brief the, the meth journal.
I was like, excuse me?
It's like, it's like, I can do it. It'll be, it'll be, I, you have to brief the, the meth journal. I was like, excuse me. It's like, it's like I could do it.
It'll be, it'll be, I'll be at work in the skiff every single day, but it,
yeah, it's, yeah, it's just one of those.
I don't know.
And it's, it's an institutional thing and you and I both know that.
Yeah.
It's a bureaucracy thing too.
Yeah.
We don't want to pay for, we don't want to pay for that guy that does nothing but China in case we need him. We want to just make that guy whenever we want it.
Of course. They're like, why would we hire some college road student who goes around the country talking about Russian group think in Crimea in the 1850s against the British and the French? No, let's just pay some, let's grab one of our E3s
who just showed up and say, you're the Russia guy,
get ready.
So, yeah, it's, yeah, I think it's cause the war's over
and it, of course, and I think it's cause the war's over
and it's really, and of course, budget comes,
cuts come right out after the war ends.
And it's almost like guys are just trying to figure out
what to do.
And so I got out trying to justify their existence. Exactly. Yep. So, you know,
again, like, again, officer perspective, I was writing NCO ERs for NCOs who've done tremendous things over the last two, three years deploying against insurgent forces across the Middle East, right?
Some in support of Tier 1 assets.
And I was told, dude, do not put anything involving insurgency or coin in that NCOER.
Try to make it LISCO, try to make it large-scale combat operations,
because that's what's going to push his career, not the
stuff he's doing or has done, but the stuff that we can say he kind of did. You know, you got to
also fluff the back catalog there because I know in the Marine Corps we have fit reps and there are
like put quantity, put total numbers.
How many times did you write an end sum?
Like one of those is like you did coin yet completely get rid of coin. Nobody cares.
They're like, I don't care if you deployed, um, just say you deployed
and, um, just make it up.
You're like, well, who's this helping?
Because at that point, the guys who are, cause at that point, all the guys who
are genuinely passionate about the job, they're going to go get fatigued and want to quit.
But then the other guys in the other set started going, yeah, I'm, I'm
excellent on paper and they're like, cool, well, you're just going to
keep rising to the top.
And then by that point, you know, it's it's just, I don't know, it's
not self-licking ice cream comb of self hate.
And also like, are we sure we're never going to fight an insurgency ever again?
Are we sure? You know, most of America never going to fight an insurgency ever again? Are we sure?
You know, most of America's wars have been against insurgencies.
You know, a nation by terrorists for terrorists, man.
Like, yeah, like we were an insurgency.
All our wars against the Native Americans were insurgency or counterinsurgency wars.
It's kind of cool and interesting to read about the banana wars with the Marine Corps in
Central America going, you know, there's no way in hell we're going to fight another insurgency.
But then at the same time, it was around when the Americans in the Philippines were fighting
on insurgency and they're like, there's no way we're going to fight another insurgency.
And then after World War One, they were like conventional cool, cool, cool. And then we fought
World War Two, they're like, cool, cool, cool. And then Korea, they were like, that wasn't uncertainty. That was like force on force. That's
cool. And then Vietnam, we got absolutely, tactically did very well strategically just botched
it. You know, like, you know, whatever, you could talk politics all day. But then after that, there
was all those interviews coming out with all these Marine soldiers, Airmen, sailors going, yeah,
there's no way in hell we're going to fight another prolonged insurgency. It's the same thing today
where after Afghanistan, there's veterans going, oh yeah, there's no way in hell we're gonna fight another prolonged insurgency. It's the same thing today where after Afghanistan, there's veterans going,
oh yeah, there's no way in hell we're gonna fight another insurgency.
It doesn't work.
Yeah.
It's also like people saying, oh, tanks aren't the thing anymore because the javelin exists.
Oh, tanks are getting killed.
Yeah. the is a lot of our senior cadre from that period, senior officers, training NCOs, senior NCOs,
were veterans of the Philippines and the wars in Central and South America.
And there's a phenomenon that I've done a little bit of reading about World War One.
British officers talk about how they describe it as suicidal, American troops wouldn't leave
positions. about how they describe it as suicidal. American troops wouldn't leave positions, right? So American
troops would stay in trenches rather than withdraw from them, right? And they'd fight for the trench
and they'd take casualties, but more often than not, they held the trench. British forces and
French forces who've been fighting on the front for years, if they thought they were going to lose
a trench, they just bail, Right. And they come back later.
On that on that. So if you were the book, the general by CS Forrester, yes. So you know that the officers in World War One
were actually really lower enlisted officers in the war,
war fighting insurgents in South Africa, but in the the Orange
Free State. And so what's really interesting about The General is it was a
completely fictitious book, but really encapsulate, just captured the British way of thinking where
their essential policy of the way they look at war is it takes three years to build a battleship.
It takes a hundred years to build a new tradition. Just keep throwing guys at it. We'll figure it out
later. And they just refuse to break tradition. So the Germans went, Oh, every NCL and officer, this is mandatory reading. This is the
first thing you're reading. Cause this is how you get inside the mind of a British office, the
British, because we know how to beat Russians. Like they had their indoctrination with my
comp for whatever. And everyone just goes like the French are pussies. They're like, they're,
they're going to roll up with a brist. That's our biggest adversary in Europe. So they're like,
just read their doctrine, which in military terms, our military terms, it doesn't make any sense why.
And this just might be my experience, but it's almost you're told not to read most like indulge
yourself in your enemies culture where it's like, if you're reading about China, they were like, why are you getting really into China? Why are you learning Chinese? They're like, you seem like an insider threat. You're like, no, I'm trying to get into the just understand what's going on. I don't care about the gun. I care about who's pulling the trigger. You know, one of those, why are they doing this? So it's
I think, and by the way, with China, with China, a country that is incredibly authoritative and regimented in its thinking, it's not a bad idea.
You know, because the way they perform in the field will be regimented and highly structured.
Oh, yes.
And so after looking at how the Russians perform in Ukraine, you could just go, didn't they base their entire military off of the FSU?
Who else based their entire military off the FSU or the former Soviet Union for the listeners, the Chinese, everyone knows if you shoot the Chinese officer,
they have no idea what to do.
It's almost like shooting a British officer in World War I.
They're like, well, who's in charge?
Because that's how their whole mindset is of, oh, there's just the top.
It's top down, that bottom up.
So, right.
Yeah.
Yeah. China is a little different though. They got, they got a
lot going on, but I'm pretty sure they're going to hold their air. They are. They're a lot of,
and it's because our economy is so interwoven with the world because they're the number one
producer of toothpaste lids, you know, Hey, if I start brushing my teeth, the Chinese are really
going to feel it, But it's, yeah,
it's a completely other beast. And so you can't really apply, you know, the Soviet Union to the Russians to the Chinese, but 23% is very similar because they better they really riff off each
other. Yeah. And also they're the, you know, when the Russians and the Chinese train, you know,
the Australians and the New Zealanders get to train the United States.
I've never done one of these rotations but I'm sure you may have as a Marine, especially
Pacific Marine. The Aussies get to do OPFOR training against the US Marine Corps.
They get to do it against the US Army. They get to experience that and make
decisions based on that and learn based on that.
The Chinese have to do it against themselves or the Russians.
If they're doing very similar stuff.
So in hindsight, it's almost like the Russians should have fully sent it in 2014 because
the Ukrainians were essentially walking around in old Soviet fatigues.
And as soon as push came to shove in Crimea, they absolutely rolled over and buckled because,
hey, they don't have any appropriate training to fight a larger tier one force, essentially,
or a super power force because they're the poorest country in Europe. And they are absolutely
strangled by the oligarchs in this deep state. You can do whatever you want with that. They're a mafia state, but their military was in no condition to fight a conventional force.
But leading into like 2015, 16 timeframe, they actually, they absolutely started to prove themselves, I guess, in Donbass.
Yeah, I mean, you're absolutely right.
Yeah, I mean, you're absolutely right. In 2014, the Russians had a window where the Ukrainian military, for want of a better term, just didn't exist, right? It was corrupt generals, basically unarmed and unequipped militiamen, right, who were pretending to be trained soldiers, fighting Russian regulars.
And the problem is the Russians gave those guys, you know,
a year of training in the field.
And then all of a sudden those guys could fight.
And now, you know, we can see it. We can see it in the field. Ukrainians know how
to fight now.
Mm hmm. And so I'm not, if I was just an average guy and I look at a picture of the Ukrainian
military, it would almost look like our military, the US military, the British based on they're wearing multi cam. They have AK-74s, but outside of that, it looks like a very Western force applied in
Eastern Europe.
And so compared to 2014 where they were no better off than the Georgians in 2008, just
running around with essentially they had a couple of mags and then they had their Moissan
de Gants in the truck behind them just in case things got hairy.
But it's looking at, and I don't know if you saw the headline that came out yesterday, the day before, but it said the British are now going to start training a thousand soldiers a week for the Ukrainians out of Lviv or something in eastern Ukraine.
out of Lviv or something in Eastern Ukraine to send them out to fight the Russians in Western Ukraine and Lviv to go fight the Russians in Eastern Ukraine because, and you may have
seen this, both the Russians and the Ukrainians are starting to throw their reserves at each
other because the Russians, when the war started, didn't really seem like they were doing that
leapfrog or yo-yo of some guys fight for a day, they take a break, the next guy comes
up behind them. There was nothing like that. They were just throwing the same guys into the meat grinder
and the Ukrainians were on the defensive, but now the Russians retrograded, put other guys,
they got arrested up, they got new ammo, but now they're going forward and the Ukrainians are
having their counteroffensive, which is really cool, but that only lasts for what? A week,
maybe two? Because you have 72 hours when you invade to gain as much territory as you can and then if you do it counter offensive you really have to keep that momentum
up but you're going to run out of steam and then your combat soldiers are going to get a little
tire so then you have to use the reserves and those guys aren't trained so well so it's interesting
to me about what's happening in the crane sort of on the ground is the russian army behaved the way
it did because they thought the war would be over in
108 hours. Like we have documents saying that's what they thought. They were wrong, but they threw
100% of their men in and there wasn't really, you know, there wasn't a deep batter's box team to go into and be like, hey, let's put men in the
field and figure it out.
They couldn't do that.
So what they had to do instead was they had to just keep everyone there.
The Ukrainians had this massive mobilization of the territorial defense units.
And those guys are now, by my judgment, at least partially trained.
You know, they've been in combat, they know what to do.
So I think the Ukrainian bench is much deeper than the Russian
bench. And that's why you're seeing gradual but substantive forward movement.
Full mobilization of every male in the country will go fight. And so if you're a Russian force
of 200,000 plus or minus going up against millions of men, it's,
yeah, you can say what you want, where it's like quality over quantity, cool, quantity kind of
comes in handy. So just look at the Soviets on the Eastern Front. Germans were way better trained,
but as soon as they started losing momentum, just that you can't stop the human wave, it's,
it's going to come, it's not gonna stop.
I also don't think that, you know, we can necessarily say
that the Russians are trained. Do you know the term, Derechevka?
So Derechevka refers to the hazing culture in the Russian
army, where you're coming as a conscript, the contract privates, the regular
army privates, steal your money, they beat you up, they steal your equipment, they make
you do stuff for them. Their corporals do the same thing to them. Their sergeants do
the same thing to the corporals, and the officers do the same thing to the sergeants. And it's
this culture of, I get 10% of your paycheck.
You do what I want you to do.
You do what I tell you to do.
And I beat you up all the time.
So, yeah, I didn't know there was a word for it, but I'm very familiar with the culture.
And did you read Zinky Boys?
It's the Soviet VDV and Soviet army in Afghanistan.
And it's just a little collection of essentially letters that were coming back from the war.
And about a third of it's about the mothers reporting on their sons who were killed.
And the other half are soldiers that were in country and sometimes nurses,
where the nurses would show up very optimistic, almost like those
that are showing up and wearing the Z's and whatnot, very patriotic about Russia.
And then they would go to Afghanistan.
They're like, all of our guys are drunk.
They're out of money.
They're, they're selling all of their equipment to the, the, the local Afghans
who are giving it to the Mujahideen.
And then at that point, our guys are wearing Adidas running shoes because they
think it's better than combat boots.
And all the guys use like the more we get more casualties from
either force on force or accidents than we do with the Mujahideen because the Russians just
take a shot. And I was talking to Mike reports about this. And it's almost like a same culture
of how the Germans not the Germans, the Georgians like to take shots before they go out into patrol.
And so essentially, by the time they get on the foot patrol, they're drunk.
And so that's how the Russians were in Afghanistan outside of like some
specific VDB units where they were like, if I catch you drinking, I'm going
to beat the hell out of you.
And at that, at that point, it's just reinforcing that, that fear tactic
of if I slip up, I'm going to get jumped.
So, yeah.
And it's, it's, and I hate interesting to my buzzword, but it's interesting to see that there has been zero progression from the Soviet hazing method until today.
Well, it's hard to fix, you know, because one of the things also to consider is that it does work for what they're trying to do structurally.
structurally, you know, it does work. You know, when the Russians
attack something, and they're doing it their way, you know, the Russians are looking to hammer something with artillery until it
basically no longer exists as a structure. Kill everyone with artillery and then roll over what's left in tanks and, you know, tanks
and infantry.
And if that's the system you have, you don't care if the guy's doing the mop up or drunk,
you don't need them.
Yeah, that's true. That's very true. You don't care if the guy's doing the mop up or drunk, you don't need them.
Yeah, that's, that's true.
That's very true.
And so that's an institutional culture where it's, it's not up or shut up essentially, and yeah, and our military it's, we've really gotten away from it
in the last 10, 15 years, but where if you have a problem, you just
drop blouses and settle the problem. But now they're like, we'll just do paperwork. So
it's, especially in the Marine Corps where it's supposed to be this real tough branch.
But at this point, they're like, if you touch anybody else, you, you get a lot of trouble.
And so regardless if it was, um, cause I've seen, I've seen a Sergeant and a Lieutenant
just get into a serious argument and they were
like, let's drop losses. And they were like, you sure? Do you
want to try that? So it's well, because like nine times out of
you know, there's our rank outweighs anything. So
there's a, and I'm really impressed by this. There is a
combatives combatives day on on hood with some of the cab units.
And you will see, you know, it's good training, you know, soldiers should be doing combatives,
it makes them better, it makes them better at their jobs. And every once in a while,
you'll see some dudes doing combatives. And, you know, it is not training. It is them settling an issue, right?
But that issue remains settled, you know? And, you know, that's, I think that's a good thing, you know?
Where is that?
Having the ability to, yeah. Yeah. They have that in the Marine Corps too. It's essentially combat us, but it's McMap and it's genuinely clowned on in the Marine
Corps, just calling it lame.
But whenever there's two guys that really want to settle something, they'll grab an
instructor and go like, can you mediate this?
Because we just need to do this.
So they're like, oh yeah, I'm a black belt and I'm an instructor and let's get the corpsman
and we'll make sure everything's okay.
So yeah, it's training.
It's just two Marines motivated about training.
Oh yes.
And if you walk back with a black guy, you're like, I deserved it.
I left the mop out.
It's okay.
They're like, okay, we'll go to EO.
And then, yeah.
Um, I think when you look at Western style militaries, which I think now includes the
Ukrainians against Russian Chinese forces, the willingness of lower level leaders to
make decisions, you know, because like one of the things we're also seeing is that in
the TDF, the territorial defense forces, a lot of people who became real leaders in the
TDF, or just the guy that was good at making the
decisions at that time, right? No one had any rank. It was just civilians with guns. And,
you know, the Marine Corps in the Army always talk about small unit leader, right? That the
strategic corporal, the, you know, the Army's strategic sergeant strategic sergeant, the squad leader who needs to be able to make battlefield decisions.
I don't think the Russians have that. I don't think the Chinese have that.
And it's why whenever you'll see like, hey, a general's dead.
Oh, wow, this Russian column is now going to stop for four days until a new one shows up.
They're just going to sit there and wait. You know, a Colonel's dead, same thing. Or if you leave your, a single tank crew to its own devices, they're going to smash
their equipment because they're going, there's no way in hell I'm going to Kiev. I'm not going to die
for some stupid idea. So, right. You know, but if you left a squad of Rangers on their own, they
try to figure it out, you know. Well, yeah, I've worked with the Rangers and those are some inventive individuals
is a good way to put it.
They find it.
Oh yes.
Them and you know, reconnaissance Marines or anything, they're just, they're like,
there's a wall, we'll climb over it or go through it.
It's, there's no stopping.
Yeah.
But that's a mentality and a culture thing. And again,
three years to build a battleship a hundred years to build a culture,
you know? So I think the Russians not having that Chinese,
not having that is a strategic weakness.
So are you dialed in and speaking about the Chinese a little bit and they've had zero conventional combat experience
and you could talk about bullying Uighurs into submission, it's not anything.
That's not the same thing or fighting the Vietnamese 10 to 1 in the 70s is not the same thing
or throwing rocks at Indians two years ago is not the same thing. They have zero
conventional experience. And so the Marine Corps and our military or the Brits who are
pound for pound, probably one of the best fighters in the planet, the British, they are
hundreds and thousands of years of doctrine. They're like, well, we learned, we just learned.
And so we keep building the doctrine, but the Chinese, like I mentioned earlier,
just reference each other and go, this looks good. How did your guys perform? Oh, we got over ran. We'll just
make it look like half your guys died and that you won the, you won this rematch. And
then they send guys to do humanitarian missions. They call it humanitarian, but it's essentially
just protecting their interest in Africa where they just set up a little road blockade and
because they used your booty as the one hop. And then from there, they go into the Horn
of Africa or wherever to set up their own position. They wrote up, set up a road blockade and because they used your booty as the one hop and then from there they go into the Horn of Africa or wherever to set up their own position. They wrote up set up a road
blockade and they're like let's call this one a victory. Yeah, that's good. And so yeah. And so
yeah if you look at footage of Chinese exercises which is actually something you can it's pretty
easy to do you can see them doing it uniformly, it looks like a Chinese war movie, where you'll see the
commander, right, will be a colonel, the general, he's older, and he'll have his
cadre of officers with him, and he'll have his stick and he'll have his map.
And he'll point at the map and like, say, we're going to do this and this.
It's very, you know, it's very Sun Tzu art of war, right.
And then I think their mentality is if I do this and I am, you know, it's very Sun Tzu art of war, right. And then I think their mentality is if I
do this, and I am, you know, sage enough in the way, and my, my guys on the front are brave enough
and committed enough, what I want to happen will happen. Right. I mean, we know that doctrinally, the Chinese think about the chosen reservoir as a victory.
Yeah, I was about to mention that. And so they had that movie that just came out where it painted
them as the winner that they won and they let the Americans go. They're like, they committed,
they committed 20 divisions to one pattern Marine division, and then just, and one army division.
One pattern Marine division and then just. And one army division.
Two American.
And they lost half their troops.
Compared to 20% losses on the part of the Americans.
And this is not killed.
America retained the lives of most of its men.
They successfully extracted those troops and they
bled the Chinese dry. But for the Chinese, that's a victory. Yeah, because you could also see.
Oh, go ahead. Go ahead. I was just going to say you could also see that.
Yeah, go right ahead, man. You're good. We We're gonna pause. I'm sorry, I'll have to
edit that. They don't see that. You know, sort of the how to put
this, the mechanics behind why what happened happened. Right.
So their doctrine doesn't tell them, hey, you're spending more
troops to achieve an objective than you really should.
You know, like, you know, the US military has a percentage where it's like, this is, this is a no go, we can't continue. You know, this is not worth what we have to spend to make it happen. Let's
try it a different way. You know, this is not worth resource expenditure. This is not that vital.
This is not worth resource expenditure. This is not that vital.
The methods we're using aren't working, right?
Or they're not working well enough for this to be good.
You know?
It's almost like looking at the Soviets on the Eastern Front and especially Leningrad
where they were like, we beat the Russians, we beat the Germans. They're like, you were under siege for 900 days and your people were
eating each other. And I guess that's a victory. Yeah. Like the Germans left. You're like, you
beat the Germans, but it's only because they stopped. Yeah. Or a Mario, the Chinese, the
Japan. Yeah. Or, or you could just look at it. Yeah. Or the Russians very Manchuria going, we beat the Japanese.
They're like, they were already spent.
They were, they were gassed by the time the Americans got to Okinawa and you invaded.
It's like kicking a, kicking a kid when he's down.
You're like, all right, yeah, we did it.
You know, but yeah, Mariupol is another example of they destroyed the city and killed hundreds of
thousands. And they're like, we did it. Yeah.
They also lost thousands. Yeah.
You know, they lost thousands cranium forces, delayed them for weeks and tied up Russian
troops for weeks when they could have been needed elsewhere, you know,
and there's this concept of the hero city in Eastern European military doctrine, right?
Where you strong point something to force someone to engage it, to allow you to maneuver around,
right? Yeah, Mariupol got taken, but it got taken weeks later and after the Ukrainians had been able to mobilize their
forces and go on the counter offensive. So, good job guys, you beat 2000 guys in a factory with
10,000 men. Well done. So I'm going to kind of sidestep a little bit and you and I are both military men. Do you think the offensive against
Kiev was a faint just to kind of keep pressure on the Ukrainians on all sides? Because tactically,
it makes no sense to attack a city barely one to one where you should use probably five to one,
but they took Kyrgyzstan pretty quick and then they opened up the waterway into Crimea. And it's almost like, because at the time it just didn't make any sense to me.
It still doesn't make any sense to me why they invaded Ukraine in the first place.
But today I'm going, okay, looking back, it goes, okay, I think it was a faint.
And they keep just re inching into Harkov to go, oh, we're still here. Yeah, we're still here.
Until they take over Donbass. And I think that's what it was. And it's almost like at first they were playing the doctrine day by day. They're like, well, that didn't work yesterday. So let's try something new. But looking back, I think it was definitely a faint to keep pressure on all sides.
Respectfully, I disagree.
Respectfully, I disagree. Oh, okay.
And by the way, the reason Russia invades Ukraine, historically speaking, is because
of A, the need for a warm water port, B, the need for grain, right?
The other name for Ukraine during the Russian Empire is Black Russia, right?
Black Earth Russia, because it is where 90%
of Russia's grain came from.
No, I'm familiar with all this, the background and whatnot,
but looking at Crimea, they were doing a very good job
of what, the Rasmus doctrine, they were doing very well.
Yeah.
And through out of nowhere go balls to the wall, go like,
oh, we're invading the whole country.
It's like what you were doing before was working.
And this quick 180, it's, I don't know, at the time, I was like, this doesn't really make any
sense. But it was like, maybe they just, maybe it is as simple as securing borders and wanting ports.
Maybe that's just the old, I think they thought, I think they thought they could take the whole
country. Yeah, I 100% believe the Russians said we can take Kiev
in 24 hours. We can seize the government. We can put a gun to Zelensky's head and say surrender
and establish a new government and the country will surrender. You know, I think they also intended
to take Kharkov, um, Sumy, you know, all these major cities they got stuck on on the northern,
northern arc, Kiev to Kharkov to Sumi, where they got stuck, they attacked all those cities
because they intended to take them. And in my opinion, right, I believe that what the Russians did in attacking Kiev is, you know, they that was their primary line of it.
Excuse me, their primary line of advance. I think that was really their first objective.
Kersan was great. We can take Kersan. You know, we can open the water back up.
But I think they're now saying that, oh, you know, it's a faint and the Russians are saying that their real objectives were the Donbass, you know, the Dineshk and Luhansk Republics and establishing a road to trans-industria, right?
Which is what they're saying now. But I really believe they wanted the whole country. I really think that was their objective. And they were just flat out wrong and not equipped to do what they
thought they could do.
Yeah, I can, I can definitely see that.
It's it's completely different looking at the North and the East compared to
the South where comparatively it looks like the Ukraine is just when it, yeah,
I'm leaving, there's no way in hell.
I'm trying to protect this.
And they got up and ran away essentially just to retrograde and better
defend Nikolayev and whatnot on the other side of the river and
blew all the bridges on the way out but in just across the board like and I just might be thinking
American tactics but it's it didn't make any sense just Just, just one to one.
Like I'm sure the Russians have something in there because they don't have any ROE.
They were just shooting anybody.
So it's as number one, that's a pretty good scare tactic and you can call them war criminals
all day.
But what are you going to do?
Go into Russia to get them and try them?
No, there's no way you can do that.
So it's yeah, they're like, well, one of the lead Russia again.
Yeah.
I don't think he cares. Right. So yeah, he doesn't care.
He also probably has a form of cancer, so he's not probably going to live very long.
That's another thing.
Yeah. Yeah.
Which may be driving this whole thing.
You know, let me snag what I can.
Well, I'm, you know, on my way out, I'll be the guy that takes the blame.
The guy that comes after me will be like, look, we have it.
We're sorry, but we're not giving it back.
You know? Yeah. So I think that I really think I was going to say, I think there's another reason why,
yeah, that's why it's, it happened so quickly, because they were going really slow for 20 years.
And then in February, they just went, we're doing everything right now. And then, right. So at that
point, you're like, maybe there's something medically wrong with food. And that's why he jumped the gun and went, I am Russia. There
is no second. It's, I will take this whole country down with me, or I will fix it. It's, and so that's
where I think kind of came down to. I also think the loss of Trump in the White House did that. And
again, this is going to, you know, this is a political thing. People have their views on Trump. But I think that,
forget the politics behind Trump, you know, was he or wasn't he, you know, connected to Russia. But
I think having someone whose view on the world was America's first, right? I'm not interested
in coalition building. I'm not, you know, like he wasn't interested in old relationships.
And, you know, every time a new or an old relationship was like, we need support.
He was like, really? Do we? You know, I think the Russian view was, hey, we can continue to creep along and get what we can get.
If this guy's going to stay in for eight years, you know, we have eight years to take as much as we can weaken the Alliance further. Right.
And then you get Biden in and Biden is very much an old school war hawk foreign policy
guy.
Right.
Number one advocate for intervention in Yugoslavia.
Yeah.
So right.
And the Russians are like, that's our window.
We have to do this now.
We got to do this while COVID is keeping the United States busy.
While there are domestic issues preventing America making foreign policy moves, while
they're still tied up in Afghanistan.
I also think if you want to get a little conspiratorial, that's why China's getting so aggressive about
Taiwan because they have an ally who's got most of the world tied up in Europe.
I do think major American commitment in Ukraine. So, and I mentioned this with Chase Baker, the
failed American back in when the war started, I think it was like episode three or four, but
when the war first started, I think it was like episode three or four, but I think it was a linear progression. And it was really just from not an American, but every other angle go, wow,
this is, it was almost beautiful. The way they executed it was Biden tripped up a flight of
stairs in air force one. And then immediately the Russians were like, all right, we're going to
start putting our guys on the border of Ukraine. And then America botched the withdrawal of Afghanistan because the whole world saw that.
Then the Chinese flew over Taiwan and left leaflets going, oh, look how America treats
its allies. You're next. And then, so there was a power vacuum in Central Asia, which is
historically just been that they call it the great game between essentially an Anglo nation and the Russians debating about who owns
that key area, but now the Chinese are involved.
So the Russians go, you know, we're not really friends with the Chinese,
but we need them.
So they, and I don't know what happened in, and I know exactly, you know, I
both know what happened, but in Kazakhstan, where out of nowhere, they
had that quasi revolution and it was almost like a dry run for the Russian VDV to secure airports. And
for the Russians are rapidly mobilized for military and secure in Kazakhstan is huge. And they took
the whole thing very quickly. And so the seas did. So it's like, and that was January, just a month
before February or the war in Ukraine. But that was just this. Yeah, it was a test run. It was just a linear progression of.
They were, they were moving fast.
And so after, and so after the Russians invade and there was that really intense
72 hours where, like I said earlier, you have 72 hours to really seize as much
ground as you can before that momentum runs out.
And then the Iranian sort of rocketing Erbil. And they,
for the first time in forever claimed like, oh, we did this. It wasn't the IRGC. And it wasn't,
it wasn't a Iranian proxy. It was us. It was the Iranians. The Americans were getting all pumped.
They were like, it seemed for a second there, because the Chinese also sent their Navy around
Taiwan and did a flyover. And we had a single destroyer out there essentially saying, go away.
And it seemed for a second there that it was like, wow, this whole world is in
the current situation because just, just an old guy tripped up a stair, but it's.
Well, but to that point, you and Baker have a Baker, by the way, is an amazing
guy. We hope he gets back safe.
He's in Ukraine right now, doing amazing stuff. And he's going to be in lethal mines.
He's writing up something for us.
Those countries are leader oriented, right?
I mean, how much pop music is generated in Russia by how sexy Putin is.
Right?
I mean, there's a, there's a Russian pop song where super
models sing a man like Putin is what I need.
Right.
It's a really weird song.
Right.
You know, China does the same thing.
It's leader ideation, Iran, you know, the Ayatollah's when they see
an American president trip, they're
like, Oh, look, look, America's week, because the president
trip, right? You know, they don't think in structures, they
think in leaders. And, you know, yes, the plot of Kabul was
that's going to be armchair general to death over the next
100 years. You know, every major in the army at the war college is going to write a paper
on how he'd have done the pullout from Kabul.
Right.
Yeah.
And it's, it's almost disrespectful at that point.
It's like, Oh, if I was there, it's like saying if you were, if you
never once were in the military, you're like, well, if I was in, you're like,
well, you weren't so shut up.
Like, yeah.
Yeah.
If I was at Valley Forge, be quiet, dude.
You know?
Yeah.
No, but like dudes do that, you know, and you know, it has to be said for all
that, how annoying that is the United States, Britain, the Western states have
self-critical militaries.
I mean, I hear more often than not that America is in a bad place in a war against China. I never hear a Chinese guy go, a Chinese officer go, you know, we
haven't actually fought a war ever, you know, since Japan.
I'm not afraid to say it though.
I'm not sure. Right. But that's the problem. I think with the attack on Kiev, the FSB, and you remember that video, the FSB director was basically grilled by Putin on live TV and told to say, you know, we think that the strategy will work.
He didn't, you know, that guy definitely did not think that, you know, that guy was seeing stuff on the ground.
Real quick, man. So we're getting close to that time. And so speaking about the FSB,
who lied to Putin, do you think? Was it the army or was it the FSB? Because the FSB was put under house arrest almost immediately. And so at first I thought maybe the FSB told them, this won't work.
And so, but Putin going, yes, it will send in the army. But then in the other half, I thought maybe the FSB went, this will work.
And the yes, man Putin in submission.
And so Putin, if you could say he has a tumor or cancer or whatever went, yeah.
And the army went, no, but the army is so corrupt.
They just didn't know what they were working with.
And so it was like a, okay.
He was like, I have an opinion on this.
Okay.
What's up?
I have an opinion on this. I think the's up? I have an opinion on this.
I think the only guy who didn't lie to him is the FSB director.
So I think the FSB told him, bro, this is not going to work.
This is not working.
I think GRU, which is the military intelligence arm of the Russian state, who competes with
the FSB and the interior ministry, as well as Sergei Shoigu, who is the Russian state who competes with the FSB and the interior ministry, as well as
Sergey Shoigu, who's the Russian minister of defense, right?
Who's never been in the military, by the way, right?
He's just a plutocrat.
Just a guy.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Just a dude.
All said, bullshit, they're lying.
We can do this.
And then when it didn't work, those guys got together and went, he compromised
us. Right? He was a naysayer. He didn't believe in Russia and in you, Mr. Putin. Right? So
the two FSB guys got snagged up. And then Shou was gone for like a month in April, he disappeared. Right? No one knew where he was.
Yeah, everyone thought he was dead.
Right. And then he came back and it turned out he'd been in hospital. Right? You know, and you know, we're never
gonna see under the rug, you know, where this stuff's happening. But I really believe that the FSB, the FSB is a
serious service. And it's as independent as intelligence services in
Russia get, right?
You know, it's not the GRU, which is under the army.
It's not MVD, which is owned by the interior ministry.
You know, it's not Rosgardia, which is, you know, the Chechens and the Russian National
Guard.
It's its own thing. And I think they were honest to Putin, like, dude, don't do this.
He didn't want to hear it.
And the guys around him didn't want to hear it.
So when it went wrong and they're like, we need a scapegoat.
Oh yeah, you the guy we don't like.
Yeah, that's goes.
And I just want to close with that.
It goes right back to how the American military works.
So if everything goes right, Intel is like, Hey, you did your job.
But if everything goes wrong, they look at Intel, they're like, Hey dude, what the fuck?
Why didn't you do your job?
You're like, Hey, well, I did the best I could before I had.
So then it's that.
And right back to where we started with the SMEs, where it's you have one, two year to
maybe three year, if you're lucky lucky subject matter experts in an area and how can you be a subject matter expert
if you're brand new it's and you keep hopping around but yeah. All right so I think we're
going to close this out if you have anything you would like to plug. Yeah, Lethal Minds volume two
Yeah, Lethal Minds volume 2 comes out July 1st at midnight. Crouch On Report, S2 Forward, Alcon S2, Northern Provisions, Meridian News and a couple others
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Alright, I'm really excited to be a part of The Journal and really appreciate you coming out today.
Thank you for having me, man.
Alright, anytime. Thanks for watching!