This is just ONE view, and from a source whose point-of-view I disagree with but a source of intelleigence nonetheless.
Last
night we watched Dr. Strangelove. Never more relevant!!
Trump
Signs Executive Order to RECALL 1,000 Combat Pilots to Air Force!
20
October, 2017
In
the surest sign yet the United States is preparing for war with North
Korea, President Trump has signed an Executive Order allowing the Air
Force to recall from retirement, 1,000 COMBAT PILOTS!
President
Trump signed an executive order Friday allowing the Air Force to
recall as many as 1,000 retired pilots to active duty to address a
shortage in combat fliers, the White House and Pentagon announced.
By
law, only 25 retired officers can be brought back to serve in any one
branch. Trump's order removes those caps by expanding a state of
national emergency declared by President George W. Bush after 9/11,
signaling what could be a significant escalation in the 16-year-old
global war on terror.
"We
anticipate that the Secretary of Defense will delegate the authority
to the Secretary of the Air Force to recall up to 1,000 retired
pilots for up to three years," Navy Cdr. Gary Ross, a Pentagon
spokesman, said in a statement.
But
the executive order itself is not specific to the Air Force, and
could conceivably be used in the future to call up more officers and
in other branches.
There's
an old saying "You don't put on a condom unless you're gonna
F*ck." In that same vein, You don't recall 1,000 COMBAT Pilots
unless you're going to war.
We're
going to war. And calling back 1,000 combat pilots from their lives
in retirement means it's going to be a REALLY BIG WAR.
Prepare
yourselves.
Here
is the Actual Executive Order with a link to the White House web site
for verification:
As
seen in the above Executive Order, Title
10, United States Code, Sections 688 and 690 are
mentioned as being invoked.
Here's
another link to that same Title, but Section
690
U.S.
Guided Missile Cruiser Given "WARNO" for Tomahawk Missile
Launch Against North Korea
20
October, 2017
For
those who have not been keeping close track of the situation with
North Korea, this will be an eye-opener: Here's how CLOSE to ACTUAL
WAR we really are . . . U.S. forces in the region around North
Korea have been put on heightened alert. After a North Korean missile
test in mid-September, a U.S. warship patrolling the Sea of
Japan received a warning order, or "WARNO," to be prepared
to fire Tomahawk missiles at North Korean targets.
Rising
tensions between North Korea and the United States have sparked fresh
concerns inside and outside the Pentagon that a potential
miscalculation — driven by heated rhetoric or technical mistakes —
could lead to an accidental conflict on the Korean Peninsula.
The
danger of an inadvertent clash is exacerbated by North Korea's
impulsive nuclear-armed leader, and US President Donald Trump who
will not cower to threats, who have publicly traded threats, and a
volatile mismatch between the United States’ overwhelming military
superiority and an isolated regime in Pyongyang.
The
recent war of words appears to be shortening the fuse, with U.S.
forces in the area put on heightened alert. After a North Korean
missile test in mid-September, a U.S. warship patrolling the Sea
of Japan received a warning order, or WARNO, to be prepared to fire
Tomahawk missiles at North Korean targets, a military source
told Foreign Policy.
“It’s
not unheard of to do that,” a former senior defense official said
of the order to prepare the cruise missiles. “But I would say
it is a fairly significant indicator that the possibility of using
Tomahawks is rising
I would say it is a fairly significant indicator that the possibility of using Tomahawks is rising.”
A
WARNO is essentially an instruction to forces to be at the ready if
ordered to take action. For Tomahawks, that means prepping the weapon
and programming a target; surface ships and submarines in the area
are armed with dozens of the cruise missiles.
Military
officials declined to speculate on what scenarios could involve the
launching the missiles, which were used this summer against a Syrian
airfield that served as a staging ground for chemical weapons
attacks. If North Korea launched missiles at Guam, Japan, or
South Korea, “you would certainly want your Tomahawks ready in a
fast-moving scenario like that should the president or secretary of
defense make the judgement to respond with an offensive strike,”
said the former senior official, who is familiar with Pentagon
contingency planning.
Former
military officers said such an order did not mean U.S. military
action was imminent, only that commanders were taking precautions to
be ready with an array of weapons if a conflict erupted. Before
contemplating launching the powerful cruise missiles, the United
States likely would first weigh less drastic options, including cyber
warfare or a naval blockade, former officers said.
“The
WARNO is to force staffs to think through the problems, but not to
actually do anything other than think,” Ted Johnson, a former naval
commander and current fellow at New America, told FP. “The
fact that it’s for a Tomahawk strike into [North Korea] feels
ominous, but my guess it’s more about having a quick strike
response should ‘Rocket Man’ make an irrational decision and
overt provocation.”
The
Defense Department declined to discuss contingency plans or the
status of Tomahawks or other weapons systems in Northeast Asia. “The
U.S. military must always maintain a high state of readiness to
counter any threat, to include those from North Korea,” a U.S.
official told FP.
The
be-prepared order for U.S. forces came on the heels of a series of
provocative missile launches and a nuclear test by the rogue power.
On July 3, North Korea launched an intercontinental ballistic missile
capable of hitting U.S. territory. Two months later, North Korea
tested what it described a thermonuclear weapon, a claim that if true
would vastly increase the destructive power of Pyongyang’s nuclear
arsenal.
By
September, U.S. President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim
Jong Un were trading insults. Trump called Kim “Little Rocket Man”
and was labelled a “mentally deranged dotard” in return.
Arms
control experts and retired senior military officers worry that
taunts from Washington could prompt North Korea to take more
provocative action. The country’s foreign minister last
month said Kim is contemplating detonating a nuclear-tipped missile
over the Pacific, an aggressive move that could force a military
response from Washington.
“The
miscalculation risk is another deeply humiliating remark from
President Trump putting Kim Jong Un in an untenable position because
his elites will view him as weak if he doesn’t respond,” a former
senior military officer told FP, speaking on condition of
anonymity to candidly assess the risk of war.
“Over-the-top
rhetoric could result in a tit-for-tat in which leaders overreact and
escalation gets out of control … Leaders have stumbled into
war before, but it’s never been between two nuclear-armed powers
Leaders have stumbled into war before, but it’s never been between two nuclear-armed powers,” he added.
Defense
Secretary James Mattis has warned that any threat to the United
States, including the territory of Guam, or to U.S. allies would be
met with “a massive military response.” And Mattis said last
month that that response needn’t jeopardize U.S. and Korean
civilians in Seoul, but he declined to say what those military
options could be.
Washington
has conducted military drills with South Korean and Japanese allies,
sent attack submarines to
South Korean ports, and flown strategic bombers over South Korea and
off the North Korean coast.
Yet
Kim and his predecessors have avoided the ultimate showdown despite
plenty of low-intensity skirmishes over the years. That’s a sign
that the regime has an overarching focus on survival, said Yong Suk
Lee, deputy assistant director at the CIA’s new Korea Mission
Center.
“The
last person who wants conflict is actually Kim Jong Un. He wants to
rule peacefully for a long time and die,” Lee said. Taking on the
United States is “not conducive to his longevity.”
During
the Cold War, there were plenty of close calls and near misses that
almost led to a conflagration between the United States and the
Soviet Union, including an infamous 1983 NATO exercise, Operation
Able Archer, that convinced Moscow it was about to come under nuclear
attack.
But
unlike the U.S.-Soviet contest between two equally matched rivals,
the Korean crisis pits the world’s most powerful military against
an impoverished, isolated, but nuclear-armed regime. In that
mismatch, the stronger side could convince itself it can impose its
will against a weaker side that has few options but to go nuclear.
Trump, for example, last week boasted that U.S. missile defenses are
nearly invincible, even though the technology remains unreliable.
That
could make a preemptive strike look more tempting than it really is,
experts said.
In
the current crisis, senior U.S. officials along with the chairman of
the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen. Joseph Dunford, have stressed that
the Trump administration is focused on tackling the crisis with North
Korea through diplomacy. But the White House has said that military
action has not been ruled out.
Lyle
Goldstein, an associate professor at the U.S. Naval War College, has
studied how the prospect of disarming a foe can shape
decision-making. In his dissertation,
Goldstein looked at the calculus of former Presidents John F. Kennedy
and Lyndon Johnson, who both mulled a surprise attack against China
to deprive Beijing of its nascent nuclear arsenal. In the end,
fearing China would wade into Vietnam in full force, the United
States chose not to strike.
Goldstein
describes the imbalance now playing out between North Korea and the
United States as a similar “valley of vulnerability.”
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