The Cepia Club Blog

The Cepia Club Blog: The Cepia Club believes individual awareness and activism can lead to a peaceful and prosperous world. This blog contains the pertinent literature, both creative and non-fiction, produced by the Cepiaclub Director and its associates.

Saturday, January 27, 2007

Update--Stragety Gazette and PiK. Media

After my last Clublog entry about the essay, "Strategy, Escalation and Quagmire," I have to reconsider putting it into the next issue of The Cepia Club Strategy Gazette (Vol. 1, #4) due out Thu. Feb. 1, 2007. I had done quite a bit of research for updating AND correcting the essay this past four days. But there is a limit of space in the newsletter has presented a problem. The S.G. has been 16 pages for issues #1-3. I was willing to go to 20 pages for this next issue, or even 24. Now, I do have the template for the newsletter ready, having finished the "new look" two weeks ago. (Part of the new look will be full on-line and emailed copies in color portable document files [.pdf]). The major writings have been completed and been undergoing intensive review and revising. The main article is "Libertarian Internationalism: Fixing the Core of U.S. Strategy." The essay itself has been started, rejected, and restarted over seven times in the last three years. Its unveiling in the next S.G. will be a personal accomplish. I only hope it satisfies the readers. Because of the new paragraph and spacing format we are adapting for S.G. (if we make that final decision to use it), the essay is almost 11 pages long already. With the other articles, and the advertisements, it would be 20 page newsletter. In order to do the "Strategy, Escalation, and Quagmire" essay correctly and include it in the S.G., the newsletter would have to approach 32 pages. At this stage, that would be both an unmanagable newsletter for our printing cost and an unreasonable length for our readers at present. So, the "Strategy" essay will not be in the new Gazette. Instead, we will do an even more thorough job on the essay. We have the option of presenting it as a separate publication. However, beginning with Vol. 2, No. 5 (our numbers on the issue will run consecutively instead of starting each new volume with "1"), April 1, 2007, The Cepia Club Strategy Gazette will run bi-monthly, which is six times a year.



About our PiK. Media update, we are in the advance post-production phase of "Let There Be Bikes," the story about the two-year life of Smitty's Bikes. Look for it soon on www.cepiaclub.com/TV.htm .





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Friday, January 26, 2007

Correction and Apology

I make a humble apology to the readers of this Clublog. Ever since I posted the last entry over two weeks on "Strategy, Escalation, and Quagmire," I have been bothered that I had one fact wrong. When facts are wrong, the analysis is less credible. I stated in the entry that Georgre Ball had originated the idea of the "enclave strategy " during the Vietnam War as an alternative approach to America policy in 1965 in South Vietnam. The truth is, US Army Chief of Staff Johnson in March 1965 brought forward the idea of the enclaves, or strategic cantonments as I called them. The idea was strongly endorsed by former Chairman of the JCS and U.S. Ambassador to Vietnam, Gen. Maxwell D. Taylor (USA, Ret.). The proposal was never given a chance for operational experiment before US policymakers decided on a more aggressive strategy with commitment of major ground units of the US and South Korea. At the time of March 1965, US Marine Corps battalion landing teams had just deployed to Danang, South Vietnam in a limited role of airbase security.



While that one very important fact about the authorship of the strategy was wrong, the general analysis of our blog entry, I feel, is fairly solid. Yet, getting something so wrong, having written the entry in haste, without proper fact checking, was due to both intellectual sloth and arrogance. I had been planning on updating the entry and expanding it for the next issue of The Cepia Club Strategy Gazette, coming up next Thu., Feb. 1st. The newer version was going to incorporate some regular scholarly quotation, notation and references, with source notes and a Works Cited section. It has always been intended that the Gazette would take a more serious approach to intellectual rigor and honesty by using such principles of research and writing. Well, after this problem with the last blog entry, we cannot delay.



Blogs are a curious thing. If the blog is not updated and kept new and fresh, readers will diminish or visit less often. This has consequences for the entire Club website. I fell into a publish or perish paranoia common to academia in writing the last entry. People who know me also know that I, unlike many people who are "history buffs," am a trained scholar in the discipline of history. I hold a degree in it, albeit a measely bachelor of arts. Still, I know better what is the proper way to do research and analysis and the correct method for explaining it. My skills over the years got to the point I said above, "lazy and 0ver-confident." I have a sincere desire to make this Clublog, Club publications and other things credible, accurate, reliable, influential and effective.



With this, I may not always be correct, or even "right" in my opinion. However, I promise Club participants, the public, clients and customers that I will make every effort to make our work a thorough effort, not lazy and arrogant.





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Correction and Apology

I make a humble apology to the readers of this Clublog. Ever since I posted the last entry over two weeks on "Strategy, Escalation, and Quagmire," I have been bothered that I had one fact wrong. When facts are wrong, the analysis is less credible. I stated in the entry that Georgre Ball had originated the idea of the "enclave strategy " during the Vietnam War as an alternative approach to America policy in 1965 in South Vietnam. The truth is, US Army Chief of Staff Johnson in March 1965 brought forward the idea of the enclaves, or strategic cantonments as I called them. The idea was strongly endorsed by former Chairman of the JCS and U.S. Ambassador to Vietnam, Gen. Maxwell D. Taylor (USA, Ret.). The proposal was never given a chance for operational experiment before US policymakers decided on a more aggressive strategy with commitment of major ground units of the US and South Korea. At the time of March 1965, US Marine Corps battalion landing teams had just deployed to Danang, South Vietnam in a limited role of airbase security.



While that one very important fact about the authorship of the strategy was wrong, the general analysis of our blog entry, I feel, is fairly solid. Yet, getting something so wrong, having written the entry in haste, without proper fact checking, was due to both intellectual sloth and arrogance. I had been planning on updating the entry and expanding it for the next issue of The Cepia Club Strategy Gazette, coming up next Thu., Feb. 1st. The newer version was going to incorporate some regular scholarly quotation, notation and references, with source notes and a Works Cited section. It has always been intended that the Gazette would take a more serious approach to intellectual rigor and honesty by using such principles of research and writing. Well, after this problem with the last blog entry, we cannot delay.



Blogs are a curious thing. If the blog is not updated and kept new and fresh, readers will diminish or visit less often. This has consequences for the entire Club website. I fell into a publish or perish paranoia common to academia in writing the last entry. People who know me also know that I, unlike many people who are "history buffs," am a trained scholar in the discipline of history. I hold a degree in it, albeit a measely bachelor of arts. Still, I know better what is the proper way to do research and analysis and the correct method for explaining it. My skills over the years got to the point I said above, "lazy and 0ver-confident." I have a sincere desire to make this Clublog, Club publications and other things credible, accurate, reliable, influential and effective.



With this, I may not always be correct, or even "right" in my opinion. However, I promise Club participants, the public, clients and customers that I will make every effort to make our work a thorough effort, not lazy and arrogant.





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Thursday, January 11, 2007

Hail T.E. Lawrence and George Ball! Strategy, Escalation, and Quagmire

Much has been said about the future of U.S. policy in Iraq. President Bush made a televised national address on January 10th calling for an increase of 21,500 U.S. troops in Iraq, focusing on securing Baghdad and Anbar Province, and increasing U.S. cooperation with Iraqi security units. Besides emphasizing micro-investing to increase the number of jobs to employ Iraqis, the new Administration line at this point shows little improvement over “the war of frenzy and attrition” pursued by the U.S. in Iraq. The U.S. and coalition troops are nowhere near numerous enough to adequately suppress the Iraqi insurgency with presence operations.

As T.E. Lawrence spoke in his memoirs about the moment he hit on a strategy for the Arab revolt against the Ottoman Empire in World War I. He reasoned the Turks had nowhere near enough troops to secure all the land in Arabia against mobile, marauding, mounted Arab guerillas. The Turks would be stuck at defending fixed vulnerable locations, facilities, and lines of communication against attack. The Turks would never have enough soldiers to pursue and destroy the Arab insurgents. They could not go far from their bases for fear of being cut off. They could not retreat from their empire because they would never get back into Arabia. The Arab forces, accustomed to a nomadic existence, could travel to the weakest parts of the Turkish defenses, isolate them, and inflict casualties at will. The Arabs would use the Turkish lifeline to their empire, the Hejaz Railroad, as a hostage. They would bleed the Ottoman Army using its railway to sustain itself because using and protecting that line of communication was an absolute strategic requirement for their military campaign. To protect everything, the Turks would be dispersed and nowhere strong enough to cause a decisive defeat on the Arab Army. Being weak everywhere, the Arabs would use their skill in small attacks, ambush, and raids to sop the Turks of their morale. Once morally defeated, material defeat of the Turks in all of the Middle East would be imminent. Then, the British would strike a crippling blow at the Turks, and that would end the Ottoman Empire that had lasted for over 700 years.

This is instructive to another era of America’s history, when one second-tier official in the U.S. Department of State repeatedly warned of the growing escalation in Vietnam. The diplomat, George Ball, wrote numerous memorandums on his own concerning U.S. involvement in Vietnam (his official duties in the State Department concerned Europe). Ball in 1965 saw that American escalation and the introduction of ground combat units would suck the U.S. military into a bloody, demoralizing hole, fighting a war of national liberation it was not prepared to fight. The U.S. military was neither doctrinally forewarned nor materially equipped to fight against indigenous guerillas supported by the communist world. And those guerillas had the further benefit of near-immune sanctuaries in North Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia. Ball was concerned that the self-limiting political restrictions forced the United States to fight at a disadvantage for limited aims using unlimited military commitments. Ball knew that the enemy was fighting a total war, mobilizing all its resources, and that the Vietnamese communist, north and south, had high political goals. Ball knew a quagmire was brewing

George Ball did have some recommendations which might have been a more effective use of military force when considering the political restrictions. Ball suggested that the political viability, the institutional strength, and the military competence of South Vietnam’s government and armed forces would decide victory or defeat in the war in Vietnam. In the long term, he was exactly right. The South Vietnamese Government relied completely on the United States to sustain them. When America’s patience with casualties and policy drift wore out, the American public forced disengagement. By then, South Vietnam’s government was woefully unprepared to do what they should have had to do in the first place: win the war against communism on their own merits.

Ball’s most appealing solution was to use limited U.S. forces to secure cantonments in strategic locations in South Vietnam, mostly along the coast. These areas would be easily supplied by sea- and airlift. Behind this wall of impenetrable security, South Vietnam could have built the political, economic, social and cultural conditions that would have strengthened both their ability to govern and fight, and to fight the insurgency’s ideas with better developed ideas. From these strategic, secure cantonments, South Vietnamese forces could have operated further and further out, solidifying their control over their control in a “seize, hold, and develop” strategy. The South Vietnamese armed forces would have been supported by U.S. advisors, air and sea power, and possibly even a limited commitment of combat units. Ball’s solution was a brilliant approach that emphasized a long-term solution, doing it right, and relying on the Vietnamese people to do the hard work themselves. One of the problems that policy-makers might have seen in Ball’s plan was that it would take so long to become a success, but it most likely would have been successful.

Instead of the U.S. using George Ball’s strategy of strategic cantonments and the “revolutionary social development” weapon to fight a brutal, murderous insurgency, the U.S. found itself engaged with the full might and weight of communist North Vietnam. And the communist were backed up by near unlimited supplies of quality weapons by the rest of the communist world. Ironically, the Viet Cong guerillas and the North Vietnamese general staff used the basic precepts of Lawrence’s strategy for the Arab Revolt in 1916-1918 in order to defeat a modern, efficient killing machine that was the U.S. Armed Forces.

Now the U.S. faces a similar challenge in Iraq. The United States is escalating its military presence in Iraq because of frustration. The frustration has all been the cause of having no viable political policy for either Iraq or the broader Middle East. The only stated aim is “defeat of the insurgents and a democratic Iraq.” Apparently, the Bush Administration policy makers suffer some delusion that this will translate to victory over Islamists warriors and a democratic transformation of the entire Middle East in the broader, longer war. In an upside-down approach from Vietnam, the U.S. in Iraq is using limited military means to achieve an unlimited political objective. Like the inverted Vietnam problem of unlimited military force pursuing limited aims, the Iraq paradox of power and policy might not be all that much more effective now than in the 1960s and early 1970s, let alone 2003 to 2006.

Frankly, using the strategic cantonment in Iraq is a better way of matching means and ends in the Iraq war. Using sea and air power as a source of strength, the U.S. can use fewer troops than now deployed in the whole of Iraq to secure the Shi’a south and the Kurdish north. Maritime and air supremacy, and the high mobility of our expeditionary land forces, could use these secure bases areas to strike deep into Iraq at insurgents without the vulnerabilities and liabilities of an occupying power, the problems foreshadowed by Lawrence. The middle and west of Iraq would be the place where Iraq’s legal government would have to perform effectively at governance and counter-guerilla warfare. They would have the strategic cantonments where they could build their capability for governing and fighting. They would have the protection of a much-reduced U.S. combat capability and full access to air and sea support. The reduced numbers of U.S. troops needed for this strategy would save the American military. Also, the U.S. would still be in Iraq, and the Persian Gulf, and be in a central position in which to exercise military control over political events, like intervention by Iran, Syria, Saudi Arabia, Israel, or Turkey in Iraq’s civil war.

T.E. Lawrence strategic genius was predictive of the U.S. challenges both in Vietnam and Iraq. George Ball’s alternative to escalation in Vietnam in 1965 was an equally brilliant political policy. The U.S. needs to learn its lessons and the lessons learned by others in order to be smarter than its problems and better than the challenges presented.

Tuesday, January 09, 2007

Club Event A Success

Pi Kielty’s Book Party

“An Evening Affair” with Wisconsin author Pi Kielty was a great success. The party, a debut of his first collection of stories and other things, took place last Sat., Jan. 6, 2007, at the Northern Lakes Center for the Arts. The book, The Mad Tales, is the first book published by The Cepia Club. Pi, who is a very anobscure writer, read to 42 of his close friends, with many more sending regrets they could not attend. Pi read his stories “Darkness of the Lake” and “The Bridge” and his poem “Along Superior’s Northwest Shore.” The party afterward was a very cool social mixer of Pi’s friends, eating snack foods and non-alcoholic punch and coffee provided by Pi’s woman, Kitty Kat, friends Darren H. and Patti M., and prepared by MELM and Ralph W. from the Arts Center. Pickup band The Scalding Hounds set the breezy tone with soft drums, bango, acoustic guitar, and stand-up bass playing a variety of blue grass and other Americana twang. A good time was definitely enjoyed by everyone. Fingers Tristane gave massage samples, Uncle Abe sold his olive oil, and the Club sold 9 copies of Pi’s books.

The “Evening Affair” was promoted successfully by The Cepia Club. First, we got Pi’s friends there. Second, flyers drew in quite a few and many who saw the flyers were unable, unfortunately, to come and join the celebration of Pi’s book. Third, a press release was written, posted, and emailed to western Wisconsin newspapers. The release got some coverage, even in the St. Paul Pioneer Press’s Wisconsin Events section (not a hard feat, but worthy of note). The Cepia Club plans on doing similar fun events in the future in cooperation with other artists and merchants, and to promote them in a similar and more experienced manner. Stay tuned to the Clublog for more details. To purchase a copy of Pi Kielty’s The Mad Tales, go to www.cepiaclub.com/Store.htm .

Friday, January 05, 2007

New Strategy Taking Shape?

The Bush Administration is expected to name Adm. Fallon, currently the commander of Pacific Command, as General Abizaid’s replacement as commander of Central Command. In addition, Lt. Gen. Patraeus, who heads the US Army Training and Doctrine Command, is anticipated by the media as the new commander of coalition forces in Iraq to replace Gen. Casey. Abizaid and Casey announced their retirements sometime ago. The appointment of Fallon and Patraeus is believed to emphasize a shift in strategic thinking in the war in Iraq and for US military policy in the Indian Ocean Area (IOA), which is the geographic responsibility of CentCom. Fallon was only the combatant commander of PacCom for a little over a year as of this time. Both Fallon and Patraeus require Congressional approval before taking up their new responsibilities, if indeed the insider information in the media is indeed accurate. Patraeus will get a fourth star in order to assume his new assignment.

It is speculated that Fallon’s appointment highlight’s the US concern with terrorists smuggling personnel, weapons, and equipment through CentCom’s sea lines of communication (SLOCs). Fallon is the first Naval officer to be CentCom commander, as all of the commanders since the organization was stood-up in 1983 have been US Army generals like Schwartzkopf or Marine generals like Zinni. The other speculation I read was that it is presumed that any military action against Iran over its alleged nuclear weapons development program would be conducted mainly from surface combatants, aircraft carriers and cruise missile-armed submarines.

Patraeus’ appointment is less of a mystery. Much of the post-Operation Iraqi Freedom (OIF) literature has praised his work as commander of the 101st Air Assault Division and that unit’s approach to counter-insurgency warfare. Patraeus instituted innovative civil, political, humanitarian, and psychological affairs methods into his division’s post-combat occupation operations. Patraeus is generally recognized as the one commanding general of a major unit in Iraq to have approached the problem of the insurgency in a creative and effective manner. His two tours in Iraq proved that his intellectual understanding of this type of political and social warfare showed how it could have been done right on the ground. Over the last year and a half, Patraeus also coordinated the writing of the new US Army/US Marine Corps joint publication on “Counter-insurgency Operations.”

This Clublog, articles in our newsletters, and other writings published on our website and elsewhere have often talked about a need for a new military approach to the war on the terrorist and to US military policy in the Indian Ocean Area in general. We have advocated consistently for a “maritime strategy” when it comes to using military action to pursue political policy. At the same time, we have promoted a “libertarian internationalism” as a new political creed for US diplomacy around the world as way of fighting not only this “long war,” but many of the problems challenging humanity in every region of the world.

Fallon is a naval aviator by vocation, but in essence a maritime man. Does his new role in the theater of CentCom/IOA mean that the US will now pursue a maritime strategy? (You will find more about maritime strategy on www.cepiaclub.com and in the forthcoming issue of Strategy Gazette due out Feb. 1st). Does General Patraeus’ appointment mean that the emphasis in the war in Iraq and against the Islamists terrorist elsewhere will now be to approach obliquely from a political policy first, violence as a last resort? Well, that is what we here at The Cepia Club are hoping, and we hope for our country that such an approach will work.

Tuesday, January 02, 2007

Club Report–Jan. 2, 2007: Success and Promise

2007 looks promising for The Cepia Club. Last year, we established our business and operated all four of enterprises: publishing, broadcasting, public and media relations, and CepiaNet. Progress in Nov. and Dec. 2006 was extraordinary. Now, we are set to move forward.

In publishing, the new Pi Kielty book, “The Mad Tales,” is selling, and selling rather well. One reason the Clublog has been neglected for 2-1/2 weeks is that we worked very steadily on the website. The Club website is almost complete. Strategy Gazette is coming out Feb. 1st. Other information, creative, promotional, and “other” literature is under development.

In broadcasting, the second episode of Freedom Affairs is posted on our TV page. The third episode is in pre-production with a guest confirmed. Today, I have been working on our first commercial for our TV page downloads. Wizodd.com was kind enough to let us experiment with their image.

In 2006 we gained great public and media relations experience and built formidable assets. We also learned about what kind of things not to do–like support political candidates who speak liberty but who believe otherwise. Last week we sent out a press release for Pi Kielty’s book party this Sat., Jan. 6th, at the Northern Lakes Center for the Arts, here in Amery, WI, USA. The press release must have gotten some play because we have received some calls about the party and requesting more info on the Club. Last Sat. on Dec. 30th I gave a speech at a concert at Planet Supply in St. Croix Falls, WI on “taking back the power.” A lot of newsletters and zines were picked up by interested people. The event even helped the CepiaNet as three people, one in the military, signed-up. Also concerning the CepiaNet, three new people joined the Yahoo! Group.

Our strategic vision business plan, Club 21: Connecting People, was finalized in early Dec. We are already following its outline for our enterprises, competencies, direction (management) and activities. Our Club virtual office has also been established on a free site service. We are still learning from the wiki version, but as Smitty pointed out, the office will be a great tool for our productivity and our building success.

The 2007 theme for our Club uses Thomas Friedman’s book “The World Is Flat: Updated and Expanded” as its core premise. The theme upon which we will conduct our business and “cepia” work is “Capitalizing on the Flat World of Business.” The book is strongly recommended for reading by all Club participants. Those familiar with the book will know how the book and theme and our goals this year combine. I will probably write something on our 2007 theme. A review of the Friedman book is scheduled for the next issue (#4) of Strategy Gazette.

Building on our 2006 success will lead to a better, more profitable business. That will, in turn, lead us to be a better Club and be more successful at helping others. There are some projects that I have in mind for literature, broadcasting, public and media relations (which includes events), and for CepiaNet. These projects will all draw heavily on each other in reinforcing method of creating impact for our growth, development, and outreach. For example, I would like to do some sort of info-mentary on the Club. We also need a CepiaNet participants handbook or guide. We need to find a wider market for our public and media releases and activities (like some list serves or a wider-ranging database). We need to build the link exchange process for our website. On the link exchanges, one of my best friend’s, Jen Mueller (see her Club Listing), is helping us. Overall, many people are cooperating in an exchange of favors and service to help us, and we are in turn helping them.

The Club is working. Here’s to 2007!