Weekend wrap: Expeditionary links

Weekend wrap: Expeditionary links

A short, but hot and humid week here in the National Capital Region. Here are a few of the things we didn’t get a chance to write about:

• Tom Ricks questioned this week whether today’s ambitions for ballistic missile defense might not be a modern version of coastal artillery — crypto-isolationist weapons of questionable practical value.

• The end of the space shuttle program not only means the end of thousands of NASA jobs, it means elite military pilots no longer have a chance to parlay their skills in the atmosphere into a ride to outer space.


• Deputy Secretary of Defense Bill Lynn announced that he’ll step down as soon as a successor can be found. Lynn said he didn’t want to commit to the job for the rest of President Obama’s term. He wants to spend more time with his family.

• Another review in the U.K. has identified still more risks in the Royal Navy’s goal of building its two Queen Elizabeth-class aircraft carriers.

• Mark Thompson at Battleland points out a piece in the new issue of the Naval Institute’s Proceedings in which the author argues that many military thinkers wildly overstate the risks of war with China — a nation that makes 90 iPhones a minute for sale in the U.S. and across the world.

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for a country that has the manufactoring capability that china now currently has, if we went to war with them we would simply be overwhelmed by numbers unless we used nuclear weapons to defeat the numbers.

eufrrprc (or, just prc if you like), if they were lined up a hundred wide, we could shoot/killl them FOREVER

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