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Old 08-12-2018, 09:20 AM
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Thumbs up Reagan made a splash putting Soviets on edge

Reagan made a splash putting Soviets on edge
By: GEORGE F. WILL | Washington Post Writers Group | Published: August 11, 2018
RE: https://www.stripes.com/opinion/reag...-edge-1.541968

Scholars have already debated for decades, and will debate for centuries, the role U.S. policies — military, diplomatic, economic — played in bringing the Cold War to endgame and the Soviet Union to extinction. One milestone was Ronald Reagan’s 1983 Strategic Defense Initiative proposal, a technological challenge that could not be met by a Soviet economy already buckling under the combined weight of military spending and socialism’s ignorance. But before SDI there was Ocean Venture ’81, initiated by Reagan as president-elect.

The protracted strategy, of which this enormous operation — 15 nations’ navies, 250 ships, more than 1,000 aircraft — was a harbinger, came to be referred to by some Soviets as the “Lehman strategy.” In “Oceans Ventured: Winning the Cold War at Sea,” John Lehman, a Navy aviator who was secretary of the Navy during Reagan’s first six years, explains the Navy’s role in the “forward strategy” that implemented Reagan’s Cold War policy. Reagan explained the policy when asked about it in 1977: “We win and they lose, what do you think of that?”

Among Reagan’s early actions — in addition to reinstating the MX missile and B-1 bomber programs that President Jimmy Carter had suspended — was to increase by 11 percent Carter’s fiscal 1981 Navy budget, and increasing by 15 percent the fiscal 1982 request. By 1980, there was rough nuclear parity, and the Soviets, with 280 divisions, had superiority of land forces. Reagan campaigned on building the U.S. Navy to 600 ships and using it for purposes beyond merely keeping sea lanes open to deliver supplies for land forces.

Those purposes included signaling U.S. confidence and ambition — what Lehman calls a “combat-credible forward naval presence” — in order to ratchet up psychological pressure on Soviet leaders. So, in the autumn of Reagan’s first year, Ocean Venture ’81 surged U.S. naval power into what the Soviet Union had considered its maritime domain, especially the Norwegian and Barents seas. (And eventually under the Arctic ice pack, where the Soviets had hoped to hide nuclear ballistic missile submarines.) By dispersing Ocean Venture ’81 ships when Soviet satellites were overhead, the arrival of a large flotilla in northern waters was an unnerving surprise for Moscow.

This “transformative” operation, Lehman writes, “came as a thunderclap to the Soviets, who had never seen such a NATO exercise on their northern doorstep.” “In preceding years,” he says, “during the hopeful pursuit of detente and arms control by Presidents [Gerald] Ford and Carter, such robust NATO activity would have been unthinkable, as provocative to the Soviets.” Provocation was a risk worth running, but a real risk:

“The Soviets were particularly fearful of being attacked under cover of a forward U.S. exercise. Why? Because their own doctrine was to use military exercises to mask surprise invasions,” as with Poland in 1981. Soviet doctrine’s “central concept was a high-speed offensive launched [against NATO] under the cover of military exercises in East Germany and Czechoslovakia.”

Lehman says that in 1986, with Mikhail Gorbachev inching crabwise toward acknowledging the Soviet Union’s terminal sclerosis, “the most delicate period of the Reagan naval strategy began.” Reagan would continue to deploy and demonstrate the multiplying American military proficiencies, but would avoid a triumphalism that might provoke an anti-Gorbachev coup by the humiliated Soviet military.

By the end of 1986, with the Soviets having learned that they could not interfere with U.S. aircraft carriers operating in Norwegian fjords, the Soviet general staff told Gorbachev that they could not defend the nation’s northern sector without tripling spending on naval and air forces there. Thus did the Cold War end because Reagan rejected the stale orthodoxy that the East-West military balance was solely about conventional land forces in central Europe, so NATO’s sea power advantage was of secondary importance.

Today’s naval problems posed by a rising China, particularly in the South China Sea, are unlike the problem of hastening the Soviet decline. Today’s U.S. ships are more capable than ever, but too few for comfort, as Lehman’s reader will realize when they consider what only the Navy can do.

In the movie “A Few Good Men,” a furious Col. Nathan Jessup (Jack Nicholson) exclaimed to his courtroom tormentors — Navy officers — words that are actually true regarding almost all civilians in this age of complex professional military establishments configured for myriad and rapidly evolving threats: “You have no idea how to defend a nation.” Lehman’s book is a rare window on that world, and a validation of the axiom that if you want peace, prepare for war.

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Personal Comment:

This article makes a lot of sense. It takes a Military man of record to outwit the adversary and to show strength thru leadership. We all may not like the manner by which these processes occur and think there are better ways - but to lead with strength can often times lead to peace. There are too many countries that dislike Americans and want to weaken our resolve or judgement. Sure we all want peace but peace sometimes comes with a cost. Stopping Wars is not always a process of compromise as many leaders say. They will do one thing and then do another. These are traps of which those who are weak can fall into - and the end results could be devastating to say the least. Americans "are not" war mongrels - but there are plenty of nations who have those tendencies that can result in terrible things happening. As much as many people want civilians to be President - I'd rather have a military person whose been there and knows the opposition and the transgressions that can come from showing weakness. We don't want a war - but if we don't stand up for the weak and lead with strength then we could fall into a trap of which we many others have done throughout history.

We've helped many little Nation's both with training & medical - to help them to rid the bad guys that deter their growth and prosperity. People want to stand up for themselves and want to live their lives with some concept dignity & progress in their countries for their children. Both education & training can put them on a stepping stone to improvement. The US has done this for many people around the world and we will continue to do this - I hope!

People - we have only one planet that we can now destroy with everybody on it! That doesn't make us feel real good. If we are intelligent why does this brutality still occur in several areas of our world?

God help us - we must still take arms when it's right and the only thing to do. Oppression has to be removed from this planet. Racial issues are also something I would have thought by now we would have moved on from - but again today's news tells me we are still at it.

This old Boats doesn't have many more years. But my Grandkids will inherit what we leave behind. Taking my dirt nap with this still going on - will only aggravate my restful sleep - but our future looks grim and I can't believe we call ourselves a humans?!

Boats
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Boats

O Almighty Lord God, who neither slumberest nor sleepest; Protect and assist, we beseech thee, all those who at home or abroad, by land, by sea, or in the air, are serving this country, that they, being armed with thy defence, may be preserved evermore in all perils; and being filled with wisdom and girded with strength, may do their duty to thy honour and glory; through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.

"IN GOD WE TRUST"
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