Are You a Transmitter or a Receiver? By Scott Eblin

view original / eblingroup.com / One of the things I love most about leadership coaching is the opportunity to see lots of different executives in action. I get to see them in team meetings, in presentations, in one-on-one’s, and just walking around the plant or office. In addition to the first-hand observations, I usually collect …

Flying Not Quite As High: Our threatened airpower. By Michael Auslin

Weekly Standard May 7, 2012 View Original / Michael Auslin / Weekly Standard The release of the Obama administration’s defense budget in January makes clear just how the president intends to reshape the U.S. military. For starters, the Army will shrink 14 percent by 2017, the Marines will decrease by 20,000, six Air Force fighter …

Strategy and Organization by Henry Kissinger Foreign Affairs (Apr 1957)

A bud of mine, Josh Zaker, passed this piece to me the other day.  It was written for Foreign Affairs in the Spring of 1957... amazing at how relevant Dr Kissinger's words are still for us 55 years later.  I have pasted the conclusion below and the article is at the link...great stuff. Kissinger Strategy …

Terror Risk Falls, U.S. Officials Say By Siobhan Gorman

Wall Street Journal April 28, 2012 Pg. 4 WASHINGTON—The chances of a Sept. 11-style attack have substantially decreased as a result of U.S. counterterrorism operations, according to senior U.S. intelligence officials who provided an assessment Friday of the state of al Qaeda a year after the raid that killed Osama bin Laden. A high-casualty attack …

The U.S. Army In A Time Of Transition Building a flexible force By Gen. Raymond T. Odierno, Army Chief of Staff

Foreign Affairs May 1, 2012 After six months as chief of staff, I can see clearly that the coming decade will be a vital period of transition for the U.S. Army. The service will have to adjust to three major changes: declining budgets, due to the country's worsened fiscal situation; a shift in emphasis to …

The war over defense by James Jay Carafano

Original Article / James Jay Carafano The U.S. Armed Forces are in quite a battle these days. They’re caught between a president determined to make substantial cuts in defense investments and a Congress increasingly intolerant with wasteful spending. All this while following a Rube Goldberg set of legislative mandates and having a nation to defend. …

Washington Double-Talk On Nukes By Walter Pincus

Washington Post April 24, 2012 Pg. 17 Fine Print The United States needs a consistent position on nonproliferation if its efforts to lower the nuclear weapons threat is to be taken seriously. The past two weeks prove the point. On Thursday, India successfully tested what it called its first intercontinental ballistic missile, the Agni V. …

Defense Department Plans New Intelligence Gathering Service

New York Times April 24, 2012 By Eric Schmitt WASHINGTON — The Pentagon is revamping its spy operations to focus on high-priority targets like Iran and China in a reorganization that reflects a shift away from the war zones of Iraq and Afghanistan that have dominated America’s security landscape for the past decade. Under the …

Fear Itself: Americans Believe Iran Threat on Par With 1980s Soviet Union

by Max Fisher, theatlantic.com April 19th 2012 4:05 PM A new poll shows that Americans today are more afraid of Iran than they were of the USSR in 1985, a peak of the Cold War. In November 1985, CNN commissioned a poll asking Americans to gauge the Soviet Union's threat to the U.S. It's hard …