Dozen Interesting Military Quotes

 

1
Know and use all the capabilities in your airplane. If you don’t, sooner or later, some guy who does use them all will kick your ass.

Dave “Preacher” Pace
Quoted in Robert L . Shaw, Fighter Combat

 

2
As one veteran Israeli pilot said after the June 1982 air campaign over Lebanon in response to American questions about how much doctrine the Israeli Air Force had written down, “Yes, we have books. But they are very thin.”

Barry D. Watts and James 0. Hale
Air University Review, 1984

 

3
It is a good thing for an uneducated man to read books of quotations.

Sir Winston Churchill

 

4
A modern, autonomous, and thoroughly trained Air Force in being at all times will not alone be sufficient, but without it there can be no national security.

Gen H. H. “Hap” Arnold

 

5
War is not an affair of chance. A great deal of knowledge, study, and meditation is necessary to conduct it well.

Frederick the Great

 

6
A wise man learns from his experience; a wiser man learns from the experience of others.

Confucius

 

7
Every soldier generally thinks only as far as the radius of action of his branch of the service and only as quickly as he can move with his weapons.

Luftwaffe general Karl Koller

 

8
Strategic air assault is wasted if it is dissipated piecemeal in sporadic attacks between which the enemy has an opportunity to readjust defenses or recuperate.

Hap Arnold

 

9
The science of war (knowledge).
The art of war (application of knowledge).

Wallace P. Franz and Harry G. Summers

Art of War Colloquium, textbook Army War College

 

10
Space in which to maneuver in the air, unlike fighting on land or sea, is practically unlimited.

Group Captain J. E “Johnnie” Johnson

 

11
Never interrupt your enemy when he is making a mistake.

Napoléon

12
Tactics are concerned with doing the job “right,” higher levels of strategy are concerned with doing the “right” job.

Dennis M. Drew and Donald M. Snow

 

For regular updates please register here –

https://55nda.com/blogs/anil-khosla/subscribe/

AIR POWER IN GREY ZONE OPERATIONS

 

My views on the issue of Air Power in Grey Zone Operations.

(For selective viewing, please click on the links below)

  1. Upto 03:10 – Introduction.
  2. 03:10 – 07:35 – Perspective on the issue.
  3. 07:35 – 13:10 – Defining Grey Zone warfrare.
  4. 13:10 – 21:00 – Difference between GZ and NWNP.
  5. 21:00 – 27:30 – India’s GZ Threat Scenario.
  6. 27:30 – 36:00 – Air Power vis-a-vis GZ.
  7. 36:00 -38:00 – GZ activity between friendly countries.
  8. 38:00 – 43:50 – Using AP in GZ.
  9. 43:50 – 57:30 – Capability building and reorientation to deal with GZ.
  10. 57:30 onwards – Concluding Thoughts.

 

Question

Does ongoing military reforms and proposed reorganisation cater for future grey zone operations?

 

Comments and value additions are most welcome

 

For regular updates please register here –

https://55nda.com/blogs/anil-khosla/subscribe/

Also read – Article on the subject

https://55nda.com/blogs/anil-khosla/2021/07/26/airpower-in-grey-zone-my-article-in-usi-journal/

GOLF AT OLYMPICS

 

Pic Courtesy:  Financial Times

Golf featured in the Summer Olympic Games in 1900 at Paris and 1904 at St. Louis.

 

Thereafter it was it was reinstated in 2016 Summer Olympics.

 

Qualification for the Olympics is based primarily upon the Official World Golf Ranking (men) and Women’s World Golf Rankings.

 

Total of 60 players compete for the medal.

 

Top 15 of each gender automatically qualify (with a limit of four per country), and then the highest ranked players from countries that had not yet already qualified (Max two players) are added.

 

Stroke play is used at the Games, with athletes playing four rounds of 18 holes (72 Holes) over four days.

USA is the leader in the medal tally of so far conducted tournaments with 12 medals followed by Great Britain with 3 medals.

TOKYO OLYMPICS

Pic Courtesy: Wikipedia

Olympic Golf venue

 

Kasumigaseki Country Club in the verdant Musashino Hills.

 

Japan has nearly 2000 golf courses.

 

Kasumigaseki is the venue for Tokyo 2020 Men’s & Women’s golf competitions.

 

It is one of the oldest and most prestigious historic courses.

 

It was founded in 1929, and has hosted many events world, Asian and Japanese tournaments.

 

It is a 7466 yard par-71 course.

 

 

Results (Men Tournament)

 

Gold Medal: The Men’s Olympic golf event gold was won by American Xander Schauffele. He won by one stroke with an 18 under par performance.

 

Silver medal: Won by Rory Sabbatini playing for Slovakia. He performed 17 under par.

 

 Bronze: Won by Pan Cheng-tsung of Chinese Taipei finishing 15 under power. Pan technically finished T3 with six other golfers but beat them all on the fourth playoff hole for the bronze medal.

 

Other T3 Players:

Hideki Matsuyama (JPN)
Collin Morikawa (USA)
Mito Pereira (CHI)
Sebastian Munoz (COL)
Rory McIlroy (IRL)
Paul Casey (GBR)

 

Indian Representation

 

The Indian men’s team was represented by 34-year-old Anirban Lahiri and 30-year-old Udayan Mane. Lahiri finished tied-42nd with score of 5-under par and Mane finished 56th with 3-over par.

Pic Courtesy: Wikipedia

The Women’s team of India is being represented by, Aditi Ashok age 23 and Diksha Dagar, age 20. Their competition is from 04 to 07 August.

Best of luck to the Indian Women’s team.

In your opinion how will the women’s team perform?

 

For regular updates please register here –

https://55nda.com/blogs/anil-khosla/subscribe/