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Aviation Sceptic's avatar

CDR Sal, you're on a roll, keep rollin'...(-; Viewed thru the reductionist lens of "you get more of what you reward, and less of what you punish" the campaign you describe has been obvious for years. Years ago, when kidnapping and ransoming diplomats was on the rise, when Russian diplomats were kidnapped, the violent response of the Russian security services convinced the kidnappers to leave Russian diplomats alone. Took us a while (and a new administration) to learn the same lesson. The Biden administration had reasons for acting the way they did towards the Houthis as they choked off the Red Sea. The new administration does not share those reasons, hence, the enactment of the Salamander doctrine is underway. What you describe is the William Tecumseh Sherman approach to war...it's hell, understand that, embrace it, apply force to bring the message home to the government AND the populace, and you may, repeat may, shorten the violence. Stretching things out, "proportional response" only serve to keep the violence going...that is guaranteed, and the opposite of "humanitarian". Very strange that.

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LCDR Fish's avatar

Been talking with folks at work about this for a while. We used to board and confiscate Iranian weapons off dozens of dhows - haven't seen anything recently. Yemen is tiny and only has a few suitable ports. It should not be that hard to cut off the incoming weapons. Issue some letters of marque, station mercs on uparmored barges outside the ports and have them inspect every single inbound vessel. No impact on aid, food, etc - but starve the weapon supply. It'd be so much cheaper and more efficient than wasting our ordnance.

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