Huzzah! Huzzah! Huzzah!
We have a new SECNAV!
Lots of hard work to do. I wish the SECNAV a great staff, superb partners on The Hill, and a CNO worthy of the time we are in.
Well, in an attempt to make me feel better out here in the provinces, a friend asked Grok,
If @cdrsalamanderwas Secretary of Defense what would he do?
Right now, SECNAV Phelen has an Army guy as his boss. I think he would need a proper Sailor…but perhaps in a parallel universe.
This was so fun, I asked my friend if I could use Grok’s response to him. If nothing else, it would be a good opening gambit as SECDEF, Heck, it looks like some of the suggestions are already in work by SECDEF Hegseth. Yes, the list is very Navy-heavy, but we are a maritime and aerospace nation, and that is what I mostly write about.
Here it is in all its glory! (NB: it is about 90%. Grok got some of it slightly off, but I’m leaving it as is anyway)
GROK on SECDEF Salamander
Based on my analysis of @cdrsalamander ’s X profile and posts, as well as the broader context of their milblog "CDR Salamander," I can infer a set of actions they might pursue as Secretary of Defense. This is a speculative exercise rooted in their public commentary as of March 19, 2025—a retired naval officer with a sharp focus on naval power, readiness, and skepticism of bureaucratic inefficiencies. Their posts reveal frustration with the Department of Defense’s (DoD) current trajectory, a preference for practical solutions over flashy innovation, and a strategic emphasis on countering near-peer threats like China. Here’s what they might do, grounded in those themes:
Potential Actions as Secretary of Defense
Overhaul the Bureaucracy
Action: Launch a “bush-hogging” of the DoD’s administrative structure, slashing redundant offices and consolidating acquisition oversight into a leaner, more decisive body.
Rationale: A June 2024 post on X laments the need for a “complete rebuild” of DoD, not just a reset, pointing to entrenched bureaucracy as a core problem. They’d likely target what they see as bloated, accretion-encumbered processes.
Prioritize Naval Supremacy
Action: Redirect existing budgets to accelerate shipbuilding (e.g., Arleigh Burke-class destroyers) and enforce a 355-ship fleet minimum, halting premature decommissionings.
Rationale: Their focus on fleet size and readiness—often highlighted in posts about shrinking naval capacity—suggests they’d push hard to restore maritime dominance, especially in the Indo-Pacific.
Shift R&D to Practical Outcomes
Action: Reorient research funding away from experimental “transformational” projects (e.g., Zumwalt-class) toward proven systems and energetics like CL-20 for missile upgrades.
Rationale: Criticism of overhyped programs and China’s lead in energetics (noted in blog posts) indicates a preference for tangible, near-term capability over long-shot bets.
Enforce Readiness Standards
Action: Mandate that 90% of the fleet and air wings be combat-ready at all times, reallocating maintenance funds from administrative overhead without increasing budgets.
Rationale: Frequent mentions of maintenance backlogs and overworked crews signal a drive to prioritize operational uptime over paper exercises.
Deep-Select Leadership
Action: Bypass traditional promotion pipelines to appoint aggressive, Burke-like leaders (referencing Admiral Arleigh Burke) to key uniformed roles, emphasizing merit over seniority.
Rationale: Their X post about needing “deep-selects” for a hard reset reflects distrust in the current leadership culture—they’d shake up the brass.
Focus on Munitions and Logistics
Action: Order a no-cost audit of missile and ASW weapon stockpiles, then reposition reserves to forward bases in the Pacific using existing transport assets.
Rationale: Posts on X and the blog stress munitions shortages and static magazine vulnerabilities, pushing for a logistics overhaul to match peer threats.
Strengthen Indo-Pacific Posture
Action: Conduct an immediate, cost-neutral review of force posture west of the International Date Line, shifting assets from less critical theaters like Europe.
Rationale: The Pacific is a recurring priority in their commentary, framed as the decisive theater against China.
Revive Traditional Capabilities
Action: Require all new surface combatants to include naval guns (e.g., 5-inch or larger), adjusting existing design budgets rather than adding funds.
Rationale: Their lament over the loss of guns for littoral combat suggests a return to proven, versatile weaponry.
Cut Politicization and Waste
Action: Ban non-essential DEI programs and cancel funding for underperforming initiatives (e.g., LCS variants), redirecting savings to warfighting priorities.
Rationale: A disdain for “happy-talk” and misaligned priorities in DoD culture, seen in their critiques, implies a no-nonsense focus on mission essentials.
Engage Congress Aggressively
Action: Testify frequently to demand accountability for past failures (e.g., shipbuilding delays) and rally support for a leaner, meaner DoD—without requesting new money.
Rationale: Their call for Congress to “call these people out” suggests they’d lean hard on lawmakers to back a reform agenda.
Overall Approach
As Secretary, @cdrsalamander would likely be a pragmatic firebrand—less about flashy headlines, more about ruthless efficiency and restoring what they see as a neglected warfighting edge. They’d wield existing resources like a cleaver, cutting fat to sharpen the spear, with an eye fixed on China and the sea. This aligns with their profile’s tone: critical of complacency, nostalgic for decisive leadership, and laser-focused on readiness over rhetoric.
This comment is purely political -- Mandate the Navy name future Gerald R. Ford-class aircraft carriers after the original aircraft carriers that played a pivotal role in shaping the history of the United States Navy, rather than naming them after politicians.
Reestablish uniform standards throughout the US Navy. Current "standards" are a joke.
- Reestablish the old Quarterdeck standards on every ship (except those in serious overhauls).
- Get rid of the NWUs (AKA "Seaweed Cammies), except for SeaBees and Specwar personnel.
- Ban flight suit wear on shore staffs. On that note, shore staffs should wear uniform of the day (no Seaweed Cammies, please!)
Etc. Plenty to peck away at in this department.