John Clark

34.8K posts

John Clark

John Clark

@AcrosstheKill

https://t.co/ADXmDCgK9N.

Born: the Rock. Now: Mainland Katılım Ocak 2011
2.2K Takip Edilen390 Takipçiler
Just call me Gunny
Just call me Gunny@JRM58506966·
On August 11-12, 2018, in Ghazni Province, Afghanistan, Tech Sgt. Gavin Fisher, a US Air Force Pararescueman assigned to the 83rd Expeditionary Rescue Squadron, was serving as the rear gunner in the lead vehicle of a Combined Joint Special Operations Task Force convoy during a ten-day mission to defend the city against over 500 Taliban fighters. The convoy suddenly came under heavy ambush with rocket-propelled grenades and machine-gun fire. Fisher was struck by grenade shrapnel but immediately returned fire, directed his vehicle out of the kill zone, and dismounted to engage two Taliban fighters at close range (within 50 meters) while beginning life-saving treatment on wounded soldiers. Despite his injuries, Fisher refused to fall back. He stopped massive bleeding and administered blood transfusions to critically injured troops under direct fire, then continued treating more casualties during a second ambush—driving 75 meters through heavy machine-gun fire to reach additional wounded, treating five more soldiers, and helping call in evacuation. Over the intense two-day fight, his extraordinary actions as both a combatant and medic saved the lives of 10 critically injured American and Afghan soldiers, enabled the medical evacuation of 20 more casualties, and contributed to the elimination of 118 Taliban fighters. For his gallantry, Tech Sgt. Gavin Fisher was awarded the Silver Star and Purple Heart.
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John Clark
John Clark@AcrosstheKill·
@ProfDBernstein Read his bio. He has none. Sadly, Witkoff and Kushner have less, and have conflicts of interest. This is what corruption has wrought.
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David Bernstein
David Bernstein@ProfDBernstein·
Even if I were a big JD Vance fan, I'd be wondering what diplomatic or other relevant experience he has that makes him the correct person to lead negotiations with Iran. (That said, I thought it was nuts to give Jared Kushner so much pull over the Abraham Accords, and he surprised me.)
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John Clark
John Clark@AcrosstheKill·
@ProfDBernstein Guys on small islands, near large amounts of enemy missiles, are generally in a tough spot.
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David Bernstein
David Bernstein@ProfDBernstein·
Just throwing this out there: I'm not predicting it, but I wouldn't be shocked if the US military presented Trump with plans to open the Straits of Hormuz, but said that it would take two weeks or so to get forces in place. Trump figures he can then agree to the two-week ceasefire and if Iran seems ready to capitulate, great, if not, bombs away. Not predicting it, but not dismissing the possibility, either. If it happens, you heard it here first.
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Johnny Cadillac
Johnny Cadillac@lippyent·
Can you name this Movie 🎬 from just this shot? Hmm 🤔 ?¿
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PoliticsGirl
PoliticsGirl@IAmPoliticsGirl·
@BlueGeorgia “The greatest geopolitical strategy book of my lifetime”??? This is humiliating. It’s like these guys have a submission kink.
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Blue Georgia
Blue Georgia@BlueGeorgia·
Tom Sauer: I think it's really important to keep in mind that so many of President Trump's detractors around the world all need to read the greatest geopolitical strategy book of my lifetime. It's called The Art of the Deal by Donald J. Trump. 😬
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Edmund
Edmund@Kulambq·
It is hard not to observe, with a sense of quiet regret, the gradual decline of an office that once at least claimed a measure of dignity. The presidents in the photograph were by no means flawless, yet they generally bore themselves with restraint, aware of the weight of their position. What we see today is not a sudden fall but the culmination of a long decline stretching back decades (Clinton, etc.). Even so, the present president has driven the office to a low few could have foreseen.
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John Clark
John Clark@AcrosstheKill·
@Mike_Pence Yes it is Mr. Vice President. It is no reflection on the President, however. You remember him? He tried to kill you...
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Mark
Mark@markofbrooklyn·
For me, one of the great unsolved mysteries of this site is why so many people are triggered by @RadioFreeTom saying “incendiary” stuff like, “Military leaders benefit from learning about history” 🤷‍♂️
SecurityAndCigars@SecCigarsNFUD

The Atlantic actually trying to discuss Christian philosophy and theory around Just War is ironic, at best. Corrupt is more like it. And Tom Nichols of all people as the author, one of the men who has actually worked to destroy the fighting spirit and aggressive lethality of the American military

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John Clark
John Clark@AcrosstheKill·
@AbeGreenwald We're having tactical success. That's due to the excellence of our military. That's not translating into strategic success. That's due to the incompetence of our civilian leadership.
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Abe Greenwald
Abe Greenwald@AbeGreenwald·
Principled detractors from this war are creeping into unprincipled territory because it’s going well for the US and Israel. Facts on the ground don’t support their case, so they appeal to conspiracy theories and dark “behind the scenes” machinations. You can be a principled opponent of a war that, to your surprise, succeeds. Be that. Write and say insightful things about that reality.
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Bob Sampson
Bob Sampson@bobsalpha1·
@ericowensdc I know for sure one of those things doesn’t float, 50/50 on 5 of the others. I could probably get them to float.
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Eric Owens
Eric Owens@ericowensdc·
This one was really tough and I think I failed it.
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David Bernstein
David Bernstein@ProfDBernstein·
@EPoe187 *Hoping* the war fails to own Trump, though, is rooting against America.
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John Clark
John Clark@AcrosstheKill·
@mdubowitz I'm assuming you know the difference between "tactical" and "strategic." Thus, I assume you're lying.
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Mark Dubowitz
Mark Dubowitz@mdubowitz·
Two surprises from this Iran war: First, how much more successful the American and Israeli militaries have been than anticipated. Second, how many Americans on this platform appear emotionally committed to an Islamic Republic of Iran victory.
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John Clark
John Clark@AcrosstheKill·
B.I.N.G.O.
Adam Kinzinger (Slava Ukraini) 🇺🇸🇺🇦@AdamKinzinger

Ok. Here we go Ari, you know better than this. You’ve been inside the room. You understand how alliances actually function, not just how they’re talked about on cable hits. NATO was never meaningfully consulted here. Not brought in as partners. Not treated as allies whose buy-in mattered. Instead, for years they’ve been publicly dressed down, threatened, and told outright that they’re on their own. When the President of the United States repeatedly questions the value of the alliance, floats walking away from Article 5, and even talks about things like taking Greenland, you don’t get trust—you get hedging. So now there’s a major war raging on their own continent, and those countries are being asked to stretch even thinner for an operation they had no role in shaping, led by a president who has made clear he views alliances as transactional at best and disposable at worst. Of course they’re cautious. Of course they’re calculating risk. And yes—of course they’re worried they’ll be left holding the bag when Trump inevitably changes course or loses interest. That’s not freeloading. That’s rational behavior in response to uncertainty we created. You’re right that some European countries have underinvested in defense. That’s been true for years, and many have started correcting it—especially since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. But let’s not pretend this moment exists in a vacuum. Trust is cumulative. And it’s been burned down repeatedly. And the idea that this is about “refusing to help the U.S. rid the world of Iran” ignores the bigger strategic picture. European nations are dealing with an active land war, energy insecurity, domestic political strain, and the very real possibility that U.S. commitments to NATO could evaporate overnight. You don’t expand commitments under those conditions—you consolidate. You know this, Ari. And I think you know why this argument doesn’t hold up. But somewhere along the way, you traded that understanding for applause lines. You’ve sold yourself at the altar of popularity instead of leveling with people about the complexity here. Alliances aren’t maintained by ultimatums and public humiliation. They’re maintained by trust, consultation, and consistency. We’ve offered too little of that lately—and now we’re seeing the result.

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