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"here" was the first word I learnt in english — gus......We’re Here Because We’re Here Because We’re Here Because We’re Here My title comes from a song sung by soldiers as they marched to hell in the trenches of World War I and the same song my sisters and I sang in the car as our parents drove us to our summer vacation in paradise at Edgewater Farm. I think of this as we march to WW III.
The soldiers, who would be slaughtered by the millions as pawns in the great game, sardonically sung it to the tune of Old Lang Syne to express their bewilderment at why they were fighting in the so-called “War to End All Wars” or “the Great War.” We children sang it because we had heard the words but had no idea where they came from, yet they seemed playful and weird and easy to remember and we were celebrating our good fortune in leaving the city and arriving at the farm for a week’s country idyll. War and peace absurdly juxtaposed. Because? Because everyone needs to be somewhere even if they don’t know why. Yet today so many people feel lost in a world gone mad, a nowhere land, far further from somewhere than when John Lennon penned the words to “Nowhere Man” in 1965. It is no wonder he was assassinated in 1980, for he was a man growing into a profound anti-war consciousness. Now we’re again celebrating Armistice/Remembrance/Veteran’s Day on November 11 in a world forever at war and with nuclear annihilation staring us in the face. Always the bitter Old Lie told by the depraved political and economic elites to suck the masses into death. Wilfred Owen, killed in action on November 4, 1918 one week before the Armistice, murmurs to us from his French grave: Dulce et Decorum Est Bent double, like old beggars under sacks, Gas! GAS! Quick, boys!—An ecstasy of fumbling In all my dreams before my helpless sight, If in some smothering dreams, you too could pace But what do dead poets know? Only everything important. What child would want such gory glory as dulce et decorum est pro patria mori unless it was pounded into its head by men in love with death? Do they think the dead can hear the cheers? Can we hear the songs of the poets who link us back to contemplate the atrocities of the battles of The Somme, Passchendaele, Marne, Gallipoli, Verdun, etc. with all the official lies told by the political jackals responsible for these slaughters? At the farm, my many sisters and I, despite not knowing what we had sung, did know why we were where we were; our “because” had a clear answer. We were there to choose life, not death, to enjoy living, which we knew was a precious gift from parents who could barely afford the expense. We walked barefoot down the sandy dirt road between the green pasture where the cows lolled dreamily and the quiet waters of the limpid creek to the swimming hole where we would float for hours with the fish as turtles eyed us from their log perches in the sun. What child would want to wallow in blood and gore for a posthumous medal? What parent would want their child to march to war to die, rather than swim in the waters of life and love? We’re here because we’re here because nihilism is celebrated as patriotism and the love of death masquerades as love of life. The nations that celebrate these war days do not do so to foster peace but to remind people that it is indeed sweet to die for one’s country. And God too, of course. Because? The poet Dylan sings the truth. Just listen: “With God on Our Side” or hear Phil Ochs’ “Is There Anybody Here.” But all of this was once upon a time in the 1960s when many people were realizing that war was a racket, as Marine General Smedley Butler told us long ago. Today sleep has descended on most people while the disease of war is injected into the public’s bloodstream in a manner learned well from the massive propaganda campaign of WW I. In the USA then, it was the Committee on Public Information, led by George Creel, Edward Bernays, Walter Lippmann, et al. who “manufactured the consent” of the public to hate the “Huns,” keep their mouths shut, and spy on their neighbors, all in the service of a jolly-good war “over there.” Today the spying and propaganda apparatus dwarfs those efforts exponentially with its electronic, digital technology. But poets don’t text the truth. They sing it and think it and tell it, even when nobody’s listening. We’re all lucky to still be here. If we continue to celebrate past wars and the soldiers who fought them in a sly homage to the greatness of war, we are doomed. We won’t be here because…. Here’s Liam Clancy singing of one man’s story of war’s greatness. (see video)
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testing the war machine....
London: Elite Australian troops have joined British and American counterparts in the United States’ joint war-gaming exercises that simulate conflict in the Pacific and mainland Europe in recognition of growing threats posed by China and Russia.
About 200 Australian Defence Force personnel joined AUKUS allies in the past fortnight in replicating a war-like scenario in the Indo-Pacific region to test the joint land-air-maritime warfare connectivity required to operate in the region.
The joint forces also tested new combat techniques as part of Project Convergence (PC22), as they learnt lessons from the war in Ukraine, training in the open landscapes of the Californian desert that are similar to the flat terrain of the Ukrainian steppe.
As part of the US-led exercises, swarms of drones identified targets while dune buggies sped across the windswept dirt and rocket launchers fired at enemy positions spotted by American F-35 fighter jets.
It is the first time the US has directly involved Britain and Australia in the war games, which were designed to evaluate dozens of new and improved weapon systems and other technologies, including ground-launched missiles, drones and unmanned ground vehicles.
The Australian Army’s experimentation included tactical unmanned aerial systems, electronic support in direction finding and an Australian-designed cyber capability.
The backbone of the exercise is a tactical communications network that not only integrates current US Army mission command capabilities with emerging technologies under development, but also facilitates information-sharing with coalition partners to enable a common operating picture and sensor-to-shooter connectivity.
Lieutenant-General Simon Stuart, appointed as the Chief of Army in July, said Australia used the event to bolster its relationship with the US and Britain as well as to exchange information-sharing techniques and procedures considered critical to countering technologically savvy opponents.
In London this week for Remembrance Sunday commemorations and to visit the southern England facilities where Australian forces will train Ukrainian troops later this year, Stuart said the exercises acted as an “accelerator” and an “incubator” for technology and tactics.
“It is a really practical way of taking ideas, and technology – some of which is at quite a low readiness – and putting it in the hands of our operators, along with their partners in the US, UK and across all four services and seeing what works,” he said.
“It’s a really fast way for putting new ideas together, figuring out how we’re going to use them in a practical sense, and in discarding those ideas that either aren’t working or aren’t ready to get, and focusing on those things that are.”
The first half of PC22, conducted in late October, imagined a conflict breaking out on a Pacific island, tying together locations across California, Washington State and Hawaii to enable the US Army and its partners to assess future war fighting concepts and capabilities.
The aim of the joint exercises was to allow the allies to assess and prepare for multidomain warfare in an area where there are vast ocean spaces, island chains and coastal regions, and to ensure the integration of a fighting force that would be capable of tackling the most challenging combat scenarios that adversaries such as China could pose in the Asia-Pacific region.
Taiwan, Japan and islands in the South China Sea are all potential target areas for Beijing in the event of a dramatic escalation in tensions, if the People’s Liberation Army were to launch countermeasures amid another grab for nearby territory.
He said the army was continuing to invest in a campaign of learning and was working with multinational partners to collect data, evaluate effectiveness, reduce risk and optimise war fighting capability.
The second phase, which ended last week and had a bigger British contingent, simulated a land war in Europe.
While Stuart said there were “already a few” things the army had learnt from Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, the West needed to be cautious not to get the wrong lessons.
While Russia has deployed attacks from land, air and sea, it has also used cyber and electronic warfare in Ukraine, with lines of communication prime targets.
“If you look at our circumstances at the moment, even though we’re in different hemispheres, the nature of the challenges is very, very similar,” Stuart said. “The geography circumstances are different, while the nature of the challenges are the same.”
The allies will meet again for more war-gaming next year as the US army brings a whole division to Europe for its vast Warfighter exercise. In a sign of the renewed focus on the European theatre, the exercises are expected to take place in Germany or Poland.
New Zealand said on Monday it would also send a further 66 defence force personnel to Britain to help train Ukrainian soldiers, in addition to its current team of 120, whose deployment had been due to end. The new deployment will run until July 2023, a government statement said.
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https://www.smh.com.au/world/europe/australian-troops-join-aukus-wargames-in-face-of-china-and-russia-threats-20221114-p5by29.html
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