Chris Ingram
@chrisgingram.bsky.social
2.8K followers 710 following 550 posts
Strategist || Military Writers Guild Board Member || #MilSky Admin || Intersection of Foreign Policy, Conflict, Economics, Politics, History, and Writing || Non-partisan, but not amoral || Opinions my own.
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chrisgingram.bsky.social
Welcome new followers!

I’m not certain what you were looking for, but I hope you stick around so we can build a community of positive discourse.

My background/interests range widely: economics, politics, military strategy, writing, history, art, hiking, and cocktails. 🧵
Reposted by Chris Ingram
justinhendrix.bsky.social
Macron remarks are notable- some quotes: "We have been incredibly naive in entrusting our democratic space to social networks that are controlled either by large American entrepreneurs or large Chinese companies, whose interests are not at all the survival or proper functioning of our democracies."
defenddemocracy.bsky.social
President Macron: “Europeans, let's wake up!

We have been incredibly naive in entrusting our democratic space to social networks.”

defenddemocracy.eu/macron-democ...
chrisgingram.bsky.social
Not sure where the name originated, but emphasis on transformation which, to your point, requires integration at all levels. The new structure reflects that core function.

Background is two “V”s (Vision to Victory), broken to indicate doing things differently. Colors are black/gold/white (Army)
chrisgingram.bsky.social
So it begins.

U.S. Army Futures Command and U.S. Army Training and Doctrine Command have cased their colors. Born from both, with an even larger mission, is U.S. Army Transformation & Training Command (T2COM); responsible for Force Design, Force Generation, and Force Development.
US Army Transformation and Training Command patch.
chrisgingram.bsky.social
Same. It has taken effort to recondition myself to listen without that bias.
Reposted by Chris Ingram
chowleen.bsky.social
The South Korean Ministry of Defense has awarded medals of merit to 11 officers for disobeying direct orders of superiors during the martial law fiasco, orders that they deemed to be contrary to the constitution and endangerment to democracy.
www.chosun.com/english/nati...
National Defense Ministry Honors 11 Soldiers for Refusing Illegal Orders
National Defense Ministry Honors 11 Soldiers for Refusing Illegal Orders Honored for rejecting illegal orders during martial law, Marine death probe
www.chosun.com
Reposted by Chris Ingram
ericmmurphy.bsky.social
I tend to think that we think of deterrence in too limited a way. We ignore entanglement, norms, awareness of non-bilateral relationships, restraints, all manner of behavioral psychology factors, etc.

I think many scholars and diplomats think about this…but no one who learned it in PME. 😉
chrisgingram.bsky.social
A profession; if we can keep it.
pptsapper.bsky.social
Military officers should have civ-mil relations embedded as a core part of their PME directly at commissioning, not once they reach field grade

Maybe then it might sink in
Reposted by Chris Ingram
queenofthinair.bsky.social
I think it's probably time for a deep #Profession rethink like post-Vietnam.
Reposted by Chris Ingram
kschake.bsky.social
Polish and Dutch fighters, directed by Italian early warning aircraft, German air defenses on alert. Dutch PM: “I’m glad that Dutch F35 fighter jets were able to provide support. The Netherlands stands shoulder to shoulder with our NATO ally Poland.” Common defense working as designed.
Reposted by Chris Ingram
audieklotz.bsky.social
🧵 worth reading on challenges facing academic journals
benpatrickwill.bsky.social
Academic authors, here's a peek into the black box of journal publishing from an journal editor if you can bear it:
Reposted by Chris Ingram
pptsapper.bsky.social
This is roughly equivalent to World War I conditions, with an extension of a few kilometers here or there. Supplies had to be brought up at night or by foot, MPs got good at noting artillery patterns to help move traffic along, and logistics governed the pace of everything
rikefranke.bsky.social
“the so-called kill zone now extends 12 to 14 kilometres behind the front – the range at which a $500 drone, flying at up to 60mph, can strike. It means, Afer adds, that “all the logistics [food, ammunition and medical supplies] we are doing is either on foot or with the help of ground drones”.
‘It is a war of drones now’: the ever-evolving tech dominating the frontline in Ukraine
Models for reconnaissance, rescue, interception and attack are changing the way both sides operate
www.theguardian.com
chrisgingram.bsky.social
The weekend starts now.

Everything just got better.

This we’ll defend…
Reposted by Chris Ingram
rgoodlaw.bsky.social
1/ I worked at DoD. I literally cannot imagine lawyers coming up with a legal basis for lethal strike of suspected Venezuelan drug boat.

Hard to see how this would not be "murder" or war crime under international law that DoD considers applicable.

Read expert analysis by @bcfinucane.bsky.social⤵️
Legal Issues Raised by a Lethal U.S. Military Attack in the Caribbean
The Trump administration’s extraordinary lethal attack on this purported smuggling vessel raises significant potential legal issues.
www.justsecurity.org
chrisgingram.bsky.social
I went to American University for grad school during ***checks notes…sigh** the Clinton Administration. Some things haven’t changed.
Reposted by Chris Ingram
sodrock.bsky.social
Why is it so hard to study war seriously in American academia? From Clausewitz to West Point’s new major, I dive into the fragmentation, disappearance, and possible revival of war as a subject of tactical, operational, and political thought. My Latest⬇️
The "War Studies" Problem
The Challenges of a Disciplinary Approach to a Multidisciplinary Problem
secretaryrofdefenserock.substack.com
Reposted by Chris Ingram
markhertling.bsky.social
“…I am infuriated that the Air Force plans to grant military funeral honors to Ashli Babbitt. She did not die defending the Constitution. She died trying to overturn it.”

My latest in @thebulwark.com

www.thebulwark.com/p/honoring-a...
Honoring Ashli Babbitt Dishonors the Military
If there’s no difference between upholding the Constitution and attacking it, then there’s no honor in service.
www.thebulwark.com
Reposted by Chris Ingram
sodrock.bsky.social
Huntington's theory of "objective civilian control," the separation of military and civilian spheres reinforced by an "apolitical" professional ethos, remains a lodestar for the American military. Yet its foundation is flawed and, as events in DC show, continues to do more harm than good. My latest⬇️
Samuel Huntington’s Prussian Paradox
Clausewitz, Military Professionalism, and the Myth of a “Apolitical” Military
secretaryrofdefenserock.substack.com
Reposted by Chris Ingram
queenofthinair.bsky.social
This is a good discussion to be had. I think its not quite as binary as this, but expected the military to solve it IS a potential threat to civ control. (See #OnObedience and linked article)
thinkingbayonet.bsky.social
This is our Trolley Problem, and the military can't solve it.

Only citizens exercising political pressure on civilian leaders can solve this problem.
thinkingbayonet.bsky.social
and so some folks on here are backing themselves into a paradox: they want the military to refuse unethical legal orders, but they want a military under civilian control.

we can't have both!
Reposted by Chris Ingram
skiles.blue
A terrorist targeted federal workers last week. There wasn’t much reporting on it. But I’m not finished thinking about it! 🧵

An anti-vaxxer fired more than 500 gunshots into CDC Atlanta, shattering 150 “blast-proof” windows on 6 buildings. Employees were pinned down in terror.
Reposted by Chris Ingram