Peter Friedman
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Ruling Imagination: Law and Creativity

December 21st, 2009 | decision making, problem solving, propaganda | Add your comment

SNAFU, anyone?

It’s not for nothing the word “snafu” is a military coinage. Ars Technica reports that “militants [in Iraq and Afghanistan] have been intercepting US Predator drone video feeds using laptops and a $30 piece of Russian software, and that the military has known of this vulnerability since the Nineties. But at least we have our priorities straight:

Operating system vendors have built entire “protected path” setups to guard audio and video all the way through the device chain. TVs and monitors now routinely use HDCP copy protection to secure their links over HDMI cables. Game consoles are packed with encryption schemes to prevent copied games from playing. Microsoft even goes out of its way to add encryption when Windows Media Center records unencrypted over-the-air TV content. Even the humble DVD, with its long-since-breached CSS encryption, offers more in the way of encryption.

But US drones, which spy on militants and rain down death from a distance, have none. The mind boggles, as it seems like the situation should be totally reversed: no encryption on legally-purchased content, more encryption on devices designed to watch and kill human beings.

But the fact Obama didn’t immediately bow down to the military and order up General McChrystal’s 40,000 troops the moment they were demanded was “dithering.” Too bad Johnson didn’t follow Kennedy’s lead and dither himself in Vietnam:

In November 1961 Kennedy sent Gen. Maxwell Taylor and foreign policy adviser Walt Rostow to South Vietnam. On their return they reported that it was possible for the South Vietnamese to defeat the Communist insurgents without an American takeover of the war effort if the United States provided strong political backing for the South Vietnamese government and provided substantially in-creased military and economic assistance. They further recommended that President Kennedy send 8,000 combat troops to South Vietnam. Kennedy decided against sending combat troops but authorized the deployment of up to 15,000 military advisers. By the time of Kennedy’s assassination in November 1963 the U.S. effort in Vietnam was costing $400 million a year, and about 12,000 military advisers were providing assistance to the South Vietnamese military effort. By the end of 1963 there had been only 70 American casualties.

Of course, in “January 1964 the Joint Chiefs of Staff had sent President Johnson a memo urging him to increase the U.S. commitment and to consider a bombing campaign against North Vietnam. By following these two strategies the military hoped that the war could be won more quickly. The commitment of U.S. troops was doubled; by the end of 1964 there were 23,300 Americans serving in Vietnam.”