Tag Archives: Ace Lyons

Secure Freedom Radio: Ace Lyons on why Comey should resign now

FRANK GAFFNEY:

Welcome back. We have a four-star admiral on deck at the moment, I’m very pleased to say. The retired commander-in-chief of the US Pacific fleet, Admiral James “Ace” Lyons. Now best known, perhaps, for his rock star quality viral videos, but a man who served with great distinction in uniform for over thirty-six years, I believe. Migrating from the enlisted ranks up to the highest ranks in the United States military. He is, it gives me great pride to say, the chairman of the Center for Security Policy’s military committee and these days the president and CEO of Lyons Associates, LLC. Admiral, welcome aboard. Good to have you with us, sir.

ACE LYONS:

Nice to be with you, Frank. And your listeners.

FRANK GAFFNEY:

Thank you. Well, listen, you have contributed an important piece to the Center’s new book entitled Warning Order: China Prepares for Conflict and Why America Must Do the Same. Admiral, we’re watching with some trepidation the run up to and announcement by this so-called arbitration panel of the Law of the Sea Treaty in The Hague next week. And they’re, many believe, likely to say what China’s been doing to manufacture islands and project power from them in the South China Sea is actually contrary to international law. Talk about what you think might come of that, if anything.

ACE LYONS:

Well, as we know, Frank, that while China is a signatory to the international Law of the Sea Treaty, they put a condition in that anything that they declare as their territorial sea they unilaterally declare that it is exempt from any international tribunal. So their tack is going to be to ignore anything that the tribunal in The Hague finds them guilty of. This is pure imperialism at its height.

FRANK GAFFNEY:

And to the extent that it’s now being combined, I’m told, with a very large naval exercise – one of our guests yesterday reported that they’ve declared off limits for the purposes of their exercise of a week or so, I believe, right up against this announcement, it seems, of a size of the area of Maine, and that would seem to be a very sort of important launching point from which to engage in shows of force at the very least if not worse, don’t you think?

ACE LYONS:

Oh, there’s no question about it. But as you know, what’s going on now is our annual RIMPAC exercise in the Hawaiian island area, which we have twenty-two of our allies and friends participating. And for the second time we’ve invited China to participate. Which to me is mind-boggling. This is akin to inviting the Soviet Union to participate in NATO exercises in the 1980s.

FRANK GAFFNEY:

Yeah. Admiral, do you know whether, as last year, the Chinese have not only sent ships to participate in the exercises, but to collect intelligence about our assets and operations, perhaps from within, but certainly from a bit removed areas with their intelligence assets?

ACE LYONS:

Well, when they were invited for the first time 2014, you know, this is a biannual exercise, they not only sent ships to participate in the exercise but they sent along an intelligence collection ship to stand – to monitor the entire exercise. And what we’re doing, we’re providing them the close end means to electronically fingerprint all our weapons systems, our radars, our missiles, the infrared signature of our ships. All of this makes absolutely no sense. What we’re doing is we’re rewarding China for their aggressive and bad behaviour in the South China and East China Seas.

FRANK GAFFNEY:

Right. Especially in so doing, making it perfectly clear that they regard you as their enemy and are preparing, as we talk about in Warning Order, for conflict against us. This is the height of irresponsibility and as you know so well, Admiral Lyons, as a distinguished and long-serving military officer, you don’t want to be emboldening enemies to engage in provocative behaviour. And is there any doubt in your mind, sir, that that’s what we’re doing at the moment?

ACE LYONS:

Oh, there’s no question. That’s exactly what we’re doing. We don’t confront our enemies, we embrace our enemies. And we’re rewarding China for their aggressive and abusive behaviour.

FRANK GAFFNEY:

Yeah. And we’ll get more of it.

ACE LYONS:

There’s no question what their objectives are is to drive us out of the Western Pacific. They have built the navy to confront the United States Navy. We certainly see, going back to the Clinton Administration where we sold them the secrets to correct their missiles. So now they can target the United States. Everybody sweeps that off the page. This is unconscionable what’s gone on. And certainly we would expect that to continue should another Clinton ever get into the White House, God forbid.

FRANK GAFFNEY:

Well, speaking of unconscionable and Clintons in the same sentence, Admiral Ace Lyons, let me ask you for your thoughts on the statement made by the Director of the FBI yesterday concerning Mrs. Clinton’s conduct as Secretary of State with respect to the – what he described as, quote, extremely careless, unquote, conduct of her handling of classified information. And whether, Admiral, your concern is, as is mine and I think as our previous guest Dan Goure said as well, that this creates a very, very dangerous precedent for others charged with protecting such secrets.

ACE LYONS:

Well, all those who have been previously charged and found guilty should immediately appeal their cases based on the logic that Director Comey put out yesterday. Quote, well, it wasn’t really her intent. There’s nothing in the law about intent. You either violate or you didn’t violate. Clearly, she violated. Director Comey, in my view, sold his soul for political purposes. It’s unconscionable and he should immediately submit his resignation. He is unfit to be – continue as the Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation. And failing to do that, what we can say is, we gave up our independence and integrity as a country on 5 July, 2016.

FRANK GAFFNEY:

A very, very powerful indictment. Admiral, just to burrow in on this one other question, though, beyond those who have engaged in criminal wrongdoing in mishandling classified information, would it be your concern, sir, knowing, for example, you know, how the Navy conducts itself with respect to protecting such information, that in the future you will see people behaving in a much more, well, shall we say, irresponsible and potentially quite dangerous way with respect to careless handling of such information?

ACE LYONS:

Well, this sets a precedent that we have no standards. What is the standard? We’ve thrown it out the window. Anybody can feel compelled – feel now to compromise our most sensitive secrets and intelligence to the net detriment of the country and all Americans. What went on yesterday really has profound effects on our future. This cannot be allowed to stand regardless of what was stated yesterday. She must be held accountable, Comey cannot be allowed to continue as the Director of the FBI.

FRANK GAFFNEY:

Admiral, we have to leave it at that, I’m afraid. I appreciate so much your time as well as your great service to our country that you’ve conducted yourself with in such a distinguished way in the past, in uniform, as well as that you are rendering these days, notably as the chairman of the Center’s military committee. God bless you, sir. Keep up your great work. God bless all of you. I hope you’ll join us again tomorrow. Same time, same station. Until then, this is Frank Gaffney. Thanks for listening.

[END OF FILE]

 

Bringing America Back into the Fold

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With Adm. James “Ace” Lyons (Ret.), former Commander of the U.S. Pacific Fleet:

PART ONE

  • President Obama’s goal of fundamentally transforming America’s role in the world
  • Is there a global jihadist movement taking place?
  • Implications of the failure of U.S. leadership to understand the coherent ideology of radical Islam
PART TWO:
  • The Benghazi Citizen’s Committee investigation
  • A controversial transfer of jurisdiction to the State Department following the murder of Amb. Chris Stevens
  • Political interests and the release of a House Intelligence report on Benghazi
  • The UAE’s designation of CAIR and the Muslim-American Society as terrorist groups
PART THREE
  • Why China is a growing military adversary to the United States
  • The Admiral’s take on Putin and Russian aggression in Europe
  • America’s relationship with Iran, the status of the nuclear program talks, and Obama’s secret letter to Tehran
PART FOUR
  • The shrinking U.S. Navy and Army
  • Modernization and the pursuit of advanced capabilities by such adversarial nations as China, Russia, and Iran
  • How sequestration and Obama Administration-sponsored social experiments are hampering U.S. military readiness

A Spark of Freedom in Hong Kong

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With Kellyanne Conway, Adm. James “Ace” Lyons, Andy McCarthy, Gordon Chang

KELLYANNE CONWAY, President and Founder of The Polling Company:

  • Results of a new U.S. public opinion poll on national security
  • An increasing trend of the American public opposing a disengagement from world affairs
  • The consequences these poll findings will have for the upcoming midterm elections

ADM. JAMES “ACE” LYONS, former commander of the U.S. Pacific Fleet:

  • Restricted rules of engagement putting U.S. soldiers at an increased risk
  • Why the fight against ISIS distracts America from the Iranian nuclear threat
  • The infiltration of U.S. government agencies by the Muslim Brotherhood
  • Implications of halting Tomahawk Cruise Missile production

ANDY McCARTHY, author of “Faithless Execution: Building the Political Case for Obama’s Impeachment”:

  • A failure to recognize the threat posed by “moderate Islamists”
  • What is the Khorasan Group?
  • The Islamic State of Saudi Arabia?
  • Potential candidates for Attorney General Eric Holder’s successor

GORDON CHANG, author of “The Coming Collapse of China”:

  • Significant developments in pro-democracy protests in Hong Kong
  • Xi Jingping’s desired consolidation of power and Maoist rhetoric
  • Prime Minister Modi’s White House visit

Rep Randy Weber: “It’s Time to Put America First” on Immigration Policy

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With Rep. Randy Weber, Diana West, Stuart Poole-Robb, Ace Lyons

Representative Randy Weber (TX-14) discusses the path the Obama Administration has taken in responding to the surge of illegal immigrants across the US’s southern border.

On today’s show:

REPRESENTATIVE RANDY WEBER, Texas’s 14th District
  • The porousness of the southern border serving as a magnet for human trafficking
  • Implications of providing aid to the illegal immigrants crossing the border: where does it end?
  • Details of Rep. Weber’s new bill to hold Mexico, Guatemala, Honduras, and El Salvador accountable for the surge of illegal immigrants crossing the US’s southern border
  • Public health concerns over the thousands of illegal aliens entering the US without medical examinations
DIANA WEST, author of “American Betrayal: The Secret Assault on Our Nation’s Character”:
  • President Obama’s request for nearly four billion dollars to stem the waves of illegal immigrants crossing the southern border
  • The creation of a future Democratic voting base in traditionally conservative states along the border thanks to lax immigration enforcement
  • Similarities in crises facing the United States and Israel

STUART POOLE-ROBB, former MI6 and UK military intelligence officer:

  • A look at Dragonfly, the foreign cyber-attack group that has spread malware to spy on—and potentially sabotage—US and EU energy companies
  • Dangers of cyber-terror to the electric grid
Admiral JAMES “ACE” LYONS, Former Commander and Chief of the U.S. Pacific Fleet, and Head of the Center for Security Policy’s Military Committee:
  • Iran’s attempts to conceal its nuclear facilities from international inspectors, as the talks approach their deadline
  • Evidence for Iranian involvement in the 2012 attack on the U.S. Consulate in Benghazi, Libya
  • Is a Iranian/U.S. alliance wise to help defend Iraq against the Islamic State?

Despite Warnings Nuclear Negotiations Push Forward With Iran

With Admiral Ace Lyons, Jim Hanson, Bill Gertz, Claudia Rosett

Admiral ACE LYONS, former Pacific Fleet Commander, shares his thoughts on a variety of national security issues, among them discussing Iran’s nuclear ambitions and the two alternative futures the U.S. could face from Iran.

JIM HANSON, of blackfive.net, explains why the Obama administrations is ready to deal with a nuclear armed Iran rather then stop one from occurring.

BILL GERTZ, of the Washington Free Beacon, examines the choices the Obama Administration recently has made towards dealing with China.

CLAUDIA ROSETT, of Forbes.com, compares the Iranian and North Korean paths to nuclear weapons.

How Can Poor, Isolated North Korea Pose Such a Threat to the U.S.?

With Kevin Freeman, Michael O’Hanlon, Adm. Ace Lyons, Gordon Chang

What can the Cyprus banking crisis tell us about U.S. vulnerability in cyber and economic warfare? Center for Security Policy Senior Fellow KEVIN FREEMAN explains how what we see in Cyprus gives us insight into a piece of the global threat matrix.

MICHAEL O’HANLON of the Brookings Institute and co-author of Bending History, discusses the good, bad, and ugly for a post –U.S. Afghanistan.

Admiral ACE LYONS, former Pacific Fleet Commander, discusses the North Korean and Iranian threats, both nuclear and cyber.

GORDON CHANG of Forbes.com describes in great detail the state of the North Korean regime.

Realist ‘Four Horsemen’ Challenge Obama, Other ‘Global Zero’ Advocates to Abandon US Denuclearization

(Washington, D.C.): This week’s Sunday Washington Post featured an op.ed. by four members of a group of twenty former senior military and civilian national security professionals who recently called on President Barack Obama to abandon his reported intention to make further, deep and apparently unilateral reductions in the U.S. nuclear arsenal. The article, entitled “Obama’s Harmful Nuclear Illusions,” was authored by former Under Secretary of Defense Douglas Feith, former Assistant Secretary of Defense (acting) Frank Gaffney, former Commander-in-Chief, Pacific Fleet Admiral James “Ace” Lyons and former Director of Central Intelligence R. James Woolsey.

This essay serves as a powerful rebuttal to a series of op.ed. articles promoting “global zero,” an initiative that seeks – in President Obama words – “a world without nuclear weapons,” that have been published since 2007 in the Wall Street Journal by a like-number of other past, senior officials, informally dubbed “the Four Horsemen”: former Secretaries of State Henry Kissinger and George Schultz, former Secretary of Defense Bill Perry and former Senator Sam Nunn. The most recent of these appeared on March 5, 2013.

In contrast to the wishful thinking exhibited by these individuals and the Obama administration, the four realists observed: “Playing to certain audiences that crave disarmament talk is not a cost-free exercise. The price is discomfiting serious, responsible officials in nations long content to forswear nuclear weapons largely because they could rely on the United States to provide the necessary security. Such reliance has served their interests and ours. It has contained the danger of nuclear war and preserved the world’s nonproliferation regime from collapse.”

The new “Horsemen” conclude: “In the name of opposing nuclear proliferation, promoting international cooperation and championing peace, the Obama administration has embraced ‘nuclear zero’ and a set of nuclear policies that risk spurring proliferation, harming U.S. alliances and increasing the danger that nuclear war someday will occur. The worst error of governments is not failing to achieve their purposes; it is achieving the opposite of what they properly intend.”

The signatories of the open letter to President Obama, who include two former members of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and eighteen others with “decades of experience with national security policy and practice,” declared: “It is now clear that, as a practical matter under present and foreseeable circumstances, this agenda will only result in the unilateral disarmament of the U.S. nuclear deterrent. That will make the world more dangerous, not less.”

A national debate on the wisdom of “global zero” and further dismantling of the U.S. deterrent – via negotiations or unilaterally – is long overdue. Let it begin now.

– 30 –

Press accounts indicate that the President was planning on announcing a cut of as much as one-third of the American deterrent during his State of the Union address on February 12th. He evidently decided to postpone the unveiling of this initiative, however, when North Korea conducted on that same day it latest nuclear test – an event that underscored the fact that only the United States is, under his administration, engaging in denuclearization. In our professional judgment…America’s “Triad” of nuclear-armed land-based and submarine-launched missiles and bomber-delivered nuclear weapons have promoted strategic stability and discouraged proliferation. Steps that raise uncertainty about the viability, reliability and effectiveness of our deterrent will have the opposite effect.

Frank J. Gaffney, Jr., the President and CEO of the Center for Security Policy which facilitated this letter, observed:

As President Obama meets today with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, he is expected to emphasize the United States’ commitment to its most important Asian ally at a time when the threat to Japan from China and North Korea is growing by the day. The single most tangible thing Mr. Obama could do to give substance to such rhetoric would be to eschew further weakening of the U.S. nuclear arsenal – and the extended deterrent or “nuclear umbrella” it has constituted for nearly seventy years. The signers of this letter have rendered an incalculably important service by challenging the myth that doing otherwise in pursuit of a “world without nuclear weapons” is either achievable or desirable under present and foreseeable circumstances.

The full text of the letter is attached.

-30-

Top National Security Leaders to Obama: Stop the Unilateral Denuclearization of the US

For Immediate Release

For more information, please contact
Ben Lerner (lerner@securefreedom.org)
at (202) 835-9077

(Washington, D.C.): A group of former senior military and civilian national security professionals today called on President Barack Obama [PDF, 2 pages, 129Kb] to abandon his reported intention to make further, deep and apparently unilateral reductions in the U.S. nuclear arsenal.

Press accounts indicate that the President was planning on announcing a cut of as much as one-third of the American deterrent during his State of the Union address on February 12th. He evidently decided to postpone the unveiling of this initiative, however, when North Korea conducted on that same day it latest nuclear test – an event that underscored the fact that only the United States is, under his administration, engaging in denuclearization.

The authors, who include two former members of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and seventeen others with “decades of experience with national security policy and practice,” declare:

It is now clear that, as a practical matter under present and foreseeable circumstances, this agenda will only result in the unilateral disarmament of the U.S. nuclear deterrent. That will make the world more dangerous, not less. In our professional judgment… America’s “Triad” of nuclear-armed land-based and submarine-launched missiles and bomber-delivered nuclear weapons have promoted strategic stability and discouraged proliferation. Steps that raise uncertainty about the viability, reliability and effectiveness of our deterrent will have the opposite effect.

Frank J. Gaffney, Jr., the President and CEO of the Center for Security Policy which facilitated this letter, observed:

As President Obama meets today with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, he is expected to emphasize the United States’ commitment to its most important Asian ally at a time when the threat to Japan from China and North Korea is growing by the day. The single most tangible thing Mr. Obama could do to give substance to such rhetoric would be to eschew further weakening of the U.S. nuclear arsenal – and the extended deterrent or “nuclear umbrella” it has constituted for nearly seventy years. The signers of this letter have rendered an incalculably important service by challenging the myth that doing otherwise in pursuit of a “world without nuclear weapons” is either achievable or desirable under present and foreseeable circumstances.

The full text of the letter is below, and a PDF is here.

 

22 February 2013

Hon. Barack Obama
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W.
Washington, D.C.  20500

Dear Mr. President:

The latest North Korean underground nuclear test represents both a danger and an opportunity.  The danger is obvious:  One of the most unstable regimes on the planet is continuing to amass the skills and the capabilities to produce, weaponize and perhaps use the most dangerous weapons known to man.  The fact that Pyongyang is doing so together with other nations hostile to us and our allies – notably, Iran – raises the possibility that the threat posed by North Korea’s nuclear weapons technologies will soon metastasize around the globe.

The opportunity this ominous turn of events offers is the chance to reconsider your pursuit of the goal of “ridding the world of nuclear weapons.”  It is now clear that, as a practical matter under present and foreseeable circumstances, this agenda will only result in the unilateral disarmament of the U.S. nuclear deterrent.  That will make the world more dangerous, not less.

In our professional judgment, born of decades of experience with national security policy and practice, America’s “Triad” of nuclear-armed land-based and submarine-launched missiles and bomber-delivered nuclear weapons has promoted strategic stability and discouraged proliferation.  Steps that raise uncertainty about the viability, reliability and effectiveness of our deterrent will have the opposite effect.

According to published reports, you are considering further, draconian and perhaps unilateral cuts in the numbers of nuclear weapons in our arsenal.  We respectfully recommend that this plan be abandoned in favor of the fulfillment of commitments you made at the time of the New START Treaty to: modernize all three legs of the Triad; ensure the safety and deterrent effectiveness of the weapons with which they are equipped; and restore the critical industrial base that supports these forces.

Doing otherwise will put our country, its allies and our peoples at ever- greater risk in a world that is, far from nuclear-free, awash with such weapons – with increasing numbers of them in the hands of freedom’s enemies.  It is unimaginable that that is your intention.  It must not be the unintended result of your actions, either.

Sincerely,

  • Adm. Thomas B. Hayward, USN (Ret.), Former Chief of Naval Operations
  • Gen. Carl E. Mundy, Jr., USMC (Ret.), Former Commandant, U.S. Marine Corps
  • Adm. Jerry Johnson, USN (Ret.), Former Vice Chief of Naval Operations
  • Adm. James “Ace” Lyons, USN (Ret.), Former Commander-in-Chief, U.S. Pacific Fleet
  • Vice Adm. Robert Monroe, USN (Ret.), Former Director, Defense Nuclear Agency
  • Lt. Gen. Thomas McInerney, USAF (Ret.), Former Deputy Chief of Staff, U.S. Air Force
  • Hon. R. James Woolsey, Former Director of Central Intelligence
  • Hon. John R. Bolton, Former U.S. Permanent Representative to the United Nations
  • Hon. Douglas J. Feith, Former Under Secretary of Defense for Policy
  • Dr. William R. Graham, Chairman, General Advisory Committee on Arms Control, 1981-1985; Director, Office of Science and Technology Policy, Executive Office of the President, 1986-1989
  • Lt. Gen. E.G. “Buck” Shuler, USAF (Ret.), Former Commander of the Eighth Air Force (Strategic Air Command)
  • Maj. Gen. Paul Vallely, USA (Ret.), Former Deputy Commanding General, U.S. Army, Pacific
  • Rear Adm. Robert H. Gormley, USN (Ret.), Former Chief of Studies, Analysis and War Gaming, Joint Chiefs of Staff
  • Hon. Kathleen Bailey, Former Assistant Director, Arms Control and Disarmament Agency
  • Hon. Fred Celec, former Assistant to the Secretary of Defense for Nuclear, Chemical, and Biological Defense Programs
  • Hon. Henry F. “Hank” Cooper, Former Director of the Defense Strategic Initiative (SDI); Former U.S. Representative to the Defense and Space Talks
  • Hon. Samantha Ravich, Former Deputy National Security Advisor, Office of the Vice President
  • Hon. Troy Wade, Former Director, Defense Programs, Department of Energy
  • Frank J. Gaffney, Jr., Former Acting Assistant Secretary of Defense for International Security Policy
  • David J. Trachtenberg, Former Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for International Security Policy

 

Retired military leaders oppose Hagel nomination

A distinguished group of fourteen retired generals and admirals, representing all branches of the United States Armed Forces, has signed a letter opposing the nomination of Sen. Chuck Hagel for Secretary of Defense.

The letter – addressed to Sen. Carl Levin (D-MI) and Sen. James Inhofe (R-OK), respectively, the Chairman and Ranking Member of the Senate Armed Services Committee – raises several concerns about the nomination of Sen. Hagel, including:

  • Sen. Hagel’s support for further cuts to the defense budget.  Sen. Hagel stated in late August 2011 that the Pentagon is “bloated” and needs to be “pared down”, contrary to Sec. Panetta’s and Chairman Dempsey’s views that sequestration – the additional hundreds of billions in across-the-board cuts to defense that go well beyond the $787 billion in cuts already sustained by the Department since Sec. Gates’ tenure – would be “disastrous for the defense budget” and “very high risk” to national security;
  • Sen. Hagel’s support for the global elimination of nuclear weapons.  Sen. Hagel is a public supporter of the “Global Zero” Initiative, the goal of which is the “elimination of all nuclear weapons.”  This stance is ill-advised for any Secretary of Defense, as Russia and China continue to modernize their nuclear capabilities while North Korea and Iran move closer to obtaining them.
  • Sen. Hagel’s hostility towards Israel.  Sen. Hagel has demonstrated an abiding hostility towards Israel, a view that would be detrimental to our national defense and perhaps perilous to our only stable, reliable ally in the Middle East were he to become Secretary.
  •  Sen. Hagel’s outlook towards Iran.  Sen. Hagel repeatedly opposed sanctions against Iran while serving in the Senate, and in 2006 stated that “a military strike against Iran, a military option, is not a viable, feasible, responsible option” – an ill-advised statement that undercuts the effectiveness of both diplomatic and military policies to prevent Iran from obtaining nuclear weapons capabilities.

The signers of the letter are:

Adm. James “Ace” Lyons, USN (Ret.)
Lt. Gen. William G. “Jerry” Boykin, USA (Ret.)
Vice Adm. Robert Monroe, USN (Ret.)
Lt. Gen. E.G. “Buck” Shuler, Jr., USAF (Ret.)
Maj. Gen. Thomas F. Cole, USA (Ret.)
Maj. Gen. Vincent E. Falter, USA (Ret.)
Rear Adm. H.E. Gerhard, USN (Ret.)
Rear Adm. Robert H. Gormley, USN (Ret.)
Maj. Gen. Geoffrey Higginbotham, USMC (Ret.)
Rear Adm. Don G. Primeau, USN (Ret.)
Maj. Gen. Mel Thrash, USA (Ret.)
Maj. Gen. Paul E. Vallely, USA (Ret.)
Brig. Gen. William A. Bloomer, USMC (Ret.)
Brig. Gen. Ronald K. Kerwood, USA (Ret.)
Frank J. Gaffney, Jr., President and CEO of the Center for Security Policy, which facilitated this letter, stated:
These military leaders deserve our profound thanks for once again acting in service to our nation – in this instance, for the purpose of raising awareness of the risks associated with confirming Sen. Chuck Hagel to be Secretary of Defense.  This group knows firsthand that the United States military requires leadership that recognizes the need for a defense budget commensurate with the threats we face; the need for a credible, reliable and effective nuclear deterrent; and the need to support our allies and not accommodate our adversaries.  Sen. Hagel lacks these qualities, and hopefully the United States Senate will heed the concerns of these flag and general officers during the course of his confirmation process.”
The full text of the letter can be found below.

29 January, 2013
Dear Chairman Levin and Ranking Member Inhofe:
As individuals who were privileged to serve our country as flag and general officers in the United States military, we write to you to express our deep concerns about the nomination of former Senator Chuck Hagel to serve as Secretary of Defense.
Our nation faces enormous national security challenges as we enter 2013.  Addressing those challenges will require leadership at the Pentagon that recognizes the gravity of the threats we face and understands the requirement for a formidable military capable of deterring and, if necessary, overcoming them.  Senator Hagel’s record on key issues indicates he is not such a leader.
First, Sen. Hagel stated on 29 August, 2011: “The Defense Department, I think in many ways has been bloated…I think the Pentagon needs to be pared down.”  This statement seems to ignore the fact that, the Budget Control Act of 2011 had already cut $487 billion from the defense budget over ten years — let alone that this round of reductions comes on top of the more than $300 billion in cuts that took place under then-Secretary Robert Gates.
Recall that Secretary Leon Panetta on 4 August, 2011 stated that hundreds of billions more in cuts over ten years that sequestration will bring about will be “disastrous to the defense budget.” JCS Chairman General Martin Dempsey has indicated that sequestration poses “very high risk” for national security.  Consequently, Sen. Hagel’s assertion that still further cuts are warranted is at odds with the judgment of the Pentagon’s current civilian and military leadership.  It suggests a disqualifying lack of understanding of the dire effects such reductions would have on our defense capabilities.
Second, Sen. Hagel is a signatory of the “Global Zero” Initiative, which describes itself as “the “international movement for the elimination of all nuclear weapons.”  At a time when Russia and China are increasing and modernizing their nuclear capabilities, North Korea is enhancing its long-range nuclear delivery systems and the weapons they will carry and Iran is moving ever closer to obtaining such arms, we cannot responsibly abandon our deterrent.  It would be ill-advised and possibly very dangerous to have as a Secretary of Defense someone who believes otherwise.
Third, Sen. Hagel has demonstrated an abiding hostility towards Israel, a view that would be detrimental to our national defense and perhaps perilous to our ally were he to become Secretary.  For example:  In 2009, he urged President Obama to undertake direct negotiations with Hamas.  In October 2000, he was one of just three Senators to refuse to sign a letter expressing support for Israel during the second Palestinian intifada.  In 2002, following several deadly Palestinian suicide-bombing attacks in Israel, he authored a Washington Post op-ed asserting that “Palestinian reformers cannot promote a democratic agenda for change while both the Israeli military occupation and settlement activity continue.”
Israel is our only stable, reliable ally in an increasingly turbulent and hostile Middle East.  Given Sen. Hagel’s record of hostility towards the Jewish State, his confirmation could signal to Israel’s enemies and ours that this important bilateral relationship is unraveling.  That perception could invite aggression and perhaps another, otherwise avoidable regional war.
Another matter of profound concern is Sen. Hagel’s outlook towards Iran — a country that, among other acts of war against our country, employed its proxy, Hezbollah, to bomb the Marine barracks in Beirut in 1983, resulting in the deaths 241 American servicemen.  Sen. Hagel has repeatedly refused to support sanctions against Iran while in the Senate, and in 2006, he stated that “a military strike against Iran, a military option, is not a viable, feasible, responsible option.”  This ill-advised statement telegraphs to Tehran that it should not fear a U.S. military response to the continued pursuit of Iranian nuclear weapons.  Whichever policies are pursued with the objective of preventing a nuclear Iran can only have hope of success if backed by a credible military deterrent.  It would be unwise to confirm a nominee for Secretary of Defense who has already publicly taken that option off the table.
For all of these reasons, it is our professional assessment that confirmation of Sen. Hagel to be Secretary of Defense would be contrary to the United States’ vital national security interests.
Sincerely,
Adm. James “Ace” Lyons, USN (Ret.)
Lt. Gen. William G. “Jerry” Boykin, USA (Ret.)
Vice Adm. Robert Monroe, USN (Ret.)
Lt. Gen. E.G. “Buck” Shuler, Jr., USAF (Ret.)
Maj. Gen. Thomas F. Cole, USA (Ret.)
Maj. Gen. Vincent E. Falter, USA (Ret.)
Rear Adm. H.E. Gerhard, USN (Ret.)
Rear Adm. Robert H. Gormley, USN (Ret.)
Maj. Gen. Geoffrey Higginbotham, USMC (Ret.)
Rear Adm. Don G. Primeau, USN (Ret.)
Maj. Gen. Mel Thrash, USA (Ret.)
Maj. Gen. Paul E. Vallely, USA (Ret.)
Brig. Gen. William A. Bloomer, USMC (Ret.)
Brig. Gen. Ronald K. Kerwood, USA (Ret.)

2011 Freedom Flame Award: John Lehman

The past June, the Center for Security Policy awarded former Secretary of the Navy John Lehman, father of the 600 ship Navy, with the Freedom Flame Award at the Union Club in New York City.

The Freedom Flame Award recognizes individuals who have exemplified the ideals of freedom, democracy, economic opportunity and international strength to which the Center for Security Policy is committed. The Award acknowledges the past contributions of its recipients while serving as a reminder that the goals for which they have worked so valiantly require the continuing, unflagging efforts of those who follow in their footsteps.  Secretary Lehman was the recipient for his unwavering support for a strong national defense.

Secretary Lehman has a long and storied career with the military that started not actually with the Navy, but with the Air Force Reserve while studying at Cambridge. After 3 years of service, he transferred to the United States Naval Reserve where he entered with the rank of ensign.

While working his way up through the ranks of the Navy, Secretary Lehman held a variety of positions including: President of the Abington Corporation, delegate to the Mutual Balanced Force Reductions negotiations and Deputy Director of the Arms Control and Disarmament Agency.

One of his greatest honors was serving as Secretary of the United States Navy from 1981 to 1987 where he was responsible for the management of 1.2 million people and an annual budget of $95 billion.  During that time, John worked tirelessly to implement the “600 ship navy,” a program unveiled during the early days of the Reagan administration that sought to reverse the dismantling of America’s military capabilities that occurred under Jimmy Carter.  Secretary Lehman fought hard for the necessary increases then, and his commitment to maintaining a robust military has not waned to this day.

In his acceptance speech [read the full transcript here] at the Freedom Flame Award Dinner, Secretary Lehman recalled the spirit of the ‘600 ship navy’ buildup, calling for strong leadership and a reeling in of the Pentagon bureaucracy to confront the declines in military readiness the United States currently faces.

We clearly have been unilaterally disarming our services over the last fifteen years. Our fleet is less than half the size, even though we’ve been spending in constant dollar terms almost twice as much in-adjusted for inflation-as President Reagan spent.

The world hasn’t gotten any smaller. The threats, while very different than the Cold War confrontation, are much more complex, much more varied, and much more disparate and less able to be dealt with by the kind of static and ordered forces that we were used to in the Cold War. So we’ve been steadily reducing our capability to act around the world. And we’ve been steadily reducing our capability to act around the world. And we’ve been doing it even while increasing the defense budget.

So I’m here to tell you that the problems we face today are very solvable. All it takes is a recognition of the problem and leadership. Seven hundred and fifty thousand bureaucrats are not needed. Nine percent a year is the attrition rate in the bureaucracy. So even a selective hiring freeze, not a total hiring, but a selective hiring freeze would shrink this bureaucracy down to a manageable size within four years.

So that’s my message. Yes, we are in a serious threat situation today. But, yes, we have the resources to turn this around and reassert American primacy as a defender of the free world. And all it takes, all it takes, is leadership.

As Secretary Lehman points out, the threat to the military is as acute now as it has ever been.  Defense spending is at the lowest point it has been in 50 years, standing at a mere 3.9% of GDP and it appears, poised to decline further: despite calls from many top officials for increased spending Obama seeks to cut another $400 billion from the military over the next 12 years.

Unless this trend is reversed and strong leadership is enacted, the United States will again find themselves in a military situation much like Secretary Lehman did when he took over the Navy, underfunded, undersized, and out-of-date.  The Center applauds Dr. Lehman for his efforts and will continue to work with him to ensure America’s military remains a dominant force for years to come.

Watch video from the 2011 Freedom Flame below.

First, Rabbi Aryeh Spero delivers a meaningful invocation. Next, the Center’s Chairman of the Board, E. Miles Prentice III, receives the Terry Elkes Sacred Honor Award for his philanthropic efforts on behalf of the Center. Then, Admiral James ‘Ace’ Lyons— former Commander-in-Chief of the US Navy’s Pacific Fleet– introduces Dr. Lehman. Finally, remarks by Dr. John Lehman, former Secretary of the US Navy.

Introductory Remarks by Adm. James “Ace” Lyons (USN, Ret.)

I’ve known John Lehman for many years. He has had more influence on the United States Navy than anybody since Teddy Roosevelt and the Great White Fleet. John learned early on about the Navy from his dad, who was captain of an LCS as a lieutenant junior grade and fought in the early battles for Okinawa. In his early college and graduate days, his inquisitive mind was put to full use. While he was at Cambridge, he spent many hours at the Tiki Lounge over a pint, discussing the issues of the day. It was there that he learned to hone his debating skills. Sometimes he was asked, why didn’t you go to Oxford? And he would reply, I was rejected when they found out my mother and father were married.  It was at graduate school at the University of Pennsylvania where John met one of his mentors, Dr. Robert Strauss and it was through that relationship that brought John to Washington and where he joined the Nixon Administration and worked directly for Henry Kissinger and Richard Allen. It was under the master, Henry Kissinger that he learned to consolidate power, which he would put to good use later on. John was the Congressional liaison point man for the administration. This let him establish close working relationships with the defense titles on Capitol Hill. Such as Senator John Stennis, John Tower, and Henry Jackson. Later on, he was appointed by President Ford as the Deputy Director for the Arms Control and Disarmament Agency. When Ronald Reagan won the presidency, he made a vow to build a six hundred ship Navy, to restore our maritime superiority. The man he chose to make that vow a reality was John Lehman.

Now, he was a young, politically-savvy, aggressive guy who knew how to get things done in Washington. He knew how to work the bureaucracy. You would have been-furthermore, he was also a qualified naval aviator who had flown combat missions in Vietnam, on his naval reserve active duty time. Now you would have thought the uniformed Navy would have greeted him with open arms. Not to be the case. He was greeted like a skunk at a picnic. What they wanted for a Secretary of the Navy was somebody they could pat on the head and send him off to make Navy-league speeches while they ran the Navy. Well, were they in for a surprise. John understood the culture of the Navy had to be changed. The programmers and budgeteers of the old-boy network were out. Operators were brought in. There was one delicate personal matter that every Secretary of the Navy had avoided like the plague. And that was how to retire Admiral Rickover gracefully. John devised the unique idea to make him the Special Adviser to the President for Nuclear Energy. Everything was set. Everything was set. They all marched in to the Oval Office. President Reagan, being the great gentleman that he was, warmly greeted the admiral, escorted him by the arm over to an armchair in front of the roaring fire, sat him down and started telling him how grateful the nation was for his years of service. At which point, Rickover interrupted him and said, ah, cut the crap. Why are you listening to these two piss ants? Pointing to John and Cap Weinberger. They don’t know what the hell they’re doing. And then he turned back to the President. He said, do you-do you know what you’re doing? Do you know how to be president? And it went downhill from there. Talk about one’s career flashing before his eyes.  Fortunately, John survived the day and fortunate for the Navy. Because we were just emerging from the disastrous Carter years where the Navy had gone from over nine hundred ships and was down to four hundred and seventy-seven. Seventy-five of those ships were overdue for their major overhaul. We were down in every readiness category.

We had senators like Gary Hart advising Carter to build low-tech ships and small carriers. That was a formula for disaster. Come to think of it, I’m wondering did Hart advise Congressman Weiner? There were many challenges facing the Navy and John met them head on. He embraced a new maritime strategy which literally took the fleet into the Soviets’ backyard in the Atlantic and the Pacific. There was not going to be a maritime Maginot Line at the GIUK Gap in the Atlantic that sacrificed our NATO allies on the northern flank to the Soviets. He implemented innovative shipbuilding plans. He built high-tech ships like Aegis cruisers. Aegis-equipped Arleigh Burke destroyers. He implemented multi-year carrier buys, which literally saved the taxpayers billions of dollars. Excuse me. He used the same technique for aircraft procurement. There was one innovative shipbuilding program which was the conversion of two super-tankers into hospital ships, now called the Mercy and Comfort. These thousand bed hospital ships are the most sophisticated afloat trauma facilities in the world. They are what the Navy uses today to project humanity, to show the best of America.  John streamlined the management system. He eliminated the naval material command along with a thousand bureaucrats. The Navy we have today is the Navy that John Lehman built in the 80s. And as I think Frank Gaffney stole one of my lines, that Navy has shrunk to two hundred and seventy-seven ships. Now, if John Lehman was Secretary of the Navy today, we would not be building these sorry-ass little, literal combat ships. That can’t defend themselves and have no offensive capability. Instead, he would be building the high-tech, twenty-first century, zoom-all class destroyer. Which is built from the keel up to be stealthy.  And has the power and capabilities to defeat any potential enemies, weapons systems, now or in the future, including the Chinese anti-ship ballistic missile. John Lehman would not tolerate the political correctness disease that has infected every echelon of Navy leadership today. John resigned as Secretary of the Navy in April, 1987. He went into business and became a very successful investment banker. I got to say, I didn’t get anything out of it, but-but he continued to serve his country.

He was a valuable member of the 9-11 Commission. He literally devoted hundreds if not thousands of hours to that committee’s work. The committee had a number of important findings. None more important than the cache of NSA documents that were found literally days before the committee’s report went to press. In those documents, it provides proof positive of Iran’s involvement in 9-11, utilizing their Hezbollah terrorist proxy group. Now I want to take you back to 23 October, 1983. The day of the Marine barracks bombing in Beirut, Lebanon where we lost two hundred and forty-one of our finest military personnel. We had proof positive information then Iran ordered the attacks. Actually, we had the information four weeks before. But I didn’t get to see it as the Deputy Chief of Naval Operations until two days after the bombing. And I showed John that message that day. Now, the Navy, working with the CIA, were able to identify the terrorist group as the Islamic Amal, which was the forerunner to Hezbollah. And where they were located at the Lebanese army barracks above Baalbek, which they took over months before with the help of the Iranian Revolutionary Guards. We had the planes loaded not once, but twice. We had shown the attack plans to John, which he approved. But, unfortunately, as Secretary of the Navy, he was not in the operational chain of command. We were essentially going to wipe out the entire Iranian Hezbollah Islamic network. The entire proxy network. We were going to take those Lebanese army barracks and when we got through with them, they were going to look like a plowed cornfield. However, we could never get authorization to launch. And that’s a story for another day. John continued to serve his country by being a valuable member of the National Defense Commission, where he did yeoman work. So it is with a great honor and privilege that I present this year’s Freedom Flame Award to the honorable John F. Lehman, Jr.

 

Remarks of Dr. John Lehman, former Secretary of the US Navy

The title of my talk tonight – and I’m going to keep it really focused on the lessons, perhaps – is national security in an age of rising Asia, unholy terror, and fiscal crisis. Pretty daunting formula. But I really want to focus on the half-full part of the glass tonight, not the half-empty.

Those of you who are long-time supporters and newcomers alike to Frank’s fantastic organization know well enough the nature of the dangers that we face today and they are certainly severe. We have a deterioration of our capability to deter and keep the peace. We have the phenomenon of a China that is exploding in terms of its capabilities and its power and where they’re going to fit in the world and this is yet to be determined. And we have an Islamist movement that we, I think very effectively laid out to the world in our 9-11 Report, that is a new phenomenon. It’s worldwide. It’s not—well, it’s enabled by some, it is not part of any nation-state. And they’re focused on setting off a weapon of mass destruction to bring down the culture of the free world as we know it. These are real threats. We also, as a result of some very inept foreign policy, have really grown the problem and the threat of nuclear non-proliferation. Now we’ve shown that if you give up nuclear weapons like Mr. Gaddafi and President Mubarak, that you can be out like that. But if you defy the United States and the world community and pursue nuclear weapons like North Korea and Iran and Syria, you are immune from even being asked to resign by the United States and the United Nations.

So these are the three major areas of threat that we as a nation and our institutions face today. And I’m not going to dwell on the ramifications of them. I want to dwell on the solutions to these issues. The solutions to these problems. Because they’re very solvable in the sense of we can provide for our national security in this very threatening age with new kinds of threats. And I want to dwell on, as I said, the half-full part of the glass here tonight. Most recently, we showed that we do have a capability and, indeed, a national will to defend our interests with the dramatic bringing to justice, as was said, of Osama bin Laden. We have enormous capabilities. We have the ability to project power anywhere in the world. We have the capability to demonstrate to the Chinese, for instance, that we are able to maintain a balance. That we are not inevitably in decline. But we have not really been taking advantage of the inherent capability we have. And I want to talk a little bit about why that is the case. We clearly have been unilaterally disarming our services over the last fifteen years. Our fleet is less than half the size, even though we’ve been spending in constant dollar terms almost twice as much in—adjusted for inflation—as President Reagan spent. The Air Force is—the average age of the Air Force’s fleet of aircraft is twenty-eight years. And they have half the number of combat airplanes that they had at the height of the Reagan Administration.

The world hasn’t gotten any smaller. The threats, while very different than the Cold War confrontation, are much more complex, much more varied, and much more disparate and less able to be dealt with by the kind of static and ordered forces that we were used to in the Cold War. So we’ve been steadily reducing our capability to act around the world. And we’ve been doing it even while increasing the defense budget. And this is why I argue all the time with my conservative friends who are constantly campaigning for increasing the defense budget. The answer is, we’ve got to have more money given to defense to provide for this deterrent. We’re fighting, now, three wars. And yet we’re talking about cutting the defense budget. But the real nature of our unilateral disarmament is something very different. We face a crisis of, to put it very simply, bureaucratic bloat. It afflicts our intelligence community. It afflicts every one of our military services. And most importantly, it afflicts our defense department. Now just to throw a few—a few factoids your way from our recent commission report. When the Department of Defense was set up in 1947, the law limited it to fifty civilian staffers for the Secretary of Defense. Which at the time was larger than the White House staff. Today, there are seven hundred and fifty thousand civilian staff members of the Department of Defense. And every time there is a crisis that the media focuses on in defense procurement, Congress reacts by creating a new layer of bureaucracy. Last year, alone, they added twenty thousand new civil service slots to the Pentagon because the argument was, we have to reform defense procurement. Now, the whole Pentagon only holds twenty-five thousand people. And with one trice, they added another twenty thousand. That’s seven hundred and fifty now added to by twenty thousand. And the problem is that this bloat has afflicted every part of defense procurement. So the F-22 had to be stopped at a hundred and eighty-seven airplanes when it was supposed to have seven hundred. And the reason was, the price had gone up to three hundred and fifty million dollars a copy. And that wasn’t because the contractors were gouging or the services were gold-plating. It was because the program took twenty-four years from the time it was started until the first squadron deployed to Japan.

And time is money. And the reason it took twenty-four years was that there are now forty requirements committees that have to approve every single action taken on a major ACAB [PH] one or two program. All of these seven hundred and fifty thousand bureaucrats have to have things to do. It is exactly the same thing in the Navy Department, for example. In World War Two, we built a thousand ships a year. At the time the Bureau of Ships, which was in charge of building ships, had a thousand bureaucrats. One thousand. Most of them were graduate engineers, graduates of MIT, members of the Engineering Duty Officer Corps Elites. When I was secretary and Ace was running the Pacific Fleet, it had grown to four thousand people. And we were building twenty-eight ships a year. Not a thousand ships a year. Today, we’ve been averaging five ships a year—of the ships that Ace was a little derisive of, shall we say. Rather than battleships or carriers. And the bureaucracy of new ships, now called NAP-C, is twenty-five thousand bureaucrats. Twenty-five thousand bureaucrats. So I won’t dwell too much on this because I said I was going to talk about the half-full part of the glass. But the intelligence community suffers exactly the same bloat. And in the 9-11 Commission, we recommended that we create a Director of National Intelligence to break down this bureaucracy, to cut it, to reduce it, to break down the layers, to tear down the stove pipe so information could be shared. It’s far too bloated. Too many bureaucrats. Fifteen different agencies. Well, unfortunately, instead, while Congress did what the Commission asked and passed the law, the Bush Administration turned it on its head and created a DNI without the powers to cut and gave them a staff of two thousand additional bureaucrats. Now that’s beyond belief. Well, now to the full part of the glass. The fact is that all it takes is leadership to reverse this and it can be reversed in a short period of time. Most of you are New Yorkers here.

When I moved to New York in 1988, it really was a cesspool of a city. It was filthy. It was disgusting. The trash wasn’t collected on time. You couldn’t walk down for a half an hour into Midtown without seeing a robbery or something. Squeegee bums on every major corner. And then suddenly we had—a leader was elected. And within three months, the squeegee bums were gone. The trash started to get collected. The streets were starting to be cleaned. The taxis were forced to turn on air conditioners. The city was transformed. At that time, New York had twice the crime rate of London. Today, the streets are clean. The subways work. The taxis are air-conditioned. No squeegee bums. The crime rate is forty percent less than London today. Everybody said, “New York is ungovernable. That’s just the way it is, you know. It’s always been that way.” Well, it’s not true. And in the 9-11 Commission, we pointed out that every bit of intelligence showed that New York was the epicenter of the targeting of al-Qaeda and every other Islamist group and that we did not have in New York anything approaching the kind of command and control or communications that could deal with that threat. As demonstrated by the inability of the cops to talk to the firemen and all of the casualties that resulted. Well, today, I’m pleased to tell you that New York, in my judgment and all of the other 9-11 people, is the safest city in the world. Because of leadership: Ray Kelly and two fine mayors. They’ve led the country and the country—most of the municipalities have tried to emulate New York. Now the cops are put in charge of the command centers in any crisis. Now the cops have the most sophisticated military communications to talk under any circumstances, in tunnels, on subways, to all of the—to all of the other first responders and the authorities.

We have the best, in New York, counter-terrorism center in the world. If I were president, I’d be briefed by Ray Kelly’s counter-terrorism center. They have the best, absolutely the best. Everybody said it couldn’t be done. It was done. And it was done fast by leadership. Ace Lyons, as I said, should have been the awardee tonight. Because everybody said when Reagan came in, all of the moss back admirals and the trendy OSD intellectuals and the people on the Hill said, you can’t take the fleet north of the GIUK gap, you can’t survive up there. NATO’s official doctrine said the fleet will get decimated within days by the Russian fleet. Ace Lyons, who had second fleet, said oh, yes, we can. And I’ll show you how to do it. And he took five carriers up there in September of 1981. And he kicked the Soviets’ ass from one side of the Norwegian Sea to the other.

And the reason we know this, still some classified sources that we can’t talk about, but three years ago, I was invited to Norway for a conference with my counterparts from the Russian high command to talk about the Reagan strategy, a forward strategy of practicing, going up there every year, showing we could not only survive, but we could run mock attacks against the Soviet Union. The White Sea. We did the same thing on the Northern Pacific. And these Russians said that their own wargaming and ops analysis showed that the longest their fleet had ever survived against Ace and his successors in these annual exercises was one week. And the entire fleet was gone. This is from the Russians. This is from the Russians. And it was the input of these general staff people who went, in 1986, back with a major position to the politburo that they had to triple the budget for defenses in the northern flank or the Soviet Union would lose the war. And it was that, that had, we now know from other intelligence sources, had a thunderclap impact on the leadership that eventually started glasnost and so forth. So I’m here to tell you that the problems we face today are very solvable. All it takes is recognition of the problem and leadership. Seven hundred and fifty thousand bureaucrats are not needed. Nine percent a year is the attrition rate in the bureaucracy. So even a selective hiring freeze, not a total hiring, but a selective hiring freeze would shrink this bureaucracy down to a manageable size within four years. Plus you have early retirements. Plus you have plenty of other tools that are available that could get back to the fine people that are in there that want to get these things done. So that’s my message. Yes, we are in a serious threat situation today. But, yes, we have the resources to turn this around and reassert American primacy as a defender of the free world. And all it takes, all it takes, is leadership. So on that note, I’m—I would like to thank you, I’m deeply honored for this—receiving this award, Frank, and keep up what you’re doing because you’ve done more to really articulate and get across to the leadership of the country the nature of this threat than anyone else I know. Thank you.