US Military Continues Blatantly Murdering Civilians at Sea

Secret squirrel logic is being given by the American government during an offensive military campaign targeting and killing civilians at sea.

“There is no evidence – none – that this strike was conducted in self-defense,” Sen. Jack Reed, ranking member of the Senate Armed Services Committee, said last week. “That matters, because under both domestic and international law, the US military simply does not have the authority to use lethal force against a civilian vessel unless acting in self-defense.”

No evidence is a problem because, without it, such targeting and killing of civilians is clearly illegal. America becomes a criminal state.

According to the Kafkaesque system apparently now running the Pentagon, a throwback to assassinations of leadership deemed “too leftist” by the Nixon administration, the public now isn’t allowed to know who may be killed next by the current President or why.

“We knew exactly who they were, exactly what they were doing, what they represented, and why they were going where they were going,” Hegseth told reporters on September 4 during a visit to Fort Benning, Georgia.

“How did you know?” a reporter asked.

“Why would I tell you that?” Hegseth responded.

Why explain?

Well, Hegseth should know Senator Frank Church already conclusively explained why, way back in 1975. And that is not to mention all the explanations from the post-WWII tribunals at Nuremburg. Such a refusal, by what amounts to a war mongering executive claiming no accountability, marks an end of democracy.

Senator Frank Church displays the CIA poison dart gun at committee hearing with vice chairman John Tower on September 17, 1975 (Source: U.S. Capital via Levin Center, photo by Henry Griffin)

The Church Committee’s work in the 1970s established that democratic oversight requires transparency about targeting criteria and legal authority. Without it, democracy ends.

Civil Rights campaigners of the 1960s certainly would recognize this “shoot first, justify second” mentality of white men claiming their invisible empire can’t be questioned. The Secretary of State Rubio admitted the civilians in a boat “could have been interdicted rather than destroyed” yet the President overruled everyone to dictate immediate lethal strikes “as a matter of first, not last, resort.”

When Hegseth refuses to explain any basis at all for such offensive thought, he’s essentially claiming an executive authority has been invented to designate kill lists. He overtly rejects any balance of judicial review or meaningful oversight. To put it another way, a few months ago he fired the top legal authorities of the Army and the Air Force in order to enable today’s illegal use of force on civilians.

As one expert reviewing Hegseth’s actions has precisely explained:

There is a word for the premeditated killing for people outside of context of armed conflict. That word is murder.

This campaign of assassination, designed to bypass not just American legal protections but any legal system that might provide due process or accountability, could now pivot to the military troops Hegseth deploys to target Black-led cities.

The pattern should remind us of Nixon’s Phoenix Program in Vietnam, which did the same by claiming certain categories of people could be killed without due process based on intelligence assessments that could never be challenged or verified. The Church Committee specifically identified how such programs inevitably expand beyond their stated parameters because there are no meaningful constraints on their application.

They assassinated JFK, Lumumba, Mondlane, Hammarskjold, MLK, Malcom X… which reveals a continuity of this system. The same networks that eliminated leaders who challenged white supremacy and American imperial power are now operating with open impunity, using Nixon’s racist “war on drugs” and “counter-terrorism” as pretexts for a campaign of state-based terror.

The Venezuela news serves as a very simple yet critical boundary test by white nationalists.

Once the principle is established that their unitary executive model is unopposed to designate any group for extrajudicial killing based on secret criteria, the categorical thinking is transferable to any group or individual for elimination.

And that’s why recent government campaigns, arguing they can target people based on race alone, should be seen for exactly what they are, a state building the scaffolding for mass detention and murder.

…the supreme court has “effectively legalized racial profiling”, granting federal agents the power to stop people in Los Angeles simply for speaking Spanish or appearing Latino…

This goes beyond policy disagreement into America once again deploying infrastructure and plans for state-sponsored mass violence against targeted populations. Hannah Arendt identified this process: the intentional creation of stateless populations who exist outside legal protection in order to normalize mass human oppression and extermination.

VA Tesla Kills One in Head-on Crash

Police already have indicated the Tesla crossed a double yellow line.

The Spotsylvania Sheriff’s Office said that it happened at around 5:45 p.m. in the 6800 block of Courthouse Road.

When deputies arrived at the scene, they saw that a 2022 Tesla X and a 2024 Hyundai Tucson had gotten into a head-on crash.

Preliminarily, it is believed that the Tesla had crossed the double yellow line and struck the Hyundai.

The Hyundai driver, Donna Pinnell, 76, died at the scene.

Romanian and German Jets Burn $600K to Intercept Cheap Russian Drone

Following Poland’s report, invoking NATO Article 4, the Romanian military has published a their own report of Russian violation of airspace.

A Geran drone used by the Russian Federation in its attacks on Ukraine penetrated the Romanian airspace on Saturday, September 13th, at 6:05 p.m. and was intercepted by two F-16 fighter jets, which were conducting an air patrol mission in northern Dobruja. […] The German allies deployed to Mihail Kogălniceanu scrambled two Eurofighter Typhoon aircraft in support of the Romanian ones, which monitored the area until 9:30 p.m.

Threat Response Calculation:

  • 2 F-16s × 3.5 hours × $27,000/hour = $189,000
  • 2 Typhoons × 3.5 hours × $62,000/hour = $434,000
  • Total NATO response cost = ~$600,000

Rough Cost Ratio

  • NATO response: ~$600,000
  • Geran drone: ~$30,000

NATO response cost roughly 20 times more than the drone itself.

Ouch.

We know Russia has adopted a doctrine to flood the Ukraine airspace, launching more one-way attack drones from September through December 2024 than in the preceding 23 months combined. Just one day on July 9 saw 728 Shahed-type drones used in a saturation attack.

This comes from the Russian industry producing more than 5,000 long-range drones each month, split between Shahed-type strike drones and decoy models (Gerbera – a flying cardboard box). It’s believed nearly 200 Geran-2 drones per day are made.

Notably, as a historian, this actually says to me that ex-KGB are executing on a 40-year old concept. The intelligence elites of yesteryear circling around Putin still are talking about America ruining their Soviet economy. They can’t think about current problems, a fundamental problem in dictatorships, so they are smarting about the huge military overspend that Gorbachev finally admitted was their failure.

Yuri Andropov, director of the KGB, created a secret department during the 1970s within the KGB devoted to economic analysis. What he eventually studied was CIA Director William Casey’s aggressive plan to undermine and destroy the Soviet Union through a combination of economic warfare and sabotage, hot and cold war, a punishing arms race, and sophisticated and heated psychological and political warfare.

The KGB veterans thus were on the front lines to see economic warfare as the sharp tip that brought down the USSR, and they’re hungry to flip the lessons against NATO. A staggering 20:1 cost ratio is a deliberate echo of the American economic pressures that bankrupted the Soviet military-industrial complex. Putin himself is a former KGB officer who lived through the Soviet collapse and understands precisely how forcing unsustainable military spending ratios can cripple an economy.

And it should be stated that swallowing such doctrine is what is rewarded by autocrats. The KGB veterans that Putin surrounds himself with have a playbook based on what they know worked against them. That’s their weakness. They can’t adapt or innovate beyond that framework because Putin would kill them the minute they exposed a truly independent thought.

So let’s dig into basic anti-fascist history and take this another possible path. Americans under normal circumstances would see a massive strategic opportunity for industry, where economic incentives are perfectly aligned with rapid expansion. The Romanian incident essentially handed the German government a half million dollar payment for a few hours of operations against a $30,000 target.

That’s math just begging for industrial innovation. But the Americans are MIA, and clearly can’t be trusted, drunkenly pouring billions down the drain on dumb military PR stunts like the Yemen and Iran “air power embarassment” of strategic bankruptcy (let alone pandering to “iPad on your face” guy selling defense lemons).

NATO has an immediate reality of three dozen countries facing a rapidly growing threat from cheap robot swarms. Layered defense systems are needed for both military and critical infrastructure markets. That’s basically another way of saying Russia just unlocked German industrial power with a potential $50 billion addressable high tech market over next decade.

Russia is taunting Germany to solve a manufacturing optimization problem, which is exactly what built the massive anti-Soviet automotive and machine tool dominance in the first place.

American engineering culture meanwhile is in steep decline, a corrupt political mess of anti-science bureaucracy pumping flashy, late, expensive, over-engineered PR as solutions nobody wants. Germany already has shown it’s perfectly positioned to pivot their quality control of “mass-producible minimum viable” engineering philosophy into independent and sustainable European commercial dominance of contested airspace. This is a made-in-EU moment.

Putin’s old man shouting at the birds grudge-fueled KGB-inspired economic warfare strategy, which he expected to weaken NATO, might end up creating the first truly independent European defense industrial base, powered by German engineering excellence. There’s real irony being funded by the paper robot threat Russia itself created.

Ukraine, Czechia, Romania and Poland have just made the innovation demand clear:

  • Accelerate European defense autonomy (exactly what the old KGB fears)
  • Seize ideal conditions for German industrial resurgence
  • Fund the next generation of European military technology
  • Eliminate American defense dominance (accept Hegseth for his malicious self-destruction)

Russia deserves exactly what happens when you give German engineers a clear problem, unlimited market demand, and necessary freedom from the stupidity of the American culture war clowns grinding themselves down even faster than foreign threats ever could.

Silicon Valley’s China Surveillance Technology Transfer Problem

One of my least favorite phrases in history is geopolitical ouroboros – everyone was enabling everyone else in a circle that eventually came back to bite them all.

Specifically American pursuit of short-term profits and tactical advantages created strategic nightmares that lasted decades. Massive federal funding to develop radar technology in WWII, which birthed Silicon Valley, is a perfect analogy for this. It helps explain the latest news about surveillance technology transfer to China, since America seems to repeatedly arm future enemies with tools to attack them and their allies.

The system apparently runs on a fundamentally compromised culture where national security product engineers aren’t measured on safety but instead how insulated they can become from dangerous consequences of their own extreme isolation and wealth; the Stanford recruitment system seems tuned to artificially transfer costs using a “break things for someone else to clean up” mindset.

Historians Produce Pattern Recognition

The Associated Press investigation into Silicon Valley’s role in building China’s surveillance state reads like an old 1940s playbook. The birth of Silicon Valley was unlimited federal funding to develop radar technology for Allied forces. Eventually the results threatened American planes over Korea in a devastating turnabout. The cultural shock resuled in a “Top Gun” project that only escalated the cycles. This context matters greatly when considering tech giants like IBM, Dell, Cisco, and Intel spending over two decades essentially building the world’s most sophisticated digital prisons and handing the keys to America’s most obvious geopolitical rival.

The scale of stupidity is sobering. American companies sold billions of dollars in surveillance technology to Chinese police and government agencies, as if emboldened by repeated Congressional warnings that these tools were being used to crush dissent and target minorities.

Can you imagine a CEO at a tech firm giving an executive team presentation that “these elected politicians are telling us if we get rich helping China we also can destroy democracy and instrument racism globally, hell yeah!”

As one public example, researchers exposed an unauthenticated MongoDB instance in China was “regularly being updated” with nearly 7 million GPS coordinates every 24 hours. It was the surveillance backend for cameras in mosques, hotels, police stations, internet cafés, and restaurants. You know, everywhere a certain ethnic group were being monitored… without basic database authentication enabled.

It was during this context the CEO allegedly told the company “our tech doesn’t matter, I don’t care if we were making dishwashers, I would still sell the shit out of it.”

That’s perhaps how to think about IBM working directly with Chinese defense contractors to build national intelligence systems, not unlike the $1 billion/year operation IGLOO WHITE of 1968 for the Vietnam War. And consider Nvidia and Intel have partnered with China’s biggest surveillance companies to add AI capabilities to camera networks. Dell, HP, and Microsoft likewise provided the software backbone that powers systems tracking tens of millions of people or more.

Moral Relativism

What makes this particularly galling is the moral hypocrisy being baked into deals. We know from history how amoral technology transfer cycles work. Take the Israel-South Africa nuclear partnership of the 1970s and 1980s. I mean Holocaust survivors literally worked with a regime led by former Nazi sympathizers, sharing nuclear technology in exchange for uranium and testing facilities. That same South African regime then used related missile technology to arm Saddam Hussein’s Iraq with billions of dollars in weapons.

The stupid result?

Iraqi missiles were fired at Israeli cities during the Gulf War with components allegedly derived from Israeli collaborations. American companies had enabled South Africa’s missile program through deliberate sanctions-busting, creating a circular nightmare where everyone was simultaneously arming and being threatened by everyone else.

Mirrors Made in China

The China surveillance story follows this old arms deal pattern, just with digital rather than kinetic weapons. American tech companies built the technological foundation for what became a system that:

  • Tracks tens of thousands of political dissidents, restricting their movement and preemptively detaining them, just like President Nixon wanted in America
  • Powered the mass detention of over a million Uyghurs in Xinjiang
  • Created “predictive policing” systems that flag people for crimes they haven’t committed
  • Established the world’s most comprehensive digital surveillance apparatus

And now?

China has become what some are calling the “surveillance superpower,” selling refined versions of American-developed technologies to Iran, Russia, and other adversaries. It reminds me of President Reagan removing solar technology from the White House and giving it to China, which now dominates the global industry that President Carter accurately predicted.

Reagan eliminated tax credits and federal support for renewable energy that Carter had established, making it economically impossible for American solar companies to compete domestically. This forced them to either die or move manufacturing to China where costs were viable.

In other words, Chinese innovations in solar powered surveillance systems are being deployed domestically now in the United States for “predictive” political detention and worse, as a result of extremist domestic political strategy.

Silicon Valley Blindness

Tech companies consistently claim they only care about the dollars and aren’t responsible for how products are used. However, internal marketing materials show this is disingenuous at best and they care, in the wrong way.

Dell boasted about helping Chinese internet police “crack down on rumormongers.” Seagate marketed hard drives “tailor made” for Chinese police to “control key persons.” IBM, Cisco, and others directly pitched their technology using specific political oppression terminology about “stability maintenance” and controlling “abnormal gatherings.”

This wasn’t accidental dual-use technology marketing it was deliberate and tailored sales pitches to attract authoritarian buyers, often in direct violation of the spirit if not the letter of export controls.

Inevitable Blowback

Historians see the patterns that predict where this leads. Just as radar technology proliferated globally and eventually threatened its creators, surveillance technology is already boomeranging back to its source. China’s refined surveillance capabilities are being used for espionage against American targets. The “predictive policing” concepts pioneered for China are now being deployed against American citizens. Technologies sold to track Uyghurs are being adapted to monitor other populations worldwide.

The geopolitical ouroboros completes its circle once again: American companies created the tools, sold them to a rival power, watched that power refine and weaponize them, and now face the consequences as those same technologies are deployed against supposed American democratic interests and values.

A Culture of Cooked Cage Matches

Here’s the real tragedy of fight club fetishism: there’s little evidence anyone in the tech industry cared when Nixon announced he would pivot the flawed Igloo White surveillance technology of the Vietnam War into domestic use. How many Americans recall how wartime sensors were placed under the White House lawn and in the yards of President Nixon’s other homes in San Clemente, California, and Key Biscayne, Florida?

Nixon had believed so strongly in the new surveillance technology, despite it failing miserably in the field, that he had the same sensors deployed to his lawns and the border with Mexico complete with drones flying overhead.

The engineers who built billion-dollar-a-year surveillance systems in the 1960s were building a money hungry engineering culture. The same culture that today measures success in Silicon Valley’s nearly $1.1 trillion in aggregate household wealth, where less than 1% of the Valley’s population held 36% of the wealth. A culture measured in SF mansions valued at tens of millions, snow parties at Tahoe chalets, and yachts racing across the Pacific.

At their Carmel compound, Palantir execs threw weddings, AI founders did cold plunges, and a collector played host to generations of tech’s war-builders. The same moral detachment that allowed decades of engineers to shrug at their technology being turned on American protesters to deny Civil Rights now drives AI researchers to build surveillance systems for authoritarian regimes while retreating to $30 million-$50 million mansions in gated communities.

The problem expands beyond corporate structure or regulatory capture into a culture that sells out the technical-minded while insulating them from the consequences of their work through payouts. A father and son recently drove to the Mojave Desert in their airstream trailer to watch the Sequoia-backed startup Mach Industries test new high-tech missiles in the sweltering sands. It’s all just tinker toys for big booms, divorced from human consequences by layers of stock options and luxury real estate.

When I used to watch howitzers practice on retired machinery down range, I never thought decades later it would be something used for corporate meetups around beers and campfires.

Breaking Cycles of Detachment

The Silicon Valley surveillance subculture is of course corporate greed and regulatory failure, yet it’s also about a fundamental cultural inability to learn from history.

The same shortsighted thinking that led to nuclear proliferation, missile technology transfers, and arms dealing debacles has now been applied to the digital realm, but this time with a culture that’s even more divorced from consequences.

Despite being a high-priced technological failure for the US military, Igloo White was pivoted into the bedrock of border surveillance that’s ongoing today. The engineers who built were simply building expensive technology they hoped would make them wealthy, measured by their ability to afford 13,421-square-foot mansions with six bedrooms and guest cottages.

The pattern is depressingly familiar: develop technology for security purposes, sell it to the highest bidder regardless of consequences, use the profits to insulate yourself from those consequences, express shock when it’s used against you, then repeat the cycle by pitching sales for the next generation of weapons.

Until we acknowledge surveillance technology is like weapons, and that the culture building it is fundamentally compromised by incentives misaligned, we’ll keep feeding this ouroboros. The radar engineers of WWII probably never calculated themselves in the formula that would threaten Allied aircraft. Today’s AI researchers, safely ensconced in their Atherton compounds, should take note: the surveillance state they’re building, will be monitoring them tomorrow, and sending their family into detention the day after.

“Everything was built on American tech,” said Valentin Weber, a researcher at the German Council on Foreign Relations who studied the use of U.S. tech by Chinese police. “China’s capability was close to zero.”

Imagine reading that the Taliban, after being empowered and armed by the U.S. military, are shooting down American military aircraft. Oh, wait…

But will they ever care as their plumped stock options are vesting and the Tahoe chalet reports a bluebird chowder day?