Coalition deploys US Navy’s lethal Swiss Army Knife to send a message to Iran and China

Biden’s next move in the Red Sea wars is critical. If we “go to war” in the Mideast, it could be over Houthi hits on Red Sea shipping. “Regarding the Houthis, these attacks are reckless, dangerous, and they violate international law,” Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin said at a press conference in Israel on December 18.

Austin later announced Operation Prosperity Guardian, calling it an important new multinational initiative to deal with the Houthi attacks. Warships from Britain, France, Japan and other nations were already in the Red Sea. It just takes American leadership to ramp up naval capabilities. 

It’s a mess out there. The Houthis have been launching drones, missiles and hijackers against Red Sea ships for two months, and a notorious Iranian spy ship is helping them. No wonder major shippers Maersk, MSC, Hapag-Lloyd and other commercial cargo carriers paused their Red Sea traffic.

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Now BP won’t send its oil tankers into the Red Sea. Oil prices have jumped up. That’s a sad tactical victory for the Houthi rebels of Yemen and their masterminds in Iran.

Details are light. But one thing’s for certain. Led by the U.S. Navy’s Fifth Fleet, America and its allies now have enough firepower in and around the Red Sea to shut down Houthi attacks.

At the center of the action are the U.S. Navy’s Aegis guided-missile destroyers, which the Navy calls DDGs.

You know the guided-missile destroyer USS Carney started nabbing Houthi drones and rockets back in October. U.S. Army Gen. Michael Erik Kurilla, who is commander, United States Central Command, was so impressed that he helicoptered out to the Carney last week to deliver 1,000 pounds of barbeque for the crew. They promptly shot down another 14 Houthi drones on Saturday.

Today’s destroyers are a far cry from the valiant “tin cans” of World War II. The phenomenal Aegis combat system was originally designed to shield aircraft carriers in Cold War days. In 1991, the first Aegis destroyer, DDG-51 USS Arleigh Burke, put to sea.

The Burke-class DDGs are heavily armed and have great sea-keeping abilities in rough seas. The U.S. Navy has 70 DDGs in the fleet now, and 17 more under construction or on contract. Simply put, these guided-missile destroyers and their crews are the heart of the Navy. 

The Aegis SPY-1 radar family on board these destroyers can track from the horizon to more than 100 miles away and network with other sensors. Picture sailors in ball caps and those large, pale green earphones sitting in the blue light of the windowless combat control center deep within the ship.

With Aegis, those sailors can take on anything from a small Houthi drone to a low-flying cruise missile to an intermediate-range ballistic missile. Of course, the DDGs can also carry Tomahawk missiles for precision land attack, launch anti-ship missiles, and go after enemy submarines, too. Pretty much your lethal Swiss Army Knife of naval warfare.

So far, the Houthis, who are not great naval tacticians, have only managed a few drones at a time. Rest assured, the Aegis destroyers can handle more. Their combination of missiles and guns and electronic countermeasures would be lethal against bigger drone swarms, too. 

Very soon, shipboard lasers will greatly increase firing capacity. The Navy installed the first Helios laser weapon on an Aegis destroyer back in 2022. Helios stands for High-Energy Laser with Integrated Optical Dazzler and Surveillance.

Basically, the laser weapon can fry guidance and control, turning a drone into a blind, charred Frisbee. (Yes, the Navy has figured out how to shoot 60 Kilowatt lasers in the damp marine environment. Navy lasers have been in operational test almost 10 years.)

Remember the Aegis destroyers also carry the very precise Tomahawk missile, perfect for striking Houthi military targets in Yemen.

Here’s the kicker. Biden would be wise to let our U.S. Navy send a message to Iran – and to China.

Oh yes, the Chinese are watching our Navy at work in the Red Sea. And not just from Beijing. Right now, several Chinese warships of an “anti-piracy task force” are perched near the Red Sea gateway at Bab el-Mandeb Strait, not far from the U.S. Navy carrier strike group USS Eisenhower. You can bet they are sucking up data on U.S. naval operations. 

The tactics being used by the DDGs against the Houthis and their Iranian overlords tell us a lot about the U.S. Navy’s ability to cope with similar mischief from China in the Pacific. 

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Let’s think ahead. If the Houthis can thwart international shipping in the Red Sea, just imagine what China’s navy can do near its own coast. Close to 100,000 vessels transit the Straits of Malacca each year, dwarfing the 17,000 transits via the Bab El Mandeb. China needs to see the U.S. and allies deliver a sharp message: shutting down maritime commerce is not OK. 

China’s navy is bigger than ours. War games in the Pacific always come down to controlling the sea lane approaches to China. However, the U.S. Navy DDGs can dominate missile defense and offensive strike warfare at sea. They are gaining valuable live fire experience – something China’s “People’s Liberation” navy does not have, I’m glad to say. 

Biden is taking a risk if he does not act against the spiraling threat to freedom of the seas. Back in 1988, President Ronald Reagan launched Operation Praying Mantis and took out significant Iranian naval capability in the Persian Gulf. It worked. Iran backed down from its sea mining and other reckless naval operations.

Now China and Iran are both waiting to see what the U.S. Navy and allies will do. Here’s Biden’s chance to send a message that will reverberate from the Red Sea to the Pacific.

Get the barbecue ready. 

LICK HERE FOR MORE REBECCA GRANT

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Army sends letter to troops dismissed for refusing COVID vaccine amid military's recruitment woes

The U.S. Army sent a letter to former service members dismissed for refusing the COVID-19 vaccine, informing them they can request corrections of their discharge records, as the military branch reportedly struggles with recruitment three years after the onset of the pandemic. 

The letter, which gained traction on social media, was addressed to former service members and notified of “new Army guidance regarding the correction of military records for former members of the Army following the rescission of the COVID-19 vaccination requirement.” 

It states, “as a result of the rescission of all current COVID-19 vaccination requirements, former Soldiers who were involuntarily separated for refusal to receive the COVID-19 vaccination may request a correction of their military records from either or both the Army Discharge Review Board (ADRB) or the Army Board for Correction of Military Records (ABCMR).” 

The letter, signed by Brigadier General Hope C. Rampy, of the U.S. Army Director of the Military Personnel Management Office of the Deputy Chief of Staff, goes on to link to three forms where “individuals can request a correction to military personnel records, including regarding the characterization of discharge.” 

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“Individuals who desire to apply to return to service should contact their local Army, US Army Reserve (USAR) or Army National Guard (ARNG) recruiter for more information,” it concludes.

An Army spokesperson on Sunday confirmed the authenticity of the letter to Fox News Digital. 

The spokesperson said the letter, dated November 1, does not explicitly ask former Army members dismissed for refusing the COVID-19 vaccine to return to service. 

The Army provided additional information on Monday.

“As part of the overall COVID mandate recession process mandated by Congress, the Army mailed the letters following Veterans Day weekend to approximately 1,900 individuals who had previously been separated for refusal to obey the mandatory COVID vaccination order,” Army spokesperson Lt. Col. Ruth Castro told Fox News Digital in an emailed statement Monday.

“The letter provides information to former servicemembers on how to request a correction of their military records,” Castro added. 

The Instagram accounts @analyzeeducate and @northernprovisions, jointly shared a copy of the letter to their combined hundreds of thousands of followers on Saturday.

“The US Army has sent letters to soldiers that were discharged for refusing to take the COVID-19 vaccine, offering to correct their records. Most, if not all, of the soldiers that were kicked out for not getting the vaccine were given a discharge that was other than honorable,” the post says. “The letter indicates that the Army is hoping these soldiers will apply to return to service.”

“The military in general has been going through a major recruiting crisis for the past two years. For both FY2022 and 2023, only the Marine Corps and the Space Force met or exceeded their recruitment goals. The Army, Navy, and Air Force all missed their targets by a long shot,” the accounts go on to say.

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“The size of the active duty Army has shrunk from 485k in 2021 to 452k right now,” the post added. “This is the smallest active duty Army since 1940. In 2022, they missed their recruitment goal by 15,000 soldiers. This crisis has necessitated changes made to policy, including the removal of a policy that mandated recruits have a high school diploma or GED equivalent. Although, after a lot of backlash that policy was quickly reinstated. Around 8,000 soldiers were kicked out for not getting the vaccine, which is a lot even if you don’t take the context of the recruiting crisis into account. The letters that were sent out have been verified by the Army as well.”

On Oct. 3, the U.S. Army announced a transformation of its recruiting enterprise, stressing how “the armed forces facing the most challenging recruiting environment in a generation.” 

At a press conference from the Pentagon, Secretary of the Army Christine Wormuth and Chief of Staff of the Army Randy George detailed sweeping changes in how the Army will identify and recruit talent by expanding focus past high schoolers to a larger share of the youth labor market and create “an increasingly permanent and specialized talent acquisition workforce.” 

They said the Army expects to have ended fiscal year 2023 with nearly 55,000 recruiting contracts, including roughly 4,600 for the Army’s Delayed Entry Program – recruits who will ship in the 2024 fiscal year. As a result, the Army said it will meet its end-strength goal of 452,000 for active-duty soldiers.

“The competition for talented Americans is fierce, and it is fundamentally different than it was 50 or even 20 years ago,” Wormuth said. 

Task and Purpose noted the Army separated about 1,900 active duty service members for refusing the COVID-19 vaccine during the nearly year-and-a-half it was mandatory. 

Regarding recruitment woes, the outlet also cited a July 2022 memo from the Department of the Army stating that “America’s military faces the most challenging recruiting environment since the All-Volunteer Force was established in 1973, driven in part by the post-COVID labor market, intense competition with the private sector, and a declining number of young Americans interested in uniformed service.” The memo said, “currently, only 23 percent of 17- to 24-year-old Americans are fully qualified to serve.”

Citing data provided by the military branches, CNN reported in October that only 43 of the more than 8,000 U.S. service members discharged from the military for refusing to be vaccinated against COVID-19 have sought to rejoin eight months after the vaccine mandate was officially repealed. 

Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin officially rescinded the COVID-19 vaccination order for service members on Jan. 10, 2023. 

Austin had issued a memo on Aug. 24, 2021, requiring service members to be vaccinated against COVID-19. According to Task and Purpose, thousands of troops unsuccessfully sought religious exemptions from the inoculation, including 8,945 soldiers, 10,800 airmen and guardians, 4,172 sailors, and 3,717 Marines.

Army sergeant indicted for murder in 2020 Austin riot shooting pleads self-defense: police investigator agrees

Violent protests, riots, and killings, in the name of the Black Lives Matter movement erupted across the country in the summer of 2020 around the time Army Sergeant Daniel Perry turned a corner in Austin, Texas and found himself surrounded by an angry mob of protesters sparking an encounter that has him facing life in prison.