Monday, September 11, 2017

RAF Saxa Vord to Reopen

BBC Radio Shetland and Shetland News report that the British Ministry of Defence has confirmed that the Royal Air Force radar station at Saxa Vord shall be reopened. Readers of this blog may remember that I saw RAF Saxa Vord during my ill-fated geocaching adventure in the adjacent Hermaness wildlife refuge. As terrifying as that particular debacle ought to have been, I enjoy fond memories of looking across the little harbor to see the disused radar station.

I've lost track of the number of times that British interceptors have been scrambled to "escort" Russian military aircraft in the last eight or nine years. RAF Saxa Vord was disestablished in 2006, and the MoD cancelled the procurement of the BAE Systems Nimrod MRA4 maritime patrol aircraft in 2010. It stands to reason that with Russia flying sporadic bomber patrols adjacent to British air space, and generally attempting a post-Cold War strategic resurgence, the current coalition government's decision to reverse the Blair era decision to close RAF Saxa Vord makes strategic and economic sense.

I can't guarantee that the Shetland Ponies will refrain from comment on this topic in the coming days.

Sunday, September 10, 2017

A Scottish Twist on an American Wedding

Let me start this post by saying that I feel awful for having neglected this blog for the last couple of years. There's plenty of stuff of Scottish interest that could have been posted, and going forward, I hope to pick up the pace. First up: a post about a very special wedding. Ours!

In nine of the more than four hundred posts I've published to this blog, I've mentioned someone named "Lady Jaye". She and I "met" digitally before I left for Scotland, but didn't meet in person until I came home. In 2016, my dear friends at BBC Radio Orkney helped me to propose to her using their Friday request program(me) and a classic Proclaimers song that was featured in the phenomenal 2013 film Sunshine on Leith...


... and she said "Yes!", and we got married in her hometown in August. The crew at Radio Orkney did a follow-up interview with us the morning after the wedding, which ended up being retooled as a BBC Radio Scotland segment and making the BBC News website. In the words of Ron Burgundy, "That escalated quickly!" You can listen to that radio segment here, and check out the article here. Someone at the University of Aberdeen obviously caught wind of it, because we were also congratulated via the University's alumni relations Facebook page.

We're hoping to get to Scotland at some point in the foreseeable future. In the mean time, we're pretty thrilled to have added a bit of Scottish flair to our otherwise American wedding.

Saturday, March 25, 2017

One More Edition of the OHBC

Continuing on the theme of Scottish comedy, here are the last couple of clips of Gregor Fisher as Angus, presenter for the Outer Hebrides Broadcasting Corporation on Naked Video.



That's some first class Scottish comedy!

Monday, March 13, 2017

Reaction to the Proposal for Another Scottish Secession Referendum

  • BBC: Scottish independence: Nicola Sturgeon to seek second referendum
  • BBC: PM: SNP 'tunnel vision' over independence 'deeply regrettable'
  • UK Government for Scotland Facebook Page: The UK Government Response to the First Minister
  • Sky News: British public opposes second Scottish referendum - Sky Data poll

    I suspect that Scots get as frustrated with me commenting on Scottish politics as I get when folk in the United Kingdom comment on American politics. Even so, I find myself hard pressed to explain why the SNP is angling for another referendum. I may comment on it further in the coming weeks and months, or I may leave well enough alone; but it didn't seem right not to post a little something on this occasion.
  • Saturday, February 18, 2017

    More Scottish Comedy from the OHBC

    Continuing on the theme of Scottish comedy, here are more clips of Gregor Fisher as Angus, presenter for the Outer Hebrides Broadcasting Corporation on Naked Video.


    There's one more installment yet to come.

    Thursday, January 19, 2017

    Things I Missed in Graduate School

    In the three years since I finished grad school, I've discovered a veritable treasure trove of resources that would have been extremely valuable during grad school. Their absence obviously didn't handicap me, as I graduated with the highest possible honors. However, as I continue in various strategic efforts, many of them will be valuable. So, what have I found?

    I really haven't found anything that would have been significantly valuable in Strategic Theory, save perhaps for a few podcasts that might have offered some quotes or concepts. (Notably, Professor Lawrence Freedman's 2014 lecture On Strategy and Strategists. Mostly, I wish that I'd spent a bit more time reading - specifically, Strategy in the Contemporary World, On War, and The History of the Peloponnesian War. C'est la vie.

    I've discovered several items that would have been helpful for my course in Strategic Intelligence, though the most useful tool for that course really would have been a ten or fifteen minute discussion of how E wanted term papers formatted. Did you know that the CIA has a FOIA release website? That would have been useful knowledge. Did you know that the British National Archives has released a series of annual podcasts discussing releases from both the Security Service (MI5) and the Secret Intelligence Service (SIS/MI6)? Not that I'm ever bereft of podcasts, but those could have been pretty valuable. I had no shortage of books, but it would have been nice to have known earlier than late 2013 that Intelligence Power in Peace and War was available as a PDF!

    For Strategic Nuclear Doctrine, Critical Mass did a fantastic job of assigning readings that were publicly available as PDFs, and I've linked to the bulk of those. The one item that would have been really useful was Michael Quinlan's slim volume on nuclear strategy, which was extremely useful and extremely succinct (as compared to Professor Freedman's tome on nuclear strategy, which is one of the most difficult books I've ever read). Quinlan's monograph is available from RUSI as a PDF. When CN Sister was working on her SND term paper, she attempted (too late, as it turned out) to check Quinlan's book out from the Hideous Glass Cube, but the HGC - a library - didn't keep all of its books there, so she was out of luck. This PDF would have been a great asset, but fortunately, I'd read it earlier. Global Security Issues dealt largely with the news and current events. I'd also read several relevant books from The Director's prescribed reading list. I haven't really found anything that I didn't have at the time that I wish I had.

    Which brings us to...

    The Dissertation! Several valuable resources about the Dhofar Rebellion have been released since my dissertation was submitted, but I've discovered many sources since August 2013. As with the rest of the course, the proposition that these stray items would have improved my final grade is a non-starter - I scored a coveted 19, which means that I literally couldn't have done any better. I'm still curious, though, about how my dissertation might have been different had I known about some of these resources. The Defense Technical Information Center has a handful of papers that discuss Dhofar either in passing or in depth. I also discovered the National Security Archive and their cache of more than four hundred relevant diplomatic cables, which I've written about elsewhere. While researching a single data point - Cuban troops advising the adoo in South Yemen - I also discovered three documents from the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library and Museum: a memorandum, a letter, and a Q&A about a 1975 meeting between Sultan Qaboos and President Ford. I absolutely would have included more information about the various foreign alliances if I'd had that information. Three other resources that I would have used for either my dissertation, Strategic Theory, or both were the digital copies of The Bear Went Over the Mountain: Soviet Combat Tactics in Afghanistan, The Other Side of the Mountain: Mujahideen Tactics in the Soviet-Afghan War, and Insurgent Tactics in Southern Afghanistan 2005-2008. Finally, I found a pretty decent op-ed in The Guardian, published just a few months before my arrival in Aberdeen, entitled Ten things I wish I'd known before starting my dissertation; it could have been helpful for calming some of my nerves, though I think that the record shows that I was pretty confident throughout the process.

    It's tempting to think of how I could have improved my experience, if not the bulk of my scores, had I possessed these resources prior to 2016/'17. Ultimately, though, I'm not sure that I would have changed much about how that adventure played out.

    Wednesday, January 4, 2017

    Scottish Comedy from the OHBC

    Continuing on the theme of Scottish comedy, I've never actually seen an episode of Naked Video. However, a couple of years ago, I accidentally found some clips of Gregor Fisher (whom some of you may remember as Billy Mack's manager from the 2003 film Love Actually. Here are a couple of clips of Fisher as Angus, the presenter for the Outer Hebrides Broadcasting Corporation.


    There'll be more of that to come. I didn't make the trek out to the Hebrides - inner or outer - while I was in Scotland. The impression I get from both this comedy, and a segment on the BBC Two program(me) Coast, the Outer Hebrides are pretty isolated... Like, Shetland isolated!

    Tuesday, December 13, 2016

    Separated by a Common Language: Orcadian Dialect Edition, Part 4

    Last year, I posted an entire season worth of Whassigo words from the beloved Orkney evening program(me). Many months late, I'm at it again with the words from the '15/'16 Whassigo season. This time, I kept track of the words as the episodes were released during BBC Radio Orkney's winter season, but I'm extremely late in posting them - as evidenced by the fact that there have already been three installments this season. And so, this latest edition of Separated by a Common Language.

    October 2015
  • "koosed" - to exchange, swap, or barter
  • "hoolican" - a shaggy, repulsive sheep
  • "bayow" - a primitive scythe
  • "nutheran" - humming or singing
  • "tyno" - rod or wire for drying fish
  • "tribble" - to touch things with one's fingers; to grope

    November 2015
  • "letto" - an insignificant item of very little value
  • "karr" - a big, strong man
  • "millens" - particulate or fine bits of stoor, e.g., in the bottom of a purse or handbag
  • "scumfaced" - old Scots word meaning disgusted, related to scunnard (scunnered?)
  • "snellie" - a coot (bird?), e.g., a mark that looks like it was made by a snail
  • "ill-fossered" - untidy or slovenly

    December 2015
  • "dagsy" - a bow-legged person
  • "noler" - a snub (Scottish in origin)
  • "feich" - an old Norse word meaning expression of disgust, particularly at a bad smell
  • "gramowrie" - a witch's power, old Scots word derived from French
  • "irpid" - from a Faroese word meaning spiteful or cantankerous
  • "yam" - an old type of Orkney potato

    January 2016
  • "transeerin" - a serious fall from a horse
  • "droose" - a Sanday word meaning to rush forth, originally Norwegian
  • "gamsmyre" - total chaos or pandaemonium
  • "lowter" - a lump of gutter
  • "nowtan" - muttering in an ill-tempered manner, growling or grumbling
  • "pilk" - a small, light-built boy

    February 2016
  • "ab" - a hindrance or impediment
  • "nivvle" - an old Norse word meaning to grip something hard
  • "skarps" - a patch of poor, rocky ground
  • "raam" - someone who is speaking nonsense or rambling incoherently
  • "koofie" - a shellfish, particularly large breeds of clam
  • "lovanentie" - an exclamation equivalent to "mercy me", corrupted from the phrase "Lord, defend me"

    March 2016
  • "skelly-wheeter" - an emaciated beast
  • "toosy" - a state of dishevelment
  • "slunky" - a word describing a long and lean person
  • "maelskorn" - a light, unsatisfying meal
  • "metting" - a single ear of corn; a handful or small amount of anything precious; a tea leaf
  • "krammy" - heavy, drizzly weather
  • "koukan" - swallowing greedily, from an old Norse word

    "April" 2016
  • "clivvo" - a steep road with high banks on the side
  • "skiggan" - from the Norse "skiggar", meaning bright and clean (repeat from February 2015)
  • "loba" - old, coarse grass on bog land
  • "drush" - a great number/amount of something
  • "kony" - strong vegetation, e.g., for making a basket or rope
  • "haffhand" - a concubine or mistress

    I'll try to make sure that the next installment of this particular series gets posted in April of May of 2017, rather than December. Many apologies!