I do not know the entirety of the terain and would have to study a topographic map. that is an estimate. There are roughly 2000 miles of border, therefore the maximum distance to secure is 2000 miles.
The human terrain is far more critical, once you have done the map study. You have to rely on Iraqi's to do a lot of the screen/guard mission on the border. Therein lies a significant part of the leaking problem.
Perhaps not. In which case the tactics would have to be sold to politicians and citizens. Again, I have not said that it would be done and I think it probably won't be done
On what basis do you make this sale? Again, the current problem isn't the border, nor the much ballyhooed foreign fighters. The problem is predominantly internal. (That would be what the military call the Main Effort.)
No. But do you realize the situation? Extreme problems demand extreme solutions. The famous example is "
"Q: You have a suspect who you know for a fact has a child hidden somewhere in a chamber with limited air supply and who will die in a matter of hours. What do you do to make him talk
A: Anything you have to."
That classroom exercise in mental masturbation is a few orders of magnitude less complex than the political/military situation in Iraq, and is useless as an analogue.
Wow... well obviously you know everything because I can only give you estimates and you know the number. Let me check for you. Okay. The united states has at least 600 C-130's in current service, but that does not include the reserve or ones which are not directly involved in military operations. Plus there are quite a few mothballed in Scottsdale. I'm not sure how long a conversion process to AC-130 takes, but I know it has been done in under a month, although it would require some retooling. So if we are to estimate that there are roughly 1000 C-130s and if half could be used..
The C-130's primary mission is in theater logistics. Your conversion gambit is risisble, thanks for the laugh. The logistic mission is critical to shaping the mission you would try to achieve on the ground. Not all US forces are committed to Iraq, US Military has a global mission, still, no matter that the currently weighted effort is Iraq.
B-52's as CAS? Perhaps, with PGM loads. Other platforms are probably more cost effective, depending on how you structure the mission. Again, the air does you no good without a permissive RoE. I cannot emphasize that enough, that the RoE is politics driven, and without it your air cover can't be used to interdict the border, and, again, the border isn't the center of gravity. Not now, in January of 2007.
No... I do not know the number. However I am quite confident a large enough number of aircraft can be put together.
Uh, huh, and I agree, if you can convince anyone beyond a Hollywood script writer that the border is the Main Effort. I'd like to see you make the case for that to General Casey, Abizaid, or anyone else who has spent any time in Iraq, in the CENTCOM AOR, or in Afghanistan. (where similar but different border problems crop up with Pakistan.

)
And don't quote for me the current production rate. When you are in an extreme situation you make it happen, even if it requires using Treasury silver to make wire windings or to use old tank barrels to make bomb casings...
The US industrial base isn't capable of the surge you envision in the short term. Please check General Shoemaker's comments in the past four months about reconstitution of the Army's hardware. USAF and USN air assets are subject to similar resource and industrial capacity constraints.
If firebombing and using nukes were necessary to secure critical objectives and secure national security, then do you doubt we would do so?
If pigs had wings, would they want to fly in bad weather?
Again, the political conditions rule out that option. I will not say that makes me happy, but that is reality. I'd like to have all of CENTCOM's air assets for about a day and Sadr City as an
unconstrained target, a free fire zone, but that is as likely as a pig growing wings. OK, slightly more likely, for extremely small values of likely.
Need I remind you that there are over 4,000 nuclear weapons in the active stockpile and many more in the "enduring stockpile." They are there incase they are needed. We don't want to use them, but if it came down to it, we would.
In Iraq? To achieve what political end?
Once again you have shown that one of the solutions I propose to border security, all by itself would not get the job done. I have not proposed this. But rather have proposed it could be part of a much larger system, using aircraft, drones (yes I know we don't currently have enough), fences, manned and unmanned stations, indirect fire, electric fences, sensors, remote weapons.
You mentioned in your first come back to me the matter of expense. Do you understand how expensive that is, if your aim is to secure the border?
I do not know the force levels or the exact rules of engagement other than there is posted warning and possibly audio warnings. Short term or long term would depend primarily on how things progressed.
RoE mean, in this context, conditions under which you will or will not apply fires to a target, and what constitutes a valid and legal target.
This is the initial proposal.
It's a wet dream.
So lets finish here.... of the 7 steps I have proposed, you have managed to find that one of the 7, which has several possible proposed methods of working, cannot work with one of those methods.
I didn't waste my time on the other six, as, I don't have the emotional energy to address them. I didn't find them any better than your border proposal.
Furthermore, you have demonstrated that the proposal is not perfect and could probably not eliminate 100% of the problem.
We agree.

*Dons party had, tosses confetti*
Also, since this is not good politics, it clearly is not worth proposing or attempting to sell to politicians or even writing about in a forum online as a brainstorm of what needs to be done...
The brainstorms you seem to presume are not being done are done every effin day in the J8, and the J3, of the Pentagon, and in CENTCOM, and elsewhere.
DR