Midrats - podcast cover

Midrats

Navy Milbloggers Sal from "CDR Salamander" and EagleOne from "EagleSpeak" discuss leading issues and developments for the Navy, Marine Corps, Coast Guard and related national security issues.
Last refreshed:
Follow this podcast in the Metacast mobile app to refresh it and see new episodes.
Download Metacast podcast app
Podcasts are better in Metacast mobile app
Don't just listen to podcasts. Learn from them with transcripts, summaries, and chapters for every episode. Skim, search, and bookmark insights. Learn more

Episodes

Episode 236: Best of Where are the Carriers

"Where are the Carriers?" Whenever the expected unexpected happens on the globe, that is the question that is often asked first. As our nation also faces one of its greatest budget crisis - it is also one that the budget cutters are asking as well. What is the status of our carrier force as we approach 2012 and what possible directions are we heading? Is the carrier more important in supporting our national strategy than it used to be, or less? Are we buying the right kind of systems to go on an...

Jul 13, 201450 min

Episode 235: Best of "Unbroken" and the Intrepid Project

Louis Zamperini passes away earlier this week, so I can see of no better best of show for the July 4th weekend. This nation has been served by those who come home, and those who never make it back. Some have had their stories preserved and celebrated within living memory, some are almost unknown. This weeks episode will cover both sides of our military experience. For the first half hour our guest will be best selling author Laura Hillenbrand to talk about her latest book Unbroken; an incredible...

Jul 06, 20141 hr 1 min

Episode 234: Asking the right questions to build the right leaders

Is the profession of arms, as the Navy believes it is, primarily a technical job for officers - or is it something else? To create the cadre of leaders one needs, do you train them as empty vessels that one only needs to fill up with what you want or an empty checklist to complete - or do you train them by helping them bring out their ability to lead and make decisions through informed critical thinking? Our guest for the full hour to discuss this and more will be Major Matt Cavanaugh, USA. Matt...

Jun 29, 20141 hr 3 min

Episode 233: Global Combat Fleets' Development With Eric Wertheim

From the USA, Europe, Russia, to the South China Sea, nations continue to signal where their priories are by what type of fleet they are building. What capabilities are they expanding, and what capabilities are they letting drift away? To discuss this and more for the full hour will be returning guest Eric Wertheim. Eric is a defense consultant, columnist and author specializing in naval and maritime issues. He was named to the helm of the internationally acknowledged, one volume Naval Institute...

Jun 22, 20141 hr 6 min

Episode 232: Father's Day Best of With Stephen Rodrick

In case you missed it the first time, especially for those whose fathers served in uniform, you owe it to yourself to listen to our interview with Stephen Rodrick about his book, The Magical Stranger: A Son's Journey into His Father's Life. You will really enjoy the interview, and I cannot recommend the book any greater. Buy it. Rodrick is a contributing writer for The New York Times Magazine and a contributing editor for Men's Journal. He has also written for New York, Rolling Stone, GQ, The Ne...

Jun 15, 201433 min

Episode 231: Best of Journalism at War

From November of 2011: They share the hazards, smell the smells; all that is needed so that those at home may understand what their countrymen are doing in the far reaches of the world on their behalf. The best know that to tell a story, you have to be in it. Sometimes, the story catches up with them. Our guest for the full hour will be Kimberly Dozier, foreign correspondent for CBS News Radio specializing in the Middle East from the disputed territories of Israel to the war in Afghanistan and t...

Jun 08, 201459 min

Episode 230: Summer Kickoff Free For All

Now that Summer is on the way and that there are more national security issues being produced from the South China Sea to the Dardanelles than can be consumed locally - that sounds like the perfect time for Sal from CDR Salamander and EagleOne from EagleSpeak to hold a Midrats "open house." A little bit of a potpourri of what we find of interest from the latest news,to a chance for you to call in or ask via the live chat room the questions and issues you'd like to to discuss. Join us this Sunday...

Jun 01, 20141 hr 1 min

Episode 229: Memorial Day Weekend Best of With Zumwalt and Grant

This Memorial Day Weekend we are reaching back to a 2010 episode where we look back at the Vietnam War and then look forward to the next decade's Fleet options for our Navy. 50 years in 1 hour. Our guests will be retired Marine Corps Lieutenant Colonel J.G. Zumwalt and journalist Greg Grant. Lt. Col. James Zumwalt is a retired Marine infantry officer who served in the Vietnam war, the 1989 intervention into Panama, and Desert Storm. He is an author, speaker and business executive, and currently ...

May 25, 20141 hr

Episode 228: A US Military Intellectually Geared for Defeat?

Since WWII, have we developed an officer corps that has not only developed a record of defeat, but has become comfortable with it? Is our military leadership structurally unsound? In his recent article, An Officer Corps That Can’t Score, author William S. Lind makes a scathing inditement of the officer corp of the United States in from the structure is works in, to its cultural and intellectual habits. We will have the author with us for the full hour to discuss this and more about what problem ...

May 18, 20141 hr 3 min

Episode 227: Mother's Day Best of with Jeannette Haynie and Robyn Roche-Paull

For the career minded Naval professional, to have a chance for the greatest advancement and promotion, you have to push and push hard. The reputation you build in your first 10 years sets the tone for the rest. Except for very rare exceptions, there are no second chances. There are no pauses, one iffy set of orders, one poorly timed FITREP, and you are on an off-ramp. You must work harder, you must sacrifice, and if you are to have a family young, you need a very strong support structure. For me...

May 11, 201457 min

Episode 226: Quo vadis Putin's Novorossiya, with Dr. Dmitry Gorenburg

So far in 2014, the big lesson is what people have known for centuries; in Eurasia you cannot ignore Russia. The cliché is accurate, Russia is never as weak or as strong as she seems. What do the developments so far mean not just for Ukraine, but for all the former Soviet Republics, slumbering Western Europe and Russia's near abroad? To discuss this and more, for the full hour we will have returning guest Dr. Dmitry Gorenburg, Senior Analyst, CNA Strategic Studies, an Associate at Harvard’s Davi...

May 04, 20141 hr 4 min

Episode 225: The Long War Becomes a Teenager, with Bill Roggio

It hasn't gone anywhere, the Long War, that is. People may be suffering whiplash having to look back to Europe in the middle of a Pacific pivot, and the Arab spring wilted in to extremism and bloodshed - but the war against the West still goes on from lone wolf attacks at home, to drone strikes across the swath of southwest, south, and central Asia. Coming back to Midrats for the full hour to discuss this and more will be Bill Roggio, senior fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies. B...

Apr 27, 20141 hr 4 min

Episode 224: Best of Russia

A lot of people were surprised when Russia came back on stage this year - but not Midrats listeners. This Easter, let's go back 100 episodes to our interview with Midrats resident Russia go-to-guy, Dmitry Gorenburg. Here were the questions we were trying to answer two years ago; While the news seems to be all around Russia from the rise of China, the incredible success of the Baltic states, Afghanistan and Central Asian Republics, to the European edge of the "near abroad" - Russia continues to b...

Apr 20, 201459 min

Episode 223: 12 Carriers and 3 Hubs with Bryan McGrath

"Where are the carriers?" Regardless of the writing, talking, and pontificating about "Why the carriers?" - when there is a real world crisis - leaders still ask, "Where are the carriers." Since we waived the requirement for a floor of 11, we have drifted to the new normal of 10 without dedicated additional funding. 10 isn't even an accurate number. With one undergoing nuclear refueling - you really have 9. Knowing what it takes to deploy, train, maintenance and preparing to train for deployment...

Apr 13, 20141 hr 6 min

Episode 222: USS PONCE (AFSB(I)-15) Lessons with CAPT Jon P. Rogers, USN

As with most concepts and good ideas, you really don't know what you need and how you need to do it until you put Sailors to task and head to sea. The idea of an Afloat Forward Staging Base has, in a variety of forms, been a regular part of naval operations arguably for centuries under different names and with different equipment. What about the 21st Century? More than just a story about the use and utility of the AFSB concept, the story of the USS PONCE is larger than that - it also has a lot t...

Apr 06, 20141 hr 3 min

Episode 221: Officer Retention with VADM Bill Moran & CDR Guy Snodgrass

This Sunday, join our guests Vice Admiral Bill Moran, USN, Navy Chief of Naval Personnel, and Commander Guy Snodgrass, USN, Prospective Executive Officer of Strike Fighter Squadron ONE NINE FIVE, in a discussion of the challenges in officer retention that is facing our Navy. As over a decade of major combat operations ashore winds down, economic & budgetary stresses grow on defense spending, a strategic re-alignment combined with a generational change are coming together in a perfect storm o...

Mar 30, 20141 hr 6 min

Episode 220: CNO's Rapid Innovation Cell

The Chief of Naval Operation's Rapid Innovation Cell (CRIC) was established in 2012 in order to provide junior leaders with venue to identify and rapidly field emerging technologies that they see needed in the Fleet. Who is in the CRIC, how do they get there, and what are some of the projects they have been working on? Join us this Sunday for the full hour with Commander Ben Salazar, USN, Director of Innovation (N93) with CRIC, along with other members of his team.

Mar 23, 20141 hr 4 min

Episode 219: The USMC Post-QDR with Dakota Wood

With the new defense budget out, new QDR out, the withdraw of maneuver forces from Afghanistan, rising interest in INDO-PAC operations, and a resurgent Russia: after over a decade of COIN and land wars in Southwest and Central Asia - what is the status of the United States Marine Corps? Materially, intellectually, and culturally - is the USMC set up to move best towards the expected challenges and missions? Our guest for the full hour will be Dakota L. Wood, Lt Col, USMC (Ret.), Senior Research ...

Mar 16, 20141 hr 4 min

Episode 218: Abolishing of the USAF, with Robert M. Farley

In concept, execution, and ability to effectively provide its part of the national defense infrastructure, has a separate Air Force served this nation well, and does it make sense to keep it a separate service. Our guest this week makes the case that the experiment in a separate US Air Force is over, and it has failed. Though we need airpower, we don't need a separate service to provide it. With us for the full hour will be Professor Robert M. Farley, PhD, author of the book being released 11 Ma...

Mar 09, 20141 hr 1 min

Episode 217: Best of the Journalist at War

Revisiting a show from NOV 2011, They share the hazards, smell the smells; all that is needed so that those at home may understand what their countrymen are doing in the far reaches of the world on their behalf. The best know that to tell a story, you have to be in it. Sometimes, the story catches up with them. Our guest for the full hour will be Kimberly Dozier, foreign correspondent for CBS News Radio specializing in the Middle East from the disputed territories of Israel to the war in Afghani...

Mar 02, 20141 hr 59 min

Episode 216: Maritime Strategy and Control of the Seas with Seth Cropsey

What direction do we need to go for our next maritime strategy? Using he recent article, Control of the Seas, as our starting point, our guest for the full hour will be Seth Cropsey, Senior Fellow and director of Hudson Institute's Center for American Seapower. He served in government at the Defense Department as Assistant to the SECDEF Caspar Weinberger and then as Deputy Undersecretary of the Navy in the Reagan & Bush administrations, where he was responsible for the Navy’s position on eff...

Feb 23, 20141 hr 3 min

Episode 215: February Free For All

Nothing like some time snowed in to focus the mind. Join us this Sunday from 5-6pm as we cover the maritime angle from China to shipbuilding to Cyber with a Midrats free for all. Have a topic you wished we would cover? Well, the phone lines are open.

Feb 16, 20141 hr 6 min

Episode 214: Best of the Hill Staffer

When you send your elected representative to Washington DC, you are not just sending one person. For each Congressman and Senator - there is a cadre of staffers that makes it happen. Bills do not sprout out of the heads of politicians - no - they are carefully crafted, often over years, by the people you see in the background on C-Span. Politicians cannot and do not read source documentation all that much, they are too busy - others do that for them and give them the Executive Summary. Who are t...

Feb 09, 20141 hr

Episode 213: Best of Skippy-San on Japan, and Bob Taylor's 13XX

For those who don't care about Football or get all grumpy if they don't get enough of their Midrats, we're heading back to early in our second year and visit our old friend. In the small world of the Navy blogosphere, when you think of Japan, one name should immediately come to mind; Skippy-san of the blog FarEastCynic. Though most know Skippy by his "interesting" perspective on some of the "interesting" parts of life - what he also has is a good feel for the Japanese. Join EagleOne and Sal as t...

Feb 02, 201459 min

Episode 212: NATO in Afghanistan with Stephen M. Saideman

Lost to many whose news sources in the USA consists of the major newspapers and the standard networks, for most of the last dozen+ years, the conflict in Afghanistan has not been a USA-Centric battle; it has been a NATO run operation. When the Commander of the International Security Assistance Force has been an American 4-star, the visuals can be misleading. For most of the last decade, American forces were dominate in only one region of Afghanistan, the east. Other NATO nations from Italy/Spain...

Jan 26, 20141 hr 2 min

Episode 211: 4th Anniversary Free For All

That's right ... Midrats has been on the air four years. This week we aren't having guests, just the two hosts and any listeners who want to take the opportunity to call in or throw a question or topic to us in the chat room. Breaking news, regular topics, or whatever you pull out of your seabag - we're going to cove it Green range, as it were.

Jan 19, 20141 hr 2 min

Episode 210: John Kuehn & Joint Operations from Cape Fear to the South China Sea

Though nations for thousands of years have been wrestling with the challenge of Joint operations, we're still trying to get it right. As an island nation with significant global interests ashore, the USA has a rich history of doing Joint right, and blind parochialism as well. Using this as a starting point, this Sunday for the full hour we will have returning guest, John Kheun. Dr. John T. Kuehn is the General William Stofft Chair for Historical Research at the U.S. Army Command and General Staf...

Jan 12, 20141 hr 5 min

Episode 209: Kenya and East Africa with Alexander Martin

Many continue to focus on the "Pacific Pivot" and/or IndoPac, but the news seems to keep finding its way back to Africa. This Sunday we're going to leave IndoPac and all that in order to focus the full hour discussing the eastern part of Africa with a returning guest Alex Martin who will give us a first hand report from a personal and professional perspective. Alex graduated with distinction from the U.S. Naval Academy and went on to lead infantry, reconnaissance and special operations units in ...

Jan 05, 20141 hr 2 min

Episode 208: Best of the General Board

Though over three years old, this topic remains at the top of the list of importance and if you are a new listener to Midrats and haven't listened to it yet - this is required listening. If you caught it in a previous year, then it is well worth a relisten. Look at the performance of the US Navy in World War II - those ships came in the shipbuilding programs of the 1920s & 1930s. At a time with no computers or modern communication equipment - and working through the naval treaty limitations ...

Dec 29, 201358 min

Episode 206: Small Ships, Flotillas & the Requirements of Naval Supremacy

For a maritime power with global requirements, what is the role of the small ship in times of peace and war? What are the tradeoffs between quantity and capability, size and range, survivability and affordable? Does the US Navy need a high-low mix; or a Strike Group-Flotilla mix? Where do our national requirements influence how we build our Fleet vs. the process other nations build theirs? Do we have a sustainable path towards a balanced Fleet, or are we sailing on based on outdated charts? To d...

Dec 15, 20131 hr 5 min
For the best experience, listen in Metacast app for iOS or Android