Logistics and Supply in 5th Generational Warfare
As we continue to study the fundamentals of war, I turn to one of the most fundamental of them, that of logistics and supply. Certainly, it's one of the less glamourous cogs in the war machine, but it is one of the most essential. If you run out of bullets, shells, or mortars, you can't fire your weapon. If you run out of food, you will lose efficiency and eventually starve to death, and if you run out of medicine or bandages, your troops die for lack of the essentials.
Very few think of logistics when they think of war, and modern "loggies" or supply specialists often complain that they do not get the appreciation they feel they deserve from their combat arms brethren. But consider this: Hitler and Napoleon both failed on Russia's Eastern Front due to thin supply lines and even ancient have spoken of "starving the enemy out." This is an old tactic in which you surround an enemy for an extended period of time, forcing them to exhaust their supplies and eventually surrender to avoid starvation.
With this in mind, let us turn to the 5th generational warfare in which we find ourselves. How would the elites try to defeat us through logistics? The Hurricane Helene disaster gives us some insight into a possible supply chokehold.
Absent the government, our countrymen have come together in amazing and compassionate ways to assist the affected through private donations and rescue flights.
One would think the feds would be grateful for the assistance, or at least let the volunteers operate unhindered. But FEMA has tried stop these kindhearted people from bringing these supplies through intimidation, rotor wash, and other suspect ways. It was almost as if FEMA had been taken over by enemy combatants and tried to choke the supplies, and thus the morale, of these mountain survivors and their assistants.
How else might they try to choke the supplies from people they do not like? What would this look like in the plains of Kansas? The deserts of Nevada? The coasts and the south?
It's truly anyone's guess, and because there are endless possibilities for supply chain headaches, I encourage my fellow countrymen to do at least some level of prepping, and perhaps coordinate with a few like-minded neighbors or farmers on what to do should shortages occur.
Very few think of logistics when they think of war, and modern "loggies" or supply specialists often complain that they do not get the appreciation they feel they deserve from their combat arms brethren. But consider this: Hitler and Napoleon both failed on Russia's Eastern Front due to thin supply lines and even ancient have spoken of "starving the enemy out." This is an old tactic in which you surround an enemy for an extended period of time, forcing them to exhaust their supplies and eventually surrender to avoid starvation.
With this in mind, let us turn to the 5th generational warfare in which we find ourselves. How would the elites try to defeat us through logistics? The Hurricane Helene disaster gives us some insight into a possible supply chokehold.
Absent the government, our countrymen have come together in amazing and compassionate ways to assist the affected through private donations and rescue flights.
One would think the feds would be grateful for the assistance, or at least let the volunteers operate unhindered. But FEMA has tried stop these kindhearted people from bringing these supplies through intimidation, rotor wash, and other suspect ways. It was almost as if FEMA had been taken over by enemy combatants and tried to choke the supplies, and thus the morale, of these mountain survivors and their assistants.
How else might they try to choke the supplies from people they do not like? What would this look like in the plains of Kansas? The deserts of Nevada? The coasts and the south?
It's truly anyone's guess, and because there are endless possibilities for supply chain headaches, I encourage my fellow countrymen to do at least some level of prepping, and perhaps coordinate with a few like-minded neighbors or farmers on what to do should shortages occur.
Published on November 01, 2024 12:01
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Tags:
logistics, self-preservation, supply, warfare
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You Can Only Do So Much
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