Disappointment in USNI's tendentious response to recent item on aircraft carriers


Last
week some of you may have noticed that I posted an item criticizing Proceedings, the journal of the U.S.
Naval Institute, for running an article by an
admiral about how great carriers are, without taking note of all the arguments
made recently by
others about how carriers may be the battleships of the 21st century -- that
is, looking quite powerful but actually being quite vulnerable, and incredibly
expensive to build, equip, and operate.



On
the day the item ran, Tuesday, I gave Proceedings's
editor a heads-up about the item. Since then, I have received a series of
complaints and accusations from the journal's publisher and from a retired
admiral who is on the USNI board. I invited them to send along a response that
I promised to post promptly. Instead, they escalated and started complaining to
my editors. "Admiral Timothy
J. Keating, USN (Ret.) is a director of the U.S. Naval Institute, and asked
that we forward his letter to the editor based on his reaction to a recent Tom
Ricks post on Best Defense," wrote Bill Miller, the
publisher. "He submitted a comment to the original post that was not
published, quite astonishing considering that Ricks railed about one-sided
debates in that post." 



Two
points here that long-time readers know are true:




I
welcome dissenting responses, and run lots of them. Indeed, last week I
repeatedly asked the USNI people to send me a response. They did not.




I
have no control over comments on this blog, and don't want to. As I have said
before, I am a First Amendment fundamentalist, and I also think that editing out
offensive material only helps the offending parties look better. Thus I don't
see comments before they are posted. I see them when you do.



Yet the USNI guys persist in believing and
asserting that I somehow suppressed Admiral Keating's comment. Indeed, Admiral
Keating this morning sent me an e-mail that seems to me to accuse me of quashing
it and then lying about it: "We had no opportunity to respond in a
timely fashion. I submitted my post within a day, as is reflected in the blog
comment queue. You say you didn't receive my post. I would say that bears a
closer look."



Normally I wouldn't
mention all this behind the scenes wrangling, but Keating's questioning of my
integrity pissed me off. I think he probably screwed up posting his comment and
is now are trying to pin that on me. But even if he is technologically
challenged, that shouldn't have been a problem, because last week I repeatedly
asked Miller and his editor, Paul Merzlak, to send me Keating's comment. If
Keating couldn't post it, I told them, I would. But they didn't send it.



Given this
experience, my opinion of Proceedings
continues to decline. And yes, they are welcome to respond to this. They have my
e-mail address if they need help.

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Published on April 03, 2014 08:03
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