VMM-165 Offloads USS Boxer

03/03/2025

U.S. Marines assigned to Marine Medium Tiltrotor Squadron (VMM) 165 (Reinforced), 15th Marine Expeditionary Unit, conduct an offload of aircraft and personnel from the amphibious assault ship USS Boxer (LHD 4) in the Pacific Ocean Nov. 22, 2024.

Elements of the 15th MEU are currently embarked aboard Boxer and are conducting routine operations in U.S. 3rd Fleet.

USS BOXER (LHD 4), PACIFIC OCEAN

11.22.2024

Video by Cpl. Luis Agostini 

15th Marine Expeditionary Unit

An Update on the French Government Approach to Drones: A March 2025 Update

03/02/2025

By Pierre Tran

Paris – The armed forces minister, Sébastien Lecornu, visited Feb. 27 Turgis Gaillard, a private company developing and building a low-cost medium-altitude, long-endurance combat drone, dubbed Aarok, at Blois, central France.   

“Turgis Gaillard had the honor to welcome the armed forces minister, Sébastien Lecornu, on its site at the Blois-Le Breuil aerodrome,” the company said in a Feb. 27 statement. “At this visit, the teams were able to present the latest developments on the Aarok project, which stands as a symbol of innovation and French military sovereignty.”

That high-profile ministerial visit to the Aarok unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) at Blois, underscored a French switch in procurement policy of military drones, sparked by the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine.

That Aarok drone made a bigger media splash when it went on display two years ago at the Paris air show, with the company pitching its prototype as an affordable UAV for combat, and intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance, offered at a low price and speedy delivery.

The static display of the Aarok drone at the air show, right next to the French armed forces chalet, sparked doubts on the outlook for the European MALE UAV, dubbed Eurodrone, which carries a price tag of €7.1 billion. 

The Safran AASM powered smart-bomb and an unidentified anti-tank weapon were among the weapons displayed with the drone.

Blois is in the Loire valley, known for its elegant chateaux and rolling green countryside along the great Loire river. The defense ministry sees the work on the Aarok combat drone as creating jobs and regenerating the local economy.      

Game Changer

The war in Ukraine was nothing less than a “game changer” for drones in reconnaissance, tactical observation, and as lethal weapons, the private office of the defense minister told journalists. That conflict showed France needed to catch up in drone capability, and build a solid domestic industry building drones.

A financial effort worth €5 billion was earmarked in the French 2024-2030 military budget law for development and procurement of drones for all the services – land, sea, and air, the office said. Some €500 million was set aside for drones in the 2024 military budget. 

The importance of drones could be seen with the defense ministry signing at the Eurosatory trade show last June its pact with industry for building air drones for the military, indicating the pivot to pursuing development of a domestic drone industry. 

Keep It Simple 

A major change came in early 2024 with a simplification of procurement, ditching a detailed set of specifications for a more basic expression of requirement, with a number of companies informed of requirement for a low-end MALE drone, the office said.

That simpler approach sought to stimulate innovation, the office said, as the ministry was not launching a detailed procurement for a specific weapon, but was offering government funds for development of a low-end drone, with first flight in 2026 and delivery in 2027. 

It was up to companies to find a way to meet the requirement.

The first batch of government funding to companies proposing a low-cost UAV was due to be announced in June at the Paris air show, the office said. If the companies could fly their low-cost drones in 2026, contracts could be signed in 2027, with several suppliers being selected.

It was uncertain how much funding would be provided, as much depended on how many companies submitted bids. But there was a figure of some €10 million to be distributed to contractors offering to develop a low-cost UAV. 

The minister’s office declined to say which companies have shown interest in developing such a drone, other than to say there were some “large, historic companies” active in the field. 

Funding from Late Delivery

The source of government funding will stem from penalties charged for lateness on large arms programs, particularly the four-nation European MALE UAV. 

Airbus Defence and Space, based in Germany, is prime contractor on that drone program, which is under development and running late. The leading subcontractors are Dassault Aviation for France, Leonardo for Italy, and the Airbus DS unit for Spain. Germany is the lead nation. That twin-engined drone is due to fly in 2030. 

There are potential offers of low-cost UAVs from five to 10 or so companies, the office said, and the authorities will provide some government funding, although that will not cover full development costs. The companies will need to fund from their own resources. A mix of large and small companies have shown interest.            

Turgis Gaillard has not been selected to supply its UAV, but its Aarok prototype is considered to be “certifiable but not certified,” the minister’s office said. 

Aarok Works on Loitering Munition

The Aarok drone completed tests on the runway a couple of weeks ago, and the UAV is due for maiden flight with a pilot onboard in May, the office said. The DGAC civil aviation authority has held up first flight of the Aarok, but that authorization is expected for May or June, the office said.

Turgis Gaillard previously expected first flight in early 2024, entering into service two years later, Patrick Gaillard, chief executive and co-founder of the company has previously said.

Turgis et Gaillard was also developing a long-range loitering munition, seen by the French authorities as one of the top priority weapons in the war economy, the office said. 

The €500 million funds for 2024 earmarked for French drones included development of loitering munitions – or “kamikaze drones.” 

The war in Ukraine showed the deadly effectiveness of loitering munitions, leading Paris to order an emergency shipment of short-range loitering munitions built by Delair and KNDS France, under the Colibri project. The French authorities are also shipping a munition from MBDA, and its project partner, Novadem. 

Procurement of low-cost UAVs is seen as “complementary” to the Eurodrone and Safran Patroller tactical UAV, the office said. 

“It is definitely not a substitute,” the office said.

There was interest in the car industry in building a low-cost drone, the office said, as there was experience in mass production, which helped drive down costs.

Turgis Gaillard was looking closely at the car industry in their work on developing a long-range loitering munition, the office said. 

The company was offering a drone which would be “ITAR-free,” the office said, referring to equipment which would avoid authorization for shipment from the U.S. international traffic in arms regulations.

Electric motors, most of which are built in China, will not be used on the low-cost drones, which will be powered by turboprop, with expectations a Safran engine will be used, the office said.

There were no French companies with a MALE drone available on the shelf, the office said. The task was to innovate, develop those drones, fly them in 2026, and deliver in 2027.  

The ministerial visit to Blois underlined the political significance of “re-industrialization” of the regions and creation of jobs, the office said. A planned opening of a factory for Aarok at Blois would create 50 or so jobs, adding to the 30 staff working there, up from the eight in 2020. There were also some 100 engineers working in the Var region in the south.  

The Aarok has a take-off weight of 5.5 tons, and is powered by a turboprop engine. The drone has empty weight of 2.5 tons, and can carry almost 3 tons of fuel, weapons and mission kit.

The UAV can fly more than 20 hours, with cruising speed of some 450 km/h and at 15,000 meter altitude.

Meanwhile across the Channel, the U.K. is reported to complete the early retirement of the British army’s Watchkeeper drone in March, following the November announcement by the secretary of defense, John Healey, of cuts in military spending. 

The British unit of Thales, a French electronics company, won that Watchkeeper contract, worth some £800 million, with an offer based on the Hermes 450 drone from Elbit Systems, an Israeli company. That Watchkeeper drone entered service in 2010 and had a troubled life.

An Update on European Drones: February 2024

AAROK MALE UAV

 

Keen Sword 25

02/28/2025

U.S. Air Force F-22A Raptors assigned to the 525th Fighter Generation Squadron, Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson, Alaska, Japan Air Self-Defense Force F-15J Eagles assigned to the 305th Tactical Fighter Squadron, and U.S. Marine Corps F-35B Lightning IIs assigned to Marine Fighter Attack Squadron 121, Marine Aircraft Group 12, takeoff in support of Keen Sword 25 at JASDF Nyutabaru Air Base, Japan, Oct. 29, 2024. Keen Sword is a biennial, joint and bilateral field-training exercise involving U.S. military and Japan Self-Defense Force personnel, designed to increase readiness and interoperability while strengthening the ironclad U.S.-Japan alliance.

JAPAN AIR SELF-DEFENSE NYUTABARU AIR BASE, MIYAZAKI, JAPAN

10.29.2024

Video by Staff Sgt. Gary Hilton 

18th Wing

The Payload Revolution: Surveillance, Reconnaissance and Decision-Making

02/26/2025

By Robbin Laird

When I visited VADM Miller, then the Navy’s Air Boss, in 2020, I learned of something called MISR. No not a cheap person, but the Navy’s rethink of how to work the left side of the kill chain or to expand its capability to provide the data necessary for more accurate and rapid decision making.

As Vice Admiral Miller, the Navy’s Air Boss said to me: “The next war will be won or lost by the purple shirts.  You need to take MISR seriously, because the next fight is an ISR fight.”

I went to the Naval Aviation Warfighting Center or NAWDC to follow up and to learn more about MISR. I talked with NAWDC officers three times that year and visited twice. The last visit was to observe the exercise which was led by MISR officers, namely Resolute Hunter. At that exercise when I visited, the main focus was upon how to leverage ISR platforms which the Navy could work with which were non-Navy platforms.

This past Fall, I visited NAWDC again and spoke with MISR officers again and learned about the development of the Resolute Hunter exercise.  What I learned is that the payload revolution had come to the ISR challenge. Rather than ISR platforms, the focus is upon sensor awareness delivered to the distributed decision maker. It is about enabling a variety of platforms with payloads which can deliver the surveillance and reconnaissance data to the distributed decision maker to be able to act rapidly and accurately in a fluid battlespace.

This means that MISR and its Resolute Hunter exercises has evolved to be able to encompass payloads on various platforms, and payloads on autonomous systems as pipelines providing the data needed for accurate and rapid decision making.

Recently, I talked with the MISR Department Head at NAWDC, CDR Timothy “HaveQuick” Bierbach about the evolution. He provided me with his perspective on the evolution which I had observed.

He noted: “What you saw in 2020 was the utilization of manned ISR dedicated platforms in the battlespace. How can we better utilize and optimize the functionality of the reconnaissance strike complex that we built out during the 1980s? We now are focused on how we can leverage new payloads and a wider variety of platforms to deliver the decisive information which the commanders need, known as the layered reconnaissance strike network. The focus is not on a narrow number of assets to provide ISR data; rather it is upon enabling the decision-maker with the most relevant data to make a more rapid decision.

“The combination of all of these systems, sensors, platforms and weapons makes the current battle space characterized by more rapid decision making  and also changes how legacy industrial military technology can operate more effectively.”

The focus is upon training MISR officers to learn how to leverage new technologies, new payloads and combine them with the evolution of the legacy force to deliver capability to the force to fight more effectively, rapidly and decisively.

Secretary Wynne, who brought me in to the world of fifth generation aircraft, always argued that the warrior shaping the con-ops guided how technology would be used.

He argued the following: “A new CONOPs leveraging the new aircraft and able to incorporate legacy platforms and to shape new investments enhancing the joint effect is crucial to success. Declining numbers, coupled with a refusal to recognize the “re-norming challenge,” will lead to a needless loss of capability.

“But we need as well to invest in the future, not just modernize the past, and step back and consider which tactics techniques and procedures have current technology trends been guiding the future fight.

“We need to also consider the training needed to perfect our capabilities. We need to retool and to rethink, and it must start in our imagination and not assume that historical success will be replicated in the future without serious effort.”

This is clearly what MISR is doing, not just building muscle memory for the past fight using legacy systems but building forward to shape ways to deliver the effects needed for the future fight. This means as well that MISR and NAWDC are working ways for training to drive development of new payloads for the operational force. By bringing in developmental payloads to Resolute Hunter exercise, the MISR team can test out what helps, what works, what does not and what can fill gaps and drive greater mission success.

This effort reflects another Wynne insight as well.

“Look to the future technology base, and consider how it will affect the conduct of warfare. Now, bring to bear the military operational brilliance so necessary to converting any technology into a weapon of warfare.”

MISR and NAWDC are focused on shaping the military art by embracing relevant new technologies and in the ISR world, a major change is that the sensors available to a distributed force using a version of a local area network is becoming a reality. The Navy leadership has been focusing on the need to fight from the Maritime Operations Center (MOC) which clearly can be distributed. Now the payload revolution is enabling distributed combat clusters to have the ISR data they need or the S and R data they need to make their decisions they are authorized to do.

The MISR approach is tailored to such a dynamic approach moving naval warfare forward beyond the information age to the age where the warrior in the high end fight needs to fight at the speed of light.

CDR Bierbach noted that “a local reconnaissance strike network now can operate much more rapidly in terms of decision cycle than a single national reconnaissance strike complex”

And frankly, in my view, the payload revolution is providing to a very wide range of platforms including maritime autonomous system mesh fleets the kind of ISR and C2 nodes enabling distributed forces and strike complexes.

Bierbach then posed the key challenge: “How do we utilize to a maximum capacity and the maximum functionality of the local area reconnaissance strike networks and combine it with the national reconnaissance strike network to create the maximum desired effects?”

Return to NAWDC: An Update on the MISR Pilot Program

The Wynne quotes are taken from our forthcoming book to be published 7 April 2025.

MQ-9 LACM Strike Against Houthi Weapon Storage Facilities

U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM) forces executed a series of precise airstrikes on multiple Houthi weapons storage facilities situated within Houthi-controlled territories in Yemen, Nov. 9-10.

These facilities housed a variety of advanced conventional weapons used by the Iran-backed Houthis to target U.S. and international military and civilian vessels navigating international waters in the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden. The operation involved U.S. Air Force and U.S. Navy assets to include the F-35C.

YEMEN

11.13.2024

U.S. Central Command Public Affairs

Secretary Rubio: “Peace is not just a word, it’s action.”

02/25/2025

By Murielle Delaporte

Even at the height of the Cold War, Washington and Moscow always managed to maintain a means of communication via diplomatic channels and bilateral summits.

The Riyadh summit follows the same logic — as did the Reykjavik summit four decades ago, for example.

The ties and modes of communication between the two countries have steadily deteriorated since the last summit in 2021 between President Biden and the head of the Kremlin.

Re-establishing these channels of communication is therefore only the first stage of a peace process that could prove long and not necessarily successful, but which is intended to test the seriousness of Russia’s intentions when they say they are interested in a return to peace in Ukraine.

This assumption was reiterated by Secretary of State Marco Rubio in an interview conducted by independent journalist Catherine Herridge (formerly of ABC, Fox News and CBS) on 20 February, during which he confirmed that the other stakeholders in the upcoming negotiations — Ukraine and their European counterparts — were of course in consultation and clarified the Trump administration’s policy as follows:

The first [thing to understand] is that even at the height of the Cold War, even at its worst, the United States and the Soviet Union communicated. And the reason is simple: if you want to be mature and responsible, you have to understand that, although I don’t agree with most of Vladimir Putin’s actions, this is largely irrelevant when it comes to diplomacy. Because ultimately we must be able to engage with a nation that has, in some cases, the largest stockpile of tactical nuclear weapons in the world and the second or even the largest stockpile of strategic nuclear weapons in the world.

Whether we like it or not, Russia is a world power, involved and engaged in Syria, the Middle East, Europe and even the Western Hemisphere. So we need to maintain some communication with them. The first step is that our embassy in Moscow is barely functioning. It is literally ceasing to operate because it no longer has access to the banking system. This problem must be resolved. If we close our diplomatic mission in Russia, then we will have to close their mission here, and we will no longer have any channel of communication with them, whether it be for the release of a detained American or for any other matter.

The second thing to understand is that the president has been very clear: he wants this war with Ukraine to end, and he wants to know whether the Russians are serious about ending the conflict or not. The only way to find out is to test them, to engage them in a dialogue and ask them: are you really prepared to end this war, and if so, what are your demands? Are their public demands different from their private demands? We have to establish a process to engage in this conversation.

We may find that they don’t want to end the war. We’re going to find out. But we have to have this process to determine it. So our meeting was essentially a follow-up to President Trump’s conversation with Putin.

It is unfortunate that some of the exaggerations and hysteria around the simple fact that he spoke to him on the phone have obscured the real reason for this discussion. Ultimately, we need to have relations with Russia, whether or not we like everything they do, as we did with the Soviet Union. And we must be able to verify whether they are serious about ending this war. (…)

But the main purpose of this meeting was to determine whether they were interested in finding a solution to this conflict. (…)

We are going to find out. I always say that peace is not just a word, it is an action. It is not a noun, it is a verb, a concrete approach. It must be actively sought. In the end, they are either interested or they are not. If their conditions for ending the war are maximalist and unrealistic, then we will have our answer. If, on the other hand, there is a possibility, no matter how small, of pursuing peace, we must seize it. (…)

I cannot yet say whether Russia is serious about peace or not. That will be determined by their attitude in the coming discussions. The only thing we have agreed on is to talk about it. What they propose, what they are prepared to give up or consider will determine whether they are really serious about peace. We are simply not there yet.

This was first published in French on Operationnels on February 25, 2025.

First 30 Days With Secretary of State Marco Rubio

Dr. Harald Malmgren Passed

02/24/2025

By Pippa Malmgren

I have been quiet for a little while. I had a series of life events that slowed me down since mid-December. One of them was the passing of my mentor, my great friend, my father. I moved back to Washington DC last year partly to spend time with him in his later years. We wanted to observe the extraordinary changes in American politics being brought about by this last Presidential election together. We could see that things were not unfolding as usual. He had so many incredible prescient insights given his extraordinary career (see below) advising so many Presidents and leaders and major companies and sectors around the world. We worked on a book together. We shared incredible laughs as we got to know each other again. We never expected to have this precious time to share again. You grow up, leave home, and visits to your parents are usually fleeting. But we lived together, which allowed for a much deeper reconnection. It was an incredible gift to us both.

But, I’m finding that my grief is interfering with my writing. I’m pausing the subscriptions and happy to extend any existing subscriptions to allow for this quiet window. I’m about to begin a profound spiritual journey to Kumbh Mela. Somehow my Dad and the universe conspired to send me there just as my father left this earthly plane, last week. We both agreed that the more advanced technology becomes, the greater the demand for humanity to achieve a greater degree of spiritual skill. He wanted me to go on the largest spiritual pilgrimage in the world. 400 million people are attending this year. So I am going to turn my energy to this process and wish to ask you for your indulgence for another two weeks. I will write when I return.

In the meantime, here is my Dad’s bio for those who are not so familiar with him. He had one issue he was especially interested in during his latter days. He quite enjoyed breaking the internet with it. It was the question of what we do as we recognize that we’ve been arrogant to believe that we are alone in the world. What happens as people wake up to intelligence(s) that exceed our own and operate in ways that our caged minds cannot fully comprehend? He did an interview on this, which he finished just before falling ill with aspirational pneumonia. It is coming…..

The Hon. Amb. Dr. Harald Malmgren served as an advisor to Presidents Kennedy, Johnson, Nixon and Ford, to US Senators Abraham A. Ribicoff and Russell B. Long, and United States Senate Committee on Finance, as well as to many Prime Ministers and Presidents of Japan, Korea, France, Germany, Australia and the EU. He was born in Boston and grew up in Rhode Island, on Narragansett Bay. He won athletic and academic scholarships to Rennsalear and then Yale University and graduated second in his class with a BA. He then won a Henry Fellowship for his D. Phil at Oxford University (Queen’s and Nuffield). He was Research Assistant to Tom Schelling at Yale as Schelling pioneered the use of game theory to solve societal problems. He was then supervised in his doctorate at Oxford by Sir John Hicks, both Hicks and Schelling went on to win Nobel Prizes. Malmgren’s paper, “Information, Expectations and the Theory of The Firm,” published in 1961, is still featured as one of a few original historical foundations of the then-emerging field of “New Institutional Economics.” His work was part of the historically important debate on the value of free markets versus central planning, which had been fiercely argued between Ludwig von Mises and Oscar Lange. Both Lange and Friedrich von Hayek spent time with him as he wrote his doctoral thesis. The Soviets later told him they had studied his work on this critical question.

After completing his doctorate at Oxford, Malmgren was immediately appointed the Galen Stone Joint Chair in Mathematical Economics in the Department of Engineering and in the College of Arts and Sciences, at Cornell University, with lifelong tenure. He served there from 1961-62. At Cornell, he was fortunate to befriend Professor Hans Bethe, of Manhattan Project fame, and popularly known among physicists as the most important scientific problem solver of the Twentieth Century. Malmgren also became friends with the writer Vladimir Nabakov and lived in his house during Nabokov’s sabbaticals.

Malmgren left Cornell when Secretary of Defence Robert McNamara asked him to become the youngest of the “Whiz Kids” under President John F Kennedy. He was assigned to The Institute for Defense Analysis and appointed as the joint liaison between The White House National Security Council and the Joint Chiefs just as the Cuban Missile Crisis began. This put him at the center of the crisis negotiations in the Pentagon situation room. He was concerned that he lacked the stature to influence the decision-making. President Kennedy and the Secretary of Defence said his role was to keep asking tough questions that were designed to slow down the Joint Chiefs and buy time for diplomatic solutions. While General Curtis LeMay, Chief of the US Air Force at the time, argued that his bomber squadron should drop nuclear weapons on the Soviet Union to prevent any further nuclear intimidation, Malmgren argued for restraint and negotiation. He pointed out that hitting Moscow with nuclear bombs would leave the US without a counterparty to negotiate with. He suggested it be leaked to the Soviets that the U.S. would not target Moscow, hoping that the Soviets would not target Washington DC in return. The crisis was ultimately resolved peacefully, averting what might have been a nuclear catastrophe.

Malmgren later traveled and lectured with Herman Kahn (noted physicist and author of On Thermonuclear WarThinking about the Unthinkable, etc.) in the U.S, Asia and Europe. He wrote several classified papers on thermonuclear warNATO defenses, and U.S. anti-missile technologies, and an unclassified paper on battlefield deployment of forces on the NATO central front, “A Forward-Pause Defense for Europe”, Orbis (University of Pennsylvania), fall, 1964. This article on the history and contemporary relevance of static/fixed vs. mobile/fluid defense strategies generated much attention in the US Military and was reprinted in Military Review, the Professional Journal of the U.S. Army, in May 1965. His interest in nuclear matters began at age thirteen when he wrote to the Atomic Energy Commission requesting information on the subject. Karl Compton, President of MIT 1930-1948, who had assembled the Manhattan Project team, tried to recruit him to MIT on a full scholarship when he was just fourteen years old, but he and his parents decided he was too young to leave home.

After the Cuban Missile Crisis, he was asked to formulate a strategy for preventing another such crisis in future and appointed as Head of the Economics Group of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff, Weapons Systems Evaluation Group (WSEG), in the Pentagon and given responsibility for costing weapons systems. He proposed an Anti-Ballistic Missile System, arguing that this strategy would force the Soviet Union to spend roughly seven times more than the US on defense than it would cost the US to develop the system. It seems doubtful at the time that such a system could be made to work, but, he argued that this did not matter because the Soviets would still be forced to spend to defend themselves against it. Later, Russian officials claimed they could never get any intelligence on this ABM system. It had not occurred to them that it did not actually exist. This strategic concept ultimately bankrupted the Soviet Union when it culminated in The Strategic Defence Initiative, or the “Star Wars”, defence system announced years later by President Reagan. Malmgren oversaw many missile tests in these roles, including the controversial Blue Gill Triple Prime test which prompted both President Kennedy and Vice President Lyndon Johnson to urgently visit Los Alamos and the Sandia Labs in December 1962.

Malmgren notably predicted that the Soviet Union would collapse from economic pressures, which was far from the consensus view at the time. He then advised the nascent post-Soviet Russian leadership on the reconstruction of Russia after the Fall of the Berlin Wall and the demise of the Soviet Union. The Mayor of St Petersburg, Anatoly Sobchack, asked him to join an advisory council to Russia that included Vladimir Putin, whom he came to know personally.

President’s Kennedy and Johnson asked Malmgren to create what became the Office of U.S. Trade Representative within the White House. President Johnson sent him on a secret mission to Japan to secure the first-ever Voluntary Export Restraints on Textiles.

Hserved as senior economist and Executive Assistant to the U.S. Trade Representative under Christian Herter (formerly Secretary of State, Governor of Massachusetts, and Member of Congress). In 1965, he was appointed as the first U.S. Assistant Special Representative for Trade Negotiations. President Nixon appointed him the Principal Deputy U.S. Trade Representative, with the rank of Ambassador. In this role, he served as the principal US trade negotiator under President Nixon and then under President Gerald Ford. He later served for several subsequent years as special adviser on trade policy to the U.S. Senate Finance Committee. He was behind most of the trade deals struck by the US between 1963 and 1974 when he was deeply involved in the crafting of the landmark Trade Act of 1974. Through 1974, Malmgren personally worked interactively with Senate Finance Committee Chairman Russell Long and Senator Herman Talmadge to draft the historically innovative “fast track trade negotiations” provision, which became embodied in the Trade Act of 1974 – the first major revision of US trade law since the Reciprocal Trade Agreements Act of 1934.

When President Nixon opened the dialogue with the Communist world, he sent Henry Kissinger to Beijing and quietly sent Malmgren to Moscow as his personal emissary on numerous occasions. Nixon asked him, “Are you a Republican or a Democrat?” He replied, “Yes”. Nixon laughed and said, “What does that mean?” Malmgren replied, “It means I solve problems for the country.” In early 1972, Malmgren was the first U.S. official to call for the creation of a Transpacific economic cooperation organization. In 1973, President Nixon appointed him as his personal emissary in the negotiations with French President Pompidou, Malmgren and French Finance Minister Valéry Giscard d’Estaing to devise and launch the Tokyo Round of world trade negotiations (1973-1979).

In 1975 when Malmgren left government service, he became a Woodrow Wilson Fellow at the Smithsonian Institution. In 1998, he co-founded the Cordell Hull Institute with former Secretary of State Lawrence Eagleburger. He also lectured at Georgetown University, SAIS and at George Washington University as Professor of Business and Public Management. He also served as adviser to Several Presidential Commissions, Special Adviser to the OECD Secretary-General, the OECD‘s Wise Men’s Group on Global Economic and Financial Reform, and the Secretary General of the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development.

He became Special Adviser to Senator Abraham Ribicoff in 1971, advising on the negotiations to assist the Jewish community in the Soviet Union secure safe passage to the United States after the Soviets raised the cost of exit visas in the early 1970’s.

When President Ford took office in 1974 he asked him to serve as Special Adviser on global economic and security issues and to William Seidman, Assistant to the President for Economic Affairs. President Ford’s first request of him was to redesign the President’s Daily Briefing (PDB) and bring in greater input from the NSA. The PDB had, in his view, too much information about the private lives of foreign leaders and not enough about grain shipments and oil flows as indicators of stress and intent. During his career he also briefed and advised virtually every Prime Minister in Japan from 1971 to 1985. He was also an advisor to The Blue House in Korea. In the mid-1980s former Japanese prime minister Takeo Fukuda asked Malmgren to serve as policy adviser to the Interaction Council, the independent association of former heads of government of all nations. He continued in this role with Fukuda’s successor, Helmut Schmidt, former Chancellor of Germany, who had overseen the reunification of Germany and with whom he became close friends.

He advised Toyota Corporation for many years and encouraged them to set up manufacturing facilities inside the U.S. in the early 1980’s, just as American car firms began outsourcing production overseas. Mr. Toyota asked him to identify potential locations. They agreed that Toyota’s teamwork approach to the assembly line would work best in the parts of America where people have a strong sense of community and “help each other build their homes and barns.” This is how they chose Lexington Kentucky. Toyota opened a plant there in 1986 which quickly became Toyota’s most profitable and innovative manufacturing facility in the world. Ever since, Toyota has produced more American-made auto content than any other automaker inside the U.S. His understanding of the U.S. Japan relationship was so deep that the Japanese Government asked him to quietly tutor one of their young diplomats while she was working in Washington DC working for the Japanese Ministry of Foreign Affairs. She later became Empress Masako of Japan.

In 1977 he founded the Malmgren Group (international economic consultancy and advisory services on corporate and financial strategies to several CEOs of major U.S. and foreign corporations and banks, and consultancy services to the European Union Commission), and in 1979 also founded the UK company, Malmgren, Golt & Kingston Ltd., 1979 to 1995, consultants to multinational companies, financial institutions, and the Commission of the European Union on European business and regulatory affairs. Most recently, he collaborated with me, his eldest daughter, to serve as the Chairman of my Geopolitica Institute.

He wrote numerous peer-reviewed scholarly articles. articles in diverse journals, including those of The National Academy of Sciences, The National Academy, The Royal Academy (UK), Royal Academy of Science (Sweden), Foreign Affairs, Foreign Affairs, and Foreign Policy, which was founded by his close friend and collaborator Samuel P Huntingdon.

His work also influenced the law. In 2019, Malmgren was called in as the closing expert witness in the historic breakup of AT&T in U.S vs. AT&T, presided over by Judge Harold Greene. He argued that the US should not break it up, or at least proceed slowly to give time to US manufacturing to pick up the work that had been done at “Ma Bell.” His exposition of the historic background and Congressional intent of key provisions of the Trade Act of 1974 (M.J. Marks and H.B. Malmgren, “Negotiating Nontariff Distortions to Trade,” Law and Policy in International Business, Georgetown University, Vol.7, No.2, 1975 was cited by the Supreme Court of the United States as explanatory basis of its historically significant trade policy determination in Zenith vs. US Treasury, 1978 [Zenith Radio Corporation v. United States, 437 U.S. 443 (1978)].

He wrote Economic Peacekeeping in Phase Two in 1973 and was interviewed by Robbin Laird in a book that was released just a few days after his death: Assessing Global Change: Strategic Perspectives of Dr. Harald Malmgren.

This was published by Pippa on her substack publication.

Credit graphic: ID 210749666 © Anett22 | Dreamstime.com

 

Finnish Readiness Exercise

U.S. Marines and Sailors with 2nd Air-Naval Gunfire Liaison Company, Marine Rotational Forces Europe, under the command and control of Task Force 61/2, and members of the Finnish Defence Forces, conduct live-fire naval surface fire support training with the PGG Hamina-class missile boat during Finnish Readiness Exercise on Camp Dragsvik, Finland, Aug. 6, 2024. Finnish Readiness Exercise exemplifies the strong defense partnership between Finland and the United States through combined training activities while enhancing operational readiness and effectiveness. Task Force 61/2 commands and controls fleet Marine forces in support of the U.S. Sixth Fleet commander while synchronizing Navy and Marine Corps units and capabilities in the U.S. European Command and U.S. Africa Command area of operations.

CAMP DRAGSVIK, FINLAND

08.06.2024

Photo by Staff Sgt. Josue Marquez   

U.S. Marine Corps Forces, Europe and Africa