Showing posts with label Colonel Falichev. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Colonel Falichev. Show all posts

Thursday, April 4, 2024

The Mystery Has Been Solved...

 ... through Falichev's classmates from... drum roll... and as I suspected... most likely Lvov Political Academy, Journalism Department, 100%--Lenin's Political Academy. Here are some highly critical views of Falichev by other military journalist, his classmate, Colonel Andrusov. 

Успел за неделю до празднования столетнего юбилея газеты отпечатать 15 книг и   20 фотоприложений.  Немалую  часть изданной продукции  отправил Фаличеву почтой с доставкой на дом  –  в аккурат  к  торжественному собранию в Центральном доме Российской  Армии   1   декабря   2023   года.   Однако. . .  Однако,  от чванливого полковника    О. В.  Фаличева  поступило  сухое,  краткое сообщение:  «Книга пришла сегодня».   И  НИКАКИХ  БЛАГОДАРНОСТЕЙ !  Досадно  сознавать ещё  то,  что  Олег даже не  спросил,  в какую сумму обошлись мне полиграфические услуги.   Откровенно говоря, я впервые в жизни  столкнулся с  этаким пренебрежением и снобизмом.  Моя  благожелательность  не нашла  отклика  в душе  Фаличева.     Зёрна  доброты,   к  сожалению,    не   дали  всходов. . .  Комчванством,  манией величия в некоторой степени страдает и другой известный  московский полковник Анушкевич Борис Павлович. Давайте вдумаемся в следующую фразу:  «Витяй, привет!  Олег не будет предлагать государственным организациям свою книгу о 100-летии КЗ в переизданном тобой варианте. Резоны такие: солидная дата, боевое издание. героические люди и эпизоды, цитаты крупных военачальников, известных военкоров. А издана в формате детской литературы с неуместными подчёркиваниями. . .»

Translation: A week before the celebration of the newspaper's centenary, I managed to print 15 books and 20 photo supplements. A considerable part of the published products was sent to Falichev by mail with home delivery - just in time for the ceremonial meeting in the Central House of the Russian Army on December 1, 2023. However. . . However, a dry, brief message was received from the swaggering Colonel O.V. Falichev: “The book arrived today.” AND NO THANKS! It’s also annoying to realize that Oleg didn’t even ask how much the printing services cost me. Frankly speaking, for the first time in my life I encountered such disdain and snobbery. My benevolence did not find a response in Falichev’s soul. The seeds of kindness, unfortunately, did not germinate. . . Another famous Moscow colonel, Boris Pavlovich Anushkevich, also suffers from snobbery and delusions of grandeur to some extent. Let's think about the following phrase: “Vityay, hello! Oleg will not offer his book about the 100th anniversary of KZ (Red Star) to government organizations in the version republished by you. The reasons are: a solid date, a combat edition. heroic people and episodes, quotes from major military leaders, famous military officers. And it was published in the format of children's literature with inappropriate underlining. . ."

There you go--everything becomes very clear: they didn't teach in Lvov any serious military-engineering issues, especially in 1970s based around now utterly obsolete hardware and tactical and operational concepts. That is why Colonel Falichev, who later graduated Lenin's Military-Political Academy... the (newspaper) Editorial Faculty doesn't have even basic tool kit for grasping modern ISR and modern operations unless someone expressed their personal opinion to him. I read his couple of pieces in Svobodnaya Pressa tabloid--a tedious re-narration of US military media about space plans and a couple of military platitudes. He was in Chechnya as correspondent. SMO helped me to discard completely another graduate of this Lvov madras--Vladislav Shurygin who portrayed himself utterly incompetent in any serious issue of combat control and technology which provides for it. All of it, without exception, is, indeed, children illustrated book level stuff. SMO exposed so many frauds... Now everything becomes clear. And there is a reason I always go for a jugular in terms of education and background. That is why I never obscure mine... Now you understand why I posted the table of content and article summary from Military Thought--exactly, written by senior officers and one general all of who are Ph.Ds in technical and physics-mathematical sciences. Feel the difference...

I Didn't Want To Do It...

... but a bunch of fanboys write about alleged "response" to me by this Simplicius guy. Comments appear in this blog under my video etc.  So, let me demonstrate to you how to obfuscate this issue:

1. Recall my constant requests since ISR "piece" by this S guy (in reality compilation of headlines), I even did my own research, trying to answer simple question: WHO IS Colonel Falichev, no serious data? Guess what, this is response from the S guy:

And then he proceeds to "answer" whatever BUT the question of WHO Colonel Falichev is.  He certainly goes into copious amount of "elaborations", including, for some reason, posting biographies of the Editorial Boards of Army Digest and Military Thought (the latter one featuring prominently in my latest book's bibliography), remarkably, with all those board members having their bios known, their academic backgrounds and service being public, Mr. S still doesn't answer the question I posited from the get go: WHO Colonel Falichev is. I later elaborated--WHAT, namely military academy, did he graduate from, which will constitute his VUS (Military Registration Specialty). No answer, but Falichev bio matters a great deal. Yet, Mr. S speculates:

In this case, for instance, the takedown of Falichev could imply that I don’t use good sources in my research—but you can clearly see the contrary is the case. Not only is the Russian Army journal I used a top source, its own Editor-in-Chief has an unassailably storied career, having graduated from three different top command schools:    

You see how it is done? "Implied", I do not imply anything:

2. ... I specifically ask a simple question of military-academic background of Colonel Falichev, which determines if he has professional engineering background to pass his opinions on the issue of ISR in general and netcentric operations in particular or is he merely a military journalist with anecdotal (and rumor collection) "knowledge" of the issue. If Falichev has engineering command VUS, has experience serving as officer-operator of TsAMO (General Staff) or operational level staff officer among many other things, then his opinion is worth something. If he is not, then he merely provided a compilation of "facts" based on somebody's opinions which can differ dramatically on many issues, including what is known as "smoking room bashing" by officers. That's what professional military magazines exist for--to publish all kinds of views.

3. Then comes this issue of ISR and netcentricity in which there are satellites and there are Satellites. Starlink is called such because it is primarily communications constellation whose main purpose is to provide broad band data-links. It can provide some valuable sign-int but that's about it. The main threat for Russian Armed Forces in the field (and the sea) are the so called "spy satellites" which provide the "view" of the battlefield in optical and electromagnetic diapasons and this is primarily anchored to air assets such as E-Sentry, P-8 Poseidon, RC-135, drones and other aircraft. If Falichev doesn't understand that ALL of them fly in the international air space near Russia's borders (especially Crimea) and CAN NOT be shot down without escalating the conflict to the WW III levels, I don't know then why he begins to talk about two different ISR systems operating under completely different sets of circumstances, with NATO ISR having a gigantic advantage operating behind the wall of International Laws and Conventions regulating air and space activity in peace time. Does Falichev know the effects of RUK/ROKs in SMO zone? Does he understand what "R" stands there for? 

And here is the main issue, again, can somebody finally tell me who Colonel Falichev is? Having his full article would help too, I cannot access Army Digest, I have access to Military Thought, though. For those who want to read up of Netcentricity, at some time Lt. Colonel Kondratiev wrote extensively on that. Now, here is how I explain (for laymen) what Sensor/Data Fusion is which is in the foundation of modern ISR in 2019. 

Here I post some pages--the introductory level explanation of NCW and Fusion. 




Why the area in the lake in which the boat can possibly be located becomes not quadrangle but ellipse--that's the whole science of probabilistic analysis and based on sensor fusion and it is some damn serious math (algorithms) which are operating at the back end of network.  Here is a very basic representation:
If you want to see some math behind it, here is some interactive Kalman Filter. These are very basic things required (imperative) for understanding of modern ISR. But the question remains: WHO is Colonel Falichev because he should understand the unprecedented scale of netcentric operations Russian Armed Forces conduct in 404 and conduct extremely successfully granted with some hiccups, but this is a normal process.