Robert Emmitt

Robert Emmitt Visit our website at http://www.robertemmitt.com

We just won the Indy 500!! Gig’em Aggies!!
05/24/2026

We just won the Indy 500!! Gig’em Aggies!!

05/12/2026

People are like Pelicans: they think if they can hide from the problem, it must not be there.

04/29/2026
I did the  Celebration of Life service for my 40 year friend Pat Kennell (90yrs old). I was shocked to see so many famil...
04/13/2026

I did the Celebration of Life service for my 40 year friend Pat Kennell (90yrs old). I was shocked to see so many family, friends and generations all together in the same place. Pat had a lifetime of love and influence over so many generations.

The motley crew in the first picture was a rowdy group of wonderful boys who grew up at CBC. I experienced a lot of blood and pain playing football and basketball with them. Now they’re all grown married, fathers, active in their Churches, architects, executives, geologists, district managers and such.

The second pic is my lifelong friend since 7th grade big John Lee and Mr All Southwest Conference for Rice Safety, Randy Piel.

Third Pic is Allison Lee, husband of the great speaker Todd Lee (handsome bald guy behind me in the motley crew pic) and their son Colton Lee (super genius who played football at Cornell and does scientific programming. He tried to explain it in a nice way, but he knew I was lost from the beginning. He’s an awesome leader!

Jesus teaches us to hang on to those life long friends as long as you can. At the end they are the ones who keep you going!!

Like the songs says: God I’m just grateful for you and the life and ministry you have given me!!

I was spinning nickels with my grandson Micah, and this happened!!1 in 6,000 🤯
03/27/2026

I was spinning nickels with my grandson Micah, and this happened!!
1 in 6,000 🤯

I played golf with three grandsons for the first time, what a blessing!! Guess which one drives the ball 350 yards 😂
03/22/2026

I played golf with three grandsons for the first time, what a blessing!! Guess which one drives the ball 350 yards 😂

03/04/2026

For those of you like me trying to understand the current war against Iran this is a really great article explaining how it really is more of a battle between the US and China. A lot of information I wasn’t aware of before reading this article.

By Haviv Rettig

The debate about the U.S.’s war in Iran is everywhere. It is threatening to split the conservative movement, dividing it between those who see it as Donald Trump’s breaking of a promise against new wars and those who see it as a necessary confrontation long overdue. Progressives, predictably, frame it as another Middle Eastern adventure dragged out of Washington by the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC). Anti-war libertarians call it regime change in a new dress. And across the world, from Brazil to Beijing, London to Karachi, the argument is the same: America is fighting Israel’s war.
But this isn’t true. And the confusion matters, because if you misread what this war is actually about, you will misread everything that follows.
This is not a war about Israel. This is not a war for Israel’s sake. Israel is a beneficiary, a capable and willing local partner, but it is not the reason America is in this fight. America is playing a much bigger game, about more than what happens in the Middle East. The subtext, that Israel exercises outsize influence or “drags Americans into wars they don’t want,” borders on the conspiratorial.
This isn’t one war, but two. There is a regional chessboard, on which Israel, Iran, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and the other Gulf states all play. Iran’s proxies, its drones and ballistic missiles, its nuclear ambitions, its funding of Hezbollah and the Houthis: All of that belongs primarily to this smaller game. Israel has always understood this board. So have the Saudis. So has everyone in the neighborhood.
But there is a second chessboard, vastly larger, on which the United States and China are the primary players. On this board, the central question of the next 30 years is being worked out: whether the American-led global order survives, or whether China displaces it. Every significant American foreign policy decision, from the pivot to Asia to the tariff wars to the posture in the Pacific, is ultimately a move on this board.
America is in this fight because of China. Specifically, it is about dismantling the most significant Chinese forward base outside of East Asia.
Iran, for most of its history as an adversary of the United States, existed only on the smaller board. It was a headache. It was a regional destabilizer. It funded terrorism, harassed shipping, threatened America’s allies, and kept the Middle East expensive and unpredictable. But it was not, in any direct sense, a threat to American primacy on the global stage. It was Israel’s problem, the Gulf states’ problem, and only tangentially Washington’s.
That changed when Iran made one of the most consequential strategic miscalculations of the century.Squeezed by decades of American sanctions and increasingly isolated, Iran turned to China as its economic lifeline. The relationship deepened rapidly. Today, roughly 90 percent of Iran’s crude oil exports go to China, processed through a network of Chinese refineries that operate beyond the reach of American sanctions enforcement. supplies around a quarter of Iran’s budget, a huge portion of which is spent on Iran’s military forces. The Iranian military is thus funded, in significant part, by Chinese purchases. Without Beijing, the regime cannot pay its security forces, cannot subsidize basic goods, and would soon face the kind of internal collapse that its own ideology has spent 40 years trying to prevent.
In other words, Iran has become—has made itself—utterly dependent on China.
China, for its part, was not being charitable. It was being strategic. Iranian oil, sold cheaply because Tehran has no other buyers, has helped Beijing build a strategic petroleum reserve exceeding a billion barrels, enough to sustain the Chinese economy for roughly a hundred days in the event of a naval blockade. China’s single greatest vulnerability is the American Navy’s ability to interdict its energy imports, especially at vulnerable choke points like the Malacca Straits. Iranian oil, flowing outside American oversight was a direct hedge against that vulnerability. (So, by the way, was Venezuela’s, another U.S. operation that was ultimately about contains
But the energy relationship was only part of the picture. China was also arming Iran with systems specifically designed to threaten commercial and American military assets. in late February of a near-finalized deal to supply Iran with supersonic anti-ship cruise missiles capable of speeds exceeding Mach 3 and engineered to evade the Aegis defense systems deployed on American carrier strike groups. China was replacing Iranian government and military software with closed Chinese systems, hardening Iran against CIA and Mossad cyber operations. Joint naval between China, Russia, and Iran in the Straits of Hormuz were becoming regular events, building real-time operational familiarity between the three navies. Iran had switched from the GPS system to the Chinese BeiDou system. And Iran was providing China with the port at Jask, as part of China’s “string of pearls” base system in the Indian Ocean.
The picture that emerges from all of this is of a Chinese forward base, a linchpin of the country’s naval architecture; cyber efforts; an economic Belt and Road influence program—every element of Chinese power projection and empire-building—positioned at the throat of the global oil supply, armed with weapons designed to pe*****te advanced American defenses and kill American sailors, and embedded in a strategic architecture whose explicit purpose is to constrain American military freedom in any future conflict over Taiwan.
When Iran began to look like that, it stopped being Israel’s problem and became America’s.
(https://substackcdn.com/The administration itself has struggled to explain this, and it’s not clear why.
On March 2, Secretary of State Marco Rubio was asked about the purpose and timing of the operation, and explained that the U.S. had launched preemptive strikes against Iran because the administration knew an Israeli attack was imminent and wanted to prevent “automatic” Iranian retaliation against American bases. He said intelligence showed Iran had pre-delegated orders to military commanders to strike U.S. assets the moment the regime was attacked by any party, making a proactive defense necessary to minimize U.S. casualties.
Rubio emphasized that the U.S. chose to destroy Iran’s offensive capabilities first rather than “sit there and absorb a blow” that would have resulted in significantly higher damage to American personnel.
It’s hard to take this explanation at face value. If the trigger was simply an Israeli strike, America could have told the Israelis to sit tight. It’s done it before, repeatedly and even recently. Goodness knows the U.S. has the leverage to do it again.
And it doesn’t fit the nature of the war.

For one thing, American media reports tell us that America, not Israel, chose the timing. Reliable sources tell us the CIA not the Mossad, tracked Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei to the Saturday meeting of Iranian military leaders struck by Israel, and Trump, not Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu, pulled the trigger on the joint attack.
The Americans went to war together with the Israelis because that’s the best way to fight a war like this. Having a capable and loyal local ally willing to deal damage and absorb blowback lowers the costs to America and increases the chances of success. If America ever finds itself in a kinetic fight with China, it presumably expects Japan and Taiwan and South Korea to play a similar role in the fighting. It’s one hell of an operational advantage.
But American forces have used this operation to target Iranian military positions and assets that have nothing to do with the Israeli-Iranian face-off.
In the first 24 hours of the war, American strikes, as confirmed by focused on Iranian naval vessels, submarines, ports, and anti-ship missile positions along the southern coast. The port of Bandar Abbas, headquarters of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps Navy, was hit. So was Jask, which China had hoped would become a permanent naval foothold on the Indian Ocean. Isfahan and Tabriz, hubs of ballistic missile production and drone assembly, were struck. The goal, explicitly stated by American officials, was not merely to degrade existing stockpiles but to destroy the industrial base from which those weapons are produced, so that China cannot spend the next few years quietly rebuilding it.
President Trump announced the operation in terms that could not have been more direct, explicitly mentioning all those elements of Iranian power—the navy, the missile production sites—that would serve as that second front in a war with China.
Many of these targets so central to CENTCOM’s efforts are no threat whatsoever to Israel.
One of the more revealing subplots of this war has been the behavior of Iran’s supposed allies. Russia signed a comprehensive strategic partnership with Iran in January of last year. China has been Iran’s economic patron for years. And yet when the bombs started falling, neither moved.
Russian radar systems in Syria went dark, transponders reportedly switched off, apparently to avoid accidentally drawing American or Israeli fire. China issued statements. Neither fired a shot in Iran’s defense.
This matters beyond the immediate moment. The entire architecture of the alternative world order that China has been constructing—BRICS, the Belt and Road Initiative, the network of partnerships meant to demonstrate that there is a credible alternative to American-led institutions—rests on the assumption that China is a reliable partner. Every government watching from the outside, from Central Asia to sub-Saharan Africa to Latin America, is now watching China leave its closest Middle Eastern ally to burn. That is a blow to Chinese soft power that no diplomatic offensive can easily repair. It is an American success that will be felt for years, irrespective of how the actual Iran operation turns out.
America, meanwhile, has demonstrated something important: that it retains both the will and the capability to act decisively when its core interests are genuinely threatened. Not Israel’s interests. Not abstract liberal internationalist ideals. American interests, defined coldly and specifically.
None of this means the war is without risk. Strikes on Saudi oil infrastructure, Houthi threats to close the Bab el Mandeb Straits, the escalation in Lebanon: These are real dangers, and the costs of miscalculation are enormous. Iran, aware that it is facing an existential moment, is doing what cornered regimes do, setting as many fires as possible for as long as possible in the hope that the pain forces a negotiated exit. And we cannot forget the risk shouldered by Israeli civilians, currently facing yet more nights in shelters and alerts pinging their phones every 10 minutes.
But the logic of the American position is not difficult to follow once you’re looking at the right chessboard. Iran embedded itself so deeply in China’s strategic architecture over the past couple of years that removing it became a prerequisite for American freedom of action in East Asia.
Or put another way: Iran is to America what Hezbollah is to Israel—the smaller second-front proxy you have to take out to have a clean shot at the main foe later on.
This is also why President Trump seems to be pursuing a strange sort of regime change—something very different from what George W. Bush or the neocons meant by the term. Trump doesn’t care one whit about democratization, or, as Venezuela showed us, about changing any element of a regime that doesn’t stand in America’s way. He’s interested in regime change in Iran only because it is fundamentally, in its founding theology, unswervingly anti-American. It is thus not swayable from the Chinese orbit by any other means.
He doesn’t need a democratic Iran, he just needs a not-anti-American Iran.
It must be said: Israel is also at war with Iran, and has focused its strikes on Iranian targets that specifically threaten Israel, such as the ballistic missile launchers. But there are nevertheless two different wars underway in Iran, each taking place on very different strategic scales.
America went to war in Iran because Iran made itself a Chinese weapon.
The war with Iran last June was very much an Israeli war, even if the Americans helped out in dramatic fashion at the end. And it seems to have played a significant role in convincing the Americans to embark on this one, simply by demonstrating Iran’s vulnerability. The success in June appears to have lowered American planners’ assessment of the risks and downsides of the much larger China-containment operation against Iran now underway.
But that was an American decision-making process about an American war. In this round against Iran, Israel is the willing local partner, nothing more.
The best-case scenario that could emerge from this war is a stable, democratic-leaning, U.S.-oriented Iran, a more secure Gulf, a weakened Hezbollah and thus a more stable and successful Lebanon, a more secure Israel—and above all, a China less able to threaten America’s Pacific allies.
None of that is nation-building. There is no Marshall Plan waiting in the wings, no democratic project, no idealism of the kind that animated the adventures in Iraq and Afghanistan. It is colder than that, and more coherent.
So why can’t Secretary Rubio say it? Why hem and haw and offer half-hearted non-explanations to a question that has set the conservative movement aflame?
One obvious answer: They don’t want to push the Chinese to more overt responses. One should always give one’s enemy an excuse not to respond in kind, on the off chance that they don’t want to. It’s a sensible ambiguity on the world stage, but it’s causing damage at home. It may be time for the administration to speak clearly on its grand strategy—not in policy papers, but in clearly articulated statements that actually answer the good-faith questions of a great many Americans.
America went to war in Iran because Iran made itself a Chinese weapon. It didn’t need to do this, to invest so much of the administration’s political capital and of the military’s firepower, just to shore up a second-run Israeli operation. This isn’t about Israel. Iran has been a growing threat to Israel for decades, and yet Trump has always resisted intervening.
Once you understand the real reasons for America to strike now, everything else about this conflict—who is being targeted, why now, what comes next—clicks into place. The loudest voices in the debate are still arguing about the smaller chessboard. The war is being fought on the larger one.

You’re never too old for a Daddy/Daughter Date!! Heather and I went to Mosquito Bay in Vieques, Puerto Rico. It’s the br...
02/17/2026

You’re never too old for a Daddy/Daughter Date!! Heather and I went to Mosquito Bay in Vieques, Puerto Rico. It’s the brightest bioluminescent bay in the world. When my science teacher daughter said she would like to see that some day, I said Let’s Go!! It was one of the most amazing things I’ve ever seen. So was Heather dancing with a Cockatoo😂

02/01/2026

The Bible says 4 things are amazing to watch, the first one is an eagle gliding through the air! Pr30.18

01/31/2026

The Bible says there are four things that are amazing to see, the first one is how an eagle glides through the sky. Pr30.18-19

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