Anies Berharap Kerjasama Antar Daerah Lebih Baik

Selamat datang di DKI Jakarta kepada rekan-rekan kepala daerah dari 34 provinsi se-Indonesia.

Kami merasa bersyukur bahwa Jakarta berkesempatan menjadi tuan rumah Rapat Kerja (Raker) Asosiasi Pemerintah Provinsi Seluruh Indonesia (APPSI) dengan agenda Evaluasi Pelaksanaan Program Kerjasama Perdagangan Produk Unggulan Antar Daerah. Raker digelar dari tanggal 6-7 Desember 2018.



Harapan kami pun besar pada raker ini karena kita punya potensi bangun kerjasama yang lebih baik antar daerah. Terutama membahas perdagangan antar daerah yang akan memberikan dampak pada penyediaan komoditas dan stabilitas harga komoditas tersebut.

Banyak tantangan ke depan yang kita hadapi guna mewujudkan kerjasama perdagangan antar daerah. Tantangan ini harus diwujudkan dalam kerja bersama diantara kita. Kita berharap 34 provinsi benar-benar ikut mendorong kerjasama perdagangan antar daerah.

Kerjasama tidak hanya antar Pemda melainkan juga badan usaha di daerah-daerah. Kita libatkan semuanya melalui badan usaha di daerah, sehingga nantinya hasil dari raker ini dapat memberikan manfaat bagi masyarakat di daerah masing-masing.

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for the moment. The Navy wasn’t giving him a break; it was just that no one
had figured out yet if the chips would interfere with sensitive avionics or ship
systems. At some point, though, tradition would lose out to technology.
Someone tapped a glass, and the noise in the room hushed to a murmur.
Links looked at his vodka martini and eyed the lemon twist. The question
wasn’t whether it was a recording device, but whose.



“Together, let us raise our glasses on this occasion to acknowledge our
common interests and objectives,” said General Wu Liao, a Directorate air
force commander who Links knew was about to announce another wave of
corruption purges. Links even knew the names of the men who would be
executed in three days, all because Wu’s driver had left a window cracked
open to smoke. That’s how good the collection was.
“It is in a navy officer’s honor I toast. That is not something you often hear
from an air force officer of any country’s military.”

Polite laughter from fifteen different nationalities followed the joke.
“The joint China-U.S. exercises to help bring order to the waters around
the former Republic of Indonesia are a sign our future together will be a
strong one,” said General Wu. “As for our neighbors to the north, I cannot
say the same.”

Wu’s angry glance at a Russian officer standing in the corner shifted the
guests’ gaze and cut off any remaining laughter. The Russian nodded
indifferently and casually moved a highball glass from one hand to the other,
as if he cared more about the temperature of his vodka than the speech.
After the toast, Links walked over to the Russian. Major General Sergei
Sechin was a regular on the party circuit. He walked with the confidence of
someone who’d been in uniform for most of his life, and he always smiled
like he had just been told a bawdy joke. Sechin had been in Beijing for over a
decade, so he must have been very good at his job if he was able to keep his
own bosses happy while also riding out the Directorate’s rise to power.
Besides the violent purges of the old Communist Party leadership, there had
been more than a few deadly traffic “accidents” involving the foreign
intelligence community.

“Sorry about that,” said Links. “Poorly done by Wu.”
“The Directorate new guard, especially the core, like Wu, say they don’t
care what anyone thinks. But it makes them think only of their own plan,”

said Sechin. “The Communist Party had theirs too, and you can see how it
ended for them . . .”
“I am going to miss our uplifting conversations, Sergei,” said Links. “And
the smog, and the winter.”
A waiter passed with a tray of drinks, and Sechin deposited his and Links’s
empty glasses and snatched two more frosty vodkas.
“One day, we will all get past this unpleasantness,” said Sechin, handing a
glass to Links, downing his own vodka, and nodding for Links to do the
same.

“Za vas,” said Links. The waiter reappeared and paused, timing his return
perfectly, likely another espionage professional at work collecting.
“Perhaps you will play a role in that . . .” Sechin focused on his glass. “Do
you know what is America’s greatest export?”
Links’s eyes narrowed. “Biggest, or greatest? Sometimes they’re not the
same thing. Biggest by the numbers? Oil and gas. Greatest? Democracy,”
said Links.

“No, no, no,” said Sechin. “It is an idea, really. A dream: Star Trek.”
He locked eyes with Links.
“If you say so.” Links wondered what the computer analytics that parsed
the transcripts would make of this conversation. Staring at his now empty
glass, Sechin continued in a serious tone. “Star Trek was a television show
watched by Americans during a time when my country and yours held each
other, as you like to say in your nation’s defense strategy, ‘at risk.’ ” “Can’t
say I ever watched it,” said Links. “At least not the old ones. My dad took me
to a couple of the newer movies.”

“The vision was so positive, a crew from all nations sent out by a world
federation. An American, Captain Kirk, was their leader. With him was a
crew from around the world, from Europe, from Africa — notable in that
time of racial tension in your country. Also, and perhaps relevant here, there
was Mr. Sulu. He represented all of Asia, which, because of America’s war in
Vietnam, made this very capable man a symbol of the peace to come.”
“Peaceful? Nobody like that here,” said Links, tipping his glass at Wu.
“I give you that. But that is not what I want you to remember. Most
important, just like you, an American officer, and I are friends,” said Sechin,
“the navigator was Pavel Andreievich Chekov, a Russian! Now, this Chekov
was not a real man, of course,” said Sechin. “But many believe that the

character was named after a brilliant Russian scientist of the time, Pavel
Alekseyevich Cherenkov. Do you know of him? He won a Nobel Prize in
1958, when my country was as sure of its destiny as Wu is of China’s.”
Sechin waved his glass to indicate the coterie around Wu. “My point is that
without Chekov, what really could Captain Kirk have done out there in
space? Our Cherenkov was the key to the future!”

Links caught the eye of the waiter, who brought another tray of vodka.
“It’s coming back to me,” said Links. “But in the story, didn’t the
Federation begin only after World War Three?”
“Yes, yes, I allow you this,” said Sechin. “In any case, you should know
that though we work for different sides, we are not all bad.”
“There’s work,” said Links, placing their empty glasses on the waiter’s
tray, taking two full ones, and holding one out to Sechin. “And there’s
friends. You’re a friend.”

“Yes, please remember that. In a few months’ time, when you are back in
your warm office in the Pentagon, fourth corridor, D ring . . . Don’t look
surprised, we know these things. When you return to your friends in Naval
Intelligence, think of me and think of Chekov. Promise me that.”
USS Coronado, Strait of Malacca

Simmons sat at the small desk in his stateroom and watched the daily
good-morning vid from his twins. While the Coronado sailed under a night
sky, Claire and Martin, six years old, complained about school between bites
of waffle. Their voices made his stomach tighten with sadness.
“Good luck today with Riley,” said his wife. “It won’t be easy, I know it.
We love you and can’t wait to get you back.”
His wife signed off, as she did every morning, with a kiss sent from around
the corner after the kids said goodbye. Then he was alone again inside the
ship’s gray hull.

He pulled himself up and walked down the hallway to the bridge wing.
Riley was there, smoking a real cigar. The bridge wing was not the officially
designated smoking area, but the ship’s captain could smoke where he damn
well pleased.
“Freighter, Directorate, freighter, freighter, Directorate,” said Riley,

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regime that’s more popular and more competent than the previous
government, and technocratic to the extreme. The business magnates and the
military have divided up rule and roles. Capitalism and nationalism working
hand in hand, rather than the old contradictions they had back in the
Communist days.”



The image switched to one of the Directorate Navy’s new aircraft carriers
tied up next to a pier, Shanghai’s skyline in the background.
“The bottom line is that the Directorate has changed China. They took a
regime mired in corruption and on the brink of civil war and forged a lockeddown
country marching in the same direction, the nation’s business leaders
and the military joined at the hip.

“But net assessment, as they teach you back in the schoolhouse, isn’t only
about looking outward; it’s also about knowing yourself and your own place
in history.”

A visual of two maps of the globe appeared, the first of British trading
routes and colonies circa 1914, the second a current disposition of U.S. forces
and bases, some eight hundred dots spread across the world.
“Some say we’re fighting, or rather not fighting, a cold war with the
Directorate, just like we did with the Soviet Union more than half a century
ago. But that may not be the right case to learn from. About a hundred years
back, the British Empire faced a problem much like ours today: How do you
police an empire when you’ve got a shrinking economy relative to the
world’s and a population no longer so excited to meet those old
commitments?”

A montage of U.S. Navy aircraft carriers in port appeared, the last shot a
lingering image of CVN-80, the new USS Enterprise, still under construction.
“And, of course, if that is the case, you can’t keep doing things the old way
on the cheap. Take capital ships, the way navies back then, and even today,
measured force. With the Ford-class carriers taking so long to build, although
the U.S. Navy has nine CVNs, that actually means four in service to cover the
entire globe. And with the cost of keeping our military in Afghanistan,
Yemen, and, now, Kenya, well, we’ve had to get used to working without
them.”

“I’d rather be on this ship than a carrier anyway,” said Gupal. “Just a
bigger bull’s-eye for an incoming Stonefish.”
“Secure that mouth, Lieutenant, or you’re not even gonna last one cruise

on this ship,” said Riley, jabbing a titanium e-cigar in the air.
“Aye, aye, Captain,” said Gupal sheepishly.

Simmons, as the XO, was supposed to be the bad cop to Captain Riley’s
good cop, making the reversal of roles that much more amusing to the crew.
“Lieutenant, all jokes aside, you are making my point. You’re right that the
DF-21E, the Stonefish anti-ship ballistic missile, is not really about us,” said
Simmons. “But I want you to think about the various trends, the why, and
then the what-next. So, what does the Stonefish offer the Chinese?”
“Well, sir, it’s like a boxer stretching his arms out farther. Gives them the
ability to target our big deck carriers before we can get in range of China,”
said Gupal.

“Right, it gives them freedom of action. So if you’re Directorate, what do
you do with that freedom? And why, or even when? These are the questions I
want you asking. Just because you see the world one way today does not
mean it will be that way tomorrow. It’s pirates today. What will it be next?”
asked Simmons.

Captain Riley stepped over to Simmons. He smiled, but his body language
made it clear he was not completely pleased with the briefing. “Thank you,
XO. The key, folks, is to assess these threats. There’s dangers, but let’s not
build these guys up to be ten feet tall. And if it comes down to a boxing
match, Big Navy’s spent literally billions on the air-sea battle concept, just
for the Stonefish threat and more. In any case, given what’s playing out on
the Siberian border, it might be better for the XO to brief the next Russian
ship we see rather than us. If anyone is going to war with the Directorate, it’s
Moscow.”

“Yes, sir,” said Simmons. “Any questions?” He looked around the room
and chewed his cheek to keep from saying anything more.
Lieutenant Gupal raised his hand. “Sir, where does that leave us on the
patrol? How should we think about the Directorate forces here? Friend or
foe? Or frenemy?”

“Like I said, the Chinese are more likely to go to war with Russia than us,”
Riley replied. “And if the idea does cross their mind to tangle with us, well,
they just don’t have the experience to do it right. The XO’s history lesson
should’ve also mentioned that China hasn’t fought a major war since the
1940s.”

“Neither has the U.S. Navy,” said Simmons quietly.

Silence followed. A few of the crew started fiddling with their glasses in
their laps, trying to look busy. Lieutenant Gupal, though, was too green to
understand that the silence wasn’t another opportunity for him to gain notice.
What worked at the Naval Academy was the wrong call in the wardroom.
“XO, do you think the captain’s right about Russia and China, though?”
asked Gupal.

Simmons glanced at Riley before looking at Gupal.
“The Directorate has been making claims about their guest-worker rights
being abused by the Russians and how their government is not beholden to
the old borders set in treaties signed by prior regimes on both sides,” said
Simmons. “So if I was in Moscow, I’d potentially come to the same
conclusion the captain has. And the Russians seem to be acting on that belief.
The latest satellite photos showed the Russian Pacific fleet has sortied from
its base in Vladivostok, most likely to put some range between it and the
Chinese air bases to complicate any potential sneak attack. It’s the right
move. The history supports it.”

“And with that rare praise from the XO, dismissed,” said Captain Riley.
“We know where to get our sunshine when we need it.”
U.S. Embassy, Beijing
The ambassador loved parties. So did Commander Jimmie Links, but for
different reasons.

The truth was the parties were just an excuse. This farewell soiree was in
his honor — he was finishing up two years in the defense attachĂ©’s office —
but no matter the country the guest came from, no matter the rank, no matter
the clout, everyone in the room was there to collect. Eyeglasses, jewelry,
watches, whatever — all were constantly recording and analyzing. Suck it all
up and let the filters sort it out. It was not much different from how the
people back home did their shopping, wide-casting for discounts.

Links watched a beautiful Chinese woman in her late twenties glide by in a
floor-length translucent SpecTran-fiber dress and noticed the telltale strip of
stiff-looking skin at the base of her neck. The new folks joining the threeletter
agencies didn’t have a choice anymore. The human body, with the right
technology, is an extraordinary antenna. Fortunately, as a U.S. Navy officer
who’d joined before the policy shift, Links had gotten out of that one, at least

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gym teacher looking down at you. The twenty-first-century Navy was
supposed to be all about brains. But physical presence still mattered, and the
XO, Commander James “Jamie” Simmons, had it. He stood six four and still
looked like the University of Washington varsity heavyweight rower he’d
once been, projecting a physicality that had become rare among the
increasingly technocratic officer corps.
“Good morning. We’re doing this my way today,” said Simmons. “No
viz.”



The crew groaned at the prospect of having to endure an entire brief
without being able to multitask or have their viz glasses record the
proceedings.
A young lieutenant in the back coughed into her fist: “Old school.”
Coronado’s captain, Commander Tom Riley, stood to the side holding a
gleaming black ceramic-and-titanium-mesh coffee mug emblazoned with the
shipbuilder’s corporate logo. He couldn’t help himself and smiled at the
impertinent comment.

The display screen loaded the first image and projected it out into the room
in a 3-D ripple: a heavily tattooed man on a matte-black electric waterbike
firing an assault rifle one-handed up at the bridge of a container ship.
Simmons had picked up this technique from an old admiral who’d lectured at
the Naval War College: instead of the typical huge slide deck with immersive
animations, he used just a single picture for each point he wanted to make.
“Now that I’ve got your attention,” said Simmons, switching the image to
a map of their position at the entry to the Strait of Malacca. A swath of red
pulsing dots waited there, each marking where a pirate attack had taken place
in the previous year. “More than half of the world’s shipping passes through
this channel, which make these red spots a global concern.”

The roughly six-hundred-mile-long channel between the former Republic
of Indonesia and Malaysia was less than two miles wide at its narrowest,
barely dividing Malaysia’s authoritarian society from the anarchy that
Indonesia had sunk into after the second Timor war. Pirates were a distant
memory for most of the world, but the red dots showed that this part of the
Pacific was a gangland. The attackers used skiffs and homemade aerial
drones to seize and sell what they could, mostly to fund the hundreds of
militias throughout the archipelago.
None of the gangs bothered with hostages ever since Chinese special

operations forces, at the behest of that country’s largest shipping concern, had
wiped out the population of three entire islands in a single night. It didn’t end
the attacks, though. There were six thousand inhabited islands left. Now the
pirates just killed everyone when they seized a ship.
“This is Coronado’s focus during the next three days,” said Simmons. “It’s
a standard presence patrol. But it connects to a bigger picture that Captain’s
asked me to brief you on: We will be linking up with the Directorate escort
force at eighteen hundred, making this a true multinational convoy.”
The XO then changed images, zooming out from the Coronado’s present
position in its southeast corner to a larger map showing the strategic
landscape of the entire Pacific.

“This leads me to the main brief this morning. It’s a long one. But there’s a
bonus: if you don’t fall asleep on me, I’ll make sure you get double your
PACE ed cred.” That brought a few smiles; the Program for Afloat College
Education, a quick way for sailors to earn college credits on the Navy’s dime,
was popular among the young crew.
“We’re breaking some ground here on this multinational undertaking. It’s
the first joint mission with Directorate naval forces since Washington started
the embargo threats,” he said. “Which means our friends from Hainan are
taking it seriously. As you can see on the screen, the Directorate will have
one of their new oilers here for refueling, which it doesn’t really need. They
want us to see that in addition to having the world’s biggest economy, they’re
buying their naval forces the range to operate anywhere on the planet.

“To understand why having a ship like an oiler is a big deal, you need to
take a step back. Let’s start with Dhahran three years ago. When the nuke —
well, more technically, the radiological dirty bomb — went off, it made the
Saudi house of cards fall down. Between Dhahran glowing and the fights
over who comes in after the Al Saud family, the world economy’s still
reeling from the hub of the global oil industry effectively going offline,” he
said.

His next slide showed a graph of energy prices spiking. “Oil’s finally
coming off the two-hundred-ninety-dollar peak after the attack, but you don’t
want to know how much this cruise is costing the taxpayers. Put it this way:
enjoy yourselves and all this sunshine because your grandkids are still going
to be paying the tab.”
“They’ll be paying in ramen,” said Lieutenant Gupal, one of the ship’s

newest officers. Ramen was slang for RMN, renminbi, the Chinese currency
that, along with the euro, had joined the American dollar as the global reserve
currency following the dollar’s post-Dhahran crash.
“At least we can sail with our own oil now,” said Captain Riley. “When I
joined back in the Stone Age, Middle East oil owned the market.”
“True enough,” said Simmons. “And shale extraction is coming back at
even higher levels than before the moratorium after the New York quake.
Dhahran made people stop caring so much about groundwater seepage.”
A new map of global energy reserves appeared on the screen. Simmons
stepped closer to the crew and continued.

“The captain hit the key change to focus on. The scramble for new energy
resources, heightening regional tensions here, here, and here, are sparking a
series of border clashes around the world. The fact that the South China Sea
oil fields were disappointments put new pressure on the Directorate. The hunt
goes on,” said Jamie. “The oilers are the Directorate’s way of showing that
their interest in this is now global.”

A screen shot of a smoking mine in South Africa replaced the map.
“That’s the Spiker mine, near South Africa’s border with Mozambique.
Remember that? These trends all connect. Even the renewed push toward
alternative energy sources has caused more conflict than cooperation.
Technologies like solar and deep-cycle batteries depend on rare-earth
materials, rare being the operative word,” said Simmons.
The picture shifted to the iconic photo of the green Chinese People’s
Liberation Army tank bulldozing into the Ministry of Public Security’s riotcontrol
truck as the crowd in Shanghai’s People’s Square cheered the soldiers
on.

“This is important, so pay attention,” said Simmons. “You all know the
history of the Directorate. When the world economy cratered after Dhahran,
the old Chinese Communist Party couldn’t keep things humming. Their big
mistake was calling in the military to put down the urban workers’ riots,
thinking that the troops would do their dirty work for them, just like back in
’89. They failed to factor in that a new generation of more professional
military and business elite saw the problem differently than they did. 

Turned
out the new guard viewed the nepotism and corruption of those ‘little princes’
who had just inherited their power as a bigger threat to China’s stability than
the rioters. They booted them out, and instead you’ve got a Directorate

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they knew they could just watch it again. They could call up anything you’d
ever said to them, yet they could never remember it.
The gold-rimmed Samsung glasses that Torres wore were definitely not
Navy issue. Mike caught a flash of the Palo Alto A’s @ logo in reverse on
the lens. So Torres was watching a replay of Palo Alto’s game against the
Yankees from last night. Beneath the game’s display, a news-ticker video
pop-up updated viewers on the latest border clashes between Chinese and
Russian forces in Siberia.



“Game was a blowout, but the no-hitter by Parsons fell apart at the bottom
of the eighth,” said Mike. “Too bad for the A’s.”
Torres, busted, took off the glasses and glared at Mike, whose eyes
continued to pan across the steely water.
The young sailor knew not to say anything more. Shouting at a contractor
was a quick path to another write-up. And more important, there was
something about the old man that made it clear that, even though he was
retired, he would like nothing more than to toss Torres overboard, and he’d
do it without spilling a drop of coffee.
“Seaman, you’re on duty. I may be a civilian now and out of your chain of
command,” said Mike, “but you work for the Navy. Do not disrespect the
Navy by disappearing into those damn glasses.”

“Yes, sir,” said Torres.
“It’s ‘Chief,’ ” said Mike. “ ‘Sir’ is for officers. I actually work for a
living.” He smiled at the old military joke, winking to let Torres know the
situation was over as far as he was concerned. That was it, right there. The
sly charm that had gotten him so far and simultaneously held him back. If
Torres hadn’t been aboard, the chief could have puttered across the bay at a
leisurely seven knots and pulled up, if he had the tide right, at the St. Francis
Yacht Club. Grab a seat at the bar and swap old sea stories. After a while, one
of the divorcées who hung out there would send over a drink, maybe say
something about how much he looked like that old Hollywood actor, the one
with all the adopted kids from around the world. Mike would then crack the
old line that he had kids around the world too, he just didn’t know them, and
the play would be on.

The rising sun began to reveal the outlines of the warships moored around
them. The calls of a flight of gulls overhead made the silent, rusting vessels
seem that much more lifeless.

“Used to be a bunch of scrap stuck in the Ghost Fleet,” said Mike, giving a
running commentary as they passed between an old fleet tanker from the
1980s and an Aegis cruiser retired after the first debt crisis. “But a lot of
ships here were put down before their time. Retired all the same, though.”
“I don’t get why we’re even here, Chief. These old ships, they’re done.
They don’t need us,” said Torres. “And we don’t need them.”
“That’s where you’re wrong,” said Mike. “It may seem like putting lipstick
on old whores in a retirement home, but you’re looking at the Navy’s
insurance policy, small as it may now be. You know, they kept something
like five hundred ships in the Ghost Fleet back during the Cold War, just in
case.”

“Floater, port side,” said Torres.
“Thanks,” said Mike, steering the launch around a faded blue plastic barrel
bobbing in the water.
“And here’s our newest arrival, the Zumwalt,” Mike announced, pointing
out the next ship anchored in line. “It didn’t fit in with the fleet when they
wasted champagne on that ugly bow, and it doesn’t belong here now. Got no
history, no credibility. They should have turned it into a reef, but all that fake
composite crap would just kill all the fish.”
“What’s the deal with that bow?” said Torres. “It’s going the wrong
direction.”

“Reverse tumblehome is the technical term,” said Mike. “See how the
chine of the hull angles toward the center of the ship, like a box-cutter blade?
That’s what happens when you go trying to grab the future while still being
stuck two steps behind the present. DD(X) is what they called them at the
start, as if the X made it special. Navy was going to build a new fleet of
twenty-first-century stealthy battleships with electric guns and all that shit.
Plan was to build thirty-two of them. But the ship ended up costing a mint,
none of the ray guns they built for it worked for shit, and so the Navy bought
just three. And then when the budget cuts came after the Dhahran crisis, the
admirals couldn’t wait to send the Z straight into the Ghost Fleet here.”
“What happened to the other two ships?” said Torres.
“There are worse fates for a ship than being here,” said Mike, thinking
about the half-built sister ships being sold off for scrap during the last budget
crisis.
“So what do we gotta do after we get aboard it?” asked Torres.

“Aboard her,” said Mike. “Not it.”
“Chief, you can’t say that anymore,” said Torres. “Her.”
“Jesus, Torres, you can call the ship him if you want,” said Mike. “But
don’t ever, ever call any of these uglies it. No matter what the regs say.”
“Well, she, he — whatever — looks like an LCS,” said Torres, referring to
the littoral combat ships used by the Navy for forward-presence patrol
missions all over the world. “That’s where I wish I was.”
“An LCS, huh? Dreaming of being off the coast of Bali in a ‘little crappy
ship,’ wind blowing through your hair at fifty knots, throwing firecrackers at
pirates?” said Mike. “Get the line ready.”
“Didn’t I hear your son was aboard an LCS?” asked Torres. “How does he
like it?”

“I don’t know,” said Mike. “We’re not in touch.”
“Sorry, Chief.”
“You know, Torres, you must have really pissed somebody off to get stuck
with me and the Ghost Fleet.” The old man was clearly changing the subject.
Torres fended the launch off from a small barge at the stern. Without
looking, he tied a bowline knot that made the old chief suppress a smile.
Maybe the new kids weren’t all bad.
“Nice knot there,” said Mike. “You been practicing like I showed you?”
“No need,” said Torres, tapping his glasses. “Just have to show me once
and it’s saved forever.”

USS Coronado, Strait of Malacca
Each of the dark blue leather seats in the USS Coronado’s wardroom had a
movie-theater chair’s sensory suite, complete with viz-glasses chargers,
lumbar support, and thermoforming heated cushions that seemed almost too
comfortable for military life — until you were sitting through your second
hour of briefings.

This briefer, the officer in charge of the ship’s aviation detachment of three
remote-piloted MQ-8 Fire Scout helicopters, thanked her audience and
returned to her seat. A few side conversations abruptly stopped when the
executive officer rose to give his ops intel brief.
When the XO, the ship’s second in command, stood at the head of the
room, you felt a little bit like you were back in elementary school with the

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