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FEATURES: The Essentials of Self Preservation
By Philip Gold
What our military can't do without
The
word "decadence" derives from the medieval Latin de cadere to fall away,
by implication from some previous height or standard of virtue or excellence. Some years
ago, literary critic Robert Adams fleshed out this meaning and its application to human
affairs. In Decadent Societies, he described historical decadence as the process
whereby "societies that without suffering a grievous wound began to languish,
struggled vainly for a while against minor enemies, and then succumbed to inner
weakness." From this he arrived at "the simplest definition of decadence; it is
not failure, misfortune, or weakness, but the deliberate neglect of the essentials of
self-preservation incapacity or unwillingness to face a clear and present
danger."
By this standard, America is a decadent society. Despite the expenditure
of well over $300 billion a year on defense and related activities, despite rhetoric about
being "the worlds only superpower" and lacking any conceivable "peer
competitor," and despite all the high-tech gadgetry, today the United States
possesses less usable military power than at any time since the late 1970s,
perhaps the late 1940s. The problem goes far deeper than the debate over transient
"readiness." It is structural. Its components are the following:
· Ten years after the fall of the Soviet Union, the United States
continues to field a smaller, ever more costly, unmaintainable, unready, and irrelevant
version of its Cold War/industrial age military dinosaur.
· The United States clings to an outdated military strategy of fighting
two major land wars on two transoceanic fronts.
· The United States squanders its power on ill-conceived and open-ended
commitments were now on our second decade of bombing Iraq and plan
on staying in the Balkans indefinitely.
· The Navy dwindles to 300 deteriorating ships. The Air Force plans to
fly its B-52 bombers until theyre 70 years old, and it cannot maintain its tactical
aircraft fleet. The Marine Corps faces the obsolescence of its helicopters and other major
systems. The Armys tanks and trucks, helicopters and weapons wear out. Even M-16
ammunition is in short supply. During the Kosovo operation, the Army couldnt get to
the fight at all.
· Preventing casualties has become an end in itself, and an extreme
casualty-intolerance drives major political and military decisions.
· The United States refuses to mount an effective national missile
defense, or to organize properly for effective homeland defense against terrorism and
weapons of mass destruction.
· The United States fails to exploit its tremendous potential offensive
advantages in space. Simultaneously, we neglect to defend the civilian and military
systems upon which we are now critically and irrevocably dependent.
After years of official denials, not even the Pentagon denies that this
force is in serious trouble. The question for the next administration is: What now?
Dollars are not enough
One
answer, much beloved of both political conservatives and the Pentagon, is to spend more
money. Throughout the Cold War, peacetime defense spending averaged about 3 percent of
GNP. In recent months, both conservative civilian analysts and senior officers have touted
a "4 percent solution" raising defense spending from its present 2.9
percent of GDP to 4 percent. This proposal, an attempt to lock in a share of the pie,
would produce extremely high annual defense budgets within a decade or so, well
over $400 billion, assuming the economy remains robust. In a time of peace, these levels
of spending should not be necessary.
Still, more money must be spent. Final fiscal 2001 expenditures (the
basic defense appropriations bill enacted in August 2000, plus all the ancillary bills and
inevitable supplementals) will probably tally at least $320 billion. But several score
billion, carefully targeted, are additionally needed over the next several years to
maintain parts of the present "legacy force" while moving towards a twenty-first
century "transformation force."
One item that, contrary to Pentagon rhetoric, does not need endless
spending is personnel. There are currently about 1.4 million men and women on active duty.
A properly structured twenty-first century force smaller units, more
people-replacing high technology, more privatization and outsourcing of domestic support
functions, base closures, etc. could have 1.2 million individuals or fewer. This is
vital. Until 1973, Americas military was predominantly young, single, and male.
Today it is older, increasingly female, married, and with children. Support requirements,
from housing and medical care to day-care centers and morale services, are enormous;
construction and maintenance backlogs stretch into the next decade. The best way to
provide a decent lifestyle for active service members is to downsize dramatically.
But more important than money is thought, and a clear sense of
destination. Merely parceling out the billions in the traditional manner no longer makes
sense. The "legacy force" is too large, too unwieldy, and too expensive. Part of
it can and should be cut, part of it transformed. But where is this "transformation
force" bound? Superficial arguments and invocations of "readiness" are
meaningless. The real questions are: Who should be getting ready for what, and how?
Where weve been
Thirty
years ago the Marine Corps tried, not too successfully, to teach me the fine art of land
navigation. I managed to revalidate the old adage about few things being more dangerous
than a second lieutenant with a map and compass. But I do recall one irrefutable axiom of
the art: You cant know where youre going until you know where you are. And you
cant know where you are until you know where youve been.
Ten years ago, the United States had the worlds most powerful
military. By many measurements technology and expenditure, especially we
still do. But this expensive, high-tech force grows ever more fragile, and expensive
technologies dont automatically produce either victory or security, as the USS Cole
incident most recently proved. For reasons ranging from Clinton budget cuts to casualty
intolerance, from material unreadiness to ethical ambiguity, we face a serious lack of
usable power. To put it bluntly: A force that is unready, unsustainable, mistrustful of
both its missions and its leaders, and unable or unwilling to take casualties does not
constitute usable power.
The confluence of forces and circumstances adding up to this peril did
not develop suddenly. When the Cold War ended, it became apparent that Americas
conventional forces could be drawn down somewhat from their Reagan-era levels. Defense
Secretary Dick Cheney and Joint Chiefs Chairman Colin Powell were determined not to
"mess up the build-down," as had happened after previous wars, and to keep a
base force capable of rapid reconstitution, should the need arise. Their 1990, pre-Desert
Storm Base Force Study (BFS) proposed about a 25 percent cut, more or less across
the board. Their requirement was that the United States be ready to fight two "Major
Regional Conflicts" (MRCs) specifically, in the Persian Gulf and Korea
at the same time. Why this approach? Essentially, plans centered around fighting a single
war would call for forces much smaller than either Cheney or Powell wanted. From the
beginning, then, the "two MRC strategy" was less a strategy than a sizing
justification.
In structural terms, this was not wrong; the larger force would provide
a much more effective base from which to reconstitute. But it was also part of a venerable
tradition of military fantasy, of finding allegedly "strategic" justifications
for the maximum fundable force. The "plans/resources mismatch" has long been
part of the American way of war. In World War II, the United States raised only half the
divisions originally planned, yet exhausted its manpower pool. Only Hiroshima kept the
extent of the exhaustion from becoming a national scandal and eventual tragedy. The 1951
Lisbon Conference, held while Korea was decimating American strength, set utterly
unreachable, not to say fantastic, NATO ground-force goals.
The Kennedy administration posited a "two-and-a-half war"
strategy, simultaneously fighting the USSR, China, and some half-power somewhere. The
half-war that did occur, Vietnam, required 15 years of recovery time. After Nixon opened
China, the strategy dropped to "one-and-a-half." Jimmy Carter played with a
"swing strategy," whereby American forces in one theater would hold on until
forces in another theater could win and then swing on over. Never in the twentieth century
did conventional plans and resources balance.
Ronald Reagan broke this pattern, if only by refusing to take the
fantasy game too seriously. (One notable exception: Navy Secretary John Lehmans
"maritime strategy," which called for carrier attacks and Marine assaults upon
the Soviet Union as a means of justifying a 600-ship Navy.) Reagans strategy was
simple: Build, then build some more, simultaneously pressuring the Soviets to accept that,
given the ever-widening technological and economic gaps between us and them, it was time
to come to terms. There was a Revolution in Military Affairs (RMA) a.k.a. the
microprocessor revolution aborning, which yielded incredible advances in precision
targeting, intelligence-gathering, and communications. The Soviets, who called it the
"military-technological revolution" and who may have sensed their doom before we
did, began to yield to the logic. Then the Soviet Union collapsed.
And then came Desert Storm, a conflict at once climacteric and
prophetic. It was, in some ways, the clash the Pentagon had planned for decades in central
Europe, only fought in the Arabian desert. But it was also the merest first glimpse of
what an RMA military could do against a conventionally powerful but technologically
inferior foe so long as that foe did not resort to nuclear, biological, or chemical
weapons of mass destruction.
So President Clinton inherited both a superb yet shrinking military and
a daunting conundrum: how to transform it, technologically and structurally, into a force
that could handle whatever the twenty-first century might send our way. And what would
come our way was increasingly clear. It wouldnt be massed armies, but
"asymmetric" threats and "niche capabilities," from knocking out our
satellites and denying access to vital foreign ports and airfields, to terror weapons
overseas and at home, and, increasingly, to cyber attacks.
Clintons response to this challenge was progressive structural
decay and, strategically, eight years of what the Navy calls "steering by your
wake." The 25 percent Cheney-Powell reduction grew to over a 40 percent reduction.
Simultaneously, Clinton used the force more, sending the military on 48 separate overseas
missions, from short-term disaster relief to the Balkans to the inherited mess in Iraq.
(In the 15 years preceding his administration, a much larger military did only 20 such
operations.) The Pentagon started raiding maintenance funds to pay for current operations,
then raiding procurement and R&D accounts to pay for maintenance.
Soon enough, it became clear that the military was headed for crisis.
But even as the force began imploding, the "two Major Regional Conflicts
strategy" remained the official line. Les Aspin, Clintons first defense
secretary, flirted briefly with "win-hold-win," a throwback to the old Carter
swing notion, but nobody bought it. So the 1993 Bottom-Up Review (BUR) concluded:
Everythings fine; well just do more with less. Serious analysts pronounced the
BUR DOA. And a cycle began that would consume the rest of the decade a cycle of
high-level pronouncements followed by devastating criticism.
In 1995 the administration created the Commission on Roles and Missions
(CORM) in accordance with that ancient rule of bureaucracy: If you want to make sure
nothing happens, study the problem. Directions for Defense: The Report of the
Commission on Roles and Missions concluded, once again, that the state of
the military was no cause for concern. In 1996, the National Defense Authorization Act was
passed, which instructed the Defense Department to produce, every four years, a
Quadrennial Defense Review (QDR). The first QDR came out in 1997 and at last conceded that
the "two nearly simultaneous MRCs" scenario was not realistic. So it changed MRC
to MTW ("Major Theater War") and "nearly simultaneous" to
"overlapping time frames." Again, outside the Pentagon, the reaction was
dismissive.
Finally Congress noticed a pattern. All these studies that werent
intended to produce major changes werent producing major changes. So Congress
chartered the National Defense Panel (NDP) to undertake a critique of the QDR. Their
effort, Transforming Defense, came out in late 1997 and represented a
fine initial attempt to break the mold. Specifically, they introduced two terms that had
been conspicuously absent in most prior official pronouncements. These terms were transformation
time to get serious about forcing this venture into the next century and homeland
defense time to get serious about the myriad threats now gathering.
Congress also chartered the National Security Studies Group (NSSG), also
called the United States Commission on National Security/21st Century, to prepare the way
for the 2001 QDR II and produce something to give the next president. The commission has
thus far issued two of its three intended reports. In the first, New World Coming,
the theme was clear. "[F]or many years to come Americans will be increasingly less
secure, and much less secure than they now believe themselves to be."
(Italics in the original.) The second report, Seeking a National Strategy,
provided little more than a checklist for strategic decision making, apparently due to
irreconcilable differences among commission members. The final report will be submitted to
the next president. Meanwhile the QDR II process is under way.
In sum, 10 years of official studiousness has produced little more than
a faux vindication of the present structure and strategy coupled with a growing
uneasiness that two key concepts, "transformation" and "homeland
defense," have yet to be addressed substantively, let alone comprehensively.
Of course, the defense debate has hardly been confined to commissions.
While these reports were being churned out, the armed forces the keepers of the
operational arts of warfare and the writers of their own budgets were engaged in a
veritable war over war.
The war over war
Enter-service
rivalry the phrase conjures up a variety of images, from Army-Navy football games
to generals and admirals pounding table tops. It sometimes seems almost ludicrous. Yet
inter-service rivalry, a relatively recent and peculiarly American affair, is a serious
game with serious consequences. Money is involved, trillions of dollars over decades. And,
today, the futures of the individual services are also at stake.
In the beginning, there was no inter-service rivalry. If it happened on
land, the Army did it. The Navy pursued its activities at sea. There were, of course, a
few overlaps. The Army maintained coastal defenses and artillery; the Navy might
occasionally bombard a fort or land small parties of Marines. But neither could do the
others job. Therefore, neither could take the others job. Since there was no
permanent unified command structure, neither service could command the other. And since
there was no Defense Department, the secretaries of war and the Navy reported directly to
their sole common superior, the commander in chief. Everybody knew the rules.
The airplane was the first innovation to blur the tidy distinction
between land and naval operations. Then came an incredible proliferation of mix-and-match
weapons. You could put airplanes on ships: carriers. You could put armies on ships:
large-scale amphibious operations. You could put soldiers on airplanes and helicopters:
airborne and air-assault forces. You could hang or stow missiles on almost anything.
Aircraft and missile ranges now covered continents and more. Satellites could provide
precision guidance and navigation for missiles flying 5,000 miles or second
lieutenants 50 meters outside the wire. Once, for example, there were only two or three
effective ways to fight enemy tanks. Now there are many, including (theoretically)
submarine-launched cruise missiles carrying sub-munitions guided by satellite.
To put it differently, systems proliferate, but effects converge. People
can do each others jobs. Thats why, despite all the talk (and action) in the
realm of "jointness" and cooperation in the field, the services guard their
"core competencies," their "operational arts," so jealously. The Army,
for example, accepts the Marines as fellow land warriors; the National Security Act of
1947 mandates such acceptance. But watch what would happen should the Marines propose to
establish a parachute regiment, or should the Army wish to station a brigade permanently
afloat somewhere. Airborne means Army; amphibious means Marines. And that must always be
that.
The 1990s witnessed many large and small inter-service clashes over
roles, missions, and core competencies. Three are presented here as examples of what the
services were debating operationally while the high-level commissions pondered strategy.
Presence. "Presence" (as distinguished from
occupation via conquest) might be defined as the art and science of influencing people
without the actual use of force. Traditionally, presence was achieved in two ways. One was
through the Army: "boots on the ground." The other was Navy: "showing the
flag." In some cases, presence was powerful a carrier battle group off-shore,
an amphibious group with Marines at the ready, Cold War forces garrisoned in Europe, etc.
In other cases, "gunboat diplomacy" the fact that the gunboat, however
puny, symbolized national might and the readiness to use it yielded presence.
As the American overseas structure shrank in the 1990s, presence seemed
a viable means of enhancing service missions and appropriations. The Army argued for more
exercises and activities; the Navy wanted the same. Things that had never been considered
"presence" started getting counted. "Relationships," for example
contacts with foreign militaries, from exercises and officer exchange to cocktail
parties. The USS Cole was in Aden as much on a "presence" as on a refueling
stop.
In the mid-1990s, in an unacknowledged but nonetheless real exercise in
budget advocacy, the Air Force proposed "virtual presence." Since long-range
bombers operating from three bases (Guam, Diego Garcia, the continental U.S.) could hit
any point on earth within 18 hours of alert, and since everybody knew it, we had presence
without actually being there.
The Navy countered that submarines provided even better "virtual
presence," since they could be anywhere, stay there almost indefinitely, land seals,
fire missiles, conduct reconnaissance and surveillance, etc. The debate over claims of
presence, and the money accompanying them, accomplished little, save raising inter-service
anxieties and suspicions.
Halt. "Halt" was an Air Force construct that roiled
the Army and, to a lesser extent, the Marines for several years. American strategy has
long been to let the other side hit first, halt their advance, assemble forces, then
launch a climactic ground counter-offensive. Air power advocates argued that the vital
phase was the "halt," a phase dominated by air power, and not the final attack.
After all, once an enemy was halted, he would have effectively lost. Also, an early halt
would provide time to mobilize and train the reserves.
In some ways, this was an Air Force bid to be deemed the decisive arm
and be funded accordingly. Why shouldnt it work? In Desert Storm, the ground
offensive hadnt won the war in the traditional manner. The ground offensive ended it
after a stunning demonstration that the best way to fight massed ground forces was now
from the air. Correspondingly, fewer ground forces, at least active ground forces, would
be needed. The Army countered that it was still the decisive force, since people lived on
land, not in the air, and that this was just the latest in a long series of dubious Air
Force claims to battlefield supremacy. Furthermore, what would happen if the
"halt" didnt work?
"Great powers dont do windows." At issue here
is the propriety and efficacy of "Military Operations Other Than War" (MOOTW),
specifically humanitarian relief, peacekeeping, and peace-enforcing. At first, it seemed
that MOOTW might be not such a bad deal, financially. Former Army Chief of Staff Dennis
Reimer proclaimed his service "the 911 force for the global village." The Marine
Corps, allied with the Army in the "halt" debate, countered that they already
had the "911" job. The Navy and Air Force touted their respective and not
inconsiderable contributions. Behind this dispute was the notion: If thats where the
money is, so be it.
Experience soon revealed, however, that relief and peacekeeping
operations were service money-losers and that they blunted and exhausted combat units.
They also did bad things to the military ethos. Support for these operations soon became
something of a litmus test for separating the traditional warriors from the new
do-gooders. Defense analyst and Desert Storm veteran John Hillen neatly summed up the
prevailing contempt: "Great powers dont do windows." For reasons of
national policy as well as military preference, relief and peacekeeping operations were
anathema.
Hillen had a point. The warrior and constabulary ethics (victory versus
peacekeeping) dont mix, as the recent unpleasantness involving the 82nd Airborne
Division paratroopers in Bosnia and their alleged use of "excessive force" has
sadly demonstrated. Sadly, too, military disgust with MOOTW has generated another mindset,
known as "radical force protection." It kept U.S. and NATO aircraft three miles
above mobile ground targets during the Kosovo bombing. One young Army lieutenant, just
back from Bosnia, related to a West Point class that his battalion commander had given him
the mission of prohibiting casualties. Every day while in Bosnia, he told his men that
there was nothing there worth dying for.
The "great powers dont do windows" mindset and the
"radical force protection" approach, coupled with legally inexpressible disdain
for the senior civilian and, in some cases, military leadership, have begun to produce an
attitude not seen since the final years of Vietnam. It might be called "contempt of
mission," an alienation from the essence of military professionalism, the sanctity of
accomplishing the mission, and the civilian world. It is not a comforting development.
Army, Navy, Air Force, Marines
Still,
the picture is not all bleak. Military alienation could vanish quickly, given the right
changes. And if the 1990s were a decade of straitening, they were also a time of
rethinking. Untold thousands of good men and women left the military. But others, in the
post-Vietnam tradition, have stayed. Despite all the physical and moral degradations, each
of the services has laid the basis for transformation. There have also been numerous acts
of military statesmanship. These must be given their due, before proceeding to this
essays proposal for serious but limited and prudent restructuring.
Army. It is possible that the current Army chief of staff, Gen.
Eric Shinseki, will go down in history as one of this countrys great peacetime
military innovators. If so, he will have to build on an ambiguous legacy, and against
considerable internal opposition. At the moment, Gen. Shinseki is grappling with two
issues, one unique, the other perennial.
The unique issue is transformation, evolving the Army into a
force capable of prevailing on the traditional battlefield with smaller, lighter, more
lethal units, while also dealing with unconventional and "asymmetric" threats,
such as weapons of mass destruction, terrorist attacks, and urban warfare where combatants
mingle with civilians. The challenge is unique, in that never before has an army had to do
so much so quickly when not goaded by the threat of defeat. The 1990s produced a strange
counterpoint of initiative and elision. Endless programs and ideas with names like
"Force XXI," "The Army after Next," "The Army after Next and a
Half," and "digitizing the battlefield" yielded a mixture of promising
ideas and dead ends, still to be sorted out. No other mixture could have been expected.
Transformation from an industrial age to a twenty-first century force
involves more than applying technology to existing structures. The Armys combat
power is organized around 10 active divisions, in effect mini-armies of 12,000 to 18,000
and more depending on type (airborne, air assault, light infantry, armored, etc.), capable
of extended operations. This divisional structure dates back at least to Napoleon. It is
also obsolete. The future probably lies with brigades of a few thousand, perhaps tailored
into light corps. This means new kinds of weapons goodbye to the heavy tank, heavy
mechanized infantry, ponderous logistical support units, perhaps even Army aviation as
currently conceived. Furthermore, new communications, intelligence, and other technologies
mandate flattening the hierarchy, perhaps even taking out a layer or two.
And theres the difficulty. While cuts in enlisted personnel might
be done fairly easily as a byproduct of restructuring, the elimination of officer slots
especially the prized command and staff jobs vital to promotion will be
harder to accomplish. And, of course, cuts in active duty personnel usually entail greater
reliance on the part-time citizen-soldiery.
Thats the second issue: What should be done with the National
Guard, the repository of the Armys reserve combat power? Throughout the 1990s, the
Pentagon claimed it could "find no mission" for the guards eight
divisions; it was willing to tolerate 15 smaller "enhanced brigades."
Simultaneously, the Army miserably overused the guard on Balkan and other assignments,
conducting the largest aggregate peacetime call-up in American history. Army-National
Guard relations, rarely cordial, grew publicly acerbic. And National Guard recruiting and
retention fell off. Guard members are liable for unlimited state duty, in addition to
federal call-ups, all of which take a toll on careers and families.
To his credit, Gen. Shinseki has directed an intense set of experimental
transformation programs, leading to fundamental decisions in the 2001-03 period. Perhaps
most notable: the experimental brigades and future weapons systems work now underway at
Fort Lewis, Washington, and elsewhere. (One intriguing concept: the "distributed
tank." A tank consists of weapons, sensors, and transportation. Why not split up the
functions to different platforms?) He has also moved toward greater integration of the
guard and the active forces. The Pentagon has found uses for those eight divisions.
Internal opposition has been intense.
What will the Army look like in 10 years? Impossible to predict. What
should it look like? Smaller, certainly. Still built around divisions? Probably not
it would be far better to concentrate on task-organizing "building-block"
brigades of a few thousand members divided into light, easily transported and sustained
"expeditionary" corps, as needed for specific tasks and missions, from full
open-field combat to street war. There is, to be sure, an enormous danger here. Lighter
units might prove too weak for full combat, yet too much (or too irrelevant) for urban and
other lesser contingencies. And, as Marine Commandant James Jones likes to point out, even
though its necessary for Army units to become more "expeditionary," i.e.
lighter and more easily deployed, "expeditionary" also requires sustainability.
Marine expeditionary deployments are built for sustainability from the sea and from
austere shore facilities a challenge that the Army, with its traditional dependence
on elaborate logistic support systems and massive fixed bases, has yet to solve.
What will be the active/guard/reserve relationship? Very likely, a high
and increasing level of dependence on citizen-soldiers across the spectrum of operations
and conflict. In fact, it may not be too much of an exaggeration to predict that the
United States will return, de facto, to something resembling the Founders original
military intent: a small active establishment backed up by a large (over a million)
citizen-soldiery. And also, capable: New training techniques, from virtual reality
simulators to computerized exercises and various forms of "distance learning"
make possible unprecedented levels of peacetime readiness. In this sense, twenty-first
century technologies empower eighteenth century virtues. Reserve and National Guard flying
squadrons have long been the equals of their full-time counterparts. In Desert Storm, one
Marine reserve tank company accounted for about half the Corps ground tank kills.
Navy. This services act of military statesmanship came
early. When the Soviet Navy collapsed, there was no fleet out there left to fight. In
1992, the Navy issued a short paper, ". . . from the Sea," that abandoned a
century-long orientation, the central belief that the job of the Navy was to fight other
navies. There would be no more fleet action on the high seas, no more patrolling the sea
lanes against packs of lethal predators from now on, the Navy would support the
land campaign. Given the Navys traditional fierce independence, this represented a
conversion of almost Pauline proportions. Adm. Frank Kelso, who presided as chief of naval
operations, is now remembered for only one thing his resignation over the Tailhook
scandal. He deserves better.
But a change of heart does not automatically produce a change of hulls.
Transforming the fleet will take decades, and the Navy remains far too enamored of
aircraft carriers. Once, these expensive ships were justified because they could take air
power far beyond the reach of land-based aviation. Today, Air Force "global
reach" is real. Also, theres the notorious "Rule of Three." It takes
three carriers to keep one on-station one there, one preparing to relieve it, one
recovering from the last deployment. Still, there are promising efforts underway to
develop vessels suited for littoral operations and support of the land campaign: the
weapons-heavy "streetfighter" and the land attack destroyer, to mention only
two. In the past, most surface combatants were designed for high-seas operations, which
generated very different weapons and other requirements. To protect an aircraft carrier is
one task; to bombard a hostile shore for days on end is quite another. Torpedos and depth
charges dont work there. But the attack submarine, originally intended for fighting
Soviet submarines, is showing remarkable utility in this area. Naval aviation is also
undergoing a slow reconfiguration.
So what will the Navy look like in 10 years? Not too different from its
present mix of ships. What should it look like? Certainly larger 350 ships, at a
minimum. It should also be moving away from dependence on large-deck carriers to a force
based on smaller surface combatants and attack submarines.
Air Force. Whatever happens to the Army and Navy, the former
will still put boots on the ground and the latter will still put to sea. Only the Air
Force, at the moment of its world supremacy, must evolve into something entirely
different.
After Desert Storm, the Air Force did a commendable job of downsizing
and restructuring. Under its current leader, Gen. Michael Ryan, the Air Force has shifted
to an "expeditionary" mode, tailoring a set of 10 "Aerospace Expeditionary
Forces" (AEFS) capable of rapid deployment and extended operations overseas, in
addition to long-range bombers operating from fixed bases. Its a wise restructuring,
both for operational and personnel reasons.
But the age of manned air combat is coming to an end. Aircraft have
simply grown too expensive, and although there needs to be a person in the loop somewhere,
that somewhere is no longer always the cockpit. The future lies with cheaper, more
plentiful unmanned and robotic vehicles, with nano-technologies and micro-systems, and in
space. Especially in space, which the Air Force has never given the attention and
resources it deserves. The Air Force must, over the next few decades, yield pilot
dominance to dare we say? geeks. In the short term, the Air Force must get
what it needs to maintain air supremacy, specifically the F-22 fighter. But in the long
term, its future depends on applying its traditional genius, courage, and energy to a
transformation that no military service has ever undergone before.
So what will the Air Force look like in 10 years? Structurally, it will
be about the same, perhaps a bit smaller. Hopefully, it will be flying an adequate fleet
of F-22 fighters (intended to replace the F-15) and receiving its share of the joint
strike fighter (replacing the F-16 and A-10). What should it look like? It should look
like a service fully committed to its own unique transformation, aggressively developing
and fielding unmanned and space systems.
Marines. Former Commandant Charles Krulak did a brilliant job
of insulating the Marine Corps from its commander in chief. Alone among the services, the
Marines raised their recruiting and retention standards, exceeded their quotas, and kept
their boot camps single-sex. Results in three other areas have been mixed but promising.
First, by law, the Marine Corps holds primary responsibility for the
amphibious mission. But the World War II-style beach assault has gone the way of the
cavalry charge. Its now called "operational maneuver from the sea,"
emphasizing landings by air and sea in lightly defended or undefended areas, launched from
over the horizon and not dependent on major supply buildups ashore. In an age of deadly
antiaircraft and antiship missiles (not to mention new forms of mines), this is no simple
task. The corps also faces obsolescence of many of its critical systems, such as
helicopters and amphibious assault vehicles. The doctrine is sound; the assets are
inadequate.
Second, Gen. Krulak developed the concept of the "three block
war" being prepared to serve as peacekeepers on one block, as peace enforcers
on the second, and to fight all-out on the third. This means urban warfare, especially in
Third World mega-sprawls where militias with assault rifles and cell phones can work to
deadly effect, and the media can show the consequences to the world. (A case in point is
the current Israeli-Palestinian conflict.) The Marines "urban warrior"
exercises demonstrated how hard it will be to develop doctrine and equipment for such
combat.
Third, the Marine Corps has undertaken serious work in the development
of non-lethal weaponry for use in this kind of combat, especially in situations where the
enemy mingles with civilians. To date, results have also been mixed. Clearly, however,
these efforts can pay dividends for the other services and, in some cases, civilian law
enforcement. They should be continued.
What will the Marine Corps look like in 10 years? About the same as
today, although perhaps a bit larger. What should it look like? The current commandant,
Gen. Jones, should keep it on course.
Space Force, Peace Force, warriors, guard
The
1990s were indeed a time of military decline and decay. But there was also serious
thought. Its clear that overall strategy must be reconceived. Its also clear
that many useful and vital initiatives are out there, in the services, the research
establishment, the contractors, and elsewhere; only a few have been mentioned here. But
how to get from here to there? More precisely, how to prepare for future conflict without
reviving the struggles and animosities of the past, and without a vicious resurgence of
inter-service rivalry? Some analysts and senior officers hold that such a revival may be
inevitable, perhaps even beneficial. Its time to put everything on the table, they
argue. Time to reopen the National Security Act of 1947 and other legislation and
agreements; time, perhaps, even to consider merging the services. This approach is
dangerous. Too much animosity would result; too much of value would be lost. The current
structure can be adapted to twenty-first century requirements, provided three things
happen.
First, as already mentioned, more money must be allocated. Carefully
targeted spending increases, coupled with serious restructuring and Pentagon business
reforms, can solve a lot of problems.
Second, a coherent new strategy must be developed, based more on
countering the array of threats this country faces than on planning for particular wars in
particular locales. This is an approach sometimes known as a "capabilities-based
strategy." It may not be as satisfying as containing communism or smashing the Axis,
but it is a strategy appropriate to an era when dangers are many, foes numerous, and
resources limited.
Third, there must be a new concept of the division of military labor
that transcends service interests and parochialism. This need not be legally enshrined.
The current structure is adequate, and few with any clear understanding of how militaries
work would wish to alter or abolish the services, with their mix of empowering traditions
and institutional competencies. But the old land/sea/air distinctions long ago lost their
clarity.
What we need is not a new structure so much as a new heuristic, one that
I call Space Force, Peace Force, warriors, guard and a new division of labor based
on the premise that a twenty-first century force should be both smaller and more
specialized than the present arrangement. This might seem odd, perhaps even illogical. The
Pentagon has long held that conventional forces should be "general purpose," on
the assumption that if you trained to the most demanding contingency, usually major war,
the lesser missions could also get done. Perhaps, in some cases, this doctrine still
holds. But in the twenty-first century it will be necessary both to acquire new
capabilities and protect certain parts of the force from debilitating involvement with
certain missions.
Space Force. As presently constituted, the Air Force cannot
effectively maintain and enhance U.S. space supremacy that is, the ability to
exploit freely and protect space-based systems while denying the use of space to others,
if necessary. Treaties and other restrictions on these activities need to be revisited,
but the internal difficulties are budgetary, institutional, and cultural. From the
beginning, the Air Force has been a pilot-dominated service; missilery and satellites have
never provided fast-track careers. Moreover, though much of what the Air Force does in
space benefits the other services, space appropriations come, for the most part, out of
the Air Force share of the budget. In recent years, there has been considerable official
rhetoric about the need for cultural change, starting with basic officer training, and
about evolving into an "air and space," thence to a "space and air"
service. Despite such rhetoric and the ubiquitous misnomer "aerospace" (air and
space are different realms with utterly different requirements), it seems unlikely. So
unlikely that, in 1999, Congress chartered a Space Commission to report in 2001 on
possible alternatives.
One of the commissions possible (perhaps even likely)
recommendations might be the establishment within the Air Force of a separate Space Corps,
with its own budget line item and ample career opportunities. Over decades, this Space
Corps should evolve into a separate Space Service within the Department of the Air Force,
as the Marine Corps exists within the Navy Department. The Air Force itself should make a
transition as swiftly and prudently as possible into an unmanned force, while maintaining
a world-class-plus manned force through the next two or three decades. Funding here must
be a top priority. Air and space supremacy must never be lost.
Peace Force. Military Operations Other Than War are expensive,
exhausting, and require specialized capabilities and assets. Save in extremis,
combat forces should not be committed to this work. The Army should establish an
active/reserve Peace Command, which should provide the military nucleus for a unified
Peace Command, akin to the current unified Special Operations Command. These troops should
possess adequate combat capabilities for their missions, especially for self-defense.
However, the unified Peace Command should make maximum use of non-military assets,
including other government agencies, police, foreign capabilities, and professional
military companies (PMCs) for routine training and security duties.
The rationale here is twofold. First, a Peace Force would provide
necessary capabilities in an efficient manner. Second, and just as important, a Peace
Force would protect other forces from such assignments. Ongoing deployments consume triple
forces: one unit on-site, one preparing to relieve it, and one just back and recovering.
Placing 10,000 soldiers in Bosnia, for example, means tying up 30,000. This drain quickly
becomes unaffordable and dangerous.
Warriors. As John Hillen puts it, "When theyre not
training to fight, they should be fighting." Preparing for combat in this high-tech
era is a full-time job; preparing for several different kinds of combat requires an
unremitting focus and effort. These forces must be protected from lesser distractions. And
for the next decade or so, the warriors must both train and transform. Who should make up
the warriors? The Army forces, whether rapidly deployable brigades, follow-on units, or
combined active/National Guard forces for sustained combat. The Marine Corps, prepared for
amphibious assaults and "three block wars"; this is the force that should handle
short-term and emergency MOOTW. Marine units afloat, especially in the Mediterranean and
the Pacific, have been doing this for decades. The warriors should also include the Air
Forces aerospace expeditionary forces and the Navys combat fleet.
It is true, of course, that in an emergency, we go with whats
available. And, just as Peace Forces need combat training and capabilities, warriors need
some MOOTW training. But the distinction must be established and maintained.
Guard. This comprises all military homeland defense efforts,
excluding air and missile defense and including cyberwar. It involves everything from
counterterrorism and border control to "consequence management" after attacks.
At the moment, homeland defense is a bureaucratic mess, even by Beltway standards.
Theres a counterterrorism "czar" in the White House. Thirty-some major
federal agencies participate in countless activities and task forces. Last year, the
Norfolk-based Atlantic Command was redesignated the Joint Forces Command and given
responsibility for "support" of civilian authorities. By all accounts, military
participation in civilian law enforcement and related activities has been increasing for
years.
Nothing makes for trouble like unclear arrangements, and military
"mission creep" in domestic affairs is especially pernicious. And the Posse
Comitatus Act, passed after the Civil War, forbids military participation in domestic law
enforcement. Although much amended in recent years to handle nuclear and terrorist
"consequence management," it is still on the books. Therefore, there should be
established a Homeland Defense Command, headed by a civilian, with a military deputy and
tenacious oversight of civil liberties. To the maximum extent possible, military
participation should be limited to the National Guard. At some point, it may be desirable
to consider segmenting the Army National Guard into deploying and stay-at-home units. The
guard resists this idea ferociously. However, non-deploying units might yield considerable
dividends in personnel recruiting and retention. Beyond exceptional circumstances, active
combat troops should not be tasked with domestic missions.
Leadership and sacrifice
Were
the United States to withdraw from the world, were we not to care from whom we bought our
oil, or what people did to each other, or whether anyone bought our goods, we could get by
on far less. Mere retaliatory forces might suffice. Many would hate us, but few would have
reason to attack us. Libertarian defense analyst Ivan Eland could possibly be right when
he argues that "the best defense is to give no offense." But giving up our
leadership role in world affairs would have profound and perilous consequences, both for
our nation and for the rest of the world.
When Robert Adams offered his definition of decadence as the deliberate
neglect of the essentials of self-preservation, he meant the inability to face a clear and
present danger. But what is the clear and present danger today? Many argue that, if
history is any guide, there will someday be another war. True enough. Others point to
proliferation of weapons of mass destruction, death, and disruption. But this country
suffers from an even greater danger, of which military decay forms only part. We want the
good things we enjoy a relatively peaceful, stable, and increasingly prosperous
world but we dont like paying what they cost.
Eighty years ago, in The Revolt of the Masses, José Ortega y
Gasset divided humanity into two groups, the aristocrats and the masses. The categories
had nothing to do with birth, social status, wealth, or accomplishment. Aristocrats were
people who knew that civilization is neither automatic nor self-perpetuating, that it
requires effort and sacrifice, and that they were the ones responsible to make that effort
and sacrifice. The masses were those who believed that civilization just grew, who showed
radical ingratitude for civilizations blessings, who believed that they were not and
need not be responsible.
On balance, ours has been an aristocratic nation, responsible for the
maintenance and advancement of civilization. Challenges change. Issues come and go. But
the need for our military power, in proper and usable quality and quantity, does not. On
balance, the world has been the better for our aristocracy. Weve made mistakes. We
will make mistakes. Certainly, we could use a little instruction in modesty, in the
differences between leadership and bullying, and in knowing when to let others be strong.
But there is no reason to believe that in the twenty-first century the worlds need
for our aristocracy, backed by appropriate arms, is any the less. Nor is there any reason
to believe that such efforts, properly conducted, will not benefit us as well.
So there is a clear and present danger here. Its the failure to
remember who and what we are when at our best, and to arm and act accordingly. And that is
the decadence that admits and allows all the others.
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