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FEATURES: Military Supremacy and How We Keep It
By Loren B. Thompson
An investor's guide to U.S. Defense
IN FEBRUARY 1776, only months before the American Declaration of Independence, British
historian Edward Gibbon published the first volume of The Decline and Fall of the Roman
Empire. It was almost immediately recognized as an important achievement. Gibbon, like
no one before, discerned the sources of Romes early success and later failures over
the course of a history spanning a full millennium. The sixth and final volume appeared in
1788, the year before the U.S. Constitution. Not surprisingly, several of the framers of
the Constitution thought they saw lessons in Gibbons work for the new republic.
George Washington was particularly impressed with an insight about Roman military power
that Gibbon offered in the first chapter of the first volume:
The terror of the Roman arms added weight and dignity to the moderation
of the emperors. They preserved peace by a constant preparation for war; and while justice
regulated their conduct, they announced to the nations on their confines that they were as
little disposed to endure as to offer injury.
When he became president, Washington paraphrased Gibbons lesson in
his first annual message to Congress, observing that "to be prepared for war, is one
of the most effectual means of preserving peace."
It was not a lesson that his fellow countrymen or their descendants
would learn easily. Over the following two centuries, the nations vital interests
would be endangered repeatedly by lack of military preparedness. But in the second half of
the twentieth century the "American Century," as Henry Luce called it in
1941 the United States emerged as a global military power without peer. As that
century ends, America commands more power and influence than perhaps any nation since the
halcyon days of Gibbons Rome.
The sources of American success are not primarily military in nature.
But after a century in which
democracy was endangered first by imperialism, then by fascism, and finally by communism
a century in which over a hundred million lives were lost to war and civil strife
most Americans can readily grasp the value of possessing global military supremacy.
The United States certainly has that today. Its defense budget is bigger than the combined
total for the six next-biggest military powers (most of whom are U.S. allies). It is the
only nation that can project military power rapidly and decisively anywhere on earth; the
only nation with a major military presence in both hemispheres; the only nation exploiting
the full military potential of the information revolution; and the only nation that anyone
seriously expects to deserve the title "superpower" in the early decades of the
next century.
If the United States can sustain the economic and cultural sources of
its success, America has the potential to preserve its global influence for a long time to
come perhaps for as long as Rome did. But that also depends upon sustaining its
current military supremacy. History is strewn with the remains of great civilizations that
lost the capacity to protect themselves from external challenges. The hard part for
America, as for Rome, seems to be maintaining a sense of purpose when threats recede.
Given enough time, Americans are masters of military mobilization and execution. Where
they have proved wanting is in preserving their might during periods of peace.
Despite an imposing defense budget, there are signs that the U.S.
military posture is losing the coherence of its Cold War years. In an international
environment posing few direct threats, it is quite possible to imagine a gradual
deterioration, born of inattention, continuing past the point at which real damage to the
U.S. global position occurs. Now, in short, is the time to think about where and why
erosion is occurring and what investments the United States must make in order to preserve
global military supremacy during the first half of the next century.
Current national strategy
BEHIND U.S.
MILITARY FORCES in the field is a complex analytical process.
Planners specify vital national interests and the threats to them; they formulate a
strategy for coping with those threats; they identify the military requirements of
implementing the strategy and translate the result into a range of programs to provide
necessary personnel, equipment, and support services. In order to understand the
investment programs the equipment and technology expenditures that must be
made over the next generation, one must first spend a little time on the earlier stages of
the process.
The Clinton administration has seen fit to rethink each step in the
national security planning process, arguing that the demise of the Soviet Union required
reflection on how future security needs might differ from those of the Cold War. The
administration called its new approach a "strategy of engagement." Proponents
characterized it as a middle ground between the extremes of isolationism and assuming the
role of global policeman. The military component of this strategy was explained in the
report of the Quadrennial Defense Review, a comprehensive assessment of U.S. military
needs completed in 1997. The review specified five "vital national interests"
that are the starting point in defining national military requirements:
Protecting the American homeland, especially
against attacks employing nuclear, chemical, or biological "weapons of mass
destruction."
Preventing the reemergence overseas of
hostile regional powers or coalitions.
Guarding the security of global lines of
communication at sea, in the air, and in space.
Ensuring unfettered access to key markets,
energy supplies, and strategic resources.
Deterring and/or defeating aggression
against allies and friends.
The defense secretarys 1999 Annual Report identified major
near-term "security challenges" (i.e., threats) to U.S. interests:
"Large-scale, cross-border
aggression" by hostile regional powers such as Iraq and North Korea.
"Flow of potentially dangerous
technologies" to overseas adversaries, particularly technologies relevant to weapons
of mass destruction, information warfare, or space access.
"Transnational dangers" such as
terrorists and drug cartels that operate with little regard for national borders.
"Threats to the U.S. homeland,"
including nuclear, chemical and biological weapons, information warfare, infrastructure
attacks, organized crime, and uncontrolled immigration flows.
"Failed states" such as Somalia
and Zaire, where the collapse of effective government has allowed the spread of
lawlessness and disorder.
"Adversary use of asymmetric
means," in other words, enemies exploitation of novel tools and tactics to
circumvent superior U.S. conventional forces.
The administration does not anticipate the emergence of a "global
peer competitor" comparable to
the old Soviet Union prior to 2015. Its strategy of countering the emergence of regional
aggressors is clearly designed to discourage such a development. However, Defense
Secretary William Cohen acknowledged in his 1999 Annual Report that China could one
day become a superpower rival of America, and also noted the possibility of "wild
card scenarios," meaning completely unexpected threats for which the U.S. is poorly
prepared.
The defense strategy formulated to deal with these interests and threats
has three basic goals. The first is to shape the global environment by promoting regional
stability, mitigating tensions, and deterring aggression, so as to diminish the frequency
with which U.S. military forces must be employed. Efforts to reduce the Russian nuclear
arsenal, halt the spread of ballistic-missile technology, and deprive international
terrorists of safe havens are key features.
The second is to be prepared to respond militarily to a full range of
possible crises. U.S. military forces must be able to deter aggression or coercion; engage
in a variety of smaller-scale, possibly protracted contingencies in widely scattered
locations; and successfully prosecute two "nearly simultaneous major theater
wars," such as Operation Desert Storm. The latter requirement is the main driver of
current force structure. Smaller-scale contingencies require less capability, and the
standard for determining whether forces can effectively deter is inherently subjective.
Virtually all of the key features of current U.S. conventional forces number of
armored divisions, number of long-range bombers, number of naval surface combatants
are in some way linked to the two-wars metric. The administration envisions that most
major theater wars will be conducted in concert with allies, but acknowledges that the
U.S. must be prepared to act alone.
The third basic strategic goal requires the military to think beyond
2015 the planning horizon for the force posture proposed in the Quadrennial Defense
Review in an exercise called "preparing now for an uncertain future."
Neither the administration nor the military claims to know what the global security
environment will look like after 2015. The services describe the forces they will need
then as "capabilities-based" rather than threat-based, acknowledging that they
can only guess at who the enemy might be. The focused modernization effort called for in
this part of the defense strategy is driven by the so-called "Revolution in Military
Affairs," the anticipated transformation in military capabilities made possible by
new information technologies. It is also in this futuristic context that the Quadrennial
Defense Review discusses national missile defense, describing it as an "insurance
policy" against unanticipated threats.
Three fundamental flaws
THE CLINTON ADMINISTRATION'S defense strategy is more
coherent than many critics acknowledge. It identifies the full range of plausible future
threats to national security and has shown a capacity to evolve over time in response to
changing circumstances. Nonetheless, the strategy has three fundamental flaws that make it
an incomplete basis for any road map of future defense investments. First of all, it
provides no real solution to the most serious and persistent security threat the nation
faces, the danger of nuclear attack against the American homeland. Second, it makes
assumptions about the circumstances under which future conflicts might arise that are too
optimistic to assure military supremacy over the long run. And third, even within the
context of neglected threats and convenient assumptions, the strategy does not yield a
force structure or capabilities adequate to satisfy its own requirements.
The first flaw is clearly the most important, reflecting the peculiar
blindness of Democratic administrations throughout the Cold War to the likely impermanence
of nuclear deterrence. U.S. nuclear strategy today, as in the past, depends upon the
presumed validity of an unprovable theory of human behavior. The strategy assumes, inter
alia, that nuclear adversaries will be rational; that they will not be accident-prone;
that they will prevent rogue elements from seizing control of strategic forces; that they
will perceive U.S. actions as intended; and that they will respond to U.S. actions in the
manner American policy makers consider appropriate. There was little historical basis for
such heroic assumptions during the Cold War, and there is even less in its aftermath,
especially given the volatile character of Russian domestic politics and the emergence of
new nuclear players.
The only valid excuse for allowing national survival to rest on such a
fragile base is the absence of alternatives. That was the main argument of those opposing
national missile defense during the Cold War that protection against nuclear attack
was not practicable, and that efforts to provide it would make attacks more likely by
"destabilizing" the superpower security relationship. In the years after the end
of the Cold War, defense became both more feasible and more necessary. The number of
strategic warheads in the Russian nuclear arsenal declined by a third during the 1990s, to
around 7,000; some U.S. intelligence analysts believe that the arsenal will deteriorate to
less than 1,000 usable warheads by 2010 (far below levels permitted under pending arms
control agreements). Defense may accordingly be easier, especially if attack comes in the
form of a limited accidental or unauthorized nuclear launch. But the same
internal decay driving down warhead numbers also makes nuclear accidents, security breakdowns, and proliferation more
likely. With the assumed stability of the Cold War era gone, active defense becomes more
necessary.
Fortunately, significant technological progress has been made in
developing systems that can counter nuclear missile attacks, particularly the
smaller-scale attacks that might be mounted by emerging nuclear powers or rogue commanders
in Russia. After cutting back on national missile defense research during its first term
in office, the Clinton administration began to warm to the idea of relaxing the severe
constraints on missile defenses imposed by the 1972 Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty. But its
defense strategy reflected little sense of urgency about developing defenses, and the
administrations public pronouncements were often fraught with misplaced emphasis,
leaving the impression, for example, that the primitive ballistic missile threat posed by
North Korea was more ominous than Russias 7,000 intercontinental warheads. An
adequate strategy for defending the nation must begin by addressing this challenge more
seriously.
The second fundamental flaw in current strategy is the tendency to make
convenient assumptions about how future warfighting contingencies might arise. Current
strategy assumes that two major conflicts will not occur at exactly the same time; that
well-armed allies will probably participate in major theater wars; that extensive
infrastructure will be available in or near conflict areas to support U.S. forces; that
early suppression of enemy air defenses will be feasible; and that adequate supplies of
precision munitions ("smart bombs") will be available to quickly disable
critical enemy assets.
For all the military success of the Western alliances air
offensive over former Yugoslavia, several of these assumptions proved wrong. The Air Force
began running out of key munitions only a week after the air war began. Uncertainty about
whether enemy air defenses had been disabled hobbled the use of U.S. aircraft. And
European allies proved ill-equipped to participate effectively with U.S. forces in a
precision air campaign. (One senior U.S. military officer was quoted in the press
commenting acidly, "We slipped some training wheels on the Europeans and put them in
the middle of the freeway; after a few days, we said, we better get these kids out
of the road.")
Even the assumptions that proved valid in Kosovo raised troubling
questions about how U.S. forces would fare in future conflicts. For example, the absence
of major conflicts in Northeast Asia and the Persian Gulf region enabled the Pentagon to
remove the only U.S. aircraft carrier in the Northern Pacific as well as
electronic-warfare aircraft enforcing the Iraqi no-fly zones to support the Kosovo
operation. But since the current U.S. force posture was constructed around scenarios
envisioning "nearly simultaneous" conflicts in both Northeast Asia and the
Persian Gulf, how likely is it that U.S. strategy will be adequate to deal with
contingencies in other areas such as the Balkans in the future? What would have happened
if U.S. forces were under pressure in both Iraq and Korea a real possibility
when the Kosovo operation began? And while U.S. forces operating over the former
Yugoslavia did indeed have access to nearby infrastructure in allied countries (they used
two dozen bases), Europe is the only major theater of military operations where base
access is not declining over time. In the Persian Gulf region, even key allies such as the
Saudis have expressed ambivalence about U.S. use of bases there. Obviously, a defense
strategy grounded in excessively optimistic assumptions has the potential to go seriously
awry in the years ahead.
This leads to a third fundamental flaw. Even within the context of
neglected threats and optimistic assumptions, the Clinton administrations strategy
never properly translated into support for the programs necessary to implement it. Indeed,
the administration made a number of foolish program choices. For example:
- The Clinton administration limited production of the stealthy,
next-generation B-2 bomber to 21 aircraft, a fraction of the originally-planned 132
planes. The Air Force does not plan to produce another new bomber until 2037, leaving it
with a force of barely 200 intercontinental bombers for the next 40 years 90
percent of which are not stealthy, and over a third of which (the B-52s) are already
nearly 40 years old.
- Although the U.S. Army today leads the world in heavy-armor technology
for the first time in history, it plans to cease upgrades to its M-1A2 Abrams tank early
in the next decade and forgo any further tank production for a generation. The service has
no firm plans as to when it will resume production of heavy-armor vehicles, and no funding
allocated to provide the majority of existing tanks with the latest digital upgrades.
- Despite the growing versatility of submarines as stealthy platforms for
sea control, land attack with cruise missiles, intelligence gathering, and other missions,
the Navys sub inventory was set to decline from 100 in 1990 to half that number.
Internal Navy studies indicate that 70 attack subs are needed to meet current commitments,
but with many older subs approaching retirement, it is not clear the service can afford to
keep even 50 operational.
Theres no way of knowing precisely where such program trends will
leave the U.S. military in, say, 20 years. But "global military supremacy"
certainly isnt the first phrase that comes to mind. Its not clear the existing
force posture can meet even the near-term demands of national strategy. Shortly after the
end of the Kosovo campaign, Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. Michael Ryan told an audience
that, faced with two simultaneous major-theater conflicts, his service would experience
shortfalls in intelligence collection, surveillance, defense suppression, airlift,
fighters, and bombers. Ryan said the service could cope with the two "nearly
simultaneous" conflicts envisioned in current strategy as long as an
accommodating adversary allowed him to begin shifting assets to the second conflict 90
days after the first one began.
If that is the state of U.S. military preparedness today, imagine where
the U.S. will stand after the full effects of no bomber production, no tank production,
and minimal submarine production have asserted themselves for a generation not to
mention dozens of other key military investments delayed, deferred, or diminished by
recent administrations. Barring some miraculous change in human nature, it is clear that a
much more ambitious investment program will be needed to assure U.S. military supremacy in
the early decades of the next century.
Critical investments ahead
AREALISTIC INVESTMENT STRATEGY for future military supremacy
must begin by recognizing some basic realities: Americas geographical remoteness
from likely theaters of military involvement; the undependability of key allies, who may
lack the resources or resolve to participate in coalition warfare; the ongoing
proliferation of advanced military technologies, including those related to weapons of
mass destruction; the uncertainty of future access to overseas bases; and the traditional
reluctance of Americans to sacrifice their fellow citizens lives in wars with
limited or unclear objectives. Current U.S. defense strategy acknowledges many of these
constraints but does not respond adequately to them.
An effective military investment plan must leverage the nations
extraordinary economic and technological power to compensate for other strategic
disadvantages the United States faces. The Clinton strategy is correct in asserting that
well-trained, well-led personnel are the U.S. militarys most important asset, but
other nations also have competent warriors. Where they cannot match America is in the
scale and sophistication of military technology. The U.S. thus requires a
technology-intensive defense strategy to assure future military supremacy, one which is
more heavily weighted toward investment than driven by readiness, as during the Clinton
years. Almost all of the critical investments can be organized to support five overarching
goals:
- Developing homeland defenses against nuclear attack.
- Preserving global air superiority.
- Asserting unrivaled dominance in space.
- Securing and leveraging the benefits of global maritime supremacy.
- Exploiting the full military potential of the information revolution.
Homeland defense
THE CLINTON ADMINISTRATION BEGAN began stressing the
importance of preparing the nation for future attacks involving chemical or biological
weapons. Planning for the protection of critical infrastructure against information
warfare has begun. The administration has even acknowledged that the emergence of
nuclear-capable rogue states such as North Korea may soon require deployment of national
missile defenses.
These efforts are all worthwhile, and probably should be accelerated.
However, the administrations approach to defense against nuclear attack, while an
improvement over its earlier positions, cannot begin to cope with the full range of
nuclear threats to the American homeland. The current concept is to construct a very
limited system of sensors and interceptors that at least initially would be compatible
with the 1972 ABM Treaty and its 1974
protocol. This would limit the system to 100 interceptors at a single, fixed domestic
site, which the administration believes could be adequate to counter the small, relatively
simple attacks mounted by a North Korea. The system architecture is being designed so it
can evolve into a more capable defensive network able to cope with somewhat larger or more
capable threats, such as those that might be posed by an accidental or unauthorized launch
of Russian missiles.
But the envisioned system will not be able to deal with a large-scale
nuclear attack such as Russia could launch today, or China perhaps 10 years in the future.
In fact, because four interceptors would be needed to provide 95 percent probability of
destroying one incoming warhead, a fully treaty-compliant version of the system could be
overwhelmed by only half a dozen multiple-warhead missiles. If the U.S. homeland is truly
to be defended, a completely different approach is needed, one involving some form of
boost-phase interception in other words, destruction of missiles early in their
launch sequence, before multiple warheads and penetration aids have been released. The
only real candidate at present to accomplish this task is the Air Forces Space-Based
Laser program.
Unfortunately, the Clinton administration allowed the laser program to
languish. Plans for a space-based test of key technologies were delayed from 2005 to 2008,
then to 2010, and now to 2012. Nuclear deterrence may fail long before the leisurely pace
of the program produces anything useful. To make matters worse, congressional proponents
of space-based lasers have contrived a series of excuses for delaying the Air Forces
Airborne Laser program, a theater-missile defense system that will facilitate early
demonstration of key enabling technologies. In short, the boost-phase interception
component of the national missile defense program is in a state of disarray. The Ballistic
Missile Defense Organizations entire budget for directed-energy technologies in the
fiscal 2000-2005 defense spending plan is a mere $450 million.
The United States cannot reasonably claim global military supremacy so
long as it is at the mercy of any nation with more than a handful of nuclear-armed
ballistic missiles. Its present defenselessness is an incentive to adversaries to acquire
nuclear weapons as a relatively inexpensive way of matching U.S. military power. The
administrations plans for a treaty-compliant system are a good first step and a
potentially valuable backup. But real security depends on infusing the Space-Based Laser
program with a much greater sense of urgency, a conclusion congressional authorizing
committees underscored in their conference report on the fiscal 2000 defense budget.
Air superiority
NO AMERICAN SOLDIER HAS BEEN KILLED by enemy aircraft since
the Korean War. No American military plane has been shot down by enemy aircraft since the
Vietnam War. And throughout the American Century a period of history essentially
coterminous with the age of air power the American homeland has never been subject
to a bombing campaign by foreign adversaries. These achievements have been made possible
in large measure by what air power theorist Guilio Douhet at the beginning of the century
called "command of the air."
Americans have enjoyed air superiority for so long that they have come
to take it for granted. Few citizens fully grasp what an accomplishment it was to pound
Serbia into submission without losing a single allied pilot or having to commit ground
forces. But precisely because U.S. air superiority has come to seem so inevitable, there
is a real danger that it could be lost sometime early in the next century. The Air
Forces plans for a stealthy heavy bomber not dependent on forward bases were scaled
back to a mere 21 planes, the only survivable long-range strike aircraft it now plans to
operate for decades to come. The Clinton administration reduced scheduled production of
the only new air-superiority fighter the Air Force has developed in the last quarter
century, the stealthy F-22, from 750 planes to 648, then to 438, then to 339 and
finally, congressional appropriators in fiscal 2000 budget deliberations threatened the
plane with extinction altogether. And because it had expected to have large numbers of
stealthy next-generation bombers and fighters, the service abandoned its fleet of
electronic-warfare aircraft, leaving the joint tactical jamming mission to the Navy.
Planners also cut the production goal for the services
next-generation strategic airlifter, the versatile C-17, by 40 percent and threatened the
program with termination in the early 1990s. That program eventually got back on track,
and the Air Force will probably buy
close to the 210 planes originally planned. But in virtually every other category of
aircraft fighters, bombers, tankers, surveillance planes, tactical airlifters
the service operates an increasingly aged and decrepit fleet. High rates of
utilization and low rates of production during the Clinton years accelerated the decay. If
U.S. air superiority is to be assured during the early decades of the next century, three
efforts in particular must receive increased funding:
- Plans to upgrade the Air Forces 21 B-2 bombers should be organized
to facilitate further production of long-range strike aircraft in the near future. Careful
sequencing and management of programmed improvements would allow the service to develop a
"virtual prototype" of a cheaper, more capable B-2 variant that could be
produced in the next decade.
- Production of the F-22 must be kept on schedule to avoid huge costs and
delays in fielding a next-generation air-superiority fighter. The F-15 fighter that the
F-22 will replace is a Vietnam-era airframe that cannot assure air superiority against
more modern foreign fighters, and the other tactical aircraft the U.S. is developing are
not suitable for the air superiority role.
- The Joint Surveillance and Target Attack Radar System (JSTARS), a radar plane that does for ground surveillance
what the awacs does for air surveillance, must be upgraded and procured in sufficient
numbers. The Clinton administration wrongly assumed allies would buy six for coalition
operations, but since they havent, the U.S. production goal should be restored to at
least the original 19 aircraft (some senior Air Force officers think twice that number
would be optimal).
The Air Force also needs to revitalize its electronic-warfare community
and determine how it will replace hundreds of aging KC-135 tankers and C-130 tactical
transports. These missions are not as well understood in Congress as the more visible
combat missions, but they are critical to the Air Forces success in future
conflicts. With access to foreign bases increasingly doubtful, the importance of
range-extending aerial refueling tankers and rugged intratheater airlifters that can land
almost anywhere will become increasingly apparent in the years ahead. But the average
KC-135 tanker is 38 years old, and many C-130s are operating well beyond their intended
design lives. They need to be replaced soon.
Space superiority
IN THE 40
YEARS SINCE the United States launched its first photographic
reconnaissance spy satellite (the KH-2 in 1959), the U.S. military has become increasingly
dependent on and proficient in the use of orbital space platforms. The most important
military satellites are five constellations of early-warning, communications, navigation,
and meteorological spacecraft operated by the U.S. Space Command; and a series of highly
classified intelligence satellites such as the Orion electronic-eavesdropping system
operated by the National Reconnaissance Office. The Air Force has traditionally been the
lead military service for acquiring and operating space systems, often acting in concert
with the intelligence community. However, all of the military services have become heavy
users of these systems, even though the Air Force bears most of the budgetary burden.
The Soviet Union tried hard throughout the Cold War to keep up with
America in the military utilization of space, but after losing an early lead during the
Kennedy administration, it never again came close to matching the sophistication of U.S.
orbital assets. The Russian military space program today is a pale shadow of its
Soviet-era scale, unable even to provide national leaders with continuous early warning
against nuclear attack. A handful of other countries such as France and Israel have
established niche competencies in particular satellite types, but the U.S. remains by far
the dominant producer and user of military spacecraft. This not only provides a critical
advantage in global defense operations, but also is a key reason America leads the world
in commercial satellite sales and technology. The U.S. will continue to dominate satellite
innovation for the foreseeable future, unless overly restrictive export controls hobble
the competitiveness of an increasingly commercial business.
The same cannot be said of the launcher segment of the space business,
where the U.S. faltered badly after the Challenger disaster in 1986. Because the Space
Shuttle was expected to replace traditional launchers in many roles, the U.S. spent
relatively little on upgrading its expendable launchers once the shuttle program began.
But the shuttle never lived up to the expectation that it would greatly reduce the cost of
orbiting satellites, and after the Challenger exploded, most military payloads were
returned to expendable launchers. A series of false starts on new launchers such as the
"Advanced Launch System" and "National Launch System" then ensued, as
the U.S. tried to improve a fleet that consisted of little more than modified variants of
Eisenhower-era ballistic missiles.
This effort led eventually to the Evolved Expendable Launch Vehicle (EELV) program in the Clinton administration, a family of
launchers that may finally solve the near-term need for cheaper, more reliable access to
space. The EELV program is essential to
effective U.S. space operations in the early decades of the next century. But by the time
that program began to bear fruit, much of the domestic demand for commercial space
launches had already moved offshore to France, Russia, and China. This process was
accelerated by neglect in modernizing and expanding the U.S. launch infrastructure. If the
United States is to maintain its present dominance in military, civil, and commercial
space operations over the long run, it will need something more revolutionary than an
evolved expendable launcher.
The leading candidate to serve as this "leap-ahead" space
transportation system is VentureStar, a "single-stage-to-orbit" launch vehicle
being developed by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration and several of the
nations largest aerospace companies. In conceptual terms, VentureStar will be a
cross between the Space Shuttle and an aircraft, with reusable systems, aerodynamic
landings, and quick turnaround on the ground. It will have a payload comparable to the
shuttle, but much lower costs and higher reliability. The first commercial operations are
forecast for 2005. Before two full-scale vehicles can be built, though, NASA needs to demonstrate key technologies on a smaller
test vehicle designated the X-33 probably beginning next year. Because reliable
access to space at reasonable cost is the greatest single weakness in the current U.S.
military space program, the X-33/VentureStar effort should arguably be the highest funding
priority in any campaign aimed at bolstering space capabilities for the future.
Maritime supremacy
DIPLOMATIC HISTORIAN JOHN SPANIER once explained
Americas purported insularity from world affairs by observing that it was "a
nation with nonthreatening neighbors to the north and south, and fish to the east and
west." He might more accurately have said, "and the U.S. Navy to the east and
west." During the nineteenth century, the Navy was the main bulwark against European
intervention in the Western Hemisphere; in the twentieth century, it became the most
frequently used instrument of American influence in the Eastern Hemisphere. The American
Century, which began so portentously in 1907 when President Theodore Roosevelt dispatched
the Great White Fleet on a cruise around the world, ended with the 97,000-ton,
nuclear-powered aircraft carrier named for Roosevelt sitting in the Adriatic Sea,
launching dozens of precision air strikes daily against the warmaking capacity of Serbia.
By the time the latter development unfolded in spring 1999, the U.S.
Navy no longer had a real rival for global maritime supremacy. One by one, all of the
other great naval powers of the
twentieth century Britain, Japan, Russia had receded to the status of
regional players. But the U.S. Navy no longer thinks solely in terms of such traditional
missions as sea control. Since the end of the Cold War, the Navy and its sister service,
the Marine Corps, have set forth an increasingly bold vision for using naval strike forces
to intervene ashore. The new doctrine, first explored in a 1993 conceptual document called
"
From the Sea," seeks to exploit the fact that most of the worlds
population and commerce are found within a few hundred miles of the sea well within
the range of sea-based aircraft and missiles. It fashions a post-Cold War role for the sea
services that leverages their mobility, versatility, and independence to make them potent
military forces far from the sea.
This is a potentially revolutionary development, one that may have great
military significance in the next century if the U.S. continues to withdraw from land
bases in the Eurasian littoral. With diminished access to foreign bases and a dwindling
number of long-range strike aircraft in the U.S. inventory, there undoubtedly will be many
overseas contingencies in the years ahead in which only the Navy and Marine Corps can
respond with the requisite combination of speed and sustained firepower. But as the number
of warships in the fleet shrinks to barely half its Reagan-era peak, the Navy has to make
hard choices about what mix of vessels is best suited to implement its new doctrine of
littoral warfare.
Aside from Marine Corps amphibious assets, the service seems to be
evolving toward a mix of three next-generation warships: advanced large-deck aircraft
carriers, multimission surface combatants, and versatile attack subs. In each case, the
next-generation vessel will be expected to accomplish a broader spectrum of missions than
the ship classes it replaces, while being much less manpower- and maintenance-intensive.
New technologies such as electric drive and digital networks will enhance the efficiency
of each vessel and will link ships, aircraft, and space assets together in an integrated
warfighting system greater than the sum of its parts. Navy insiders call this a transition
from "platform-centric" to "network-centric" warfare.
In doctrinal terms the revolution is already well advanced. The Navy
knows what capabilities it is seeking in next-generation warships, and has begun
development of all three classes. But there are challenges with each class caused by
inadequate funding:
Development of the New Attack Submarine ("NSSN" in naval nomenclature) has progressed to a point where initial production
can begin. However, even though the versatile sub will be the only undersea warship
produced for the foreseeable future and may even be modified to serve as a
successor to Trident strategic-missile subs there is uncertainty as to whether the Navy can afford the annual build
rate of two to three boats necessary to sustain an adequate fleet.
Development of a new destroyer, designated DD-21, is still in its
infancy, but the vessels diverse mission requirements ranging from land
attack to theater missile defense to antisubmarine warfare are raising doubts about
whether it can operate as planned with a much reduced crew of perhaps 100 sailors. This
program may need increased funding to assure that all required capabilities are suitably
integrated in time to commence production in the next decade.
Development of an advanced replacement for large-deck Nimitz-class
aircraft carriers has been slowed by budgetary constraints, forcing the Navy to gradually
introduce new design innovations over a period of many years. The consequences of this
delay will be compounded by the Clinton administrations unwillingness to fund the
necessary force structure of 15 carriers, which would require production of one new
carrier every four years rather than five.
In addition to these long-term challenges, there are two more pressing
issues that the Navy must address soon. First, the aging EA-6B Prowler carrier-based
electronic warfare aircraft, which provides tactical jamming for all U.S. military
aircraft, must be replaced in the near future. With only a hundred such aircraft available
worldwide on any given day and their average age approaching 18 years (production ceased
10 years ago), it is just a matter of time before lack of coverage leads to combat losses.
Providing adequate coverage of U.S. strike aircraft during the Kosovo operation required
shifting a third of available assets to the Balkan theater, leaving other regions thinly
protected. Since it is too late to begin the lengthy development of a
"clean-sheet" replacement aircraft, the only practical solution is to take
advanced jamming equipment already in development for the Prowler and integrate it into a
variant of the Navys new strike aircraft, the F/A-18 Super Hornet. The Super Hornet
will be the dominant fighter-bomber in the Navy inventory for the foreseeable future, so
making it the host for electronic-warfare missions will minimize logistics costs and
maximize air-wing flexibility.
The other pressing near-term issue is disposition of four Trident
ballistic-missile submarines due to depart strategic service early in the next decade.
These boats are in need of nuclear refueling and probably are no longer required for the
deterrence mission. But their large size makes them well-suited for use as stealthy
land-attack warships carrying cruise missiles. Modifying the subs for that mission would
be an innovative and low-cost approach to bolstering the firepower for littoral warfare,
but because it cuts across traditional mission lines, the service has not fully embraced
the concept. Conversion needs to be funded while the option still exists.
The Marine Corps has made huge progress in recent years modernizing its
aging collection of amphibious combat vessels. A class of eight very capable LHD amphibious assault vessels they look like small
aircraft carriers and cost over $1 billion each will be complemented by a dozen new
San Antonio-class vessels incorporating advanced design concepts and technology,
leaving the service well positioned in terms of combat vessels for the next century.
However, the corps faces major problems with an obsolescent aircraft fleet that have been
exacerbated by Clinton Administration cutbacks in the planned production run and rate of
the V-22 tiltrotor aircraft. The V-22 features the range and speed of a fixed-wing
aircraft, combined with the vertical ascent/descent of a helicopter. It is the most
important new aircraft the corps has purchased in two generations. The program needs to be
restored to higher production goals at accelerated rates, before more Marines fall victim
to their aging aircraft. The corps also needs to ensure that its next-generation Advanced
Amphibious Assault Vehicle is adequately funded, because existing vehicles for transiting
from ship to shore lack the range, speed, flexibility, and protection for littoral warfare
in the next century.
Information revolution
THE FINAL OVERARCHING GOAL of an investment strategy for
future military supremacy can be covered quickly, because it is not so much a mission area
as a mindset. Virtually all of the advanced military systems and capabilities discussed
above draw on new information technologies. From the pinpoint accuracy of smart bombs to
the battle management of missile defenses to the superior connectivity of network-centric
warfare, it is apparent that every facet of Americas military posture is now
permeated with digital processors and software. This is arguably the greatest military
achievement of the Clinton years, a broadly based breakthrough in capabilities grounded in
awareness that Cold War systems can be made much more effective through the insertion of
new technology.
Over the next several decades, the armed forces must make a costly
transition from the insertion of digital components to exploiting the full potential of
the information revolution. But it is important to recognize that most of the major weapon
systems that will be found in the force posture of 2020 have already been built today. The
nation cannot afford to simply walk away from this vast investment in military hardware,
and it doesnt need to. Innovative upgrades of older systems can keep many of them
relevant to combat even as the full potential of the information revolution is being
realized in a new generation of weapons.
Rather than permitting sharp discontinuities in capability as the result
of a fitful transition to something fundamentally new, it is more prudent and affordable
to gradually introduce next-generation weapons into a force structure where proven systems
still have a place. That means systematically applying digital technologies across the
force structure and to its underlying logistics base rather than reserving
them for the "gee-whiz" weapons of tomorrow. The Clinton administration made a
good start on this process, one on which future administrations should try to build.
The price of supremacy
DISCUSSIONS OF FUTURE MILITARY requirements lead inevitably
to questions about affordability particularly in periods of diminished danger, when
the consequences of failing to modernize forces are less apparent. While the cost of the
investment program set forth above would be considerable, some perspective on the scale
and composition of current U.S. military spending is in order. Viewed in the light of
post-Cold War threats, the scale of U.S. defense expenditures in the late 1990s was
already quite imposing; at about one-third of the global total, it is many times the
military budget of any existing adversary. But while dangers to democracy are at their
lowest ebb in three generations, that situation cannot prudently be expected to last
indefinitely. Moreover, much of Americas current quarter-trillion-dollar annual
defense budget is spent inefficiently on redundant bases, the high overhead costs of an
all-volunteer force, and support functions that should long since have been contracted to
the private sector.
If the Defense Department were operated according to the management
standards prevailing at the nations most competitive private companies, it would
probably be feasible to accommodate the proposed investment agenda within planned budgets.
Unfortunately, the Clinton administrations efforts to reform Pentagon management
practices were mainly rebuffed by Congress. Furthermore, it is doubtful that government
could ever come close to matching the efficiency of the marketplace, and even trying to do
so might undercut popular support for defense spending. In any event, fundamental reform
takes time, and after the depressed investment spending of the last decade, that is one
thing the armed forces do not have. A program to preserve global military supremacy needs
to be funded now.
That means political leaders must abandon the belief that they can enjoy
sustained military supremacy for only 3 percent of gross domestic product, the level of
defense spending prevailing in 1999. Some say, reform first. But insisting on
"fixing" the Pentagon before major increases in military expenditure are
approved would be like refusing to increase Medicare and Medicaid expenditures until those
programs are reformed: Many people may die before the system is noticeably improved.
The good news is that U.S. economic activity is so robust compared with
that of current or prospective enemies that global military supremacy can be sustained for
only a modest additional increment of national wealth: on the order of 0.5 percent of gdp.
The Congressional Budget Office
estimated in July 1999 that U.S. gross domestic product in fiscal 2002 will for the first
time surpass $10 trillion. Following Clinton administration guidelines, defense spending
the same year is likely to total about $300 billion, matching its current 3 percent claim
on national output.
Fiscal 2002 (beginning October 1, 2001) is also the first full budget
year for President Clintons successor. It thus will be the critical year for
establishing the tenor and priorities of a new administration. A commitment to increase
defense spending by an average of half a percent of gdp over the subsequent eight years
would ensure that all of the investment goals for future military supremacy described
above could be met (so long as the new presidents defense managers maintained a
clear sense of their goals). It would enable the United States to begin rapid development
of real homeland defenses, to bolster its global air and space superiority, to leverage
the benefits of maritime supremacy, and to realize the full military potential of the
information revolution.
Critics would undoubtedly complain that a defense budget increase
ranging from $50 billion in 2002 to $70 billion in 2010 (assuming a $14 trillion gdp in
the latter year) is excessive. In a limited sense, they might be right: Quickly increasing
defense spending in the first year of a new administration could lead to waste. In the
larger sense, however, they would be wrong. The share of national output allocated to
defense would still be less than half the 7.5 percent average of the Cold War years. And
because per capita gdp is so much bigger now than it was then, the sacrifice of average
taxpayers would be smaller still.
It is important to keep in mind that the real (after-inflation) buying
power of the U.S. defense budget has declined continuously since fiscal 1986. Increasing
the defense budget by the equivalent of half a percent of gdp would barely restore its
buying power to the level at which it stood at the beginning of the 1990s, long after the
decline from the peak spending of the Reagan years had commenced.
But this still would be sufficient to meet the investment requirements
of global military supremacy. One reason is that the Clinton administration programmed a
42 percent nominal increase in procurement spending into its fiscal 2000-2005 defense
budget plan (from $53 billion to $75 billion in "then-year" dollars). Skeptics
who remember the administrations repeated deferral of promised procurement increases
in the mid-1990s were right to question whether this commitment would mean anything years
after Clinton left office. But the plan is there, and a new administration has the option
of building on it, not only by purchasing the sinews of long-term military superiority,
but also by bolstering the readiness accounts that robbed procurement spending during the
Clinton years.
So global military supremacy is affordable at a level of sacrifice that
many citizens might hardly notice. In a nation that now spends 6 percent to 7 percent of
national wealth on various forms of gambling, it hardly seems unrealistic to expect that
half that amount might be spent on defense. After all, the alternative might be to suffer
military defeat at the hands of an emerging competitor sometime in the first half of the
next century. That may seem improbable today, but who foresaw the full extent of the
danger that would be posed by fascism or communism in the early years after the Great War?
Human nature has not changed. If no other lesson can be learned from the deaths of 100
million human beings in conflicts during the American Century, there is at least the one
that lingers from the experience of Rome two millennia ago as well: Over the long run it
costs far more to be unprepared for war than it does to be well-armed and ready.
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