A Balanced Strategy
Reprogramming the Pentagon for a New Age
From Foreign
Affairs,
Summary: The
Pentagon has to do more than modernize its conventional forces; it must also
focus on today's unconventional conflicts -- and tomorrow's.
Robert M. Gates is U.S. Secretary of Defense.
The defining
principle of the Pentagon's new National Defense Strategy is balance. The United
States cannot expect to eliminate national security risks through higher defense
budgets, to do everything and buy everything. The Department of Defense must set
priorities and consider inescapable tradeoffs and opportunity costs.
The strategy
strives for balance in three areas: between trying to prevail in current
conflicts and preparing for other contingencies, between institutionalizing
capabilities such as counterinsurgency and foreign military assistance and
maintaining the United States' existing conventional and strategic technological
edge against other military forces, and between retaining those cultural traits
that have made the U.S. armed forces successful and shedding those that hamper
their ability to do what needs to be done.
UNCONVENTIONAL
THINKING
The United
States' ability to deal with future threats will depend on its performance in
current conflicts. To be blunt, to fail -- or to be seen to fail -- in either
Iraq or Afghanistan would be a disastrous blow to U.S. credibility, both among
friends and allies and among potential adversaries.
In Iraq, the
number of U.S. combat units there will decline over time -- as it was going to
do no matter who was elected president in November. Still, there will continue
to be some kind of U.S. advisory and counterterrorism effort in Iraq for years
to come.
In Afghanistan,
as President George W. Bush announced last September, U.S. troop levels are
rising, with the likelihood of more increases in the year ahead. Given its
terrain, poverty, neighborhood, and tragic history, Afghanistan in many ways
poses an even more complex and difficult long-term challenge than Iraq -- one
that, despite a large international effort, will require a significant U.S.
military and economic commitment for some time.
It would be
irresponsible not to think about and prepare for the future, and the
overwhelming majority of people in the Pentagon, the services, and the defense
industry do just that. But we must not be so preoccupied with preparing for
future conventional and strategic conflicts that we neglect to provide all the
capabilities necessary to fight and win conflicts such as those the United
States is in today.
Support for
conventional modernization programs is deeply embedded in the Defense
Department's budget, in its bureaucracy, in the defense industry, and in
Congress. My fundamental concern is that there is not commensurate institutional
support -- including in the Pentagon -- for the capabilities needed to win
today's wars and some of their likely successors.
What is dubbed
the war on terror is, in grim reality, a prolonged, worldwide irregular campaign
-- a struggle between the forces of violent extremism and those of moderation.
Direct military force will continue to play a role in the long-term effort
against terrorists and other extremists. But over the long term, the United
States cannot kill or capture its way to victory. Where possible, what the
military calls kinetic operations should be subordinated to measures aimed at
promoting better governance, economic programs that spur development, and
efforts to address the grievances among the discontented, from whom the
terrorists recruit. It will take the patient accumulation of quiet successes
over a long time to discredit and defeat extremist movements and their
ideologies.
The United
States is unlikely to repeat another Iraq or Afghanistan -- that is, forced
regime change followed by nation building under fire -- anytime soon. But that
does not mean it may not face similar challenges in a variety of locales. Where
possible, U.S. strategy is to employ indirect approaches -- primarily through
building the capacity of partner governments and their security forces -- to
prevent festering problems from turning into crises that require costly and
controversial direct military intervention. In this kind of effort, the
capabilities of the United States' allies and partners may be as important as
its own, and building their capacity is arguably as important as, if not more so
than, the fighting the United States does itself.
The recent past
vividly demonstrated the consequences of failing to address adequately the
dangers posed by insurgencies and failing states. Terrorist networks can find
sanctuary within the borders of a weak nation and strength within the chaos of
social breakdown. A nuclear-armed state could collapse into chaos and
criminality. The most likely catastrophic threats to the U.S. homeland -- for
example, that of a U.S. city being poisoned or reduced to rubble by a terrorist
attack -- are more likely to emanate from failing states than from aggressor
states.
The kinds of
capabilities needed to deal with these scenarios cannot be considered exotic
distractions or temporary diversions. The United States does not have the luxury
of opting out because these scenarios do not conform to preferred notions of the
American way of war.
Furthermore,
even the biggest of wars will require "small wars" capabilities. Ever since
General Winfield Scott led his army into Mexico in the 1840s, nearly every major
deployment of U.S. forces has led to a longer subsequent military presence to
maintain stability. Whether in the midst of or in the aftermath of any major
conflict, the requirement for the U.S. military to maintain security, provide
aid and comfort, begin reconstruction, and prop up local governments and public
services will not go away.
The military and
civilian elements of the United States' national security apparatus have
responded unevenly and have grown increasingly out of balance. The problem is
not will; it is capacity. In many ways, the country's national security
capabilities are still coping with the consequences of the 1990s, when, with the
complicity of both ends of Pennsylvania Avenue, key instruments of U.S. power
abroad were reduced or allowed to wither on the bureaucratic vine. The State
Department froze the hiring of new Foreign Service officers. The U.S. Agency for
International Development dropped from a high of having 15,000 permanent staff
members during the Vietnam War to having less than 3,000 today. And then there
was the U.S. Information Agency, whose directors once included the likes of
Edward R. Murrow. It was split into pieces and folded into a corner of the State
Department. Since 9/11, and through the efforts first of Secretary of State
Colin Powell and now of Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, the State
Department has made a comeback. Foreign Service officers are being hired again,
and foreign affairs spending has about doubled since President Bush took
office.
Yet even with a
better-funded State Department and U.S. Agency for International Development,
future military commanders will not be able to rid themselves of the tasks of
maintaining security and stability. To truly achieve victory as Clausewitz
defined it -- to attain a political objective -- the United States needs a
military whose ability to kick down the door is matched by its ability to clean
up the mess and even rebuild the house afterward.
Given these
realities, the military has made some impressive strides in recent years.
Special operations have received steep increases in funding and personnel. The
air force has created a new air advisory program and a new career track for
unmanned aerial operations. The navy has set up a new expeditionary combat
command and brought back its riverine units. New counterinsurgency and army
operations manuals, plus a new maritime strategy, have incorporated the lessons
of recent years in service doctrine. "Train and equip" programs allow for
quicker improvements in the security capacity of partner nations. And various
initiatives are under way that will better integrate and coordinate U.S.
military efforts with civilian agencies as well as engage the expertise of the
private sector, including nongovernmental organizations and academia.
CONVENTIONAL
THREATS IN PERSPECTIVE
Even as its
military hones and institutionalizes new and unconventional skills, the United
States still has to contend with the security challenges posed by the military
forces of other countries. The images of Russian tanks rolling into Georgia last
August were a reminder that nation-states and their militaries do still matter.
Both Russia and China have increased their defense spending and modernization
programs to include air defense and fighter capabilities that in some cases
approach the United States' own. In addition, there is the potentially toxic mix
of rogue nations, terrorist groups, and nuclear, chemical, or biological
weapons. North Korea has built several bombs, and Iran seeks to join the nuclear
club.
What all these
potential adversaries -- from terrorist cells to rogue nations to rising powers
-- have in common is that they have learned that it is unwise to confront the
United States directly on conventional military terms. The United States cannot
take its current dominance for granted and needs to invest in the programs,
platforms, and personnel that will ensure that dominance's
persistence.
But it is also
important to keep some perspective. As much as the U.S. Navy has shrunk since
the end of the Cold War, for example, in terms of tonnage, its battle fleet is
still larger than the next 13 navies combined -- and 11 of those 13 navies are
U.S. allies or partners. Russian tanks and artillery may have crushed Georgia's
tiny military. But before the United States begins rearming for another Cold
War, it must remember that what is driving Russia is a desire to exorcise past
humiliation and dominate its "near abroad" -- not an ideologically driven
campaign to dominate the globe. As someone who used to prepare estimates of
Soviet military strength for several presidents, I can say that Russia's
conventional military, although vastly improved since its nadir in the late
1990s, remains a shadow of its Soviet predecessor. And adverse demographic
trends in Russia will likely keep those conventional forces in check.
All told, the
2008 National Defense Strategy concludes that although U.S. predominance in
conventional warfare is not unchallenged, it is sustainable for the medium term
given current trends. It is true that the United States would be hard-pressed to
fight a major conventional ground war elsewhere on short notice, but as I have
asked before, where on earth would we do that? U.S. air and sea forces have
ample untapped striking power should the need arise to deter or punish
aggression -- whether on the Korean Peninsula, in the Persian Gulf, or across
the Taiwan Strait. So although current strategy knowingly assumes some
additional risk in this area, that risk is a prudent and manageable
one.
Other nations
may be unwilling to challenge the United States fighter to fighter, ship to
ship, tank to tank. But they are developing the disruptive means to blunt the
impact of U.S. power, narrow the United States' military options, and deny the
U.S. military freedom of movement and action.
In the case of
China, Beijing's investments in cyberwarfare, antisatellite warfare,
antiaircraft and antiship weaponry, submarines, and ballistic missiles could
threaten the United States' primary means to project its power and help its
allies in the Pacific: bases, air and sea assets, and the networks that support
them. This will put a premium on the United States' ability to strike from over
the horizon and employ missile defenses and will require shifts from short-range
to longer-range systems, such as the next-generation bomber.
And even though
the days of hair-trigger superpower confrontation are over, as long as other
nations possess the bomb and the means to deliver it, the United States must
maintain a credible strategic deterrent. Toward this end, the Department of
Defense and the air force have taken firm steps to return excellence and
accountability to nuclear stewardship. Congress needs to do its part by funding
the Reliable Replacement Warhead Program -- for safety, for security, and for a
more reliable deterrent.
When thinking
about the range of threats, it is common to divide the "high end" from the "low
end," the conventional from the irregular, armored divisions on one side,
guerrillas toting AK-47s on the other. In reality, as the political scientist
Colin Gray has noted, the categories of warfare are blurring and no longer fit
into neat, tidy boxes. one can expect to see more tools and tactics of
destruction -- from the sophisticated to the simple -- being employed
simultaneously in hybrid and more complex forms of warfare.
Russia's
relatively crude -- although brutally effective -- conventional offensive in
Georgia was augmented with a sophisticated cyberattack and a well-coordinated
propaganda campaign. The United States saw a different combination of tools
during the invasion of Iraq, when Saddam Hussein dispatched his swarming
Fedayeen paramilitary fighters along with the T-72 tanks of the Republican
Guard.
Conversely,
militias, insurgent groups, other nonstate actors, and developing-world
militaries are increasingly acquiring more technology, lethality, and
sophistication -- as illustrated by the losses and propaganda victory that
Hezbollah was able to inflict on Israel in 2006. Hezbollah's restocked arsenal
of rockets and missiles now dwarfs the inventory of many nation-states.
Furthermore, Chinese and Russian arms sales are putting advanced capabilities,
both offensive and defensive, in the hands of more countries and groups. As the
defense scholar Frank Hoffman has noted, these hybrid scenarios combine "the
lethality of state conflict with the fanatical and protracted fervor of
irregular warfare," what another defense scholar, Michael Evans, has described
as "wars . . . in which Microsoft coexists with machetes and stealth technology
is met by suicide bombers."
Just as one can
expect a blended high-low mix of adversaries and types of conflict, so, too,
should the United States seek a better balance in the portfolio of capabilities
it has -- the types of units fielded, the weapons bought, the training done.
When it comes to
procurement, for the better part of five decades, the trend has gone toward
lower numbers as technology gains have made each system more capable. In recent
years, these platforms have grown ever more baroque, have become ever more
costly, are taking longer to build, and are being fielded in ever-dwindling
quantities. Given that resources are not unlimited, the dynamic of exchanging
numbers for capability is perhaps reaching a point of diminishing returns. A
given ship or aircraft, no matter how capable or well equipped, can be in only
one place at one time.
For decades,
meanwhile, the prevailing view has been that weapons and units designed for the
so-called high end could also be used for the low end. And to some extent that
has been true: Strategic bombers designed to obliterate cities have been used as
close air support for riflemen on horseback. M-1 tanks originally designed to
plug the Fulda Gap during a Soviet attack on Western Europe routed Iraqi
insurgents in Fallujah and Najaf. Billion-dollar ships are employed to track
pirates and deliver humanitarian aid. And the U.S. Army is spinning out parts of
the Future Combat Systems program, as they move from the drawing board to
reality, so that they can be available and usable for troops in Afghanistan and
Iraq.
Nevertheless,
given the types of situations the United States is likely to face -- and given,
for example, the struggles to field up-armored Humvees, Mine Resistant Ambush
Protected vehicles (MRAPs), and intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance
(ISR) programs in Iraq -- the time has come to consider whether the specialized,
often relatively low-tech equipment well suited for stability and
counterinsurgency missions is also needed. It is time to think hard about how to
institutionalize the procurement of such capabilities and get them fielded
quickly. Why was it necessary to go outside the normal bureaucratic process to
develop technologies to counter improvised explosive devices, to build MRAPs,
and to quickly expand the United States' ISR capability? In short, why was it
necessary to bypass existing institutions and procedures to get the capabilities
needed to protect U.S. troops and fight ongoing wars?
The Department
of Defense's conventional modernization programs seek a 99 percent solution over
a period of years. Stability and counterinsurgency missions require 75 percent
solutions over a period of months. The challenge is whether these two different
paradigms can be made to coexist in the U.S. military's mindset and
bureaucracy.
The Defense
Department has to consider whether in situations in which the United States has
total air dominance, it makes sense to employ lower-cost, lower-tech aircraft
that can be employed in large quantities and used by U.S. partners. This is
already happening now in the field with Task Force ODIN in Iraq, which has mated
advanced sensors with turboprop aircraft to produce a massive increase in the
amount of surveillance and reconnaissance coverage. The issue then becomes how
to build this kind of innovative thinking and flexibility into the rigid
procurement processes at home. The key is to make sure that the strategy and
risk assessment drive the procurement, rather than the other way
around.
SUSTAINING THE
INSTITUTION
The ability to
fight and adapt to a diverse range of conflicts, sometimes simultaneously, fits
squarely within the long history and the finest traditions of the American
practice of arms. In the Revolutionary War, tight formations drilled by Baron
Friedrich von Steuben fought redcoats in the North while guerrillas led by
Francis Marion harassed them in the South. During the 1920s and 1930s, the
Marine Corps conducted what would now be called stability operations in the
Caribbean, wrote the Small Wars Manual, and at the same time developed the
amphibious landing techniques that would help liberate Europe and the Pacific in
the following decade. And consider General John "Black Jack" Pershing: before
commanding the American Expeditionary Forces in Europe in World War I, Pershing
led a platoon of Sioux scouts, rode with buffalo soldiers up San Juan Hill, won
the respect of the Moro in the Philippines, and chased Pancho Villa in
Mexico.
In Iraq, an army
that was basically a smaller version of the United States' Cold War force over
time became an effective instrument of counterinsurgency. But that transition
came at a frightful human, financial, and political cost. For every heroic and
resourceful innovation by troops and commanders on the battlefield, there was
some institutional shortcoming at the Pentagon they had to overcome. There have
to be institutional changes so that the next set of colonels, captains, and
sergeants will not have to be quite so heroic or quite so
resourceful.
One of the
enduring issues the military struggles with is whether personnel and promotions
systems designed to reward the command of American troops will be able to
reflect the importance of advising, training, and equipping foreign troops --
something still not considered a career-enhancing path for the best and
brightest officers. Another is whether formations and units organized, trained,
and equipped to destroy enemies can be adapted well enough and fast enough to
dissuade or co-opt them -- or, more significant, to build the capacity of local
security forces to do the dissuading and destroying.
As secretary of
defense, I have repeatedly made the argument in favor of institutionalizing
counterinsurgency skills and the ability to conduct stability and support
operations. I have done so not because I fail to appreciate the importance of
maintaining the United States' current advantage in conventional war fighting
but rather because conventional and strategic force modernization programs are
already strongly supported in the services, in Congress, and by the defense
industry. The base budget for fiscal year 2009, for example, contains more than
$180 billion for procurement, research, and development, the overwhelming
preponderance of which is for conventional systems.
Apart from the
Special Forces community and some dissident colonels, however, for decades there
has been no strong, deeply rooted constituency inside the Pentagon or elsewhere
for institutionalizing the capabilities necessary to wage asymmetric or
irregular conflict -- and to quickly meet the ever-changing needs of forces
engaged in these conflicts.
Think of where
U.S. forces have been sent and have been engaged over the last 40-plus years:
Vietnam, Lebanon, Grenada, Panama, Somalia, Haiti, Bosnia, Kosovo, Afghanistan,
Iraq, the Horn of Africa, and more. In fact, the first Gulf War stands alone in
over two generations of constant military engagement as a more or less
traditional conventional conflict from beginning to end. As General Charles
Krulak, then the Marine Corps commandant, predicted a decade ago, instead of the
beloved "Son of Desert Storm," Western militaries are confronted with the
unwanted "Stepchild of Chechnya."
There is no
doubt in my mind that conventional modernization programs will continue to have,
and deserve, strong institutional and congressional support. I just want to make
sure that the capabilities needed for the complex conflicts the United States is
actually in and most likely to face in the foreseeable future also have strong
and sustained institutional support over the long term. And I want to see a
defense establishment that can make and implement decisions quickly in support
of those on the battlefield.
In the end, the
military capabilities needed cannot be separated from the cultural traits and
the reward structure of the institutions the United States has: the signals sent
by what gets funded, who gets promoted, what is taught in the academies and
staff colleges, and how personnel are trained.
Thirty-six years
ago, my old CIA colleague Robert Komer, who led the pacification campaign in
Vietnam, published his classic study of organizational behavior, Bureaucracy
Does Its Thing. Looking at the performance of the U.S. national security
apparatus during the conflict in Vietnam, both military and civilian, he
identified a number of tendencies that prevented institutions from adapting long
after problems had been identified and solutions proposed: a reluctance to
change preferred ways of functioning, the attempt to run a war with a peacetime
management structure and peacetime practices, a belief that the current set of
problems either was an aberration or would soon be over, and the tendency for
problems that did not fit organizations' inherited structures and preferences to
fall through the cracks.
I mention this
study not to relitigate that war or slight the enormous strides the
institutional military has made in recent years but simply as a reminder that
these tendencies are always present in any large, hierarchical organization and
that everyone must consistently strive to overcome them.
I have learned
many things in my 42 years of service in the national security arena. Two of the
most important are an appreciation of limits and a sense of humility. The United
States is the strongest and greatest nation on earth, but there are still limits
on what it can do. The power and global reach of its military have been an
indispensable contributor to world peace and must remain so. But not every
outrage, every act of aggression, or every crisis can or should elicit a U.S.
military response.
We should be
modest about what military force can accomplish and what technology can
accomplish. The advances in precision, sensor, information, and satellite
technologies have led to extraordinary gains in what the U.S. military can do.
The Taliban were dispatched within three months; Saddam's regime was toppled in
three weeks. A button can be pushed in Nevada, and seconds later a pickup truck
will explode in Mosul. A bomb dropped from the sky can destroy a targeted house
while leaving the one next to it intact.
But no one
should ever neglect the psychological, cultural, political, and human dimensions
of warfare. War is inevitably tragic, inefficient, and uncertain, and it is
important to be skeptical of systems analyses, computer models, game theories,
or doctrines that suggest otherwise. We should look askance at idealistic,
triumphalist, or ethnocentric notions of future conflict that aspire to
transcend the immutable principles and ugly realities of war, that imagine it is
possible to cow, shock, or awe an enemy into submission, instead of tracking
enemies down hilltop by hilltop, house by house, block by bloody block. As
General William Tecumseh Sherman said, "Every attempt to make war easy and safe
will result in humiliation and disaster."
Repeatedly over
the last century, Americans averted their eyes in the belief that events in
remote places around the world need not engage the United States. How could the
assassination of an Austrian archduke in the unknown Bosnia and Herzegovina
affect Americans, or the annexation of a little patch of ground called
Sudetenland, or a French defeat in a place called Dien Bien Phu, or the return
of an obscure cleric to Tehran, or the radicalization of a Saudi construction
tycoon's son?
In world
affairs, "what seems to work best," the historian Donald Kagan wrote in his book
on the Origins of War and the Preservation of Peace, ". . . is the possession by
those states who wish to preserve the peace of the preponderant power and of the
will to accept the burdens and responsibilities required to achieve that
purpose." I believe the United States' National Defense Strategy provides a
balanced approach to meeting those responsibilities and preserving the United
States' freedom, prosperity, and security in the years ahead.
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