ROBUST U.S. DEFENSES FOR THE POST-COLD WAR WORLD: WHAT THE STATE OF THE UNION ADDRESS SHOULD SAY

(Washington, D.C.): President Bush’s
State of the Union address tonight comes
amidst one of the United States’ periodic
national debates about the size and
composition of the military it requires.
It is hard to overstate the importance of
this debate — and the stakes involved
should it fail to be an informed and
deliberative one leading to thoughtful
force structure and budgetary decisions.
This Decision Brief offers some
thoughts on the way the U.S. military
should be sized and configured based on the
kinds of capabilities this nation
requires today — and will likely need in
the future
. It takes as the
point of departure the American
experience in the Persian Gulf War one
year ago.

Desert Storm — A
Prototypical “Post-Cold War”
Conflict?

The war with Iraq was instructive on
some points. For example, it showed
conclusively that — even in the
absence of a significant Soviet threat

— the United States is likely still to
face numerically substantial and heavily
armed threats in places far removed from
its shores. This reality strongly
suggests that America will continue to
require sufficient forces, lift and
technological superiority to contend
reliably with such threats.

Indeed, it would appear on the face of
it that, given the possibility of Desert
Storm-style contingencies in the future, the
United States would not want to have
appreciably less of any
of these determinants of military power
than it possessed at the time of Desert
Storm
. That said, it must be
remembered that the United States had
such capabilities when they were needed not
because it sized its military to perform
this sort of mission in the Third
World. Rather,
they were the result
of a decade of heightened military
spending aimed at configuring and
equipping American forces to deal with
the immense threat posed by Soviet
power.

What is more, the lessons of Desert
Storm can also be misleading when
considered as a guide to future defense
requirements. In this war, American power
projection relied decisively on a massive
and secure U.S.-designed infrastructure.
It was the product of a forty-year
coordinated investment program and was
available to coalition forces for
six-months prior to 16 January 1991. In
addition, the enemy completely ceded the
initiative, leaving the choice of when
and under what circumstances the war
would be fought to the United States and
its allies.

Similarly, the United States enjoyed
exclusive access to space and to modern
command, control, communications and
intelligence capabilities. Finally,
Washington had the support of allies who
went along with and — to varying degrees
— facilitated U.S. military operations.

This partial listing of the
differences between the Desert
Shield/Storm scenario and virtually
any other
involving U.S. forces that
one can realistically imagine suggests
that more flexible, more
sustainable American power projection
capabilities are needed — not less.
Whether those can be achieved within the
context of radical reductions in overall
defense spending and military force
structure is far from clear. If it can be
done at all, however, it will entail a
very careful and non-traditional approach
to decision-making concerning the forces
to be cut and those to be retained. There
is no evidence that the requisite
approach is being used by either the Bush
Administration or the Congress in their
respective assaults on the defense
budget.

Avoiding
Strategy/Capability Mismatches in the
Future

There have in the past been
significant mismatches between U.S.
strategy and the forces America
maintained to implement that strategy.
Fortunately, those mismatches proved
non-determinative with respect to the
outcome in the major global contest in
which this country was engaged, i.e.,
that with the former Soviet Union. The
United States prevailed anyway because
the Soviet system — when contained by
such power (political, economic,
technological as well as military) as the
U.S. did bring to bear — could not
withstand its own inherent
contradictions, inefficiencies and
immorality.

In the present and prospective budget
climate, however, the United States
simply does not have the luxury of
retaining such slop in the system. It is
going to be compelled to do a
better job of matching resources to needs
and ensuring that they are sufficient to
persuade others that our deterrent
strategy can be credibly implemented.

This will require among other things:

  • A competent understanding of
    potential threats, both specific
    and generic;
  • An appreciation of what it will
    take to deter and, if necessary,
    to fight such threats in terms of
    force structure, weapon systems,
    standing capabilities and
    research and development;
  • Decisions both as to how
    reductions are going to be
    apportioned and how the remaining
    funds will be allocated must be
    made in a manner as insulated
    as possible
    from the
    distorting effects of service
    bureaucratic parochialism and
    congressional pork-barrelling.
  • Of particular concern with regard
    to the latter is the insidious
    effect of the mindset that is the
    legacy of the 1947 Key
    West accord
    . This
    forty-five year-old agreement
    divided defense missions and
    responsibilities among the armed
    services. It has also served to
    inculcate an attitudinal
    predisposition within the Defense
    Department that assigns equal
    shares
    among the Army, Navy
    and Air Force whether the budget
    is increasing or contracting. No
    less real are the pressures for
    each congressional district to
    retain its defense establishment
    and any defense production lines
    it may have — irrespective of
    their contribution to the needed
    national capability.

Considerations in
Sizing/Configuring U.S. Forces in the
Anticipated Environment

The
foregoing requirements can best be met if
the decision-making process on which the
United States is now embarked is guided
by the following considerations:

  • The United States will continue
    to have global interests, be they
    of a strategic, trade and other
    economic, political or other
    nature.
  • It is becoming ever less likely
    that anyone else is
    going to look out for these U.S.
    interests. In particular,
    longstanding alliance
    relationships are changing and
    becoming less reliable.
  • For example, Germany’s
    reunification and its increasing
    preoccupation with domination of
    European political and economic
    affairs has recast its
    traditional post-war desire for
    American protection and its
    willingness to be a deferential
    partner in international affairs.
    Similarly, Japan’s immense
    economic clout and the diminution
    of an imminent Soviet threat in
    East Asia have exacerbated the
    tensions often present in
    U.S.-Japanese security and other
    ties. Where the U.S. ability to
    act depends upon these
    and other allies — in contrast
    with Desert Storm where, in the
    final analysis, it did not
    — it seems reasonable to expect
    that they will be increasingly
    unlikely to play whatever role
    the United States requires.
  • Unfortunately (although not
    coincidentally), U.S. dependence
    on its allies is actually growing
    substantially as a result of the
    loss of forward bases, notably in
    Germany and the Philippines. This
    would likely mean that the costs
    and difficulties associated with
    U.S. power projection in the
    future will increase.
  • The turmoil and change now being
    experienced by the former Soviet
    empire may or may not mean an
    appreciable and sustained
    reduction in the threat that has
    traditionally come from that
    quarter. It seems prudent to
    expect, however, that — unless
    and until a genuine
    transformation of the old Soviet
    system (especially, its
    military-industrial complex) is
    secured — the potential for
    future problems with the former
    USSR cannot be permanently
    dismissed.
  • Moreover, those whose aggressive
    tendencies were formerly held in
    check or otherwise influenced by
    Cold War calculations (e.g., the
    danger of nuclear escalation) may
    no longer be able or willing,
    with that conflict’s passing, to
    resist temptations to go after
    neighbors or other targets of
    opportunity. This may be true
    even where, by so doing, they act
    in ways contrary to U.S.
    interests. In this connection, it
    is important to remember that the
    collapse of USSR is producing a
    glut of advanced weapons and
    military know-how on the world
    market with which such aggression
    can be undertaken and which could
    add substantially to the costs of
    reversing it.

So What is Required?

Under these circumstances, the United
States will need substantial quantities
of forces featuring the following
characteristics:

  • Capable of rapidly bringing U.S.
    power credibly and discriminately
    to bear on conflicts against
    adversaries anywhere in the
    world
    ;
  • Featuring the flexibility to have
    application at many — if not
    virtually all — levels of
    conflict in the spectrum of
    warfare running the gamut from
    counter-terrorism to strategic
    nuclear war;
  • Exploiting inherent U.S.
    advantages — notably in high
    technology — to maximize the
    effectiveness of our forces
    against even the most
    sophisticated of adversaries.
    This is especially true of the
    need to enhance the
    discriminateness of attacks
    (i.e., reduction of unintended,
    collateral damage) while
    minimizing the degree to which
    U.S. personnel are put in harm’s
    way.

Such characteristics are best
exemplified in the following
forces — which should,
therefore, be given priority in
budgetary, force structure and
programmatic decisions:

  • Carrier battle groups,
    equipped with relatively
    long-range, stealthy strike
    aircraft.
    It is far from
    clear that present and future
    conditions permit a safe
    reduction in the number of active
    carriers from fourteen to twelve
    — let alone to ten or fewer
    carrier battle groups. In any
    event, the nation must
    clearly proceed with procurement
    of a new carrier for both
    industrial and force obsolescence
    considerations.
  • Sea-launched cruise
    missiles (SLCMs).

    Increased deployment of SLCMs
    equipped with a variety of
    warheads optimized for
    land-attack, runway busting,
    choke point-denial and other
    purposes would add enormously to
    the Navy’s on-shore
    power-projection capabilities.
  • Precision guided
    surface-to-surface missiles with
    advanced submunitions.

    Deployment of such advanced
    systems would reduce present
    reliance on heavy armor for the
    combat power of ground forces.
  • Marine amphibious forces,
    equipped with indigenous sea- and
    airlift assets (including
    deployment of the
    force-multiplying V-22 Osprey
    tiltrotor system).

    Consideration should be given to expanding,
    rather than reducing, the Marine
    Corps and other special
    operations forces under present
    conditions.
  • Stealthy
    intercontinental-range bombers,
    namely, the B-2.
    These
    aircraft are uniquely capable of
    striking heavily defended targets
    anywhere in the world within
    hours of a decision to do so and
    with negligible need for allied
    support or risk to U.S. service
    personnel.
  • Space-based surveillance
    and space control capabilities
    (including a secure space launch
    and anti-satellite capacity).

    The Gulf War demonstrated that
    command of and operations from
    space will be increasingly
    indispensable to terrestrial
    warfighting strategies.
    Particular emphasis should be
    placed on space-based
    intelligence and warning
    capabilities.
  • Global (including
    space-based
    ) defenses
    against ballistic missile attack.

    A clear lesson of the Gulf War is
    the unacceptability of a posture
    of vulnerability to such attack;
    the United States simply must
    provide effective defenses
    against ballistic missiles for
    both its forward deployed troops,
    assets and allies and for its own
    population. The most
    cost-effective and highly
    leveraged way to accomplish this
    would be through a layered
    deployment including space-based
    Brilliant Pebbles interceptors.
  • Reliable, survivably
    based nuclear forces (including
    nuclear sea-launched cruise
    missiles deployed at sea,
    not kept ashore).
    These
    weapons will continue to be
    needed for deterrence of nuclear
    war and warfighting, should it be
    necessary.
  • Robust command, control,
    communications and intelligence
    capabilities.
    These must
    include in the future more
    distributed systems capable of
    equipping battlefield commanders
    in real-time with the products of
    advanced intelligence systems.
  • Greater sea- and airlift
    capabilities than were available
    at the time of Desert Storm.

    To the extent that American
    ground will increasingly be based
    in the continental United States,
    the need will only increase for
    lift capacity sorely taxed by
    Desert Shield/Desert Storm.

In an environment of finite — and
declining
— resources, trade-offs
will inevitably have to be made to
acquire and maintain such capabilities.
Candidates for reduced priority and
funding include the following:

  • Heavy armored and mechanized
    infantry divisions of the U.S.
    Army.
  • Tactical fighter wings.
  • Nuclear-powered attack
    submarines.

Unfortunately, these tend to be precisely
the systems most strongly favored by the
service constituencies that currently
dominate the Army, Air Force and Navy
hierarchies, respectively. Therefore, they
are the assets and capabilities least
likely
to be cut by any
decision-making approach to force
reductions that relies upon those
hierarchies to determine service
priorities and candidates for cuts
.
Not surprisingly, it appears that, in the
defense cuts Mr. Bush will recommend
tonight, these less important systems
will be protected at the expense of many
of the higher priority programs and
capabilities mentioned above.

The foregoing prescription for a
revised U.S. defense posture might,
on net and over time, result in a
military force somewhat smaller
than that projected by the Cheney
Five-Year Defense Plan unveiled last
year. This, in turn, could entail defense
outlays below those projected by his
plan. The exact size of any such further
cuts and associated savings would, of
course, depend upon the specific force
levels (ships, air wings, divisions,
etc.) selected.

Whether the alternative defense
posture recommended here could result in
any appreciable savings would almost
certainly depend on whether present and
serious inefficiencies in defense
procurement are reduced and greater
stability and predictability imparted to
out-year budgeting by both the executive
and the legislative branches.
Regrettably, at present there appears to
be little willingness on the part of
either the executive or legislative
branches to rectify these critical
systemic problems.

Supporting Actions

In the latter regard, it is of
particular importance if the United
States is to obtain maximum return on its
declining investment in defense, that it
reconsider present approaches toward
government-industry collaboration in
support of national security readiness
and technological competitiveness. Here,
too, there has been a painful inattention
— or, worse, active resistance — on the
part of the Bush Administration to
anything that might smack of
“industrial policy.”

Specifically, thought needs to be
given to ways in which the United States
can responsibly eliminate unsustainable
duplication in defense industrial
capacity while ensuring that at least a
single U.S. supplier remains available to
provide vital hardware or components. Far
and away the best way to accomplish this
would be for the Administration and the
Congress to agree on a level of defense
capability that will be required for the
foreseeable future — and stick to it
long enough for market forces in the
defense industry to adjust and stabilize
accordingly.

Under such a arrangement, if it is
decided that cuts are in order,
they could be phased in in an
orderly and gradual manner
. As a
result, the present Hobson’s choice of
destroying the morale and readiness of
the volunteer armed forces or denying
them the capabilities required to do
their jobs could be avoided. While either
the Congress or the executive branch —
or both — has found it difficult to
fashion and stick to an agreed defense
spending plan in the past, this is the
only formula that holds out any hope of
maintaining the sort of forces, equipment
and industrial base needed for today and
tomorrow.

Forget About R&D-Only

By contrast, the Bush Administration’s
apparent decision to embrace the idea of
conducting research and development on
major new weapon systems — but
refraining from putting them into
production — is a formula for disaster.
Consider the following:

  • A significant technology in
    modern weapons involves
    manufacturing technology;
    stopping short of at least
    limited full-scale production
    dramatically lessens the
    confidence one can have in the
    producibility and viability of a
    given system.
  • Some of the most critical skills
    needed to produce modern weapons
    reside in a highly qualified and
    employed
    workforce. If that
    workforce has been disbanded,
    there is negligible prospect of
    swiftly restoring it to reliable
    operation within the stipulated
    year’s time.
  • Not fielding enough systems,
    albeit sometimes a small number,
    will prevent necessary military
    doctrine and operational art to
    develop. For example, had this
    policy been applied to the
    helicopter, the F-117,
    conventional cruise missiles and
    many other systems, the United
    States could never have fielded
    what was necessary for Desert
    Storm — even if the production
    base had been in place.

The effect of a penny-wise and
pound-foolish R&D-only policy is
predictable: It will ensure that today’s
American five-year olds will be
ill-equipped to deter a war fifteen or
twenty years hence — and may die
unnecessarily should deterrence fail.

“Systemic” Arms
Control

Another step that should be considered
in connection with force structure cuts
and defense budget reductions would
involve minimizing the risks associated
with such cut-backs — especially those
that would affect forces principally
designed and structured to deal with the
threat the U.S. has faced from the Soviet
Union. This can best be done by effecting
the wholesale transformation of
the Soviet system — both political and
economic.

While accomplishing such a
transformation ultimately depends upon
the will and determination of the
successors to the Soviet Union, there is
much the United States and its allies
could do to facilitate it. For one thing,
the West can deal with those
“qualifying” republics that
demonstrate with concrete and aggressive
action their commitment to the democratic
and free market overhaul of their
societies. After all, by bringing to bear
Western aid, trade, technological
assistance, know-how and other assets in a
selective and highly leveraged manner

on behalf of such “qualifying”
republics, Western nations could ensure
that far more effective and lasting
disarmament of the residual Soviet
military capability is actually
undertaken.

A systemic approach — rather than
misbegotten throw backs to an arms
control era now past (e.g., de-MIRVing,
nuclear freezing and sweeping unilateral
cuts of modern and important strategic
systems) — is the order of the day.
President Bush’s determination to press
ahead with the latter sort of arms
control initiatives is at best distinctly
premature. At worst, it could prove
downright reckless.

Conclusion

When all is said and done, the
business of defining appropriate levels
of U.S. defense force structure and
expenditures is an art, not a
science. It requires highly subjective
decisions to be made about the degree of
threat the United States faces and the
amount of risk it is willing to assume
with regard to our preparedness to deal
with that threat.

Fortunately, notwithstanding the
unhappily lingering recession, this
country is in a position to take its time
to draw down its force structure. Given
the considerable uncertainties about the
emerging world and the dangers it may
pose to U.S. interests down the road, it
would be wise to avoid the mistake this
country has made again and again in the
past, namely of cutting defense too
dramatically and too quickly. After all, the
costs entailed in trying to rectify the
situation that usually follows such a
rash act typically far exceed
any savings that might accrue in the
short-run
.

It would appear, therefore, for fiscal
as well as strategic reasons that the
United States should strenuously resist
the temptation to gut our defenses. Alas,
that would appear to be the effect of
even the Cheney draw-down
program enunciated last year — if
it is implemented in the absence of
systemic reforms both here in the United
States and in the former Soviet
Union. Needless to say, matters will only
be made worse if inaction on the systemic
side is compounded by a slashing of the
U.S. defense budget and force structure
well beyond the levels recommended by
Secretary Cheney.

– 30 –

Center for Security Policy

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