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The commissions task was an enormously difficult and ambitious one. Moreover, it was made all the more difficult by the decision to limit the reports recommendations and findings to areas where consensus could be reached among the panels 14 members. Overall, the commission performs a modest, but important, service in outlining a range of US security interests and strategic objectives. Unfortunately, it comes up short in its most important (and difficult) task: crafting a strategy for preserving US security in what it rightly observes is a rapidly changing, and increasingly challenging, security environment. As discussed at the end of this analysis, fundamentally, strategy is about setting priorities and making choices between competing alternatives under conditions of limited resources. Unfortunately, the commission fails to clearly set strategic priorities, make choices among competing alternatives for achieving its objectives, or provide a meaningful indication of the resources that would be required to achieve its objectives. Yet these actions are inherent to crafting a strategy. The commission does raise a number of important issues in its report. But it generally does not provide meaningful guidance concerning those issues. This critique focuses on ten of the policy areas identified in the report that could have major implications for defense strategy and budgetary requirements:
The commission attaches primary importance to homeland defense, declaring that Americas safety from direct attack, especially involving weapons of mass destruction [WMD], by either states or terrorists is a survival interest of the United States. In emphasizing this emerging security challenge, the commission underscores and extends the findings of the 1997 National Defense Panel. The commission asserts that the United States must focus anew on how to maintain a robust and powerful deterrent to all forms of attack on its territory and its critical assets. The commissions most provocative recommendations include its advocacy of: Preventive diplomacyto prevent, through diplomatic and other means, unconventional attacks on all states, and an effective and enforceable international ban on the creation, transfer, trade, and weaponization of biological pathogens, whether by states or non-state actors; Strikes against terrorist financial and logistical infrastructures to foil terrorist plots and deny terrorists sanctuary and possibly preemptive strikes against WMD capabilities; The development of methods to defend against other, covert means, of attacking the United States with weapons of mass destruction and disruption; A bolstering of programs to ensure continuity of Constitutional government.
Despite the fundamental importance the commission attaches to the emerging challenge of homeland defense, for the most part, it does not differ significantly from the policies of the Clinton Administration. Where it does, the commission is vague on why such a departure is needed, or what it would entail, in terms of both an actionable agenda and the resources required to implement it, as well as its overall feasibility. In the many areas where the commission appears to agree with current policy, it does not acknowledge its endorsement. Where the commission departs from current policy it is vague on the specific actions that it would recommend. In addition, some of the commissions recommendations, however desirable, may be unrealistic. For example, the commission advocates sweeping arms control treaties aimed at precluding the use of all biological pathogens by states and non-state actors, but does not acknowledge the dubious enforceability of such pacts. The commission is also extraordinarily vague on how it proposes to defend the national information infrastructurethe emerging national security challenge of strategic information warfare merits only one, obscure reference on the need to develop defenses against weapons of mass disruption. Why programs to ensure continuity of government are more paramount today than they were at the height of the Cold War similarly go unexplained.
Missile Defenses However, while the commissions conclusions concerning NMD are sound, as with some of its other findings, they appear to offer little practical guidance for policymakers. The commission offers no opinion about whether the NMD system now being considered by the Clinton Administration would be technologically feasible, fiscally prudent, and politically sustainable. Nor does it offer any clues as to how these generic criteria should be applied in practice. Although the commission is mandated to look out 25 years, it also fails to discuss either the prospects or pitfalls associated with space-based and other futuristic NMD technologies. To its credit, the commission does note that, to be effective, an NMD system would have to be supplemented with defenses against cruise missiles and covert means of delivering WMD. But it provides no direction as to how efforts to develop such capabilities should be pursued or the level of resources that should be devoted to such efforts. The commission also advises that the United States should build comprehensive theater missile defense [TMD] capabilities. This finding, too, is difficult to argue with. The threat posed by theater-range ballistic missiles is immediate, widespread and growing. However, the commission fails to discuss the broader implications of the proliferation of theater-range ballistic missiles (as well as cruise missiles) for US power projection capabilities. While in some ways easier than the NMD mission, the TMD mission is also extremely demanding. Even a comprehensive TMD system is likely to be only partially effective. Moreover, the cruise missile threat is currently far more serious at the theater level than the national level. This means that the US militarys traditional way of projecting power into forward regions, through the use of in-theater air bases and ports, may be much more difficult in the future. But, beyond its support of TMD, the commission is silent on how the US military might prepare to meet this new challenge.
The Two-War Strategy
More Money for Defense
On the other hand, the commission also calls into question some of the main cost drivers of DoDs budget, including use of the two-MTW metric for sizing US forces. If the United States were instead to adopt a one-MTW requirement, to maintain the two-MTW requirement at a greater level of risk, or change the metric by which the forces needed to carry out the two-MTWs are sized, it might be possible to adequately sustain the US military without a major increase in funding. More fundamentally, because the commission fails to articulate a clear national security strategy, or define what new forces are needed and what legacy forces could be eliminated, it is impossible to say whether implementing such a strategy would require more or less funding than currently projected for defense. Finally, since the commission also stresses the importance to US national security of many non-military factors (e.g., promoting social cohesion, economic competitiveness, technological ingenuity, energy independence, and education), its recommendation to increase funding for defense would seem better grounded if their report also included some discussion of the relative importance of military versus non-military contributions to national security.
Power Projection and Future Forces
The commission also argues that the US will need five kinds of forces in the emerging security environmentnuclear capabilities to deter and protect the United States and its allies from attack, homeland security capabilities, conventional capabilities necessary to win major wars, rapidly employable expeditionary/intervention capabilities, and humanitarian relief and constabulary capabilities. In addition, the commission concludes that the US is currently not fielding the capabilities that will be needed for the varied and complex contingencies now occurring and likely to emerge in the years ahead. The commission, however, does not specify what it believes is wrong with current US forces, and what steps need to be taken to correct those deficiencies.
It fails to describe the size and composition of the force structure that it believes will be required, or whether the era of general purpose forces is coming to an end. Also omitted is a discussion of the division of labor that between future active and reserve forces. This is especially important given the commissions call for increased emphasis on homeland defense.
Preemption and Nuclear First Use
The commission repeats this approach in discussing the first-use of nuclear weapons, declaring that we must take into account both the potential US need to respond to chemical and biological threats with nuclear weapons . . . . The commissions assertion that the United States should explore the need to respond to the threat of use of chemical and biological weapons with nuclear weapons is most provocative. It implies not only the first-use of nuclear weapons, but pre-emptive first-use against a non-nuclear threat. Unfortunately, the commission does not offer an explanation of how it reached this conclusion, or of how such operations are to fit within an overall US military strategy.
Geopolitics
The commission states that it is a critical national interest of the United States that no hostile hegemon arise in any of the globes major regions, nor a hostile global peer rival or a hostile coalition comparable to a peer rival, but seems to expect that a continuation of current policy (e.g., engagement with China, Russia, and India) will ensure this end. The commission asserts that the United States and its allies should support the continued independence and territorial integrity of the newly independent states of the former Soviet Union, but avoids indicating whether its identification of these states among the many others in the international system would constitute a security guarantee. The commission similarly likewise asserts that the domestic stability of some states (Mexico, Colombia, Russia, and Saudi Arabia) is of major importance to U.S. interests, but curiously omits others that might fit the same criteria (e.g., China, India, and Pakistan).
Role of Allies
However, once again, the commission provides little practical guidance for policymakers. For example, its finding that the United States should be prepared to support the evolution of an independent European Union [EU] defense policy in a manner consistent with the unity of the Atlantic Alliance (emphasis added), would be far more helpful if it were supported by some sense of what such an acceptable EU defense policy would look like. Similarly, the commission provides no indication of how the changing geostrategic environment might provide opportunities to find new allies or render some existing alliances less important.
Intervention Criteria
According to the commission, If all or most of these conditions are present, the case for multilateral military action is strong. If any one of these criteria is serious enough, however, the case for military action may also be strong (emphasis added).
It is certainly understandable why the commission would want to create an improved framework for deciding when and where US military forces should be used. Moreover, it would be difficult to argue with the reasonableness of the five suggested criteria. However, like other efforts to articulate such criteria, in practice this list is likely to provide only very limited guidance for policymakers.
One problem is that listing generic criteria is far easier than applying them to specific real-world situations. For example, few would disagree with the contention that US military force should be used when US allies or friends are imperiled, but views may vary widely about what constitutes a friend or what it means to be imperiled. The list also omits a number of other potentially critical considerations, such as the level of public support for the use of force, the likely difficulty of the mission, and the extent to which the US military is already involved in other operations. Perhaps most importantly, by concluding that meeting even one of these criteria might be enough to justify the use of military force, the commission renders the list so flexible as to be arguably almost meaningless.
Space/Cyberspace
As in the case of homeland defense, in describing the growing importance of space and cyberspace to US national security the commission echoes the findings of the National Defense Panel, and numerous other studies. The commission is vague, however, on whatif anythingit would have the US do that is different from what it is already doing. |
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