This is the first article in a series on the future of American power.
In the post-Iraq era America will need to answer three critical questions about the nature of its military.
— What do we need the force to do?
— What kind of force do we need to do it?
— What kind of force can we afford?
Below the fold: whose fights do we want to fight?
Real Security: The Democratic Plan to Protect America and Restore Our Leadership in the World calls for a “21st Century Military.” Under Democratic leadership, the document states, America will “Rebuild a state-of-the-art military by making the needed investments in equipment and manpower so that we can project power to protect America wherever and whenever necessary.”
As with much of the Democrats’ security strategy, the notion of a 21st century military is vague, but when it comes to modern strategic force planning, vagueness is a virtue.
For starters, with so much of modern weaponry coming directly from off-the-shelf sources, what constitutes “state-of-the-art” changes rapidly, often from week to week. Iran’s recently unveiled maritime weapons and platforms, for example, herald a new geo-strategic calculus for U.S. naval forces that up to now have patrolled in the Arabian Gulf and northern Indian Ocean with relative impunity.
Equally debatable is the question of where and when we’ll need to project power in order to protect ourselves. If, for example, we become independent of foreign oil by 2020 as “Real Security” calls for, do we really need to bother to project naval power in the Arabian Gulf and the Indian Ocean? If not, how much do we need to invest in countermeasures to Iran’s rocket torpedoes and stealthy patrol boats and anti-ship cruise missiles?
Oil independence not only brings our maritime force strategy into question. If we don’t have a vested interest in the flow of Gulf region oil, what’s the need to maintain a significant ground force footprint in the Middle East? And if we don’t need to project land power in the Middle East, where else will we need to project it? We’re certainly not going to conduct an Iraq-style invasion and occupation of Russia or China or Europe. And nobody’s going to invade the continental United States.
Mister Bush has become fond of saying, “We can no longer hope that oceans protect us from harm.” As with so much of what Bush says, that statement is largely bunk.
Yes, terrorists can sneak into this country, hijack airplanes, and drive them into skyscrapers. But that was as true in 1948 as it is now. Rogue nations like Iran or North Korea may someday be able to strike American cities with nuclear tipped intercontinental ballistic missiles, but the Soviets became capable of doing that during the Eisenhower administration.
But no one can muster sufficient ground forces to invade and occupy America, and even if they could, they couldn’t muster enough maritime or air transportation to bring a force that size across the oceans. Even if they could muster that kind of transoceanic transportation, we could easily sink it or shoot it down before it got halfway here.
Some argue that the Iraq experience proves that we need to expand our land power services, but the real lesson learned from the Iraq war is that we don’t want to fight any more wars like it. With no need for a standing ground force to repel a military invasion, America’s Army and Marine Corps will continue to conduct their primary business abroad. But how much offshore business is left for them to engage in?
Russia isn’t likely to invade Western Europe. Its army has been bogged down in an insurgency style war in Chechnya for over a decade. Mainland China might attempt to invade Taiwan, but helping Taiwan repel such an invasion would mainly involve air and maritime interdiction operations. North Korea might invade South Korea, and any of several of its neighbors might attempt another invasion of Israel, but South Korea and Israel are capable of handling those contingencies without significant levels of assistance from U.S. ground forces.
It’s just possible, I suppose, that Russia and China might engage in a major land war along their mutual border. But if they ever do, why would we want to step into the middle of it?
So we can say we did?
Next week: war as an instrument of power in the next new world order.
Other Jeff Huber articles on national security issues:
In an Arms Race With Ourselves
Wars and Empires
Invasion of the Transformers
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Commander Jeff Huber, U.S. Navy (Retired) writes from Virginia Beach, Virginia. Read his weekday commentaries at ePluribus Media and Pen and Sword.
It is possible that the largest ships of US fleet have been sitting ducks for some years. The war games of 2002 in the Persian Gulf generated much controversy but certainly hint at this.
The US army has been functionally destroyed in Iraq. Only the air force remains to carry out American imperial ambitions. It is not enough. In just a few years–maybe next year, maybe next decade–the American empire will be over. This will not be, primarily, a military event, but an economic one. An economy that has been systematically looted from the inside for over a decade will be unable to support imperial ambitions.
The American empire was based on resource extraction from far corners of the world, at very favorable prices. Cheap resources made the industrial economy possible, and made world hegemony possible. It was the unadvertised role and purpose of the military to keep those prices favorable.
The key foreign resource for over two decades now (really three) has been oil. There are numerous signs that the US has already lost control of oil–the failure of the Iraq venture being the most obvious, but there are others. However, the US Government does not realize this yet, and is not ready to give up a military approach to the matter. So, in fact military planning will be based on thoughts about how to continue the War for Oil, beyond Iraq.
I have no constructive thoughts to offer. This is a doomed venture, that will get a lot of people killed, but finish in failure. Occupation of oil producing regions will likely be tried, but will generally go no better than the occcupation of Iraq. Some oil will go off line, of what is still in production, the US will end up paying full price–and the dollar will no longer hold much value. America’s oil-fed economy will be at an end. That means pretty much everything that exists right now.
Could something better be done? Sure. If the US were willing to start moving to a sustainable economy, there would be a transition period in which resources and world trade would still be important. In that period countermeasures agains piracy would become more urgent. Piracy will arise precisely because control is being lost: Countermeasures would focus on regional political co-operation and small, flexible operations to disrupt pirate activities. The world trend seems to be to light, flexible weaponry, and the US would do well to follow that trend.
To imagine further is to imagine politial restructuring within the US. As long as corporations are the actual determiners of political policy, America will remain essentially indefensible.
I’ll be covering the MC02 war game in the next part of this series. I agree, the Army is just about shot. Some suggest Rumsfeld wanted it that way, I don’t know.
As to whether we’ll get stuck with another oil invasion remains to be seen.