Dollars
and Sense
by
William S. Lind
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At
a recent book party for Winslow Wheeler's new history of the Military
Reform Movement of the 1970s and 1980s, I was asked for my views
on the prospects for genuine reform. I replied that "So long as
the money flow continues, nothing will change." Chuck Spinney, a
reformer who spent decades as a polyp in the bowels of the Pentagon,
agreed.
Events
on Wall Street suggest that the day when the money flow stops may
be approaching. Despite President Hoover's assurance that "Prosperity
is just around the corner," the American economy is in free-fall.
After decades of frivolity, that economy now amounts to little more
than a pyramid of financial pyramids, all requiring a constant inflow
of borrowed money. The inflow is endangered by the developing Panic
of '08, where the junk mortgage crisis and the collapse of the housing
market combine to dry up lending. What happens to pyramid schemes
when money stops flowing in at the bottom? Maybe a recession; maybe
a depression. That's why pyramid schemes are illegal, unless the
government runs them.
A
tanking economy and world credit markets tighter than Scrooge's
sphincter will require large cuts in federal spending. That will
include the Pentagon. If a new administration were to turn to the
military reformers and ask us how to cut defense spending while
still securing the country, what would we advise?
Here's
what I would propose:
First,
adopt a defensive rather than an offensive grand strategy. America
followed a defensive grand strategy through most of her history.
We only went to war if someone attacked us. That defensive grand
strategy kept defense costs down and allowed our economy to prosper.
We do not have to be party to every quarrel in the world.
Second,
scrap virtually all the big-ticket weapons programs such as new
fighter-bombers, more Aegis ships, and the Army's Rube Goldbergian
Future Combat System. They are irrelevant to where war is going.
We
should not plan for conventional wars against hypothetical "peer
competitors," which can only be Russia or China. We should do our
utmost to make Russia an ally, and we should make a fundamental,
bi-partisan national strategic decision that we will not go to war
with China. Regardless of who "won" such a war, it would destroy
both countries, just as the two World Wars destroyed both Germany
and Britain. The world needs China to serve as a source of order
in what will be an increasingly disorderly 21st century. We should
welcome the growth of Chinese power, just as Britain learned (reluctantly)
to welcome the growth of American power in the 20th century. It
is only a threat to us if we make it one.
Third,
as we cut, preserve combat units. That means, above all, Army and
Marine Corps infantry battalions. Cut the vast superstructure above
those battalions, but keep the battalions. Infantry battalions are
what we need most for Fourth Generation wars, which we should do
our utmost to avoid but which we will sometimes be drawn into, even
with a defensive grand strategy.
In
the Navy, keep the submarines. Submarines are today's and tomorrow's
capital ships, and geography dictates we must remain a maritime
power. Keep the carriers, too, though there is little need to build
more of them. Carriers are big, empty boxes, which can carry many
things besides aircraft. Mothball most of the cruisers and destroyers.
Build lots of small, cheap ships useful for controlling coastal
and inland waters, and create strategically mobile and sustainable
"packages" of such ships. Being able to control waters around and
within stateless regions can be important in 4GW.
Fighter-bombers
are largely useless in Fourth Generation wars, where their main
role is to create collateral damage that benefits our enemies. Keep
the air transport squadrons and the A-10s, and move them all to
the Air National Guard, which flies and maintains aircraft as well
as or better than the regular Air Force at a fraction of the cost.
Reduce the regular Air Force to strategic nuclear forces and a training
base.
In
all the services, vastly reduce the baggage train: the higher headquarters,
the development commands, the education bureaucracies and the armies
of contractors. As Mark Twain said of the male teat, they are neither
useful nor ornamental.
Finally,
as we cut, undertake reforms that cost little but will make our
remaining forces more effective. Reform the personnel systems to
create unit cohesion, eliminate the surplus of officers above the
company grades and reduce careerism by ending up-or-out. Reform
tactics and doctrine by moving from the Second Generation to the
Third, which is to say from French attrition warfare to German maneuver
warfare. This requires a change in military culture, in education
and in training. The adoption of Third Generation tactics, doctrine
and culture must be real, not just words on paper as it has been
in the Marine Corps.
A
program of military reform along these lines could give us more
effective forces for Fourth Generation wars and such minor conventional
wars as we might face within a defensive grand strategy than the
forces we now possess. It could do so for a defense budget half
or less the size of the current budget. To the reigning Military-Industrial-Congressional
Complex, that potential is a threat, not a promise. When the MICC's
money runs out, it will suddenly become a necessity.
March
12, 2008
William
Lind is an analyst based in Washington, DC.
Copyright
© 2008 William S. Lind
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