Frank Hoffman
The new National Defense Strategy (NDS) identifies China and Russia as our primary competitors.[1] Some members of the defense community misread the NDS as embracing great power wars and perceive these as purely conventional wars. Some even suggest that the Pentagon reflexively yearns for a large conventional threat, so it can get back to what it wants to, fighting peers and justifying its technologically oriented hardware programs. This oversimplifies the underlying assessment of the future environment in the strategy and misreads the strategy’s explicit appreciation of the various dimensions of great power competition. Concerns about the future of small wars should not be dismissed, but proponents of the study of irregular wars should also accept the need to prioritize threats and risk in any strategy. The NDS does reflect a mindset shift and shift in modernization given the scale of the two major competitors.
But there is more to the strategy than a repeat of our “big war” syndrome. As a member of the NDS Core Task Force and very familiar with the debates involved in the NDS, I understand how the distinctive shift in priorities and the resulting shift in force design and modernization can be interpreted as a reflex action against 17 years of counterinsurgency, counter-terrorism and stabilization operations. But there is no blind lust for Great Power War amongst the leadership of the Pentagon, just a clear recognition that geopolitical competition poses severe threats to our way of life and economic prosperity. Thus, the strategy does not overlook the various forms that warfare may take in the future. Peacetime competition, “gray zone” tactics, Small War or hybrid combinations are not dismissed. Granted, there is a need to reinvest in atrophied skill sets and domains to sharpen the U.S. military’s competitive edge for the coming decade. This is a clear-eyed evaluation of the near to mid-range security environment, coupled with an appreciation of how much our education and training and readiness has been altered to support Iraq, Syria, Afghanistan and other missions for so long. It also reflects a well-founded assessment of the ambitions and investments made over the last decade by two geopolitical challengers.
Nor does the strategy lack of appreciation for both Chinese and Russian strategic culture which both recognize unconventional methods and non-military conflict. The Secretary of Defense and his NDS explicitly recognizes a full spectrum of conflict and warns against over-investing in a single and preclusive form of warfare, which an adversary will surely exploit.[2] The Secretary has stressed that “a paradox of war is that an enemy will attack a perceived weakness, so we cannot adopt a single preclusive form of warfare.” The strategy also explicitly states that Irregular Warfare will be retained as a core competency.
The Joint Force must be ready and able to respond to numerous challenges across the full range of conflict including complex operations in peace and during war. This is not an easy task given the complexity of the projected operating environment. Partially because of this conceptual challenge, we are falling behind in our readiness for the future. As the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Joseph Dunford, concluded “We’re already behind in adapting to the changed character of war today in so many ways.”[3] The U.S. defense community faces global challengers, and must devote sufficient attention to the breadth of adversaries facing it. The first step is understanding the range of conflicts we may face and the relative risks of each. Some threats pose existential challenges, but these will be quite rare. Other adversaries can generate more frequent but less consequential risks. We need to be able to assess these risks and prioritize accordingly.
If the defense strategy released by Secretary of Defense Mattis this past January was myopically oriented entirely on high-intensity and conventional warfighting, some clear force structure and budget shifts would be evident. For example, Security Force Assistance Brigades would have been still born, and the resources for Special Operations Command would have been curtailed. But, as clear evidence of the Department’s embrace of the full continuum of conflict, the opposite happened. The SFABs are being deployed and SOCOM received budget increases and its FY19 budget adds 1,700 military and civilian personnel .[4] The NDS calls for the SOF community to take on more tasks beyond its current counter-terrorism tasks, and broaden its consideration of and application of Unconventional Warfare to major powers. This would not be happening if DoD thought it was walking away from irregular warfare or conflict short of conventional wars. To be clear, the strategy recognizes that we face an array of different threats and require a comprehensive suite of skills and competencies to address the full range, and the strategy matches goals to resources in accordance with clear priorities. We have some catching up to do in some key warfighting domains.
Understanding future security challenges requires that policy makers interpret the past, understand the present, and think rigorously about what lies over the horizon in order to adapt to the changing character of conflict.[5] This requires keeping an open and informed mind about the breadth of the various modes of conflict that exist. The wars of the twenty-first century may take many forms. As conflict reflects a greater degree of convergence and complexity, so should our mental models and frameworks. But our strategies must also be driven by our national interests and the assigned national security and defense objectives. The Pentagon’s leadership and its strategy,Sharpening the U.S. Military Competitive Edge, reflects those interests and an acute appreciation for tradeoffs and priorities. The essence of strategy is to wrestle with the choices presented with the risk/resource balance and the tradeoffs required. In my view, the Pentagon has done that.
Readers of this journal and its community of interest should not be worried that the National Defense Strategyignores the more frequent and the more likely forms of conflict. It embraces a full continuum from competition, to conflict, and to various forms of war. However, we should be vigilant about the sine wave of U.S. policy interest in complex conflicts into the future. The United States has made that mistake before and paid for it.
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