By SYDNEY J. FREEDBERG JR
M1 tank at the National Training Center in Fort Irwin, California.
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The Army Chief of Staff, Gen. Mark Milley, checks out a cyber/electronic warfare unit at the National Training Center.
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The near-term piece is training — training so intense, Milley said, that soldiers’ “lower lips are quivering” afterwards. The idea is to burn the lessons of simulated defeats into their memories so they can achieve victory in real war.
“The objective is to intentionally increase the stress on ourselves so we face our first battle in training, not in combat,” Milley said. “Yes, it’s hard, but its purpose is to keep you alive and effective on a future battlefield against a very capable enemy.”
Infantry training at the Joint Readiness Training Center, Fort Polk, La.
![](https://breakingdefense.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/3/2017/10/Fort-Polk-JRTC-training-DSC_5421-300x199.jpg)
But just as future enemies will attack US forces relentlessly by every means at hand, the US can fight back with every means as well. That approach is what the Pentagon now calls multi-domain operations. The concept is that all the services — Army, Air Force, Navy, Marines — coordinate attacks in all domains — land, sea, air, space, and cyberspace — to find the enemy’s weak point, wherever it lies, and break open their defenses.
An Army slide attempting to explain the Multi-Domain Battle concept, later renamed Multi-Domain Operations.
“A New American Way of War”
“We have to adapt the American way of war to the unique reality of future combat in highly dense urban areas, (with) rapidly emerging technology, along with increasingly contested space and cyber domains,” Milley said. “So we have been hard at work developing a new American way of war. We call it multi-domain operations.”
![](https://breakingdefense.sites.breakingmedia.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/3/2018/09/Beam-on-image-Drone_Silhouette_16x9-300x169.jpg)
German Panzers cross the Ardennes to take French forces by surprise, 1940.
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The Army’s battlefield framework for Multi-Domain Operations.
Another classic principle of war that Milley espoused? “Wars are won on the offense,” he said. That’s an implicit rejection of some learned observers’ anxieties that we’re headed for a new era in which the defense is dominant and bloody stalemate is inevitable. Their fear is that smart weapons will sweep attacking forces from the land, sea, and sky, much as machineguns and artillery swept the battlefields of the Western Front in World War I. The bloodless term of art for such a high-tech defense is Anti-Access/Area Denial — but all the US services sound increasingly confident they can crack such defenses open.
How will we know what we can really do, short of the horrific shock of actual war? Realistic wargames can help here too. “This new concept is in the process of development now,” Milley said. “It involves extensive field testing that is ongoing throughout the joint force in CONUS (the continental United States) and in both Asia and Europe.”
“We did our first iteration in the Pacific,” he said. That’s where the Army reinforced a long-range artillery unit — a fires brigade — and transformed it into the first Multi-Domain Task Force. “New multi-domain formations will be built in strategically important locations,” he pledged, without giving details.
It’s crucial to get it as right as possible before the shooting starts, Milley said, recalling his father’s service in the hastily mobilized military of World War II. “We can do better than the decisionmakers of his day who sent an army off to war in 1942 unprepared for the hardships of combat in the Kasserine Pass,” he said. “We can do better than the leaders who sent unprepared troops into Korea in1950, or the Civil War, or the Spanish-American war, or nearly every war America has every fought.”
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