Saturday, January 24, 2009

What Is The Next War?

By FRANK N. CARLSON
Published: Dec. 10, 2008 at 7:34 PM
Courtesy Of United Press International

Part 1

WASHINGTON, Dec. 10 (UPI) -- "Opportunity cost" is a term economists use to describe the price of not doing something: the consequences of choosing one thing and thus forgoing another.

A consumer who drives to work each day must buy a car and pay expenses like insurance, garage bills and gas. The benefits of the car are obvious, but they come at the cost of other possible purchases, like a remodeled kitchen or a new home closer to work.

People make decisions with opportunity costs dozens of times a day, often with little or no reflection. Most times this does not matter -- the decisions are small and so are the consequences. But every so often the consequences are huge and lasting, and when that happens, the risks and rewards must be weighed and the consequences of choosing incorrectly seriously considered.

The U.S. military is now in such a period. As military chiefs describe Iraq in a "fragile and reversible" state and the nation's collective attention moves toward rising difficulties in Afghanistan, there is a debate heating up -- visible mostly on the pages of military journals, at Washington think tanks and in defense colleges -- on issues that will directly affect the lives of American troops and their families, the welfare of developing nations and the influence America projects around the world.

The debate centers on this question: Should the U.S. military adapt its institutions to reflect the hard lessons learned in Iraq? And second, but no less important, does America wish to engage in nation-building?

It may be surprising that the answers individuals give to these questions are not neatly predictable along political lines. Many of those who opposed the Iraq War on the grounds that it was fought on the basis of faulty or perhaps cherry-picked intelligence would now have U.S. forces draw down there to intervene in more humanitarian causes like Darfur. But the lessons from Iraq and Afghanistan, and indeed the broader War on Terror, would be central to precisely that sort of protracted undertaking.

Meanwhile, those who claim ousting Saddam Hussein was a legitimate end based on the proposition that pre-emptive wars should be fought to protect America's strategic interests or punish those who harbor terrorists -- essentially the Bush doctrine -- might oppose using American troops to "police the world," protecting schoolchildren in Myanmar or building hospitals in Haiti. But it was their decisions that pushed the military into a conflict in which its lack of capability in stability and peace-building operations was painfully obvious.

The coming change of administrations presents a natural opportunity to reconsider the familiar but fading admonition that the world changed on Sept. 11, 2001, and so too must America's willingness to confront its enemies. At this historic juncture, it is worth asking: Do Americans actually still believe this? And if so, are they willing to pay the price -- measured in troops, time and money -- as well as the price of not doing something else?

Secretary of Defense Robert Gates, who took over after Donald Rumsfeld resigned following the midterm elections in 2006, represents to many Democrats and Republicans alike the levelheaded practitioner one would hope to find at the top of the military. In his speeches he reveals that he is a balanced man, if anything.

But at the Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs earlier in the year, Gates criticized what he deemed to be a lack of balance in the military, an ailment he diagnosed as "Next War-itis." Harmful enough to be given the suffix of an illness, but one sounding more chronic than debilitating, Gates was describing the tendency of the military establishment to focus on future wars to the detriment of preparing for and fighting the wars America currently finds itself in.

In September, in another speech, this one at the National Defense University, Gates again picked up this issue and expounded upon it.

"When referring to 'Next War-itis,'" Gates explained, "I was not expressing opposition to thinking about and preparing for the future. It would be irresponsible to do so -- and the overwhelming majority of the people in the Pentagon, the services and the defense industry do just that. My point was simply that we must not be so preoccupied with preparing for future conventional and strategic conflicts that we neglect to provide, both short term and long term, all the capabilities necessary to fight and win conflicts such as we are in today."

It may seem odd that a defense secretary would find it necessary to say to the military, essentially, "Win the wars you're fighting." But it's not quite as simple as that. Gates is walking a tightrope between adapting to the realities of a complex world today and hampering the ability to deter or respond to large-scale, conventional conflicts in the future.

And in doing so, he's asking: Is the country more likely to see another Iraq or Afghanistan -- a failed state in need of fundamental rebuilding -- than it is to see a conventional war with a belligerent state, like China or Russia? Gates, and many others, says yes.

"It is true that the United States would be hard-pressed to fight a major conventional ground war elsewhere on short notice, but as I've said before, where on Earth would we do that?" Gates asked.

And despite Russia's recent mischief in Georgia, which ignited in many renewed fears of the Cold War, Gates explained in his speech that the Kremlin's motivations and capabilities differ greatly today and are a result of "a desire to exorcise past humiliation and dominate their 'near abroad' -- not an ideologically driven campaign to dominate the globe."

As such, Gates said, the U.S. response must not be a return to the military and nuclear buildup seen in the 1980s.

Instead, Gates is touching on the issue of whether the adaptations that have occurred over the last five to seven years as American troops adjusted their tactics, equipment and weaponry in Iraq and Afghanistan -- thus far paid for through emergency supplemental bills outside the baseline defense budget -- should be institutionalized.

While few question the effectiveness of the tactics, there are those asking whether the military should really be a one-stop shop for nation-building. And they worry that as U.S. troops build roads, pick up trash, provide electrical generation and train police, they lose their ability to fight and win the wars of tomorrow.

Part 2: Defense Transformation

WASHINGTON, Dec. 11 (UPI) -- "You have to go back to the original version of what 'defense transformation' was supposed to be," says Thomas Donnelly, a defense analyst with the American Enterprise Institute. Following Gulf War I and the end of the Cold War, it was thought that information technology and precision weapons had changed the landscape of war by reducing costs and increasing the efficacy of remote firepower. Destroying a bridge during World War II took hundreds of bombs. In Vietnam, it required a couple of dozen. Today, the U.S. military can destroy a bridge with one precision-guided bomb.

What these vast technological gains amounted to, at least on their face, was a new kind of war, one in which satellites in the sky replaced boots on the ground, in which machines literally replaced men. For some of its advocates, it meant high-tech, light, specialized forces designed to be deployed wherever they were needed, and few were more vocal proponents of this than Donald Rumsfeld.

And to a certain extent, it worked. The Taliban were ousted in months after the attacks on Sept. 11, 2001, and it took a mere three weeks to topple Saddam in 2003.

"But that was a kind of reductionist view that looked at warfare as simply the delivery of firepower," Donnelly says.

America had learned to play the game better than anyone else. The only problem was that the game changed.

But the fall of the Taliban and Saddam, as demonstrated by the lengthy periods of counterinsurgency that followed with such mixed results, were in reality only campaigns in a longer global conflict that cannot be won by military means alone, or even primarily. Instead, victory requires using all the instruments of state power -- and seeing the military as just one tool.

"What is dubbed the war on terror is, in grim reality, a prolonged, worldwide irregular campaign -- a struggle between the forces of violent extremism and moderation," Secretary of Defense Robert Gates explained. "We cannot kill or capture our way to victory."

In this type of conflict, conventional military wisdom is turned on its head. Its founding handbook, the "Counterinsurgency Field Manual," lists various paradoxes: "Sometimes, the more you protect your force, the less secure you may be." Another: "Sometimes the more force is used, the less effective it is." In this realm, firepower is often a last resort rather than the first. And while airstrikes may be exceptional ways to knock things down, they are useless in putting things back together. They can create more enemies than they kill.

"The U.S. military's ability to kick down the door must be matched by our ability to clean up the mess and even rebuild the house afterward," Gates said.

This is because in Iraq and Afghanistan, winning requires that the people of those countries choose their own governments over the insurgents. To do this, the military must protect the population from attacks while engaging in a great number of tasks once considered the sphere of those foreign governments, non-governmental organizations and the State Department.

"It's more like cops on a beat than it is like sending cruise missiles through a window," Donnelly said. And as cops on a beat, they must also identify and separate out those who can be turned away from insurgencies or terrorists and those who cannot, the reconcilables and the irreconcilables. This, too, is hard to achieve through a satellite or with high-precision bombs.

This is collectively known as COIN: counterinsurgency.

If there is a poster child for how important the arguments over the future of the military are, it may be the Mine Resistant Ambush Protected vehicle.

For years the nightly news inundated viewers with reports of troops killed and maimed by roadside bombs known as improvised explosive devices as they traversed the streets in Humvees, some with armor but many without.

Memorably, in late 2004, when an Army specialist asked Rumsfeld why more combat vehicles weren't up-armored, Rumsfeld responded: "You go to war with the army you have -- not the army you might want or wish to have at a later time."

But Gates saw a problem here and continues to see it as a symptom of what is wrong with procurement in the military. According to the Pentagon, IEDs have been the No. 1 killer in Iraq, responsible for nearly two-thirds of fatalities. In May 2007 Gates made acquisition of MRAPs the Pentagon's top priority, and there are now nearly 9,000 MRAPs in use in Iraq and more than 1,000 in Afghanistan, with a total of 15,830 contracted. Gates and others credit the MRAPS with drastically reducing casualties since their implementation.

"Why did we have to bypass existing institutions and procedures to get the capabilities we need to protect our troops and pursue the wars we are in?" Gates asked pointedly.

The issue is more a question of continuous adaptation than finding a one-size-fits-all answer. Ironically, the MRAPs that have proven so important to the effort in Iraq are less helpful in Afghanistan, where mountains are many and roads steep, poorly built or non-existent. MRAPs can weigh anywhere from 7 tons to 22.5 tons, so the Pentagon is again adapting to procure a modified, lighter version that would do better in the rugged terrain of Afghanistan.

But the implementation by the U.S. military of a broader counterinsurgency mandate is not uncontroversial. Many believe it risks watering down troops' warrior culture and limiting the capabilities of the force to fight conventional wars.

Part 3: The "Small Wars" Debate

WASHINGTON, Dec. 12 (UPI) -- The debate raging about the lessons the U.S. military should learn from the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan now has a poster child. The forthcoming edition of the quarterly specialist counterinsurgency publication Small Wars Journal features a debate between two men who have come to personalize the divide between the "conservatives" -- who say it is the military's job to fight wars above and beyond all else -- and the "crusaders" -- who see the military as an adaptive tool for the application of U.S. realpolitik: Gian Gentile and John Nagl.

John Nagl, a senior fellow at the Center for New American Security and recently retired Army lieutenant colonel, could be called one of the founders of the new counterinsurgency doctrine and a true believer of the Petraeus camp. He argues in his article that fighting the wars of today means seeing the world as it is and responding to it.

"The U.S. military's role in irregular warfare cannot be wished or willed away, and the Army has a responsibility to prepare itself to fulfill that role as effectively as possible. It is irresponsible to assume that current and future foes will play to America's strengths by fighting conventionally rather than through proven, cost-effective, insurgent-like asymmetric strategies."

On the other side is Col. Gian Gentile, director of the military history program at the U.S. Military Academy and bearer of the "conservative" argument. Gentile disputes the logic of placing nation-building above fighting and worries that the military core skills have atrophied as a result.

The real question, he argues, in view of America's ongoing military experience in Iraq and Afghanistan, is whether the Army should be prepared to conduct stability operations, nation-building, counterinsurgency and related operations for more than very brief periods. Experience to date both indicates the limitations of American military capability to reshape other people's societies and governments and points to the limits of American military and economic resources in the conduct of these operations.

Coming back, Nagl states in no uncertain terms that he's unconvinced by Gentile's concerns for conventional warfare. "When bullets are flying, soldiers are in harm's way, and the national interest is at stake, the Army must devote the last full measure of its devotion to winning the wars it is in. Future conflicts are important, but the present conflicts are critical," he writes.

In a somewhat ironic twist, Gentile worries that the military's adaptations have made its thinking rigid. He says the military is dogmatically accepting the wisdom of Petraeus and counterinsurgency doctrine, and thus failing to challenge underlying assumptions about conflicts in different parts of the world.

"When problems of insurgencies and other sources of instability present themselves to American military planners, the only option seemingly available is large numbers of American combat boots on the ground protecting the people from the insurgents. This is why the Army has become dogmatic."

Nagl and Gentile represent an emerging fissure in the military and broader national security community. On the one side are the Long War's true believers, who think it incumbent upon America to wage a protracted fight in the breeding grounds of extremism -- and adapt the military to do so.

And then there are the true conservatives, who say America's misadventure in Iraq has taught it a valuable lesson about trying to clean up the world. For them, the military is already overly adapted to counterinsurgency and should return to doing what it does best: defending the homeland and fighting when it must.

As with any good scrap, there are already those stepping in to break it up. Elsewhere in the Small Wars Journal, other defense experts seek to both moderate and synthesize the two arguments. In one, titled "Nagl and Gentile are both right, so what do we do now?" Robert Haddick writes the military must recognize the world as it is today but must not fall into the trap of overextending itself in open-ended conflicts around the world. He proposes adopting Nagl's plan for developing a 20,000-man Combat Adviser Corps to conduct prevention, shaping and deterrence operations in irregular conflict areas, while at the same time emphasizing the importance that the majority of forces focus on conventional capabilities.

Whether the country prepares for long, protracted, irregular conflicts has implications for the budget: It means more translators, civil engineers and specialized forces like "human terrain" teams, otherwise known as cultural anthropologists. And it may mean strongly modifying, delaying and/or even eliminating programs that don't directly serve this mission, such as the Air Force's F-35 Joint Strike Fighter or the Army's ultra-modern, computer-networked $200 billion Future Combat System.

It is easy to get carried away on rhetoric. Experts who watch the Pentagon's budget say there has been little sign of revolution since Defense Secretary Robert Gates took charge. Any changes, they say, have been at the margins.

It is "a moderate readjustment of priorities, not a radical shift in philosophy," says Michael O'Hanlon, a defense expert at the Brookings Institution. O'Hanlon likened Gates's words on "Next-War-itis" to a rhetorical tactic designed to "light a fire" under the Air Force and Navy leadership to give him what he wants: namely, hastening the deployment of unmanned aerial vehicles like the Predator and other new technologies that have been used with great success in both Iraq and Afghanistan.

Steven Kosiak, vice president of budget studies at the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments, agrees. "The broad-brush look at the force structure and the major modernization programs; I don't think it would be fair to say there's been a substantial change in (budgetary) direction under Gates," he says. Kosiak cautions that this isn't to say that changes at the margins, like the deployment of the MRAP vehicles or more UAVs, haven't been extremely important.

This may be because of the additional flexibility provided to the military by Congress in the form of special spending bills called "emergency supplemental appropriations," which means additional cash doesn't have to come out of the baseline defense budget. But this also may serve to indicate how the military and Congress regard the state of the adaptations: as temporary.

Both O'Hanlon and Kosiak acknowledge the difficulty in implementing institutional change in the military. "A lot of this is sort of like turning a tanker at sea," Kosiak says. "It takes a long time, and it's something you're not going to do in a short period of time."

Gates and many others say it's not about choosing one option or another. It's about striving for balance.

There's another voice that falls into this camp: President-elect Barack Obama. On the campaign trail, Obama often called for tempered, pragmatic adaptation in the military, saying the United States should buy less expensive warships, train more translators, increase special operations units and put more money into intelligence and non-military aid.

With word that he'll stay on as secretary of defense under Obama for at least the time being, Gates will have no shortage of advice on how to find the balance he's looking for.

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(Medill News Service)

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