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Secretary Gates' Defense Budget Proposals

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Victory in Iraq and Afghanistan is the driving force behind Secretary of Defense Robert Gates' new long-range defense plan. Gates made that clear in an article he wrote for the January issue of Foreign Affairs Magazine: "The United States' ability to deal with future threats will depend on its performance in current conflicts. To be blunt, to fail — or to be seen to fail — in either Iraq or Afghanistan would be a disastrous blow to U.S. credibility, both among friends and allies and among potential adversaries."

Given the long lead time in high-tech weapons procurement programs, is this a contradiction, apparently putting short-term considerations over longer-term, over-the-horizon risks that could threaten national survival?

The answer is no.

Gates understands the importance of perseverance in war — the weapon of spine, determination, will.

Osama bin Laden committed many strategic blunders, but one of his greatest was underestimating American will. References to America "fleeing" from Somalia litter captured al-Qaida documents.

Credibility of commitment — the will to win — is the psychological backbone of deterrence. A determined foe will scorn advanced weapons with near-magic capabilities if he believes you won't use them or that he can force you to fight on a battlefield where the weapons are not decisive. He wagers his will to win far exceeds your comfy, bourgeois fecklessness.

Credible commitment, Gates wrote, extends beyond winning the war of bullets to winning the war for long-term security, which requires maintaining "small war" capabilities, including counter-insurgency skills, local security training programs, rule of law projects, and economic and political stabilization capacities. In the strategic context of the 21st century, these are "systematic weapons" (strategic approaches and tactics not dependent on specific weapons systems, but rather people skills). They are potentially more decisive than the deadliest high-tech weapons system, for they are the means of restoring or promoting productive, just societies and thus creating future allies.

The continuing tragedy is that the United States has yet to comprehensively integrate civilian entities and non-military governmental agencies into this process and thus never achieves "Unified Action" (Pentagonese for the synchronized use of diplomatic, military, information and economic power).

The U.S.

military is often the only agency on the ground. Infantrymen must act as diplomats in the morning, agricultural experts in the afternoon and cops after dark. Gates' article noted improvements in inter-agency cooperation, but — with succinct resignation — concluded that "military commanders will not be able to rid themselves of the tasks ... ."

Gates' defense plan, presented this week, seeks to embed these capabilities but also thwart the most likely current and emerging conventional threats, what he called "the security challenges posed by the military forces of other countries — from those actively hostile to those at strategic crossroads."

"Most likely" sounds bland, but for Congress, defense industries and many military leaders, they are fighting words. Money isn't the only reason — legitimate debate over what constitutes adequate preparation for a "war of national survival" is not only justifiable, but a duty. The reason the United States confronts terrorist threats is that America has the combat power to win conventional force-on-force fights, and that must be retained.

Gates doesn't dispute that — he argues for balance. Budgets are limited. Procuring the expensive "perfect" may be ideal, but acquiring sufficient numbers of "the better than good enough" is more rational.

As a specific example, Gates bets that a sufficient number of F-35s assures U.S. air dominance in the coming decades, so the Pentagon can buy fewer F-22s. Now a battle over numbers flares. Gates says 187 F-22s. I estimate the right number is around 250. Hey, it's not quite thin air. It's based on attrition and operational estimates, and posits a U.S.-China clash over Taiwan.

No one wants that conflict, but if it occurs sometime in the next 20 years we'll rue the day we didn't buy more F-22s. Gates, however, wins the bigger point — America has less expensive systems that more than overmatch potential adversaries.

Choices must be made, and Secretary of Defense Gates has made his. He has done so with an acute assessment of the long-term strategic benefits of assuring success in Iraq and Afghanistan complemented by a cool, intellectually defensible estimate of future requirements. His proposals now become a Washington budget warfighting document.

To find out more about Austin Bay, and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2009 CREATORS SYNDICATE INC.


Comments

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Sir;....Your article is one long statement of stupidity... It is a declaration of stupidity, and a constitution of stupidity...Do you really think the world learns a lesson from our being in Afghanistan???The world gets some free entertainment at our expense...Do you think our credibility is at stake; or is it our incredibility??? Why not consider for a moment our constitution....Of all the worthy causes for which this nation was established which we have never honestly set as goals, defense is the goal we have come closest to reaching... And this is reasonable, and fair, and intelligent.... Because democracy does for a whole people what it should do for individuals; and that is, provide them with a defense... The problem is, that the democracy we never had does not protect this people as individuals, or as a nation... Our true nature is offensive, and that is because we are Oligarchic, and a Plutocracy... Our leaders sure enough fear the power of democracy, but as best they can, the rich in this country divide the people and every district to the ultimate degree; and they still cannot shake the fear that we will find some point of agreement and sweep them all away...If you think this country needs spine; consider what that means...No one sought consensus before these stupid wars, but instead took unity for granted.... If they studied any history, they could see no less than LBJ talking about the impatient nature of public opinion... The fact is that it takes people a while to get their backs up... When they see their leaders do something stupid, understanding that they, and not their leaders will pay the price in blood and treasure, they wear raw, and they look on uneasy for a while; but they do not like it... So success ought to be quick, and preferably bloodless... The mission should be accomplished, not so we can straggle on in endless war, but so we can declare victory, and get the hell out... The military is one great toilet that this people has used to flush the national wealth...If Mr. Gates has the nerve to tell the people they cannot afford it all, then he is a man...In fact, rather than a great military, this country needs some common sense...There is no substitute for the genius of the people, and that is the first thing that is denied in all forms of rule, majority rule, rule of the few, rule of the best, rule of the wealthy, or rule of a single individual...We do not need rule, but we do need democracy to achieve the goals of the constitution -which have never been truely accepted as goals by the goverment...The failure in Iraq and Afghanistan is a failure of leadership, for sure; but it is also a failure of government...This is what happens when people having power think they are thus blessed with brains...No one has sense enough to speak for another...No one knows better what is best for another than he himself knows...The object of democracy is good, as it is for any form of goverment...But only those mistakes a person makes on their own choice will ever have their full support... The mistakes this country has made in Afghanistan and Iraq have little support because the people know they were mistakes made by others having little caring for their lives...Our politicians did those follies for their own gain, and should be ruined for them...Thanks...Sweeney
Comment: #1
Posted by: James A, Sweeney
Fri Apr 10, 2009 6:08 AM
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