This holiday season offers America's Army
little reason for rejoicing. Bogged down in a difficult
campaign to bring democracy to Mesopotamia, the service is in danger
of being blamed for a political defeat in the global war on terror. The Army's sacrifices have earned it first place in
line for some holiday relief from the nation's leaders, but once pressing
operational needs have been met, there's the question of what rewards the
service should receive for the long run.
The Army might hope for a
more competent collection of national leaders who would
stop sending the service on ill-conceived missions, but recent
experience proves that the nation can't count on all its politicians being as
mature as a Senator Clinton or a Senator Warner. The
Army might hope for additional brigades to reduce the burden of
excessive operational tempo, but recruiting thousands of new soldiers is tough in a high-employment economy. So what realistic rewards can we give the Army
that offer some prospect of a brighter future? Here are four
suggestions.
Better language
skills. The biggest deficiency
U.S. soldiers have exhibited
in Iraq
is their inability to understand what the locals are saying. With so few
Arabic speakers in the force, war-fighters often must either guess at what
Iraqis are trying to tell them, or depend on indigenous interpreters of
uncertain reliability. There are plenty of languages that might come in
handy in the future, but Spanish isn't hard to learn and Korean speakers aren't
hard to find. Arabic, in its various dialects, is both tough to learn
and in scarce supply. The Army needs a crash program to
make one in every fifty soldiers fluent in Arabic.
Better intelligence
tools. Counter-insurgency and
counter-terrorism have less to do with firepower than finding the enemy.
During the Cold War, U.S.
forces could search for Russian missile silos and tank armies
from space, but today's elusive threats demand collection systems that are
closer to the action, such as the long-endurance Global Hawk unmanned aerial
system that can provide imagery, eavesdropping and tracking of ground targets
as events are occurring. There is also a need for tools such as the
Distributed Common Ground System that can quickly combine, display and
distribute tactical intelligence from many different sources, because in
counter-insurgency, time is always of the essence.
Better
communications. Space may not
be the best vantage point from which to look for terrorists, but it is the
key to keeping the Army in touch with the rest of the joint force. That's
why the Transformational Communications Satellite system to provide a global "Internet in the sky" for U.S. war-fighters must be kept on
track. The other key pieces of the Army's future communications
framework are the Joint Tactical Radio System and the War-fighter Information
Network (Tactical), or WIN-T. If these three programs are
brought to fruition in a timely fashion, soldiers will never again have to
worry about their communications being degraded by lack of range,
resilience, bandwidth or inter-operability.
Better light trucks.
The Army's 120,000 High Mobility
Multi-Purpose Wheeled Vehicles, or "Humvees," comprise 50% of the
service's tactical truck fleet. They were a big improvement over the
jeeps they began replacing in 1985, but they're taking a beating in Iraq.
More importantly, they lack essential self-protection features for the kind of
combat the service is likely face in the future. The Army needs enough
funding to refurbish or replace thousands of Humvees returning from the
war zone, but it also needs to step up the search for a next-generation light
tactical vehicle that is less vulnerable and more versatile.