MILITARY TRANSFORMATION FALTERS IN MESOPOTAMIA
Apr 16, 2004
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Defense News reports this week that defense secretary Donald Rumsfeld
has set new "speed goals" for winning America's wars. According to
staff writer Jason Sherman, "Rumsfeld is challenging the military
services to structure themselves to deploy to a distant theater in 10
days, defeat an enemy within 30 days, and be ready for an additional
fight within another 30 days." The new goals, referred to as 10-30-30,
will serve as a metric for assessing the warfighting concepts and
investment plans of the military services.
Isn't it a little odd
that the Pentagon's plans for military transformation seem so
disconnected from what's going on in Iraq? Nearly a year after
President Bush declared victory and his Pentagon team began crowing
about the successes of transformational warfighting, U.S. soldiers are
bogged down in the bloodiest month of fighting since the operation
began. With the Marine Corps about to roll out plans for transforming
itself into a lighter force, maybe it's time for the big thinkers to
take their own "strategic pause" and ask themselves whether they know
what they're doing.
Just about everybody agrees that the
military needs to change the way it does business. The Air Force has
too many fighters and the Navy needs to rethink the role of surface
combatants. The Army is understaffed and lacks critical equipment. But
the administration's answer to these issues, generically called
"military transformation," looks like the last gasp of dot.com mania
rather than a balanced response to the emerging warfighting
environment. Look at the way its various biases have contributed to the
unfolding debacle in Iraq:
Awareness. The Pentagon's
Transformation Planning Guidance says "exploiting U.S. intelligence
advantages" is a pillar of transformation. But the missing weapons of
mass destruction and our perplexity about how to cope with insurgents
show those advantages are exaggerated.
Speed. U.S. forces were
so busy racing to Baghdad that they bypassed much of the Iraqi Army. It
melted into the countryside, where it now provides the backbone of
resistance to coalition forces.
Precision. The reason Germany
and Japan accepted defeat at the end of World War Two is that they had
been pounded into submission. By substituting finesse for firepower,
the Pentagon's warplan for Iraq neglected the psychological dimension
of defeat.
Lightness. Transformational warfighting concepts
resulted in an occupation force too small to stabilize Iraq.
Troublemakers got the message that U.S. forces were stretched thin, and
now the resistance is firmly rooted.
America's military was
overdue for change when Secretary Rumsfeld took office. But military
transformation has many possible meanings, and the approach the Bush
Administration has taken is too trendy, too politically correct. It's
time to set aside all the network-centric ideology and recognize the
many ways in which war has not changed.
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