Rumsfeld's Reformation: The New Defense Secretary Faces Tough Choices
May 30, 2001
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These
are difficult days for Donald Rumsfeld. A quarter century after serving
as the nation's youngest defense secretary in the years following the
Vietnam War, he has returned to the Pentagon to find it in an eerily
similar state of disarray. Weapons are aging. Readiness is eroding.
Morale is depressed. And the unpaid bills just keep piling up. On Rumsfeld's first tour as secretary, his biggest headache was
the post-Vietnam antimilitarism that infected congressional
deliberations on defense policy. That's largely gone now, but it has
been replaced by a waning sense of urgency about military preparedness
that potentially could be just as corrosive.
Rumsfeld has a mandate from the President to challenge Pentagon
orthodoxy and transform the military into an information-age force.
Bush declared two years ago on the campaign trail that "As President, I
will begin an immediate, comprehensive review of our military -- the
structure of its forces, the state of its strategy, the priorities of
its procurement -- conducted by a leadership team under the Secretary
of Defense." He said he would give his defense secretary "a broad
mandate -- to challenge the status quo and envision a new architecture
of American defense for decades to come."
That is precisely what Rumsfeld has attempted to do since assuming
office in January. He spun up a series of panels populated by academic
experts and respected retired officers to examine such long-term issues
as geopolitical trends, new technologies and changing mission
requirements. And he deliberately excluded most of the usual insiders
from the discussions, in order to receive unvarnished views as to the
real challenges facing the military.
The panels have now completed their deliberations, and Rumsfeld is
meeting with the Joint Chiefs of Staff to begin the next step in the
process, during which the military will have their own say on what the
future strategy and force posture should look like. The Pentagon is
required by law to complete a "quadrennial defense review" by the end
of the fiscal year (September 30), and provide Congress with the
results.
Getting the military involved should end much of the sniping about
how the process has been conducted. Some senior military officers
thought they should have been involved from day one and have complained
to the press, feeding an impression that the review was being poorly
run. Hamstrung by a lack of confirmed subordinates and the usual
burdens of establishing control over the sprawling Pentagon
bureaucracy, Rumsfeld has been an easy target of critics in the media.
He has now begun to reach out to those critics, both in the
military and on Capitol Hill. But while the criticism of his approach
is likely to be muted over the coming months, the new administration
has barely begun to come to grips with the problems its military
establishment faces. Those problems are compounded by a lack of
consensus concerning the future threats the nation faces, making any
defense posture potentially subject to challenge.
No one misses the Soviets, but at least during the Cold War there
was general agreement in Washington about what the key dangers were.
Now that bipartisan consensus is gone, and a powerful undertow of
opposition to increased defense spending has emerged in Congress --
despite abundant evidence that the military can't make ends meet on it
current budget.
It's not hard to see why some legislators think enough is already
being spent on the military. At about $300 billion, the current US
defense budget is bigger than the combined total for Russia, Japan,
China, France, Britain, Germany and Italy. But it is also the lowest
percentage of national wealth spent on defense in three generations --
roughly 3% of a $10 trillion economy. According to some estimates, that
is barely half of what Americans spend on gambling in an average year.
What concerns Rumsfeld and his key advisors is that the Clinton
Administration's spending priorities may have been taking a gamble with
national security. Although the former President spoke frequently about
investing in America's future, his Pentagon budgets were heavy on
consumption and light on investment. The military was run at a very
high level of operating tempo throughout Clinton's term, while only
minimal expenditure was made for new weapons and infrastructure. As a
result, the whole system has begun to run down.
Rumsfeld was aware of that before he returned to the Pentagon, but
he wasn't prepared for just how serious the problems are. Almost every
category of Air Force plane -- fighters, transports, tankers, etc. --
has either exceeded its maximum acceptable average age, or is within
months of doing so. Recapitalization of base housing and other
infrastructure is progressing so slowly that at current rates it would
take over a century to replace all the decrepit facilities. Military
healthcare is underfunded to the tune of $5 billion annually.
Everywhere Rumsfeld looks, he sees evidence of decay.
The Pentagon's internal review has confirmed Congressional Budget
Office estimates that about $50 billion more would need to be spent on
the military each year just to arrest the erosion in capability. Much
of that would go to replacing aging facilities, improving military pay
and benefits, catching up with maintenance backlog, and other necessary
housekeeping. The rest would go to revitalizing the Cold War arsenal
with a new generation of information-age weapons.
Reports that Rumsfeld plans to make massive investments in missile
defense and new military space systems are wrong. While he intends to
give both mission areas increased priority -- reflecting his recent
service on missile-defense and space commissions formed by the Clinton
Administration -- the amounts involved are relatively modest. The
preponderance of increased weapons spending will go to the conventional
systems that have always consumed the lion's share of procurement
accounts.
The biggest increases will go to aircraft. Rumsfeld wants to
accelerate purchase of the Air Force's stealthy F-22 air-superiority
fighter and the Navy's carrier-based F/A-18 E/F Super Hornet, partly
because existing fighters are aging rapidly and partly to clear the
deck for production of the versatile Joint Strike Fighter. He also will
accelerate purchases of the C-17 transport, begin development of a
next-generation tanker (the current fleet is approaching 40 years of
age), and either buy more B-2 bombers or initiate a new
intercontinental bomber program dubbed B-3.
In addition, he is determined to keep the size of the Navy above
300 ships, a goal that will require increasing the number of warships
built annually by about three above the level that prevailed in the
Clinton years. Contrary to some media reports, he has no plans to delay
development of the next-generation DD-21 destroyer or CVNX successor to
Nimitz-class carriers. During his first term as defense secretary in
the 1970s, Rumsfeld decided to buy nonnuclear carriers rather than more
nuclear-powered Nimitz's, but he no longer views that as an option. He
also wants to convert four redundant Trident ballistic-missile subs for
use as conventional cruise-missile launchers.
Most of the remaining weapons
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