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Within the past decade, the U.S. military has implemented a number
of programs to assess the changes underway in the global security
environment and in the nature of warfare. Defense leaders and
thinkers have concluded that revolutionary change is taking place
and, if the United States develops appropriate technology,
warfighting concepts, and military organizations, it can master or
control this change, thus augmenting American security. In this
monograph, Dr. Steven Metz, who was one of the earliest analysts of
the strategic dimension of the revolution in military affairs,
suggests that official thinking within the U.S. military may be too
narrow. The information revolution, he contends, will have
far-reaching strategic effects. The transformation it brings will
not only be technological, but political, social, ethical and
strategic as well.
U.S. military strategy is undergoing its most serious examination
since the end of the Cold War. Led by Secretary of Defense Donald
Rumsfeld, this process is designed to assess every dimension of the
strategy, including its most basic assumptions and concepts. For
the first time in over a decade, everything about U.S. military
strategy is subject to question. One of the most important elements
of U.S. military strategy for the past ten years has been the
belief that a force able to fight two nearly simultaneous major
theater wars (MTW) of the DESERT STORM type would be capable of
dealing with the full gamut of security challenges that the United
States is likely to face. Now nearly every expert on U.S. military
strategy agrees that this force shaping paradigm needs a relook.
The authors explore the open-source literature on the revolution in
military affairs that has resulted from the Gulf War.
The U.S. military and national security community lost interest in
insurgency after the end of the Cold War when other defense issues
such as multinational peacekeeping and transformation seemed more
pressing. With the onset of the Global War on Terror in 2001 and
the ensuing involvement of the U.S. military in counterinsurgency
support in Iraq and Afghanistan, insurgency experienced renewed
concern in both the defense and intelligence communities. The
author argues that while exceptionally important, this relearning
process focused on Cold War era nationalistic insurgencies rather
than the complex conflicts which characterized the post-Cold War
security environment. To be successful at counterinsurgency, he
contends, the U.S. military and defense community must rethink
insurgency, which has profound implications for American strategy
and military doctrine.
Few if any American officers performed a wider array of strategic
functions as Dwight D. Eisenhower--he was a staff planner in the
War Department, wartime commander of a massive coalition force,
peacetime Chief of Staff, and Supreme Allied Commander in Europe.
Eisenhower was directly involved in a number of major transitions
including the building of the wartime American Army, its
demobilization following the war, and the resuscitation of American
military strength during the initial years of the cold war. This
means that Eisenhower's career can provide important lessons on how
a coherent strategy should and should not be built during times of
strategic transition. That is what this monograph begins to do. It
is not intended to be a biography in the usual sense and thus
offers no new facts or insights into Eisenhower's life. Instead it
uses that life as a backdrop for exploring the broader essence of
strategic coherence and draws lessons from Eisenhower's career that
can help guide the strategic transition which the U.S. military now
faces.
Counterinsurgency is seemingly not of great concern to the U.S.
Army today. This may represent a period of remission rather than
the apparent abandonment of the mission. It is possible that the
U.S. military may again become engaged in counterinsurgency support
in the future. In this study, Steven Metz argues that the way the
Department of Defense and U.S. military spend the time when
counterinsurgency support is not an important part of American
national security strategy determines how quickly and easily they
react when policymakers commit the nation to such activity. If
analysis and debate continues, at least at a low level, the
military is better prepared for the reconstitution of capabilities.
If it ignores global developments in insurgency and
counterinsurgency, the reconstitution of capabilities would be more
difficult. Today, there is no pressing strategic rationale for U.S.
engagement in counterinsurgency but history suggests that if the
United States remains involved in the Global South, one may emerge.
American counterinsurgency strategy has unfolded in a distinct
pattern over the past 50 years. At times, policymakers saw a
strategic rationale for engagement in counterinsurgency. When they
did, the military and Department of Defense formed or reconstituted
counterinsurgency doctrine, concepts, and organizations. When the
strategic rationale faded, these capabilities atrophied. This
pattern may be repeated in the future. During the last decade of
the Cold War, the U.S. military developed an effective approach to
insurgency and implemented it in El Salvador, but this focused on
one particular type of insurgency: Maoist "people's war." The El
Salvador model may not apply to post-Cold War forms of insurgency.
Moreover, many of the basic assumptions of American
counterinsurgency strategy appear obsolete. Trends such as
ungovernability, the routinization of violence, and the mutation of
insurgency change the costs/benefits calculus that undergirded Cold
War-era strategy and doctrine. During the current period of
remission in insurgency, the Army should use its intellectual
resources to analyze ongoing mutations in insurgency and to open a
debate on the nature of a cogent post-Cold War counterinsurgency
strategy. This strategy should expand its conceptual framework and
stress three principles: selectivity, multilateralism, and
concentration on secondary support functions including indirect or
second-tier engagement. Such efforts will pave the way for the
reconstitution of American counterinsurgency should it be required.
For more than 2 decades, the Strategic Studies Institute (SSI) has
hosted an annual strategy conference. Each conference was designed
to convene some of the world's top experts on a major strategic
issue, and to use cutting edge scholarship and analysis to help the
U.S. Army and Department of Defense (DoD) leadership understand the
issue. The April 2010 Strategy Conference was entitled "Defining
War for the 21st Century." The conference included a keynote
address by Professor Martin van Creveld, a banquet presentation by
Major General (Retired) Robert Scales, and panels on the historical
context; the instigation of war; the end of wars; the participants
in war; the rule sets governing war; and the policy, strategy, and
organizational implications of defining war. The conference
speakers, which included well known scholars, former policymakers,
and former senior military leaders, agreed on some points, but
often had very different perspectives. Most importantly, they
identified the most pressing questions that the American and
international defense communities are grappling with as they refine
their definition of war. In the report which follows, Steven Metz
and Philip Cuccia of SSI have summarized the presentations and
debates at the conference and placed them in their wider
intellectual and strategic context. SSI is pleased to offer this
report in fulfillment of its mission to assist U.S. Army and DoD
senior leaders and strategic thinkers in understanding the key
issues of the day.
In war, there are always differences between the opponents. At
times these are insignificant, passing disparities with no bearing
on the outcome. At other times, the differences between opponents
are important, placing one in a position of advantage, the other at
a disadvantage. This is a very simple observation, but from it
flows one of the pressing issues faced by the United States today:
strategic asymmetry. Strategic asymmetry is the use of some sort of
difference to gain an advantage over an adversary. It is an idea as
old as warfare itself, appearing under a number of guises. Among
strategic theorists, Sun Tzu placed great stock in psychological
and informational asymmetry, writing that: All warfare is based on
deception. When confronted with an enemy one should offer the enemy
a bait to lure him; feign disorder and strike him. When he
concentrates, prepare against him; where he is strong. avoid him.
While the involvement of the United States in counterinsurgency has
a long history, it had faded in importance in the years following
the end of the Cold War. When American forces first confronted it
in Iraq, they were not fully prepared. Since then, the U.S.
military and other government agencies have expended much effort to
refine their counterinsurgency capabilities. But have they done
enough?
Security professionals and strategists are discovering the
post-cold war world is as rife with persistent, low-level violence
as its predecessors. In fact, many regions are experiencing a rise
in the amount of conflict in the absence of restraints previously
imposed by the superpowers. Since frustration in many parts of the
Third World is actually increasing, insurgency--the use of
low-level, protracted violence to overthrow a political system or
force some sort of fundamental change in the political and economic
status quo--will be an enduring security problem. Unfortunately,
most existing doctrine and strategy for dealing with insurgency are
based on old forms of the phenomenon, especially rural, protracted,
"people's war." But as this type of insurgency becomes obsolete,
new forms will emerge. It is important to speculate on these future
forms in order to assist in the evolution of counterinsurgency
strategy and doctrine. Dr. Steven Metz uses a psychological method
of analysis to argue that two forms of insurgency, which he calls
the "spiritual" and the "commercial," will pose the greatest
intellectual challenges to security professionals, military
leaders, and strategists. The specific nature of such challenges
will vary from region to region.
Within the past decade, the U.S. military has implemented a number
of programs to assess the changes underway in the global security
environment and in the nature of warfare. Defense leaders and
thinkers have concluded that revolutionary change is taking place
and, if the United States develops appropriate technology,
warfighting concepts, and military organizations, it can master or
control this change, thus augmenting American security. In this
monograph, Dr. Steven Metz, who was one of the earliest analysts of
the strategic dimension of the revolution in military affairs,
suggests that official thinking within the U.S. military may be too
narrow. The information revolution, he contends, will have
far-reaching strategic effects. The transformation it brings will
not only be technological, but political, social, ethical and
strategic as well. As he explores the impact that the information
revolution may have on the conduct of armed conflict, Dr. Metz
introduces a number of ideas which need further analysis, including
the potential for the emergence of nontraditional, networked
enemies; multidimensional asymmetry; the privatization of security;
and the potential impact of technologies like robotics,
nonlethality, and nanotechnology. He concludes with an assessment
of the features likely to characterize successful militaries in the
21st century. Because it deals with the future, this study is
conceptual and speculative. But the issues and linkages it raises
are directly relevant to today's strategic thinkers and leaders.
The Strategic Studies Institute is pleased to offer it as a
contribution to debate over the nature of the challenges that the
U.S. military will face in coming decades.Douglas C. Lovelace, Jr.
Interim Director Strategic Studies Institute
The facts of Dwight D. Eisenhower's military career are well-known.
This does not mean, however, that there is nothing to be gained
from a careful examination of his experience. Few if any American
officers performed a wider array of strategic functions - he was a
staff planner in the War Department, wartime commander of a massive
coalition force, peacetime Chief of Staff, and Supreme Allied
Commander in Europe. Eisenhower was directly involved in a number
of major transitions including the building of the wartime American
Army, its demobilization following the war, and the resuscitation
of American military strength during the initial years of the cold
war. This means that Eisenhower's career can provide important
lessons on how a coherent strategy should and should not be built
during times of strategic transition. That is what this monograph
begins to do. It is not intended to be a biography in the usual
sense and thus offers no new facts or insights into Eisenhower's
life. Instead it uses that life as a backdrop for exploring the
broader essence of strategic coherence and draws lessons from
Eisenhower's career that can help guide the strategic transition
which the U.S. military now faces. WILLIAM A. STOFFT Major General,
U.S. Army Commandant
What design would I be forming if I were the enemy? "Y Frederick
the Great The great difficulty in forecasting the future strategic
environment and the force structure needed in response is the
plethora of variables that change the calculus. Only hindsight
reveals the failure of a Maginot Line or the brilliant success of a
mechanized Blitzkrieg doctrine. In the final analysis, the reader
must judge the line of reasoning. In this monograph, Dr. Steven
Metz and Lieutenant Colonel Raymond Millen examine the trends in
the strategic environment in their development of the Future
War/Future Battlespace. One fact is clear. Traditional warfighting
has changed in the post 9-11 era. The U.S. military must adapt or
fail. There is no other recourse. Dr. Metz and LTC Millen have
superbly framed the strategic environment into four strategic
battlespaces and have examined the ways future adversaries will
operate within them to thwart U.S. strategic initiatives. In this
context, these variables influence the path that Transformation
must take. The Strategic Studies Institute is pleased to offer this
monograph as a topic of debate concerning Transformation and the
Objective Force. Douglas C. Lovelace, Jr. Director Strategic
Studies Institute
Today the U.S. military is more nimble, mobile, and focused on
rapid responses against smaller powers than ever before. One could
argue that the Gulf War and the postwar standoff with Saddam
Hussein hastened needed military transformation and strategic
reassessments in the post-Cold War era. But the preoccupation with
Iraq also mired the United States in the Middle East and led to a
bloody occupation. What will American strategy look like after U.S.
troops leave Iraq?"Iraq and the Evolution of American Strategy"
examines the ways in which the Gulf War, the WMD standoff, the Iraq
War, and the ongoing occupation have driven broader changes in U.S.
national security policy and military strategy. Steven Metz answers
three overarching questions: 1. How did the conflict with Iraq
drive and shape broader changes in national security and military
strategy? 2. Did policymakers and military leaders interpret the
conflict correctly and make the most effective responses? 3. What
does this process tell us about the process of change in America's
national security and military strategy and in the evolution of its
strategic culture?Metz concludes that the United States has a
long-standing, continuing problem "developing sound assumptions
when the opponent operates within a different psychological and
cultural framework." He sees a pattern of misjudgments about Saddam
and Iraq based on Western cultural and historical bias and a
pervasive faith in the superiority of America's worldview and
institutions. This myopia contributed to America being caught off
guard by Saddam's invasion of Kuwait in 1990, then underestimating
his longevity, and finally miscalculating the likelihood of a
stable and democraticIraq after he was toppled. With lessons for
all readers concerned about America's role in the world, Dr. Metz's
important new work will especially appeal to scholars and students
of strategy and international security studies, as well as to
military professionals and DOD civilians. With a foreword by Colin
S. Gray.
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