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The Strategic Debate We Need To Have
By Jeff Lukens
The
U.S. federal debt is our nation's greatest strategic weakness. As the
debt continues to grow, our military posture around the globe is
threatened. Defense cuts are coming, and with that reduction must come
a reduced mission. In this environment, what our nation's strategic
mission should be, and what the corresponding defense funding should be
to meet that need, are open questions. They are questions that need to
be openly explored by politicians and the American people alike.
In a
recent speech to the American Enterprise Institute (AEI), Defense
Secretary Robert Gates said, "A smaller military, no matter how superb,
will be able to go fewer places and do fewer things." Ever the public
servant, Gates seeks to kindle a debate the country seems reluctant, but
needs, to have. It would be an invitation to disaster if we kept the
same mission with reduced funding, or a reduced force. By bringing the
issue to the public forum, Gates apparently seeks to avoid that
calamity.
The
core Pentagon budget is now about $530 billion, and accounts for roughly
20 percent of federal spending, and roughly half of discretionary
spending. Defense cuts are coming, that much we know for sure, and the
easiest of them have already been made. Gates acknowledged that over
the past two years, "more than 30 programs (weapon systems, etc.) were
canceled, capped, or ended that, if pursued to completion, would have
cost more than $300 billion."
After
a comprehensive review, the Pentagon hopes to find additional savings.
Whatever those might be, however, they will not be enough to meet their
goal of saving $400 billion over 10 years. The pressure on the
Pentagon's budget is part of the GOP's larger effort to cut the overall
budget deficit by $4 trillion over the same time period. To meet that
goal, the Pentagon is already suggesting that military missions and
troop levels be reduced.
For a
historical perspective, our defense budget hit a postwar high of 14.2%
of GDP in 1953 during the Korean War. At the height of Vietnam in 1968,
it was 9.5%, and it was 6.8% in 1986 at the height of the Reagan
buildup. In 2000, military funding reached the lowest point on 3.0%.
Today, 10 years into the Global War on Terror, we are spending 4.7% of
GDP on defense.
In
the 1980s, the Army had 18 combat divisions. Today they have ten. Many
of the Army's weapons have already missed several rounds of
modernization. Many of its soldiers are on their fourth or fifth tour
of duty in Iraq or Afghanistan. And the Army Reserves have been on
repeated deployments overseas since 9/11 as well.
The
Navy has been reduced from 600 ships in the 1980s to fewer than 300
today. They now have fewer ships than at any time since the First World
War. In that same time, the number of tactical air wings in the Air
Force has fallen from 37 to 20. And their planes are the smallest in
number and the oldest in age, ever. The useful life of the tanks,
artillery, planes, ships, and missiles that date to the Reagan buildup
is ending, and the cost of replacing them is now far greater than it was
back then.
Going
forward, the challenge for Washington is to reach a political consensus
that transitions our military capability and alliances, and meets the
realities of the decades ahead. As a nation, perhaps the first question
we must ask ourselves is what is so critical to our security that we are
willing to go to war to defend it? Upon the answer to that question lie
answers to how much military strength we need, and at what amount of
funding will be needed to achieve it.
Once
the Afghan War is over, we would hope to see U.S. troop levels reduced
in the Middle East. In Korea, the South has twice the people, and many
times the economy of the North. Moreover, Pyongyang has no Soviet Union
or Maoist China backing them as in the past. We may also have an
opportunity to reduce our commitment there.
And
what is the necessity for a U.S. troop presence in Europe? The Red Army
withdrew from Germany and the rest of Central Europe long ago. Our
European allies are as wealthy as we are. And while they would rather
push their defense responsibilities off on us, perhaps it is time for us
to step back from there too. Should we really have U.S. troops
stationed in places like Kosovo? Maybe we should let the Europeans
handle these places on their own.
Our
military footprint is shrinking because we are broke, and we must make
hard choices about what is important to our nation's security. Some
have said we should not partake in any more wars where we must endlessly
explain our reasons for being there to the American people. In this
time of austerity, perhaps that is right approach.
The
old axiom that peace comes through strength has not changed. When a
crisis comes, we could be forced to pay in blood and treasure many times
over what we save today in downsizing our military. Clearly, we must be
smart about downsizing our military and optimizing its strength while
undergoing this process. Our decisions today will be consequential to
when that day of crisis inevitably comes.
In
his AEI speech, Gates said:
I am
determined that we not repeat the mistakes of the past, where the budget
targets were met mostly by taking a percentage off the top of
everything, the simplest and most politically expedient approach both
inside the Pentagon and outside of it. That kind of "salami-slicing"
approach preserves overhead and maintains force structure on paper, but
results in a hollowing-out of the force from a lack of proper training,
maintenance and equipment - and manpower. That's what happened in the
1970s - a disastrous period for our military - and to a lesser extent
during the late 1990s.
The
biggest items in the federal budget are Social Security, Medicare, and
Defense. It is unlikely we will reach any long-term bipartisan budget
deal without cuts to all three. So Defense cuts are coming, and the
2012 campaign season is as good a time as any to air this issue
publicly. As Gates said, "Part of this analysis will entail going
places that have been avoided by politicians in the past."
The
President, the Congress, and the American people should openly decide
which commitments and capabilities America should maintain, reduce, or
abandon. It is a debate we need to have. Typically, most pols would
kick this thorny issue down the road. In one of his final acts as
Secretary of Defense, Robert Gates has brought this vital issue to the
forefront of the public attention. His service to the nation is
commendable. Let the debate begin.
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