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Chet Richards Straus Military Reform Project Center for Defense Information May 2006

Chet Richards Straus Military Reform Project Center for Defense Information May 2006. Conclusions. We’re not going to fight Russia, China, or India (at least not with conventional weapons). China. Conclusions.

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Chet Richards Straus Military Reform Project Center for Defense Information May 2006

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  1. Chet RichardsStraus Military Reform ProjectCenter for Defense InformationMay 2006

  2. Conclusions • We’re not going to fight Russia, China, or India (at least not with conventional weapons).

  3. China

  4. Conclusions • We’re not going to fight Russia, China, or India (at least not with conventional weapons). • Therefore we can eliminate most of the non-nuclear forces we now have. • What we will face is “evolved insurgency,” for which we have no good solution. • Our best strategy is military containment combined with a strong incentive program a la the way we dealt with the Soviet Union. • Eventually, we should privatize our residual conventional combat forces.

  5. Nuclear Weapons Proliferate Fall of USSR Peace of Westphalia state vs. state Precursor activities – going back to Alexander & Sun Tzu (and before) 2 GW 1GW 3 GW States & non-states wage war maneuver concepts State-vs-state— only “legal” form of war New commo & trans networks 4 GW Highly irregular / partisan warfare; terrorism; criminal organizations, etc. States & non-states wage war 1600 1700 1800 1900 2000 The “generations of war” modelFrom the viewpoint of Core states and nuclear powers

  6. So, what is 4GW? • Correct answer is: We don’t know – still being worked out. It’s however non-state groups confront a conventional / nuclear superpower • Possibilities • Base around what has worked: guerrilla warfare • Pump up “information operations” at the moral level – convince them (i.e., us) not to continue the fight • Often build around an ideology • Regard current states as artificial and illegitimate

  7. Army Navy Air Force USMC Special operations forces Special operations forces Tactical airlift Heavy forces Tactical air All Special operations forces Tactical air ReserveComponent SESStrike Force Political, financial, law enforcement, engineering, etc. For Rollback For Containment Counterinsurgency/ reconstructingforces 3GW forces Evolved SESStrike Force SystemAdministrator SES“Leviathan” Potentially Two conceptual scenarios: containment or rollback Privatize

  8. Why privatize? • Our (largely) public system isn’t working • $500 BN/yr = rest of world, combined • Can’t suppress a pick-up insurgency in Iraq • More of same will only produce more of same • Our opponents are already privatized • Non-state • Cellular, distributed • Low cost of entry (and exit) • Rate of evolutionary change is a function of the amount of variation present in the population (with apologies to Fisher)

  9. Why privatize? • Bankrupt organizations can go out of business • Markets unleash competition • variety, rapidity, initiative • creativity • Privatization has a long military history • Privateers & mercenaries • British East India Company(1600-1858) • US PMCs today • van Creveld’s gloomy tomorrow • Nothing less will force the amountof change that we need

  10. Predictionsvan Creveld • Distinctions between war and crime will break down (204) as will the difference between armed forces and civilians (194) • Battles will be replaced by skirmishes, bombings and massacres • Intermingling with enemy forces, mixing with the civilian population, and extreme dispersion have become the norm (208) The problem of subversion is likely to be serious (211) • Much of the task of defending society against non-trinitarian warfare/4GW will fall to private security companies, with a corresponding decrease in the utility, size, and technological complexity (cost) of military forces • Armies will shrink in size and wither away, to be replaced by police-like security forces on the one hand and armed gangs on the other (not that the difference is always clear, even today) (225) Ref: Transformation of War, 1991

  11. Predictionsvan Creveld • Distinctions between war and crime will break down (204) as will the difference between armed forces and civilians (194) • Battles will be replaced by skirmishes, bombings and massacres • Intermingling with enemy forces, mixing with the civilian population, and extreme dispersion have become the norm (208) The problem of subversion is likely to be serious (211) • Much of the task of defending society against non-trinitarian warfare/4GW will fall to private security companies, with a corresponding decrease in the utility, size, and technological complexity (cost) of military forces • Armies will shrink in size and wither away, to be replaced by police-like security forces on the one hand and armed gangs on the other (not that the difference is always clear, even today) (225)

  12. Why not rollback? • Don’t know how to do it

  13. NATO New York Times Map Rollback, in the heartof NATO “In Albania and much of ex-Yugoslavia, the forces ranged against the state—crime syndicates and armed nationalists—are often more than a match for legitimate business and politics. Government, in so far as its writ runs at all, is frequently worse than useless: customs barriers and regulations simply obstruct legal business, offer bribe opportunities for bureaucrats and abet crime. “… Albanian gangs spirit people into Britain and Germany; guns are reaching Britain from Croatia and points south; the stolen-vehicle trade in the Netherlands is dominated by Serbs; and Chinese syndicates based in ex-Yugoslavia send illegal migrants to Finland. It was once said of the Balkans that they produce more history than can be consumed locally; it is even more true that the region is a big net exporter of crime.” “Europe's banlieue,” The Economist, Nov 24th 2005

  14. Why not rollback? • Don’t know how to do it • Military interventions are unpredictable in result, but always expensive • nationalism, tribalism, sectarianism, etc. • insurgency / guerrilla warfare almost inevitable • We never fund the reconstructing phase adequately • And then there’s corruption

  15. Army Navy Air Force USMC Special operations forces Special operations forces Tactical airlift Heavy forces Tactical air All Special operations forces Tactical air ReserveComponent SESStrike Force Political, financial, law enforcement, engineering, etc. For Rollback For Containment Counterinsurgency/ reconstructingforces 3GW forces Evolved SESStrike Force SystemAdministrator SES“Leviathan” Potentially Private military companies That leaves containment • Developed world must combine with police, intelligence, and strong preemptive incentives: • Financial • Commercial • Political • Diplomatic

  16. 10 are now members of NATO and 8 also belong to the EU Could it work? We integrated: • The entire Soviet Union(except Belarus?) and • The entire Warsaw Pact into the global system without invading anybody. (In fact, a proximate cause of the fall of the Soviet system was its successful attempt to invade and remove a “bad guy,” Hafizullah Amin, in Afghanistan.)

  17. Questions?Comments?Accolades?

  18. Objections See, this is what is wrong with privatizing the Pentagon. The BBC reports that the US gave a contract to a small private firm to import weapons for the Iraqi security forces. It brought in massive amounts of weapons from Bosnia. But the procurement process was complex and involved-- you guessed it-- subcontractors, and the weapons are hard to trace. It is very likely that a lot ended up in the hands of the guerrillas. What irony. A mania for the private sector has helped turn Iraq into Bosnian using Bosnian weapons. In this Iraq scandal, everywhere you dig you find bodies. Juan Cole, Informed Comment, 24 May 2006.

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