Why Stop There?

The Obama administration's leaner, meaner military may be still too big.

BY JAMES TRAUB | JANUARY 26, 2012

If you listened on Thursday afternoon to Defense Secretary Leon Panetta lay out the details of the 2013 Pentagon budget, warning that cuts yet deeper than the ones Congress had mandated could "inflict severe damage to our national security for generations to come," you would have had a hard time believing that the Pentagon's budget had been reduced all of 1 percent -- from $531 to $525 billion -- with small increases projected over the coming years. While the rest of the federal budget is being squeezed to a pulp, the Defense Department, which now absorbs more than half of discretionary spending, has to forego the 6 to 7 percent increases to which it has become accustomed since 9/11. Cue the violins.

The focus of public attention, and criticism, will of course fall on those areas where the budgetary axe has landed, and above all on the planned reduction of the Army from 570,000 to 490,000 active-duty troops over the course of the next five years. Panetta pointed out that this would still make the Army bigger than it had been on Sept. 11, when the figure was 482,000. Gen. Martin Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told reporters that he was "confident that 490,000 is the right number for 2017," when the current five-year plan will end. I wish that someone had asked him why he was so confident. It's quite possible that the Pentagon hasn't cut deep enough.

The real, unspoken theme of the 2013 budget is not "smaller," it's just "different" -- though the difference in spending is much more modest and incremental than the change in doctrine which lies beneath it. The very first priority listed in the new budgetary document is the "Rebalance Towards the Asia-Pacific and Middle East Regions," where the Pentagon authors write: "The focus on the Asia-Pacific region places a renewed emphasis on air and naval forces while sustaining ground force presence. The Middle East has been dominated by ground force operations over the last decade; however, as we gradually transition security in Afghanistan and reestablish peacetime ground presence, this region will also become increasingly maritime." For this reason, the planners, explain, they have maintained the current bomber fleet and all 11 aircraft carriers -- and kept troops forward-deployed in Asia while removing two of the four brigades based in Europe. While the Navy will give up some ships and the Air Force some planes, neither will suffer a loss of uniformed personnel.

The deep change which the new budget rather vaguely discloses is the shift from a military doctrine focused on land wars to one much more oriented towards naval and air conflict. First, as the "Strategic Guidance" which the Pentagon issued earlier this month states, "U.S. forces will no longer be sized to conduct large-scale, prolonged stability operations" -- i.e., no more wars of occupation like Iraq or Afghanistan. We have tried it, and we don't like it, and we're not as good at it as we thought. Second, China has replaced, or drawn even with, al Qaeda as the chief threat to U.S. national security -- at least that's the view in the military and the administration. The terrorist threat will be increasingly countered through drones and Special Forces. And the threat from China will be countered largely through naval and air power. The same is true of the very real danger that Iran will seek to choke off the Straits of Hormuz.

It is no longer obvious, as it was only a few years ago, what the Army is for anymore. This is not some sort of metaphysical question. As Andrew Krepinevich, director of the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments says, "In the Cold War, the Army was the supported force, not the supporting force. The same was true in Afghanistan and Iraq." The Navy's job over the last decade was mostly to haul fighter planes around on top of aircraft carriers. But all that has been reversed. The military is now very much focused on projecting power in regions where strong states, not stateless actors, are developing the capacity to exclude us. Krepinevich is one of the authors of the so-called "AirSea Battle Concept," whose goal is to counter the threat that China's long-range missiles, anti-satellite and cyberwar capacity, space-based and land-based surveillance systems pose to U.S. forces stationed in Asia and to America's Asian allies. AirSea Battle, as the name implies, involves coordinating efforts by the Navy and the Air Force. Krepinevich flatly dismisses the possibility of a land war against China. The Army's role in Asia, he says, will consist largely of training allies and partners, such as Japan, Korea, and the Philippines.

The Army has never fully embraced counterinsurgency, the chief doctrine to emerge from the wars of the last decade. And now the Navy and Air Force have AirSea Battle. The Army's current problem may have less to do with a lack of imagination than with a lack of appropriate enemies. Who do we expect to fight a land war against?

Win McNamee/Getty Images

 

James Traub is a contributing writer for the New York Times Magazine and a fellow of the Center on International Cooperation. "Terms of Engagement," his column for ForeignPolicy, runs weekly.

JOHNMATHIS14

2:09 AM ET

January 27, 2012

1%??? Seriously, how about the 99% of overspending.

This is a joke... We spend twice as much as we make, yet we can only manage to cut 1% of our budget? What is wrong with this picture?

OH, I know... we can PRINT more money. Yes that's the ticket. While the rich enjoy cake, ice cream, and Limo Services, the poor are left to foot the bill with taxes upon taxes to cover a debt that will never truly be repaid.

The real tragedy is that the poor are robbed of their money by the sheer amount of interest owed, and debut upon debt for our children keeps piling up.

I'm tired of playing kick the can, and I'm sure our kids will get sick of that game soon enough as well.

 

BEINGTHERE

9:53 AM ET

January 27, 2012

Long overdue - Media Should Not Give Audience to McCain

Our military was built up again (after Clinton) only because of two unnecessary wars, sponsored by the U.S.. The new military will be nimble and more effective.

Why do media continue to give time to the warmongering John McCain? He's stuck in time like so many of his aging, conservative colleagues (Chambliss, Gramham, Petraeus). The U.S. must have a strong military, but these (mostly) men who yammer about big military don't like big government. Neither do I, but do these older men equate patriotism with war and security? When we had two failed bomb attempts on our soil, they were foiled by average citizens.No boots on the ground or celebrity generals in sight.

 

MPETAN

8:45 PM ET

February 2, 2012

Repeating the Same Mistake(s)

"...no more wars of occupation like Iraq or Afghanistan. We have tried it, and we don't like it..."

I'm truly amazed at those that hold this belief, this already proven-wrong notion that all future wars and conflicts will be small skirmishes carried out by elite, mobile forces and units. Though I think, yes, we are seeing more of these, the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq prove that even in the 21st century, we are still using conventional warfare and tactics to further our nation's agenda. Anybody who says otherwise lacks any sense of connection to reality.

Look at Eisenhower's foreign policy that used the threat of nuclear retaliation and how it was proven ineffective when the Soviet's called him on it. Look at Bush Sr. and Clinton's view that American foreign policy would be carried out by UN mandates and in cooperation with other nations. The fact is nothing remains or stays the same -one president may believe in the UN, the next may deny its legitimacy or its authority.

And that's my point, going after the size of the military, especially ground forces, is a fundamental mistake. Imagine how Iraq would have turned out had we had more boots on the ground early on, or Afghanistan, where we didn't have to reduce troops in one country and surge in another. A constant juggling act between Iraq and Afghanistan, all because we lacked the appropriate number of troops and resources.

We may not like conventional warfare and what it requires. But it remains a very real likelihood for future conflicts we will no doubt take part in.

Let's try not to butcher that up...again.

 

GDE

6:26 PM ET

February 3, 2012

repeat mistakes

The US military has failed repeatedly, although it does manage to kill a lot of people along the way. Why go with what doesn't work?

 

WILLRIVERA

3:13 AM ET

February 24, 2012

Obama's corporate tax plan to close loopholes

The corporate tax debate has also become an element of presidential politics. Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney has called for a 25 percent rate while former House Speaker Newt Gingrich has said they would cut the corporate tax rate to 12.5 percent, & Rick Santorum called for exempting domestic manufacturers from the corporate tax & halve the top rate for other businesses.