Thursday, November 18, 2010 - 11:30 AM
I'm
off to Brown University today to participate in a public lecture
on "Nation-Building in Afghanistan" with Ambassador James Dobbins, so
I've no time to write a lengthy post. Instead, I'm going to paste in the text
of an open letter to the Bowles/Simpson commission on deficit reduction, which
was signed by a number of well-known national security scholars. I was pleased
to be among their ranks, and our central point is that any serious effort at
deficit reduction has to include defense cuts, and that it is possible to do
that without endangering U.S. national security. You can find an official link to the text here,
and the letter reads as follows:
Dear Co-chairman Bowles and Co-chairman Simpson:
We are writing to you as experts in national security and defense economics to convey our views on the national security implications of the Commission's work and especially the need for achieving responsible reductions in military spending. In this regard, we appreciate the initiative you have taken in your 10 November 2010 draft proposal to the Commission. It begins a necessary process of serious reflection, debate, and action.
The vitality of our economy is the cornerstone of our nation's strength. We share the Commission's desire to bring our financial house into order. Doing so is not merely a question of economics. Reducing the national debt is also a national security imperative.
To date, the Obama administration has exempted the Defense Department from any budget reductions. This is short-sighted: It makes it more difficult to accomplish the task of restoring our economic strength, which is the underpinning of our military power.
As the rest of the nation labors to reduce its debt burden, the current plan is to boost the base DOD budget by 10 percent in real terms over the next decade. This would come on top of the nearly 52 percent real increase in base military spending since 1998. (When war costs are included the increase has been much greater: 95 percent.)
We appreciate Secretary Gates' efforts to reform the Pentagon's business and acquisition practices. However, even if his reforms fulfill their promise, the current plan does not translate them into budgetary savings that contribute to solving our deficit problem. Their explicit aim is to free funds for other uses inside the Pentagon. This is not good enough.
Granting defense a special dispensation puts at risk the entire deficit reduction effort. Defense spending today constitutes over 55 percent of discretionary spending and 23 percent of the federal budget. An exemption for defense not only undermines the broader call for fiscal responsibility, but also makes overall budget restraint much harder as a practical economic and political matter.
We need not put our economic power at risk in this way. Today the United States possesses a wide margin of global military superiority. The defense budget can bear significant reduction without compromising our essential security.
We recognize that larger military adversaries may rise to face us in the future. But the best hedge against this possibility is vigilance and a vibrant economy supporting a military able to adapt to new challenges as they emerge.
We can achieve greater defense economy today in several ways, all of which we urge you to consider seriously. We need to be more realistic in the goals we set for our armed forces and more selective in our choices regarding their use abroad. We should focus our military on core security goals and on those current and emerging threats that most directly affect us.
We also need to be more judicious in our choice of security instruments when dealing with international challenges. Our armed forces are a uniquely expensive asset and for some tasks no other instrument will do. For many challenges, however, the military is not the most cost-effective choice. We can achieve greater efficiency today without diminishing our security by better discriminating between vital, desirable, and unnecessary military missions and capabilities.
There is a variety of specific options that would produce savings, some of which we describe below. The important point, however, is a firm commitment to seek savings through a reassessment of our defense strategy, our global posture, and our means of producing and managing military power.
Since the end of the Cold War, we have required our military to prepare for and conduct more types of missions in more places around the world. The Pentagon's task list now includes not only preventive war, regime change, and nation building, but also vague efforts to "shape the strategic environment" and stem the emergence of threats. It is time to prune some of these missions and restore an emphasis on defense and deterrence.
U.S. combat power dramatically exceeds that of any plausible combination of conventional adversaries. To cite just one example, Secretary Gates has observed that the U.S. Navy is today as capable as the next 13 navies combined, most of which are operated by our allies. We can safely save by trimming our current margin of superiority.
America's permanent peacetime military presence abroad is largely a legacy of the Cold War. It can be reduced without undermining the essential security of the United States or its allies.
The wars in Iraq and Afghanistan have revealed the limits of military power. Avoiding these types of operation globally would allow us to roll back the recent increase in the size of our Army and Marine Corps.
The Pentagon's acquisition process has repeatedly failed, routinely delivering weapons and equipment late, over cost, and less capable than promised. Some of the most expensive systems correspond to threats that are least prominent today and unlikely to regain prominence soon. In these cases, savings can be safely realized by cancelling, delaying, or reducing procurement or by seeking less costly alternatives.
Recent efforts to reform Defense Department financial management and acquisition practices must be strengthened. And we must impose budget discipline to trim service redundancies and streamline command, support systems, and infrastructure.
Change along these lines is bound to be controversial. Budget reductions are never easy - no less for defense than in any area of government. However, fiscal realities call on us to strike a new balance between investing in military power and attending to the fundamentals of national strength on which our true power rests. We can achieve safe savings in defense if we are willing to rethink how we produce military power and how, why, and where we put it to use.
Sincerely,
Gordon Adams, American University
Robert Art, Brandeis University
Deborah Avant, UC Irvine
Andrew Bacevich, Boston University
Richard Betts, Columbia University
Linda Bilmes, Kennedy School, Harvard University
Steven Clemons, New America Foundation
Joshua Cohen, Stanford University and Boston Review
Carl Conetta, Project on Defense Alternatives
Owen R. Cote Jr., Security Studies Program, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Michael Desch, University of Notre Dame
Matthew Evangelista, Cornell University
Benjamin H. Friedman, Cato Institute
Lt. Gen. (USA, Ret.) Robert G. Gard, Jr., Center for Arms Control and Non-Proliferation
David Gold, Graduate Program in International Affairs, The New School
William Hartung, Arms and Security Initiative, New America Foundation
David Hendrickson, Colorado College
Michael Intriligator, UCLA and Milken Institute
Robert Jervis, Columbia University
Sean Kay, Ohio Wesleyan University
Elizabeth Kier, University of Washington
Charles Knight, Project on Defense Alternatives
Lawrence Korb, Center for American Progress
Peter Krogh, Georgetown University
Walter LaFeber, Cornell University
Richard Ned Lebow, Dartmouth College
Col. (USA, Ret.) Douglas Macgregor
Scott McConnell, The American Conservative
John Mearsheimer, University of Chicago
Steven Metz, national security analyst and writer
Janne Nolan, American Security Project
Robert Paarlberg, Wellesley College and Harvard University
Paul Pillar, Georgetown University
Barry Posen, Security Studies Program, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Christopher Preble, Cato Institute
Daryl Press, Dartmouth College
David Rieff, author
Thomas Schelling, University of Maryland
Jack Snyder, Columbia University
J. Ann Tickner, University of Southern California
Robert Tucker, Johns Hopkins University
Stephen Van Evera, Security Studies Program, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Stephen Walt, Harvard University
Kenneth Waltz, Columbia University
Cindy Williams, Security Studies Program, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
**This letter reflects the opinions of the individual signatories. Institutions are listed for identification purposes only.**
Are you looking for additional signatories? I'd certainly sign on to this letter.
with a resurgent Russia and China's ludicrous claims to the south Pacific it might seem like sense now but it will cost more to rebuild the capabilities that will be needed in the future.
I'm sorry I meant the South China Sea and yes I do realize theres a significant difference between the too lack of sleep does these things..
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Does the average American realize how much we are spending on defense? With 28% of the average American's tax return being swallowed up on defense, it wouldn't be a bad idea to listen to what these academics have to say.
The lecture was very interesting, thanks for being there.
As for the letter, It's nice to see Bacevich's name in the list -his latest book illustrates very well the problems adressed: a military budget that is eight times bigger than China's, more than 700 military bases overseas, aircraft carriers that were designed to fight the Japanese Imperial Navy but are useless when it comes to nation-building, etc, etc...
Cut the bloated "Defense" budget.
The authors of the petition are right...our over-sized military and globe spanning military, network of bases, and regional 'commands' is a no longer needed legacy of the Cold War...this 'empire' only enables the costly and deadly foreign entanglements George Washington and our founders warned us to avoid.
SecDef also needs to focus on...
Both the Norfolk and San Diego areas have more than a few community colleges or universities, so why do we need the taxpayer to pay to send Navy SEALs to charm school? I was in the Navy and paid my own money to learn such things. What about joining Toastmasters? This is blatant waste.
From FedBizOps -- Solicitation Number: H92240-11-T-RW10-Speaking
Naval Special Warfare Center requires a contract for a regularly scheduled “Effective Military Leader Speaking Course”. This requirement includes course materials and instructors. The required course end state is to produce students who are effective public speakers.
1. Evaluating Speaking Strengths and Weaknesses 3. Developing Audience Perception 4. Techniques For Convincing And Persuading 5. Personal Demeanor 7. Dress and Grooming 10. Proper Ways to Use Notes 11. Audiovisual Aids: b. Using PowerPoint effectively.
Answer to question in solicitation Amendment 1:
"This course is being taught to Navy SEALs. As you probably know, the actions SEALs perform in the line of duty are significantly different than that of the general population. Hence, it is essential that the course instructor have a knowledge of the specific tasks that Navy SEALs perform, as the course will be taught to allow the SEALs their properly express their combat experiences."
I absolutely agree with this post. Well said. The statistic regarding the size of the Navy was stunning... clearly there are many cuts that can be made to streamline our military without compromising security. The intelligence community shouldn't be exempt from cuts either; we have such a bloated, overgrown intelligence bureaucracy in this country that it actually makes communication between departments extremely inefficient and hinders our effectiveness.
There's an unfortunate political reality in this country that defense cuts = not supporting the troops. Really, this couldn't be further from the truth. Troop equipment is really only a small portion of our defense budget. Our politicians need to take a stand and inform the public that defense cuts will not make us less safe and does not mean cutting support for our troops.
Stephen M. Walt is the Robert and Renée Belfer professor of international relations at Harvard University.
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