The
Cold War is back, and with it comes tremendous risk of escalation and
confrontation.
APRIL
3, 2018
The
Pentagon headquarters in Washington, DC. (David B. Gleason, CC BY-SA
2.0)
Think of
it as the most momentous military planning on Earth right now. Who’s even
paying attention, given the eternal changing of the guard at the White House, as well as
the latest in tweets, sexual revelations, and investigations of every sort? And yet it increasingly
looks as if, thanks to current Pentagon planning, a 21st-century version of the
Cold War (with dangerous new twists) has begun and hardly anyone has even
noticed.
In
2006, when the Department of Defense spelled out its future security role, it
saw only one overriding mission: its “Long War” against international
terrorism. “With its allies and partners, the United States must be prepared to
wage this war in many locations simultaneously and for some years to come,” the
Pentagon’s Quadrennial Defense Review explained that
year. Twelve years later, the Pentagon has officially announced that that long
war is drawing to a close—even though at least seven counterinsurgency
conflicts still rage across the Greater Middle East and Africa—and a
new long war has begun, a permanent campaign to contain China and Russia in
Eurasia.
“Great
power competition, not terrorism, has emerged as the central challenge to
United States security and prosperity,” claimed Pentagon Comptroller David Norquist while
releasing the Pentagon’s $686 billion budget request in January. “It is
increasingly apparent that China and Russia want to shape a world consistent
with their authoritarian values and, in the process, replace the free and open
order that has enabled global security and prosperity since World War II.”
Of
course, just how committed President Trump is to the preservation of that “free
and open order” remains questionable given his determination to scuttle
international treaties and ignite a global trade war. Similarly, whether China
and Russia truly seek to undermine the existing world order or simply make it
less American-centric is a question that deserves close attention, just not
today. The reason is simple enough. The screaming headline you should have seen
in any paper (but haven’t) is this: The US military has made up its mind about
the future. It has committed itself and the nation to a three-front
geopolitical struggle to resist Chinese and Russian advances in Asia, Europe,
and the Middle East.
Important
as this strategic shift may be, you won’t hear about it from the president, a
man lacking the attention span necessary for such long-range strategic thinking
and one who views Russia’s Vladimir Putin and China’s Xi Jinping as “frenemies”
rather than die-hard adversaries. To fully appreciate the momentous changes
occurring in US military planning, it’s necessary to take a deep dive into the
world of Pentagon scripture: budget documents and the annual “posture
statements” of regional commanders already overseeing the implementation of
that just-born three-front strategy.
THE
NEW GEOPOLITICAL CHESSBOARD
This
renewed emphasis on China and Russia in US military planning reflects the way
top military officials are now reassessing the global strategic equation, a
process that began long before Donald Trump entered the White House. Although
after 9/11 senior commanders fully embraced the “long war against terror”
approach to the world, their enthusiasm for endless counterterror operations
leading essentially nowhere in remote and sometimes
strategically unimportant places began to wane in recent years as they watched
China and Russia modernizing their military forces and using them to intimidate
neighbors.
While
the long war against terror did fuel a vast, ongoing expansion of the Pentagon’s Special Operations
Forces (SOF)—now a secretive army of 70,000 nestled inside the larger military
establishment—it provided surprisingly little purpose or real work for the
military’s “heavy metal” units: the Army’s tank brigades, the Navy’s carrier
battle groups, the Air Force’s bomber squadrons, and so forth. Yes, the Air
Force in particular has played a major supporting role in recent operations in Iraq and
Syria, but the regular military has largely been sidelined there and elsewhere
by lightly equipped SOF forces and drones. Planning for a “real war” against a
“peer competitor” (one with forces and weaponry resembling our own) was until
recently given far lower priority than the country’s never-ending conflicts
across the Greater Middle East and Africa. This alarmed and even angered those
in the regular military whose moment, it seems, has now finally arrived.
“Today,
we are emerging from a period of strategic atrophy, aware that our competitive
military advantage has been eroding,” the Pentagon’s new National Defense Strategy declares. “We are facing
increased global disorder, characterized by decline in the long-standing
rules-based international order”—a decline officially attributed for the first
time not to Al Qaeda and ISIS but to the aggressive behavior of China and
Russia. Iran and North Korea are also identified as major threats, but of a
distinctly secondary nature compared to the menace posed by the two great-power
competitors.
Unsurprisingly
enough, this shift will require not only greater spending on costly, high-tech
military hardware but also a redrawing of the global strategic map to favor the
regular military. During the long war on terror, geography and boundaries
appeared less important, given that terrorist cells seemed capable of operating
anyplace where order was breaking down. The US military, convinced that it had
to be equally agile, readied itself to deploy (often Special Operations forces)
to remote battlefields across the planet, borders be damned.
On
the new geopolitical map, however, America faces well-armed adversaries with
every intention of protecting their borders, so US forces are now being arrayed
along an updated version of an older, more familiar three-front line of
confrontation. In Asia, the United States and its key allies (South Korea,
Japan, the Philippines, and Australia) are to face China across a line
extending from the Korean peninsula to the waters of the East and South China
Seas and the Indian Ocean. In Europe, the United States and its NATO allies
will do the same for Russia on a front extending from Scandinavia and the
Baltic Republics south to Romania and then east across the Black Sea to the
Caucasus. Between these two theaters of contention lies the ever-turbulent
Greater Middle East, with the United States and its two crucial allies there,
Israel and Saudi Arabia, facing a Russian foothold in Syria and an increasingly
assertive Iran, itself drawing closer to China and Russia. From the
Pentagon’s perspective, this is to be the defining strategic global map for the
foreseeable future. Expect most upcoming major military investments and
initiatives to focus on bolstering US naval, air, and ground strength on its
side of these lines, as well as on targeting Sino-Russian vulnerabilities
across them.
There’s
no better way to appreciate the dynamics of this altered strategic outlook than
to dip into the annual “posture statements” of the heads of the Pentagon’s “unified combatant commands,” or combined Army/Navy/Air
Force/Marine Corps headquarters, covering the territories surrounding China and
Russia: Pacific Command (PACOM), with responsibility for all
US forces in Asia; European
Command (EUCOM), covering US forces from Scandinavia to the Caucasus;
and Central Command (CENTCOM),
which oversees the Middle East and Central Asia where so many of the country’s
counterterror wars are still underway.
The
senior commanders of these meta-organizations are the most powerful US
officials in their “areas of responsibility” (AORs), exercising far more clout
than any American ambassador stationed in the region (and often local heads of
state as well). That makes their statements and the shopping lists of weaponry
that invariably go with them of real significance for anyone who wants to grasp
the Pentagon’s vision of America’s global military future.
THE
INDO-PACIFIC FRONT
Commanding
PACOM is Adm. Harry Harris Jr., a long-time naval aviator. In his annual posture statement, delivered to the Senate Armed
Services Committee on March 15th, Harris painted a grim picture of America’s
strategic position in the Asia-Pacific region. In addition to the dangers posed
by a nuclear-armed North Korea, he argued, China was emerging as a formidable
threat to America’s vital interests. “The People’s Liberation Army’s rapid
evolution into a modern, high-tech fighting force continues to be both
impressive and concerning,” he asserted. “PLA capabilities are progressing
faster than any other nation in the world, benefitting from robust resourcing
and prioritization.”
Most
threatening, in his view, is Chinese progress in developing intermediate-range
ballistic missiles (IRBMs) and advanced warships. Such missiles, he explained,
could strike US bases in Japan or on the island of Guam, while the expanding
Chinese navy could challenge the US Navy in seas off China’s coast and someday
perhaps America’s command of the western Pacific. “If this [shipbuilding]
program continues,” he said, “China will surpass Russia as the world’s second
largest navy by 2020, when measured in terms of submarines and frigate-class
ships or larger.”
To
counter such developments and contain Chinese influence requires, of course, spending
yet more taxpayer dollars on advanced weapons systems, especially
precision-guided missiles. Admiral Harris called for vastly increasing
investment in such weaponry in order to overpower current and future Chinese
capabilities and ensure US military dominance of China’s air and sea space. “In
order to deter potential adversaries in the Indo-Pacific,” he declared, “we
must build a more lethal force by investing in critical capabilities and
harnessing innovation.”
His
budgetary wish list was impressive. Above all, he spoke with great enthusiasm
about new generations of aircraft and missiles—what are called, in Pentagonese,
“anti-access/area-denial” systems—capable of striking Chinese IRBM batteries
and other weapons systems intended to keep American forces safely away from
Chinese territory. He also hinted that he wouldn’t mind having new
nuclear-armed missiles for this purpose—missiles, he suggested, that could be
launched from ships and planes and so would skirt the Intermediate-Range
Nuclear Forces Treaty, to which the United States is a signatory and which bans
land-based intermediate-range nuclear missiles. (To give you a feel for the
arcane language of Pentagon nuclear cognoscenti, here’s how he put it: “We must
continue to expand Intermediate Nuclear Force Treaty-compliant theater strike
capabilities to effectively counter adversary anti-access/area-denial [A2/AD]
capabilities and force preservation tactics.”)
Finally,
to further strengthen the US defense line in the region, Harris called for enhanced
military ties with various allies and partners, including Japan, South Korea,
the Philippines, and Australia. PACOM’s goal, he stated, is to “maintain a
network of like-minded allies and partners to cultivate principled security
networks, which reinforce the free and open international order.” Ideally, he
added, this network will eventually encompass India, further extending the
encirclement of China.
THE
EUROPEAN THEATER
A
similarly embattled future, even if populated by different actors in a different
landscape, was offered by Army Gen. Curtis Scaparrotti, commander of EUCOM,
in testimony before the Senate Committee on Armed
Services on March 8th. For him, Russia is the other China. As he put it in a
bone-chilling description, “Russia seeks to change the international order,
fracture NATO, and undermine US leadership in order to protect its regime,
reassert dominance over its neighbors, and achieve greater influence around the
globe… Russia has demonstrated its willingness and capability to intervene in
countries along its periphery and to project power—especially in the Middle
East.”
This,
needless to say, is not the outlook we’re hearing from President Trump, who has
long appeared reluctant to criticize Vladimir Putin or paint Russia
as a full-fledged adversary. For American military and intelligence officials,
however, Russia unquestionably poses the preeminent threat to US security
interests in Europe. It is now being spoken of in a fashion that should bring
back memories of the Cold War era. “Our highest strategic priority,” Scaparrotti
insisted, “is to deter Russia from engaging in further aggression and
exercising malign influence over our allies and partners. [To this end,] we
are… updating our operational plans to provide military response options to
defend our European allies against Russian aggression.”
The
cutting edge of EUCOM’s anti-Russian drive is the European Deterrence
Initiative (EDI), a project President Obama initiated in 2014 following the
Russian seizure of Crimea. Originally known as the European Reassurance Initiative, the EDI is intended to
bolster US and NATO forces deployed in the “front-line states”—Estonia, Latvia,
Lithuania, and Poland—facing Russia on NATO’s “Eastern Front.” According to the
Pentagon wish list submitted in February, some $6.5 billion are to be allocated
to the EDI in 2019. Most of those funds will be used to stockpile munitions in
the front-line states, enhance Air Force basing infrastructure, conduct
increased joint military exercises with allied forces, and rotate additional
US-based forces into the region. In addition, some $200 million will be devoted
to a Pentagon “advise, train, and equip” mission in Ukraine.
Like
his counterpart in the Pacific theater, Gen. Scaparrotti also turns out to have
an expensive wish list of future weaponry, including advanced planes, missiles,
and other high-tech weapons that, he claims, will counter modernizing Russian
forces. In addition, recognizing Russia’s proficiency in cyberwarfare, he’s
calling for a substantial investment in cyber technology and, like Admiral
Harris, he cryptically hinted at the need for increased investment in nuclear
forces of a sort that might be “usable” on a
future European battlefield.
BETWEEN
EAST AND WEST: CENTRAL COMMAND
Overseeing
a startling range of war-on-terror conflicts in the vast, increasingly unstable
region stretching from PACOM’s western boundary to EUCOM’s eastern one is the
US Central Command. For most of its modern history, CENTCOM has been focused on
counterterrorism and the wars in Iraq, Syria, and Afghanistan in particular.
Now, however, even as the previous long war continues, the Command is already
beginning to position itself for a new Cold War-revisited version of perpetual
struggle, a plan—to resurrect a dated term—to contain both
China and Russia in the Greater Middle East.
In
recent testimony before
the Senate Armed Services Committee, CENTCOM commander Army Gen. Joseph Votel
concentrated on the status of US operations against ISIS in Syria and against
the Taliban in Afghanistan, but he also affirmed that the containment of China
and Russia has become an integral part of CENTCOM’s future strategic mission:
“The recently published National Defense Strategy rightly identifies the
resurgence of great power competition as our principal national security
challenge and we see the effects of that competition throughout the region.”
Through
its support of the Syrian regime of Bashar al-Assad and its efforts to gain
influence with other key actors in the region, Russia, Votel claimed, is
playing an increasingly conspicuous role in Centcom’s AOR. China is also
seeking to enhance its geopolitical clout both economically and through a small
but growing military presence. Of particular concern, Votel asserted, is
the Chinese-managed port at Gwadar in Pakistan on the
Indian Ocean and a new Chinese base in Djibouti on the Red Sea, across from
Yemen and Saudi Arabia. Such facilities, he claimed, contribute to China’s
“military posture and force projection” in CENTCOM’s AOR and are signals of a
challenging future for the US military.
Under
such circumstances, Votel testified, it is incumbent upon CENTCOM to join PACOM
and EUCOM in resisting Chinese and Russian assertiveness. “We have to be
prepared to address these threats, not just in the areas in which they reside,
but the areas in which they have influence.” Without providing any details, he
went on to say, “We have developed…very good plans and processes for how we
will do that.”
What
that means is unclear at best, but despite Donald Trump’s campaign talk about a
US withdrawal from Afghanistan, Iraq, and Syria once ISIS and the Taliban are
defeated, it seems increasingly clear that the US military is preparing to
station its forces in those (and possibly other) countries across CENTCOM’s
region of responsibility indefinitely, fighting terrorism, of course, but also
ensuring that there will be a permanent US military presence in areas that
could see intensifying geopolitical competition among the major powers.
AN
INVITATION TO DISASTER
In
relatively swift fashion, American military leaders have followed up their
claim that the United States is in a new long war by sketching the outlines of
a containment line that would stretch from the Korean Peninsula around Asia
across the Middle East into parts of the former Soviet Union in Eastern Europe
and finally to the Scandinavian countries. Under their plan, American military
forces—reinforced by the armies of trusted allies—should garrison every segment
of this line, a grandiose scheme to block hypothetical advances of Chinese and
Russian influence that, in its global reach, should stagger the imagination.
Much of future history could be shaped by such an outsized effort.
Questions
for the future include whether this is either a sound strategic policy or truly
sustainable. Attempting to contain China and Russia in such a manner will
undoubtedly provoke countermoves, some undoubtedly difficult to resist,
including cyber attacks and various kinds of economic warfare. And if you
imagined that a war on terror across huge swaths of the planet represented a
significant global overreach for a single power, just wait. Maintaining large
and heavily-equipped forces on three extended fronts will also prove exceedingly
costly and will certainly conflict with domestic spending priorities and
possibly provoke a divisive debate over the reinstatement of the draft.
However,
the real question—unasked in Washington at the moment—is: Why pursue such a
policy in the first place? Are there not other ways to manage the rise of China
and Russia’s provocative behavior? What appears particularly worrisome about
this three-front strategy is its immense capacity for confrontation,
miscalculation, escalation, and finally actual war rather than simply grandiose
war planning.
At
multiple points along this globe-spanning line—the Baltic Sea, the Black Sea,
Syria, the South China Sea, and the East China Sea, to name just a few—forces
from the United States and China or Russia are already in significant contact,
often jostling for position in a potentially hostile manner.
At any moment, one of these encounters could provoke a firefight leading to
unintended escalation and, in the end, possibly all-out combat. From there,
almost anything could happen, even the use of nuclear weapons. Clearly,
officials in Washington should be thinking hard before committing Americans to
a strategy that will make this increasingly likely and could turn what is still
long-war planning into an actual long war with deadly consequences.
Michael T. KlareTWITTERMichael T. Klare is
a professor of peace and world-security studies at Hampshire College and the
defense correspondent of The Nation.
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