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Last Days of Rome

Pentagon’s ‘War Over Future Wars’ Is Underway

As Republicans and Democrats engage in high stakes horse trading on the congressional deficit reduction “super-committee,” the generals and admirals are circling their wagons, preparing detailed arguments on how their particular specialty is the one capability 21st Century America cannot live without.

The “super-committee” – officially the Joint Select Committee on Deficit Reduction – emerged from the summer’s Beltway fiasco – the failed debt ceiling talks and the downgrade of America’s sovereign credit rating by Standard & Poor’s that followed. It is, in essence, a desperation attempt to force a bipartisan compromise that would trim $1.2 trillion from U.S. government spending over the next decade.

To date, with the panel’s deadline for agreement looming on November 23, few signs have emerged of a sudden appetite for compromise. By law, a failure to agree to a plan will mean automatic, undifferentiated cuts would be imposed on all government agencies, and the Pentagon, flush from a decade of having its cake and eating it too, has grown into the biggest target of them all.

An analysis by the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments, a think tank, indicates that the automatic cuts would slice the U.S. defense spending pie – not including the diminishing but still large costs of the Afghan and Iraq wars – to its 2007 level and keep it there for about a decade.

Even if the automatic cuts do not happen, however, the U.S. military understands that the salad days of almost unlimited budgets that prevailed after 9/11 have come to an end.

U.S. spending defense has grown enormously in the decade since 9/11 – by 86 percent, according to DOD figures.  Even at the 2007 level, annual Pentagon budgets would still be larger than the combined military budgets of the next seven largest nations ranked by defense spending, and 50 percent higher than the last budget signed by President Bill Clinton in 2000.

But cuts will mean changes. Since the largest single line item in the defense budget is personnel, cutting $350 to $450 billion over the next tens years will force hard decisions on the size of various services and the weapons they employ.

Dan Goure, a military analyst at the Lexington Institute, says these cuts will force individual services to “look for ways to gain resources at the expense of the others while simultaneously dumping undesirable roles and missions. What we could see is the biggest military food fight in at least a generation. The outcome of this fight could profoundly recast the traditional equal division of defense resources among the Army, Navy, Marines and Air Force.”

As they peer over their battlements, each of the military’s service commanders see the world a differently. Not surprisingly, each tends to argue that the real savings are best sought in some other branch.

  • The Army, for instance, accepts overall troop levels will fall after the Iraq and Afghan deployments wind down. But it is fighting hard to make the case that those wars wore out its inventory of vehicles and weapons and, therefore, it needs an infusion of money to replace and rehabilitate them, along with a continued expansion of its stealthy Special Operations Forces;
  • The Navy, dismissing the troop-heavy ground wars of the past decade as an anomaly unlikely to be repeated, stresses that naval power in the form of the U.S. Seventh Fleet in the Pacific is America’s primary expression of power in Asia. With varying degrees of diplomacy, the Navy has made the case that its carriers and submarines are the best tools to keep China honest.
  • The Air Force points to the success of its Predator and Reaper drones, but also defends the value of new high-tech manned aircraft like the F-22 Raptor to replace F-15s and F-16s designed in the 1970s. The Air Force also sees itself as the most high-tech of the services, warning against cuts to complex missile defense systems, cyber war and surveillance capabilities it would like to deploy
  • The Marine Corps, while technically a part of the Navy, echoes some of the Army’s arguments, though also insists that Marine air wings must have the new F-35B ground attack jets that some budget analysts see as vulnerable. Future wars, says Marine Corps Commandant James Amos, will require just what the Marines do best. “You get a lot of bang for the buck with us,” Amos said at the Council on Foreign Relations in New York this week Wednesday. “We don’t need fancy hotels or air conditioned hooches to live in.”

Of the major services, the Army appears to understand it is most vulnerable. Even before 9/11, its heavy tank brigades – a legacy of the Cold War – had fallen out of favor as too hard to move and too expensive to maintain.

Then came the long, difficult wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, where the ultimate outcomes remain very much in question. These wars relied on major ground force deployments that have cost trillions of dollars, led to thousands of American deaths and consumed valuable political capital for two administrations.

Within the Army, and inside the civilian leadership of the Defense Department, a higher-level debate over the shape of future threats also rages, with Army and Marine Corps stressing that large, ready-to-deploy ground forces will continue to be the backbone of American power, while the Navy and Air Force stress high-tech, “stand-off” capabilities like drones and missiles that risk fewer American lives (and require fewer troops – and thus health care, pension and housing costs).

This has the army’s partisans spooked.

Gen. Peter Chiarelli, the army’s vice chief of staff, told a House defense panel hearing last Thursday that while the army is prepared for budget and manpower cuts, historically such decisions had gone too far and “hollowed out the force.”

“I lived through an Army that came out of Vietnam … and for 10 to 12 years, we had to rebuild that Army,” he said. “These questions, these decisions have been made before, and there’s just a tendency to believe at the end of a war that we’ll never need ground forces again. Well, I tell you that we’ve never got that right. We have always required them. We just don’t have the imagination to always be able to predict exactly when that will be.”

As the debate unfolds, the Navy and Air Force feel they have the upper hand. During the past decade, their capabilities – geared largely toward major, conventional wars before 9/11 – seemed out of step with the mission. At the height of the Iraq insurgency in 2005, Navy sailors were even pulled from their ships and trained for ground combat.

Now, however, as the two wars of 9/11 wind down, a more global, strategic line of thinking is back in vogue. China’s rise certainly is part of the picture – and Defense Secretary Leon Panetta’s trip in Asia last week repeatedly stressed that the Navy’s huge Seventh Fleet would not only stay in the region, but actually grow.

“We are a Pacific nation. We will not only remain a Pacific power, but we will strengthen our presence in this area,” he told sailors Wednesday aboard the USS Blue Ridge, Seventh Fleet command ship.

Those are the kind of words that can make the saltiest admiral smile.

 

8 Responses to “Pentagon’s ‘War Over Future Wars’ Is Underway”

hoamingNovember 2nd, 2011 at 12:29 pm

The book This Time Is Different looked at 8 centuries of economic crises and found that every banking or currency crisis had common causes, but every generation has ignored the signs and argued that This Time Is Different. In the 1980s, at about the time when the US government started to unwind financial regulations, academic research identified the first step in banking crises, unwinding financial regulations – and here we are.

Eisenhower left a warning against the power of the military industrial complex. That left a lot of people puzzled about just what was a military industrial complex. Under the cover of a Cold War, the world found out, but it was so complex that even now hardly anyone understands what it is, but they know we have one.

So the comparison with Rome is apt. Hardly anyone understands why Rome collapsed, nor for that matter, how Rome was able to be so powerful in the first place. Well let me advance a theory.

The strength of Rome came from the strength of the community around Rome, small landholders who were self reliant, made a good living from their personal efforts, and were proud of it. They resented the threat of being subordinated by Carthage. While enjoying the fruits of individual effort, they recognised the need for constructive engagement with like minded citizens to protect their lifestyle. They banded together to form a republic and provided the backbone of a navy that demolished Carthage. Their strength and solidarity produced one of the great overshoots of history. They became the backbone of the legions that conquered parts of the world that had been previously unknown, such as present day England and Germany.

By the time Rome collapsed, the military industrial complex had been in full control of Rome for centuries. At the same time the small landholders whose culture had given Rome the strength to take on the world had been replaced by more efficient large scale plantations operated with slave labour, undercutting the cultural strengths that had made Rome dominant.

That has been a recurring theme since – the emergence of a dynamic society and its gradual decline as it gets consumed from within by the individuals who suck out a disproportionate share of resources, in the process undermining the source of the dynamism that produced the wealth.

hoamingNovember 2nd, 2011 at 12:40 pm

A follow on to the previous post.

The rulers of Rome used their privileged positions to channel an inordinate proportion of wealth to a small percentage of the population, undermining the majority whose past efforts had made that wealth possible. Those leaders wondered why they held such an exalted position and concluded that they must be innately superior, which meant that the plebs, who included impoverished descendants of the small landholders who had been the backbone of Rome, were inferior, justifying their extreme wealth.

Over the 15 centuries since, various centres have become dominant, then declined – Venice, Florence, Genoa, Amsterdam, London and now New York. Look closely and there has been a common pattern similar to that of Rome, starting with a cohesive society with a reasonable spread of wealth in which wealth became increasingly concentrated, squeezing the vitality out of the society that had been the source of the initial strength.

The US is the extreme example of what is happening in many Western societies. People who have the power to influence where the money goes direct it to themselves. The recurring pattern echoes back to Rome. The high incomes that executives and directors pay each other also echo back to the last great crash in 1929.

Go to http://emlab.berkeley.edu/users/saez/ download the tables for Income Inequality in the US 1913-2008 and look at Table A3. The share of income paid to the top 1% of income earners peaked in 1928 at 23.94 of total income. Over the next half century that percentage dropped, falling below 10% in the 1970s. By 1980 it was back above 10% and by 2007 had climbed back to a peak of 23.5%.

The socalled representatives of the 99% who are camping out in Wall Street and cities around the world have serious grounds for protest. The source of strength of western societies in recent centuries has been a reasonable spread of income that gave people the resources and confidence to spend those resources, the context for the dynamic economies that revolutionised human societies.

The factor with the most direct correlation to economic success is the level of trust in a society. All of the societies with high per capita GDP have high trust. All of the poorly performing economies have low trust. Various studies have shown that there is a direct correlation between the level of equality and the level of trust in society. As the level of inequality has grown in the US since 1980, the level of trust has declined.

Economists dismiss equality as a social issue, when it is, in fact, central to economic performance. Economists still puzzle over the reasons for the slow recovery by the US from the Great Depression, as they now puzzle over the lack of dynamism in the present US economy. They need look no further than the distorted income distribution in the US that diminishes trust and the resources of the large majority that have been the context for the past dynamism of the US economy.

How many people can an economy sustain who suck an inordinately large share of income, screwed out of the share of income of the large majority whose ability and inclination to spend produce the context for the dynamism of the market.

It took the US a decade and the 2nd world war to extricate itself from the Great Depression. Given the eery similarity of the level of inequality, time will tell whether it will take as long to recover from the present Great Contraction.

But as the book says, This Time Is Different. There are no similarities to the decline of Rome, Venice, Florence, Amsterdam or London. The similarities between the US in 1929 and 2008 are just coincidental. Hopefully we will not need another world war to pull the US out of the present hole.

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