AirSea Battle The Military-Industrial Complex’s Self-Serving Fantasy.doc_第1页
AirSea Battle The Military-Industrial Complex’s Self-Serving Fantasy.doc_第2页
AirSea Battle The Military-Industrial Complex’s Self-Serving Fantasy.doc_第3页
AirSea Battle The Military-Industrial Complex’s Self-Serving Fantasy.doc_第4页
全文预览已结束

下载本文档

版权说明:本文档由用户提供并上传,收益归属内容提供方,若内容存在侵权,请进行举报或认领

文档简介

AirSea Battle: The Military-Industrial Complexs Self-Serving Fantasy/2012/08/08/airsea-battle-the-military-industrial-complexs-self-serving-fantasy/By Thomas P. M. BarnettNice Washington Post piece (by Greg Jaffe, of course) on the great COIN counterattack that is the Pentagons AirSea Battle.As scenario work goes, what the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Analysis has done in its war-games has to rank right up there with the most egregiously implausible efforts ever made to justify arms build-ups.These games, done for Andrew Marshalls Office of Net Assessment at the Defense Department, enthusiastically embrace what I have long dubbed the exceedingly narrow “war within the context of war” mindset purposefully zeroing out all outside existing reality that readily contradicts the core operational concepts behind AirSea Battle.For my most complete criticism of ASBC, see Big-War Thinking in a Small-War Era: The Rise of the AirSea Battle Concept for the journal China Security.A Post quote from respected China expert Jonathan Pollack, who, in another life, was a colleague of mine at the Naval War College:Some critics doubt that China, which owns $1.6 trillion in U.S. debt and depends heavily on the American economy, would strike U.S. forces out of the blue.“It is absolutely fraudulent,” said Jonathan D. Pollack, a senior fellow at Brookings. “What is the imaginable context or scenario for this attack?”Other defense analysts warn that an assault on the Chinese mainland carries potentially catastrophic risks and could quickly escalate to nuclear armageddon.The war games elided these concerns. Instead they focused on how U.S. forces would weather the initial Chinese missile salvo and attack.That last bit is what I mean when I say the “big war” crowd inside the Pentagon is actively seeking to lower the threshold of great-power war: when confronted with the dangers of escalation, these complications are simply eliminated from the model in a truly Strangelovian twist of logic.Heres how I wrote that bit up in the China Security piece:Most incredulously, a guiding assumption of the CSBAs war scenario analysis is that, despite the high likelihood that a Sino-US conventional conflict “would devolve into a prolonged war” (presumably with tens of thousands of casualties on Chinas side at least), mutual nuclear deterrence would be preserved throughout the conflict even as China suffers humiliating defeat across the board. The historical proof offered for this stunning judgment? Neither Nazi Germany nor Saddam Husseins Iraq used chemical weapons as a last-ditch tool to stave off defeat. And if China took that desperate step? The CSBA then admits that, “the character of the conflict would change so drastically as to render discussion of major conventional warfare irrelevant.” As strategic “oops!” disclaimers go, that one has the benefit of understatement.As a mental exercise, just imagine the reverse situation: China is defending Cuba from U.S. military threats, but the U.S. makes it look like its going to attack, and then . . . WHAMMO! the Chinese military drops bombs in the American west, east, south, north and heartland. Imagine how the United States would handle that. Do you think we just might pop off a nuke in Chinas general direction? Or do you think wed just “take it” and respond solely via conventional means?But, please, by all minds, stop me when I start sounding crazy . . .And yet this stuff is seriously passed around in Washington, and it forms the core operational logic underpinning President Obamas “strategic pivot” to China.Scared yet? You should be. Because these are some incredibly dangerous ideas being passed off as “necessary.” To be brutally honest, it makes me ashamed of my profession its that bad. Worse, these plans and preparations are proceeding with zero public debate.Youd think such thinking was impossible in this connected day and age, but its a testament to 91-year-old Marshalls staying power within the Pentagon, along with the military-industrial complexs enduring attraction to his high-dollar, big-ticket approach to future war. Mr. Marshall still wants his “revolution in military affairs” no matter what it costs or what arms races and major conflicts it may encourage.This is a vision of war thats long been in search (since the 1980s) of a suitable enemy. Naturally, no matter how China “rises,” it fits the bill. So the more we push the envelope, the more the Chinese push back. And when the right Vietnamese fisherman is arrested, well . . . hell, man! Well be ready for World War III.Overkill? Undoubtedly.But more to the point: tell me how this imagined war will end to our advantage?But these are meaningless questions to those who refuse to imagine, as I like to say, “war within the context of everything else.” Because, in the end, the outside world doesnt matter. What matters is who controls the bucks inside the Pentagon.Naturally, the Army and Marines are less than thrilled with the vision (again, from the Post piece):Inside the Pentagon, the Army and Marine Corps have mounted offensives against the concept, which could lead to less spending on ground combat.An internal assessment, prepared for the Marine Corps commandant and obtained by The Washington Post, warns that “an Air-Sea Battle-focused Navy and Air Force would be preposterously expensive to build in peace time” and would result in “incalculable human and economic destruction” if ever used in a major war with China.The concept, however, aligns with Obamas broader effort to shift the U.S. militarys focus toward Asia and provides a framework for preserving some of the Pentagons most sophisticated weapons programs, many of which have strong backing in Congress.That last line says it all. AirSea Battle is an exercise in spending fantastic amounts of U.S. taxpayer dollars in certain congressional districts. This is the only reason it flourishes, and the primary reason why a cynical Obama embraces it: it proves his “tough on defense” credentials as he draws down in Afghanistan.We have no serious leadership in Washington. Strategic thinking has been completely eliminated in the quest for program-preserving rationales. It is a sad time to be in this business.This is what I meant when I said that 9/11 saved us from ourselves. The Bush neocons were all wound up about China prior to 9/11, and now that that strategic narrative has been consummated in our minds, at least by Osama Bin Ladens assassination, the China hawks are once again ascendant.Why? There is simply more of the right kind of defense dollars in this vision (meaning uber-expensive high tech stuff not those pesky troops).This vision fits the countrys mood: whats wrong with America is China not whats actually wrong with America. Since fixing America would be hard, its better to blame China an

温馨提示

  • 1. 本站所有资源如无特殊说明,都需要本地电脑安装OFFICE2007和PDF阅读器。图纸软件为CAD,CAXA,PROE,UG,SolidWorks等.压缩文件请下载最新的WinRAR软件解压。
  • 2. 本站的文档不包含任何第三方提供的附件图纸等,如果需要附件,请联系上传者。文件的所有权益归上传用户所有。
  • 3. 本站RAR压缩包中若带图纸,网页内容里面会有图纸预览,若没有图纸预览就没有图纸。
  • 4. 未经权益所有人同意不得将文件中的内容挪作商业或盈利用途。
  • 5. 人人文库网仅提供信息存储空间,仅对用户上传内容的表现方式做保护处理,对用户上传分享的文档内容本身不做任何修改或编辑,并不能对任何下载内容负责。
  • 6. 下载文件中如有侵权或不适当内容,请与我们联系,我们立即纠正。
  • 7. 本站不保证下载资源的准确性、安全性和完整性, 同时也不承担用户因使用这些下载资源对自己和他人造成任何形式的伤害或损失。

评论

0/150

提交评论