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In 1992, General Colin Powell, chairman of the joint chiefs,
awarded the prize for his strategy essay competition at the National
Defence University to Lieutenant Colonel Charles Dunlap for The Origins of
the American Military Coup of 2012. His cautionary tale imagined an
incapable civilian government creating a vacuum that drew a competent
military into a coup disastrous for democracy. The military, of course, is
bound to uphold the constitution. But Dunlap wrote: "The catastrophe that
occurred on our watch took place because we failed to speak out against
policies we knew were wrong. It's too late for me to do any more. But it's
not for you."
The
Origins of the American Military Coup of 2012
CHARLES J.
DUNLAP,
JR.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
From
Parameters, Winter 1992-93, pp.
2-20.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
The
letter that follows takes us on a darkly imagined excursion into the
future. A military coup has taken place in the United States--the year is
2012--and General Thomas E. T. Brutus, Commander-in-Chief of the Unified
Armed Forces of the United States, now occupies the White House as
permanent Military Plenipotentiary. His position has been ratified by a
national referendum, though scattered disorders still prevail and arrests
for acts of sedition are underway. A senior retired officer of the Unified
Armed Forces, known here simply as Prisoner 222305759, is one of those
arrested, having been convicted by court-martial for opposing the coup.
Prior to his execution, he is able to smuggle out of prison a letter to an
old War College classmate discussing the "Origins of the American Military
Coup of 2012." In it, he argues that the coup was the outgrowth of trends
visible as far back as 1992. These trends were the massive diversion of
military forces to civilian uses, the monolithic unification of the armed
forces, and the insularity of the military community. His letter survives
and is here presented verbatim.
It goes without saying (I hope)
that the coup scenario above is purely a literary device intended to
dramatize my concern over certain contemporary developments affecting the
armed forces, and is emphatically not a prediction. -- The
Author
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Dear
Old Friend,
It's hard to believe that 20 years have passed
since we graduated from the War College! Remember the great discussions,
the trips, the parties, the people? Those were the days!!! I'm not having
quite as much fun anymore. You've heard about the Sedition Trials? Yeah, I
was one of those arrested--convicted of "disloyal statements," and "using
contemptuous language towards officials." Disloyal? No. Contemptuous? You
bet! With General Brutus in charge it's not hard to be
contemptuous.
I've got to hand it to Brutus, he's ingenious. After
the President died he somehow "persuaded" the Vice President not to take
the oath of office. Did we then have a President or not? A real
"Constitutional Conundrum" the papers called it.[1] Brutus created just
enough ambiguity to convince everyone that as the senior military officer,
he could--and should--declare himself Commander-in-Chief of the Unified
Armed Forces. Remember what he said? "Had to fill the power vacuum." And
Brutus showed he really knew how to use power: he declared martial law,
"postponed" the elections, got the Vice President to "retire," and even
moved into the White House! "More efficient to work from there," he said.
Remember that?
When Congress convened that last time and managed to
pass the Referendum Act, I really got my hopes up. But when the Referendum
approved Brutus's takeover, I knew we were in serious trouble. I caused a
ruckus, you know, trying to organize a protest. Then the Security Forces
picked me up. My quickie "trial" was a joke. The sentence? Well, let's
just say you won't have to save any beer for me at next year's reunion.
Since it doesn't look like I'll be seeing you again, I thought I'd write
everything down and try to get it to you.
I am calling my paper the
"Origins of the American Military Coup of 2012." I think it's important to
get the truth recorded before they rewrite history. If we're ever going to
get our freedom back, we've got to understand how we got into this mess.
People need to understand that the armed forces exist to support and
defend government, not to be the government. Faced with intractable
national problems on one hand, and an energetic and capable military on
the other, it can be all too seductive to start viewing the military as a
cost-effective solution. We made a terrible mistake when we allowed the
armed forces to be diverted from their original purpose.
I found a
box of my notes and clippings from our War College days--told my keepers I
needed them to write the confession they want. It's amazing; looking
through these old papers makes me realize that even back in 1992 we should
have seen this coming. The seeds of this outrage were all there; we just
didn't realize how they would grow. But isn't that always the way with
things like this? Somebody once said that "the true watersheds in human
affairs are seldom spotted amid the tumult of headlines broadcast on the
hour."[2] And we had a lot of headlines back in the '90s to distract us:
The economy was in the dumps, crime was rising, schools were
deteriorating, drug use was rampant, the environment was in trouble, and
political scandals were occurring almost daily. Still, there was some good
news: the end of the Cold War as well as America's recent victory over
Iraq.
All of this and more contributed to the situation in which we
find ourselves today: a military that controls government and one that,
ironically, can't fight. It wasn't any single cause that led us to this
point. Instead, it was a combination of several different developments,
the beginnings of which were evident in 1992. Here's what I think
happened:
Americans became exasperated with democracy. We were
disillusioned with the apparent inability of elected government to solve
the nation's dilemmas. We were looking for someone or something that could
produce workable answers. The one institution of government in which the
people retained faith was the military. Buoyed by the military's obvious
competence in the First Gulf War, the public increasingly turned to it for
solutions to the country's problems. Americans called for an acceleration
of trends begun in the 1980s: tasking the military with a variety of new,
nontraditional missions, and vastly escalating its commitment to formerly
ancillary duties.
Though not obvious at the time, the cumulative
effect of these new responsibilities was to incorporate the military into
the political process to an unprecedented degree. These additional
assignments also had the perverse effect of diverting focus and resources
from the military's central mission of combat training and warfighting.
Finally, organizational, political, and societal changes served to alter
the American military's culture. Today's military is not the one we knew
when we graduated from the War College.
Let me explain how I came
to these conclusions. In 1992 not very many people would've thought a
military coup d'etat could ever happen here. Sure, there were eccentric
conspiracy theorists who saw the Pentagon's hand in the assassination of
President Kennedy,[3] President Nixon's downfall,[4] and similar events.
But even the most avid believers had to admit that no outright military
takeover had ever occurred before now. Heeding Washington's admonitions in
his Farewell address about the dangers of overgrown military
establishments,[5] Americans generally viewed their armed forces with a
judicious mixture of respect and wariness.[6] For over two centuries that
vigilance was rewarded, and most Americans came to consider the very
notion of a military coup preposterous. Historian Andrew Janos captured
the conventional view of the latter half of the 20th century in this
clipping I saved:
A coup d'etat in the United States would be too
fantastic to contemplate, not only because few would actually entertain
the idea, but also because the bulk of the people are strongly attached to
the prevailing political system and would rise in defense of a political
leader even though they might not like him. The environment most
hospitable to coups d'etat is one in which political apathy prevails as
the dominant style.[7]
However, when Janos wrote that back in 1964,
61.9 percent of the electorate voted. Since then voter participation has
steadily declined. By 1988 only 50.1 percent of the eligible voters cast a
ballot.[8] Simple extrapolation of those numbers to last spring's
Referendum would have predicted almost exactly the turnout. It was
precisely reversed from that of 1964: 61.9 percent of the electorate did
not vote.
America's societal malaise was readily apparent in 1992.
Seventy-eight percent of Americans believed the country was on the "wrong
track." One researcher declared that social indicators were at their
lowest level in 20 years and insisted "something [was] coming loose in the
social infrastructure." The nation was frustrated and angry about its
problems.[9]
America wanted solutions and democratically elected
government wasn't providing them.[10] The country suffered from a "deep
pessimism about politicians and government after years of broken
promises."[11] David Finkle observed in The Washington Post Magazine that
for most Americans "the perception of government is that it has evolved
from something that provides democracy's framework into something that
provides obstacles, from something to celebrate into something to ignore."
Likewise, politicians and their proposals seemed stale and repetitive.
Millions of voters gave up hope of finding answers.[12] The "environment
of apathy" Janos characterized as a precursor to a coup had
arrived.
Unlike the rest of government the military enjoyed a
remarkably steady climb in popularity throughout the 1980s and early
1990s.[13] And indeed it had earned the admiration of the public.
Debilitated by the Vietnam War, the US military set about reinventing
itself. As early as 1988 U.S. News & World Report heralded the result:
"In contrast to the dispirited, drug-ravaged, do-your-own-thing armed
services of the '70s and early '80s, the US military has been transformed
into a fighting force of gung-ho attitude, spit-shined discipline, and
ten-hut morale."[14] After the US military dealt Iraq a crushing defeat in
the First Gulf War, the ignominy of Vietnam evaporated.
When we
graduated from the War College in 1992, the armed forces were the
smartest, best educated, and best disciplined force in history.[15] While
polls showed that the public invariably gave Congress low marks, a
February 1991 survey disclosed that "public confidence in the military
soar[ed] to 85 percent, far surpassing every other institution in our
society." The armed forces had become America's most--and perhaps
only--trusted arm of government.[16]
Assumptions about the role of
the military in society also began to change. Twenty years before we
graduated, the Supreme Court confidently declared in Laird v. Tatum that
Americans had a "traditional and strong resistance to any military
intrusion into civilian affairs."[17] But Americans were now rethinking
the desirability and necessity of that resistance. They compared the
military's principled competence with the chicanery and ineptitude of many
elected officials, and found the latter wanting.[18]
Commentator
James Fallows expressed the new thinking in an August 1991 article in
Atlantic magazine. Musing on the contributions of the military to American
society, Fallows wrote: "I am beginning to think that the only way the
national government can do anything worthwhile is to invent a security
threat and turn the job over to the military." He elaborated on his
reasoning:
According to our economic and political theories, most
agencies of the government have no special standing to speak about
thegeneral national welfare. Each represents a certain constituency; the
interest groups fight it out. The military, strangely, is the one
government institution that has been assigned legitimacy to act on its
notion of the collective good. "National defense" can make us do
things--train engineers, build highways--that long-term good of the nation
or common sense cannot.[19]
About a decade before Fallows' article
appeared, Congress initiated the use of "national defense" as a rationale
to boost military participation in an activity historically the exclusive
domain of civilian government: law enforcement. Congress concluded that
the "rising tide of drugs being smuggled into the United States . . .
present[ed] a grave threat to all Americans." Finding the performance of
civilian law enforcement agencies in counteracting that threat
unsatisfactory, Congress passed the Military Cooperation with Civilian Law
Enforcement Agencies Act of 1981.[20] In doing so Congress specifically
intended to force reluctant military commanders to actively collaborate in
policework.[21]
This was a historic change of policy. Since the
passage of the Posse Comitatus Act in 1878, the military had distanced
itself from law enforcement activities.[22] While the 1981 law did retain
certain limits on the legal authority of military personnel, its net
effect was to dramatically expand military participation in anti-drug
efforts.[23] By 1991 the Department of Defense was spending $1.2 billion
on counternarcotics crusades. Air Force surveillance aircraft were sent to
track airborne smugglers; Navy ships patrolled the Caribbean looking for
drug-laden vessels; and National Guardsmen were searching for marijuana
caches near the borders.[24] By 1992 "combatting" drug trafficking was
formally declared a "high national security mission."[25]
It wasn't
too long before 21st-century legislators were calling for more military
involvement in police work.[26] Crime seemed out of control. Most
disturbing, the incidence of violent crime continued to climb.[27]
Americans were horrified and desperate: a third even believed vigilantism
could be justified.[28] Rising lawlessness was seen as but another example
of the civilian political leadership's inability to fulfill government's
most basic duty to ensure public safety.[29] People once again wanted the
military to help.
Hints of an expanded police function were
starting to surface while we were still at the War College. For example,
District of Columbia National Guardsmen established a regular military
presence in high-crime areas.[30] Eventually, people became acclimated to
seeing uniformed military personnel patrolling their neighborhood.[31] Now
troops are an adjunct to almost all police forces in the country. In many
of the areas where much of our burgeoning population of elderly Americans
live--Brutus calls them "National Security Zones"--the military is often
the only law enforcement agency. Consequently, the military was ideally
positioned in thousands of communities to support the coup.
Concern
about crime was a major reason why General Brutus's actions were approved
in the Referendum. Although voter participation by the general public was
low, older Americans voted at a much higher rate.[32] Furthermore, with
the aging of the baby boom generation, the block of American voters over
45 grew to almost 53 percent of the voters by 2010.[33] This wealthy,[34]
older electorate welcomed an organization which could ensure their
physical security.[35] When it counted, they backed Brutus in the
Referendum--probably the last votes they'll ever cast.
The
military's constituency was larger than just the aged. Poor Americans of
all ages became dependent upon the military not only for protection
against crime, but also for medical care. Again we saw the roots of this
back in 1992. First it was the barely defeated proposal to use veterans'
hospitals to provide care for the non-veteran poor.[36] Next were calls to
deploy military medical assets to relieve hard-pressed urban
hospitals.[37] As the number of uninsured and underinsured grew, the
pressure to provide care became inexorable. Now military hospitals serve
millions of new, non-military patients. Similarly, a proposal to use
so-called "underutilized" military bases as drug rehabilitation centers
was implemented on a massive scale.[38]
Even the youngest citizens
were co-opted. During the 1990s the public became aware that military
officers had the math and science backgrounds desperately needed to
revitalize US education.[39] In fact, programs involving military
personnel were already underway while we were at the War College.[40] We
now have an entire generation of young people who have grown up
comfortable with the sight of military personnel patrolling their streets
and teaching in their classrooms.
As you know, it wasn't just
crises in public safety, medical care, and education that the military was
tasked to mend. The military was also called upon to manage the cleanup of
the nation's environmental hazards. By 1992 the armed services were deeply
involved in this arena, and that involvement mushroomed. Once the military
demonstrated its expertise, it wasn't long before environmental problems
were declared "national security threats" and full responsibility devolved
to the armed forces.[41]
Other problems were transformed into
"national security" issues. As more commercial airlines went bankrupt and
unprofitable air routes dropped, the military was called upon to provide
"essential" air transport to the affected regions. In the name of national
defense, the military next found itself in the sealift business. Ships
purchased by the military for contingencies were leased, complete with
military crews, at low rates to US exporters to help solve the trade
deficit.[42] The nation's crumbling infrastructure was also declared a
"national security threat." As was proposed back in 1991, troops
rehabilitated public housing, rebuilt bridges and roads, and constructed
new government buildings. By late 1992, voices in both Congress and the
military had reached a crescendo calling for military involvement across a
broad spectrum of heretofore purely civilian activities.[43] Soon, it
became common in practically every community to see crews of soldiers
working on local projects.[44] Military attire drew no stares.
The
revised charter for the armed forces was not confined to domestic
enterprises. Overseas humanitarian and nation-building assignments
proliferated.[45] Though these projects have always been performed by the
military on an ad hoc basis, in 1986 Congress formalized that process. It
declared overseas humanitarian and civic assistance activities to be
"valid military missions" and specifically authorized them by law.[46]
Fueled by favorable press for operations in Iraq, Bangladesh, and the
Philippines during the early 1990s, humanitarian missions were touted as
the military's "model for the future."[47] That prediction came true. When
several African governments collapsed under AIDS epidemics and famines
around the turn of the century, US troops--first introduced to the
continent in the 1990s--were called upon to restore basic services. They
never left.[48] Now the US military constitutes the de facto government in
many of those areas. Once again, the first whisperings of such duties
could be heard in 1992.[49]
By the year 2000 the armed forces had
penetrated many vital aspects of American society. More and more military
officers sought the kind of autonomy in these civilian affairs that they
would expect from their military superiors in the execution of traditional
combat operations. Thus began the inevitable politicization of the
military. With so much responsibility for virtually everything government
was expected to do, the military increasingly demanded a larger role in
policymaking. But in a democracy policymaking is a task best left to those
accountable to the electorate. Nonetheless, well- intentioned military
officers, accustomed to the ordered, hierarchical structure of military
society, became impatient with the delays and inefficiencies inherent in
the democratic process. Consequently, they increasingly sought to avoid
it. They convinced themselves that they could more productively serve the
nation in carrying out their new assignments if they accrued to themselves
unfettered power to implement their programs. They forgot Lord Acton's
warning that "all power corrupts, and absolute power corrupts
absolutely."[50]
Congress became their unwitting ally. Because of
the popularity of the new military programs--and the growing dependence
upon them--Congress passed the Military Plenipotentiary Act of 2005. This
legislation was the legacy of the Goldwater-Nichols Defense Reorganization
Act of 1986. Among many revisions, Goldwater-Nichols strengthened the
office of the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and mandated numerous
changes intended to increase "jointness" in the armed services.[51]
Supporters of the Military Plenipotentiary Act argued that unity of
command was critical to the successful management of the numerous
activities now considered "military" operations. Moreover, many
Congressmen mistakenly believed that Goldwater-Nichols was one of the main
reasons for the military's success in the First Gulf War.[52] They viewed
the Military Plenipotentiary Act as an enhancement of the strengths of
Goldwater-Nichols.
In passing this legislation Congress added
greater authority to the military's top leadership position. Lulled by
favorable experiences with Chairmen like General Colin Powell,[53]
Congress saw little danger in converting the office of the Chairman of the
Joint Chiefs of Staff into the even more powerful Military
Plenipotentiary. No longer merely an advisor, the Military Plenipotentiary
became a true commander of all US services, purportedly because that
status could better ameliorate the effects of perceived interservice
squabbling. Despite warnings found in the legislative history of
Goldwater-Nichols and elsewhere, enormous power was concentrated in the
hands of a single, unelected official.[54] Unfortunately, Congress
presumed that principled people would always occupy the office.[55] No one
expected a General Brutus would arise.
The Military Plenipotentiary
was not Congress's only structural change in military governance. By 2007
the services were combined to form the Unified Armed Forces. Recall that
when we graduated from the War College greater unification was being
seriously suggested as an economy measure.[56] Eventually that
consideration, and the conviction that "jointness" was an unqualified
military virtue,[57] led to unification. But unification ended the
creative tension between the services.[58] Besides rejecting the
operational logic of separate services,[59] no one seemed to recognize the
checks-and-balances function that service separatism provided a democracy
obliged to maintain a large, professional military establishment. The
Founding Fathers knew the importance of checks and balances in controlling
the agencies of government: "Ambition must be made to counteract ambition.
. . . Experience has taught mankind the necessity of auxiliary controls .
. . [including] supplying opposite and rival
interests."[60]
Ambition is a natural trait of military
organizations and their leaders.[61] Whatever might have been the
inefficiencies of separate military services, their very existence served
to counteract the untoward desires of any single service. The roles and
missions debates and other arguments, once seen as petty military
infighting, also provided an invaluable forum for competitive analysis of
military doctrine. Additionally, they served to ensure that unscrupulous
designs by a segment of the military establishment were ruthlessly
exposed. Once the services were unified, the impetus to do so vanished,
and the authority of the military in relation to the other institutions of
government rose.[62] Distended by its pervasive new duties, monolithic
militarism came to dominate the Darwinian political environment of
21st-century America.
Why did the uniformed leadership of our day
acquiesce to this transformation of the military? Much of the answer can
be traced to the budget showdowns of the early 1990s. The collapse of the
Soviet Union left the US military without an easily articulated rationale
for large defense budgets. Billions in cuts were sought. Journalist Bruce
Auster put it bluntly: "Winning a share of the budget wars . . .
require[s] that the military find new missions for a post-Cold War world
that is devoid of clear military threats."[63] Capitulating, military
leaders embraced formerly disdained assignments. As one commentator
cynically observed, "the services are eager to talk up nontraditional,
budget-justifying roles."[64] The Vietnam-era aphorism, "It's a lousy war,
but it's the only one we've got," was resuscitated.
Still, that
doesn't completely explain why in 2012 the military leadership would
succumb to a coup. To answer that question fully requires examination of
what was happening to the officer corps as the military drew down in the
1980s and 1990s. Ever since large peacetime military establishments became
permanent features after World War II, the great leveler of the officer
corps was the constant influx of officers from the Reserve Officers
Training Corps program. The product of diverse colleges and universities
throughout the United States, these officers were a vital source of
liberalism in the military services.[65]
By the late 1980s and
early 1990s, however, that was changing. Force reductions decreased the
number of ROTC graduates the services accepted.[66] Although General
Powell called ROTC "vital to democracy," 62 ROTC programs were closed in
1991 and another 350 were considered for closure.[67] The numbers of
officers produced by the service academies also fell, but at a
significantly slower pace. Consequently, the proportion of academy
graduates in the officer corps climbed.[68] Academy graduates, along with
graduates of such military schools as the Citadel, Virginia Military
Institute, and Norwich University, tended to feel a greater homogeneity of
outlook than, say, the pool of ROTC graduates at large, with the result
that as the proportion of such graduates grew, diversity of outlook
overall diminished to some degree.
Moreover, the ROTC officers that
did remain increasingly came from a narrower range of schools. Focusing on
the military's policy to exclude homosexuals from service, advocates of
"political correctness" succeeded in driving ROTC from the campuses of
some of our best universities.[69] In many instances they also prevailed
in barring military recruiters from campus.[70] Little thought was given
the long-term consequences of limiting the pool from which our military
leadership was drawn. The result was a much more uniformly oriented
military elite whose outlook was progressively
conservative.
Furthermore, well-meaning attempts at improving
service life led to the unintended insularity of military society,
representing a return to the cloistered life of the pre-World War II armed
forces. Military bases, complete with schools, churches, stores, child
care centers, and recreational areas, became never-to-be-left islands of
tranquillity removed from the chaotic, crime-ridden environment outside
the gates.[71] As one reporter put it in 1991: "Increasingly isolated from
mainstream America, today's troops tend to view the civilian world with
suspicion and sometimes hostility."[72] Thus, a physically isolated and
intellectually alienated officer corps was paired with an enlisted force
likewise distanced from the society it was supposed to serve. In short,
the military evolved into a force susceptible to manipulation by an
authoritarian leader from its own select ranks.
What made this all
the more disheartening was the wretched performance of our forces in the
Second Gulf War.[73] Consumed with ancillary and nontraditional missions,
the military neglected its fundamental raison d'etre. As the Supreme Court
succinctly put it more than a half century ago, the "primary business of
armies and navies [is] to fight or be ready to fight wars should the
occasion arise."[74] When Iranian armies started pouring into the lower
Gulf states in 2010, the US armed forces were ready to do anything but
fight.
Preoccupation with humanitarian duties, narcotics
interdiction, and all the rest of the peripheral missions left the
military unfit to engage an authentic military opponent. Performing the
new missions sapped resources from what most experts agree was one of the
vital ingredients to victory in the First Gulf War: training. Training is,
quite literally, a zero-sum game. Each moment spent performing a
nontraditional mission is one unavailable for orthodox military exercises.
We should have recognized the grave risk. In 1991 The Washington Post
reported that in "interview after interview across the services, senior
leaders and noncommissioned officers stressed that they cannot be ready to
fight without frequent rehearsals of perishable skills."[75]
The
military's anti-drug activities were a big part of the problem. Oh sure, I
remember the facile claims of exponents of the military's counternarcotics
involvement as to what "valuable" training it provided.[76] Did anyone
really think that crew members of an AWACS--an aircraft designed to track
high-performance military aircraft in combat--significantly improved their
skills by hours of tracking slow-moving light planes? Did they seriously
imagine that troops enhanced combat skills by looking for marijuana under
car seats? Did they truly believe that crews of the Navy's sophisticated
antiair and anti-submarine ships received meaningful training by following
lumbering trawlers around the Caribbean?[77] Tragically, they
did.
The problem was exacerbated when political pressures exempted
the Guard and the Reserves from the harshest effects of the budgetary
cutbacks of the early 1990s.[78] The First Gulf War demonstrated that
modern weapons and tactics were simply too complex for part-time soldiers
to master during their allotted drill periods, however well motivated.[79]
Still, creative Guard and Reserve defenders contrived numerous
civic-action and humanitarian assignments and sold them as "training."
Left unexplained was how such training was supposed to fit with military
strategies that contemplated short, violent, come-as-you-are expeditionary
wars.[80] Nice-to-have Guard and Reserve support-oriented programs
prevailed at the expense of critical active-duty combat
capabilities.[81]
Perhaps even more damaging than the diversion of
resources was the assault on the very ethos of military service. Rather
than bearing in mind the Supreme Court's admonition to focus on
warfighting, the military was told to alter its purpose. Former Secretary
of State James Baker typified the trendy new tone in remarks about the
military's airlift of food and medicine to the former Soviet republics in
early 1992. He said the airlift would "vividly show the peoples of the
former Soviet Union that those that once prepared for war with them now
have the courage and the conviction to use their militaries to say, `We
will wage a new peace.'"[82]
In truth militaries ought to "prepare
for war" and leave the "peace waging" to those agencies of government
whose mission is just that. Nevertheless, such pronouncements--seconded by
military leaders[83]--became the fashionable philosophy. The result?
People in the military no longer considered themselves warriors. Instead,
they perceived themselves as policemen, relief workers, educators,
builders, health care providers, politicians--everything but warfighters.
When these philanthropists met the Iranian 10th Armored Corps near Daharan
during the Second Gulf War, they were brutally slaughtered by a military
which had not forgotten what militaries were supposed to do or what war is
really all about.
The devastation of the military's martial spirit
was exemplified by its involvement in police activities. Inexplicably, we
ignored the deleterious effect on combat motivation suffered by the
Israeli Defense Forces as a result of their efforts to police the West
Bank and Gaza.[84] Few seemed to appreciate the fundamental difference
between the police profession and the profession of arms. As Richard J.
Barnet observed in The New Yorker, "The line between police action and a
military operation is real. Police derive their power from their
acceptance as `officers of the law'; legitimate authority, not firepower,
is the essential element."[85]
Police organizations are
understandably oriented toward the studied restraint necessary for the end
sought: a judicial conviction. As one Drug Enforcement Administration
agent noted: "The military can kill people better than we can [but] when
we go to a jungle lab, we're not there to move onto the target by fire and
maneuver to destroy the enemy. We're there to arrest suspects and seize
evidence."[86] If military forces are inculcated with the same spirit of
restraint, combat performance is threatened.[87] Moreover, law enforcement
is also not just a form of low-intensity conflict. In low-intensity
conflict, the military aim is to win the will of the people, a virtually
impossible task with criminals "motivated by money, not
ideology."[88]
Humanitarian missions likewise undermined the
military's sense of itself. As one Navy officer gushed during the 1991
Bangladesh relief operation, "It's great to be here doing the opposite of
a soldier."[89] While no true soldier relishes war, the fact remains that
the essence of the military is warfighting and preparation for the same.
What journalist Barton Gellman has said of the Army can be extrapolated to
the military as a whole: it is an "organization whose fighting spirit
depends . . . heavily on tradition."[90] If that tradition becomes imbued
with a preference for "doing the opposite of a soldier," fighting spirit
is bound to suffer. When we first heard editorial calls to "pacify the
military" by involving it in civic projects,[91] we should have given them
the forceful rebuke they deserved.
Military analyst Harry Summers
warned back in '91 that when militaries lose sight of their purpose,
catastrophe results. Citing a study of pre-World War II Canadian military
policy as it related to the subsequent battlefield disasters, he observed
that
instead of using the peacetime interregnum to hone their
military skills, senior Canadian military officers sought out civilian
missions to justify their existence. When war came they were woefully
unprepared. Instead of protecting their soldiers' lives they led them to
their deaths. In today's post-Cold War peacetime environment, this trap
again looms large. . . . Some today within the US military are also
searching for relevance, with draft doctrinal manuals giving touchy-feely
prewar and postwar civil operations equal weight with warfighting. This is
an insidious mistake.[92]
We must remember that America's position
at the end of the Cold War had no historical precedent. For the first time
the nation--in peacetime--found itself with a still-sizable, professional
military establishment that was not preoccupied with an overarching
external threat.[93] Yet the uncertainties in the aftermath of the Cold
War limited the extent to which those forces could be safely downsized.
When the military was then obliged to engage in a bewildering array of
nontraditional duties to further justify its existence, it is little
wonder that its traditional apolitical professionalism eventually
eroded.
Clearly, the curious tapestry of military authoritarianism
and combat ineffectiveness that we see today was not yet woven in 1992.
But the threads were there. Knowing what I know now, here's the advice I
would have given the War College Class of 1992 had I been their graduation
speaker:
* Demand that the armed forces focus exclusively on
indisputably military duties. We must not diffuse our energies away from
our fundamental responsibility for warfighting. To send ill-trained troops
into combat makes us accomplices to murder.
* Acknowledge that national
security does have economic, social, educational, and environmental
dimensions, but insist that this doesn't necessarily mean the problems in
those areas are the responsibility of the military to correct. Stylishly
designating efforts to solve national ills as "wars" doesn't convert them
into something appropriate for the employment of military forces.
*
Readily cede budgetary resources to those agencies whose business it is to
address the non-military issues the armed forces are presently asked to
fix. We are not the DEA, EPA, Peace Corps, Department of Education, or Red
Cross--nor should we be. It has never been easy to give up resources, but
in the long term we--and the nation--will be better served by a smaller
but appropriately focused military.
* Divest the defense budget of
perception-skewing expenses. Narcotics interdiction, environmental
cleanup, humanitarian relief, and other costs tangential to actual combat
capability should be assigned to the budgets of DEA, EPA, State, and so
forth. As long as these expensive programs are hidden in the defense
budget, the taxpayer understandably--but mistakenly--will continue to
believe he's buying military readiness.
* Continue to press for the
elimination of superfluous, resource-draining Guard and Reserve units.
Increase the training tempo, responsibilities, and compensation of those
that remain.
* Educate the public to the sophisticated training
requirements occasioned by the complexities of modern warfare. It's
imperative we rid the public of the misperception that soldiers in
peacetime are essentially unemployed and therefore free to assume new
missions.[94]
* Resist unification of the services not only on
operational grounds, but also because unification would be inimical to the
checks and balances that underpin democratic government. Slow the pace of
fiscally driven consolidation so that the impact on less quantifiable
aspects of military effectiveness can be scrutinized.
* Assure that
officer accessions from the service academies correspond with overall
force reductions (but maintain separate service academies) and keep ROTC
on a wide diversity of campuses. If necessary, resort to litigation to
maintain ROTC campus diversity.
* Orient recruiting resources and
campaigns toward ensuring that all echelons of society are represented in
the military, without compromising standards.[95] Accept that this kind of
recruiting may increase costs. It's worth it.
* Work to moderate the
base-as-an-island syndrome by providing improved incentives for military
members and families to assimilate into civilian communities. Within the
information programs for our force of all-volunteer professionals
(increasingly US-based), strengthen the emphasis upon such themes as the
inviolability of the Constitution, ascendancy of our civilian leadership
over the military, and citizens' responsibilities.
Finally, I would
tell our classmates that democracy is a fragile institution that must be
continuously nurtured and scrupulously protected. I would also tell them
that they must speak out when they see the institution threatened; indeed,
it is their duty to do so. Richard Gabriel aptly observed in his book To
Serve with Honor that
when one discusses dissent, loyalty, and the
limits of military obligations, the central problem is that the military
represents a threat to civil order not because it will usurp authority,
but because it does not speak out on critical policy decisions. The
soldier fails to live up to his oath to serve the country if he does not
speak out when he sees his civilian or military superiors executing
policies he feels to be wrong.[96]
Gabriel was wrong when he
dismissed the military's potential to threaten civil order, but he was
right when he described our responsibilities. The catastrophe that
occurred on our watch took place because we failed to speak out against
policies we knew were wrong. It's too late for me to do any more. But it's
not for you.
Best regards,
Prisoner
222305759
------------------------------------------------------------------------
NOTES
1.
The Twenty-fifth Amendment to the Constitution provides that in the case
of "death . . . the Vice President shall become the President." But
Section 1 of Article II requires the taking of the oath before "enter[ing]
the Execution of his Office."
2. Daniel J. Boorstin, "History's
Hidden Turning Points," U.S. News & World Report, 22 April 1991, p.
52.
3. Oliver Stone's movie, JFK, is one example. See Joel
Achenbach, "JFK Conspiracy: Myth vs. Facts," The Washington Post, 28
February 1992, p. C5.
4. See Len Colodny and Robert Gettlin, Silent
Coup (New York: St. Martin's, 1991).
5. George Washington in his
"Farewell Address" dated 19 September 1796 counseled: "Overgrown military
establishments . . . under any form of government are inauspicious to
liberty and . . . are to be regarded as particularly hostile to republican
liberty." As quoted in The Annals of America (Chicago: Encyclopedia
Britannica, 1976), p. 609.
6. Author Geoffrey Perret expressed the
traditional view as follows: "The antimilitaristic side of the American
character is forever on guard. Americans are so suspicious of military
ambition that even when the armed forces win wars they are criticized as
robustly as if they had lost them." A Country Made By War (New York:
Vintage, 1989), p. 560.
7. Andrew C. Janos, "The Seizure of Power:
A Study of Force and Popular Consent," Research Monograph No. 16, Center
for International Studies, Princeton University, 1964, p. 39.
8.
Mark S. Hoffman, ed., The World Almanac & Book of Facts 1991 (New
York: Pharo Books, 1990), p. 426; Royce Crocker, Voter Registration and
Turnout 1948-1988, Library of Congress, Congressional Research Service
Report No. 89-179 (Washington: LOC, 1989), p. 11.
9. E. J. Dionne,
Jr., "Altered States: The Union & the Campaign," The Washington Post,
26 January 1992, p. C1. Fordham University researcher Marc Miringoff
reports that the Index of Social Indicators fell to its lowest point in 20
years. He describes the Index, which is an amalgamation of social and
economic data from government sources, as "sort of a Dow Jones of the
national soul." See Paul Taylor, "`Dow Jones of the National Soul' Sours,"
The Washington Post, 16 January 1992, p. A25. The nation's frustration was
the cause, according to columnist George F. Will, of a rising level of
collective "national stress." George F. Will, "Stressed Out in America,"
The Washington Post, 16 January 1992, p. A27. See also Charles
Krauthammer, "America's Case of the Sulks," The Washington Post, 19
January 1992, p. C7.
10. A 1989 Harris poll revealed that 53% of
Americans believed that Congress was not effectively fulfilling its
responsibilities. See Robert R. Ivany, "Soldiers and Legislators: Common
Mission," Parameters, 21 (Spring 1991), 47.
11. Mortimer B.
Zuckerman, "Behind Our Loss of Faith," U.S. News & World Report, 16
March 1992, p. 76. Many believed that democracy's promise didn't include
them. Ninety-one percent of Americans reported that the "group with too
little influence in government is people like themselves." See "Harper's
Index," Harper's Magazine, January 1991, p. 17.
12. David Finkle,
"The Greatest Democracy on Earth," The Washington Post Magazine, 16
February 1992, p. 16. Forty-three percent of those who failed to vote
didn't see any important differences between the two major parties. See
"Harper's Index," Harper's Magazine, March 1992, p. 13. One in eight
Americans was so pessimistic as to conclude that the country's domestic
problems were "beyond solving." "Harper's Index," Harper's Magazine,
October 1991, p. 15.
13. A ten-year rise in public confidence was
reported by Tom Morganthau, et al., in "The Military's New Image,"
Newsweek, 11 March 1991, p. 50.
14. Michael Satchell, et al., "The
Military's New Stars," U.S. News & World Report, 18 April 1988, p.
33.
15. A survey of 163 new Army brigadier generals revealed that
their IQ was in the 92nd percentile of the population. See Bruce W. Nelan,
"Revolution in Defense," Time, 18 March 1991, p. 25. In many instances the
curricula vitae of military personnel was more impressive than that of
their civilian counterparts. For example, over 88% of brigadier generals
had an advanced degree compared with 19% of top civilian business leaders.
See David Gergen, "America's New Heroes," U.S. News & World Report, 11
February 1991, p. 76. Similarly, 97% of enlisted personnel were high
school graduates, the highest percentage ever. See Grant Willis, "DoD:
Recruits in '91 Best Educated, Most Qualified," Air Force Times, 27
January 1992, p. 14. The services "had become practically a drug-free
workplace." See David Gergen, "Bringing Home the Storm," The Washington
Post, 28 April 1991, p. C2. Military sociologist Charles Moskos explained
that the reason for the great decline in disciplinary problems is "simply
better recruits." Peter Slavin, "Telling It Like It Is," Air Force Times,
14 March 1988, p. 60.
16. Ivany, 47; David Gergen, "America's New
Heroes," p. 76; Grant Willis, "A New Generation of Warriors," Navy Times,
16 March 1991, p. 12.
17. 408 U.S. 1, 17 (1972).
18. At
least one observer sensed the peril which arises when power and respect
converge in the military: "Our warriors are kinder and gentler, and have
not shown the slightest inclination to lust for political power. But that
potential always lurks where power and respect converge, and the degree of
military influence in society is something to watch carefully in the years
ahead." Martin Anderson, "The Benefits of the Warrior Class," The
Baltimore Sun, 14 April 1991, p. 3F.
19. James Fallows, "Military
Efficiency," Atlantic, August 1991, p. 18.
20. Civilian law
enforcement agencies were intercepting only 15% of the drugs entering the
country. See U.S. Code Congressional & Administrative News (St. Paul:
West, 1981), p. 1785; Public Law 97-86 (1981) codified in 10 U.S.C. 371 et
seq.
21. Newsweek reports: "The Pentagon resisted the
[counternarcotics] mission for decades, saying that the military should
fight threats to national security, and the police should fight crime."
Charles Lane, "The Newest War," Newsweek, 6 January 1992, p. 18. See also
U.S. Code Congressional & Administrative News (St. Paul: West, 1981),
p. 1785.
22. The original purpose of the Posse Comitatus Act (10
U.S.C. 1385) was to restrain Federal troops who had become deeply involved
in law enforcement in the post-Civil War South--even in areas where civil
government had been reestablished. See U.S. v. Hartley, 486 F.Supp. 1348,
1356 fn. 11 (M.D.Fla. 1980). The statute imposes criminal penalties for
the improper uses of the military in domestic law enforcement matters. See
U.S. Code Congressional & Administrative News (St. Paul: West, 1981),
p. 1786.
23. Additional amendments were added in 1988. See Public
Law 100-456 (1988).
24. Although anti-drug spending will decrease
in FY 93, the rate of decline is slower than that of the DOD budget as a
whole. William Matthews, "Counternarcotics Request Increased," Air Force
Times, 24 February 1992, p. 2. See also Lane, "Newest War," p.
18.
25. "Combatting Drugs," National Military Strategy of the
United States (Washington: GPO, 1992), p. 15.
26. Some were
suggesting the need for greater military authority in 1992. See Dale E.
Brown, "Drugs on the Border: The Role of the Military," Parameters, 21
(Winter 1991-92), 58-59.
27. The rise in the rate of violent crime
continued a trend begun in the 1980s when such offenses soared by 23%. See
John W. Wright, ed., "Crime and Punishment," The Universal Almanac 1992
(Kansas City: Andrews and McMeel, 1991), p. 255.
28. "Harper's
Index," Harper's Magazine, July 1991, p. 15.
29. George Will
observed that "urban governments are failing to perform their primary
function of protecting people from violence on streets and even in homes
and schools." George F. Will, "Stressed Out in America," p.
A27.
30. Using Guardsmen in a law enforcement capacity during riots
and other emergencies was not unusual, but a regular presence in a
civilian community in that role was unusual in those days. Guard members
usually performed law enforcement activities in their status as state
employees. This is distinct from their federalized status when they are
incorporated into the US military. See U.S. Code Congressional &
Administrative News (St. Paul: West, 1988), p. 2583; and K. R. Clark,
"Spotlighting the Drug Zone," Pentagram, 30 January 1992, pp.
20-21.
31. Indeed, one of the specific purposes of the DC program
was to "work with police to increase the uniformed presence in the
neighborhood at night to cut down on illegal activity." See Clark p.
21.
32. For example, persons over the age of 65 vote at a rate 50%
higher than that of the 18-34 age group. See George F. Will, "Stressed Out
in America," p. A27.
33. The number of baby boomers in the
population is expected to peak in 2020. See Marvin J. Cetron and Owen
Davies, "Trends Shaping the World," The Futurist, September-October 1991,
p. 12. Persons over 65 were estimated to constitute 18% of the electorate
by 2010. This group, together with the boomers over 45 years, would
constitute 53% of the electorate by 2010. These percentages were computed
from statistics found in the Universal Almanac 1992, "The U.S. Population
by Age," John W. Wright, ed. (Kansas City: Andrews and McMeel, 1991), p.
207.
34. Deidre Fanning, "Waiting for the Wealth," Worth,
February/March 1992, pp. 87, 89.
35. A 1990 poll of Americans aged
50 years and older showed that nearly 23% believed that use of the
military was the best way to combat the growing problems of drug abuse and
crime. See Mark S. Hoffman, ed., The World Almanac & Book of Facts
1991 (New York: Pharo Books, 1990), p. 33.
36. "Plan to Open
Veterans Hospitals to Poor is Dropped," The New York Times, 23 February
1992, p. 17.
37. Scott Shuger, "Pacify the Military," The New York
Times, 14 March 1992, p. 25.
38. Andy Tobias, "Let's Get Moving!"
Time, 3 February 1992, p. 41.
39. U.S. News & World Report
noted that "a third of the officers leaving the Army are qualified to
teach high school math, and 10 to 20 percent can teach physics." David
Gergen, "Heroes For Hire," U.S. News & World Report, 27 January 1992,
p. 71.
40. For example, a District of Columbia National Guard unit
entered into a "Partnership in Education" agreement with a local school
district. Under the memorandum the Guard agreed to "institute a
cooperative learning center providing tutoring in science, English,
mathematics, and other basic subjects." See "Guard Enters Partnership with
School," Pentagram, 13 February 1992, p. 3. For another example, see
"Arlington Schools Join Forces with Defense Department Agency," The
Washington Post, 12 December 1991, p. Va. 1.
41. The DOD budget for
environmental cleanup for FY 93 was $3.7 billion. Anne Garfinkle, "Going
Home is Hard to Do," The Wall Street Journal, 27 January 1992, p. 12. See
also Peter Grier, "US Defense Department Declares War on Colossal
Pollution Problem," The Christian Science Monitor, 2 March 1992, p. 9. The
Army, at least, saw this activity as a "vital mission" as early as 1991.
The National Journal reported: "Outside the Storm, a pamphlet heralding
the Army's post-Persian Gulf war `vital missions and important work'
touches on the war on drugs and `protecting the planet Earth' (even
reprinting a syrupy ode to environmentalism from the 1989 Sierra Club
Wilderness Calendar)." David C. Morrison, "Operation Kinder and Gentler,"
National Journal, 25 May 1991, p. 1260.
42. In February 1992 Trans
World Airlines became the eighth major airline to go bankrupt since 1989.
Martha M. Hamilton, "Trans World Airlines Files for Bankruptcy," The
Washington Post, 1 February 1992, p. C2. By 1992 US-flagged commercial
shipping had virtually disappeared. See James Bovard, "The Antiquated 1920
Jones Act Slowly Sinks U.S. Shipping," Insight, 6 January 1992, p. 21. In
the wake of Desert Storm, $3.1 billion was spent to build and convert
ships for the military's cargo fleet. Michael Blood, "An Idea to Use
Shipyard as a U.S. Sealift Base," Philadelphia Inquirer, 16 February 1992,
p. B-1. The precedent for "leasing" military resources can be traced to
1992. Just such an arrangement occurred in Germany following
reunification: "A shortage of German [air] controllers and their
unfamiliarity with newly reunified Berlin's busy skies prompted Germany to
hire a squadron from the US Air Force at a cost of $35 million for four
years. . . . It is the only US military unit that guides civilian air
traffic on foreign soil." Soraya S. Nelson, "AF Controllers in Berlin Keep
Eye on Civilian Sky," Air Force Times, 10 February 1992, p. 22.
43.
See, e.g., Helen Dewar, "Nunn Urges Military Shift: Forces Would Aid
Domestic Programs," The Washington Post, 24 June 1992, p. A17; Rick Maze,
"Nunn Urges Military to Take Domestic Missions, Army Times, 21 September
1992, p. 16; Mary Jordan, "Bush Orders U.S. Military to Aid Florida," The
Washington Post, 28 August 1992, p. A1; George C. Wilson, "Disaster Plan:
Give Military the Relief Role," Army Times, 21 September 1992, p. 33; and
Rick Maze, "Pentagon May Get Disaster-relief Role Back," Army Times, 21
September 1992, p. 26. See also note 64.
44. See Shuger, p. 25.
Similarly, noting the growing obsolescence of the Guard's combat role, a
National Guard officer proposed an alternative: "The National Guard can
provide a much greater service to the nation by seeking more combat
support and combat service support missions and the structure to support
them. Such units can participate in nation building or assistance missions
throughout the world, to include the United States. . . . Much of our
national infrastructure, streets, bridges, health care, water and sewer
lines, to name just a few, particularly in the inner cities of the United
States, are in disrepair. Many of the necessary repairs could be
accomplished by National guard units on a year-round training basis."
Colonel Philip Drew, "Taking the National Guard Out of Combat," National
Guard, April 1991, p. 38. Also jumping on the bandwagon are National Guard
officers Colonel Philip A. Brehm and Major Wilbur E. Gray in "Alternative
Missions for the Army," SSI Study, Strategic Studies Institute, USAWC, 17
July 1992.
45. Eric Schmitt, "U.S. Forces Find Work As Angels Of
Mercy," The New York Times, 12 January 1992, p. E3.
46. See the
legislative history of Public Law 99-661, U.S. Code Congressional &
Administrative News (St. Paul: West, 1986) p. 6482. Public Law 99-661
codified in 10 U.S.C. 401 et seq.
47. Ken Adelman, "Military
Helping Hands," Washington Times, 8 July 1991, p. D3; Bruce B. Auster with
Robin Knight, "The Pentagon Scramble to Stay Relevant," U.S. News &
World Report, 30 December 1991/6 January 1992, p. 52.
48. It was
predicted that the AIDS epidemic would hit Africa especially hard with
infection rates in some cities as high as 40% by the year 2000. See Marvin
J. Cetron and Owen Davies, "Trends Shaping the World," The Futurist,
September-October 1991, p. 12. Some experts have predicted that African
famine might present a requirement for a military humanitarian mission
(Weiss and Campbell, pp. 451-52). See also Richard H. P. Sia, "U.S.
Increasing Its Special Forces Activity in Africa," The Baltimore Sun, 15
March 1992, p. 1. Long-term military commitments to humanitarian
operations have been recommended by some experts (Weiss and Campbell, p.
457).
49. US troops assigned to African countries in the early
1990s were tasked to "help improve local health-care and economic
conditions." See Sia, p. 1. Similarly, the notion of using the expertise
of US military personnel to perform governmental functions in foreign
countries was also suggested in the 1990s. For example, when the food
distribution system in the former Soviet Union broke down during the
winter of 1991-92, there were calls for Lieutenant General Gus Pagonis,
the logistical wizard of the First Gulf War, to be dispatched to take
charge of the system. See "A Man Who Knows How," editorial, The Los
Angeles Times, 5 February 1992, p. 10.
50. As quoted in Dictionary
of Military and Naval Quotations, Robert Debs Heinl, Jr., ed. (Annapolis:
US Naval Institute, 1966), p. 245.
51. Public Law 99-433 (1986).
Under the Goldwater-Nichols Defense Reorganization Act, the Chairman of
the JCS was given much broader powers. Not only is he now the primary
military advisor to the President, he is also responsible for furnishing
strategic direction to the armed forces, strategic and contingency
planning, establishing budget priorities, and developing joint doctrine
for all four services. Edward Luttwak and Stuart L. Koehl, eds., The
Dictionary of Modern War (New York: Harper Collins, 1991), p. 320. The law
also mandated that joint duty be a requirement for promotion to flag rank.
See Vincent Davis, "Defense Reorganization and National Security," The
Annals of the American Academy of Political Science, September 1991, pp.
163-65. This facilitated development of senior military cliques which
transcended service lines.
52. Many praised Goldwater-Nichols as
the source of success in the Gulf War. See, e.g., "Persian Gulf War's
Unsung Hero," editorial, Charleston, S.C., News & Courier, 4 April
1991, p. 6. See also Sam Nunn, "Military Reform Paved Way for Gulf
Triumph," Atlanta Constitution, 31 March 1991, p. G5. But the Gulf War was
not a true test of either Goldwater-Nichols or joint warfare. About all
that conflict demonstrated was that poorly trained and miserably led
conscript armies left unprotected from air attack cannot hold terrain in
the face of a modern ground assault.
53. One study concluded that
because of Powell's background he was "especially well qualified" for the
politically sensitive role as CJCS. See Preston Niblock, ed., Managing
Military Operations in Crises (Santa Monica: RAND, 1991), p.
51.
54. Representative Denton stated as to Goldwater-Nichols: "This
legislation proposes to reverse 200 years of American history by, for the
first time, designating by statute . . . a single uniformed officer as the
"Principal Military Advisor" to the President. That change in the role of
the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff is profound in its implications.
Similar proposals have been specifically and overwhelmingly rejected in
the past--in 1947, 1949, 1958--on the grounds that, in a democracy, no
single military officer, no matter what his personal qualifications,
should have such power." U.S. Code Congressional & Administrative News
(St. Paul, Minn.: West, 1986), p. 2248. See also Robert Previdi, Civilian
Control versus Military Rule (New York: Hippocrene Books,
1988).
55. In The Federalist No. 51 the Founding Fathers warned
against the folly of constructing a governmental system based on
assumptions about the good character of individuals who might occupy an
office.
56. William Matthews, "Nunn: Merge the Services?" Air Force
Times, 9 March 1992, p. 6.
57. This belief was enshrined in Joint
Pub 1, Joint Warfare of the United States (Washington: Office of the JCS,
11 November 1991). It states (p. iii) that "joint warfare is essential to
victory." While joint warfare might usually be essential to victory, it
cannot be said that it is essential in every instance. For example,
rebels--composed entirely of irregular infantry--defeated massive Soviet
combined-arms forces in Afghanistan. Equipped only with light arms,
Stinger missiles, and light antiaircraft guns, they triumphed without
benefit of any air or naval forces, and indeed without unity among
themselves. Furthermore, even in the case of Western nations, there are
likely to be plenty of hostilities involving single-service air or naval
campaigns.
58. Former Secretary of the Navy John Lehman described
the value of this creative tension in discussing his criticism of the
"unified" Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff occasioned by
Goldwater-Nichols. According to Lehman: "Franklin Roosevelt . . . wanted
to hear Admiral King argue with Marshall in front of him. He wanted to
hear MacArthur argue against Nimitz, and the Air Corps against the Army,
and the Navy against all in his presence, so that he would have the option
to make the decisions of major strategy in war. He knew that any political
leader, no matter how strong, if given only one military position, finds
it nearly impossible to go against it. Unfortunately . . . now the
president does not get to hear arguments from differing points of view."
John Lehman, "U.S. Defense Policy Options: The 1990s and Beyond," The
Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, September
1991, pp. 199-200.
59. See, e.g., Arthur C. Forster, Jr., "The
Essential Need for An Independent Air Force," Air Force Times, 7 May 1990,
p. 25.
60. Alexander Hamilton, James Madison, and John Jay, The
Federalist, as reprinted in the Great Books of the Western World, Robert
M. Hutchins, ed. (Chicago: Encyclopedia Britannica, 1952), XLIII,
163.
61. Shakespeare called ambition "the soldier's virtue." Antony
and Cleopatra, Act III, Scene 1, as reprinted in the Great Books of the
Western World, Robert M. Hutchins, ed. (Chicago: Encyclopedia Britannica,
1952), XXVII, 327.
62. Samuel P. Huntington, The Soldier and the
State (Cambridge: Harvard Univ. Press, 1959), p. 87, said "If the officer
corps is originally divided into land, sea, and air elements, and then is
unified under the leadership of a single, overall staff and military
commander in chief, this change will tend to increase its authority with
regard to other institutions of government. It will speak with one voice
instead of three. Other groups will not be able to play off one of the
officer corps against another."
63. Bruce B. Auster with Robin
Knight, "The Pentagon Scramble to Stay Relevant," U.S. News & World
Report, 30 December 1991/6 January 1992, p. 52. Despite the Gulf War,
defense outlays were scheduled by 1997 to shrink to their lowest
percentage of the federal budget since the end of World War II. Sara
Collins, "Cutting Up the Military," U.S. News & World Report, 10
February 1992, p. 29. See also John Lancaster, "Aspin Seeks to Double
Bush's Defense Cuts," The Washington Post, 27 February 1992, p. A16; and
Helen Dewar, "Bush, Mitchell Take Aim at Slashing the Defense Budget," The
Washington Post, 17 January 1992, p. B1.
64. Morrison, "Operation
Kinder and Gentler," p. 1260. Most revealing, on 1-2 December 1992, the
National Defense University at Fort McNair in Washington, D.C., hosted a
symposium titled "Non-Traditional Roles for the U.S. Military in the
Post-Cold War Era," featuring presentations on disaster relief, refugee
evacuation, humanitarian medical care, engineering assistance to
infrastructure and environment, counternarcotics, riot control, emergency
preparedness, civil unrest, national assistance, etc.
65. Military
analyst Harry Summers insists that ROTC is a key reason military coups
have not occurred in the United States as they have in other countries. He
notes: "ROTC was designed to produce a well-rounded officer corps
inculcated with the principles of freedom, democracy, and American values
through close contact with civilian students on an open college campus,
and through a liberal education taught by a primarily civilian academic
faculty. And that's just what has happened." Harry Summers, "Stalking the
Wrong Quarry," Washington Times, 7 December 1989, p. F-3.
66. The
Army plans to cut ROTC officer acquisitions from 7,778 in 1990 to 5,200 in
1995. See Peter Copeland, "ROTC More Selective in Post-Cold War Era,"
Washington Times, 27 May 1991, p. 3.
67. David Wood, "A Breed
Apart, Volunteer Army Grows Distant from Society," The Star Ledger
(Newark, N.J.), 24 April 1991, p. 1.
68. The armed services will
shrink at least 25% by 1995. Richard Cheney, "U.S. Defense Strategy for An
Era of Uncertainty," International Defense Review, 1992, p. 7. But service
academy graduates are expected to decline by only 10% during the same
period. Eric Schmitt, "Service Academies Grapple With Cold War Thaw," The
New York Times, 3 March 1992, p. 12. Just after the Vietnam War, West
Point was supplying about 8% of new Army officers, compared to the current
24%, a new study by the congressional General Accounting Office (GAO)
suggests. To roll back the officer stream from West Point, the GAO says,
enrollment might have to be limited to 2,500 cadets, a 40% drop from
today. Larry Gordon, "Changing Cadence at West Point," Los Angeles Times,
25 March 1992, p. 1.
69. See, e.g., Tom Philip, "CSUS May End ROTC
Over Anti-Gay Policy," Sacramento Bee, 15 February 1992, p. 1.
70.
As of November 1991, 89 law schools prohibit or restrict on-campus
military recruiting. See "Sexual Preference Issue," HQ USAF/JAX
Professional Development Update, November 1991, p. 9. Such bans are not
legal in most cases. See 10 U.S.C. 2358; and U.S. v. City of Philadelphia,
798 F.2d 81 (3d Cir. 1986). Furthermore, by condoning the exclusion of
military recruiters from campuses--billed as "marketplaces of
ideas"--these universities legitimized censorship of "politically
incorrect" views.
71. An article by journalist David Wood grasped
this trend. He quoted an Army officer as stating, "We are isolated--we
don't have a lot of exposure to the outside world." Wood goes on to
observe: "The nation's 2 million active duty soldiers are a self-contained
society, one with its own solemn rituals, its own language, its own system
of justice, and even its own system of keeping time. . . .Only a decade
ago, life within the confines of a military base might have seemed a
spartan existence. But improving the garrison life has been a high
priority. As a result, many bases have come to resemble an ideal of
small-town America. . . . There is virtually no crime or poverty. Drug
addicts and homeless are mere rumors from the outside." David Wood, "Duty,
Honor, Isolation: Military More and More a Force Unto Itself," The
Star-Ledger (Newark, N.J.) 21 April 1991, p. 1. See also Laura Elliot,
"Behind the Lines," The Washingtonian, April 1991, p. 160.
72.
Wood, p. 1.
73. Studies indicate that defeat in war may actually
increase the likelihood of a military coup. Ekkart Zimmermann, "Toward a
Causal Model of Military Coups d'Etat," Armed Forces and Society, 5
(Spring 1979), 399.
74. United States ex rel. Toth v. Quarles, 350
U.S. 11, 17, 76 S.Ct. 1 (1955). Of course, Carl von Clausewitz had put it
even better: "The end for which a soldier is recruited, clothed, armed,
and trained, the whole object of his sleeping, eating, drinking, and
marching, is simply that he should fight at the right place and the right
time." On War, Michael Howard and Peter Paret, eds. (Princeton: Princeton
Univ. Pres, 1976), p. 95.
75. Barton Gellman, "Strategy for the
'90s: Reduce Size and Preserve Strength," The Washington Post, 9 December
1991, p. A10.
76. See, e.g., Brown, "Drugs on the Border: The Role
of the Military," p. 50.
77. According to one report, the effort
was futile and wasteful: "We're getting so little of the drug traffic for
such a great expenditure of effort," lamented one Navy officer; "We're
pouring money into the ocean, at a time when resources are scarce."
William Matthews, "Drug War Funds Would Shrink Under Budget Proposal," Air
Force Times, 17 February 1992, p. 33.
78. John Lancaster reported
that proposals to cut Guard and reserve funding "inflame passions on
Capitol Hill," causing Congress to resist cutting the part-time forces.
"Pentagon Cuts Hill-Favored Targets," The Washington Post, 24 January
1992, p. A6. Art Pine reported that the Guard and reserves "exercise
stunning political power and influence, both among state and local
governments and in the power centers of Washington." Pine quoted Brookings
Institute expert Martin Binkin as saying that the Guard/Reserve lobby
"makes the gun lobby led by the National Rifle Association look like
amateurs." Art Pine, "In Defense of 2nd Line Defenders," Los Angeles
Times, 13 March 1992, p. 1.
79. Former Director of Operations for
the Joint Staff, Lieutenant General Thomas Kelly, believed there was
simply not enough training time to keep Guard units ready for the kind of
highly complex warfare the Army now conducts. He said, "There is nothing
on earth harder to teach than the maneuver function in combat." As quoted
by Grant Willis, "A New Generation of Warriors," Navy Times, 16 March
1991, p. 12. The motivation of some Guardsmen toward fulfilling their
military responsibilities was called into question when up to 80% of the
Guardsmen in California units called up for Desert Storm reported for duty
unable to meet physical fitness standards. Steve Gibson, "Guards Flunked
Fitness," Sacramento Bee, 18 June 1991, p. B1.
80. "Decisive
Force," National Military Strategy of the United States (Washington: GPO,
1992), p. 10; "Contingency Forces," National Military Strategy of the
United States (Washington: GPO, 1992), p. 23. Secretary of Defense Richard
Cheney and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Colin Powell testified
before the Senate Armed Services Committee on 31 January 1992 that the
military of the future "would be smaller and more mobile and flexible. . .
. Its likely target would be regional conflicts, in which American
firepower might still be needed on short notice." As reported by Eric
Schmitt, "Pentagon Says More Budget Cuts Would Hurt Combat Effectiveness,"
The New York Times, 1 February 1992, p. 9.
81. Military analyst and
decorated combat veteran David Hackworth sized up the Guard and Reserves
as follows: "Except for the air and Marine combat components, these forces
aren't worth the billions paid each year to them. The combat service and
support units are great, but there are too many of them." "A Pentagon
Dreamland," The Washington Post, 23 February 1992, p. C3.
82.
Operation Provide Hope was a two-week humanitarian aid effort involving 64
US Air Force sorties carrying approximately 4.5 million pounds of food and
medicine. Michael Smith, "First of Up to 64 Relief Flights Arrives in
Kiev," Air Force Times, 24 February 1992, p. 8. For Baker quotation, see
David Hoffman, "Pentagon to Airlift Aid to Republics," The Washington
Post, 24 January 1992, p. A1.
83. The Vice Chairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff also saw the military's future role in non-combat terms.
Stating that there was "no plausible scenario" in which the United States
would be involved in a military conflict in Europe or with elements of the
former Soviet Union, he maintained that the likeliest use of military
forces would be to address instability that could arise from migrations by
poor peoples of the world to wealthier regions. He envisioned the
military's role: "You would like to deal with this on a political and
social level. The military's role should be subtle, similar to the role it
plays now in Latin America--digging wells, building roads, and teaching
the militaries of host nations how to operate under a democratic system. .
. . When prevention fails, the military can be called to the more active
role of running relief operations like the current one at Guantanamo Bay,
Cuba, for fleeing Haitians. Operation Provide Comfort, the giant US
military rescue mission to save Kurdish refugees who fled from the Iraqi
army to the snow-covered mountains of southeastern Turkey last spring, may
have been a precursor of what we can look forward to in the next decade if
not the next century." As quoted by William Matthews, "Military Muscle to
Shift to Humanitarian Help," Air Force Times, 6 January 1992, p.
14.
84. Leon Hader, "Reforming Israel--Before It's Too Late,"
Foreign Policy, No. 81 (Winter 1990/91), 111.
85. Richard J.
Barnet, "Reflections--The Uses Of Force," The New Yorker, 29 April 1991,
p. 82.
86. Charles Lane, "The Newest War," p. 18.
87.
Newsweek reported the following incident: When a Marine reconnaissance
patrol skirmished with smugglers near the Arizona-Mexico border last
December--firing over their heads to disperse them--one colonel near
retirement age shook his head. He argued that combat-trained Marines
shouldn't be diminishing hard-learned skills by squeezing off warning
shots. "That teaches some very bad habits," he said. Bill Torque and
Douglas Waller, "Warriors Without War," Newsweek, 19 March 1990, p.
18.
88. Charles Lane, "The Newest War," p. 18.
89. As quoted
by David Morrison in the National Journal. This relief operation involved
8,000 sailors and marines tasked to help millions of Bangladeshi survivors
of a 30 April 1991 cyclone. See Morrison, "Operation Kinder and Gentler,"
p. 1260.
90. Barton Gellman, "Strategy for the '90s: Reduce Size
and Preserve Strength," The Washington Post, 9 December 1991, p.
A10.
91. Shuger, "Pacify the Military," p. 25.
92. Harry
Summers, "When Armies Lose Sight of Purpose," Washington Times, 26
December 1991, p. D3.
93. See "Warnings Echo from Jefferson to
Eisenhower to Desert Storm," USA Today, 1 March 1991, p. 10A.
94. A
caller to a radio talk show typified this view. She stated that while she
appreciated the need for a military in case "something like Iraq came up
again," she believed that the military ought to be put to work rebuilding
the infrastructure and cleaning up the cities instead of "sitting around
the barracks." "The Joel Spevak Show," Station WRC, Washington, D.C., 11
March 1992.
95. One example of the dangers of lowering standards to
achieve social goals is "Project 100,000." Conceived as a Great Society
program, youths with test scores considered unacceptably low were
nevertheless allowed to enter the armed forces during the 1966-1972
period. The idea was to give the disadvantaged poor the chance to obtain
education and discipline in a military environment, but the results were a
fiasco. See Marilyn B. Young, The Vietnam Wars, 1945-1990 (New York:
Harper Collins, 1991), p. 320.
96. Richard A. Gabriel, To Serve
with Honor (Westport, Conn.: Greenwood, 1982), p.
178.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Lieutenant
Colonel Charles J. Dunlap, Jr., USAF, is the Deputy Staff Judge Advocate,
US Central Command, at MacDill AFB, Florida. He is a graduate of St.
Joseph's University (Pa.), the Villanova University School of Law, and the
Armed Forces Staff College, and he is a Distinguished Graduate of the
National War College, Class of 1992. He has taught at the Air Force Judge
Advocate General's School, and served tours in Korea and the United
Kingdom. In 1987 he was a Circuit Military Judge, First Judicial Circuit,
and was subsequently assigned to the Air Staff in the Office of the Judge
Advocate General. Lieutenant Colonel Dunlap was recently named by the
Judge Advocates' Association as the USAF's Outstanding Career Armed
Services Attorney of 1992. The present article is adapted from his
National War College student paper that was co-winner of the Chairman of
the Joint Chiefs of Staff 1991-92 Strategy Essay Competition, in which
students from all the senior service colleges
compete. ------------------------------------------------------------------------
Reviewed
25 November 1996. Please send comments or corrections to
Parameters@carlisle.army.mil. |