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Old 01-19-2018, 08:43 AM
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Arrow Rising Threats From China and Russia Dominate Trump’s Defense Strategy

Rising Threats From China and Russia Dominate Trump’s Defense Strategy
By: Anthony Capaccio - 1-19-18 9AM
RE: https://www.bloomberg.com/news/artic...ategy-jcm1xi6v

> Rivals want to impose ‘authoritarian model,’ Pentagon says
> ‘Great-power competition, not terrorism’ is main focus: Mattis

The U.S. must prepare to wage a great-power competition with China and Russia as those nations narrow their technological gap with the U.S. military and seek “to shape a world consistent with their authoritarian model,” according to a new Defense Department strategy report.

Confronting China and Russia and staying ahead of their quickly expanding military capabilities are the Pentagon’s “principal priorities” and will require “increased and sustained investment,” according to an 11-page unclassified summary of the 2018 National Defense Strategy released Friday.

The two U.S. rivals are actively seeking to “co-opt or replace the free and open order that has enabled global security and prosperity since World War II,” according to the report. To counter that effort, the U.S. will “thwart their use of coercion and intimidation to advance their goals and harm U.S. interests.”

The report, a summary of a more detailed classified document mandated by Congress, outlines Defense Secretary Jim Mattis’s views on geopolitics and threats facing the U.S. one year into President Donald Trump’s term. On Russia, it reflects a U.S. foreign policy team that never bought into their leader’s early enthusiasm for President Vladimir Putin.

Edge ‘Eroding’
“Great-power competition -- not terrorism -- is now the primary focus of U.S. national security,” Mattis said in prepared remarks for a speech outlining the plan at the the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies in Washington.

He said “everything we do must contribute to the lethality of our military” because “our competitive edge in every domain of warfare -- air, land, sea, space and cyberspace -- is eroding.”

But the unclassified summary of the strategy offers few specifics of how U.S. forces should be structured to combat that threat, how many conflicts those forces must be ready to contest -- possibly simultaneously -- or the budget assumptions driving the document.

The report singles out China’s military modernization and expansion in the South China Sea as key threats to U.S. power. It also highlights Russian actions to undermine democratic processes in Georgia, Crimea and eastern Ukraine, as well as Moscow’s efforts to “shatter” the North Atlantic Treaty Organization.

“China and Russia are now undermining the international order from within the system by exploiting its benefits while simultaneously undercutting its principles and ‘rules of the road,” according to the report.

North Korea, Iran
Reflecting some of the key foreign policy challenges the Trump administration has confronted in its first year, the report also addresses dangers posed by Iran, North Korea and terrorism, saying that changes in technology and threats from non-state actors mean “that the homeland is no longer a sanctuary.”

“Rogue regimes such as North Korea and Iran are destabilizing regions through their pursuit of nuclear weapons or sponsorship of terrorism,” according to the report, which called out the government in Tehran for its ballistic missile program and exports.

More specific questions about how to counter U.S. threats -- and how much it may cost -- are probably addressed in the classified version of the report and will be the focus of the fiscal 2019-2023 budget expected to be released next month. The summary published Friday reiterates calls to modernize the U.S. nuclear weapons arsenal, boost investments in cyber capabilities and missile defense and approach space as a “warfighting domain.”


It’s not clear how the document’s vision will translate into the military’s fiscal 2019 budget, the second of the Trump administration, which will be measured by the amount it exceeds budget caps mandated by the 2011 Budget Control Act -- $562 billion for overall national defense and $534 billion for the Pentagon’s base spending.

“No enemy in the field has done more to harm the readiness of the U.S. military than” the “budgetary confusion” imposed by the caps and by stopgap spending measures passed by Congress, Mattis said.

Pressed about budget assumptions underpinning the strategy, Elbridge Colby, deputy assistant secretary for strategy and force development, was vague. In a briefing for reporters before the report’s release, he said “the strategy was really developed as a strategy” of “what was best for the nation, but not obtuse to resource requirements.”

Finding Resources
Kathleen McInnis, international security analyst at the nonpartisan Congressional Research Service, said the budgetary challenge is fashioning a military that can take on Russia and China while also dealing with “regional and transnational spoilers.”

“The question is whether DOD will have the resources to implement the strategy, both in terms of budget and support from allies and partners -- and both of which are, arguably, central to its execution,” McInnis said.

The new strategy also calls for more robust engagement with NATO allies to “fortify the trans-Atlantic alliance” -- while pressing them to boost defense expenditures, one of Trump’s frequent themes. It also says the U.S. will seek to “form enduring coalitions in the Middle East” and expand Indo-Pacific alliances and partnerships.

The new strategy can be compared in terms of scope to the 2010 Quadrennial Defense Review published in February 2010 during the Obama administration. That plan, signed by then-Defense Secretary Robert Gates, outlined the challenges posed by China’s “anti-access” strategy to keep U.S. forces at bay, but Russia wasn’t mentioned. That document instead focused on winning wars in Iraq and Afghanistan “while building the capabilities needed to deal with future threats.”

The Mattis strategy, by contrast, calls for a small carrot and a large stick, saying, “We continue to seek areas of cooperation with China and Russia based on shared concerns, but we will thwart their use of coercion and intimidation to advance their goals and harm U.S. Interests.”

Reflecting the rapid technological developments since 2010, the new strategy said the Pentagon “will invest broadly in military application of autonomy, artificial intelligence and machine learning, including rapid application of commercial breakthroughs.”
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