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<TITLE>2001Book - Final</TITLE>
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Chapter 29
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U.S. Defense Strategy: From Threat-Based to Capabilities-Based Planning
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<P ALIGN="CENTER"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="3" FACE="Palatino">
The Honorable William Schneider<BR>
Chairman of the Defense Science Board, Office of the U.S. Secretary of Defense
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<BR>
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<P ALIGN="LEFT"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="2" FACE="Palatino">
<FONT COLOR="#000000" FACE="Palatino" SIZE="7">T</FONT>he timing and focus of this Workshop is perfect, since President Bush
 is about to make a statement concerning the evolution of U.S. strategy.
 The process the President has initiated is intended to better couple strategy
 and purpose to acquisition and R&amp;D, so that our defense policy is enduring
 and predictable and can help us determine how we allocate resources for
 national defense well into the future. As I think about this topic, I am
 reminded of a dialogue between the British composer Sir Thomas Beecham,
 a famous conductor of the classical repertoire, and an equally famous critic
 of contemporary music about 40 years ago. The critic asked Beecham if he
 had ever performed, and Beecham responded, &#147;No, but I&#146;ve stepped in some.&#148;
 I think we have to make some very sharp distinctions about the paths we
 take and the strategy we develop so that we have a clear idea of why our
 military forces are serving and how they will be trained, organized, and
 equipped.
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<B>SIMILARITIES TO THE PAST</B>
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The strategic review President Bush has undertaken has certain structural
 parallels to an exercise that was undertaken almost 50 years ago by President
 Eisenhower in 1953. Eisenhower had inherited a legacy force from World
 War II that was largely mechanized infantry. He faced a completely different
 strategic environment from the wartime period in which the Soviet Union
 was our ally&#151;it had become a mortal enemy. The underlying technologies
 that were available for military applications, such as ballistic missiles,
 thermonuclear weapons, nuclear propulsion for submarines and surface ships,
 and communications satellites and reconnaissance satellites, were at hand,
 but there was no real path for applying those technologies to the defense
 program. So the President undertook a top-down review over a five-month
 period in early 1953. That review subsequently produced a change in defense
 strategy that largely animated the U.S. post-World War II defense strategy
 for dealing with the Soviet bloc. The parallels between that time and today,
 at least structurally, bear noting, even though the circumstances are much
 different. The threat environment in both periods changed fundamentally.

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<B>CHANGING TO CAPABILITIES-BASED PLANNING</B>
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<P ALIGN="LEFT"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="2" FACE="Palatino">
Today we are no longer faced with one specific adversary. Indeed, it is
 no longer practical, as General Smith noted, to optimize our military forces
 against a specific threat. Our forces now need to be designed in such a
 way that they are much more flexible and adaptable to threats as they emerge.
 This means we must have not merely good but excellent intelligence about
 our adversaries&#146; intentions, because we have to be able to anticipate changes
 sufficiently far in advance to adapt our forces to the threats as they
 emerge. <FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" FACE="Times New Roman" SIZE="2"></FONT>
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Therefore, the U.S. must shift substantially from threat-based planning
 for its forces, in which it seeks to optimize those forces against a specific
 threat, to capabilities-based planning, in which we try to develop capabilities
 that will deal with the threats that pose the greatest danger to our interests&#151;threats
 of the use of weapons of mass destruction and long-range delivery, and
 threats of the use of high-tech, general-purpose forces that would pose
 a threat to our general-purpose forces. We are already concerned about
 the terrorist threat, and indeed we are spending three times as much on
 counter-terrorism as we are spending on missile defense. So having forces
 that are able to respond to a range of contingencies, even when we cannot
 predict those contingencies, is a part of the planning process that will
 lead, I think, to a greater rationalization of the coupling of strategic
 planning to the procurement and R&amp;D process.
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The concept of capabilities planning focuses on the need to have certain
 types of generic capabilities that contribute to the flexibility and adaptability
 of the forces. These forces need to be grounded in the sophisticated use
 of information, intensive applications, and effective C4ISR (Command, Control,
 Communications, Computers, Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance)
 so that the political leadership, the military leadership, Allied governments,
 and defense establishments are all aware of each situation throughout the
 depth of the theater. Further, these forces need to be coupled to a scheme
 of precision strikes so that the targets that are identified can be held
 at risk effectively across the Alliance. That is by no means an easy task,
 but the way the technology is evolving provides some hope that the task
 will be somewhat easier to accomplish in the future.
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<B>RESTRUCTURING THE INDUSTRIAL ENVIRONMENT</B>
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<P ALIGN="LEFT"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="2" FACE="Palatino">
As Al Volkman has suggested, the need to restructure the industrial environment
 to accommodate 21<FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" FACE="Palatino" SIZE="1"><SUP>st</SUP></FONT><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" FACE="Palatino" SIZE="2">-century realities is an important dimension of our
 task. In the Cold War period, certainly the sources of military capabilities
 arose from technologies developed in the defense sector. These sources
 were typically developed in secret and remained the property of the defense
 establishment, and over time trickled down into civil applications. In
 the 21</FONT><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" FACE="Palatino" SIZE="1"><SUP>st</SUP></FONT><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" FACE="Palatino" SIZE="2"> century, the situation is likely to be much different. Adversaries
 and friends alike will all have access to the same technology base. Defense
 applications will be largely derived from universally available technology
 in the civil sector. What is unique about the defense industry now is not
 that it will develop these technologies, such as telecommunications products,
 materials, computation, signal processing, and so forth, but that it will
 invent ingenious ways of integrating these universally available technologies
 into sophisticated military capabilities. It is this process of integration
 and systems engineering that is likely to be the industrial base&#146;s unique
 contribution within the Alliance.</FONT><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" FACE="Times New Roman" SIZE="2"></FONT>
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There are also hopeful signs, I think, of the industry&#146;s ability to contribute
 to the management of the industrial-base tensions that have existed within
 the Alliance and that continue to be a problem. Because we are all working
 from the same technology base, the technology is global, and access to
 it is nearly universal. The ability of Alliance industry to contribute,
 then, is more dependent on its capacity, systems engineering, and integration
 skills&#151;software, if you would like&#151;than on its vast installed base of industrial-scale
 manufacturing capabilities. Indeed, those capabilities are largely being
 rendered obsolete by the way in which technology is changing the need for
 defense products. Yet the installed base of defense equipment and facilities
 in the U.S. would take over $3 trillion to replace. And to modernize that
 base, based on a 25-year life span, it would take a defense investment
 of $250 to $300 billion a year, not a practical investment. A similar process
 would be required within the Alliance.
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In order to make a difference with this advanced technology, a relatively
 small fraction of our forces needs to be modernized, as several previous
 experiences show. Prior to World War II, the U.S. had only 8 aircraft carriers
 out of the nearly 600 ships that were in the U.S. Navy, but those 8 aircraft
 carriers proved to be the decisive instruments of U.S. military power in
 World War II. Similarly, only about 10 percent of Wehrmacht forces were
 mechanized infantry; the rest were largely foot infantry and horse-drawn
 equipment. But it was that 10 percent that was decisive, that made the
 difference. The technology behind information-intensive applications is
 now providing us with the opportunity to modernize the Alliance&#146;s military
 capabilities cost-effectively so they can interoperate at the cutting edge
 of the spear. That fact, I believe, provides a source of optimism that
 modernization can be very effective, especially if it is coupled with a
 shared view of strategic purposes and to defense forces committed to those
 purposes.
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