American Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON, June 29, 2012 –
Collaboration, as much as military might, should play a key role in national
security, Defense Secretary Leon E. Panetta said here last night.
In remarks as part of the United States
Institute of Peace’s Acheson lecture series, Panetta outlined a blueprint for
building 21st-century partnerships and improving security cooperation across
several areas.
“We must be bold enough to adopt a more
collaborative approach to security, both within the United States government
and among allies, partners, and multilateral organizations,” he said, adding
that the United States must place even greater strategic emphasis on building
the security capabilities of others.
Panetta underscored the need to maintain
comprehensive and integrated capabilities in key regions to confront critical
security challenges.
"Unlike past defense drawdowns when
the threats the country was facing appeared to diminish, we still confront many
challenges,” the secretary said.
Destabilizing behavior of nations such
as Iran and North Korea, the rise of new powers across Asia and the ongoing
need to deter aggression in the Middle East and North Africa, Panetta said,
have made partnership a critical component of peaceful and cooperative
international order.
“Our new strategy prioritizes the
Asia-Pacific region and the Middle East – the areas with the most significant
security challenges,” he said. “We will retain … our military presence, … but
we are also going to help more nations share the responsibilities and costs of
providing security by investing in alliances and partnerships.”
These partnerships will include
engagement in exercises, training and innovative rotational deployments, the
secretary added.
Panetta acknowledged that the United
States must face these challenges while grappling with a deficit and debt
problem that has led Congress to seek nearly half a trillion dollars in defense
savings over the next decade. This, he added, requires reshaped priorities that
will include a leaner, agile and quickly deployable force on the cutting edge
of technology while continuing to develop key capabilities.
“We will … continue to invest in the
capabilities of the future such as cyber, unmanned systems, space, special
operations forces, and the ability to quickly mobilize and maintain our
industrial base,” he said.
Panetta said his strategies built on
many enduring philosophies put forth by Dean Acheson, for whom the lecture
series is named. As secretary of state from 1949 to 1953, Acheson was a leading
proponent for bolstering America’s military might and was a principal architect
of America’s foreign policy.
“Acheson strongly believed that America
should not seek to shoulder the burden and costs for global security alone,”
the secretary said. “Instead, he understood that a key part of a strong defense
was to build the security capacity of allies and partners.”
Panetta praised Acheson’s
forward-thinking in policy from Western Europe and NATO to South Korea, from
the Truman Doctrine to the Nixon Doctrine, and the statesman’s involvement with
key allies and regional partners to build a sound U.S. national security
strategy after World War II.
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