By Cheryl Pellerin
DoD News, Defense Media Activity
WASHINGTON, Feb. 17, 2015 – Ash Carter becomes the 25th
secretary of defense today after having served previously as deputy defense
secretary, defense acquisition chief and assistant secretary for global
strategic affairs.
When President Barack Obama nominated Carter for the
position -- calling Carter an innovator and a reformer who knows the Defense
Department inside and out –- the president said, “On Day One, he’s going to hit
the ground running.”
At his Feb. 4 Senate Armed Services Committee confirmation
hearing, Carter described the work that lies ahead for him and the department.
“I think we are in a time,” he told the Senate panel, “where
the number and severity of risks is something I've not seen before in my life.”
Risks to the Nation
For Carter, the job will include dealing with coalition
responsibilities in Afghanistan and Iraq, and what he described as “the
malignant and savage terrorism” emanating from turmoil in the Middle East and
North Africa.
He’ll also take on what has become a reversion to what he’s
called old-style security thinking in parts of Europe, long-standing tensions
and rapid changes in Asia, a continuing imperative to counter the spread of
weapons of mass destruction, and dangers in new domains such as cyber.
Carter’s own expertise, experience, travels and interests in
defense and national security have prepared him precisely to deal with these
challenges and more.
As former U.S. Sen. Joe Lieberman said in introductory remarks
during Carter’s hearing, “It would really be hard to find someone to serve as
secretary of defense who combines as much practical Pentagon experience with so
deep a background in national security policy as Ash Carter.”
Issues and Allies in NATO
Over his career, Carter has developed important
relationships among military and foreign policy leaders of U.S. partners and
allies in NATO. In 2013, as part of an expert panel at the 49th Annual Munich
Security Conference, Carter explored DoD’s strategic approach to 21st-century
threats for an audience of international foreign and defense ministers and
security policy officials.
“I think our strength in Europe is our alliance with NATO
and the political solidarity that represents, which is very important when it
comes to the Baltic states and the response in Ukraine,” he said during his
confirmation hearing.
Carter told members of the Senate Armed Services Committee
that economic and political pressure on Russia and President Vladimir Putin has
to remain the center of gravity in the U.S. effort to push back against the
incursion of Russian troops into Ukraine.
Budapest Memorandum
Carter was present and involved in the 1994 signing in
Hungary of the Budapest Memorandum on Security Assurances. In the diplomatic
document signed there by Ukraine, Russia, the United States and the United
Kingdom, Ukraine agreed to remove all Soviet-era nuclear weapons from its
territory, send them to Russian disarmament facilities and sign the Nuclear
Nonproliferation Treaty, all of which it did.
Russia, the United States and the United Kingdom agreed to
accept Ukraine as an independent sovereign state.
“I was in Ukraine the day the last nuclear weapon rode
across the border from Ukraine into Russia,” Carter said. “That agreement
provided for Russia to respect the territorial integrity of Ukraine, which it
obviously has not done.”
In that agreement the United States took on a commitment not
only to respect, but also to assure, “the ability of Ukraine to find its own
way as an independent country,” he added. “That is at stake today.”
Finishing the Job in Afghanistan
Warfighters’ needs -- for weapons, equipment, training and
more -- were a driving force in Carter’s nine official trips to Afghanistan
during the International Security Assistance Force combat mission there.
Carter spent some of his last days as deputy defense secretary
in Afghanistan over the Thanksgiving holiday in 2013. On Thanksgiving Day,
after meeting with U.S. and Afghan military leaders and shaking hands with 150
troops at Forward Operating Base Gamberi in eastern Afghanistan’s Laghman
province, Carter and his wife, Stephanie, got behind the dining facility’s
steam tables and happily served turkey to the men and women in uniform.
At several stops, Carter was honored as a champion for
troops in moving the Pentagon acquisition process beyond bureaucracy and into the
life-saving business with a range of tools produced in a timely way.
A Champion for Troops
These included mine-resistant, ambush-protected vehicles;
unmanned aerial systems; counter-roadside-bomb equipment; persistent
surveillance by way of the aerostat, or an immobile balloon-type structure
filled with a lifting gas -- what Carter called ‘a poor man’s Predator unmanned
vehicle’ -- and medical advances produced during the long wars in Iraq and
Afghanistan.
“The campaign in Afghanistan has been close to my heart for
all the time that I've been associated with the Department of Defense,” he said
during his confirmation hearing.
“I think success is possible there, but … requires the
United States to continue its campaign and finish the job,” he added, noting
that he supports the president’s plan for Afghanistan but will recommend
changes if he sees a need for them.
In the Middle East region, Carter told the Senate panel, “I
think we have two immediate, substantial dangers -- one is [the Islamic State
of Iraq and the Levant, or ISIL, and one is Iran,” he said.
A Serious Complication
Carter called Iran’s role a “serious complication” in the
region and in the coalition fight against ISIL being waged in Iraq and
stretching across the border into Syria.
During his hearing, in answer to a question about reports of
Iran’s recent use of a two-stage rocket to place another satellite in orbit,
Carter said continued Iranian development of ballistic missile technology is “a
threat not only to the United States but friends and allies in the region, and
it's just one of the things Iran is doing that is dangerous.”
“That's one of the reasons why we need to keep our missile
defenses and especially our [intercontinental ballistic missile] defenses
current, capable and large enough in size to deal with both the prospective
Iranian threat and the also very real North Korean ICBM threat,” Carter
explained.
On the international fight against ISIL, Carter said that
regional partners in the fight will help the United States make sure the defeat
inflicted on ISIL is lasting, and that it keeps ISIL from creating breeding
grounds for its “malignant and vicious kind of terrorism.” U.S. involvement is
essential and necessary, he added, but not sufficient by itself for lasting victory.
Rebalance to the Asia-Pacific Region
During his Jan. 20 State of the Union address, Obama said
the United States is modernizing alliances in the Asia-Pacific region while
making sure other nations play by the rules in how they trade, resolve maritime
disputes and work to meet common international challenges like nonproliferation
and disaster relief.
A big part of the transition is the military rebalance to
the region, where Carter traveled extensively as deputy secretary to explain
the rebalance and to reassure political and military leaders there that budget
cuts would not affect the U.S. commitment.
In 2013, a March trip to Asia included visits to defense and
government officials in Japan, South Korea, Indonesia and the Philippines. In
Indonesia, as part of an international panel at the third Jakarta International
Defense Dialogue, Carter said the United States is serious about its commitment
to the region and detailed elements in motion of a rebalance called for in the
department’s 2012 Defense Strategic Guidance.
Keeping Peace and Stability
Carter called the rebalance a commitment to continue the
pivotal American military role in the Asia-Pacific theater, a presence that for
decades has kept peace and stability there, and created an environment for
explosive economic growth.
At his confirmation hearing, Carter said the United States
could rebalance to the Asia-Pacific region while keeping its commitments in the
Middle East and Europe.
“My view is that we can and must,” he added. Though ISIL and
events in Ukraine are critically important and require much attention, “we have
to remember that half the population of the world and half its economy is in
[the Asia-Pacific] region,” he said.
Multilaterally, Carter has said, DoD recognizes the importance
of strengthening regional institutions such as the Association of Southeast
Asian Nations, which plays a critical role in maintaining regional stability
and resolving disputes through diplomacy.
The Importance of South Asia
The rebalance is a transition not only to the Asia-Pacific
but within the region, Carter told the Senate panel. As former Defense
Secretary Chuck Hagel’s deputy, Carter’s portfolio included serving as the
department’s point man in defense relations with India.
“India is, in my view, destined to be a strategic partner of
the United States,” Carter said, characterizing the nation as a large democracy
that shares many U.S. political values and the values of pluralism.
“I think that destiny will bring us together, but I'm for
hastening that,” he added, with collaborative efforts in military-to-military
relations and defense and technology cooperation.
For all their economic relations, India and every other
country in South Asia depend on peaceful relations and trade with one another,
Carter observed at the time.
“The top priority of all those governments, they’ll tell
you, is economic prosperity,” he added, “and that can’t be had without security
within their borders and with their neighbors with whom they have to trade.”
The Very Newest in Technology
One tenet of the 2012 defense strategy was to pursue the
very newest in technology and operational art, Carter said many times in his
role as deputy defense secretary.
“Investments in this area target special operations forces,
capabilities in space and in intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance, and
cyberspace,” he said.
In 2012, during a keynote address to participants at the
annual RSA Conference on cryptography and information security in San Francisco,
Carter said DoD is deeply involved in and committed to cybersecurity and the
department’s responsibility to defend the nation.
“That explains, for us -- and in this I speak for [the
defense secretary and the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff] and other
department leadership -- our real sense of urgency about cyber and our
willingness, indeed eagerness, to be a leading part of, where appropriate, the
march to cybersecurity that we're all just beginning.”
Urgency About Cyberspace
On cyberspace, Carter said during his confirmation hearing
that the federal government has a role in protecting the country from
cyberattacks in the same way it has a role in protecting the country from other
kinds of attacks.
“I think [the government] can do a lot more to exercise that
responsibility without causing concerns over invasions of people's privacy,” he
added.
The government can share information and knowledge it has
collected about threats to private networks with those private parties, for
example, if proper legal safeguards are provided, Carter said. And these have
less to do with privacy than they do with things such as antitrust and other
important legal aspects, he added.
“I think the government can sponsor and conduct [research
and development] that improves the tradecraft in network defense for the good
of the country,” he said. “So I think there's a lot we can do, and we're not
anywhere near where we should be as a country.”
21st-century Defense Strategy
Carter often characterized as a strategic crossroads the
department’s transition from wars in Iraq and Afghanistan to a renewed
political and economic focus on the Asia-Pacific region and the need to absorb
defense budget reductions.
"These two great historical currents are coming
together," Carter said in 2013, “and it's my view that they can, if
managed properly, reinforce one another.”
During a November 2013 address on national security
leadership in Annapolis, Maryland, Carter detailed for 250 U.S. Naval Academy
midshipmen the strategic tasks facing the Defense Department as the 21st
century unfolds.
One of these was to maintain a technological edge over U.S.
adversaries, and Carter -- who holds a doctorate in theoretical physics from
Oxford University, where he was a Rhodes Scholar -- said maintaining a
technological edge over competitors is the surest way to deter conflict.
Maintaining a Technological Edge
The nation, he added, must continue to invest in technologies
that will be essential to 21st-century defense, and the president and the
department have focused on protecting critical investments, even in times of
budget austerity.
DoD is increasing investments in the cyber domain because of
growing threats to national security and critical infrastructure, Carter said.
In the space domain, the department is rebalancing its portfolio to better
defend against threats, degrade enemy space capabilities and operate in a
contested environment.
The department also is investing in intelligence,
surveillance and reconnaissance and unmanned assets, he said, including
platforms that launch from land and sea, and operate well above the Earth’s
surface and deep under the sea.
“I would say,” Carter said during his confirmation hearing,
“that the world continues to pose serious challenges to international order,
and that the United States is indispensable to the solution of those
challenges.”
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