By Lt. Col. David Huxsoll, 42nd Air Base Wing Public Affairs
/ Published November 20, 2015
MAXWELL AIR FORCE BASE, Ala. (AFNS) -- The end of the Cold
War, coupled with the conflicts in Afghanistan and Iraq, caused American
decision-makers to focus on present-day conflicts, but a resurgent Russia, the
rise of new non-state actors and new threats in the cyber realm have brought
about a renewed focus on the concept of deterrence, according to faculty and
researchers at Air University.
Joint Publication 1-02 defines deterrence as “the prevention
of action by the existence of a credible threat of unacceptable counteraction
and/or the belief that the cost of action outweighs the perceived benefits.”
“Part of what makes deterrence difficult is that deterrence
is successful when nothing happens, so it’s very hard to measure.” said Dr.
Adam Lowther, a former AU research professor, who now serves as the director of
the School for Advanced Nuclear Deterrence Studies.
Lowther said conflict can be conceived as a pyramid.
“At the top of that conflict is nuclear conflict,” he said.
“At the bottom is terrorism as we generally think of it. The top is the worst
case but least likely. At the bottom is the least dangerous but most likely.”
The nuclear deterrent force remains to be defined by the
triad of bombers, intercontinental ballistic missiles and submarines.
“The Air Force and the Navy are all looking to update their
nuclear arsenals,” said Col. Charles Patnaude, the Air University Global Strike
Command chair.
However, deterrence is not an exclusively military concept,
said Lt. Col. Dave Lyle, the deputy director of warfighting and education and
AU’s Curtis E. LeMay Center for Doctrine Development and Education.
“It’s part of everyday human interaction,” he said. “We have
different competing interests, we have different ways we would like to see the
world and we try to influence others to go along with the way we like to see
things happen.
“When you’re talking about trying to deter terrorists or
non-state actors, they usually exist in a much larger social context. We
concentrate on how many foreign fighters are in one area of Syria, but the even
more interesting question is, ‘where are they all coming from?’ What is causing
them to want to collect in this one area to fight in support of their
ideology?”
Air University has committed its intellectual resources to
the study an understanding of deterrence. The 2015 AU Strategic Plan identifies
deterrence as an area where it is committed to providing research, analysis,
and recommendations that address priority issues for the Air Force.
“Deterrence is resurgent,” Lowther said. “Both an interest
and need for an understanding of deterrence is really returning, and Air
University and the Air Force are making a distinct effort to improve the
understanding of Airmen in regards to deterrence – both conventional and nuclear
and in the new realms of cyber.”
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