By Cheryl Pellerin
American Forces Press Service
MUNICH, Feb. 1, 2014 – In a changing security and fiscal
environment, the Defense Department will seek to collaborate more closely with
European allies, especially to help build the capabilities of other global
partners, Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel said this morning.
He and State Department Secretary John Kerry formed a panel
here at the Munich Security Conference, which ends Feb. 2. The conference, a
key gathering for the international strategic community, was called the
Internationale Wehrkunde-Begegnung when it began in 1963. Wehrkunde, pronounced
“verkunda,” literally translates as “military science.”
The afternoon panel addressed the need for a transatlantic
renaissance that will tune defense partnerships, investments and international
relationships to common threats that have become persistent, pressing and
global.
Such threats, Hagel said in his opening remarks, “emanate
from political instability and violent extremism in the Middle East and North
Africa, dangerous nonstate actors, rogue nations such as North Korea, cyber
warfare, demographic changes, economic disparity, poverty and hunger.”
China and Russia are modernizing their militaries and global
defense industries, challenging the U.S. technological edge and its
international defense partnerships, the secretary added, and the world will
continue to grow more interconnected, complicated and in many cases
combustible.
“The challenges and choices before us will demand leadership
that reaches into the future without stumbling over the present,” Hagel said,
adding that the United States and Europe must together meet this “challenge of
change.”
With the U.S. transitioning off of a 13-year war footing,
it’s clear to the president and the nation that the future demands an enhanced
era of partnership with U.S. friends and allies, especially in Europe, the
secretary added.
U.S. and European budget constraints make it necessary for
both partners to invest more strategically, protecting military capability and
readiness, Hagel said, to share burdens and opportunities.
“The Defense Department’s strategy and defense investments
will make clear that the United States sees Europe as its indispensable
partner” in addressing the new threats, challenges and opportunities, he added,
and NATO is the centerpiece of the transatlantic defense partnership.
A key theme of the upcoming DOD Quadrennial Defense Review
will be the need for the military to place even greater strategic emphasis on
working with allies and partners around the world in a changing security and
fiscal environment, the secretary said.
“The Department of Defense will work closely with our
allies’ different and individual strengths and capabilities, from the training
of indigenous forces to more advanced combat missions,” Hagel said.
Promising new initiatives include Germany’s Framework
Nations concept, in which clusters of nations are responsible for different
defense areas of competence. Such a distribution of effort, the secretary said,
could help NATO plan and invest more efficiently.
In Africa, the U.S. military and European allies are
partners in combating violent extremism and working alongside U.S. diplomats to
avert humanitarian catastrophes, he added.
“In Mali and the Central African Republic, U.S. and European
partners are providing specialized enablers such as air transport and
refueling. We’re there to support a leading operational role for French
forces,” Hagel said.
“The United States has supported France’s leadership and
efforts,” he added, “and we welcome German Minister [Ursula] von der Leyen’s
recent proposal to increase German participation in both [African] countries.”
The United States and its allies must work more closely with
African nations to help them build their own security forces and institutions,
Hagel noted.
A more collaborative approach to global security challenges
calls for U.S. and allied defense establishments to cooperate on operational
and strategic levels, he said.
“We are working with … the United Kingdom and Australia,
building closer collaboration between our militaries across a range of areas,
from force development to force posture, the secretary said. He noted as an
example the United States’ assistance to the United Kingdom as they regenerate
their aircraft carrier capability to enable more integrated operation of U.S.
advanced F-35 fighters and enhance both nations’ shared ability to project
power.
Last year, he added, an Australian Army officer became
deputy commanding general of U.S. Army forces in the Pacific, helping connect
U.S. and Australian forces more strategically with other allies and partners in
the region.
Hagel said such collaboration offers a model for closer
integration with other allies and partners, including NATO as a whole, and will
influence U.S. strategic planning and future investments.
“Sustaining and enhancing these cooperative efforts will
require shared commitment and shared investment on both sides of the Atlantic,”
he said. “That includes the United States’ commitment to a strong military
posture in Europe.”
As the U.S. force structure draws down after the long war in
Afghanistan, posture adjustments to meet new challenges include efforts such as
responding to elevated threats to U.S. diplomatic facilities in North Africa
and the Middle East, the secretary said.
“We have partnered with Spain to position U.S. Marines in
Morón, and we have put other forces throughout the region on heightened alert
status. These forces not only enable us to respond to crises or support ongoing
operations but they also expand our diplomatic options,” he added.
And amid recent violence in South Sudan, Hagel said, the
rapid availability of nearby forces allowed American diplomats to remain on the
ground and help broker a ceasefire.
Another important posture enhancement is European missile
defense in response to ballistic missile threats from Iran, he added.
“Over the last two days I’ve been in Poland, where I
affirmed the United States’ commitment to deploying missile defense
architecture there as part of Phase Three of our European Phased Adaptive
Approach,” the secretary said.
Yesterday afternoon the guided missile destroyer USS Donald
Cook left the United States for Rota, Spain, he added, where over the next two
years three more missile-defense capable destroyers will join the Cook.
“Despite fiscal constraints, the budget we will release next
month fully protects our investment in European missile defense. Our commitment
to Europe is unwavering. Our values and our interests remain aligned,” Hagel
said.”
In his State of the Union address this week, President
Barack Obama called the U.S. alliance with Europe “the strongest the world has
ever known.”
Still, the most successful and effective collective security
alliance in history requires continued strong and visionary leadership,
attention, resources and commitment, the secretary said, adding that 50 years
from now, in 2064, there will still be a Wehrkunde, “and there will still be a
strong and enduring transatlantic alliance.”
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