By Jim Garamone DoD News, Defense Media Activity
WASHINGTON, Jan. 19, 2018 — The new National Defense
Strategy is a good fit for the times, emphasizing the return of great power
rivalry, yet still addressing other threats that abound in the world today,
Defense Secretary James N. Mattis said today.
The secretary unveiled the strategy at the Paul H. Nitze
School of Advanced International Studies and stressed that the strategy is not
merely a defense strategy, but an American strategy. The school is a division
of the Johns Hopkins University based in Washington.
The strategy -- the first new strategy in a decade -- is
based on the National Security Strategy President Donald J. Trump announced in
December.
New Strategy Reclaims ‘An Era of Strategic Purpose’
“Today, America's military reclaims an era of strategic
purpose and we're alert to the realities of a changing world and attentive to
the need to protect our values and the countries that stand with us,” the
secretary said. “America's military protects our way of life and I want to
point out it also protects a realm of ideas. It's not just about protecting
geography. This is a defense strategy that will guide our efforts in all
realms.”
Threats have changed since the last strategy. There is
increasing global volatility and uncertainty with challenges from Russia and
China coming to the fore. “Though we will continue to prosecute the campaign
against terrorists that we are engaged in today, but great power competition,
not terrorism, is now the primary focus of U.S. national security,” the
secretary said.
The strategy will provide the American people the military
required “to protect our way of life, stand with our allies and live up to our
responsibility to pass intact to the next generation those freedoms that all of
us enjoy here today,” Mattis said.
The strategy expands the U.S. military’s competitive space,
prioritizes preparedness for war, provides clear direction for significant
change at the speed of relevance and builds a more lethal force to compete
strategically.
Tough Choices
In forming the strategy, officials had to make tough
choices, “and we made them based upon a fundamental precept, namely that
America can afford survival,” Mattis said.
“We face growing threats from revisionist powers as
different as China and Russia are from each other, nations that do seek to
create a world consistent with their authoritarian models, pursuing veto
authority over other nations' economic, diplomatic and security decisions,” he
said.
The threat from rogue regimes like North Korea and Iran
persist. And even though ISIS’s physical caliphate is no more, the group -- and
other extremist organizations -- continues to sow hatred.
“In this time of change, our military is still strong, yet
our competitive edge has eroded in every domain of warfare: air, land, sea,
space and cyberspace, and it is continuing to erode,” the secretary said.
‘Our Military Will Win Should Diplomacy Fail’
Sixteen years of war, rapid technological change, defense
spending caps, and seemingly continuous continuing resolutions “have created an
overstretched and under-resourced military,” he said. “Our military's role is
to keep the peace; to keep the peace for one more year, one more month, one
more week, one more day; to ensure our diplomats who are working to solve
problems do so from a position of strength and giving allies confidence in us.
This confidence is underpinned by the assurance that our military will win
should diplomacy fail.”
Mattis said the supremacy of American military is not
preordained. “It is incumbent upon us to field a more lethal force if our
nation is to retain the ability to defend ourselves and what we stand for,”
Mattis said. “The defense strategy's three primary lines of effort will restore
our comparative military advantage.”
The strategy commits the department to build a more lethal
joint force. It calls for strengthening old alliances and building new ones.
“At the same time, we'll reform our department's business practices for
performance and affordability,” the secretary said.
An enemy will attack any perceived weakness, Mattis said.
The American military, therefore, must be able to fight across the spectrum of
conflict. “This means that the size and the composition of our force matters,”
he said. “The nation must field sufficient capable forces to deter conflict.
And if deterrence fails, we must win.”
Mattis added, “To those who would threaten America's
experiment in democracy, they must know: If you challenge us it will be your
longest and your worst day. Work with our diplomats: You don't want to fight the
Department of Defense.”
Alliances are key to American success, the secretary said.
“In my past, I fought many times and never did I fight in a solely American
formation,” Mattis said. “It was always alongside foreign troops.”
The American military must be designed, trained and ready to
fight alongside allies, he added. “History proves that nations with allies
thrive, an approach to security and prosperity that has served the United
States well in keeping peace and winning war,” Mattis said. “Working by, with
and through allies who carry their equitable share allows us to amass the
greatest possible strength.”
Reforming DoD’s Business Practices
The third line of effort, he said, will be the foundation
for the U.S. competitive edge: reforming the business practices of the
department.
“We are going to have to be good stewards of the tax dollars
allocated to us, and that means results and accountability matter,” the
secretary said. “The department will transition to a culture of performance and
affordability that operates at the speed of relevance. Success does not go to
the country that develops a new technology first, but rather, to the one that better
integrates it and more swiftly adapts its way of fighting.”
Deputy Defense Secretary Patrick M. Shanahan is already
leading this effort. He expects it to leverage the scale of operations, driving
better deals for equipping troops and modernizing systems.
This strategy means nothing if the resources are not in
place, Mattis said. “No strategy can long survive without necessary funding and
the stable, predictable budgets required to defend America in the modern age,”
he said. “Failure to modernize our military risks leaving us with a force that
could dominate the last war, but be irrelevant to tomorrow's security.”
Continuing Resolutions Harm Military Readiness
Mattis added, “Let me be clear. As hard as the last 16 years
have been on our military, no enemy in the field has done more to harm the
readiness of the U.S. military than the combined impact of the Budget Control
Act's defense spending cuts, worsened … by us operating, nine of the last 10
years, under continuing resolutions, wasting copious amounts of precious
taxpayer dollars.”
The military continues to work tirelessly to accomplish the
mission with now inadequate and misaligned resources, simply because the
Congress cannot maintain regular order, Mattis said.
“That we have performed well is a credit to our wonderful
and loyal troops, but loyalty must be a two-way street,” he said. “We expect
the magnificent men and women of our military to be faithful in their service,
even when going in harm's way. We must remain faithful to those who voluntarily
sign a blank check, payable to the American people with their lives.”
Under the Constitution, it is Congress that has the
authority to raise armies and navies, Mattis said.
“Yet as I stand here this morning, watching the news, as we
all are, from Capitol Hill, we're on the verge of a government shutdown or, at
best, yet another debilitating continuing resolution,” he said. “We need
Congress back in the driver's seat of budget decisions, not in the spectator
seat of Budget Control Acts' indiscriminate and automatic cuts. We need a
budget and we need budget predictability if we're to sustain our military's
primacy.”
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