By Jim Garamone DoD News, Defense Media Activity
All DoD personnel need to read and internalize the new
National Defense Strategy, Deputy Defense Secretary Patrick M. Shanahan said
here Jan. 19.
“This is not a document; it is a means to an end,” the
deputy secretary said in an interview. “The strategy creates alignment and
transparency.”
Defense Secretary James N. Mattis unveiled the bones of the
strategy during a speech at the Johns Hopkins Paul Nitze School for Advanced International
Studies in Washington. An 11-page summary of the strategy is available on the
Defense Department’s website.
Shanahan said he wants the more than 2 million members of
DoD to be in alignment with the strategy to create a powerful impetus to making
the joint force more lethal, helping DoD to strengthen old alliances and build
new partnerships, and reforming the way the department does business.
“When you have a common understanding of priorities and a
common lexicon, we’re the most powerful team in the world,” Shanahan said.
Foundational for Future Budgets
The NDS is foundational, the deputy secretary said. “As we
put together the fiscal 2019 budget, it was derived from the framework of the
National Defense Strategy,” he said. “We apply our resources based on the way
we budget. So, if the strategy is going to come to life, it must be resourced.
It has been the foundation of what we put together for ’19, and it will be the
underpinning for what we do for fiscal 2020.”
The essence of the strategy is that it is not prescriptive
-- it’s directional and descriptive, he said. “The strategy in its most
distilled form is about doing more,” Shanahan said. “It’s about being more
lethal, it’s about having more relationships and it’s about being more
affordable.”
Technology is important, but that is not where most of the
money is riding, he said. “All of our bets are on people,” he added.
“Technology is an enabler to allow people to do more. The thing that makes our
military great is our ability to be joint and its will. The investment we make
is to enable greater will and greater jointness. That’s what flows out of the
strategy.”
People are at the heart of the joint force, and the strategy
recognizes it, Shanahan said. “When I’m sitting in the room with the staffs …
thinking about strategy, I’m really thinking about the person most downrange,”
he said. “It’s all about how do we make them more lethal? How do we make their
efforts easier? How do we make them smarter, faster, stronger, better?”
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