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Speeches
U.S. Military: Strength Through
Flexibility
Remarks by James H. Webb,
Jr.; Secretary of the Navy
National Press
Club, Washington D.C.
January 13,1988
Countless commentators have
already marked 1988 as a threshold year, and certainly we are in a period of
rather uncomfortable transition as a nation, a period whose dynamics we do
not yet fully comprehend. Certain realities are more apparent than others,
however, and I would like to talk to you today about my view of the
realities facing the Navy and the U.S. military as a whole. Reality seems to
indicate that we need to make some adjustments in our military posture
around the world, and the good of the country mandates that we do so in the
best way that will serve our future as a nation, not merely as a service or
as a Defense Department.
First, the realities:
-- We are not as rich, compared to other nations with whom we are allied, as
we were when we sketched out the basic framework of our international
military presence just after World War Two. In the decade following that
war, our country consistently produced more than 40 percent of the world's
Gross Domestic Product. In recent years, that figure has been about 25
percent.
-- Nor is the Defense Department as well off as it was even a year ago, and
the future looks equally difficult. As most of you know, last month the
Department of Defense was required to reduce an existing fiscal 1989 budget
by more than 33 billion dollars.
__ We are being told in no uncertain terms, and from many different fronts,
that due to fiscal realities the U.S. military of the future must be smaller
and more efficient.
--We are also hearing, quite frequently and with equal fervor, that in the
aftermath of the INF agreements the conventional threat in Europe will be
larger, and that conventional force structure there should receive more
emphasis.
-.We also know, and there is no question about this, that our future as a
nation is very closely tied to Asia in economic and political terms, and
that we must do a better job of attending to the economic, political and
security issues here in our own hemisphere.
-- And the overriding reality is that it should be obvious that a smaller
United States military, no matter how efficient, cannot attend to all of
these matters by itself, at least not in the same way that it has over the
past 42 years.
The key question for our national leadership as it struggles with these
realities is not one program or another in the budget, as has so often been
the case, but whether, and how, the United States can maintain its
commitments throughout the world, while at the same time reducing the size
and force structure of its military.
It is a little bit easier to point out
what we cannot do. The first answer is that we cannot do it at all without a
great deal of risk, in both diplomatic and military terms. The second, and I
have been saying this for much longer than I have been Secretary of the
Navy, is that it would be impossible to do it with any degree of
effectiveness and at the same time reduce the size of our Navy. And the
third answer is that we cannot do it without the increased cooperation and
help of our allies.
The only clear answer to our dilemma is for us to take a fresh look at the
world and our place in it, and to seriously debate the posture of the U.S.
military in that context. In other words, we need to "zero base" our
military commitments, and to justify to ourselves the force structure, roles
and missions, and location of our military units based on a reassessment of
where things stand in the world. This debate would be most helpful to us if
it began immediately. It needs to be done honestly, absent the usual
parochial veil that surrounds even the most minor of such discussions. It
should f low from certain logical principles, from an examination of our
history, and of the evolving relationship of the United States with the rest
of the world. National resources, changes in world economic structure,
recent political changes, and the improved capabilities of many of our
allies, dictate that we must, perhaps for the first time since the late
1940s, seriously debate the posture of the U.S. military around the world,
and the roles and missions assigned to our military services.
We all know that our worldwide posture was undertaken in a different era.
While it may be correct to term that period as one of unprecedented strength
for the United States,, a more accurate description may be that it was one
of unprecedented weakness for many nations who historically have been
strong, and who had either been ravaged or exhausted by World War Two. We
held things together while they got back onto their feet. We continued to
hold things together after they got back onto their feet. They now have
regained their strength, almost, without exception due to the generosity of
this nation under the Marshall Plan and other economic recovery programs,
and under the umbrella of our military protection.
The extent of our military involvement around the world since we undertook
these obligations has been unprecedented in our history, particularly with
respect to long-term, static defensive positions that have drained both our
economic and military resources. It can be fairly argued that the economic
recovery of other nations has not uniformly been met with a complete
re-assumption of their obligation to join us in protecting the way of life,
and the values, that we share.
This is not to suggest that major changes could take place immediately, but
rather that we must establish the guideposts that will take us into the next
century. The current defense posture has been important to worldwide
stability for more than 40 years. But the world is changing, and if we do
not address these changes, and others yet to come,, then events will rule us
rather than the reverse.
I mentioned logical principles. I would like to lay out what I believe are
the most important premises, the touchstones, if you will, for any analysis
of what our defense priorities should be, and thus where our military forces
should operate, and at what level. There may be disagreement with portions
of what I am about to say, but allow me to advance the following thoughts as
an analytical beginning.
First, although a great deal of
energy and money is dedicated to our NATO alliance, and although this
alliance is one of the keystones of our military structure, we need to
remind ourselves from time to time that we are more than a European nation.
We are a global nation with largely European antecedents, continuing
European interests, and national loyalties to Western Europe's fundamental
objectives. We must remain strong in Europe, but we also have the obligation
to view the Soviet military threat in global, rather than regional terms,
and to address that threat worldwide.
The United States and the Soviet Union must face each other at many other
points on the globe. Many of the most critical points of tension, and
certainly many of the evolving areas of confrontation, are far from Europe.
The United States has a requirement, contrary to European nations, to view
the Soviet military threat in Europe through more than a European prism. And
to be fair to the other areas in which. we must operate, there is no region
better equipped through its resources, large population base, strong
economy, and military tradition to reassume a greater share of the burden of
its own defense than Western Europe.,'-Logic, then, should call for greater
responsibility by the Western Europeans for their own defense.
Second, the United States is
becoming more intertwined with Asia, and the issues involving Asia are
moving to the forefront in the world community.
In 1986 the United States did
219 billion dollars gross trade in Asia, 75 percent more than its gross
trade with the Atlantic nations. In economic, cultural and political terms,
we are becoming increasingly more tied to Asia, and it is imperative that we
match those ties with the military capability to protect our interests and
honor our obligations to friends and allies in the region.
Asian strategy is more difficult to define and to resource than European
strategy. The countries of Asia are at great variance in economic, political
and cultural terms. Vast ocean areas separate them. Still-evolving political
structures left over from the colonial era cause the sort of turbulence that
has claimed more than 100,000 American lives in Asia since World War Two.
But East Asia is an indispensable part of our country's future, and it
requires the same careful development of friendships and alliances that we
have cultivated in Europe. Nor should we forget that it provides the only
point in the world where the direct military interests of the Soviet Union,
The People's Republic of China, The United States, and Japan converge.
The Soviet Union is also placing a greater emphasis on East Asia, Southeast
Asia, and Southern Asia. While Soviet force structure in Europe has remained
relatively constant over the past decade, they have made marked advances in
Asia. The Soviets have achieved the historic Russian dream of owning a warm
water port in the Pacific, and on any given day two dozen Soviet ships are
in Cam Ranh Bay, Vietnam, as are fighter, bomber and long range
reconnaissance aircraft. They have increased their Far East Command by ten
divisions over the last ten years, and now have 530,000 ground troops in
East Asia, in addition to another 200,000 spread through Mongolia, the
Transbaikal, and Central Asia. The Far East military region has 85 Backfire
bombers, and nearly 2,500 combat aircraft. The Soviet Pacific Fleet is now
the largest of its four fleets, with 840 warships as opposed to 750 a decade
ago. These ships include two Kiev class aircraft carriers, a Kirov class
nuclear guided missile cruiser, 41 percent of the heavy surface ships in the
entire Soviet navy, 37 percent of the combat aircraft in Soviet naval
aviation, 40 percent of all their SSBNS, and extensive amphibious
capabilities.
The Soviets are militarily entrenched in Vietnam. They are said to be
looking for naval bases in North Korea. They have pursued in recent months a
defense relationship with Thailand. They have for three years running
attempted to offer a dry dock facility for the Australians in Perth. They
have become active in Polynesia and Micronesia. They have continued a close
defense relationship with India that began in 1971, during which the Indians
have increased their Army by 150,000 men to a size of 1.1 million -- much
larger than the United States Army their air force by 35,000 people to 11
5,000 and by 136 combat aircraft to a total of 761, and increased the force
structure of their Navy to include two aircraft carriers, 11 submarines, 21
frigates, and 18 minesweepers. Just recently,, the Soviets committed
themselves to providing the Indians a nuclear submarine.
And they have done all of this while pursuing vigorously a rapprochement
with the People's Republic of China.
Clearly, we cannot allow force structure reductions to affect our commitment
to the most dynamic and volatile area in the world. In fact, our
responsibility to meet Soviet pressure globally might logically dictate an
increase in our Asian presence that would match their obvious shift in
priority.
One element in this equation, obviously, must be the responsibility of the
Japanese as a friend, ally, and world power to assume a greater portion of
the regional military responsibility in Asia. Most of us are fully aware of
the dynamics of this issue, and I will not dwell on the intimate details. We
know and are sensitive to apprehensions in the region due to Japan's
activities 50 years ago. We understand the emotion that surrounds the
constitutional provision regarding Japanese self defense, and the famed "one
percent' threshold regarding defense spending. But we also know that the
Japanese have fully recovered from the spiritual and economic devastation of
World War Two, and that most of our countrymen believe it is time for the
Japanese to assume more of the burden of defending the way of life we now
share together as allies.
The Japanese have made measurable progress on this score, and have increased
their defense spending for several years in a row. Regional security demands
that they do more of this. Japan clearly has the resources and the national
interest to pick up more of the defense load in Asia. Japan is becoming the
largest creditor nation in the world. More than half of the oil that passes
through the Straits of Hormuz goes to Japan. I personally recommended as
early as 1973 that Japan include the defense of its sea lanes, even as far
as the Indian Ocean, in its constitutional interpretation of 'self-defense."
Oceangoing activities of that sort would aid in our alliance without
inciting the concern of other nations in the region that attended its land
occupations of forty4ive and fifty years ago.
Third, we must consider the Soviets themselves. No analysis of our own
future defense priorities can leave them out. There has been considerable
discussion of late regarding changes taking place within the Soviet Union.
It would be inappropriate for me, and beyond the scope of this speech, to
address these changes in any detail, but two observations seem inescapable.
First, Soviet convent on a force structure around the world has been
growing, and if force structure cuts are to occur in our own military, we
must be careful to signal to the Soviets that this is a refinement of our
capabilities, rather than a reduction of them. And second, an improved
situation in Europe, absent a stand-down of conventional forces taken out of
that theater, may well increase rather than decrease Soviet pressure in
other areas.
Fourth, we must pay greater
attention to our own hemisphere, and to the Third World as a whole.
I mentioned that we are becoming more intertwined with Asia, and the same is
true with Latin America. This nation's principal movements, in economic,
cultural and political terms, are west and south. The changing ethnic makeup
of the country itself shows this. Fully 86 percent of our legal immigrants
over the past ten years have been from either Asia or Latin America, 42
percent from Latin America itself. And these, as I said, are the legal
immigrants. Latin America's problems are rapidly becoming our problems, and
we have been pushing them to the back burner at great peril. The Soviets and
Cubans have been more adept at understanding that than many of our own
policymakers.
In the Third World as a whole, the Soviet Union has long emphasized a policy
of using "cooperative forces" of Third World allies, along with Soviet and
other advisors, in order to take advantage of age-old rivalries, and to
assist so-called revolutionary movements which invariably end up as
totalitarian regimes. In Latin America, the Soviets operate roughly 7600
military personnel in Cuba, and another 230 in Nicaragua and Peru. During
1986 alone the Soviets provided more than 600 million dollars of equipment
to the Sandinista regime as well. The Cubans contribute another 2500 troops
in Nicaragua. Discounting our Southern Command in Panama, the United States
has some 2300 troops in Guantanamo Bay Cuba,, and 932 operating personnel
elsewhere in 27 Latin American countries, 643 of those in Honduras.
Through troop presence and arms transfers, the Soviet Union and Cuba are
heavily involved in Africa. The Cubans maintain military and technical
personnel in 17 African nations, with major combat units in Ethiopia,
Algeria, Congo, Angola and Mozambique. The Soviets now maintain a continuous
naval presence off the coast of west Africa.
Additionally, key water routes and bases around the world continue to be at
risk. American basing rights will be subject to negotiations in the near
future, including those in Panama, Greece, Portugal, Spain, and the
Philippines. It is reasonable to assume that we will lose our lease in
Guantanamo Bay in 1999. The southern reaches of the Red Sea have been
bracketed by the Soviet influence in Ethiopia and its presence in the
People's Republic of Yemen, particularly on the island of Socotra, which
dominates the Gulf of Aden. Nor do I need to spend a great deal of time
today on the importance of protecting international waterways into and
inside the Persian Gulf. This essential lifeline to Europe and Japan is now
benefiting from the strength of American resolve, and the manifestation of
American sea power.
The analysis I have just offered is by no means exhaustive, but it does
indicate the enormity of the responsibilities that our military forces will
continue to face. For those of us who view the Soviet threat seriously, and
who believe we must improve our efforts in assisting the Third World, this
is a very full plate. it will require extremely careful use of a reduced
United States force structure, as well as a more enthusiastic participation
by other friendly nations, in order for us to meet such challenges. It will
also require, quite f rankly, that we modify the architecture of our defense
structure over time, creating the best combination of air, ground, sea and
space assets to do the job.
The overriding guidepost for the future is that our conventional force
structure must provide us the most utility and the most capability in the
global arena. This requires versatility in terms of military mission. It
means that forces dedicated to static defensive missions must be scrutinized
and altered when possible in favor of units that can deploy and fight
wherever they are needed. An example of this type of unit is the Third
Marine Division on Okinawa, forward deployed not for the local defense of
Okinawa, but as a maneuver force available for immediate commitment
throughout Asia.
A world environment with many demands for the use of our forces, ideally in
correlation with the forces of other nations but potentially alone, requires
this sort of maneuverability. To the greatest extent possible, forces of the
future should be free to deploy and to maneuver, to concentrate at a crisis
point and project military force at that point, without the necessity of
negotiating base rights or the unavoidable involvement in local conflict
that such base rights imply. A smaller U.S. military force structure
demands, by logic, that a greater percentage of that force structure be
available to do more things.
Consequently, post-INF thinking that conventional forces in Europe be
increased because conventional forces in Europe are arguably more at risk
without the intermediate nuclear shield does not necessarily mean that this
should be a U.S. buildup, or for that matter that such a buildup should
occur in Europe at all, or even that it be a land-oriented buildup. In fact,
given the resource reductions clearly facing this country's defense
establishment, just the opposite might be true.
Strategy does not dictate that pressure applied by an adversary at one point
be countered at exactly that point. The regional preoccupation that produced
the strategy of the "Maginot Line," and of the "Schlieffen Plan" is
seductive in Europe, but history has repeatedly demonstrated its
incompleteness. If the interests of the United States and its allies are
threatened or attacked by the Soviet Union in one part of the world, the
United States could and probably should react at the point most beneficial
to its own strengths, anywhere in the world.
And this of course is the great strength of sea power, and why we should
recognize its validity in terms of our geopolitical place in the world. We
are not a continental land power, except on our own continent, and we never
have been. It simply hasn't been necessary, given our existence as a
maritime nation. We have never even fought a true continental war, except
the War Between the States. This is one reason Macarthur warned against land
campaigns in Asia, but it is true elsewhere as well. Our armies have been
most effectively used in history in combination with other armies. We tipped
the balance in World War One, but only on the margins, at the very end of
the war, and at the expense of some 55,000 combat dead, while the French
lost 1.7 million dead, the British Empire lost almost a million, and the
Germans lost 1.8 million dead. In World War Two,, we fought essentially a
rear guard action on the ground, losing 290,000 servicemen of all services
in all theaters, while the Germans lost 3.7 million and the Soviets lost 7
million -- soldiers, dead.
By contrast, our place in the world has been guaranteed by our maritime
power, particularly during this century. We are a maritime nation by virtue
of our geographic position, economic necessity, and political commitment.
American sea power maintains unimpeded access to world markets. It denies
our adversaries the use of sea lanes for expansionist or imperialistic
reasons. It maintains international security and stability, including
protection of those nations whom we count as friends and allies during
crisis. It enables us, when war comes, to reinforce allies, to multiply the
effectiveness of their armies, to inject our own ground forces when
appropriate, to become supreme on the land through control of the sea. It
provides us the single greatest deterrent to nuclear war, with a nuclear
submarine force that fields one-half of our nuclear capability at one-fourth
of the overall cost for the strategic nuclear Triad.
A credible sea power, which means a naval force that can deploy immediately,
stay for as long as necessary, and fight at whatever level of conflict the
situation demands, can affect world events quickly and decisively. Our navy
and Marine Corps meet those criteria. Aircraft carrier battle groups coupled
with an amphibious power projection capability can represent the interests
of the United States at the exact point of crisis without the necessity or
expense of negotiating base rights, and without the vulnerability that so
frequently attends static defensive positions. This is exactly what we will
need more of in the future, if our commitments unfold as I have just
described them.
The Navy and Marine Corps are structured, and essential, across the full
spectrum of military use, from forces in being through low intensity
conflict all the way to nuclear war. At every step of the way, a large
percentage of the Navy and Marine Corps force structure is available, on a
task organized basis, to perform. Furthermore, while the Navy and Marine
Corps participate along with the other services in exercises designed to
test wartime readiness, they also are continually participating in real
world operations that are essential to keeping the peace -- today. They were
in Lebanon. They have operated repeatedly off the coast of Libya. They have
been in the Indian Ocean since 1979. They were off the coast of Iran
throughout the entire hostage crisis. They are on duty even as I speak in
the Persian Gulf. At this moment, of our total fleet of 569 ships, which
includes the naval reserve, 157 are at sea, 112 outside of their local
operating areas, 91 them forward deployed at potential hot spots around the
world. These numbers are actually a bit low, due to the respite of the
holiday season.
And we need not speculate on what would happen if we cut back naval force
structure. Those who claim that the last seven years have shown the greatest
peacetime buildup of the U.S. Navy forget that the decade that preceded this
buildup gave us the greatest evisceration of the Navy in its history. When I
was commissioned in 1968 there were 931 combatants in the U.S. Navy. By the
time we inherited the Indian Ocean commitments in 19719, the greatest navy
in the world had been cut in half, to a force of only 479 combatants.
Operational commitments, so often driven by national command authority
needs, did not decrease.
The Navy did it with less, and the result was a hemorrhaging of manpower and
material the likes of which this country has never seen. Aircraft carriers
deploying to the Indian Ocean commonly spent four months and longer at sea,
without so much as seeing land, much less visiting a liberty port. The
Nimitz spent 146 days continuously at sea. The Independence went 210 days,
with only nine days ashore. By 1980, the-navy was short 22,000
noncommissioned officers. The standard joke among my contemporaries was
"make Commander and get your divorce," because you were going to spend the
next four years at sea, away from your family.
I'm not sure we'd be lucky enough as a service to survive that sort of
misfortune again. And yet, in an ever more complex world environment, and
with a U.S. military force structure that we are told will be smaller, we
can expect national command authority commitments, or what the budgeters
euphemistically call "unprogrammed contingencies," to at least remain the
same, and perhaps to increase. It would seem illogical to reduce the size of
our sea services at the very moment in history when they should be assuming
an even greater role in our international security posture, unless our
leaders wish to consciously acknowledge that we will be unable to meet the
contingencies of the future.
I would hope that a different decision will be made. I would hope that we
will instead have the courage to fully debate the nature of our obligations,
as well as the nature of our allies' obligations to us, and to sort out
exactly what it is we are defending and how this defense can best be
accomplished.
Thank you.
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