Reasonable Doubter
About this Blog: CIO.com’s Reasonable Doubter Constantine von Hoffman keeps a close eye on technology, government, public policy, privacy and security to help readers see the forest for the trees—and the facts through the BS.
Something good may yet come from the sequestration idiocy on Capitol Hill: Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel ordered a reexamination of military strategy approved last year because budget cuts may force a readjustment of priorities. Let's hope this is the start of a trend.
For nearly a quarter century U.S. defense policy has been designed to fight an enemy that doesn’t exist, in ways that make less sense with every passing day.
It’s an axiom that generals are always trying to fight the last war. They are seldom prepared for the changes in combat that occurred since the last time they were under fire. Well, the Pentagon is still designed to fight the Soviet Union.
Some examples:
Officially America spends about $561 billion a year on its military. That is more than all the other militaries of the world combined, and that's a low estimate. As David Cay Johnston reported earlier this year, that number excludes things like:
The U.S. Army, Navy, Air Force and Marines are all constructed and armed around the idea that America will have to defend itself from another major industrial power, even though no such enemy exists or is ever likely to exist.
The government would like its citizens to believe the Chinese are that enemy. To that end it has been redeploying U.S. military "assets" to the Pacific. It is difficult to make a convincing argument that the Chinese are a military threat and not an economic competitor.
However, for the sake of discussion let us say they are. It is militarily impossible for America to stop the Chinese anywhere in mainland Asia. America could not field and supply an army even remotely large enough to contest China. Fortunately the Chinese are awash in way too many internal economic and political problems to even contemplate expanding–if it even made sense to do so in the first place.
Allow me to paraphrase former Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld (who is responsible for severely damaging the U.S. military to no good end): "[Y]ou go to war with the enemy you have. They're not the enemy you might want or wish to have at a later time."