September 22, 2009 11:06 AM

Pressing the 'Reset Button' on Defense

By
CBSNews
(National Review Online)  By Thomas C. Pinckney
Reprinted with permission from National Review Online.


Despite all his initial talk of bipartisanship and putting aside the stale arguments of the past, President Obama is revealing himself with each passing day to be a traditional, doctrinaire liberal.

And although it has received little coverage, Obama's liberal instincts are influencing the direction of America's defense posture. True, Obama has not cut and run in Iraq and Afghanistan, as many feared he would, and for this, he deserves the praise he has received from conservatives. But the longer-term defense policies the Obama administration is establishing are troubling and will be very difficult for a future president to reverse.

The core policies mapped out in President Obama's defense budget are not the result of an internal Pentagon review. They originated inside the Center for American Progress (CAP), a liberal think tank headed by former Clinton chief of staff John Podesta, and were openly, if quietly, laid out during his campaign. CAP's website features "a progressive 'Quadrennial Defense Review'" and other papers laying out defense policies "progressives" would like to see in a Democratic administration. The center boasts that President Obama's recent defense cuts "reflect the overall thrust of CAP's recommendations over the last four years, and [the administration's] specific recommendations clearly embrace our suggestions."

The Defense Department is charged with writing and submitting an actual Quadrennial Defense Review to Congress at the beginning of 2010. When it crafts this document, the department should bear in mind that while a liberal think tank may have insights worth considering, it is simply no substitute for the professional military and intelligence experts who have real-world responsibility for our safety.

The Obama administration has received an impressive amount of political cover from its shrewd decision to retain Defense Secretary Gates. But political cover and wise policy are not the same. Conservatives should remember that our nation faces substantial threats not only from radical Islam but also from an emerging set of geopolitical actors whose interests will almost certainly conflict with ours in the coming decades.

Will Russia move aggressively to retake former Soviet states? Will China move aggressively to occupy Taiwan? Will Iran build an intermediate-range nuclear capability that can threaten Israel and our European allies? What options will be open to the United States to contain such threats?

As a command pilot with more than 3,400 flying hours, I could not help but take notice of the administration's zeal last week in ending the F-22 Raptor program, which produces the most advanced strike fighter in the world. The F-22 is the only plane we have that is capable of penetrating deep into the most sophisticated, lethal air defenses in the world and destroying them. During the congressional debate, the F-22 was derided as a "relic of the Cold War" that has not been deployed in Iraq and Afghanistan. Never mind that neither country has a sophisticated air defense, and that other potential adversaries do have sophisticated air defenses and fighter aircraft. Air dominance is as important to U.S. military doctrine as it has ever been. With the growing importance of unmanned Predator aircraft, which are vulnerable to enemy aircraft and surface-to-air missiles, air-dominance fighters are arguably more important than ever.

There was even pious talk of how expensive programs like the F-22 were hoarding precious resources that could be spent on more troops. This, from a president and a congressional leadership that have poured trillions of dollars into pet liberal projects.

Most conservatives are not so easily led astray by talk of "change" and pressing "reset buttons," preferring to stick to their traditional beliefs in maintaining a strong defense. We see looming threats that the administration's defense plans seem all too eager to ignore or wish away:

Iran is continuing to advance its nuclear program, and nuclear-armed North Korea is continuing to test-fire missiles. But Obama is cutting ground-based missile defense.

A well-armed Russia feels free to bully U.S. allies such as Georgia in open defiance of American and international will. But Obama is canceling production of our most sophisticated, most survivable, stealthiest fighter plane.

Our troops are facing asymmetrical threats on the ground in hotspots around the world. But Obama is slashing the Future Combat Systems program, which would give our soldiers real-time intelligence and increase their coordinated-strike capabilities.

Our ability to operate naval forces in the Pacific and Indian oceans is increasingly important to maintaining our strategic and commercial interests. But Obama is stalling production of the Navy's top F-18 Hornet strike fighter in the face of what the Congressional Research Service has now estimated to be a 300-plane shortfall.

It remains to be seen what the Pentagon's Quadrennial Defense Review will contain. But in the meantime, coddling liberal fantasies of peace-through-defense-cuts instead of prudently maintaining a clear American edge in the ability to project power around the world is a mistake we will no doubt live to regret.

By Thomas C. Pinckney
Reprinted with permission from National Review Online

National Review Online
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by concerned57 August 11, 2009 12:41 AM EDT
Can America really afford to allow itself to become a middle power, which will one day be froced to confront radical powers, who will more than likely have the combined power to take on the leader of the free world??.
I am an Autralian who is proud to live in a country that allows freedom of speech, the right to protest and above all, the choice of who leeds the free world. Australia is a middle power, who has never backed away from a fight.

We were one of the last countrys to leave the vietnam conflict, because our friends from other nations were still there.Your President (obama)has some strong visions on what America should become, IE: a strong global economic posiotion, that will allow economic dreams to become a reality.

I am not a politician, but my gut hunch is telling me that if a person wants to be seen as securing and strenghening their position in the economic arena, then, they had better have the military muscle to back up and protect their world, econmic interests.

Cutting back on your military interests is not, the best way to go and nuclear weapons are not the ideal weapon to protedt those interests. China, Russia, North Korea, Iran etc, do you really think a middle power can deal with all the above at the same time.

Having an unmatched edge in military power is the only answer and America will only have itself to blaim if (God forbid), it is forced to confront all the above, but, doese not have the hardware to do it.

regards
Thomas
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by kikomanson August 6, 2009 3:25 AM EDT
The U.S. and the U.N. were fought to a stalemate in Korea by a 10Th rate peasant army from communist China. We had the technology on our side. We had control of the Air and of the sea, we had the fire power, and the armies of our Allies ,all the things you need for a military victory, What Happened??
In Vietnam the American military fought a guerrilla war , with conventional tactics.
In Afghanistan we did in months what the Soviet army could not do in 10 years.Then the war for oil in Iraq took top billing over Afghanistan, and we allowed the The Islamics to reestablish control over that country. Obama has made the right decision of building up our troops presents in Afghanistan, but it maybe a case of to little to late. Bush and the neocons again turned victory into defeat?

Why are we fighting two ground wars in the Middle East? Why are we giving the Israelis $3 billion in military aid every year. Our support for Israel is behind the reason we are pitted against the Muslin countries in this world.
The Christian Fundamentalist right wing movement in the U.S., That have control the Republican party for the last 20 years. and turned these modern conflicts into a repetition of the Crusades.

America has learn nothing from the war in Korea and Vietnam, She is undergoing the same lesson in Iraq and Afghanistan. Learn to fight an Unconventional war,I see troops loaded down with full field pack fighting in urban warfare in house to house fighting.

With pride all Americans looked at the "Shock and Awe" blight in Iraq, until DUMB-YA decided to occupy that country,He never had enough boots on the ground.

We need to stop funding the Aggressions of Israel and all the other Right Wing dictatorships in the world,We are the enemy of Democracy and are responsible for the overthrow of more elected governments in the world than any other nation.
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by kikomanson August 6, 2009 3:21 AM EDT
The U.S. and the U.N. were fought to a stalemate in Korea by a 10Th rate peasant army from communist China. We had the technology on our side. We had control of the Air and of the sea, we had the fire power, and the armies of our Allies ,all the things you need for a military victory, What Happened??
In Vietnam the American military fought a guerrilla war , with conventional tactics.
In Afghanistan we did in months what the Soviet army could not do in 10 years.Then the war for oil in Iraq took top billing over Afghanistan, and we allowed the The Islamics to reestablish control over that country. Obama has made the right decision of building up our troops presents in Afghanistan, but it maybe a case of to little to late. Bush and the neocons again turned victory into defeat?

Why are we fighting two ground wars in the mideast? Why are we giving the Israelis $3 billion in military aid every year. Our support for Israel is behind the reason we are pitted against the Muslin countries in this world.
The Christian Fundamentalist right wing movement in the U.S., That have control the Republican party for the last 20 years. and turned these modern conflicts into a repetition of the Crusades.

America has learn nothing from the war in Korea and Vietnam, She is undergoing the same lesson in Iraq and Afghanistan. Learn to fight an Unconventional war,I see troops loaded down with full field pack fighting in urban warfare in house to house fighting.

With pride all Americans looked at the "Shock and Awe" blight in Iraq, until DUMB-YA decided to occupy that country,He never had enough boots on the ground.

We need to stop funding the Aggressions of Israel and all the other Right Wing dictatorships in the world,We are the enemy of Democracy in the world and are responsible for the overthrow of more elected governments in the world than any other nation.
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by jschmidt27 August 5, 2009 11:10 AM EDT
But pelosi will get here jet. "At the end of July, the House approved nearly $200 million for the Air Force to buy three elite Gulfstream jets for ferrying top government officials and Members of Congress.

The Air Force had asked for one Gulfstream 550 jet (price tag: about $65 million) as part of an ongoing upgrade of its passenger air service.

But the House Appropriations Committee, at its own initiative, added to the 2010 Defense appropriations bill another $132 million for two more airplanes and specified that they be assigned to the D.C.-area units that carry Members of Congress, military brass and top government officials."
http://www.rollcall.com/issues/55_19/news/37552-1.html
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by babooph August 5, 2009 6:19 AM EDT
Another propaganda game.should it not be the "Dept of OFFENCE"?
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by cs4466 August 5, 2009 4:35 AM EDT
Looks like the neocons are still upset. That's good. Nothing to see here... next!
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by dannysteele August 4, 2009 9:01 PM EDT
The author's premise seems to be "we need to fight them over there so we don't need to fight them here." Hopefully, the American public is starting to see the stupidity of that line of reasoning. My guess is that his favorite song is "Cops of the World" by Phil Ochs (his favorite if he doesn't understand sarcasm, that is.)

For those who want to put the US military budget into perspective, please see:

http://www.straightdope.com/columns/read/2512/1-with-a-bullet-why-is-the-u-s-military-budget-so-high
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by Tim_Bandit August 4, 2009 11:20 PM EDT
Nothing like "alternative journalism", or in other words, journalism that doesn't necessarily require facts.

In this particular case, the facts are true... but it's missing a couple of things. First off, there aren't cities full of people that dance in the streets when airliners are crashed into buildings in Iceland (who, btw, we protect). Secondly, it didn't emphasize the % of GDP spent enough. Ranking 50th in the world's percentage, we're doing pretty well. And the more you have, the harder it is to protect.

Of course, the "need to fight them over there" thing is partially true. It's preferable to fight somewhere that's not on your own soil... We've learned lots of good lessons from WWII. But throw in that the current problems with radical terrorists require military action to stop the spread of an idea... Before you say it, I dislike censorship too... But when the idea is "Kill this group of people you don't even know while you kill yourself and you go to heaven," and somehow a ton of people believe it, we really don't have much choice.
by Tim_Bandit August 4, 2009 6:13 PM EDT
I like how some people seem to think that, without the big, bad United States, everyone would play nice. Apparently, these are people who've never been in a sandbox before, let alone a prison. Some of these things that we're cutting are pretty important.

I'm not talking about the F-22. The big, bad military industrial complex didn't put up a fight over that one, despite the fact that the author nailed that one. For a "cold war relic", it's interesting to note that this is the most capable fighter aircraft in the air... but also the most expensive. We do need to be able to knock out air defenses, because air superiority wins wars, especially for smaller forces... And that's the US. We attacked Iraq with far fewer troops than they had (both times). China has an army of 2.25 million active troops in peacetime, with almost a billion people eligible for conscription. We don't win wars by overwhelming our enemies. We win them through training and technology. We need the F/A-18 able to launch from our carriers so we can project our air superiority beyond land bases. We need F-35s to replace our 20 and 30 year old F-15s and F-16s. We need a new tanker to replace the tankers currently in service, with an average age of 50 years. (Honestly... if you got onto a plane with, say, United, and they told you the plane wasn't the average of around ten years old... but was actually 50 years old... Would you want to fly on it? Then how can we ask our children to fly in them?)

The "fat cats" on the golf course, by the way, are your pension funds and such... That's who owns the majority of these companies. Maybe you should learn to read an annual report before making generalizations. The CEOs of these companies generally don't make as much as in the companies that make consumer products, or that provide you your banking or financial advice, etc etc etc. The workers generally don't make as much. So who is really the evil profiteer? (Side note: defense spending went up this year... it's just being spread to other places. Maybe it would be smart to find out what the money is being spent on?)

And as for the concept of manned fighters "taking a real pasting"... Well, that's just making the same mistake that we did when we bought a lot of F-22s, but no mine resistant vehicles. We bought the F-22 for a specific type of war without considering that we may fight a war of insurgency... But by the same token, do you thinkt hat's the only type of war we'll ever fight in the future?

Bottom line, I see a lot of ignorance here. I'm not saying stupidity, mind you, but ignorance. There's a lot of misinformation being spread on both sides, and it might be a good idea to let go of your politics, no matter which side of the fence you may prefer, and learn about the issues. These "fat cats" that don't exist, the wars we'll "never fight again", the "gold-plated relics" that don't work... Politics didn't create all these terrible things... They created the lies that these terrible things exist.
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by dwilson59 August 4, 2009 8:51 PM EDT
Tim_Bandit

Thank You I could not of done better myself.

Just my thought what if we kept the F22 flying we could save 100k jobs. I think that would be good for the economy. But what do I know I just pay 36% of what I make to taxes.
by quatermass2 August 4, 2009 5:05 PM EDT
Ah, for the good old days of us vs the USSR. Sigh. It must be difficult for SOME Cold Warriors to adjust to the idea that we don't need, and can't afford, the thousands of gold-plated toys they'd like to have, and in fact, the very concept of manned fighters is taking a real pasting in the skies over Afghanistan. Lockheed cynically scattered subcontracts for the F-22 over more than 40 states in the hopes that pork lovers would balk at killing this 20-year-old relic and lose jobs for their "constituents", but as it turns out, there simply weren't THAT many jobs to begin with.
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by afmcalax August 4, 2009 3:05 PM EDT
This is an article only a true neo-con could love. Keep the status quo and keep throwing good money after bad defense contracts. Bring out the Russia bogey man again to ensure that the much needed changes to defense procurement does not happen. Buy expensive, worthless products that reap military contractors huge amounts of money while providing little to no additional security. We are having issues in both Iraq and Afghanistan because we never learned the lessons from Vietnam. We are again fighting gnats with sledge hammers.

The military brass and politicians are at fault. Gates is finally trying to get an armed force that can fight the conflicts of today not the Cold Wars of yesterday. The neo-cons are more afraid of their lower profits than of any real danger to the U.S.
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