In order to identify the required capabilities for the Army,
classic elements of force planning first demand that leaders
determine model assumptions including objectives; identify where
the U.S. is committed by treaty or interest; evaluate likelihood,
intensity, and length of contingencies including surge
capabilities; understand potential enemy capabilities; update force
constraints including mobilization rates and readiness levels; and
know allied capabilities for friend and foe. From there, leaders
may then characterize near- and long-term risk by phase of
operations and the type of mission.
This allows leaders to balance priorities with acceptable levels
of risk by adjusting strategy to reduce demand, altering strategic
emphasis, or accepting risk in operational timelines. Once that
information is available, leaders may then ask what operational
problem their forces will be tasked to solve once they are on the
ground overseas. After a capability assessment, the right forces
(e.g., early arriving, halt, enabler, counteroffensive, stability),
the best force mix (active and reserve, heavy to light), and end
strength may be determined.
As Army leaders create an updated modernization plan this year,
they will be wise not to think of modernization in a vacuum, but to
plan for a future force of legacy and modern platforms.
Operating Environment
As this audience knows, the 2006 Lebanon War was by no means the
first instance of "hybrid" warfare--a conflict of blended or mixed
warfare including conventional, guerrilla, counterinsurgency, and
terrorism. For example:
- During the Napoleonic wars, Napoleon had to deploy 100,000 men
and his cavalry in Spain to fight not only the Spanish, Portuguese,
and British armies under Wellington, but also the guerrillas that
attacked his lines of communication and rear areas with hit-and-run
tactics. After defeat in Russia, Napoleon could not finish off the
allied armies he defeated in Germany because his cavalry was in
Spain fighting both conventional forces and the Spanish
guerrillas.
- The U.S. experienced in World War II the conventional war
accompanied by the insurgency warfare of the Soviet partisans in
the Eastern Front, of Tito's partisans in the former Yugoslavia,
and of the Maquis in France. Before the Normandy landings, U.S.
forces also saw the use of terrorist acts by the French Maquis
against German forces, such as the shooting in broad daylight of
German officers sitting in a café and murders of those
accused of collaborating with the Germans.
- The Vietnam War is another instance in which conventional war,
insurgency warfare, and terrorism occurred by the Vietcong.
Hybrid warfare is not a new phenomenon, and the U.S. Army is
committed to preparing to fight all types of war--conventional and
counterinsurgency/ counterterrorism--simultaneously. This is
because historical experience has demonstrated that blended warfare
will happen and coexist more often than expected in one
conflict.
Indeed, industrial-age terminology to describe warfare may not
be as useful for leaders today. Commanders may instead choose to
talk about operations in contested, denied, or permissive
battlespaces in order to discuss what capabilities are needed now
and in the future.
Warfare that constantly shifts along the conflict continuum will
demand more dual-use and multi-role platforms. Hybrid conflict will
also require new and creative approaches to operational problems,
including the need for leaders to consider the formation of ad
hoc, modular composite units where elements from other units
could be attached depending on the particular mission.
Army Modernization Must Solve
Identifiable Operational Problem
One concern about the Army's Future Combat Systems (FCS) program
was the unanswered question of what operational problem the FCS
brigade combat teams would solve in future contingency plans.
Further clarifying the types of scenarios where medium-weight
combat units will prevail will not only help provide leadership to
Capitol Hill, but also help identify the specific capabilities
needed for the revamped Army manned ground vehicle program.
During Operation Iraqi Freedom, for example, the U.S. sought to
overwhelm Iraqi forces by opening five fronts in Iraq and operating
with fast movements of advance and maneuver speed. The momentum of
the advance of coalition forces operating from multiple fronts
prevented the enemy from organizing an effective defense or
counterattack. The strategic objective of the campaign was to
change the regime in Iraq, and the operational objectives were to
take control of the oil fields and water infrastructure and to
thwart Iraqi attempts to use long-range missiles and weapons of
mass destruction.
In order to achieve these goals, according to General Thomas
Franks, then Commander in Chief of United States Central Command,
"the object was to destroy the Iraqi military's will to fight"
through a campaign of effects-based operations in which a smaller
ground force would mass firepower and employ air power, precision
artillery strikes, and attack helicopters to pin down and destroy a
slow-maneuvering enemy force. The operation destroyed Iraq's
Integrated Air Defense System, its command and control centers,
government buildings, military bases, and military forces.
What are the Army's operational objectives if it were to
intervene quickly to prevent the invasion of a Caucasus country
where a foreign military seeks to occupy the capital and coastal
towns and establish a puppet government?
- Land forces would likely send an armored heavy brigade to
prevent the advance or the capture of a main port.
- U.S. forces would need to secure sections of the highway and
push the enemy back to their initial line of departure.
- The U.S. Army would need to secure any major airports and ports
to bring more forces into theater.
- Soldiers would need air defenses, including against ballistic
missiles, and Special Operations Forces to prevent attacks on
command centers, supply convoys, logistical facilities, and radar
installations.
In this scenario, a hybrid conflict is also likely where U.S.
forces would have to fight pro-invasion irregular forces and
militias recruited from the population.
Or perhaps the Army will have to intervene to stop a tank
invasion in the Andean region of South America, fighting
conventional and guerrilla forces potentially in a country with
U.S. forces already present. A counterthrust and occupation after a
defeat on the ground could involve initially a guerrilla and
counterinsurgency war against radical militias armed with modern
assault rifles. The U.S. military would also have to contend with
the vibrant drug trade and its impact on contingency plans and
funding of enemy forces. In many scenarios, ground forces would
conduct raiding missions behind enemy lines, conduct reconnaissance
missions, destroy supply convoys, attack enemy logistical
facilities, and neutralize enemy reconnaissance forces.
Many other contingencies are certainly possible, although the
central question is to answer where Army modernization meets
operational requirements in the Pentagon's concept of operations.
If the assumption is a future of hybrid conflict, the core
principles of modernization appear to fall into three categories:
mobility, speed, and surprise.
Army leaders should continue investing in land stealth,
sophisticated active defense systems, an electro-optical
countermeasures system, and a fire-control system with a radar and
laser range finder. Each Army vehicle should be fitted with a C4ISR
(Command, Control, Communications, Computers, Intelligence,
Surveillance, and Reconnaissance) system that would allow command
and control of the vehicle in which it is fitted, command and
control of other vehicles up to a company level, and use of a
vehicle as a command post for the battalion commander. Military
vehicles should be able to receive directly via datalink real-time
targeting and intelligence video images collected by Unmanned
Aerial Vehicles (UAVs) and be capable of using synthetic fuels and
biodiesel.
Many of the Future Combat Systems' elements should be preserved
if not further refined first. The Army should keep the Class I and
Class IV UAVs, the unattended munitions Non-Line-Of-Sight Launch
System missile launch system, the unattended ground sensors, the
network and its operating principle, and unmanned ground vehicles.
Continued support must be given for the development and deployment
of robots and unmanned ground vehicles to provide fire support to
the dismounted soldier as well as reconnaissance, surveillance, and
target acquisition.
Finally, flexibility will remain critical to Army modernization.
While operational surprise is more likely than strategic,
commanders must expect to encounter systems currently left to the
imagination, to be fielded within the next 20 years. For example,
the UAV was unheard of 20 years ago, yet today it is essential to
the fight.
Upgrading Legacy Fleets While Building
Next-Generation Vehicles and Network
No single platform, including vehicles, operates alone. As a
result, Army modernization will be undertaken while maintaining
equipment of various classes and ages--a constant mix of upgraded
legacy systems and new platforms. Determining the appropriate
numbers versus technology mix will remain a central force planning
question. A subset to resolve will include size versus technology
and weight. Leaders must also decide what purchases will offer a
deterrent capability, including human capital (e.g.,
combat-hardened Army soldiers and officers); what equipment will
provide operational capability; the impact of disruptive events;
and what partners and allies might contribute.
While operations in Iraq and Afghanistan have shown the value of
heavy armored vehicles, commanders must acknowledge that potential
enemies may invest to exploit perceived or real shortfalls. For
example, China does not possess any aircraft carriers today, but it
now has an anti-ship ballistic missile that can strike carriers at
a range of 2,000 kilometers and a large submarine fleet.
For leaders, identifying the heavy-versus-light "sweet spot"
will be an ongoing challenge. Further, trading heavy forces for
medium may not save money. Nor is trading heavy for light forces a
legitimate option due to the augmentation needed for infantry
brigade combat teams today prior to deployment. Army leaders must
therefore consider the Reserve Component when making modernization
choices and decide whether forces currently in the Active Component
today should be shifted.
A holistic approach to modernization that invests in legacy
upgrades and new equipment, as well as Active and Reserve
Components, will benefit the Army. An incremental approach to
building new ground vehicles will also bolster confidence in Army
acquisition. Building one ground vehicle at a time would allow for
the development of a common chassis and allow follow-on variants to
be built more quickly.
Leaders should also consider that just because the manned ground
vehicles were canceled in this year's budget does not necessarily
mean the requirements process is flawed. Much of the manned ground
vehicle capability must be retained for the next effort, but the
acquisition process can and should be altered. Many of the central
requirements of FCS are still needed in the son of FCS.
Further, there is no doubt the network must again become the
centerpiece of modernization. Indeed, Vice Chairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff General James Cartwright has said future vehicles
are not survivable without the network.
Heavy, Medium, and Light Mix: Study
the Formation of Composite Units
Beyond identifying specific capabilities, a constant tension
will exist to manage legacy and new fleets with shrinking budgets.
This may require commanders to study the repackaging of existing
resources while waiting for new replacements to be fielded. This is
particularly important because the resources are not available for
Army leaders to recapitalize vehicles on a one-to-one basis.
Composite units of different equipment and vehicles with unique
capabilities, along with the future manned ground vehicles, might
help to offset the inevitable declining number of platforms. Using
vehicles attached to other units to form ad hoc composite
units as required by the operational situation would provide
commanders more flexibility. Combined arms composite units would be
modular in that elements from other units could be attached
depending on the particular mission. For example, commanders could
attach more sniper sections for an urban mission or add a cyber
warfare company, a military intelligence company, a signals
company, an anti-armor company, a reconnaissance squadron, or an
air defense company as needed.
Composite units can be formed by combining, in accordance with
the operational requirements, the tactical situation, and the
forces available, sub-units from maneuver brigades--heavy, Stryker,
and Infantry Brigade Combat Teams (IBCTs)--with military aviation
units, artillery units, airborne forces, air assault, armored
cavalry, armored infantry, air defense, Special Forces, combat
engineers, mountain troops, Marine Corps, and even private
contractors. Put together through a concept of unit and sub-unit
modularity, the ad hoc task force would function under a
single C4ISR system.
For example, commanders should consider supplying the Stryker
armored personnel carrier to IBCTs to equip the two infantry
battalions when deployed to protect forces from enemy ambush. When
deployed in non-combat zones, the infantry troops would be
transported in military tactical vehicle trucks. These brigade
units of action would shift from light infantry units to medium
combat units, upgrading their combat rating.
Each Stryker would carry infantry squads and provide soldiers
improved mobility, speed, protection, and firepower when compared
to a truck. Strykers would also provide a command center for the
squad unit due to the Stryker's own C4ISR system. Commanders should
study whether the 105 mm Stryker Mobile Gun System should also be
supplied to the IBCTs to provide them with their own fire support
against enemy combat vehicles, bunkers, and strong points in urban
areas.
Another example could include the commander of a Heavy Brigade
Combat Team temporarily adding elements of an Airborne unit as part
of an armored thrust task force consisting of other elements like
an attack helicopter battalion or a Multiple-Launch Rocket System
(MLRS) battalion. This custom-built unit could serve as the core
for composite units, having attached to it elements from other
formations, such as attack helicopters, MLRS batteries, airborne
troops, or air assault troops with their transport helicopters.
Independent tank and mechanized infantry battalions and combined
arms battalions with semi-independent companies would provide the
capability of deploying anywhere in the world in 48 hours. The
independent heavy units would have an organic Unmanned Aerial
Vehicle reconnaissance platoon. Combat or anti-mine robots
(explosive charge robot, anti-mine MULE robot, infantry combat MULE
variant, armed IED-reconnaissance robot) could be attached to the
independent tank battalions, with each tank having the
command-and-control capability to operate the robots.
Independent or semi-autonomous units would allow a "running
start" operation where units engage in combat upon arrival instead
of waiting for the complete ground force to be assembled in theater
first. An independent unit could hold a front against the earlier
stages of an enemy offensive, arriving at a threatened area 48
hours after the beginning of an invasion.
Robust Navy and Air Force Are in the
Army's Best Interests
For the Army to continue fulfilling its missions, the U.S. Armed
Forces will need to achieve superiority in many spaces of operation
simultaneously in a conflict: on land; above, at, and below sea; in
the air; throughout the outer space (navigation, communications,
and reconnaissance satellites); and within cyberspace. For example,
Air Force space assets, including bandwidth and GPS among others,
will remain essential to ground operations, secure command and
control, and situational awareness.
Air superiority fighters are required to eliminate threats from
the air, provide close air support, allow UAVs to operate freely,
and eliminate sophisticated enemy air defenses. This matters to the
Army because once the fifth-generation F-22 air superiority fighter
technology was introduced, it opened Pandora's Box in that there is
no going back in the technological arms race in the air. Defense
leaders should smartly assume that by 2025, other countries will
have developed advanced stealth fighter capability. This capability
protects soldiers and Marines on the ground, and investment must be
maintained for the joint force to truly succeed.
Leadership and Capitol Hill
Members of Congress want to clearly understand the Army's
overall force mix of heavy, medium, and light forces when a
modernization plan is delivered in September. Congress has also
highlighted its concern in recent defense bills that the Army
modernize while simultaneously upgrading and expanding legacy fleet
capabilities. This may take some up-front resources from
next-generation platform investments. In an era of declining
resources, this predicament is not ideal; however, the Army simply
cannot afford to skip another generation of modernization on top of
the last one. Credibility is required for continuous robust
investments and resources.
A dilemma for military planners--and primary flaw of
threat-based planning--is when requirements chase the problem of
the day. Due to budget constraints and the nature of conflict, the
common themes for many new systems will include dual-use,
multi-capable, and multi-role. No matter the details of Army
modernization, acquisition officials must be capable of managing
and executing a realistic, stable program.
Senior Army leaders must be able to answer Congress's questions
up front before full-rate ground vehicle production, including:
- Will manned ground vehicles replace Bradleys alone (or also
Strykers or M-113 armored personnel carriers)? If more than one
vehicle, in what order will they be built?
- What is the Army's plan for competitive prototyping?
- What legacy vehicles will be upgraded during modernization
(e.g., Abrams)?
- How do Army modernization programs meet Reserve Component
requirements?
- What is the Army modernization plan for non-maneuver brigades
(e.g., fire support; mobility; aviation; and intelligence,
surveillance, and reconnaissance)?
- Does Army modernization strike the right balance between legacy
and new vehicles?
- Do the modernization plans account equally for strategic and
tactical mobility?
- Do medium-weight brigade combat teams possess both maneuverable
and survivable capabilities?
- What capabilities are being built to meet cross-service
requirements (e.g., Marine Corps Joint Light Tactical
Vehicles)?
- What is the Army's plan for air mechanization?
Congress is predisposed to support Army modernization efforts so
long as Army leaders manage the program skillfully without
overreaching in requirements, send up honest cost estimates, and
instill discipline throughout acquisition. Requirements definition
and the stability of those requirements throughout the research,
development, and acquisition process are key to success.
Army leaders must not be afraid to tell industry when
requirements are unmet. Army leaders did the right thing by
terminating the Aerial Common Sensor program when it became clear
the platform would not work and issues with the program would not
be resolved satisfactorily. The Army has the authority and funds
now to send fielded FCS equipment overseas. Continuing to refine
modernization plans without fundamentally overhauling requirements
will be helpful going forward.
Urgency on the part of Army leaders is understandable given the
generation of upheaval and cancellations in Army modernization
programs. Demonstrating to the Hill that Army officials have a
competent plan of execution will reap dividends for years and get
the Army what it needs now: an upgraded legacy fleet and modernized
force.
Mackenzie M. Eaglen is Research Fellow for
National Security in the Douglas and Sarah Allison Center for
Foreign Policy Studies, a division of the Kathryn and Shelby Cullom
Davis Institute for International Studies, at The Heritage
Foundation. These remarks were delivered at a "Future of the Army
Symposium" held by the U.S. Army G-8 Initiatives Group. Lajos
Szaszdi, Ph.D., contributed to the preparation of these
remarks.