Gates: Beware “Creeping Militarization”

Gates: Beware “Creeping Militarization”

It’s not often that a defense secretary says his department is overfunded, has the wrong strategy and is saddled with a mission ill suited to its core functions. But that’s just what Robert Gates did this week when he spoke July 15 at the U.S. Global Leadership Council.

Ever since he took over the Pentagon, Gates has tried to narrow the military’s roles and missions, particularly when it comes to foreign policy functions that were long the purview of civilian agencies. In his speech this week, he said he’s mindful of what some see as the “creeping militarization” of American foreign policy, even outside Iraq and Afghanistan. He is trying to radically reshape the military’s posture from one focused solely on direct military action to a broader set of capabilities that will “shape the security environment in ways that obviate the need for military intervention in the future.”

Gates views it unlikely that the U.S. will repeat an Afghanistan or Iraq style “nation building under fire,” a sentiment I hear echoed by many officers. He sees the greatest future threat not from rising powers such as Russia and China but rather failing states that cannot address the needs of a discontented populace. He said that in too many countries he’s visited, “regard for the U.S. remains low amongst the populations,” worrisome for American security that depends on cooperation from other nations. He said the U.S. can be faulted for occasionally straying from our values and arrogance and that only over time will more positive actions build trust and credibility with other nations.

Gates says America’s civilian international affairs agencies must take a much more active role in foreign policy, but are grossly underfunded, particularly relative to DOD. The problem, he said, is diplomats don’t have the ready made political constituency on Capitol Hill that job creating major weapons programs have. He says Congress’ slashing of the President’s foreign affairs budget request has become an annual ritual. He contrasted that with another annual ritual where Congress asks the military services for more stuff they want that OSD and the White House “were too stingy to put in the budget request.”

Gates is clearly not a big fan of occupying foreign countries. To stave off potential insurgencies, he advocates working with and through other governments, with a much smaller American military footprint, a shift to where the military “is – and is clearly seen to be – in a supporting role to civilian agencies.” Gates is an advocate of what can be called the “El Salvador” school of military intervention, where during the 1980s a small team of no more than 50 special forces troops trained the El Salvadoran military to effectively fight a communist insurgency.

When it comes to the struggle against terrorist networks, Gates says “we cannot kill or capture our way to victory,” in many ways a repudiation of the Bush administration’s strategy that has aimed to do just that. It’s a statement likely to draw the ire of those on the far right of the political spectrum who contend that America is locked in an existential struggle against Islamic terrorism. Gates doesn’t even label it a “war” against terrorist networks, rather he used the word “campaign.”

His prescription for dealing with terrorists is a radical departure from the last seven years. The military’s “kinetic operations,” special ops troops and aerial drones knocking off the odd terrorist, should take a back seat to “tools of persuasion and inspiration.” Gates said U.S. efforts should promote participation in government, fund economic programs to spur development and other efforts to “address the grievances that often lie at the heart of insurgencies.” A frustrated Army officer recently returned from Iraq once asked me to go to the Pentagon and find the office of “we rebuild nations.” Clearly, Gates believes that is a role best left to diplomats and civilian aid agencies.

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About time we had a SECDEF that supports letting the military do military things and leaves nation-building to the other agencies. Thank you!

A man with a BRAIN in POWER, to bad they didn’t think of that sooner,I have said it for years and now they are will to try it,2 big AT-A-BOYS to the ones that got him there,who ever you are I love you and him,and you have gave me that warm fuzzy fealing again,just like when I was a baby in my mother’s arms,Thank You and Simer Fi I’m looking forward to going to bed tonight for the first time in forty years so I can tell my friends it will be OK.

so instead of fighting people who try to kill us we should pay the off via “economic aid” so they won’t?

them*

It’s always great to hear reports like this, that the Military is going to be allowed to be the Military.…but…Washington D.C. is choked full of civilians that believe otherwise and there is a possibility of a whole new slew of ‘we know betters’ about to come into ‘Office’ which will really screw things up. If the Congress and the rest of the ‘civilians’ would really do what their job description says…then the Military could be..the Military doing what it’s meant to do and not pick up the slack all the time.

I’m all for fighting people who try to kill us, but when the fighting is causing an insurgency rather than preventing it, we really need to evaluate how we are doing (or did) things.

I still like Australia’s approach to Islam Rads…if ya don’t like our country, go somewhere else! We aren’t going to kowtow to Islam…and TOUGH if they don’t like it! We ARE and always WILL BE A Christian Nation, whether the towel heads like it or not! Osama’s brother Obama is dead wrong about that, and I’m very suspicious of him and his hidden agenda. Just do NOT trust that suavecito talking head. Islam needs to come into the 21st century instead of living in the 7th century!

Will be interesting to watch how the White House press secretary spins reporter’s questions on this?

While I admire SECDEF Gates very much, his comments as recorded above seem to me fixed in a pre-9/11 mindset. Yes, it is good to have the military be the military and not play the role primary nation-builder. However, the issue isn’t just nation-building as the article leads one to believe. Key point in the above is that the civilian international affairs agencies do not have a constituency on the hill…I wonder why, since it has been these same agencies that have failed us in the past and undermine efforts at the present. They don’t deserve a constituency. When OIF came on the board it was truly amazing to see how many organizations jumped off that same board and not get their hands dirty with “Rumsfeld’s War on Terrorism.” Little wonder isn’t it, that the military went about nation-building, when the civilian agencies want no part of it. That goes for all other places that are “icky” and not chock full of the champagne breakfast facilities, not just in CENTCOM either. It is these same agencies that were in bed with those that inhabit the halls of decorum and diplomacy of the UN and other non-friendly (or useful) multi-lateral entities. To what end did they achieve? So now SECDEF Gates is trying to put a military back in a box that it was forced out of in order to do another entities work. I think it important that SECDEF Gates look very closely at what it will mean as he guides DOD back. A for-instance: does DOD give up its role in offensive HUMINT efforts too, and again become reliant on an unfriendly and uncooperative CIA who wants to go about business as it did pre-Rumsfeld?

He sees el salvador as a success story? I guess no one remembers the massacres, the torture, the flood of refugees that compete for american jobs to this day. Teaching torture techniques to rural peasants on behalf of sociopathic greedsters is unworthy of the america I’d like to believe in.

Where is the human intelligence?

I am in agreement with Secretary Gates position with regards to militarism and our economy.

This was a major concern of Dwight D. Eisenhower in his biography as well.

That being said what is the solution? How do we change course?

As a future Congressman to be voting against keeping thousands of jobs in my constituency through a military related contract does not lead to being reelected.

Personally, I would like to see a balance. A strong able (flexible) military force with a strong able (flexible) economy.

Simply, because our engagements for these Rogue Nations as discussed has to be a dual pronged approach.

I would (initially) recommend that military (domestic) manufacturing would aspire and be rewarded accordingly if they develop into both military and civilian (alternative energy) products in conjunction to one another.

I would think incentives or even a mandate that by date (example: 2015), 20 percent of military related manufacturing is producing alternative energy products (solar, wind, hydrogen, etc) could be something feasible.

Energy Security is a direct threat to our National Security so who else is better to take on the challenge then the Defense Establishment.

“Teamwork Wins Wars” Dwight D. Eisenhower 1944

El Salvador certainly is a success story. Due to US training, there are no longer accusations of torture, massacres, etc. by the El Salvadoran armed forces.

This is not what Eisenhower cautioned us against (he spoke against a growing military/industrial complex) although there are linkages to this problem. What Gates is warning us about is a continuous migration of roles and responsibilities from the State Dept to the Defense Dept. He’s exactly right in trying to reverse this trend. While the military is extremely competent when used appropriately, it’s not US-AID, and shouldn’t be used in this way.

Why does the rest of the world hate us???. because of the military I think not.its because of the politictians,the money hungry business men,the opportunist,not the military. it is its on people taking advantage of them and then they call us to help them.our military steps in cleans up the mess . moves out of country. then the american business man steps in, the politician sticks his nose in and tells them that this is the way they will do it or should do it. that why the world hates us!!!.

re: el salvador: this is the problem with corporate media: inconvenient facts are conveniently forgotten. Google “salvador option” and what it meant in iraq. Then go to the library and look up New York Times, 1/11/82,
titled “US advisors saw ‘torture class,’ Salvadoran says” by Raymond
Bonner.

Then ask why negroponte is director of national intelligence.

Well, disillusioned, you’ve proven my point if you need to go to the NYT archive for an article from 1982… I would guess that Negroponte is DNI because he’s qualified to do the job.

Anyway, do you agree with Gates or not?

Make Pentagon accountable for every taxpayer dollar they get

The salvadoran intervention happened in the early 80’s after all. And it’s not the only such report by any stretch of the imagination.

I agree the military is being abused in many ways, one of which is to compensate for the lack of basic intelligence (I’m talking IQ here) on the part of the so-called civilian “leadership”.

Gen. Smedley Butler said it best: “War is a racket”. And a damn profitable one to boot.

Also google “Dianna Ortiz” and “Jennifer Harbury“
for some recent US history vis-a-vis guatemala.

I’m somewhat puzzled that Sec of Def Gates would feel we must be more touchy-feely than we already are in current Counterinsurgency doctrine. Wasn’t that a major factor behind the success of the surge??

Provincial Reconstruction Teams in Afghanistan would have a tough time without military protection. India sent their own military forces to help protect Indian highway construction workers. For the longest time in Iraq, we had to guard infrastructure from Al Qaeda.

Look at the capture of Bosnian Serb Radovan Karadzic and recall not too many years ago the ethnic cleansing and sniper attacks going on in the Balkans. It’s just hard to fathom that Sec of Def Gates would feel that events like this would not require military forces, and that current “nation-building under fire” is an isolated incident. Can you imagine going into Darfur without military protection?

Military funding does not require assets just to be used for hostility. That is the whole basis for Army doctrine of Stability and Civil Support Operations being on an even emphasis with combat operations. Helicopters, planes, and warships are a natural fit for resupplying disaster victims and being able to do it in a quasi Martial Law environment, like for instance Haiti. Look at the recent events in former Burma where the despot regime would not let us in to help…and might have messed with aid workers if the big stick had not been on hand nearby.

Sure you could separate roles like Cyber Warfare from the military. Let the CIA/FBI etc do that instead of having multiple services involved. But don’t assume that the past 20 years are a footnote in history with Islamic fundamentalism as strong as ever, and the competition for resources heating up in the final decades of the Oil Era.

I recall a Michael Yon article where a Battalion Commander suddenly disarmed and arrested a corrupt Police Chief while his forces overwatched Iraqi police outside with superior firepower. Just can’t fathom that happening through diplomacy. Or would you rather have Blackwater creating more international incidents while protecting the State Department…

Eisenhower’s concern about the unwarranted influence by the military-industrial complex is not Gate’s conern with militarism being too prevalent in foreign affairs. That said, Mr. Cryer’s suggestion military production to focus more on alternative energy is not without merit. They might want to start with finding a way to fly without gas.

Eisenhower’s concern about the unwarranted influence by the military-industrial complex is not Gate’s conern with militarism being too prevalent in foreign affairs. That said, Mr. Cryer’s suggestion for military production to focus more on alternative energy is not without merit. They might want to start with finding a way to fly without gas.

Sigh. There is a difference between isolationism and non-interventionism. Just because Gates wants to have different meddlers pulling different strings in these countries does not make what he wishes to do any purer. They don’t need our police/military, and they don’t need our social meddeling. “Free trade with all, entangling alliance with none.” Why is that so hard to grasp?

LHA_3Rusty July 21st, 2008 at 7:00 pm So Sorry, but you are dead wrong,we are not a christan nation,WE ARE A FREE NATION,just cause you chisttan say crap don’t make it true,I as my for-fathers did,fight to have a free nation, so get that streight. Simper Fi to the good guys

Joseph B. Cryer July 22nd, 2008 at 7:51 am I hope you will be part of the solution and not part of the problem,go thru the unclassified and declassified documents first,if your give in to any off those wrongs,stay out.

So, finally a SECDEF calling for inter-agency operations on a larger scale.…too bad CONGRESS will turn him a deaf ear!! Don’t expect any lessons learned soon.….

Bambooviper…good comeback for LHA3_Rusty’s comments. It is because we are a free nation we can practice our religion without interference or prosecution. That’s why the colonies were formed, and especially why no preference was given to a particular religion in our Constituion…

Cole…the application of nation building Gates is referring to is “before” the shooting starts!! Security will always be an issue.…

How is it that gates can release such reasonable –sounding statements while he oversees the missile-bait being installed on russia’s doorstep? (surely no one believes it has anything
to do with iran)

We can’t afford this empire any longer. There are more useful things to do than antagonize the bear.

“Cole…the application of nation building Gates is referring to is “before” the shooting starts!! Security will always be an issue….”

A lot of diplomacy has been tried over the years…and almost all of it failed when the threats are real, and looney-tune leaders are involved. Ask Chamberlain…and every U.S. President who has tried to resolve the Israeli/Palestenian problem. Could we negotiate our way out of Iran closing the Straits of Hormuz after an Israeli attack?

Can we allow Iran to gain nukes because of the belief that MAD will work against religious zealots and terrorists who get a hold of the technology?

I’m all for using military forces for peaceful purposes. Almost all military equipment is dual use in some manner. But can’t recall too many instances where the CIA or State Department has pulled us out of a sticky situation…while plenty of history involved effective Western Armed Forces preventing us from having to learn German, Japanese, Chinese, or Russian.…

And just as now, counterinsurgency, the building of good will, and nation-rebuilding is occurring by versatile military leaders…so has it occurred in the past under the Marshall Plan and in Japan under MacArthur. Contrast that with the fiasco that occurred when we first achieved victory in Iraq and an Ambassador was in charge.….

Let us see.….….…..SECDEF playing President Eisenhower?

Perhaps a bit awed by the USAF fiasco[s]!? A truly decent person taken aback?

Perhaps ADM King said it best.……“When the goin’ gets tough, they call on the sonsabitches.”

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