The end of the Gates era

The end of the Gates era

Over the arc of its history — which is not that long, in the scheme of things — the Defense Department tends not to change very much. It grows and spends and tends to get the things it wants, eventually, despite the occasional speed bumps thrown up by the people who run it. Louis Johnson scrapped the aircraft carrier USS United States, but the Navy soon got its big flattops. Robert McNamara tried to force the Air Force and Navy to accept a compromise neither really loved in the F-111 Aardvark, but both services eventually got the fighters they really wanted. No earthly power could stop the military-industrial-legislative complex from acquiring the V-22 Osprey. Etc.

And yet Robert Gates will wind up his tenure as having been one of the most successful secretaries of defense at forcing his will on the thousand-tentacled clockwork octopus we call the Pentagon. His biggest foil was the Air Force: He fired its top leadership after the service grew lax in its nuclear mission and pushed back too hard against the unglamorous UAVs Gates wanted for Iraq and Afghanistan. When he wanted to extol the virtues of air power, Gates flew onto an aircraft carrier. He lopped off the F-22 program, a symbol of traditional fighter pilot Aim-Highism if there ever was one, and, lest we forget, he cut the Air Force’s beloved next generation bomber — before eventually bringing it back.

The other services didn’t get off easy, either: The Army had to give up its dreams of vast tinker-toy battlefields where a UAV that looks like a shop-vac can beam HD video to a soldier’s wristwatch. The Navy lost the huge futuristic cruiser that was becoming the ultimate fantasy for surface warfare officers. And the Marines, of course, had to give up their dear high-speed swimming APC, a living emblem of their legendary exploits. The Gates era, from the perspective of the services, cost each of them a fundamental piece of its identity, as Gates forced them to take their eyes off the stars and put them back onto the battlefield. Now, the Air Force can’t buy enough little robot airplanes to fly racetracks over the desert; the Army can’t buy enough new trucks to keep its soldiers safe; and the Navy can’t stop reminding everyone how many sailors it has serving on the ground in the Middle East, not out on those silly ships at sea.


With the end of Gates’ tenure now only weeks away, the biggest question is: Did it take? Will it last? Gates himself recognized the Pentagon’s tendency to fall back into familiar ways; he warned as much in his speech to the Air Force Academy in March:

“This country requires all the capabilities we have in the services — yes, I mean carriers, tac-air, tanks, and amphibious assault — but the way we use them in the 21st Century will almost certainly not be the way they were used in the 20th Century. Above all, the services must not return to the last century’s mindset after Iraq and Afghanistan, but prepare and plan for a very different world than we all left in 2001.”

Gates forced the Air Force to accept a new type of warfare that was abhorrent to its traditional pilot-centric culture. Will the UAV become a long-term part of the way it does business? How much will the Navy resist the long-term plan to lower the requirement for aircraft carriers over the coming decades? And will the Army really go along with Gates’ planned reduction in end strength when the time comes?

Gates won’t be around — few secretaries of defense are in office long enough to see many decisions pay off. But the services will be.

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Dr. Gates is a superb public servant and I am grateful for his service. He inherited a mess in Iraq and acted decisively. I think the “surge” in Iraq, much derided by the left and the left leaning main stream media (and their congressional allies) was one of the boldest moves in a generation.

Well done, sir!

Gates was ultimately a loser, he tried the DOD by early cuts in the naiv idee to worse the DOD preserving but he failed with this strategy miserably and contributed so to give the DOD the final blow. He has cut everything what it was possible to cut and so nothing is remain what the DOD can now sacrifice without suffering massive damage.

It is possible that if Gates had not start to kill anything before the final fight on Budgeht has begann, the DOD today would just to sacrifice that Gates have killed in the last 2 years ago. So only the FCS,the DDG1000 and the F22 but now the DOD will moust sacrifice the things what he absolutely need! Things like the F35, 3–4 carrier and many of his active Air Wings and his 313 ship plan and mutch other important things.Gates did not understand that politicians like Obama are not driven by rationality but by their idiologie and their selfishness. And so at the last Gates was exploited by Obama to give is bad and naiv policy credibility and this is the real legacy tragedy of Gates era !

Ah yes the surge where we handed over Iraq to an Iranian backed clique. The Iranians certainly thought it was a great success — they even thanked us publicly for it.

If anybody some of the friends of the old Baathist party got a piece of the pie, not the Iranians. Do you honestly think the Iranians are going to invade?

Why would they invade a client state.

Mr. Gates should have left town with Bush. He told everyone that China and Russia would not have stealth fighters until 2020, and yet here they are with flying prototypes. He took a first rate Airforce and put it on the road to mediocrity. Dumping a program that had just started production of the best fighter/attack jet that ever flew, and attempting to field tuboprops instead. We have the best spec-ops in the world ‚now i can see increasing the number of units and giving them better equipment, but to take the Airforce and trying to religate it to a supporting role to the spec-ops is crazy and very incompetent and near sighted. The two war (cold war) military that greeted him when he took office,was not perfact ‚but was flexable enough to take on any scenario. Build a force to the upmost techenical level and let them adapt to the threat, don’t build a force to a specific threat and then get caught with your pants down.

Gates may have had a few good moments, but cancellation of the F-22 program was certainly not one of them. In fact, I fear that decision will ultimately be one that comes back to bite us in the proverbial ass.

Cause all of that bad blood between the two countries just vanished.

Putting all our eggs in the F-35 basket will definitely come to bite us later in time. That flying turd is truly a Gates gift of mediocrity. He should have crushed Lockheed and Pratt a long time ago, and never promised the darkening of the skies with new jets…that’ll never happen as well.

When did the F-22 prototype fly again? What makes you think the Chinese or Russians will have a working, in production system before 2020?

Gates did something beyond canceling programs that is the most important. He made people think. There is more discussion about alternatives and new perspectives and capabilities than there ever has been, and not just amongst the think tank crowd, but in the actual DoD. That’s important. People are asking hard and fair questions of the military leadership. Strategies and assumptions are being questioned.

There are legions of fanboys for different programs that love to rant here about why America is doomed if we cancel their favorite program. I think America is doomed if it doesn’t wake up and deploy appropriate forces at a legitimate price. That is something Gates has definitely been responsible for inserting into the dialogue and that is important.

While the f-22 cancellation may turn out to be one of the few specs in Gates’ tenure how about you try to taking off those pink tinted glasses.

Best attack jet that ever flew? Seriously? Does it even have ground attack radar modes yet? How about a EO/IR sensor system capable of positively identifying targets? Does it have a laser designation capability? A wide selection of air to ground weaponry for attacking multiple stationary or moving targets in one pass? Anti radiation missiles?

The tragedy is that when Gates came into office, the U.S. is the only fighter in production-5 gene, had the F22. Gates killed the program for the poor said the F35 should be affordable.

Now the F22 line is dead and the F35 is to team as well and the U.S. will have no longer a 5 Gen figther program but the russians will have one and the chinese will have one our more programs. Gates have make the U.S. military smaller, weaker and less capable competitors in the medium and long term, this is finaly Gates legacy.

Gates may want to recognize his fault but probably he recognized is only as Obama informed him 24 hours before his campaign speak about t hes plan to remove 400 billion more from the DOD.

He certainly did superb job on F-35 program oversight (as he put all the eggs in that basket), just like well-educated decision to teminate F-22 production line and deny its sales to closest allies, based on the intel analysis that Russia and PRC will focus less on fighters and more on tricycles. Bad luck he didn´t manage to shut down Super Hornet production for the Navy, Congress didn´t get his idea, but he tried hard, I have to admit. Accurate assessment of China´s inability to build 5th generation fighter before 2020 was only spoiled by Chinese lack of cooperation, just like price assessment of F-35 unit price was quite close, only small correction needed (multiply by 2). I could go on (tankers, NGB, LCS) but history will tell us more. He was much like Rummy, but more polished, didn´t use that much of laser pointer and didn´t say “Holly mackarel!”. Great promoter of F-35 in other countries, but I guess Lockeed Martin should be doing that. Superb use of powerpoint, never bothering much with numbers. Sound bias against finance, technical issues and management and personal management, and other domains that distract from creating visions how should US Armed Forces look like in 2041.

All of you are passing judgment on Gates. You need to take into consideration the cast of clowns he has to work with, including Presidents, Congress, idiot Generals, and dysfunctional federal work force. Despite his bad decision supporting F-35, Gates’ legacy will be righting the sinking ship Rumsfeld left him, and smartly navigating the Washington DC’s perilous minefields.

The AF put itself on a road to mediocrity with poorly run fighter programs.

It is not a question of “fanboys” for major programs. Gates derailed Army modernization for at least a decade. One might contend that he was just “following orders”, but that is not what a SecDef is there for. Despite the fact that Panetta is likely to go for deeper cuts, if he rebalances the unbalanced “rebalancing” that Gates did, then there is hope. We can drive on with less budget, as long as the fundamentals are right and stakeholders are realistic and patient. That was not Bob Gates. Or Don Rumsfeld, for that matter. We have nowhere to go but up now.

Sarcasm duly noted.

you are such a loser. the last person on earth to recognize that FCS was a disaster, and would assign blame for the Army & the program’s failure on Gates. FCS shouldn’t have been started in the first place — if DoD followed its procedures and had better discipline, it would have never been given the green light.

Sorry, this problem does not go away because people have sour grapes about FCS. The party line was always, “we need this, but current war priorities take precedence”. They’ve been thrashing around for two years since the program was restructured with zero progress. And you have former FCS consultant Frank Kendall going around making speeches about the lessons we are supposed to have learned. What a joke. I say we have drawn exactly the wrong lessons from FCS because people have a vested interest in burying what really happened. The fact that they are closing the Lima tank plant only helps prove my point. But you still have the same pressures on budget and personnel accounts, and the same long term strategic challenges. And those will not go away.

When the PAK FA and the J-20 finally become into production and operation. Will 187 15+ year old F-22As be enough to counter 1,000 (PAK FA) Sukhoi T-50s and perhaps 400+ J-20s? Will the F-35s be able to go head to head with them? Are our BVR air to air missiles better than the Russian and Chinese versions? So that the F-35 can get off the first shot? Or do we need more F-22s to be bought in the years 2013–2020?

can you provide (and will c) some links backing that?

This is not the problem, the problem is the F22 line will be close before Obama live the office them he lost the election 2012. A over DOD secretary and administration will simple not have the time to stop the close of the F22 line. And in the real the closing of the F22 Line has already begun, it is simple too late to bring the F22 back on the table. To kill the F22 was probably one of the biggest failures in the History of the American Defense History.

The F 35 was not necessary how long the F22 was open, for example 480–700 F22 there a guaranty for the US Air Dominance in the next 4 Years but now the US AF will get only 187 F22 and the F35 Program will kill and this is alone Gates fault. The reality is the F35 can be replaced by modern F16 and F15SE legacy Fighter how long the F22 was open but without many more F22 this strategy is impossible.

Sorry in the next 40 Years.

No, but on the plus side Lockheed will still be making billions from JSF rework.

Gates is our generation’s Louis Johnson and I fear a lot of of good people will die because his miserable decisions. Cancelling the F-22 practically guarantees that we will fight in the future without air superiority. Letting the Fleet deteriorate its lowest strength in a hundred years means we may see sea battles again with an equal or superior enemy in the PLA (Navy). Throw in services organized for social and political ends (gays, women, and affirmative action all elevating diversity above combat effectiveness) and we’re going to run a real chance of losing a future war.

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