Jim Garamone at the DoD News offers the below piece:
FORT McNAIR, D.C., Aug. 23, 2016
— National
security leaders must be able to confront today’s threats, and they must develop
and maintain the personnel, strategies and equipment needed for an ever more
uncertain world, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff told the new class at
the National Defense University today.
Marine Corps Gen.
Joe Dunford also shared with the members of the class of 2017 his thoughts on
the strategic landscape, and the implications to the joint force.
Dunford agrees with
assessments that the world is in the most uncertain time since the end of World
War II. Still, the U.S. military “is recruiting and retaining quality people,”
the chairman said.
“Across the board,”
he added, “they are focused. They are committed. They are high
quality.”
There are signs of
wear in some military specialties and Dunford cited a pilot shortage and the
near constant deployments of special operators and other small, but crucial
specialties, specifically. But, he noted the closer to a combat environment, the
higher the morale.
Assessing
Risk
“In the environment
we are in today, with the complexity and volatility and variety of challenges we
have, how do we assess risk?” he asked. “How do we assess the capabilities or
capacities that must exist in the joint force? A part of this is also how to
prepare for the unexpected.”
The threat baseline,
he said, is four-plus-one: Russia, China, Iran, North Korea and violent
extremism. Four are nation states that can cause varying degrees of concern. The
fifth threat, terrorism, can flare up in any part of the world.
“We use those four
state actors and one nonstate actor … to get an appreciation for where is the
force relative to where it needs to be,” Dunford said.
He addressed each of
the threats starting with the campaign against the core of the Islamic State of
Iraq and the Levant in Iraq and Syria. The military campaign against core ISIL
is going well, he said. Iraqi security forces have proved in Fallujah and Ramadi
that they can take on ISIL and win. They have set the stage for the battle
against the terror group in Mosul -- Iraq’s second-largest city and the largest
city anywhere under ISIL control.
Fighting ISIL in
Iraq
Now, he said, “it is
no longer the military campaign that is going to be the determining factor in
the success in Iraq. The interactions of governments in Iraq, the role of Shia
militia forces, the relationship of the Peshmerga in the north with the Shia and
government -- all those things have to be sorted out.”
Meanwhile, the
United States is supporting 14,000 Arab fighters and upwards of 30,000 Kurds
during the counter-ISIL campaign in Syria, said Dunford, who noted there’s been
much ground retaken there from ISIL.
ISIL in
Libya
ISIL is not limited
to Iraq and Syria and the United States is helping government forces in Libya
strike at ISIL in Sirte, Dunford said. The U.S. needs to eliminate the group
from the region for ISIL in Libya could be the headquarters for the group
throughout Africa and for attacks into Europe, he said.
Dunford said the
counter-ISIL campaign in Libya is making progress. “The trajectory that ISIL was
on in Libya in January and February was concerning to me, but it is less so
today,” the chairman said.
ISIL is also in
Afghanistan, West Africa and is trying to gain adherents in Southeast Asia. The
United States will confront the group wherever it goes, Dunford said.
The chairman
discussed the capabilities that Russia and China are developing. “When I look at
Russia, they are modernizing their nuclear enterprise, they are modernizing
their submarine force, they are modernizing their conventional capabilities,” he
said. All this is being done, he said, despite significant demographic and
economic challenges facing Russia.
The U.S. competitive
advantage in many of these areas is getting smaller, the chairman
said.
Russian
Actions
Dunford said he’s
concerned about Russia’s behavior, including its annexation of Crimea, its
actions in Eastern Ukraine, it threats to Georgia and Moldova, and its aid to
Syria.
Russia is engaging
in these actions in an attempt, Dunford said, to “undermine the most successful
alliance in history -- the NATO alliance.”
He added: “From a
U.S. perspective, I would tell you I believe our center of gravity as a nation,
through a security lens, is the network of alliances. Russia is trying to erode
that.”
Russia and China are
separately concentrating on anti-access, area denial strategies, but for similar
ends, the chairman said.
The Question of
China
China is a bit more
opaque, Dunford said. China has invested significant sums in building up its
military, including its nuclear enterprise. Its actions in the South China Sea
are cause for concern to the United States, the chairman said.
Meanwhile, Iran is
trying to spread its influence across the Middle East, he said, and must be
carefully monitored. And, the chairman said, North Korea is still building
nuclear capabilities and intercontinental missiles and is the most unpredictable
nation on the list.
All these risk
assessments have implications for the joint force. The first, Dunford said, is
the United States must have balanced capabilities. “In other words, we have to
have capabilities that range from the nuclear down to conventional and special
operations capabilities,” he said. “We as a nation with the challenges out there
cannot afford not to have a robust capability.”
Another implication
is the United States has to do better at integrating all aspects of the
government into strategy and integrating allies and partners into plans, the
chairman said.
Finally, the
chairman believes any disagreement has the potential to grow to a transregional,
multi-domain conflict.
He cited the example of North Korea. In the 1990s, it was
possible that if the armistice broke down, the conflict could be limited to the
Korean Peninsula. With ballistic missiles, the cyber threat and conventional
attacks, any conflict with North Korea would soon escalate to include the rest
of U.S. Pacific Command, U.S. Northern Command, U.S. Strategic Command and U.S.
Cyber Command.
This calls for a
much greater degree of strategic integration in the future, Dunford said. The
decision-making processes need to be streamlined, and leaders need a common
operational picture. All this requires a strategic framework to build the plans
for global operations.
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