Cheryl Pellerin at the DoD
News offers the below report:
WASHINGTON, May 23, 2017 —
North Korea, Russia, China, Iran and extremist organizations are the top five
military threats facing the nation, the director of the Defense Intelligence
Agency said here this morning.
Marine Corps Lt. Gen. Vincent
R. Stewart (seen in the below photo) testified before the Senate Armed Services
Committee to discuss worldwide threats. Also testifying today was Daniel R.
Coats, director of National Intelligence.
Expanding on the nature of
the threats, Stewart said they include a nuclear-capable and increasingly
provocative North Korea, a resurgent Russia, a modernizing China, an ambitious
regional power in Iran and violent extremist organizations.
The last category encompasses
ongoing operations in Afghanistan, Iraq, Syria and elsewhere, the general
noted.
“We in DIA call these our
no-fail missions because the risk is too high for us to fail in pursuing these
missions,” Stewart added.
North Korea’s Trajectory
The world is focused on
events in Pyongyang and for good reasons, Stewart told the panel.
“Since assuming power, Kim
Jong Un has conducted three nuclear tests and the regime has tested an
unprecedented number of ballistic missiles of varying ranges over the past
year,” he said.
Despite technical shortfalls,
the regime has achieved key milestones in specific systems and engineers get
valuable data and insights from each test, Stewart observed.
“If left on its current
trajectory, the regime will ultimately succeed in fielding a nuclear-armed
missile capable of threatening the United States homeland,” the general said,
adding that it’s impossible to say when the capability will be operational but
the regime is committed and on a sure path to the capability.
Russia’s Key Objective
Stewart said Russia sees
military power as critical to achieving key strategic objective and the nation
devotes significant resources to its military modernization program.
“The Russian government seeks
to be the center of influence in what it describes as a multi-polar, post-West
world order,” he explained.
To support this worldview, he
said, Moscow pursues aggressive foreign and defense policies by using a full
spectrum of influence and coercion aimed at challenging U.S. interests around
the globe.
Out-of-area operations remain
a priority as demonstrated by its ongoing deployment to Syria and long-range
aviation approaching U.S. airspace.
China’s Military
Modernization
China is in the third decade
of an unprecedented military modernization program involving weapon systems,
doctrine, tactics and training, and space and cyber operations, Stewart said.
The nation now stands firmly
as a near-peer U.S. competitor, the general added.
New bases are being built in
the South China Sea and Stewart said that evidence suggests the outposts will
be used for military purposes.
“A key component of China's
strategy for a regional contingency is planning for potential U.S. intervention
in a conflict in the region,” he added. “Its navy remains on a course for 350
ships by the year 2020 and anti-access, area-denial capabilities continue to
improve.”
Iran’s Regional Security
Threat
In Iran, despite sanctions
Tehran is putting considerable resources into conventional military priorities
such as ballistic and cruise missiles, naval systems, unmanned aerial vehicles
and air defense systems that could threaten the U.S. and its interests in the
region, Stewart said.
“Iran's conventional military
doctrine is designed to protect Iran from the consequences of its assertive
regional policy,” he added, noting that policy is spearheaded by the Iranian
Revolutionary Guard's Kuds Force and its regional proxy Lebanese Hezbollah, and
in concert with certain Iraqi Shia militias and the Houthis, a Shia-led
movement.
“We should expect Iran to
continue to undermine the current regional security architecture,” the general
said, “using terrorist organizations and proxies to complicate U.S. efforts
throughout the region.”
Transregional Terrorism
Steady progress is being made
against transregional terrorism but there is still a long way to go, Stewart
said.
The Islamic State in Iraq and
Syria has been diminished in Libya, he added. Soon it will lose control of
Mosul and of its capital in Raqqa, which is now nearly isolated by counter-ISIS
local fighters.
“We've killed many ISIS and
al-Qaida leaders, and numerous terrorist plots have been averted,” Stewart
said.
Trend lines are moving in the
right direction but the fight will not end soon, he noted, adding that the
enemy is highly adaptable and capable, and instability and under-governed
territory may give them opportunities to resurge.
“I'm particularly concerned
about the long-term impact of returning foreign fighters and the potential for
these groups to capitalize on the proliferation of armed unmanned aerial
vehicles to do harm to U.S. and our allied interests,” the general said.
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