ARLINGTON: Military officers and analysts are increasingly worried that if a war breaks out with a major power — meaning China, Russia or both — the conflict would escalate faster, spread more broadly, and drag on longer than anything in recent history. Think World War II on speed, with no front lines or clear demarcations between the European and Pacific theaters.Then this.
“The history of short-war predictions is one of repeated disappointment, and it would be profoundly unwise to risk our security by preparing only for wars of limited duration,” warned Vice Adm. Frank Pandolfe, assistant to Gen. Joseph Dunford, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. (Pandolfe represents the chairman on interagency bodies and particularly to the State Department). Dunford has pushed for a new trans-regional planning staff that transcends the current geographic combatant commands, arguing that new threats — like the Islamic State — sprawl too broadly in space for the current structure. Pandolfe is arguing threats may extend too long in time as well.
Pandolfe said, but a long war against well-armed great powers would be very different. Sophisticated cyber and electronic warfare attacks would precede large salvos of smart weapons, “an unprecedented blending of mass and precision,” he said. Instead of the steady movement of front lines that gave America time to mobilize in World War II, fighting would leap like a wildfire over a firebreak, from one theater into another. Instead of World War II-era censorship or even Vietnam-era nightly newscasts, he said, leaks, propaganda, and fake news would pour over the Internet, “a torrent of real and false information transmitted in near real-time,” to attack the American people’s will to fight.Last highlight first. But if we fail to prefer a war, “I am very confident that America’s technological and industrial might would rise to the occasion.”
A great-power war would be so fast-paced, so intense, so destructive that some analysts assume it would burn out in weeks or months. Pandolfe disagrees — which implies Dunford does. “It is possible that shared concerns between states over the great damage that’s been inflicted on people, infrastructure, and trade will act to limit the time and space allowed for conflict,” Pandolfe said, “(but) this thinking is founded on presumptions that rational actors will prevail and that, upon the rupture of the international fabric, immediate and intense diplomatic efforts will be brought to bear.”
“However comforting such thoughts might be, military planners cannot assume such will be the case,” Pandolfe warned.
Could the United States endure such a conflict? I asked the admiral. In particular, could we mobilize our industrial base — as we did in World War II — to replace the sunken ships, the downed aircraft, the burnt-out tanks, the expended munitions? The first resort is to engage and deter, Pandolfe replied, “so we don’t ever get into that position again.” But if we fail to prefer a war, “I am very confident that America’s technological and industrial might would rise to the occasion.”
Seriously?
People discount the state of the American culture as part of the war winning effort in WW2. Society had just endured the great depression and govt aid was scant at best. People panhandled, lived hand to mouth, recycled and reused every bit of clothing/material on hand, was used to deprivation and hardship and lived a mostly rural lifestyle that allowed them to survive.
American has none of that today and I think our moral fiber is so weakened that any hardship would snap our country like a twig. Rebuilding the industrial base in time of war? You're talking months at best and years realistically.
In the meantime the US Army and Marine Corps along with the Air Force and Navy would be fighting desperate holding actions.
As I've said before. RUSSIA IS NOT THE THREAT IN THIS TYPE SCENARIO! Its the Chinese that we should be looking hard at. They can pump out ships and planes rapidly....not refurbished models out of the bone yards like we would have to, but they could build new tanks/IFVs, ships and planes.
Despite all my misgivings I have to cheer this discussion. They're at least thinking about the problem. Of course this makes Trump's efforts to reach some type of diplomatic understanding with Russia essential. One of these threats we can handle but both? I have my doubts. Additionally our allies in the Pacific are...unsteady....depending on the target that Russia picks in Europe or the Middle East the same applies to NATO.
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