Instead of Romney, This is What We Got….

As a former Pentagon war-planning strategist, I feel obligated to comment that Tom McInerney’s and his collaborator’s views are quite poignant regarding Bob Gates’ sufficiency as our Secretary of Defense.  He, the Obama Administration, and the current secular-progressive Congress have placed America’s national security in great peril with their institutionalization of the 2010 Defense budget.   They literally cut America’s future out of our hearts.  Their decision not to fund critical Defense expenditures—such as continuance of the F-22 program, replacement of the half-century-old B-52 bomber, standing up a missile defense system to protect the United States and our Allies from nuclear missile attacks, and purchasing a stronger ability to project American influence via the U.S. Navy—instead will supply more money to pay for Obama’s stimulus payoffs (read taxpayer money down a black hole of nothingness).  Gates, et. al., have placed political considerations in front of strategic wisdom, which indeed violates the personal oaths each took to defend the U.S. Constitution against “…all enemies, foreign and domestic….”

secretary-of-defense-robert-gates

Secretary of Defense Robert Gates

President Ronald Reagan understood the value of technology, effectively invested in it, and his “Star Wars” strategy subsequently broke the back of Communism in the Soviet Union, another bureaucratic behemoth.  In our time and for the future, the F-22, stealthy and fast bombers that are capable of striking targets around the world at the drop of a hat, a missile-defense shield that protects North America from unstable provocateurs like North Korea, and three more aircraft carriers would give us and our children the ability to live in undisturbed peace.  And let us not forget the significance of deterrence, a doctrine that has kept us safe and economically triumphant since World War II.  Our military, economic, and foreign policy professionals, not the temporary political implants, hold onto the institutional rails over the long haul by applying continually better science and economics within our borders to maintain consistency from presidential administration to administration.

Such is possible, as long as the designs of each successive administration are not dramatically different from each other.  What ought to alarm all of us at this juncture is that the Obama revolution cannot be smoothed over by the professionals this time.  Traditional nation-to-nation relationships and military-industrial constancy are out the window.  The bottom line?  Obama doesn’t get this line of thinking.  Bob Gates doesn’t get it.  The secular progressives in Congress don’t get it.  They would rather visit the ice cream shop for instant gratification than save up to purchase the store and run a viable business.  When the most powerful nation on Earth (a) turns its back on international security agreements and (b) abrogates its responsibility as the only “super power” to do everything possible to preserve the regional balances of economic/political/military power around the world, (c) everything goes to “the hot place” in a hand basket.  A plus B equals C.

Even the slightest imbalances in regional power structures can give birth to oppression and mayhem that eventually, if not immediately, involve the United States.  Isolationism almost always leads to world war, and you can take that history to the bank.  Worst of all, we now face for the first time an enemy who actually wants to die in battle to achieve success in heaven.  Therefore, we can’t possibly deter, much less negotiate, with him.   Pulitzer Prize-winning Dr. Charles Krauthammer, who frequently writes for the Washington Post, had it right when he recently observed that Obama and his far-left academic associates are bent on “nothing short of revolution.”  Bob Gates is a political survivor who swims with the fishes wherever the fishes want to swim.

Gates is Obama’s enabler.  In my mind and those of a preponderant number of active-duty and retired senior military officers, he is not trustworthy as a supposedly loyal guardian of the U.S. Constitution, because his first priority is to remain in office instead of serving the best interests of his country.  His “vision” can’t withstand the expert critics.  Incidentally, the only candidate who is presently visible to American voters and who has the ability and vision to save us from this impending train wreck is Mitt Romney.

Please take time to read the following insightful piece by Lieutenant General McInerney and Major General Vallely.  Their collective analysis is 100 percent accurate and should be canonized by the news media as a call to action by those who care about enjoying a prosperous and peaceful future.

By Colonel Craig Bradford (USAF, Ret)


HumanEvents.com
June 24, 2009

Gates’ Epiphany

By Tom McInerney and Paul Vallely


When President Obama announced his National Security Team of Hillary Clinton, Robert Gates and James Jones, we were a bit apprehensive . And that apprehension was, unfortunately, proven justified when Gates announced his 2010 budget on April 6, 2009.

The 2010 budget is so different from earlier budgets Defense Secretary Gates helped draft and push through Congress during the last Bush years that we had to wonder: did he have some sort of revelation in which it was revealed to him that the threats to the United Stateshad been vastly reduced?

We should have suspected something was amiss when he made senior military leaders sign Non-Disclosure Agreements — in effect a gag order — so that the Service Chiefs could not discuss details of the coming budget with their staffs or even with Congress. The gag orders even reached to the service vice chiefs of staff who run the services on a daily basis. Gates — who describes himself as the Secretary of War — thus ensured that the Service Chiefs had to rely on their personal skills to convince him of their needs without the support of experts whose only reason for being is to provide analysis and advice to the service leaders.

This is a first time this has happened in our history, and it was a dramatic departure from his last two budgets. Again, what drove this epiphany?

Gates’ experience in the CIA was now being implemented to ensure, as he said, that leaks could not be sent to the Hill before he wanted them to be. It became even more apparent to us why the former Secretary of the Air Force Mike Wynne, and Chief of Staff Buzz Moseley had to go, because both were skilled, knowledgeable infighters who had dominated the last QDR (Quadrennial Defense Review).

Since Gates was using the Air Force budget as a pot of money to pay other services’ bills, he had to change out the more experienced team for one that might be more accommodating.

When the 2010 budget was announced during the Easter recess with the Congress out of town, the average citizen and congressman did not realize that this was the most dangerous budget since the end of World War II. It decimates our Air Force, freezes our long range Missile Defense capability, scales down our naval strike forces and the Army’s future mobility capabilities without the normal analysis. All we have is Gates’ back-of-the-envelope calculations.

The American people need to know that fact. Before any military realignment is undertaken — and, as required by law — the Defense Department conducts a deep-impact analysis of the threats facing America and the weapon systems and manpower needed to deter or defeat them. This is called — again, in the law that requires it — the Quadrennial Defense Review.

But the 2009 QDR wasn’t even begun when Gates announced his actions, which make the new QDR irrelevant. What was even more surprising was that this budget was not coordinated with the services for military advice prior, which again was a first. The normal expertise and clear analytical justification built into the budget system was missing completely. By Gates’ own admission, he did not consider the impact on the industrial base, which is profound and which he is charged to maintain.

All the cuts have been described as justified by the future of irregular warfare. We applaud the emphasis on that, but does Gates believe that we will never have to deter or fight a conventional war or face down a nuclear threat? His budget says he does.

The Gates budget is also tied to the less than zero-sum game imposed by budget constraints. The president signed a $787 billion stimulus that nobody read, so why didn’t Gates ask for 10% (or $79 billion) to recapitalize the services that have deployed for 19 years in Bosnia, Kosovo, and the Middle East? We are not short of funds, but the Obama administration has placed a low priority on defense. The stimulus addition to defense could have created 500 thousand jobs, which should be his priority, plus recapitalized a worn-out military, which should be Gates’ top priority.

Now one of the most surprising things was that the secretary did not get all of his facts right on the programs he canceled. This is one of the dangers of a small, rigidly-bound group having total control of the defense budget.

For instance, his cancellation of the presidential helicopter program was based on future cost projections. The current program is basically on cost and on schedule with nine helicopters delivered. The problem is that the White House, Secret Service, and Navy have added a host of gold-plated requirements on the next model to be bought (increment 2) which could have been removed.

Why cancel the program and throw away $4 billion? The Marine and Navy pilots are very happy with the performance of the helicopter. Gates should have looked at removing the gold plating instead of canceling the program outright, as the Italian defense Minister said in a letter to Mr. Gates on 28 May.

Termination of the F-22 was the most far-reaching and short-sighted of Gates’ decisions. When the program was begun in the late 1980s, the Air Force said it needed 750 F-22s. With the end of the Cold War, the requirement was reduced again and again, to the point at which the Air Force said that with 243 aircraft, there would be a moderate risk.

Of what? Of losing a war if we were engaged in more than one conflict at a time.

Now comes Secretary Gates, cutting the force of F-22s to the affordable number of 187. Please note that the threat hasn’t changed. If 243 aircraft create a moderate risk of losing a war, what do 187 mean?

It means we have a higher risk, perhaps a fatally higher one, of losing a war. Gates’ termination decision at 187 means that we will have only about 65 combat coded fighters on any given day. That would be the smallest air superiority force since WWI.

That number will also not equip each of the Air Expeditionary Forces that make up the deployable Air Force, nor will the smaller number provide sustainable combat power for the combatant commanders such as Dave Petraeus, Stan McChrystal, and the other front-line warriors.

This short-sighted decision is unreasonable when measured against the developing threat we are facing in Iran and North Korea. Gates will not let the F-22 be deployed into the Middle East for unknown reasons, but never fails to say that they have not been used in combat. That amounts to a political decision, not a reason to cancel the program.

Gates’ overconfidence in the F-35 misses the point. The Pentagon planned to have a mix of F-22s and F-35s because the F-35 lacks both the air-to-air dogfighting capability the F-22 has and the F-22′s survival capabilities against the advanced surface to air missile systems that are about to be deployed into Iran and even North Korea. And then there is the small fact that the F-22 is in production, and the F-35 will not be ready for prime time for years to come.

Gates’ rationale that “exquisite,” dominating combat systems are not required by American aviators ¦and, that the services should be equipped with aircraft that “will do” is just not embraced by the fighter pilots that actually fly into harm’s way or knowledgeable analysts that study actual lessons learned and contemporary threats and long term trends.

This “just getting-by” logic of his will be costly in lives, in treasure, and certainly in our ability to influence or deter, as we will never be able to field the numbers that potential threats have available to them. We owe it to our warriors — and to ourselves — that each aircraft (or other combat system) will be the absolute best that can be produced and delivered — especially the aircraft tasked to perform the “predicate mission” of air dominance throughout the combat area of responsibility.

Why would we terminate the most advanced fighter in the world, as the production is reaching optimum price and delivery schedule for a less capable, unproven, unfielded design that would not win in a fly-off? The F-22 would have a 100 to 0 success rate against the F-35. It makes no sense at all. Ask the captains and majors what they want. They will have to fly them in combat at the risk of their lives and their joint forces.

The cancellation of the Combat Search and Rescue Helicopter — CSAR — for the Air Force 30 days before the winner was to be announced is seemingly based on Gates saying that a single service requirement was not necessary as we had lots of helicopters to do this mission. Unfortunately, the clique of sycophants around the secretary did not realize that we have tried this before in “real” combat, and it has always failed.

True, combat search and rescue is a time critical, high intensity, high risk mission area that demands pilot and aircrew core competencies, focused training, specific equipage and an assigned service responsible to the overall joint team for the organizing, training, and equipping of this mission area. In short, as the previous Air Force Chief of Staff (General Buzz Moseley) has stated, “this is an ethical and moral imperative to pick our people up,¦all our people, ¦across the full joint spectrum of operations. If we are going to send them out to fight, we must have the capability to recover them in distress.”

Since 2001, our CSAR crews have rescued over 3,000 people. The United States Air Force CSAR forces are Joint Forces working for the Joint Force Air Component Commander.

Mr. Secretary, we expect you to provide resources to recover our aircrews in combat and peacetime, every time, and with all possible speed and expertise.

The most egregious errors were in his testimony about the cancellation of the Kinetic Energy Interceptor (KEI). The Lexington Institute’s Dan Goure pointed out six major factual errors in his rationale for canceling the program of a long-range interceptor. Yet Gates would not recant on this important decision on missile defense. On 28 May, former Secretary of Defense Bill Cohen pointed out in an op-ed in theWashington Times that now is not the time to cut $1.4 billion out of long range missile defense with North Korea and Iran increasing their long range missile capabilities. We quite agree with Cohen’s recommendation.

Gates is delaying the Initial Operational Capability of the Next Generation Bomber (NGB) for more study, which is just slow rolling it. The fact of the matter is this “taking of the money” and “delay for additional study” will effectively kill the effort to develop and deliver a lethal, penetrating, persistent, survivable long range strike aircraft that is required to provide the President the true global reach and global strike necessary to deter and dissuade (or deliver strategically paralyzing, decisive blows).

How many of those captains and majors and lieutenant colonels flying B-52s thought that — as it now appears will result from Gates’ decision — they and their sons will be flying the B-52 when it achieves the unenviable distinction of becoming the first 100-year old aircraft still flying in combat? Aches the age of 100 years? Surely America can do better for the pilots and crews who fly.

The Navy saw its carrier battle groups reduced from 11 to 10, which means that they will now end up with nine air wings. This will put us at greater risk at a time that we see an increasing emerging threat in North Korea and Iran. One must ask the question, why is the Obama administration taking such risk?

The Army had their Future Combat System vehicle modernization program canceled, and General Casey, the Army Chief, said, “I supported it, I did not agree with it,” which goes back to our introduction and the gag orders that our senior military leaders were forced to live with for the first time in history.

In summary, Gates still has great credibility on Capitol Hill, and we are still great admirers of all he is trying to do especially in Iraq andAfghanistan, but most members do not understand the dangers of this budget. Most alarming is this budget appears to all observers to be a step towards unilateral disarmament. For the first time in modern history, the administration will not publish the five-year defense program.

North Korea detonated a second nuclear weapon on Memorial Day and continues to fire ballistic missiles specifically to send signals of defiance to the Obama administration. The May detonation was immediately followed by President Ahmadinejad of Iran saying they would continue their nuclear development program. Today, Iran is about to come apart and we are still exhibiting weakness and appeasement.

We are facing some very challenging, very lethal, and very technologically advanced threats, and now is not the time for unilateral disarmament. Only our members of Congress can stop this dangerous budget now. Mr. Gates’ priorities and his decisions without analysis are the problem. Our troops fighting today and our troops that will certainly fight tomorrow deserve a more honestly-based and adequately budgeted force structure.

What epiphany did we miss?

Retired Air Force Lt. General McInerney and retired Army Maj. Gen. Vallely are co-authors of Endgame, The Blueprint for Victory in the War on Terror and Baghdad Ablaze. Both are or have been Fox News Military Analysts and authors of numerous articles and appear regularly on numerous radio shows. Mr. McInerney was former assistant Vice Chief of Staff USAF and Mr. Vallely was former Deputy Commander Army Pacific.

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14 Responses to “Instead of Romney, This is What We Got….”

  1. Copperhead
    July 6, 2009 at 4:01 am #

    What a bunch of paranoid, fascist, militaristic crud this is.
    Sorry boys, 99.99% of the world’s problems are solved without the military, or violence, and usually a strong military from any country causes more problems than it solves.

    Try to justify troops and military bases in over a hundred countries. If that’s not empire, I don’t know what is. In any case, that’s not conservatism, that’s imperialism.

  2. Crystalf
    July 6, 2009 at 8:15 am #

    Thank you for the posting — very insightful!!

  3. Spencer Iacono
    July 6, 2009 at 8:32 am #

    Is this the same Crystal from CTR?

  4. Spencer Iacono
    July 6, 2009 at 9:26 am #

    It has nothing to do with “imperialism.” We in the world of reality more accurately refer to it in as simple, and logical, terms as “security.”

    But for those who have “forgotten” the perils that US faces in our time(i.e. 9/11), I can see how your paradigm would be off. The key here in having a “correct” paradigm is to NEVER forget.

  5. Copperhead
    July 6, 2009 at 6:53 pm #

    Security? As in national security?

    More like resource, and market security.

    Yes, it enables oil to flow, our rich companies to make ever larger profits, and for Walmart to sell cheap crap. So we eliminate local manufacturing, and the rich in our country are richer. But having military strung out all over the world has nothing to do with protecting the average American citizen.

    Seriously, all we need to do is protect our borders, and it can cost a lot less. If you guys are serious about protecting Americans then how come 47 million Americans don’t have access to health care? Even the people who survived 9-11 can’t get proper care unless the can shell out a bunch of money.

    What type of system is that?

    I hope you Neo-cons join the civilized world at some point.

  6. Spencer Iacono
    July 6, 2009 at 7:45 pm #

    Security? As in national security?

    More like resource, and market security.

    Yes, it enables oil to flow, our rich companies to make ever larger profits, and for Walmart to sell cheap crap. So we eliminate local manufacturing, and the rich in our country are richer. But having military strung out all over the world has nothing to do with protecting the average American citizen.

    Seriously, all we need to do is protect our borders, and it can cost a lot less. If you guys are serious about protecting Americans then how come 47 million Americans don’t have access to health care? Even the people who survived 9-11 can’t get proper care unless the can shell out a bunch of money.”

    What type of system is that?

    I hope you Neo-cons join the civilized world at some point.

    Sounds a little like “paranoid, fascist crud” you are spouting out.

    Can you site your credentials as compared to the man who posted this article, Craig Bradford, who served as a Strategic War Planner in the Pentagon, is by far not a ‘neo-con’, was a U.S. Diplomat to Egypt, a counter terrorist official, then retired most recently from Executive Director of Economic Developing in Crescent City CA and who is a man who bled for his country, was shot down twice in vietnam fighting to liberate the Hmong refugees? What have you done that gives you the credentials to this good man’s character and his intentions? Let’s here it.

    Mr. Bradford won awards from the state of CA for his economic recovery of Crescent City. He was hired from the credentials he established as Deputy City Manager of Las Vegas. He is now retired and serves, without pay, on his city council protecting the people from likely setbacks in his community. Having SEEN the situation this country faces from an insider’s perspective, not a mere sideline critic who listens to Ron Paul and the liberal media, he has a pure grasp on reality.

    You don’t. Your point of view is not based off of any type of experience, at least not to the degree that his is I can bet. Whenever I hear people drop the “oil” card I lose instant respect for them as it has absolutely nothing to do with the US and it’s missions. When Obama puts us in such a state of vulnerability that we are attacked again(maybe it will be a nuke this time) the people will be ready to throw him out of office and replace him with someone who they can feel more secure with, in terms of national security.

    Please don’t run for president in mine or my family’s lifetime. There are terrorist bent on the destruction of our civilization and they have sleeper cells just about EVERYWHERE.

    By the way, as far as health care goes, Romney is the only person in the country to have provided universal health care for people in this country. He did so for the people of Mass. and did so without a Government takeover. It relies on “free market principles.” He is no George Bush. He is competent and can get things done.

  7. Illinoisguy
    July 6, 2009 at 8:17 pm #

    To reduce missile defense at a time like this borders insanity. To reduce our defense expenditures at all with enemies on so many fronts is simply idiotic. Obama seems to be doing all he can do to bring down our country, and so far he’s succeeding at it. he must be stopped. Meanwhile, our Congress can not allow these weapons programs to be reduced. In fact, they must be increased. Why not put some people to work protecting our country. That would be a novel idea, and its very shovel ready!

  8. Spencer Iacono
    July 6, 2009 at 8:41 pm #

    Well said Illinois Guy!

  9. Copperhead
    July 7, 2009 at 1:30 pm #

    I see my last comment was censored.

    Typical conservatives, claiming to love freedom, but hating ideas and information that challenges the dogma they are taught.

  10. Spencer Iacono
    July 7, 2009 at 1:42 pm #

    Copperhead, you were marked as “spam.” That’s what I perceive you as being, just spam. It is a waist of time for me to reply as I see the “typical” isolationist liberal fear mentality, compounded by your “conspiracy theory” sickness, requires more help than what I can offer.

    Perhaps a psychologist would be better suited for your condition. I have seen all the conspiracy theory video about 9/11, all the oil theories and ask myself “who really in their right mind can believe this junk”?

    Sorry, I can’t help you and therefore marked you as spam. Incidentally, when one is marked as “spam” with the Word Press blog software, it blocks out their comment comment as well and will not automatically show up in the comment section unless approved. Furthermore, this blog is focused on promoting Conservative principles and recruiting those who are seeking, not those who are antagonizing.

    Basically, you are not our “target market” as we know there is nothing we can say or do that will change your mind, correct?

  11. July 16, 2009 at 7:57 am #

    =

  12. Spencer Iacono
    July 16, 2009 at 8:16 am #

    Thank you for visiting, please visit us again.

  13. July 18, 2009 at 2:27 am #

    Thank you! I would now go on this blog every day!

  14. ROBERT DIXON
    September 10, 2009 at 1:53 pm #

    I am not a defense guru, but I think I see a distressing trend here. the American officer corp. loves big expensive toys. The last time I read a report on the F-22 it’s operational rediness tended to be about 60%. That means of every 10 fighters we have only six of them will fly at any given time. Look how much money we have wasted on them (what about the JSF-35). Our foot soldiers are still using a rifle that was proven poor in the late sixties. And we could buy AK-47′s cheaper. What are the American parents of sailors going to say when we lose over 5000 of them as a big carrier is nuked. We will not always have air superiority like we have now. Darwinism works evan in defense The weapons system that is on the battlefield in the greatest QUANTITY (not quality) will be the victor

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