OP-ED Preparing for the Next Big War

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://warontherocks.com/2016/01/preparing-for-the-next-big-war/

Preparing for the Next Big War

David Barno and Nora Bensahel
January 26, 2016
Comments 6

“For almost twenty years we had all of the time and almost none of the money; today we have all of the money and no time.”

Those words were spoken by Army Chief of Staff George Marshall in 1940 as he was facing the imminent entry of the United States into World War II. He was lamenting the fact that when large conflicts suddenly arrive, all the money in the world cannot magically fix military shortfalls overnight. It is not hard to imagine a future Army chief of staff uttering those same words on the eve of a truly big war.

Between 1945 and 1989, the looming threat of global war between the United States and the Soviet Union informed every aspect of U.S. military preparations, from doctrine to organization to weaponry. But since the end of the Cold War, the U.S. military has not been sized, organized, and globally postured to fight a large-scale and bloody war.

Today, virtually no one serving below the rank of colonel or enlisted senior chief has ever served in a military facing a powerful peer competitor, nor have they faced a realistic prospect of fighting a global war to protect the nation’s most vital interests and perhaps even its survival. Yes, the United States has been at war for the past decade and a half. But even at their peak, U.S. military operations in Iraq and Afghanistan included no more than 171,000 troops and 100,000 troops respectively. Compare that with the more than 537,000 troops deployed at the height of the Vietnam War in 1968 — which was considered a small and limited conflict at the time.

The likelihood that the United States will have to fight a really big war — one that requires many hundreds of thousands of troops, with high levels of destructiveness and casualties — remains low, but the consequences would be enormous. And in a world threatened increasingly by disorder, violent extremism, and more aggressive large states, those low odds may be increasing.

What could trigger a big war? A massive, direct attack on the United States certainly would, but other lesser crises could also escalate unpredictably. Imagine, for example, a Russian invasion of another eastern European state; a territorial miscalculation between the United States, China, or a treaty ally in the South China Sea; an explosive Sunni–Shia conflict spilling beyond the Middle East; a regional conflict in South Asia or on the Korean peninsula; or a large deadly terrorist attack in the United States. An initial U.S. military response to any of these scenarios could escalate into a greater, and potentially even global, conflict. The requirements of such a war would greatly exceed current contingency plans for Iraq, Afghanistan, or even the Korean peninsula.

The potentially devastating consequences of the next big war demands that the U.S. military (and the nation as a whole) prepare as much for this scenario as for the range of lesser challenges demanding attention today. Today’s wars, likely contingencies, and simply running the Defense Department all require time, energy, and resources. Choices and tradeoffs must be made. Nevertheless, the Pentagon must identify the gaps that would put the United States at the biggest risk in a large, prolonged conflict against a highly capable adversary, and mitigate those risks to the greatest extent possible.

We believe that there are at least five big gaps that the United States must try to fill — and a sixth that cannot be fixed even though it may be the area of greatest U.S. vulnerability.

1. Precision Munitions and Advanced Weaponry. A large-scale conflict could consume vast quantities of U.S. and allied precision munitions in the opening weeks. Many of these weapons have been bought in limited quantities and would require immediate replenishment. Munitions production lines should be stocked with critical sub-assemblies and parts, and precious scarce materials warehoused to rapidly churn out more of these essential tools of war. Precision munitions will be consumed quickly even in medium size conflicts; upgrading this capability would yield high payoffs across most potential scenarios. Moreover, the Department of Defense and industry must be able to rapidly accelerate and combat test advanced weapons that are still in development (such as rail guns and laser weapons), so they can get into the hands of fighting troops quickly.

2. Platforms. Fighter planes, drones, bombers, even submarines and surface warships could see heavy losses in the first days and weeks of a big war. Other hardware may prove obsolete or vulnerable to enemy action and require immediate replacement or abandonment. Most of these complex platforms require months or years to produce. Warm production lines with readily available manufacturing materials must be available to accelerate production quickly. There may be some lessons to be learned from the rapid production of MRAPs at the height of the IED threat in Iraq and Afghanistan. Further, the services should inventory their boneyards to identify what systems could be rapidly reconfigured for combat use with some advanced preparation.

3. Troops. Defending the United States against potential homeland threats while deploying hundreds of thousands of troops overseas would require a significantly larger U.S. military, even after the National Guard and Reserves are mobilized. A new and massive effort to build, train, lead, and equip new forces may be necessary to generate sufficient combat power quickly and to sustain it over multiple months and even years of combat. All of the services need plans to expand rapidly if required, though this is particularly urgent for the Army and Marines. Since conscription might well be required, U.S. political leaders should ensure that the Selective Service System remains strong (and, as we have written, includes women), and think through what manpower requirements would require instating a draft.

4. Planning and Adaptability. Planning for a big war requires carefully examining vulnerabilities, making sober estimates of casualties and attrition, and realistically appraising how many men and women will be needed. Broad questions need to be asked about how the force might fight, where, and against what adversary; what new equipment and capabilities might be needed; and what current assumptions or constraints (such as relying on a volunteer force) might need to be discarded. Once a big war starts, the services will need to rapidly adapt to unanticipated battlefield conditions. They may need to invent new units and capabilities, either as physical formations or virtual capabilities — think space attack brigades, civilian chem-bio advisory teams, or micro-drone defense units.

5. Technology. Additive printing, robotics, artificial intelligence, and other emerging technologies all have important military applications — and every combatant will be racing to exploit them first in battle. The U.S. military must therefore maintain its technological superiority, and also find ways to rapidly find wartime applications for non-military technologies. However, the United States is likely to be far more vulnerable to cyber attack than almost any imaginable adversary, since its military, government, and business functions rely so heavily on the cyber realm. The U.S. government may need to mobilize key parts of the nation’s cyber workforce in an online version of the Civil Air Patrol to counter large-scale cyber attacks and defend U.S. public and private networks against hostile disruptions and direct attacks.

6. Stamina. This is a major strategic gap that may not be able to be filled before a big war starts, because it is psychological in nature. The military and the nation must both be mentally and emotionally prepared for large numbers of dead and wounded troops — and possibly civilians, too. Big wars tend to be bloodily indiscriminate toward both. Hundreds and perhaps thousands of killed and wounded may be incurred in hours and days rather than months and years; generals may no longer be able to carry slim packets of index cards with their names and stories as has become common practice in Iraq and Afghanistan. “Bloody mindedness” among fighting generals and admirals may once again become a necessary war-winning attribute — in stark contrast to recent limited wars. The willingness of the nation to endure a big war is a potentially large vulnerability, especially if the war does not involve a direct attack on the United States. Making the nation and military psychologically more resilient in the face of potential heavy casualties is a challenge that both civilian and military leaders should begin thinking about now.

U.S. political and military leaders face many constraints in addressing these gaps, including limited time, resources, and attention. Nevertheless, one of the most important things they (and their staffs) can do is to foster truly creative thinking in each of these six areas. That can be a very difficult challenge, since a big war would have a much different character and different requirements than the wars and challenges of today. That’s why, for example, we included the novel Ghost Fleet on our professional reading list for the incoming Joint Chiefs of Staff last year. It imagines a big war with China, and shows both the challenges and creative solutions that emerged as the United States filled its considerable pre-war gaps. (No plot spoilers here, but one example is Mentor Crew, which assigns retired military officers throughout the fleet to advise the many brand new crews that had to be formed.)

The United States cannot afford to enter an increasingly dangerous future without a sober look at the most demanding, even existential, military contingencies. The return of aggressive great powers, the diminishment of some allied military capabilities, and the rise of transnational threats all suggest a world in which a large, dangerous, and deadly war could arise unexpectedly. Creative thinking and problem solving must remain a very important part of how the Department of Defense and the services prepare now. As the U.S. military continues to reshape itself for an uncertain future, imagining the unimaginable next big war must become an essential part of its planning for a dangerous future.


Lt. General David W. Barno, USA (Ret.) is a Distinguished Practitioner in Residence, and Dr. Nora Bensahel is a Distinguished Scholar in Residence, at the School of International Service at American University. Both also serve as Nonresident Senior Fellows at the Atlantic Council. Their column appears in War on the Rocks every other Tuesday.

_

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China Connection

TB Fanatic
It is hard to say what Russia or China would do on day one of the start up of a conflict with the United States. If they had any sense they would hit the U.S. mainland with everything they had at hand.

It would be hard for the U.S. to keep in the fight after such an action.

With so many Russians and Chinese living it the U.S. it would be tempting to kill every last farmer possible. Not that difficult when only two or three percent are working the land. Hitting the water supplies to large cities would also do immense damage.

Every time the U.S. goes into a country in the Middle East it hits the infrastructure for the cities so I would expect that both Russia and China would do the same if the attacked the U.S. mainland.

I think it would then be everyone for themselves in the cities. The Chinese and Russians would not have to do anything more.
 
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Thinwater

Firearms Manufacturer
All of that warfare is to much work. All they have to do is send up an EMP a couple of hundred miles off of each coast from a N Korean flagged ship and watch 2/3 of Americans die over the next year.

Getting one "200 miles over Kansas" is much over rated and to likely to be shot down. If launched from a couple of hundred miles offshore, there would be no catching it and no stopping it. There is little chance they would even positively identify it before it popped. One man made Carrington event coming up.
 

Shacknasty Shagrat

Has No Life - Lives on TB
General Marshall was a great man.
The Marshall Plan was a success that will live in history.
Now, in our present crisis, we have neither the money nor the time.
Welcome to the Caliphate.
SS
 

China Connection

TB Fanatic
Is Washington Preparing For World War III?
Tyler Durden's picture
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/06/2015 23:25 -0400

Submitted by Patrick Martin via WSWS.org,

The US military-intelligence complex is engaged in systematic preparations for World War III. As far as the Pentagon is concerned, a military conflict with China and/or Russia is inevitable, and this prospect has become the driving force of its tactical and strategic planning.

Three congressional hearings Tuesday demonstrated this reality. In the morning, the Senate Armed Services Committee held a lengthy hearing on cyberwarfare. In the afternoon, a subcommittee of the House Armed Services Committee discussed the present size and deployment of the US fleet of aircraft carriers, while another subcommittee of the same panel discussed the modernization of US nuclear weapons.

We will provide a more detailed account of these hearings, which were attended by a WSWS reporter. But certain preliminary observations can be made.

None of the hearings discussed the broader implications of the US preparations for war, or what a major war between nuclear-armed powers would mean for the survival of the human race, and even of life on our planet. On the contrary, the hearings were examples of what might be called the routinization of World War III. A US war with China and/or Russia was taken as given, and the testimony of witnesses and questions from senators and representatives, Democrats and Republicans alike, concerned the best methods for prevailing in such a conflict.

The hearings were component parts of an ongoing process. The witnesses referred to their past writings and statements. The senators and representatives referred to previous testimony by other witnesses. In other words, the preparations for world war, using cyber weapons, aircraft carriers, bombers, missiles and the rest of a vast array of weaponry, have been under way for a protracted period of time. They are not a response to recent events, whether in the South China Sea, Ukraine, Syria or anywhere else.

Each of the hearings presumed a major US conflict with another great power (sometimes unnamed, sometimes explicitly designated as China or Russia) within a relatively short time frame, years rather than decades. The danger of terrorism, hyped incessantly for the purposes of stampeding public opinion, was downplayed and to some extent discounted. At one point in the Senate hearing on cyberwarfare, in response to a direct question from Democrat Jeanne Shaheen of New Hampshire, the panel witnesses all declared that their greatest concern was nation-states, not terrorists.

One of the witnesses at that hearing was Dr. Peter W. Singer, listed as a “Strategist and Senior Fellow” for New America, a Washington think tank. He titled his presentation, “The Lessons of World War 3.” He began his prepared statement with the following description of that imagined conflict:

“US and Chinese warships battle at sea, firing everything from cannons to cruise missiles to lasers. Stealthy Russian and American fighter jets dogfight in the air, with robotic drones flying as their wingmen. Hackers in Shanghai and Silicon Valley duel in digital playgrounds. And fights in outer space decide who wins below on Earth. Are these scenes from a novel or what could actually take place in the real world the day after tomorrow? The answer is both.”

None of the hearings saw any debate about either the likelihood of a major war or the necessity of winning that war. No one challenged the assumption that “victory” in a world war between nuclear-armed powers is a meaningful concept. The discussion was entirely devoted to what technologies, assets and human resources were required for the US military to prevail.

This was just as true for the Democratic senators and representatives as for their Republican counterparts. By custom, the two parties are seated on opposite sides of the committee or subcommittee chairmen. Without that arrangement, there would be no way of detecting, from their questions and expressions of opinion, which party they belonged to.

Contrary to the media portrayal of Washington as deeply divided between parties with intransigently opposed political outlooks, there was bipartisan agreement on this most fundamental of issues, the preparation of a new imperialist world war.

The unanimity of the political representatives of big business by no means suggests that there are no obstacles in the path of this drive to war. Each of the hearings grappled, in different ways, with the profound crisis confronting American imperialism. This crisis has two major components: the declining economic power of the United States compared to its major rivals, and the internal contradictions of American society, with the deepening alienation of the working class and particularly the youth.

At the House subcommittee hearing on aircraft carriers, the chairman noted that one of the witnesses, a top Navy admiral, had expressed concern over having “an 11-carrier navy in a 15-carrier world.” There were so many challenges confronting Washington, he continued, that what was really needed was a navy of 21 aircraft carriers—double the present size, and one that would bankrupt even a country with far more resources than the United States.

The Senate hearing on cybersecurity touched briefly on the internal challenge to American militarism. The lead witness, retired Gen. Keith Alexander, former director of the National Security Agency and former head of the Pentagon’s CyberCommand, bemoaned the effect of leaks by NSA contractor Edward Snowden and Army private Chelsea Manning, declaring that “insider attacks” were one of the most serious threats facing the US military.

Democratic Senator Joe Manchin of West Virginia asked him directly, referring to Snowden, “Should we treat him as a traitor?” Alexander responded, “He should be treated as a traitor and tried as such.” Manchin nodded heartily, in evident agreement.

While the witnesses and senators chose to use the names of Snowden and Manning to personify the “enemy within,” they were clearly conscious that the domestic opposition to war is far broader than a few individual whistleblowers.

This is not a matter simply of the deep-seated revulsion among working people in response to 14 years of bloody imperialist interventions in Afghanistan, Iraq, Somalia, Libya, Syria, Yemen and across North Africa, important as that is.

A war between the United States and a major power like China or Russia, even if it were possible to prevent its escalation into an all-out nuclear exchange, would involve a colossal mobilization of the resources of American society, both economic and human. It would mean further dramatic reductions in the living standards of the American people, combined with a huge blood toll that would inevitably fall mainly on the children of the working class.

Ever since the Vietnam War, the US military has operated as an all-volunteer force, avoiding conscription, which provoked widespread opposition and direct defiance in the 1960s and early 1970s. A non-nuclear war with China or Russia would mean the restoration of the draft and bring the human cost of war home to every family in America.

Under those conditions, no matter how great the buildup of police powers and the resort to repressive measures against antiwar sentiments, the stability of American society would be put to the test. The US ruling elite is deeply afraid of the political consequences. And it should be.

http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2015-11-06/washington-preparing-world-war-iii
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
General Marshall was a great man.
The Marshall Plan was a success that will live in history.
Now, in our present crisis, we have neither the money nor the time.
Welcome to the Caliphate.
SS

Considering the kind of killing that's possible without nukes or boots on the ground and how cheaply that can be done, calling "caliphate" may be a bit soon.
 

China Connection

TB Fanatic
15 Things the Next War Will Tell Us About America
What will tomorrow's wars be like, and is the United States prepared to win them?

Sherbien Dacalanio/Pacific Press/LightRocket via Getty Images
By Joe Pappalardo
Jul 7, 2014

The next war will expose our gaps.

There is no doubt that the U.S. military is the best equipped and trained and most experienced force on the planet. Pundits like to point out that it's better funded than any 10 other nations combined. But just because a nation spends more money than its adversaries doesn't mean it will win a war, especially far from home.

As the U.S. cuts defense spending, other nations like China and Russia have increased theirs. Their focus is on areas such as air defense and ship-killing missiles—the exact places where they can blunt America's ability to project power. That's why, despite a half-trillion dollars in spending, the United States military might face gaps in its capabilities during the next war.

"The United States has relied on a Department of Defense that has had technological superiority for the better part of the post–World War II era," says Lan Shaffer, principal deputy for the assistant secretary of defense for defense research and engineering. "[That] technological superiority is now being challenged." The 2014 Quadrennial Defense Review, a review of Department of Defense strategy, acknowledges that a leaner U.S. military will see some of its advantages eroded. Maj. Gen. Martin Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, wrote in the document: "Our loss of depth across the force could reduce our ability to intimidate opponents from escalating conflict . . . Nearly any future conflict will occur on a much faster pace and on a more technically challenging battlefield."

Some gaps are already appearing. Adm. Samuel Locklear III, commander of U.S. Pacific Command, told Congress this year that he does not have enough landing craft to conduct amphibious operations. The Marine Corps will shrink to 175,000 if the law that mandates 2016 sequestration is kept in place. If not, that number will dip to 182,000, a loss of 8,000 Marines. The Army is shrinking its active-duty members by about 22 percent, shedding 125,000 soldiers. Gen. Ray Odierno, the Army chief of staff, told Congress that, by 2016, he "doubts that we could even execute one prolonged, multiphase operation that is extended over a period of time."
It will vindicate the Pentagon's focus on tech over troops. Or not.

The trend is to replace manpower with automation. Fewer warplanes will fly, and many of those that do will be unmanned. There will be fewer warships in the Navy's fleet, and new ships will carry fewer crew members. Proven aircraft like the A-10 close-air-support warplanes and F-16 fighters will be retired and replaced with fewer numbers of (untested) F-35 Lightning IIs.

Faced with mandatory spending cuts, the Pentagon is doubling down on the assumption that advanced weapons will enable fewer troops to win a war. "We chose further reductions in troop strength and force structure in every military service in order to sustain our readiness and technological superiority," Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel has said.

This direction introduces risk. "The Army's initiative to reduce manpower and increase dependence on improving is a double-edged sword," says Cadet Brandon Swank, a senior at West Point. "It may show us how increased reliance on technology makes it more difficult to replace the highly trained individuals required for maintaining it." He adds that it will be harder to train forces on complex gear "when we choose to increase our Army's size again."
It will highlight the weaknesses of our allies.

The U.S. military, for all its prowess, cannot police the world. Having capable allies is vital, especially in some of the world's most volatile hot spots, where military might must deter aggressive moves. When there's a severe imbalance, such as between Ukraine and Russia in Crimea, tensions can escalate into military action.

American allies around the world have slashed military spending to offset economic woes, to the point where they cannot face regional challenges. Taiwan's Minister of National Defense Yen Ming told the national legislature last March that the heavily armed nation could hold out alone for only a month against an invasion by the rapidly rearming Chinese. In Europe things are even more grim. NATO nations have steadily underfunded militaries. Just four of 27 member nations dedicated defense spending above the treaty-mandated 2 percent of GDP.

These shortfalls become apparent during a crisis, as when the European-led campaign against Libya in 2011 quickly became dependent on U.S. hardware. In his autobiography Duty, then-Defense Secretary Robert Gates described the reality of fighting with ill-equipped partners: "Just three months into the campaign we had to resupply even our strongest allies with precision-guided bombs and missiles—they had exhausted their meager supply."
9 New Tools That Will Change the Future of War

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It will be the war we haven't finished.

Washington, D.C., may have abandoned the name, but the global war on terror rages on. Osama bin Laden is dead, but al-Qaida has morphed into five franchises in 12 countries. Some, such as al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula, have plans to launch attacks on the U.S. homeland. The most powerful of them, the Islamic State group, has captured major cities in Syria and Iraq, destabilizing the region and overshadowing al-Qaida as a major risk.
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"What's called the Long War, we don't see that changing anytime soon," says Maj. Bryan Price, the director of the Combating Terrorism Center at West Point. "Counterterrorism and counterinsurgency were around long before September 11, but we found ourselves going back to earlier insurgencies in Southeast Asia and Vietnam to relearn them. Maybe we don't make that mistake moving forward, even if we have to bring back conventional [military] training."
It will reach home in unexpected ways.

Technology has made the world a smaller, more interconnected place. As Dempsey wrote in his 2014 review: "In the case of U.S. involvement in conflicts overseas, the homeland will no longer be a sanctuary either for our forces or for our citizens." Where will these threats come from?

Economic Weapons: Embargoes, blockades, frozen assets, and shipping harassment are potent tools in a globalized world. For example, Iran blockading or releasing mines in the Strait of Hormuz could raise the price of oil 50 percent in a week. Economic warfare could take the form of sell offs of U.S. Treasury notes that ruin the value of the dollar, intentional hedge-fund manipulation, or crippling cyberattacks aimed at trading floors.

Cyberattacks: U.S. infrastructure—including water-treatment facilities, refineries, pipelines, dams, and the electrical grid—relies on industrial control systems patched in to computer networks. These can be manipulated to shut down or even destroy key equipment, causing domestic havoc and delaying a military response during a crisis. The more experts look, the more evident the danger: In 2014 cyber researchers discovered widespread software vulnerabilities in Centum CS 3000 software, which is used worldwide to run oil refineries, rigs, and power plants.

Psych Ops: Feeding false information aimed at populations and political leaders has never been easier. Faked photos, deliberately altered phone conversations, and hacked social media sites—tactics used by both sides of the Syrian civil war, Russia during the Crimea annexation, and the U.S. in Cuba—can shape opinion faster than an official rebuttal. A generation raised with social media may find this battlespace easier to handle than experienced veterans do.

"The cadets are really attuned to social media, just as we find our [terrorist groups the] younger generation that's joining terrorist groups," Price says.
It will use tech to augment human beings.

Robots may not replace people anytime soon, but enhanced soldiers are coming.

"I don't think that it's hard to imagine monitoring or surveying devices being implanted directly into a soldier's vital systems," West Point Cadet Ryan Polston says. "Contact-lens video recording, in-ear communications, and heart-rate, hydration, and oxygen-saturation reporting will provide commanders with more information." However, he says, "all of these possible improvements are dangerous in the sense that they detract from the humanity of the soldier."
It will see robots that are a part of human teams.

Robots are finding a place in every branch of the military, but they provide little advantage if someone has to operate them directly. The solution is autonomy.

"Networked and autonomous systems allow for the Army to decentralize its formations, making its actions less predictable and less vulnerable to asymmetric efforts," says Lt. Col. John Burpo, an advisor at West Point's Department of Chemistry and Life Science. For example, a unit on a long-range patrol could be resupplied by an unmanned helicopter, rather than by a truck that follows predictable routes.

Noel Celis/AFP/Getty Images
It will put carrier groups at greater risk from submarines.

Diesel–electric submarines can lurk in shallow water where sonar is less effective and attack American aircraft carriers using high-speed antiship missiles. The U.S. Navy can hunt them, but it's a fatiguing effort for these helicopter crews, who often must give up tracking their targets to refuel.

To combat the threat, the Pentagon commissioned the Anti-Submarine Warfare Continuous Trail Unmanned Vessel, or ACTUV. The idea is to have the unmanned vessels search for submarines with powerful sonar and then follow them relentlessly once located. Construction of the 130-foot prototype vessel has just begun.
It will be fought against enemies who can jam or eavesdrop on military radios.

"We know potential adversaries are developing cyberspace and electronic warfare capabilities to neutralize, disrupt, and degrade our communications systems," Deputy Secretary of Defense Christine Fox says. Radios, which operate over wide bandwidth, are especially vulnerable to interception or jamming. In response, the Navy is testing a system called Tactical Line-of-Sight Optical Network, which uses a high-frequency laser to carry voice and video more than 30 miles. Engineers at Exelis, the system's designer, say future versions could bounce beams off unmanned aircraft or satellites to increase range beyond line of sight.

It will put new, tougher satellites to the test.

Global positioning satellites guide soldiers, point missiles to targets, and maintain the courses of ships and unmanned vehicles. But they are at increasing risk for interference, jamming, and spoofing, according to a 2013 Defense Sciences Board report.

The Air Force is fielding new sats, called GPS III, that are designed to be more secure. Since the most common form of jamming is to overwhelm a signal with a similar signal, GPS III will transmit signals eight times as powerful as the current ones. Launch is expected in 2015, but the ground control system is delayed by up to two years, according to the chief of the Air Force's space operations.
It will require stealth aircraft that rely on more than just their shape.

"Ground-based radars and surface-to-air missiles are making leaps in technology, enabling aircraft to be detected and targeted at increased range. Plus, recent advancements in radar technology have diminished our traditional stealth capability," Gen. Mark A. Welsh III, chief of staff of the Air Force, tells PM. "We must continue to blend stealth technologies and new technologies like hypersonic propulsion systems, autonomous sensors and weapons systems, and directed energy weapons."

The problem is that these technologies are not cheap. One solution is to prioritize speed over stealth. Welsh says hypersonic aircraft have the potential to exceed speeds of 5,000 mph, making them untouchable for weapons systems to track and shoot down. "This is all part of our new guiding concept, this idea of strategic agility," he says. "The ability to adapt and respond faster than our potential adversaries."
It will be fought with pilots and their robot wingmen.

Robotic systems are a key way to maximize capabilities and spend less money. "Unmanned aircraft not only allow us to reduce the size, cost, and complexity of operations—they also increase range, endurance, and performance," Welsh says. To get these benefits, robots need to be smarter. It makes no sense to have a human pilot on a joystick flying just one drone from a remote base, but it makes a ton of sense to have one pilot monitoring the flights of a dozen unmanned aircraft that need little supervision. Future drones need to be able to see other aircraft, avoid them, track targets, and navigate without using GPS waypoints. They'll do everything but shoot weapons—for that, expect humans to remain in the loop.
It will be waged in population centers that are increasingly located in megacities near a coastline.

Fighting in cities is the ultimate equalizer. Even the most effective militaries can be ground down by street-by-street fighting. With urban sprawl spreading across the globe, this terrain will be hotly contested in future wars.

"Urban environments present very complex terrain with dense populations of noncombatants," says Lt. Col. Bruce Floersheim, a professor with West Point's Department of Civil and Mechanical Engineering. The solution is to know where you are, who you are shooting at, and be careful when you fire. "Precision munitions, nonlethal munitions, and temporary physical blockades could play an increasingly large role," Floersheim says.
9 New Tools That Will Change the Future of War

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It will see the risk of modern sea mines.

The U.N. estimates that more than 90 percent of world trade moves by sea, with the World Trade Organization putting the value of maritime commerce at more than $8 trillion annually. A campaign to place sea mines in these waterways could be brutally effective.

Right now the U.S. Navy has two ways of finding mines: by towing detection equipment from an aging MH-53 helicopter or sending in dolphins or sea lions to find them. Neither system will last much longer: the MH-53, which was supposed to retire in 2012, may face a service life extension to 2020; the Marine Mammal program will end in 2017.

There's a better way to hunt mines—robots. Scheduled to deploy in 2017, the Knifefish torpedo-shaped maritime drone will carry side-scan sonar that can find objects underwater while operators happily sit outside the at-risk zone.
It will force the U.S. Navy to fight from afar.

Land- and air-fired missiles threaten Navy ships, forcing them farther from shorelines where the fights will be. But this new tech will help the U.S. Navy win the fight at a distance:

P-8A: The $220 million P-8A is a reconnaissance and surveillance airplane based on a 747. The airplane's size means it can launch from long distances and cover wide swaths of terrain. It can track small targets such as surfaced submarines and small, fast-moving vessels. The P-8A carries 126 sonobuoys—sensor devices dropped by a rotary launcher into the water to generate sonar pulses that show what's below. It made its first deployment to look for the missing Malaysian airliner in the Pacific.

Long Range Anti-Ship Missile: The LRASM is an autonomous, precision-guided antiship missile that can be fired from longer distances and is equipped with a multimodal radio-frequency sensor suite for detecting targets, as well as a weapon datalink for better communication. B-1 bombers and new combat ships will receive these weapons.

New Destroyers: The Navy christened a new kind of warship in 2014: the 610-foot Zumwalt-class destroyer. Its automated interior requires a crew half the size of that of existing destroyers. Its stealthy design makes the warship appear on radar to be the size of a fishing ship. Future versions may use the Navy's now-experimental electromagnetic rail gun, which shoots projectiles more than 100 miles at Mach 7. The Navy plans to shoot from the deck of a ship in 2016.

Top-Gun Drones: Carrier drones can increase the eyes and teeth of an aircraft carrier. Aircraft range using unmanned aircraft will extend from 400 nautical miles to 1,500, keeping the ship out of range of enemy missiles. The Navy landed the unmanned X-47B jet on a carrier at sea, proving the concept and prompting the Navy to create a development program. The Navy may choose a design from competing vendors in 2015.

People may have lampooned Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld when he famously said that a nation goes to war with the army it's got—not necessarily the one it wants—but he was right. Choices made today will determine the outcome of America's future conflicts. In that way, the next war is already being waged.

http://www.popularmechanics.com/mil...next-war-will-tell-us-about-america-16959650/
 

Dozdoats

On TB every waking moment
BRAC (Base Realignment And Closing) has herded the US military into a handful of large bases, mostly in CONUS. Nice concentrated targets for easy strategic attack...
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
BRAC (Base Realignment And Closing) has herded the US military into a handful of large bases, mostly in CONUS. Nice concentrated targets for easy strategic attack...

Yeah, all in the name of cost effectiveness. Something that often goes counter to the military's actual mission but applied to the majority of time when they're preparing for the threats as opposed to when actually engaged in their primary mission.
 

tiger13

Veteran Member
If America hadn't gotten stupid about it's gun control agenda, and TPTB didn't fear the people, they would not need to fear any country having a larger army than the US. But they have stolen the gun rights away, and over the past few generations pussified them until there is not too much left to fight a war with, and very little left for any country to fear by invading large geographical areas here.
 
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