SECDEF Hagel: Back-Up Slides: "Army Joint Warfighting"
SECDEF Hagel: Back-Up Slides: "Army Joint Warfighting"
SECDEF Hagel: Back-Up Slides: "Army Joint Warfighting"
Culture does not change because we desire to change it. Culture changes when the organization is transformed.
Frances Hesselbein, My Life in Leadership, 2011
The purpose is clear. It is safety with solvency. The country is entitled to both.
President Dwight David Eisenhower, 1958
Why not rely on the Army National Guard to perform the ground force mission?
Answer: The ARNG can mobilize huge numbers of soldiers if given months or years to do so. However, 21st Century military power is not based on the mass mobilization of the manpower and the resources of the entire nationstate. In addition, ARNG units cannot cultivate and maintain the skills to employ todays complex armor, missile and ISR capabilities. When response times are limited and the U.S. confronts enemy armies, air forces, air defenses and naval forces, shifting the so-called heavy force into the ARNG renders it unusable. In the 21st Century, the demand is for ready, deployable combat forces-in-being, highly trained forces that can take hits and keep fighting, forces capable of decisive action on land within a joint warfighting framework.
Why not rely on the Marine Corps to conduct combat operations on land?
Answer: The Marine Corps has very limited maneuver/exploitation capability. It deploys two small tank battalions (33 tanks each) and four LAV (armored trucks) battalions with very limited artillery. In the words of a Naval War College Analyst: The Marines are similar to the Jordanian Army, with one third of the Jordanian Armys armored vehicles. Here is the Marine dilemma: in Najaf, two battalions of the Armys tanks did what a lighter marine battalion could not, inflicting huge casualties on Mr. Sadrs insurgents while taking almost none of their own. The 70-ton tanks and 25-ton Bradleys pushed to the gates of the Imam Ali shrine at the center of the old city. Meanwhile, the marines spent most of the fight raiding buildings far from the old city. Even so, seven marines died, and at least 30 were seriously wounded, according to commanders here, while only two soldiers died and a handful were injured.
Alex Berenson, The New York Times, August 29, 2004
The Framework is not just about things. It s about integrating existing and future capabilities within an agile operational framework guided by human understanding. Its an intellectual construct with technological infrastructure.
The Framework is the next logical step in the evolution of warfare beyond the ad hoc coordination of Federal Agencies or combined arms, airground cooperation, air-sea battle, amphibious and special operations.
U.S. capabilities must be integrated at the operational level to detect, deter, disrupt,
neutralize or destroy opposing forces/threats decisively; Apply the ISR-Strike-Maneuver-Sustainment Framework as a methodology for investment planning and programming as constrained budgets compel force optimization; Develop the framework inside a reduced number of regional unified commands.
JFC JFC
JFC
Strike & MD
ISR SUST MNVR
JFC
JFC
JFC
Brigadier General
Combat Maneuver Group Commander
Colonel Chief of Staff
Lieutenant Colonel
Lieutenant Colonel
Lieutenant Colonel
Lieutenant Colonel
Lieutenant Colonel
ISR
Strike COORD
Civil Affairs
Intelligence functions split, but integrated to support maneuver, strike and IISR
Experience makes the case for preparedness to surge from a joint rotational readiness posture, not for forward presence as currently executed. Surging is more economical and, potentially more effective in crises and conflict; what forces do after they arrive in a crisis or conflict is far more important than how fast they arrive.
based on force in Transformation under Fire (Praeger, 2003) Roughly 250,100 troops in the deployable Field Army on rotational readiness. Maneuver Echelon (136,600) 4X 12 X 6X 4X
CMG Light Reconnaissance Strike Group (5,150) Combat Maneuver Group (Armored) (5,500) Infantry Combat Group (Motorized) (5,000) Airborne-Air Assault Group (5,000)
2X
4X 4X
STRG
TMDG
Strike Groups (UCAV/MLRS) (3,000) Theater Missile Defense Groups (4,000) Aviation Combat Groups (3500)
ICG
AVN
AAG
CW
THAAD
C4I/SUST BN
PATRIOT
Ballistic Missiles
1x THAAD Battery
Cruise Missiles
1x THAAD Battery
1x THAAD Battery
National Command Authorities should begin fielding TMD Groups from existing assets.
Aircraft
NASAM
Drones
US Navy
ENG
ENG
Manages contracts for civil works and military bases within CONUS of permanent structures. (i.e. bridges, levees, home ports, dams, reservoirs, land management, buildings, etc.)
Expedient construction of sea ports, airfields, logistics hubs, bridges, roads, etc. in an expeditionary combat zone environment.
Graduates (of Army Schools) lack the ability to quickly develop creative solutions to complex problems in a timeconstrained environment.
A better means for talent management is needed in the Army. 2011 Center for Army Leadership Annual Survey of Army Leadership Technical Report 2012-1
ASB will require enough munitions to cover an area equivalent to 2/3 the size of the continental US. Assuming it does not escalate to a nuclear exchange what will this operation accomplish?
Japanese Army Minister Sugiyama Hajime predicted the broader war with China would last only two months. Instead Japans war with China dragged on for 8 years until August 1945.
Initial operations to invade northern China, while seizing Shanghai, and several coastal cities took only 250,000 troops. However, by 1945 the Imperial Japanese Army of 5.9 million deployed 4.2 million soldiers to occupy China and Manchuria. Chinese Nationalist and Communist forces simply withdrew into mountainous central China to rebuild and preserve their forces.
It took three generations (close to 80 years) for the Mongols to conquer China. In the same amount of time the Mongol Armies conquered Persia, Russia, the Middle East, Central Asia and Eastern Europe.
Colonel (ret) Douglas Macgregor was commissioned in the US. Army in 1976 after 4 years at West Point and 1 year at VMI. In 1991, Macgregor was awarded the bronze star with V device for valor for his personal leadership of the lead cavalry troops that destroyed an Iraqi Republican Guard Brigade in the Battle of the 73 Easting, the U.S. Army s largest tank battle since World War II. His latest book, Warrior s Rage. The Great Tank Battle of 73 Easting (Naval Institute Press, 2009) describes the action from his tank turret. As the Chief of Strategic Planning and Director of the Joint Operations Center at SHAPE( 1997-2000), Macgregor supervised the conduct and planning of the Kosovo Air Campaign and subsequent occupation of Kosovo. On 16-17 January 2002, the Secretary of Defense directed General Tommy Franks to meet with Macgregor to discuss his concept for the attack to seize Baghdad. Though modified to include less armor and large numbers of Army and marine light infantry, Macgregor s offensive concept was largely adopted. Macgregor s concepts from his groundbreaking books on military transformation, Breaking the Phalanx (1997) and Transformation under Fire (2003) continue to exert influence inside the worlds militaries. His books are available in Chinese, Korean and Hebrew, as well as English. Macgregor holds a PhD in international relations from the University of Virginia.