Back To The Future Of War
The principles of war in today’s (and yesterday’s) conflicts
by John Sponauer
(Address altered to prevent spam...please correct in your email 'To' field before sending)
February, 2005

 

Author's Note:   In February 2005, the following essay was submitted into the "Principles of War" essay contest sponsored by a range of defense establishment organizations, including the U.S. Naval Institute, Johns Hopkins University, Royal United Services Institute, National Defense University, Army War College, Air War College, Naval War College, Office of Force Transformation, and the Department of Defense.  

Because the contest was open to the general public as well, and offered $35,000 in prizes, participation was very high; more than 800 essays were received.   Participants in the contest were challenged to answer the following in 3,500 words or less.

""Have the traditional principles of war changed? How are they changing?

Leaders at the highest levels now speak of a "new kind of war." Even before 9/11, President George W. Bush challenged the armed services to "redefine war in our terms" in response to the conflicts of a new century. Yet, a debate on the Principles of War, as they are understood today, is absent.  This deficiency skews the content of public policy and budget discussions just as it hampers the crafting of warfare doctrine for joint and coalition operations. Dare to write an essay for this contest."

While I am of course disappointed that I did not win, I am honored to have had the opportunity to submit a paper to the key players in shaping this nation's defense policy.   I hope the essay is an enjoyable to read as it was to write, and I welcome any comments at the email address above.  My thanks go to my team of volunteer editors, whose broad experience in military affairs and history on the ground, in the air, and on (and under) the seas helped make the essay much better.

Information about the contest, and the list of winners, is available at www.usni.org


Contents


INTRODUCTION

Just weeks into his presidency, George W. Bush staked his ground in the perpetual debate about America’s military future. 

“...we must extend our peace by advancing our technology.  We're witnessing a revolution in the technology of war, powers increasingly defined not by size, but by mobility and swiftness.  Advantage increasingly comes from information...  Safety is gained in stealth and forces projected on the long arc of precision-guided weapons.  The best way to keep the peace is to redefine war on our terms.” [i] 

Within seven months, the Twin Towers were destroyed, the Pentagon was on fire, and more than 3,000 Americans lay dead.  The peace to ‘extend’ was imaginary.

America has since launched two major combat operations, applying nearly the full range of her military within them.  From horse-bound special operators guiding airstrikes to division-sized armored offensives, from close-range urban fights to around-the-clock strikes by naval and aerial weapons of global reach, there seems to be no limit to US military capability.  For all of the recent talk of “transforming” the US military into a more flexible force, there’s abundant evidence that it’s largely there, at least in capability.

Within this variety of action, however, America’s military is still driven by principles of conventional warfare established in the 19th century by Prussian Carl von Clausewitz; all US military services refer to and cite them in doctrinal documents.   These principles - Mass, Objective, Offensive, Surprise, Economy of Force, Movement, Unity of Command, Security, and Simplicity – are easily-defined, broad, and as demonstratively relevant in today’s conventional war as in Clausewitz’s era.

However, the American military is operating in a vastly different world than Clausewitz was; indeed, even from the one envisioned a decade ago.  Without a global rival now or on the near horizon, America faces a likely military reality not of conventional forces sweeping across continents in total war, but instead a strategic equivalent of what the US Marine Corps calls the ‘three block war;’ armed conflict on the city block ahead, with reconstruction and redevelopment on the two behind.[ii]  To prepare for this world and also keep a necessary contingency for conventional wars, America’s military must continue to draw from Clausewitz’s principles of conventional war, but also adapt them into a larger framework for the types of conflict actually more common today and in the future.  They are a far cry from the conventional warfare the military was built for, but America should heed the danger of “preparing for the war we want to fight…not for the conflicts we cannot avoid,” as military analyst Ralph Peters writes.[iii]

 These conflicts are categorized broadly as ‘operations other than war,’ ‘low intensity conflict,’ ‘fourth generation warfare,’ or other phrases that reveal an institutional lack of clarity.  It’s an environment usually bereft of familiar society, technology, and structure, where warfare often remains little changed from pre-industrial eras.  It’s here that the future of American ‘war’ lays, and a glimpse at history reveals that it should be familiar ground indeed for America’s warriors.

 

AMERICAN WAR

While President Bush was certainly not being literal in his call to redefine war, the exercise is useful.   It's time to move past misconceptions of war that have clouded military planning since 1945.

 

America has not been limited by constitutionally established constraints on ‘war.’   She has not declared war in more than 60 years, the longest peacetime in her history, although Americans have shot and been shot at in dozens of locales during that period.  There’s not been a dedicated large-scale public mobilization, literally or in spirit, since 1945.  During Vietnam, when America saw its largest ever draft-age population, barely one-third of era veterans were conscripted, compared to nearly 70 percent in WWII.[iv]   

 

Aside from economic and societal side effects of these conflicts, the vast majority of today’s Americans have been personally unaffected by the battles fought in their name.  Total war has not been experienced for generations, and within a decade, nearly all with personal memories of it will be gone.  In the meantime, America has changed, as have expectations for how it fights.   Today’s American society would be hard-pressed to condone destruction or losses routine in our last declared war.   A repeat of the American firebombing of Tokyo, with 100,000 civilians purposely killed overnight, would be unlikely today and into the foreseeable future, although technologically possible in spades.  Even the use of the word ‘war’ has been eroded, now also describing programs addressing poverty and drugs. What have been fought since 1945 were not traditional wars, but limited actions fitting each era’s political needs.  During the Cold War, these fights were usually tied into that larger ideological conflict.  In the decade between the Soviet collapse and 9/11, American military force was mostly used to stabilize unstable regions.  If there was any consistent rationale offered for operations in Haiti, Africa, and the Balkans, it was to ‘do something.’   Post-9/11 conflicts under a ‘global war on terror’ have largely been to change the social, political, and military dynamics of the Middle East.

 

More hopeful visionaries such as Dr. Thomas P.M. Barnett describe today’s desired strategic outcome as moving socially and economically ‘disconnected’ regions of the world from ‘the Gap’ to ‘the Core,’ the functioning players in the global economy and community.[v]   More pessimistic visionaries would call it a clash of civilizations.  Virtually all see the world split into groups of nations, ranging from affluent developed states to countries-in-name-only existing in a nightmarish ‘Mad Max’ world.  Whether or not one accepts his Core / Gap premise, or believes that it should be the military’s constitutional mission to perform this ‘reconnection,’ Barnett correctly reveals that nearly all post-war American combat actions have occurred in the Gap.[vi]   Therefore, if present and future American ‘war’ is defined by the use of force since 1945, it most accurately means combat for limited political purposes, in defense of America’s values or positioning overseas, usually in the disconnected regions of the world.

 

PRINCIPLES FOR ‘THE GAP’

Once the notion of total war is removed from the likely probabilities of future conflict, it becomes necessary to examine how America fights these ‘small wars.’[vii]  If one accepts the words of Barnett, Peters, and military leaders like Gen. Anthony Zinni, USMC (Ret.),[viii] there is a vast portion of the undeveloped world that will continue to disproportionably draw American attention.  Conflicts here will not necessarily include large conventional battles, clearly defined goals, or even specific short-term outcomes.  

 While these notions would seem to be antithesis for a military giant like America or its “Powell Doctrine” of overwhelming conventional force, US soldiers have been tasked with this mission in every decade since the 1840s, if not earlier.  In the 1990s, it was not uncommon for ten or more of these operations occurring at one time.[ix]  Were America to fund its military solely on the basis of past usage, it would largely be a ‘small wars’ force.  This is clearly not new ground….in fact, the basics can be found in the 1940 ‘Small Wars Manual’ published by the US Marine Corps, building on experience from the decades prior in Central America.[x]   Comparing its lessons to those today on the streets of Iraq or Afghanistan shows either tremendous premonition or the somewhat universal nature of ‘small wars’ through time; it’s unsurprising that Barnett identifies the Marines as key players today in ‘connecting’ the Gap to the Core. [xi]  

Connecting the Gap requires envisioning and creating a future of lasting system change there, and a new set of principles of operation are needed for military forces to participate in, and more importantly, lead that change.   The beauty of Clausewitz’s principles for conventional warfare is their breadth, which allows for broad interpretation and application.   Similarly, those attempting to define principles for ‘small wars’ should be wary not to micro-analyze minor ideas into large concepts.  Because ‘small wars’ are framed by unique circumstances and depth, those seeking to operate in them need flexibility with planning and application, using a new set of principles valid in nearly all types of similar conflict.

 

IN DEFENSE OF THE ‘BIG WAR’ MILITARY

With few exceptions, forces designed for a conventional fight on land, on (or under) the seas, or in the air are still relevant and needed in the ‘small war’ mission.  Even futurist Barnett sees what he calls a ‘Leviathan’ force doing the eternal military role of killing people and breaking things.[xix]   Carrier Battle Groups designed to project force in the Cold War are often as useful during a time of ‘small wars’ as centers of force, logistics, command, and support…perhaps their design isn’t ideal, but it works now (as recently evidenced by their deployment in Asia’s 2004 tsunami aid relief effort) and will for decades.   Similarly, while America's submarines don’t face similar competition as in the Cold War, the need for stealthy naval strike and intelligence continues.    On the ground, armored forces are still highly valued, as the tough urban fights in Iraq have demonstrated clearly.[xx]  Air combat technology allows for the global reach and precision attack that nearly any modern combat requires.  Even the Small Wars Manual, written in the dawn of airpower’s growth as a strategic power, states “the primary mission of combat aviation in a small war is the direct support of the ground forces.” [xxi] 

Aside from these procurement issues, there is still a need for big war strategy, in which Clausewitz’s principles are as valid and useful as ever.   History has shown that micro-versions of the big war, like Operation Desert Storm, have been historically common enough to plan for and fund, and in any case, they often are needed first before a ‘small war’-based reconnection can proceed.   

America is affluent enough to fund such a dual purpose military…today’s defense spending accounts for a historically tiny 3 percent of America’s GDP,[xxii] and the size of the US Army alone is still approximately 30% less than its 1980s, all-volunteer level of 780,000.[xxiii]

 

TECHNOLOGIES HAVEN'T CHANGED THE PRINCIPLES

When focusing on the need to plan for a conventional threat, it is tempting to seek to change Clausewitz’s principles of conventional war to account for modern technology.   With billions of dollars, thousands of careers, and decades of work put into these efforts, there is also great pressure to do so.   While many of these technologies are exciting and full of potential for making conflicts shorter and less costly, for all their advantages they do not by themselves change the principles of conventional war.  A close look at several reveals that they rather easily fit into the existing set of principles. 

 

CONCLUSION

While he couldn’t have foreseen it on that February day nearly four years ago, President Bush was speaking to a military about to be charged with its most ambitious battle plans in decades.  It has performed that duty very well as a whole, especially in conventional battle when it has relied on doctrine rooted in Clausewitz’s principles.   However, only part of the fight today remains conventional in nature, and it is in this other gray area that the US military must lead and adapt to persevere.  It cannot do that by solely relying on the high technology and lofty visions of ‘big war’ transformation, but rather in the messy, long-proven strategies for fighting conflicts where the ultimate outcome isn’t the total destruction of a nation, but rather the building up of a better society.

Creating a worldview based on conventional warfighting capability, instead of creating a warfighting capability based on the actual world, is a dangerous folly, and far too costly a mistake to make.   America owes its warriors the lessons of conventional war that have withstood the test of time, and also apply them to the world they are actually living and fighting in today and tomorrow.   That world will less resemble the fields of battle from Clausewitz’s era, but rather the messy world of a global system coming together economically and socially.  Bush’s call to ‘keep the peace’ in this world will require America to view its past lessons, apply the proven principles of war to conventional battle when it occurs, and frame out a new operating order for the non-conventional conflicts most likely in the future.



[i] Remarks by the President at Norfolk Naval Air Station, Norfolk, Virginia, February 13, 2001.  Available online at: http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/20010213-1.html

[ii] Gen. Charles C. Krulak, "The Strategic Corporal: Leadership in the Three Block War," Marines Magazine, January 1999.   Available online at: http://www.au.af.mil/au/awc/awcgate/usmc/strategic_corporal.htm

[iii] Ralph Peters, Fighting for the Future:  Will America Triumph?  (Mechanicsburg, PA:  Stackpole), p. 22.

[iv] B.G. Burkett, Stolen Valor:  How the Vietnam Generation Was Robbed of its Heroes and its History (Dallas, Texas:  Verity Press, 1998), p. 52.

[v] Thomas P.M. Barnett, The Pentagon’s New Map:  War and Peace in the Twenty-first Century (New York:  G.P. Putnam, 2004), p. 191.

[vi] Barnett,  p. 152. 

[vii] Max Boot, The Savage Wars of Peace:  Small Wars and the Rise of American Power (New York:  Basic, 2003), p. 332. 

[viii] Tom Clancy, with General Tony Zinni (Ret.) and Tony Koltz, Battle Ready (New York:  G.P. Putnam, 2003), p. 432. 

[ix] Dana Priest, The Mission:  Waging War and Keeping Peace with America’s Military (New York:  Norton, 2003), p. 56. 

[x] US Marine Corps Small Wars Manual (Washington:  Government Printing Office, 1940).

[xi] Barnett, p. 325.

[xii] US Marine Corps Small Wars Manual, Section I, 6-4.

[xiii] Barnett, p. 323.

[xiv] Louis Sahagun, “Army Trainers to Become Fighters in Iraq,” Los Angeles Times, October 17, 2004.  Brig. General Robert W. Cone, commanding officer of Ft. Irwin’s vast National Training Center, is quoted as describing recent training changes:  “Smash-mouth, regiment-on-regiment battles are not what I'm concerned with right now.  For the next year, I'm stressing low-intensity conflict and cultural awareness."

[xv] US Marine Corps Small Wars Manual, Section VI, 1-31.

[xvi] Marine Corps Operations MCDP 1-0, (US Department of the Navy, 2001), B-4. 

[xvii] Clancy, p. 248.

[xviii] Priest, p. 71.

[xix] Barnett, p. 321.

[xx] Roxana Tiron, “Heavy Armor Gains Clout in Urban Combat,” National Defense, July 2004.

[xxi] US Marine Corps Small Wars Manual, Section VI, 9-23.

[xxii] Cato Handbook to Congress:  Policy Recommendations for the 108th Congress, (Washington:  Cato Institute), p. 500.

[xxiii] Frederick W. Kagan, “The Army We Have,” The Weekly Standard, December 27, 2004.

[xxiv] “Hamas leader killed in Israeli helicopter strike,” CNN.com, May 30, 2004.  Available online at: http://www.cnn.com/2004/WORLD/meast/05/29/mideast/ 

[xxv] United States Air Force Basic Doctrine, (US Air Force Electronic Publications Library), p. 22.

[xxvi] David Zucchino, Thunder Run:  The Armored Strike to Capture Baghdad (New York:  Atlantic Monthly Press, 2004), p. 71.


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