Strike rapidly, consolidate gains, harden victory into a fait accompli

Friday, April 15th, 2022

Christian Brose explains (in The Kill Chain) how our near-peers plan to win a future war:

Indeed, that is exactly how China plans to win a future war in Asia and how Russia plans to prevail in Europe: strike rapidly, consolidate their gains before US forces can respond effectively, harden their victory into a fait accompli, and force the United States to escalate the conflict to attack and dislodge their forces. This kind of rapid aggression will only become easier when future war is moving at the speed of hypersonic weapons and intelligent machines.

To deter this kind of conflict, the United States must have nearly all of the military forces required to defend against great-power aggression right where war might occur.

This necessitates positioning large numbers of new military forces, especially autonomous systems, advanced missiles, and electronic attack systems, in Europe and Asia.

It will also require the eventual forward deployment of advanced manufacturing and other means of production that could rapidly generate vast quantities of replacement forces in the event of conflict, where losses would be significant.

Comments

  1. Gavin Longmuir says:

    Brose is dreaming! So the bankrupt USA is going to take whatever funds it can borrow to increase the size & expense of the military — a military for which we can barely find enough fit young men today. And then we are going to export the sole remaining US industry — the Military-Industrial Complex — to ungrateful EuroScum.

    And all of this would be pointless, because China increasingly controls the supply of manufactured goods to the US. Our Betters have turned the US into a Cargo Cult economy, waiting for the next delivery of goodies from overseas. Fighting wars with guns is unnecessary if you are the country which makes everything the rest of the world needs.

    Our problem is not military — it is the need to rebuild a productive economy after decades of destructive financialization.

  2. Isegoria says:

    Brose is not arguing to increase defense spending:

    The problem is not that America is spending too little on defense. The problem is that America is playing a losing game. Over many decades we have built our military around small numbers of large, expensive, exquisite, heavily manned, and hard-to-replace platforms that struggle to close the kill chain as one battle network.

  3. VXXC says:

    Brose never served a day in his life, except on John McCain’s staff as military adviser.

    He doesn’t look like too many fights in the schoolyard either.

  4. VXXC says:

    Isegoria, this man Dr. Philip Kharber is briefing West Pointers in 2018 at the Modern War Institute [West point] on lessons learned about the Russian army from the Ukraine war.

    He spent many days from 2014–2018 in Ukraine with the Ukrainian army, bringing back some shrapnel from Grad strike as proof.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_CMby_WPjk4&t=1593s

    We have our problems, but Brose et al., believe me, don’t understand them or the solutions.

    And the Russian army is prepared for peer conflict, and we gutted our peer-conflict army of the 1980s and ’90s to try and make Iraqis and Afghans into SWPLS or who knows what.

    Nearly all our Stinger Avenger units, for instance, are in the National Guard. I’ve served decades and never seen a Stinger.

    We got rid of our EW (Electronic Warfare) to do “Cyber Security” because that’s where the money is, but it has nothing to do with the Battlefield. Meanwhile the Russians can, from the ground, with 2 trucks, jam an AWACS from 300 km. We can go on.

    We. Are. Not. Prepared.

    In any case, I think Brose is focused on Naval and Air and China. As it happens, it’s land war with Russia on the way to perhaps nuclear war?

  5. Gavin Longmuir says:

    It really sounds like Brose is arguing for more military spending when he says: “This necessitates positioning large numbers of new military forces …”

    And look at what he wants to do with those new forces: “… the United States must have nearly all of the military forces required to defend against great-power aggression right where war might occur.”

    So we need extra forces for expensive pre-positioning. And where might that be? In Cuba, perhaps — a la Cuban Missile Crisis? Or in Hong Kong? Or Taiwan? Or the Ukraine –even as the Ukrainian rulers were fighting a civil war against what they considered the wrong kind of Ukrainian?

    Or perhaps Turkey decides to finally settle the issues with Greece? What about the running sore of Cyprus? Or maybe China starts arming up Venezuela with nuclear missiles, and Brazil takes exception? What if the civil war that NATO started in Libya gets out of control — does the US need forces in Tunisia or Egypt or both? What if they don’t want pre-positioned US forces? And let’s not even talk about the potential for Russia or China to start stirring things up in Sub-Saharan Africa.

    No, the solution is to quit pretending that the bankrupt US can continue to be the world’s unpaid policeman. It is time to cut all those international entanglements and focus on repairing the damage the Political Class has done to the US over the last several decades.

  6. Isegoria says:

    Brose’s point is that we haven’t invested in the right weapons systems, because the Military Industrial Complex can continue to get paid for incremental improvements, while calling them revolutionary.

    “The United States must have nearly all of the military forces required to defend against great-power aggression right where war might occur,” because they would come under immediate attack once they began their multiweek mobilization across the planet, if they were stationed back in the States.

  7. Gavin Longmuir says:

    Sorry, not buying Brose’s premise — that the US should be ready at the drop of a hat to respond to “great power aggression” far far away from the US.

    Take, for example, the US desire to respond to Russia choosing to get involved in the Ukraine’s long-running civil war. Assuming that ends up with the partition of the Ukraine and the rump Ukraine (that part of the west not subsequently reclaimed by Poland) declaring neutrality and deciding against joining NATO. How would that “great power aggression” on the other side of the world have harmed the people of the United States in any way?

    How did it benefit the people of the United States for US/NATO to bomb the people of Belgrade back to the Stone Age — hitting power plants and water supplies? What “great power aggression” were our Betters responding to there?

    Any “great power” war these days is going to end up in nuclear devastation. Our troops will get nuked, no matter whether they are already on the other side of the world, in transit, or in the US. So will the rest of us. That is why we should be focusing on repairing our own society, and avoiding pumping up conflicts elsewhere.

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