
Originally Posted by
Patsfan56
Oh, I think it can.
We have a tremendous opportunity here given the ramping down of operations in Afghanistan (although Karzai just signed an extension on US Armed forces in Afghansitan through 2030).
We have an opportunity to reflect opn what the mission statement for our military needs to be. I do not believe we should be postured to confront two major fronts at one time. Obviously, the difference will need to be compensated through changes in foreign policy, and mutual defense agreements and the like with our friends and allies. However, if we can refine the mission statement, everything else will follow.
We would need to assess our needs for armored, mechanized, and light forces based upon the greatest threats we envision overthe next 15 years. Where we think we might fight will tel us how much of each type of force we will need. From there, we can trim it down. The trick will be not repeating the same mistake made after each conflict- ramping down too far, which results in poor unit readiness, low morale, and insufficient resourcing of units and their equipment. My personal thought is that ten divisions is about where we need to be, but the composition of those divisions is what needs to be addressed.
I would need someone with more relevant expereince in the Navy to articluate a strategy for approaching this issue from a seapower standpoint.
This can most definitely be done, if intelligently. If not, and we go the way we've gone before, we tend to have to overspend to rapidly ramp up forces when we need them, and elect people like W after eight years of Clinton's military mismanagement. He says all the things folks want to hear, but his presidency was even worse for the military than was Clintons, and that is saying something.