Economic Club of Chicago speech
As Delivered by Secretary of Defense Robert M.
Gates, Chicago, Ill.
| |
July 16, 2009
Thank you,
Secretary Daley, for that kind introduction.
It’s an honor to be at the Economic Club of Chicago. I
certainly appreciate the special arrangements you made to
have me here this afternoon. I
thank all the distinguished citizens of this great city who
came here today. I am mindful I am speaking in the
adopted hometown of my boss. President Obama sends his
greetings, as do Rahm Emanuel and David Axelrod and the rest
of the Chicago crew. They are no doubt discovering that
Washington is the true “Windy City."
The issue that brings me here today is central to the
security of all Americans: the future of the United States
military: How it should be organized, equipped – and funded
– in the years ahead, to win the wars we are in while being
prepared for threats on or beyond the horizon. Earlier
this year, I recommended to President Obama – and he
enthusiastically agreed – that we needed to fundamentally
reshape the priorities of America’s defense establishment
and reform the way the Pentagon does business – in
particular, the weapons we buy, and how we buy them. Above
all, to prepare to wage future wars, rather than continuing
the habit of rearming for previous ones.
I am here on relatively short notice to speak publicly about
these matters because the Congress is, as we speak, debating
the president’s defense budget request for the next fiscal
year, a budget request that implements many needed reforms
and changes. Most of the proposals – especially those that
increase support for the troops, their families, and the war
effort – have been widely embraced. However, some of the
crucial reforms that deal with major weapons programs have
met with a less than enthusiastic reaction in the Congress,
among defense contractors, and within some quarters of the
Pentagon itself. And so I thought it appropriate to address
some of these controversial issues here – in a place that
is, appropriately enough not only the adopted home of our
Commander-in-Chief, but also a symbol of America’s
industrial base and economic power.
First, some context on how we got to this point. President
Obama’s budget proposal is, I believe, the nation’s first
truly 21st century defense budget. It explicitly recognizes
that over the last two decades the nature of conflict has
fundamentally changed – and that much of America’s defense
establishment has yet to fully adapt to the security
realities of the post-Cold War era and this complex and
dangerous new century. During
the 1990s, the United States celebrated the demise of the
Soviet Union and the so-called “end of history” by making
deep cuts in the funding for, and above all, the size of the
U.S. military, including a 40 percent drop in the size of
the Active Army. This took place even as a post-Cold War
world grew less stable, less predictable, and more
turbulent. The U.S. military, with some advances in areas
such as precision weaponry, essentially became a smaller
version of the force that held off the Soviets in Germany
for decades and expelled Iraq from Kuwait in 1991. There was
little appetite for, or interest in, preparing for what we
call “irregular warfare” – campaigns against insurgents,
terrorists, militias, and other non-state groups. This was
the bipartisan reality both in the White House and in
Congress. Of course, after
September 11th, some things did change. The base defense
budget – not counting spending for the wars – increased by
some 70 percent over the next eight years. During this
period there were important changes in the way U.S. forces
were organized, based and deployed, and investments were
made in new technologies such as unmanned aerial vehicles.
However, when all was said and done, the way the Pentagon
selected, evaluated, developed, and paid for major new
weapons systems and equipment did not fundamentally change –
even after September 11th.
Indeed, the kinds of equipment, programs, and capabilities
needed to protect our troops and defeat the insurgencies in
Iraq and Afghanistan were not the highest priority of much
of the Defense Department, even after several years of war.
I learned about this lack of
bureaucratic priority for the wars we are in the hard way –
during my first few months on the job as the Iraq surge was
getting underway. The challenges I faced in getting what our
troops needed in the field stood in stark contrast to the
support provided conventional modernization programs –
weapons designed to fight other modern armies, navies, and
air forces – that had been in the pipeline for many years
and had acquired a loyal and enthusiastic following in the
Pentagon, in the Congress, and in industry. The most
pressing needs of today’s warfighter – on the battlefield,
in the hospital, or at home – simply lacked place and power
at the table when priorities were being set and long-term
budget decisions were being made.
So the most important shift in President Obama’s first
defense budget was to increase and institutionalize funding
for programs that directly support those fighting America’s
wars and their families. Those initiatives included more
helicopter support, air lift, armored vehicles, personnel
protection equipment, and intelligence, surveillance, and
reconnaissance assets for our troops in Iraq and
Afghanistan. In addition, we also increased funding for
programs that provide long-term support to military families
and treatment for the signature wounds of this conflict –
such as traumatic brain injury and post traumatic stress.
But, while the world of
terrorists and other violent extremists – of insurgents and
IEDs – is with us for the long haul, we also recognize that
another world has emerged. Growing numbers of countries and
groups are employing the latest and increasingly accessible
technologies to put the United States at risk in disruptive
and unpredictable ways. Other
large nations – known in Pentagon lingo as “near-peers” –
are modernizing their militaries in ways that could, over
time, pose a challenge to the United States. In some cases,
their programs take the form of traditional weapons systems
such as more advanced fighter aircraft, missiles, and
submarines. But other nations
have learned from the experience of Saddam Hussein’s
military in the first and second Gulf wars – that it is
ill-advised, if not suicidal, to fight a conventional war
head-to-head against the United States: fighter-to-fighter,
ship-to-ship, tank-to-tank. They also learned from a
bankrupted Soviet Union not to try to outspend us or match
our overall capabilities. Instead, they are developing
asymmetric means that take advantage of new technologies –
and our vulnerabilities – to disrupt our lines of
communication and our freedom of movement, to deny us
access, and to narrow our military options and strategic
choices. At the same time,
insurgents or militias are acquiring or seeking precision
weapons, sophisticated communications, cyber capabilities,
and even weapons of mass destruction. The Lebanese extremist
group Hezbollah currently has more rockets and high-end
munitions – many quite sophisticated and accurate – than all
but a handful of countries. In
sum, the security challenges we now face, and will in the
future, have changed, and our thinking must likewise change.
The old paradigm of looking at potential conflict as either
regular or irregular war, conventional or unconventional,
high end or low – is no longer relevant. And as a result,
the Defense Department needs to think about and prepare for
war in a profoundly different way than what we have been
accustomed to throughout the better part of the last
century. What is needed is a
portfolio of military capabilities with maximum versatility
across the widest possible spectrum of conflict. As a
result, we must change the way we think and the way we plan
– and fundamentally reform – the way the Pentagon does
business and buys weapons. It simply will not do to base our
strategy solely on continuing to design and buy – as we have
for the last 60 years – only the most technologically
advanced versions of weapons to keep up with or stay ahead
of another superpower adversary – especially one that
imploded nearly a generation ago.
To get there we must break the old habit of adding layer
upon layer of cost, complexity, and delay to systems that
are so expensive and so elaborate that only a small number
can be built, and that are then usable only in a narrow
range of low-probability scenarios.
We must also get control of what is called “requirements
creep” – where more features and capabilities are added to a
given piece of equipment, often to the point of absurdity.
The most flamboyant example of this phenomenon is the new
presidential helicopter – what President Obama referred to
as defense procurement “run amok.” Once the analysis and
requirements were done, we ended up with a helicopter that
cost nearly half a billion dollars each and enabled the
president to, among other things, cook dinner while in
flight under nuclear attack. We
also had to take a hard look at a number of weapons programs
that were grotesquely over budget, were having major
performance problems, were reliant on unproven technology,
or were becoming increasingly detached from real world
scenarios – as if September 11th and the wars that followed
had never happened. Those of
you with experience in the technology or manufacturing
sectors have at some point probably faced some combination
of these challenges in your own businesses. But in the
defense arena, we faced an additional, usually
insurmountable obstacle to bring rationality to budget and
acquisition decisions. Major weapons programs, irrespective
of their problems or performance, have a habit of continuing
long after they are wanted or needed, recalling Ronald
Reagan’s old joke that a government program represents the
closest thing we’ll ever see to eternal life on this earth.
First, there is the Congress,
which is understandably concerned, especially in these tough
economic times, about protecting jobs in certain states and
congressional districts. There is the defense and
aerospace industry, which has an obvious financial stake in
the survival and growth of these programs.
And there is the institutional military itself – within the
Pentagon, and as expressed through an influential network of
retired generals and admirals, some of whom are paid
consultants to the defense industry, and some who often are
quoted as experts in the news media.
As a result, many past attempts by my predecessors to end
failing or unnecessary programs went by the wayside.
Nonetheless I determined in a triumph of hope over
experience, and the president agreed, that given the urgency
of the wars we are in, the daunting global security
environment we will inhabit for decades to come, and our
country’s economic problems, we simply cannot afford to move
ahead with business as usual.
To this end, the president’s budget request cut, curtailed,
or ended a number of conventional modernization programs –
satellites, ground vehicles, helicopters, fighters – that
were either performing poorly or in excess to real-world
needs. Conversely, future-oriented programs where the U.S.
was relatively underinvested were accelerated or received
more funding. For example, we
must sustain and continually improve our specialized
strategic deterrent to ensure that our – and our allies’ –
security is always protected against nuclear-armed
adversaries. In an initiative little noticed, the
President’s program includes money to begin a new generation
of ballistic missile submarines and nearly $700 million in
additional funds to secure and assure America’s nuclear
deterrent. Some of our proposed
reforms are meeting real resistance. They are called risky.
Or not meeting a certain military requirement. Or lacking in
study and analysis. Those three words – requirements, risk,
and, analysis – are commonly invoked in defense matters. If
applied correctly, they help us make sound decisions. I’ve
found, however, that more often they have become the holy
trinity of the status quo or business as usual.
In truth, preparing for conflict in the 21st century means
investing in truly new concepts and new technologies. It
means taking into account all the assets and capabilities we
can bring to the fight. It means measuring those
capabilities against the real threats posed by real world
adversaries with real limitations, not threats conjured up
from enemies with unlimited time, unlimited resources, and
unlimited technological acumen.
Air superiority and missile defense – two areas where the
budget has attracted the most criticism – provide case
studies. Let me start with the controversy over the F-22
fighter jet. We had to consider, when preparing for a future
potential conventional state-on-state conflict, what is the
right mix of the most advanced fighter aircraft and other
weapons to deal with the known and projected threats to U.S.
air supremacy? For example, we now have unmanned aerial
vehicles that can simultaneously perform intelligence,
reconnaissance, and surveillance missions as well as deliver
precision-guided bombs and missiles. The president’s budget
request would buy 48 of the most advanced UAVs – aircraft
that have a greater range than some of our manned fighters,
in addition to the ability to loiter for hours over a
target. And we will buy many more in the future.
We also took into consideration the capabilities of the
newest manned combat aircraft program, the stealth F-35
Joint Strike Fighter. The F-35 is 10 to 15 years newer than
the F-22, carries a much larger suite of weapons, and is
superior in a number of areas – most importantly,
air-to-ground missions such as destroying sophisticated
enemy air defenses. It is a versatile aircraft, less than
half the total cost of the F-22, and can be produced in
quantity with all the advantages produced by economies of
scale – some 500 will be bought over the next five years,
more than 2,400 over the life of the program. And we already
have eight foreign development partners. It has had
development problems to be sure, as has every advanced
military aircraft ever fielded. But if properly supported,
the F-35 will be the backbone of America’s tactical aviation
fleet for decades to come if – and it is a big if – money is
not drained away to spend on other aircraft that our
military leadership considers of lower priority or excess to
our needs. Having said that,
the F-22 is clearly a capability we do need – a niche,
silver-bullet solution for one or two potential scenarios –
specifically the defeat of a highly advanced enemy fighter
fleet. The F-22, to be blunt, does not make much sense
anyplace else in the spectrum of conflict. Nonetheless,
supporters of the F-22 lately have promoted its use for an
ever expanding list of potential missions. These range from
protecting the homeland from seaborne cruise missiles to, as
one retired general recommended on TV, using F-22s to go
after Somali pirates who in many cases are teenagers with
AK-47s – a job we already know is better done at much less
cost by three Navy SEALs. These are examples of how
far-fetched some of the arguments have become for a program
that has cost $65 billion – and counting – to produce 187
aircraft, not to mention the thousands of uniformed Air
Force positions that were sacrificed to help pay for it.
In light of all these factors, and with the support of the
Air Force leadership, I concluded that 183 – the program of
record since 2005, plus four more added in the FY 09
supplemental – was a sufficient number of F-22s and
recommended as such to the president.
The reaction from parts of Washington has been predictable
for many of the reasons I described before. The most
substantive criticism is that completing the F-22 program
means we are risking the future of U.S. air supremacy. To
assess this risk, it is worth looking at real-world
potential threat and assessing the capabilities that other
countries have now or in the pipeline.
Consider that by 2020, the United States is projected to
have nearly 2,500 manned combat aircraft of all kinds. Of
those, nearly 1,100 will be the most advanced fifth
generation F-35s and F-22s. China, by contrast, is projected
to have no fifth generation aircraft by 2020. And by 2025,
the gap only widens. The U.S. will have approximately 1,700
of the most advanced fifth generation fighters versus a
handful of comparable aircraft for the Chinese. Nonetheless,
some portray this scenario as a dire threat to America's
national security.
Correspondingly, the recent tests of a possible nuclear
device and ballistic missiles by North Korea brought
scrutiny to the changes in this budget that relate to
missile defense. The risk to national security has again
been invoked, mainly because the total missile defense
budget was reduced from last year.
In fact, where the threat is real or growing – from rogue
states or from short-to-medium range missiles that can hit
our deployed troops or our allies and friends – this budget
sustains or increases funding. Most of the cuts in this area
come from two programs that are designed to shoot down enemy
missiles immediately after launch. This was a great idea,
but the aspiration was overwhelmed by the escalating costs,
operational problems, and technological challenges.
Consider the example of one of those programs – the Airborne
Laser. This was supposed to put high-powered lasers on a
fleet of 747s. After more than a decade of research and
development, we have yet to achieve a laser with enough
power to knock down a missile in boost phase more than 50
miles from the launch pad – thus requiring these huge planes
to loiter deep in enemy air space to have a feasible chance
at a direct hit. Moreover, the 10 to 20 aircraft needed
would cost about $1.5 billion each plus tens of millions of
dollars each year for maintenance and operating costs. The
program and operating concept were fatally flawed and it was
time to face reality. So we curtailed the existing program
while keeping the prototype aircraft for research and
development. Many of these
decisions – like the one I just described – were more
clear-cut than others. But all of them, insofar as they
involved hundreds of billions of dollars and the security of
the American people, were treated with the utmost
seriousness by the senior civilian and military leadership
of the Pentagon. An enormous amount of thought, study,
assessment, and analysis underpins these budget
recommendations – including the National Defense Strategy I
issued last summer. Some have
called for yet more analysis before making any of the
decisions in this budget. But when dealing with programs
that were clearly out of control, performing poorly, and
excess to the military’s real requirements, we did not need
more study, more debate, or more delay – in effect,
paralysis through analysis. What was needed were three
things – common sense, political will, and tough decisions.
Qualities too often in short supply in Washington, D.C.
All of these decisions involved considering trade-offs,
balancing risks, and setting priorities – separating
nice-to-haves from have-to-haves, requirements from
appetites. We cannot expect to eliminate risk and danger by
simply spending more – especially if we’re spending on the
wrong things. But more to the point, we all – the military,
the Congress, and industry – have to face some iron fiscal
realities. The last defense
budget submitted by President George W. Bush for Fiscal Year
2009 was $515 billion. In that budget the Bush
administration proposed – at my recommendation – a Fiscal
Year 2010 defense budget of $524 billion. The budget just
submitted by President Obama for FY 2010 was $534 billion.
Even after factoring inflation, and some of the war costs
that were moved from supplemental appropriations, President
Obama's defense request represents a modest but real
increase over the last Bush budget. I know. I submitted them
both. In total, by one estimate, our budget adds up to
about what the entire rest of the world combined spends on
defense. Only in the parallel universe that is Washington,
D.C., would that be considered “gutting” defense.
The fact is that if the defense budget had been even higher,
my recommendations to the president with respect to troubled
programs would have been the same – for all the reasons I
described earlier. There is a more fundamental point: If the
Department of Defense can’t figure out a way to defend the
United States on a budget of more than half a trillion
dollars a year, then our problems are much bigger than
anything that can be cured by buying a few more ships and
planes. What is important is to
have a budget baseline with a steady, sustainable, and
predictable rate of growth that avoids extreme peaks and
valleys that are enormously harmful to sound budgeting. From
the very first defense budget I submitted for President Bush
in January 2007, I have warned against doing what America
has done multiple times over the last 90 years by slashing
defense spending after a major conflict. The war in Iraq is
winding down, and one day so too will the conflict in
Afghanistan. When that day comes, the nation will
again face pressure to cut back on defense spending, as we
always have. It is simply the nature of the beast. And the
higher our base budget is now, the harder it will be to
sustain these necessary programs, and the more drastic and
dangerous the drop-off will be later.
So where do we go from here? Authorization for more F-22s is
in both versions of the defense bill working its way through
the Congress. The president has indicated that he has real
red lines in this budget, including the F-22. Some might
ask: Why threaten a veto and risk a confrontation over a
couple billion dollars for a dozen or so planes?
The grim reality is that with regard to the budget we have
entered a zero-sum game. Every defense dollar diverted to
fund excess or unneeded capacity – whether for more F-22s or
anything else – is a dollar that will be unavailable to take
care of our people, to win the wars we are in, to deter
potential adversaries, and to improve capabilities in areas
where America is underinvested and potentially vulnerable.
That is a risk I cannot accept and I will not take.
And, with regard to something like the F-22, irrespective of
whether the number of aircraft at issue is 12 planes or 200,
if we can’t bring ourselves to make this tough but
straightforward decision – reflecting the judgment of two
very different presidents, two different secretaries of
defense, two chairmen of the joint chiefs of staff, and the
current Air Force Secretary and Chief of Staff, where do we
draw the line? And if not now, when? If we can’t get this
right – what on earth can we get right? It is time to draw
the line on doing Defense business as usual. The President
has drawn that line. And that red line is a veto. And
it is real. On a personal note,
I joined CIA more than 40 years ago to help protect my
country. For just about my entire professional career in
government I have generally been known as a hawk on national
security. One criticism of me when I was at CIA was that I
overestimated threats to the security of our country.
Well, I haven’t changed. I did not molt from a hawk into a
dove on January 20, 2009. I continue to believe, as I always
have, that the world is, and always will be, a dangerous and
hostile place for my country with many who would do America
harm and who hate everything we are and stand for. But, the
nature of the threats to us has changed. And so too should
the way our military is organized and equipped to meet them.
I believe – along with the
senior military leadership of this nation – that the defense
budget we proposed to President Obama and that he sent to
Congress is the best we could design to protect the United
States now and in the future. The best we could do to
protect our men and women in uniform, to give them the tools
they need to deter our enemies, and to win our wars today
and tomorrow. We stand by this reform budget, and we are
prepared to fight for it. A
final thought. I arrived in Washington 43 years ago this
summer. Of all people, I am well aware of the realities of
Washington and know that things do not change overnight.
After all, the influence of politics and parochial interests
in defense matters is as old as the Republic itself. Henry
Knox, the first secretary of war, was charged with building
the first American fleet. To get the support of Congress,
Knox eventually ended up with six frigates being built in
six different shipyards in six different states.
But the stakes today are very high – with the nation at war,
and a security landscape steadily growing more dangerous and
unpredictable. I am deeply concerned about the long-term
challenges facing our defense establishment – and just as
concerned that the political state of play does not reflect
the reality that major reforms are needed, or that tough
choices and real discipline are necessary.
We stand at a crossroads. We simply cannot risk continuing
down the same path – where our spending and program
priorities are increasingly divorced from the very real
threats of today and the growing ones of tomorrow. These
threats demand that all of our nation’s leaders rise above
the politics and parochialism that have too often plagued
considerations of our nation's defense – from industry to
interest groups, from the Pentagon to Foggy Bottom, from one
end of Pennsylvania Avenue to the other. The time has come
to draw a line and take a stand against the
business-as-usual approach to national defense. We must all
fulfill our obligation to the American people to ensure that
our country remains safe and strong. Just as our men and
women in uniform are doing their duty to this end, we in
Washington must now do ours. |
(Archives)
|