He states, accurately enough: "The United States also ought to be clear about the range of conflicts that it has in mind when thinking about asymmetric warfare, a term that obscures more than it clarifies." then uses the term freely...Nor did I. In particular, I think this excerpt is ideally correct but practically virtually impossible to implement: "The United States would remain firmly involved in defense alliances around the world. On the nonmilitary side of the ledger, it would substantially increase its profile abroad in foreign aid, expanded diplomatic missions, cultural engagement, and much more. It would seek to address the underlying causes of asymmetric conflict." For six reasons; we do not have a good record in foreign aid and I see no indication of future improvement; our cultural interplay is not wanted in most of the world; Congress; the US system of governance and its lack of continuity; the underlying causes of conflict are deep, varied and too many to properly address; and, lastly, the fact that by definition, the asymmetric attacker will aim for those areas in which we do not possess overwhelming superiority -- it is predicting what those areas will be that presents the debate he addresses.I didn't, though, find his suggestion that we revert back to preparing for MTWs very persuasive.I have no doubt that some are doing so, some would go in the opposite direction but most I think are simply still trying to get an accurate sort on it (and good luck with that ) to determine what to aim for.I'm left wondering whether we're just searching for an alibi to perserve a very large military rather than deciding that we MUST keep a very large military.
Given the fact that the object in war should be to always be asymmetric in relation to the opponent, I'm distressed but not terribly surprised that most of the buzz I hear is aimed at reacting (in one way or another) to the other guy (whoever he is) instead of asymmetrically knocking him off balance before he does something we may regret.
That, to me, should be our strategic aim.
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