Freakonomics Radio - 473. These Jobs Were Not Posted on ZipRecruiter
Episode Date: August 26, 2021In a conversation fresh from the Freakonomics Radio Network’s podcast laboratory, Michèle Flournoy (one of the highest-ranking women in Defense Department history) speaks with Cecil Haney (one of t...he U.S. Navy’s first Black four-star admirals) about nuclear deterrence, smart leadership, and how to do inclusion right.
Transcript
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Hey there, Stephen Dubner. Hope you've been having a great summer. Today, I'd like to
update you on what we've been doing this summer and to give you a preview of the fall. As
you may know, Freakonomics Radio was our one and only podcast for a long time. But last
year, right in the teeth of the pandemic, we decided to create the Freakonomics Radio
Network. Our first spinoff
show was called No Stupid Questions, which I co-host with Angela Duckworth, a psychology
professor at the University of Pennsylvania who is incredibly dynamic and insightful.
If you have not heard it yet, here's what No Stupid Questions sounds like.
We've talked actually, Stephen, about the spotlight effect, right? Tom Gilovich.
Everybody's paying attention to what I'm doing. Yes. And what I'm wearing and my hairstyle.
I just think we so often overestimate. We get self-conscious and we get insecure.
Now with you, we actually do pay attention to all those things. But with most people, we don't.
So that's no stupid questions. The next show we launched was People I Mostly Admire.
The host of that show is my Freakonomics friend and co-author Steve Levitt, who is an economist at the University of Chicago. But as you may know, Levitt is not your typical economist.
He's not your typical anything. This fact is reflected in the amazing
conversations that Levitt's been having on People I Mostly Admire with guests like Danny Kahneman
and Mayim Bialik, Sam Harris and Susan Wojcicki, talking everything from metaphysics to autonomous
vehicles and even economics, including the economics of women's professional basketball.
Here's Levitt with Sue Bird, who just won her fifth Olympic gold medal.
So the average player in the NBA made $8.3 million in 2019.
And in the WNBA, the average was $80,000.
Is that frustrating?
At times, but I live in reality.
I understand business and economics.
We're looked at in one of two ways.
Some people look at us as like charity.
And if they do look at us as an investment, immediately it's talked about how we don't make money.
I think people look at men's sports and immediately see potential, even if it doesn't exist.
Whereas we are never, we haven't been invested in our potential.
You guys don't make money.
And it's like 50 years ago, I don't think the NBA did either.
That's where my issues lie.
Just a few weeks ago, we launched another weekly show.
This one is called Freakonomics MD.
The host is Bapu Jena, who's both a physician and a research economist. He does very clever
empirical work that is right at the intersection of healthcare and the real world, like this.
Today, we're tackling flu shots, a seemingly straightforward, easy-to-come-by,
run-of-the-mill vaccine, unless you're a baby or a toddler. As an adult, if I want to get my flu
vaccine, I can get it at my doctor's office. I can get it at a walk-in flu clinic. I could get it
from my employer. But little kids can usually only get a flu vaccine at a doctor's office.
And kids who are healthy tend to only go see a doctor once a year, usually around their birthday. So do kids with summer birthdays
miss getting flu shots more often? And if so, what are the ripple effects?
Freakonomics MD brings us up to four weekly shows in the Freakonomics Radio Network. You can follow
all of them for free in any podcast app. But we are not stopping at four. Our motto, you may recall, is that Freakonomics explores
the hidden side of everything. So we've got a variety of projects in development, shows about
math, about dogs, about the economics of everyday things that you probably never give much thought
to. And today we want to give you a sample from another new show we are working on. This one doesn't even have a title yet.
So after you hear the episode, if you have a good idea, let us know.
We're at radio at Freakonomics.com.
But we do have an idea for this show.
The idea being, with everything going on in places like Afghanistan and Russia and China,
wouldn't it be useful to have a smart podcast on foreign
policy and national security to hear from someone who can reveal the hidden side of that world?
So we reached out to one of the smartest people in this realm, Michelle Flournoy,
a former Pentagon official and one of the highest ranking women in the history of
the Defense Department. Michelle, are you there?
Hi, Stephen.
Good to talk to you.
Nice to talk to you.
So as I just mentioned, one of the new projects we're working on is a podcast with you about
foreign policy and national security.
Hey, can I ask you while we're at it, what is the relationship between those two, foreign
policy and national security?
Which is the chicken and which is the egg?
Oh, good question. We could have a lot of debates about that. But I like to think that
foreign policy is dealing with all of our relationships in the world, our international
engagement. And national security is really a subset, if you will, of the things that really
touch on the security of the United States and of Americans here and abroad.
I was hoping you would say that, that security was a subset of foreign policy,
but then I thought you could say, well, without security, policy becomes a totally different animal.
That's probably true, too. That's why we could have an hour-long debate about this.
So, as I understand it, the idea behind this new show is that you will be having conversations with policymakers and decision makers who have been in the room where it happened, as Lin-Manuel Miranda put it in the musical Hamilton.
I've heard you are yourself a big Hamilton fan. Are you somehow tricking us into making a foreign policy musical? I wish, but I don't think any of our guests is likely to burst into
song, but they all have really fascinating stories to tell, and they can bring you inside a key
decision or a major event as if you two were in the room. So I don't mean to be cynical, at least
not too cynical, but for the average podcast listener, why does it matter? What's the value
in knowing more about this kind of decision-making?
Because we don't have any influence.
Well, every day there are policies being made and executed in our name.
And I think in a democracy, it's so important for citizens to understand what's happening
and to also understand this is a very human endeavor.
This is human beings
coming together, grappling with really tough situations and making the best decisions they
can, but often decisions that are flawed or imperfect or don't work out like they were
intended. Yeah. Can we talk about Afghanistan for a moment? Mitch McConnell recently criticized
President Biden for pulling out of Afghanistan
the way he did, even though that pullout was begun under the previous Trump administration.
When I see politics and foreign policy collide as they are now with Afghanistan, I'm really curious
to know what that relationship is like between elected officials and foreign policy civil servants? There's always politics in terms of how people respond to decisions that a president makes.
My guess is that if the Biden team had it to do over again, they probably would have
focused on teeing up a number of things before that decision was announced, really pressing
the negotiations to try to get
a ceasefire in place. I know they were trying that, but that got cut short. Having a plan to
take care of all of the Afghans who helped the U.S. and their families, getting them out of
harm's way. Having a plan for supporting the Afghan national security forces from over the horizon.
Having more of a plan for how we
were going to deal with counterterrorism threats from over the horizon. And instead, the decision
was made up front. And then all of this has been rolling out in a way that's much more chaotic than
it probably needed to be. Tell us in general about the kind of person that you want to talk to on this show.
Which sectors or realms will they come from?
I'd like to talk to people who've been on the front lines of national security.
They could be policymakers from the White House.
They could be diplomats.
They could be humanitarians, people who've done development work in crises on the ground,
military leaders. So they've either been at the decision-making table or they work in crises on the ground, military leaders.
So they've either been at the decision-making table or they've been participants on the ground in the most consequential events in recent history.
We will hear from one such person in a few minutes.
He's a former four-star admiral in the Navy who held tremendous responsibility in U.S. nuclear strategy. But before we get to that conversation, you add with him, let's learn a little bit more about you, because you two have been in the room
where it happened during the Obama administration and to some degree in the Clinton administration
as well. Let's take your most senior government role in the Obama administration in the Pentagon.
Is there a kind of thumbnail job description that you might find on ZipRecruiter if this job were posted on
ZipRecruiter, which I assume it's not? Not sure it'd be posted on ZipRecruiter. The job was
under Secretary of Defense for Policy. And the role is to support the Secretary of Defense in
all of his or her international engagements, to support him or her in all of their engagements in the National
Security Council, which is the primary decision-making body or advising body for the
president. And then also to help the secretary, because we're in a democracy, provide civilian
oversight of military strategy plans and operations. And which secretaries did you serve under?
So in the Clinton administration, I served under Les Aspin, and then Bill Perry, and then William Cohen. And then in the Obama administration under Bob Gates, and then Leon Panetta.
Talk about your day-to-day work in the Obama administration. What was that like?
So I oversaw a staff of about a thousand people and I had oversight over three defense agencies that focused on different topics. A typical day would start with an intelligence briefing, then moving to often a National Security Council meeting, either at the deputies level or the principals level over in the White House, then coming back, maybe so helping the secretary prepare for a foreign
counterpart coming to visit in the Pentagon. And then maybe we'd be reviewing a war plan
or a contingency plan or a proposed operation in the afternoon.
When you look around the world at this moment, what do you see as the,
let's say, three major foreign policy hotspots? Maybe they're obvious, maybe
they're not. I think one is Taiwan. I don't think either Beijing or Washington wants to go to war
over Taiwan, but we are very bad at understanding each other's resolve, calculus, capabilities,
and the risk of miscalculation is higher than it should be. So that's the first thing. I think in the wake of all these cyber attacks that we've seen recently, from solar winds
to the ransomware attacks, the thing that worries me is that at some point, one of these
attacks is going to inadvertently kill some Americans.
Like if you had an attack that took down an electricity grid and suddenly the hospitals
lose electricity, you're actually
going to have Americans die. Then what does a president do? And the risk of that escalating
into something that was never intended is one of those things that, you know, keeps me up at night.
And then I guess for a third, I'd say the real sleeper that nobody thinks about day to day,
but we could wake up tomorrow in a crisis. India, Pakistan,
they have had three wars since the creation of the two states. They both have nuclear weapons that they've deployed near their borders. You know, if they got into another conflict,
we could be in a nuclear situation overnight with almost zero warning. So, Michelle, this new podcast is not your first foray into journalism.
I know that during college you worked as a stringer for Time magazine, but then you abandoned
the glorious heights of journalism for the muck and shadows of foreign policy.
What made you interested in stepping back into the light now?
You know, the honest truth is I couldn't decide which side of the interview I wanted to be on
for like 10 years. Even when I was working in foreign policy, I was moonlighting for a public
television station. So what forced my hand was my first job in government, which decidedly put me
into the foreign policy, defense policy practitioner camp
and one side of the interview. So we are going to hear now your conversation with retired Admiral
Cecil Haney. A lot of us have an image, a stereotype of what a four-star Navy Admiral is like. How well
or poorly would you say Admiral Haney fits that stereotype? He is definitely not the stereotype.
He is a very humble sort of servant leader who is a wonderful storyteller and just a
very down-to-earth person.
All right, Michelle Flournoy, thank you so much.
It is a joy to welcome you to this little Freakonomics Radio network that we're building.
So thanks for coming to play in our sandbox. And let's now hear your conversation with
retired Navy Admiral Cecil Haney. As I told Stephen a moment ago, I want this show to grapple
with some of the most important national security issues of the day.
And we'll get to those issues through the stories of people who've shaped the decisions,
the people who've been at the table, the people who've been on the front lines executing the policy. Cecil Haney is one of those people. During his four decades in the United States Navy,
Haney rose through the ranks as a submarine commander, then a rear admiral,
and vice admiral. When he took command of the U.S. Pacific Fleet, he became one of the country's
first black four-star admirals. And then ultimately, he became the commander of U.S. Strategic Command,
which is responsible for all nuclear forces and global strike capabilities for the United States.
He was the person on point to provide nuclear options to the president and the secretary of defense in a crisis.
That experience gave him some pretty unique insight into nuclear developments around the world.
When we look at the investments that both Russia and a rising China have today,
we have to look at that with eyes wide open.
As we look at the challenges that will come ahead,
if we don't get this right,
we will be perhaps boxed in a corner.
And if nuclear deterrence fails,
that will not be a good day
for the United States of America and for the world.
We're definitely going to talk
about nuclear deterrence. I started my career as a nuclear arms control analyst. That was during the
Cold War. More than 30 years later, the challenges facing our aging nuclear arsenal are very different.
He'll also talk about what the U.S. military needs to do to address racism and extremism, and what it will take to get more people of color into leadership roles.
You can't just pay attention to it for five years and then stop paying attention to it,
thinking, okay, we're successful, we're done.
I didn't get a chance, unfortunately, to actually serve alongside Admiral Haney in the Pentagon,
but we have gotten to know each other
serving on a nonprofit board together, and I just think the world of him. As someone who was often
the only woman in the room, I wondered what his experience was like as a Black man coming up the
ranks of the Navy. So in this episode, what we're going to do is talk about his experience from his
time at the Naval Academy all the way through to becoming an admiral.
Forty years ago, when Cecil Haney first thought about joining the military,
he had his eyes not on the Navy, but on the Army.
His father was not very excited about this.
Jesse Diggs had experienced racism while serving in the Army during World War II.
You know, he grew up in the military at a time frame where we were a segregated organization of sort.
And as a result, you could sense there was some disappointments from him in terms of just the overall treatment, but also coming back to a nation that was
clearly divided in terms of how African Americans should be in society and equality and equity and
those things we talk about today. Jesse was a bus driver for Greyhound, and some of his passengers
were midshipmen from the U.S. Naval Academy in Annapolis. Jesse got to know some of them, and he liked them.
Maybe a similar path would be right for Cecil.
So, Admiral Haney, in 1974, you were admitted to the U.S. Naval Academy,
a huge achievement unto itself.
What was it like when you were actually there?
Well, as a guy growing up here in Concrete City of Washington, D.C., the one thing I wasn't as
prepared for as many other midshipmen were, I didn't know how to swim.
Oh, my.
So one of my biggest challenges coming in was going through swimming and what we called
swimming sub-squad. I can tell you, I got to learn how
to swim as part of that education. But it was also a very busy place. You were never bored there.
I'll put it that way. You were always challenged, challenged intellectually, challenged physically.
And as a result, it was an environment that, quite frankly, I thrived in.
So the military likes to think of itself as sort of a colorblind meritocracy.
What was your experience in the Naval Academy? Did it feel like that to you, or did you encounter
some challenges just because people weren't used to seeing a person of color in the ranks?
I was not as alone as one would think in that we had a larger number of African-Americans coming into the academy.
So that was one.
Two, I didn't run into what I call a lot of blatant racism,
or I didn't slow down enough to look for it.
One of the two.
I did have one incident where I was coming up the stairs in Bancroft Hall,
and one white midshipman turned around to me and said,
the only reason you're here is because of a quota system. And he was surrounded with
some other white midshipmen and nobody said anything. And I just kept going. But I tell you,
that too may have been a blessing in disguise because I was so motivated to make sure that I was going to graduate regardless of
how people thought of why I came into that school. And I was going to study hard to make sure my
grades were where they needed to be and leave that behind and stay focused forward toward the goal.
Yeah, it's amazing how a comment like that can become a source of positive motivation. My own experience, my first time in the Pentagon,
you know, relatively young, female.
I was a Democratic political appointee.
And my first counterpart meeting
with a one-star general officer
who happened to be from the South,
he said, what's a nice girl like you
doing in a job like this?
And the assumption was the only reason you're here
is because some Democratic president thinks that there's a quota and women should fill these jobs.
But I walked away from that meeting being very determined to show him why I was there,
because I'm competent and I'm going to add value and so forth. And he eventually turned around.
But it's amazing how those comments
can actually motivate you to excel. It does, but it also puts in the back of your head in
every interaction, particularly when you are the one and only in classrooms and laboratories.
What are they really thinking about you that they're not seeing.
So you graduate in 1978. You're commissioned as an officer in the United States Navy that very day.
Very happy day, I am sure. And you're assigned to your first submarine, which happens to be named after the former vice president, John C. Calhoun, a man who was an
infamous defender of slavery in the 19th century. What was it like to serve aboard a submarine
called the John C. Calhoun? Well, it was interesting because I had to wear a ball cap
with that name on it all the time, being that that was the namesake you were serving on.
When I reported aboard, I'll give you two sort
of flavors of this. I was given the opportunity to lead the electrical division and the interior
communications division. When I got assigned there, I had Master Chief Hubbard as my leading chief
petty officer. Now, Master Chief Hubbard was not from Washington, D.C. He was from the great state of Alabama. We were probably in such different camps. But this individual was a very professional
Master Chief. And I credit a lot of my start and success to this individual who, from a diversity
standpoint, from a growing up standpoint, et cetera, we were on opposite ends of the planet. But he would pull me in and we would be able to talk candidly about what needed
to be done associated with making the division successful. He would say, hey, sir, you need to
go up there and tell the captain about this. You need to come back here and look in this equipment.
And he was just God's gift to the planet in terms of teaching
young Ensign Cecil Haney how to really do his job as a division officer in a very candid, polite way.
Here I got an individual from the South that really showed me what good looked like. So it was
a great start on that submarine, even though its namesake was John C. Calhoun.
The other part was, of course, you know, coming back home and my dad, who would do his homework,
even though he had no college education, he was an avid reader.
And he'd say, well, why is that submarine named after John C. Calhoun?
And, you know, I had no good answer for him, to be honest with you. Now that the military is actually in the process of changing names of bases and ships and so forth, will that be important?
Does it make a difference in terms of communicating the kind of inclusive environment we want to create for people in the military?
Oh, absolutely. I think it's so important today when every individual of color goes through a gate or walks across a brow and knows that the person that go-get-em, that drive that we need our military to have.
It can detract from it in a bad way.
It is something that we needed to correct then, and we definitely need to correct now.
So you've already mentioned your master chief from Alabama who became a mentor of sorts.
How did you find mentors going forward in your career? I don't think there were too many African-American officers, senior officers at that point in the Navy. So who were
your mentors? What was their counsel to you as someone who was rising in the ranks?
It started off for me when I was in my first school before reporting to that submarine, the John C. Calhoun. Myself and another individual, Mel Williams, who became a vice admiral before he retired officer of a submarine of the United States Navy.
He called us over to his lodging room and wanted to talk to us.
We didn't know this individual, but we got a note to go over and see him.
And this individual was instrumental in telling us,
hey, there aren't that many of us in this submarine business.
I count on you to work hard and to perform.
Don't expect any favors and keep your nose to the grass. So it
wasn't one of these pleasantry kind of meetings whatsoever. But I tell you, when I look back at
any success you say I might have had, it goes back to that conversation. We ended up establishing
this thing we call the Centennial Seven, the first seven African-Americans that got to command submarines in the first 100 years of our Navy submarine service.
And as such, we became mentors for many.
One of my best mentors was someone who gave me very tough feedback, who basically sat me down and said, look, as the only woman in the room, as someone who's going to be trying to break into this very male
environment. You can't just be as good as. You have to be better. And you have to go after your
weaknesses and fix them. So my weakness at the time was I was terrified of public speaking.
And he put me through this program because he thought it would hold me back. And he also said,
you have to toughen up. I remember
him saying, never let them make you cry. So that sort of tough love mentorship was really important.
No, it sure is. You know, and as I rose through the ranks and particularly became a flag officer,
it was sort of, okay, now who will I get mentoring from?
Flag officers are the most senior officers in the fleet,
the Navy's version of generals,
the people with the stars on their shoulders.
Cecil Haney became a flag officer in 2005 when he was promoted to rear admiral
and pinned on his first star.
He retired as a full four-star admiral,
having served as the commander of the Navy's Pacific Fleet and then U.S. Strategic Command.
As you rise in the ranks, what is your experience like?
Do people become more colorblind because you've proven yourself clearly, because you've been promoted several times, you're performing, you're a leader.
Does it get better as you get more senior?
Well, it depends.
So the more senior you get, obviously, the more people salute and say three bags full.
But the real key is what are you really thinking?
And you still would enter rooms where you're the only person of color.
And you might reflect a little bit back on that midshipman day.
Is somebody there thinking you're there because of a quota system?
So how did your experiences sort of shape you as a leader?
How did you go about creating a more equitable and inclusive environment under your command?
The piece, I think, for me really got back to my roots of being in the submarine force.
A small crew demanding a lot, intricate operations, where you really had to depend on each and every individual.
The other thing it afforded you is really knowing each and every individual.
So the scary part as I got into bigger and bigger organizations was, boy, I can't possibly know each and every individual that works for you, their weaknesses,
et cetera. So I need to farm that out and make sure others are paying close attention to it.
But even as a leader, that whole business of walking around, talking to your people,
even up to the last job, USS Strategic Command, over 150,000 people working for you.
If I'd go down and get my own coffee at the
cafeteria and I could stop in line and talk to people, well, how is it really going? And the
more senior you are, they are going to want to share that with you. You have to really have
tactics and techniques to really get into their head. So I found when people realize that you
are interested in what they think, what they are doing, and you have that genuine concern,
they will do all kinds of push-ups for the organization because they want to be part of
the team. But if they don't feel that their voice is heard for whatever reason, whether it's because
of the lack of diversity or what have you, that becomes a impediment to success. Yeah, they say
that listening is the highest form of respect,
right? And when people feel listened to, they feel like their voice is heard, as you say,
they feel like they can contribute to the organization and the success of the team that
does wonders for the climate and the environment and making people feel like they're a part of it.
We would be doing a planning strategy brief and, you know, the room would be filled with a bunch of people,
and you'd have the primary talker. And so the other thing I loved to do was I'd say,
well, you're in the room here. We've been talking about this for about a half an hour. What do you
think? And that individual would first squirm a little bit, but then sometimes you would get
reinforcing information, or you could tell from the body language that person wasn't sold,
and you needed
to drill back into something a little bit more. Yeah. You know who used to do that all the time
was President Obama in the Situation Room. So my boss, either Secretary Gates or Secretary
Panetta would be at the table. I would be the plus one sitting behind. And before he would
sort of close out a meeting or make a decision, President Obama would always go around the back wall, not just at the table, but the back wall.
And I had this bad habit of scowling when I'm concentrating.
And so I'd be sitting there scowling.
So President Obama would say, Michelle, it looks like you disagree.
What do you think?
And Secretary Gates would turn around and look over his shoulder like, what are you doing? But it was a wonderful way to really, first of all, ensure that he got the full perspective of everybody in the room, heard any dissent that he needed to hear before he made a tough decision, and created that sense of, you know, we're all trying to help him make the best decision possible. And that's what matters. No one's going to shoot the messenger if you want to speak up and raise a different point.
So a really important element of creating a great leadership climate, a command climate.
And I think it's very important in the military because we grow up, you know, everybody marching in formation, turn left here, turn right here, and getting people out of that syndrome of when do you have to be
uniform than when you need to really plan and really extract from everybody. What do you think
and what may I be missing with this particular picture? According to a Department of Defense
report from 2020, just under half of active duty enlisted personnel in the U.S. military
are people of color, about 47%. But when you look at officers, the people in leadership roles,
that figure drops down to 27%. I asked Admiral Haney why there aren't more people of color
leading the U.S. military. Well, I think it's complicated. It's a very intricate piece that
goes back to not just policy, but the implementation of policy and understanding and valuing the
business of diversity throughout the ranks. And this requires a steady attention. You can't just
pay attention to it for five years and then stop paying attention to it,
thinking, okay, we're successful, we're done, let's move on to the next problems.
And meanwhile, not understanding the sustainability efforts that have to occur there in order
to get anybody up to the captain, the rear admiral, to vice admiral, to full four-star
admiral, takes a concerted effort of mentorship, paying attention to who's available, who's
on the bench, and are you giving them the right experiences that you would want that
individual to have at a admiral level of any number of stars. I had the opportunity to serve
on an external task force for the Central Intelligence Agency on diversity. What they
were finding is they were very, very good at recruiting a representative class of entry-level
officers, very close to mirroring the demographics of the United States. But if you fast forward 12, 13 years
in, when people were finally being considered to their equivalent of promotion to general officer,
you know, senior intelligence service, a lot of the women had disappeared. A lot of the people
of color had disappeared. And so the study was really a systematic look at where are the barriers?
What is the experience that is causing people to leave, whether it's lack of mentorship or sponsorship, whether it's implicit bias,
whether it's requirements that basically make it impossible for women to have any children and stay competitive for promotion as operations officers, for example.
And that, it seems, is what you're talking about, is we need to really look at it at every
step along the way. Very much so. And that retention piece is, in my mind, just so critical
in terms of retaining enough of whatever category you're looking at there so that they can,
in fact, compete and be available for the upward mobility you would hope that they would have.
Because they are sought after, you know, by other companies and corporations. And when I talk about
just the relentless pace we sometimes have in the military in our assignments, moving
periodically to different areas, uprooting your kids from different school systems and what have
you, that can become a negative if you don't have the other part of the positive right in terms of
that person feeling valued, feeling that someone cares enough to sit down and tell me what I'm
doing good, but what I'm doing that I need to go work on so that I can be promotable in the future.
Coming up after the break, we'll turn to national security
and the future of the country's nuclear weapons.
So Cecil, I want to ask you about your final leadership position in the U.S. military when you were head of U.S. Strategic Command, which is basically, you know, in charge of all U.S.
nuclear forces. That is a very daunting set of responsibilities.
Tell us a little bit about that experience. That really, in some regards, got my training
wheels going in terms of bringing to the department plans associated with how do we do
deterrence better. Every warfighting plan that we have, the foundation of that plan is based on nuclear deterrence working. And you can't short sheet that piece. As I came in aboard as commander of U.S. Strategic Command, it was at a time frame where I could sense in a lot of the military and as a country as a whole, nuclear deterrence was
something that wasn't being talked enough about.
Didn't that end with the Cold War?
Absolutely.
That sort of view.
That was the preponderance of the argument. And don't we need to just cut more of it
as we reduce the role of nuclear weapons, which was a presidential goal. But what this goal still was that we would have a credible
nuclear deterrence capability. And some would have looked at the first part and said, well,
now let's just cut the forces. Well, that in itself has a problem of deflating the energy
of those working in that business, whether they're in missile silos or whether they're
operating from ballistic missile submarines or whether they're operating
from ballistic missile submarines or whether they're flying training missions with the B-2
stealth bomber or the B-52 bomber, which has been flying for a while. And that support was being
deflated at the time frame that I really felt we needed to pump up the volume in terms of how important this mission is for our nation because it has existential consequences if we get it wrong.
And now we're at the brink that if we aren't successful in modernization now, now, now, we will lose that capability.
And the ability to resurrect it once you lose it is way too hard and may not be done in time, particularly as we confront competitors like China and Russia that have growing capability in these areas. land-based leg of the triad, the bombers, all of these are aging. You now have a modernization
bill that Congressional Budget Office estimates is something like half a trillion dollars.
So the Biden administration will be conducting a nuclear posture review, which is a policy review
of all things related to nuclear weapons, what our strategy should be, what our posture should be,
what the force should look like. What do you want to see come out of that review? How do we square
the circle of fundamental importance as a foundation, but huge price tag if we were to
modernize everything equally? Sometimes we look at a bill and say, oh, it's going to cost X amount. And we've unfortunately been in that pickle of passing
that bill downstream to such an extent that now it looks tremendous to us. And I would hope as we
go into the nuclear posture review, we don't come in with some perceived notion that, okay,
we need this nuclear posture review in order to kill this program. We need to understand what does it really take to have a credible nuclear deterrence capability that's foundational the nuclear industrial base that supports those nuclear weapons, the industrial
base of shipbuilding or aircraft building or missile building, as well as the command
and control capability to direct forces under duress in your worst day of communications
capability.
So when you were STRATCOM commander, and I have to ask this because I started my career as a
nuclear arms control analyst, you were actually very supportive of strategic arms control. And
the Biden administration came in, they extended for five years the New START treaty, which
limits the number of strategic nuclear weapons in both the U.S. and Russia.
Why, as STRATCOM commander, were you so supportive of arms control? What role does
arms control play in this equation? Well, arms control is hard work. And to me,
it is part of that strategic deterrence capability a country has. When you look historically at some of our successes on strategic
weapons, you look at how much we had in the Cold War to how much we have now, and you can look at
that report card and say, we've done wonderfully in reducing the number of nuclear weapons.
The other piece that is important in my mind is having that ability to have some transparency into each other's capability.
Even just the thing of every time you test launch something that's intercontinental that we tell
the other side before doing so. And just the conversations that have to occur to get to an
agreement are the kind of conversations you would want these major powers to have.
And those actually bring more stability, I think, going forward.
As you listen to the national security conversation today,
is there an issue that you feel we should be paying more attention to that's just
not getting enough focus or bandwidth or energy?
Well, today as I look at the stage of competition technologically between us and, for example,
China, we have to be careful that we can make those crisp decisions in enough time so that we can make those crisp decisions at enough times so that we can get the capability we need,
whether we're talking about military capability or if we're talking about that technology that
we need to sustain our economic advantages going forward. So this is an area that I think
we as a nation need to invest more. So it's not just all technical, but we have to have the education system
so that we can be armed as best we can
with the right brains
to be able to get at those problems
we don't even understand today
that will be Admiral Haney.
You've had a little time to process it by now.
I'm curious what stuck with you.
What have you continued to think about?
One of the things that's really stuck with me is how thoughtful Admiral Haney has been about his experiences and what it means to be a good leader. around and said, okay, how do I become a better mentor? How do I help improve the Navy? How do I
be a better leader where diversity and inclusion is welcomed? I admire that. He has an almost
unshakable sense of optimism. Yeah, that really struck me too, that whether he was talking about
issues of identity or issues of national security, that his perspective on just about everything
was remarkably considered.
And I guess what struck me about the conversation is how rare it is to hear that kind of tone
and consideration in the public sphere.
Because, you know, if you watch a little bit of cable news, for instance, you get pretty
close to zero of that. You know, we are hearing from the noisy few on most of the cable channels and social media.
But in my experience, one of the things I loved about working in the Defense Department and in
national security more broadly is you have so many altruistic people who just want to serve,
who just want to make a difference,
be part of something on behalf of the country,
do good where they can.
And the motivation of this podcast is like bring you their stories.
Who are these people behind the scenes
who are actually doing this work?
And I think people will come away feeling better
about the people who serve them
in government. I hope that's the case. So you and I have talked about having your guests
revisit a specific decision or outcome, bring us back to the room where something happened,
and reflect on that with hindsight and with wisdom. I'm curious how good you think your colleagues
or former colleagues in the Defense Department and State Department will be at doing that.
Well, I think it's much easier with formers than with current officials. So they're just
speaking for themselves. I think coming at these issues through their personal
stories hopefully will help them to just relax into telling their stories. And obviously,
one of the criteria for choosing guests will be people that we think are willing to open up and
be candid and do that reflection with us in conversation. realm, we would love to hear from you. Our address is radio at Freakonomics.com. Also,
the fact is that naming a podcast can be even harder than making a podcast. So we'd love to
hear your ideas on that too. Again, radio at Freakonomics.com. Michelle Flournoy, thank you
so much. I look forward to working with you on this and I think the world will really benefit
from it. So thanks. Thank you, Stephen. I'm really excited about the project and look forward to hearing
feedback from our listeners.
Freakonomics Radio is produced by Stitcher and Renbud Radio. This episode was produced
by Alexandra Solomon. Our staff also includes Allison Craiglow, Greg Rippin, Joel Meyer,
Tricia Bobita, Zach Lipinski, Mary J. Duke, Ryan Kelly, Brent Katz, Jasmine Klinger, Emma Terrell, Lyric Bowditch, and Jacob Clemente.
Our theme song is Mr. Fortune by The Hitchhikers. Other music was composed by Luis Guerra. You can
get the entire archive of Freakonomics Radio on any podcast app. If you would like to read a
transcript or the show notes, that's at Freakonomics.com.
As always, thanks for listening.
This is going to get me a little notepad.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Have you been?
Good, good. Busy, but so excited to do this and I really appreciate it, you know.
Just so you say that when we're done.
No, absolutely. Absolutely.
Very good.