The Daily Signal - The 'Marginal' State of the US Military
Episode Date: December 1, 2020The military strength of the United States again is rated as only “marginal” in a new report, the "2021 Index of U.S. Military Strength", from The Heritage Foundation. Russia is identified as the ...main threat to the U.S., but China is identified in the report as “the most comprehensive threat that the U.S. faces, [and] continues to modernize and expand its military and pay particular attention to its space, cyber, and artificial intelligence capabilities.” How should these challenges be addressed? Dakota Wood, senior research fellow for The Heritage Foundation’s Center for National Defense and the Davis Institute for National Security and Foreign Policy, joins "The Daily Signal Podcast" to discuss. We also cover these stories: Biotechnology company Moderna is asking the Food and Drug Administration to give it an emergency authorization for the coronavirus vaccine. The results of Georgia’s presidential election continue to be contested. The White House is ready for Christmas! First lady Melania Trump announces that the theme for this year’s decor is "America the Beautiful." “The Daily Signal Podcast” is available on Ricochet, Apple Podcasts, Pippa, Google Play, and Stitcher. All of our podcasts may be found at DailySignal.com/podcasts. If you like what you hear, please leave a review. You also can leave us a message at 202-608-6205 or write us at letters@dailysignal.com. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
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This is the Daily Signal podcast for Tuesday, December 1st. I'm Virginia Allen.
And I'm Rachel Del Judas. For the third consecutive year, the military strength of the United States is again rated as only marginal and a new report from the Heritage Foundation.
Why is this the case and what can be done about it? Dakota Wood Senior Research Fellow for the Heritage Foundation Center for National Defense and the Davis Institute for National Security and foreign policy joins me today on the Daily Signal podcast to discuss.
And don't forget, if you're enjoying this podcast, please be sure to leave a review or a five-star rating on Apple Podcasts and encourage others to subscribe.
Now on our top news.
Biotr technology company, Moderna, is following the steps of its associates, Pfizer and Biointech, saying Monday that it is asking the FDA to give them an emergency authorization for the coronavirus vaccine.
This comes as Moderna announced in a press release Monday that the phase three study conducted on 196,000.
cases confirms the high efficiency observed at the first in-term analysis. The data analysis
indicates a vaccine efficiency of 94.1 percent and that safety data continue to accrue, and the
study continues to be monitored by an independent NIH-approved data safety monitoring board.
The results of Georgia's presidential election continue to be contested. President Trump has
called on Georgia's Secretary of State Brad Rappensberger to recount
all mail-in votes by matching ballot signatures to envelope signatures.
Raffensberger has said that will be impossible since the ballots have been separated from their
envelopes to protect voters' privacy. President Trump has criticized both Raffensberger and Georgia
Republican Governor, Brian Kemp. On Sunday, Trump said in an interview with Fox News that he was
sorry he had ever endorsed Kemp. And on Monday, the president tweeted,
why won't governor at Brian Kemp GA, the hapless governor of Georgia,
use his emergency powers, which can be easily done,
to overrule his obstinate secretary of state
and do a match of signatures on envelopes.
It will be a gold mine of fraud,
and we will easily win the state.
And Trump added,
also quickly check the number of envelopes
versus the number of ballots.
You may just find that there are many more ballots
than there are envelopes. So simple and so easy to do. Georgia Republicans are angry. All Republicans
are angry. Get it done. Governor Kemp responded to the president in a statement Monday saying,
Georgia law prohibits the governor from interfering in elections. The Secretary of State, who is an
elected constitutional officer, has oversight over elections that cannot be overridden by executive order.
Brassenberger also said Monday that dishonest actors were exploiting the emotions of many Trump supporters and misleading the president as well.
Here's what he had to say during a news conference via Foxton News.
Once this recount is complete, everyone in Georgia will be able to have even more confidence in the results of our elections, despite the massive amounts of misinformation that is being spread by dishonest actors.
There are those who are exploiting the emotions of many Trump supporters with fantastic claims, half-truths, misinformation, and frankly, they are misleading the president as well, apparently.
The White House is ready for Christmas.
On Monday, First Lady Melania Trump announced that the theme of this year's White House decor is America the Beautiful.
Over the weekend, volunteers flooded into the White House to help put up the decoration.
which include a tribute to essential workers in the red room of the White House with a Christmas
tree holding ornaments celebrating nurses, caregivers, scientists, and more. This year's traditional
decorations boast 62 Christmas trees, 106 wreaths, over 1,200 feet of garland, and more than 3,200
lights. Now stay tuned for my conversation with Dakota Wood on the state of the United States
military. This is Virginia Allen, host of the Daily Signal podcast. I don't know about you,
but YouTube is certainly one of my guilty pleasures. I really enjoy watching short videos on a
variety of topics, so I'm always looking for videos that are actually educational and beneficial
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I'm joined today on the Daily Signal podcast by Dakota Wood.
He's the senior research fellow for the Heritage Foundation Center for National Defense and the Davis Institute for National Security and Foreign Policy.
Dakota, it's great to have you with us on the Daily Signal podcast.
Rachel, it's great to be with you.
Thanks for having me on this episode.
Your defense shop just released the 2021 Index of U.S. military strength.
First off, Dakota, can you tell us more about what the index of U.S. military strength is for those
who might not know about it?
It's a comprehensive report card.
So we've all been in school or know somebody in school and you get to the end of the academic year
and you want to know how you did in that year.
So it's not, a report card isn't a futures document.
It doesn't look way, way in the past.
It's, you know, you finish this year.
How did you do?
And so what we've done is we've provided a record card for the U.S. military and U.S.
military power.
And it's important to understand the context of military power in order to understand the power
itself.
So in our record card, we talk about the world as a place the military would have to operate
in.
We talk about the nature of challenges or threats to the United States and how they've done
during the assessed year.
And then we talk about the U.S. military services, the Army, Navy, Air Force, and Army,
of Marines, and we give them a score on how big they are, how ready they are, and how modern
they are with respect to defending U.S. interests against challenges or threats. So it's the only
thing like it in the world. It should be viewed as this report to the American taxpayer,
and we're just pleased to be able to put something like this together. The military strength
of the United States is again rated as a lean marginal, which also happens to be the third
consecutive year it has received this rating. Dakota, why is this the case?
So it is not an indictment or a measure of the individual service member. We're taking a big
picture look and saying the military that we have, is it big enough and ready enough to defend
U.S. interests in more than one place around the world? And so on a scale of one to five,
three or four doesn't really resonate. So we use words to try to present a picture.
So it goes from very weak to weak, to marginal, to strong, to very strong.
And the reason we used marginal is it does kind of convey this sense that it's not really
where you want it to be, you know?
And so when we look at the U.S. military going up against anybody else, on a one-for-one,
we think that our military would win a major fight against a major competitor.
But the U.S. has global interests.
It's a global power.
The world is a very big place.
And unlike during the Cold War, where we just had to deal with the Soviet Union,
today we need to deal with challenges from China and Russia and North Korea and Iran.
So the military needs to be big enough and have enough readiness embedded in it to be able to do more than one thing.
And as we conclude, it's only big enough and only ready enough to take on one major problem.
one part of the world, and we just don't think that that's sufficient. So we gave it a marginal
rating. It's being better in readiness, but it's certainly not big enough, and it has very old
equipment. Before we continue further, can we talk about some of the bizarre facts or interesting
items that you have found not only in your research for the index, but also in related research?
I know I believe one of those items was that China has been buying more ships in the past three
years than the British Navy total. Dakota, can you unpack that for us and tell us more about
what's going on there. Yeah, you know, it's I mentioned that kind of relative context. You know,
we've got a military. It's certainly very capable, but relative to what? So when you look at a
major competitor and economic power like China, well, how big is their military? You know,
how is it postured? Are they training and doing things? Is it modernizing? And they came from a very
weak position several years ago, but with their financial wealth, have made huge investments,
in expanding the numbers, the capacity of their military, and being very serious about analyzing
how the United States has fought wars over the past 20, 30, or 40 years, and what would they
need to do and have if they had to prevail in some kind of a military context?
So we point out that most people aren't aware of how rapidly the Chinese have been
expanding their Navy.
And when you look at the other part of context, it's our own friends and allies.
You know, it's always better if you have to go fight that you're accompanied by friends,
you know, that you have the combined capability of these military powers.
And Great Britain isn't so great anymore in terms of its military capabilities.
It only has about 17 or 18 surface combatants, warships, and the whole Royal Navy.
China has added that many ships or more just in the last three years or so.
So whereas the U.S. Navy has just under 300 ships for global operations,
China's Navy is already at 350 ships.
And they're adding chunks the size of other countries' navies to its own capacity every year or two.
It's just a stunning insight that tells you how big of a challenge we would.
would have in the greater Indo-Pacific region if we had to go support an ally like Japan or Korea
or the Philippines or somebody along those lines.
Something else you highlighted, Dakota, is that ships and tanks have increased the cost
five times the rate of inflation and the cost to equip a soldier has jumped 16 times the rate
of inflation.
Can you talk more about this and some of the challenges it poses?
Well, I think by any measure, if you looked at the U.S. defense budget of $700 billion or more,
that is an eye-watering amount of money.
And so people usually are skeptical about calls to spend even more than that.
I mean, $700, $740 billion.
But what's hidden in that number is how expensive things have gotten over the years.
So oftentimes military analysts or people providing an opinion on defense matters will talk about us spending in real dollars more than we have spent in previous eras.
And on a dollar for dollar comparison, just looking at dollars adjusted for inflation, that is true.
But it's what is the dollar buying?
So if a tank costs five times more than the rate of inflation today than it did, say, back in the Vietnam era,
well, just because your defense in spending is keeping pace with inflation, it's not accounting for the dramatic increases in the cost of modern.
military equipment. So back in the old days, you'd send a soldier to the field, the helmet,
a rifle, first aid kid, and a couple of canteens. And it didn't take much to outfit that soldier
at all. Today, much more modern weapons, optics, sites that are on the weapons itself, night vision
goggles, modern day radios. I mean, the better body armor, it's just 16 times more than the rate
of inflation to put an American man or woman in uniform in the field and have them do what we
would want them to do.
So when we talk about defense spending and any increases in defense spending, it's just not a
dollar for dollar comparison.
What does that dollar buy and how relevant is that dollar's worth of investment in a particular
place in the world against a particular opponent?
And these are the sorts of insights that we have embedded in the index throughout.
Another point, Dakota, I wanted to talk to you about is how the Air Force section talks about
how old Air Force aircraft are, with tankers averaging 50 years old and fighter jets being 30 years old.
Can you talk more about this?
So the Soviet Union went away in 1992, so the early 1990s it was in the throes of a collapse.
And during that decade of the 90s, there were no.
major military or economic challenges in the entire world. So in many eyes, it made sense to dramatically
reduce the cost to the U.S. military. We just didn't need as big a military. We certainly
didn't need to replace a lot of equipment that was being retired at that particular point
in time. So we went a full decade without buying any new fighter aircraft as an example. Meanwhile,
those pilots still have to fly to maintain their skills. So every time an airplane leaves the
runway, flies around for a two-hour training mission or an operational mission it comes back,
you've used up some of the planned life for that airplane. And the same thing occurs with
trucks and tanks and generators and ships. You have to use it on a daily basis to maintain
competence. So we're using equipment for the whole decade of the 90s.
And yet you're not buying any new aircraft to replace that stuff that's getting older.
Then the attacks of 9-11, September 11, 2001 occurred.
And we were at very high levels of operational use of these fighter aircraft, you know,
to provide support to our troops on the ground for 15 or 20 years, you know, from 2001 until today.
And yet the rate of buying new equipment was one-fifth or less than it was.
any previous time. So we still were using up equipment at a very accelerated rate and not buying new
stuff to bring it in. So when we see video clips today on the news or what have you, when you've got
some Air Force fighter pilot flying a modern F-16 or an F-15, those aircraft average, as you
mentioned, 30 years old. And they look great, they perform well. We put better radars on them,
and they carry very advanced weapons.
But the airplane itself, all the metal components and whatnot
that make that plane what it is are three decades.
And that's just the average.
Some are 40 years old, some are in their late 20s.
But we wouldn't drive around town in the 30-year-old car very often.
And yet that's the state of our military and its equipment
that we send out into harm's way.
The Marines are shrinking in size, even though historical use shows they need to grow.
Dakota, why is this the case and what are the implications down the road of this happening?
So what we did in the index is we tried to avoid kind of futurism.
You know, what might more look like 10 or 15 years from now?
Because so many things change and new technologies promise a lot,
but you really don't know what it can do until you actually get it into the force
and they used it and you find out, you know, what works and what doesn't.
So to try to be as helpful to the public as possible and to members of Congress, we said,
what does a historical record look like?
So every time the U.S. military has been committed to war in Korea and Vietnam and Operation Desert Storm in 1991
and the Operation Iraqi Freedom in 2003, we find that about the same size military is used every time.
And I think that what it does is that accounts for technologies of the era, the nature of your competitor, how far away from home you are and you have to operate.
And so for the Marine Corps, to use your example, we found that about 15 battalions, infantry battalions, with all the supporting stuff, is used whenever the Marine Corps commits to a big war.
So if you want to have more than one basket of capabilities, you can double that 15 and say 30 battalions gives me a two-war capacity.
force. When I retired from the Marine Corps in 2005, we had 27 battalions. That seemed pretty good.
But then in succeeding years with budget cuts and all this nonsense, we saw it shrink from 27 to 24 down to 21.
21 is far less than 30, which historically you've needed. And what we see now is with
increasing budget pressures. While they climb back to 24,
to account for modernization efforts by the current crop of Marines, they're going to shrink
back down to 21.
So we compare the Marine Corps' current low 20s against a historical need for 30 to do what
they would need to do when we find that they're just coming up very short in that capacity
figure.
Looking now at the international scene, the new index identifies Russia as the main threat to the
U.S. but says China is the most comprehensive threat that the U.S.
the U.S. faces and continues to modernize and expand its military and pay particular attention
to its space, cyber, and artificial intelligence capabilities. Dakota, can you impact this more for
us? Yeah, so, you know, a really common understandable question is what's the biggest threat?
And the answer to that is, well, it depends. You know, I could have a very acute threat
at my doorstep right now, you know, really causing problems, like a terrorist group. We see that
Russia has been very aggressive along the northern tier of NATO countries in northern Europe.
We've seen it get involved in Syria, propping up the regime of Bashar al-Assad there in Syria,
just doing all kinds of things that caused problems.
It invaded the country of Ukraine and has taken territory from it.
So near-term, Russia is a very active, aggressive problem that the United States has to account for in Europe and especially in the Middle East.
But then you can look kind of bigger picture, which ones are more comprehensive and more profound
over a longer period of time.
And that's then how we turn to China.
So China is not actively involved in military operations to destabilize governments in the way that
Russia is.
But it is making extraordinary investments in the most advanced technologies.
It is rapidly expanding its military.
It's being very intimidating in the East China Sea and South China Sea.
We've seen what it's done to citizens in Hong Kong and the threats that it makes against Taiwan.
So Russia, we would view, and as we do in the index, is the most acute, short-term, immediate sort of problem with the big state category.
And the longer term, more comprehensive problem, has just got to be China, investments in hypervottial.
munitions and artificial intelligence and unmanned systems, just a full range of modern warfare
weaponry that you would expect to encounter over the next decade or two.
Iran is listed as the biggest security challenge because of its support of terrorist organizations
such as Hezbollah and its hate of not only the U.S. but also Israel, the nation's strongest
ally.
What are improvements that need to be made so that the U.S. military can meet security threats,
such as Russia, China, and Iran head on?
Well, capacity. I keep coming back to that word.
So numbers really do matter of warfare.
I could have an absolutely super ship or soldier or airplane.
But at some point, that ship soldier airplane is going to take a hit.
And I might lose them as a fatality or a complete combat loss or even in a short-term state.
And so when we talk about attrition in warfare, I have to be able to replace these battlefield losses.
And the smaller military you have, the more challenging it is to do that.
And whereas a country like Iran is operating in its very near vicinity, you know, the Arabian Sea or the Persian Gulf, depending on how you want to term it, its involvement on the ground in Iraq and Syria.
China is involved in maritime operations and air operations fairly close to its homeland and Russia does the same.
counter to that is the United States, which has to operate three or five or eight thousand miles from home
and yet try to sustain those sorts of operations. So when we look at a country like Iran that has now
developed an inventory of 3,000 ballistic missiles, lots of artillery and the ability to really
provide a strong presence on the ground in its near vicinity for the U.S. military to be prepared for
something like that, you have to have missile defense, you have to have a sufficient number of
soldiers and armor equipment and aircraft that can get in close to that sort of competitor, that
enemy force, and be able to sustain hits. So we spend a lot of time talking about the size
of the force and whether our forces and equipment are modern enough to deal with the types of
very modern anti-platform weapons, you know, missiles and those sorts of things.
that would pose a threat to the force that we would need just to get to the battlefield.
And then wrapping up, Dakota, this last question I have for you is a two-part question.
Given that the U.S. Index of Military Strength has received a marginal rating for the past three years with
the Trump administration, how do you see the state of the military in the next coming months and
years with the Biden administration?
And then on top of that as well, what needs to be done to improve that marginal rating?
So I think it's going to be very challenging.
You know, we're accumulating massive amounts of debt because of the coronavirus pandemic response,
the hit that it's taken on our economy with people out of work and service industries and
everybody else just not making the amount of money, which then relates into taxes,
and that goes into the federal coffers.
So it's going to be extraordinarily challenging to maintain adequate levels of defense spending
if people don't care about that.
The other thing that will compete is, especially if a Biden administration comes
in with the Democratic Party, they've always put a lot of emphasis on expanding social entitlement
programs, which are very expensive as our population continues to grow. And especially if we bring
in an 11 or 12 more million undocumented, illegal, what have you call it, workers here in the United
States, it just makes the loading, the financial loading that much greater. So maintaining adequate
defense spending will be under a lot of pressure in a Democrat administration as we would go into the
next year. And it can only really come from the American people. What kind of military do they
want to have to defend U.S. national interests and our productivity and wealth and security back
here at home as we go forward into a future where you have a very aggressive China and Russia
and North Korea and Iran, and certainly terrorist elements,
and the entire continent of Africa, the Middle East,
and the Indo-Pacific region.
Dakota, as someone who has served for two decades in the U.S. Marine Corps,
what do you have to say about implications for our service members
when the military isn't given the resources it needs?
Well, you have lack of confidence.
I mean, if I'm only able to fire my weapons system,
you know, our artillery piece or a missile off of the ship,
maybe once a year,
you just don't have that confidence and developed competence to really, with confidence, go off into battle,
you know, to be assured that your equipment is going to work and that you know how to use it very, very well.
The more you train, the more confident you get, and the more, I want to say not personal courage,
but the confidence that you have and really mixing it up with an enemy.
And so this focus on readiness of the current force within the Defense Department has been very important.
We have a small force.
They're trying to get it out to the training ranges much more often to be able to shoot things and fire things and maneuver and use their equipment.
But that consumes a lot of money, you know, in terms of the rounds or the munitions, the ammunition used, the fuel used to drive vehicles and sail ships and fly airplanes.
it's just the wear and tear on the equipment, the repair parts.
So funding current readiness is very important.
And I know that my fellow Marines and certainly soldiers and airmen and sailors,
they want to be able to train sufficiently so that they know what they're doing
and they can do that very effectively anywhere in the world.
As you use that equipment, we've already discussed, you're using it up.
And so then you're talking about what new equipment might be coming in to make you more
capable? And then do I have a sufficient numbers of pieces of equipment and units and personnel so that I
can do more than one thing at one point in time? So I think if we can support in kind of an echelon
way, our current military, can the current military train sufficiently? That would be current
readiness. Are we bringing new equipment in to replace the old stuff so that it is competent
and relevant to today's battle space.
And then can we expand the force
to get greater opportunity
for more Americans
to serve the country
and certainly in operational settings
the ability to sustain operations
in that kind of a battle environment.
Dakota, thank you so much
for joining us today on the Daily Signal podcast.
It's been great having you with us.
It's been a real pleasure
and just keep up the good work.
Thanks.
And that'll do it for today's episode.
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