Doctrine That Works Pub724
Doctrine That Works Pub724
Doctrine That Works Pub724
I recently spent a morning talking with a scholar who is researching material for a
book on the U.S. Army’s willingness to learn about war above the tactical and operational
level. His thesis echoes, to some degree, Dr. Antulio Echevarria’s monograph that
concludes that there is an American Way of Battle, but not an “American Way of War,” as
Russell F. Weigley’s well-studied book suggests. This scholar was asking for evidence to
identify change points in the development of U.S. Army thinking about war during the
decades of the 1970s and 1980s.
I suggested that the 1973 Arab-Israeli War was one of those points because it gave the
Army a tangible event that was relevant to a key national security objective: the defense of
NATO Europe. That war allowed the Army to put Vietnam behind it. It signaled that
Russian military technology had caught up with and in some ways surpassed western
military technology. That technology, in the hands of—from an American perspective—
ill-trained Arab conscript armies could be enormously effective, particularly in the tactical
defense. Three years later, FM 100-5, Operations, emerged from the pen of General William
DePuy, reflecting General Donn A. Starry’s analysis of this remarkable war. That field
manual tacitly recognized the insufficiency of American materiel to do much more than
fight an Active Defense. Properly, it did not address that the same Army was still
recuperating from its Vietnam-inflicted wounds and was struggling to become a real All-
Volunteer Army—something it had always wanted since the days of Emory Upton. Active
Defense also fit the NATO defensive philosophy. In short, it was comfortable at the time,
even though its apparently defensive orientation was anathema to American Army
officers who actually had studied their profession. Starry must be credited for making a
major attempt to correct that deficiency as he continued to insist on the development of an
‘historical mindedness’ in the officer corps.
The publication of FM 100-5, 1982 edition, changed things. That manual revived the
centrality of offensive action and recognized the growing reality of the Big-Five in the
reequipping of the Army, giving it the potential to conduct offensive operations at the
tactical and operational level. The AirLand Battle concepts that underlay the 1982 edition
of FM 100-5 frightened NATO Europe, partly because it demonstrated this offensive
character which was so at odds with the basic concept upon which NATO rested its
existence. But it made the U.S. Army happy, and the years that followed demonstrated
that the U.S. Army could revive itself and recreate itself as a genuinely professional
military force without equal in the tactical and operational realms. Operation DESERT
STORM validated the AirLand Battle concept, the Big-Five reequipping choices, and the
Training Revolution that had taken hold during those two preceding decades.
Then hubris set in. It was evident at nearly every level in the institution. Read U.S.
Army doctrine today, and you will see a struggle to trump each successive set of
superlatives—Full Spectrum Dominance is a good example. The Quality of Firsts—See First,
Understand First, Act First, Finish Decisivel—is another. These may be neat slogans, but they
reflect a sense of sophomoric chest-pounding totally inappropriate as doctrine and reflect
shallow thinking about the present realities now confronting us, or more importantly the
future. They are little more than statements of what every military person of every age has
sought within the limits of the tools available. It goes deeper as each successive description
of the future operating environment repeatedly recites that the future will be chaotic,
irregular, ambiguous, and so forth—as if it was not equally so for our forefathers.
What are the military realities facing the nation today that suggest to an organization
that it is steadily “learning” and not simply resting on its laurels? I would suggest there
are two: adopting the concept of the Soldier as a System, and the progressive
Modularization of the entire force enroute to an approximation of the Future Combat
System. Realization of the concepts that allow the Soldier to be treated as a System will
provide Soldiers the tools to be able to adapt to whatever the future brings. The adoption
and progressive realization of the modular concept will make it possible to deal with
almost anything that emerges at any point along the Spectrum of Conflict. So it should be.
But it is past time to give sober address to doctrine in an imperfect world, employed by
imperfect people, against implacable but human enemies. Too much current doctrine is
self-congratulatory nonsense written to deal with tank armies on the plains of central
somewhere. It fails to partake of the relatively clear directive qualities of the above two
cited FMs. Doctrine should set forth principles and precious little more. That would allow
the Army to adapt those things that endure to ever-changing conditions and the tools
available. Paring the baroque structure of developing doctrine might facilitate deeper
discussion of its application, and that just might protect us from the charge of failing to
understand the war in which we are engaged and of trying to make of it something which,
by its nature, it cannot be.
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