Thinking of RMA - Towards A Common Understanding of RMA
Thinking of RMA - Towards A Common Understanding of RMA
Thinking of RMA - Towards A Common Understanding of RMA
Affairs (RMA)
Towards a common understanding of RMA
Henrik Olsen Nordal
UNIVERSITETET I OSLO
20.11.2013
II
Thinking of Revolution in Military Affairs
(RMA)
Towards a common understanding of RMA.
III
© Henrik Olsen Nordal
2013
IV
Summary
The origins of the Revolution in Military Affaires (RMA) concept we use today has its
roots in the Soviet military thinking of the 1960s. By the early 1980s the Soviet
General Staff developed the concept of what many call the information revolution in
military affairs today. They saw advanced data processing and communications
technology applied to hi-tech conventional firepower potentially increasing the US and
NATO conventional capabilities. The Soviets coined it the Military-Technical
Revolution (MTR). Inspired by the Soviet thinking, the Office of Net Assessment
(ONA) at the Pentagon at the time undertook an assessment that would explore
whether a major shift in the character of military competitions was under way. They
also started to use the term RMA instead of MTR to avoid a cognitive bias toward the
role of technology in these kinds of shifts.
RMA is a sudden change in the power relations1 between two or more political
actors2 as a consequence of changes in variables other than economic or
geopolitical prerequisites. The change has to be large enough to win significant
political concessions through conflict, or through general acknowledgement of
increased power.
1
By «power relations» it is here meant military power relations.
2
By «political actors» it is here meant actors with given political goals and the ability to mobilize resources to
ensure a successful completion of this objective.
V
concessions through conflict. Napoleon at the time did not grasp when the window of
opportunity closed and failed to cement most of his political concessions, however.
VI
VII
Preface
The quote from Wittgenstein is very true when it comes to the emergence of the term
Revolution in Military Affairs (RMA.) But the core issue here is not just of
philosophical and theoretical nature, it has to do with war, the most serious aspect of
politics. And war has, and always will be, a very complex affair with a lot of
unknowns. It has great potential as a catalyst for change but is also cloaked in grave
consequences if not handled wisely. As recent wars in Iraq and Afghanistan show,
even history’s mightiest military – the US armed forces of today – experience war as
complex and a difficult mistress to harness. After all, a few weeks of all-out-war easily
removed Saddam from the throne in Iraq, something 20 years of covert action and
sanctions never did. But Iraq didn’t necessary turn out quite as imagined. Also, war
has become increasingly complex in recent history. Not just more complex
technologically but also in terms of its judicial, social and moral aspects. The
increasing unpopularity of war continues to complicate. It has not been a linear
increasing unpopularity but a marked and clear one for sure. And in some circles war
has also been seen as something that will eventually become obsolete by evolution.
Progress will do away with the savage and natural instincts that make us prone to wars.
As Tennyson so elegantly put it: “And battered with the shocks of doom […] Move
upward, out the beast. And let the ape and tiger [inside us] die” (Tennyson, 1850:
183). Even though wars now have a tendency to be fought for other reasons than in the
past when goods, territory and women were the primary objectives, it doesn’t seem to
go away quite yet.
The term Revolution in Military Affairs (RMA) became a buzzword in the course
of the 1990s. This had much to do with the fall of the Iron Curtain, the stunning
victory against Iraq in 1991 and the usefulness of the concept for US military
budgetary and procurement procedures in the wake of the Cold War. Much of the
work and some of the definitions that were formulated in this period were clearly
tailored towards addressing the current situation without any wider historical
understanding of the concept. So why is RMA of interest to the general public today?
VIII
It is not an easy question to answer when competing with fashionable terms as COIN
(counterinsurgency), A2/AD (anti-access/area-denial), the new arms races3, the “new
cold war”4, etc. These terms apparently makes more sense in everyday life. The truth
is that these fashionable terms depend on a few prerequisites. And these prerequisites
again take for granted that a certain military regime5 (network-centric warfare) is the
dominant and most effective way when it comes to waging war. But is that really the
case? One aspect worth pointing out here is that this military regime has never been
tested against a “worthy” opponent. So this assumption lacks empirical evidence.
Therefore it is of great interest to gain a better understanding of how this assumption
arose. By taking a thorough look at the term RMA and refine the concept, it might be
possible to gain a better understanding of how it affects COIN, A2/AD, the “new cold
war” and the new arms races; then further be able to better refine these concepts. By
gaining further insight into how some sudden changes in the balance-of-power came
about might gain new insight into fields of research beyond RMA as well.
What is beyond doubt is that the term RMA by coming into existence provided us
with an opportunity to think differently about familiar conditions that surrounded us.
And another interesting thing about RMA is the historical phase the term is in. That
means that the exact meaning has not been determined, and how it is used still
influence how it should be understood. Other concepts, for example “chair”, has an
established meaning and cannot be too much outside the scope before people would
say it is not a chair anymore. This is not the case with RMA. Moreover, RMA is an
abstract term that cannot be pointed at or pinned on the wall. The terms of use are only
loosely established so the ongoing discussion shapes the concept quite rapidly.
3
The new arms race generally refers to the competition for high-tech weapons, especially in Asia.
4
The new cold war generally refers to the rise of China and the effects it has on Sino-US relations.
5
Military regime must here be understood as the prevailing system or pattern of conducting war. Some refer to
this as a military paradigm.
IX
having the army you wish to have at a later time that generated the term RMA. Exactly
how it came about is described in detail in chapter 2.
Even though I have had tremendous help underway from Lieutenant Colonel Dr.
Harald Høiback all shortages, errors and lacking logic is due to my own stubborn
insistence or from lack of better knowledge. I also owe Dr. Høiback big thanks for his
extreme patience with me during all this time. A big thanks also to my fiancée for
pushing me to finish this project, Professor Steven Metz and Dr. Michael O’Hanlon
for great and insightful discussions on the subject. And last but by no means least the
legendary Dr. Andrew Krepinevich for discussions, advice and valuable data.
X
XI
Table of Contents
1 Introduction ........................................................................................................................ 1
2 A short historical background of the RMA concept .......................................................... 4
2.1 Ogarkov and the MTR................................................................................................. 8
2.2 ONA and the MTR Term........................................................................................... 10
3 Conceptual Theory ........................................................................................................... 13
4 The Nature of War and Warfare......................................................................................... 1
5 Defining the RMA concept ................................................................................................ 8
5.1 RMA and Strategy ....................................................................................................... 8
5.2 The Etymology of the Term ........................................................................................ 8
6 Towards a Definition of Revolution in Military Affairs (RMA) ..................................... 15
6.1 New Definition .......................................................................................................... 17
7 The Character of the Phenomenon ................................................................................... 22
7.1 Changing Character of the Phenomenon ................................................................... 22
7.2 A Recurring Phenomenon?........................................................................................ 23
8 Past RMAs........................................................................................................................ 26
8.1 Mass Mobilization ..................................................................................................... 26
8.1.1 Background: The Tactics of the Old Order........................................................ 27
8.1.2 The Revolution Unfolds: conscription as a variable .......................................... 29
8.1.3 The Prussian Counter Move: isolating the variable ........................................... 30
8.1.4 Conclusion.......................................................................................................... 33
9 Transformation ................................................................................................................. 36
10 Conclusion........................................................................................................................ 40
Bibliography............................................................................................................................. 44
Appendix .................................................................................................................................. 49
XII
XIII
"Concepts lead us to make investigations; are the expression of our interest, and direct our interest."
The main purpose of this assignment is to conduct an analysis of the term Revolution
in Military Affairs (RMA.) It will be argued that the term is in flux, and consists of many
competing definitions. The ambition in this assignment is thus to establishing a common
understanding of the term. This is just a small step in a very long march. It will be done by
formulating a definition of the term that will function as a demarcation of the scope of the
phenomenon. Further case studies will be needed to determine on individual basis what
constitute, and what does not, constitute a RMA (i.e. determine the scope of the
phenomenon.) Due to space limitation only one case will be fully examined in this
assignment.
Two important considerations must be taken into account when trying to establishing
a common understanding of RMA. The first that there need to be a relation between the
term (RMA) and the established meaning of the words that make up the term (“revolution”
and “military affairs”), and that there is a correlation between the purpose for which the
term arose and the new definition. If these considerations are not taken into account, one
can equally well create a new term.
1
With these considerations in mind, I have developed a definition that tries to take
these factors into account:
RMA must be understood as a sudden change in the power relations6 between two or
more political actors7 as a consequence of change in a variable other than economic
or geopolitical prerequisites. The change has to be large enough to win significant
political concessions through conflict, or through general acknowledgement of
increased power.
There are several variables and an important temporal component at play here. “Change in
power relations”, “significant political concessions” and “sudden” are rather straight
forward. But in the definition there is one changing variable as well. To find the variable
that causes the “sudden change in power relations” an analysis to isolate this variable need
to be conducted.
The vagueness of the wording in the definition is both its weakness and strength. It is
a weakness in the sense that expressions like “sudden change”, “large enough” and “general
acknowledgement” easily can be taken out of context and applied to a great deal of
examples. In order to limit this potential weakness much effort has been devoted into
explaining these key terms in chapter 6.1. But the vagueness is also the strength of the
definition. This way it remains timeless and can be applied to phenomena that we do not yet
know the nature of. As a definition often rely on a set of other terms to explain itself, it is
necessary to conduct an etymological examination to increase the level of precision and
reduce the ambiguity (chapter 5.2.)
Further, this assignment rests on two premises. The first one is that it assumes that
RMA is only interesting if it has an effect on power relations between a set of actors. This is
a controversial point which will be discussed in depth in chapter 4. The second is that the
effect of the RMA doesn’t have to be permanent. Only that it has worked once, or
6
By «power relations» it is here meant military power relations.
7
By «political actors» it is here meant actors with given political goals and the ability to mobilize resources to ensure
a successful completion of this objective.
2
acknowledged by other actors once. Also, certain issues have been omitted due to the
limited nature of this assignment. The discussion on whether or not terrorism or other forms
of none-state actors can bring about RMAs is one of them. It is important to note that it is
not been defined out of the RMA debate, only that it will not be discussed here.
3
2 A short historical background of the
RMA concept
As mentioned RMA became a buzzword in the course of the 1990s as a result of the
usefulness of the concept for US military budgetary and procurement procedures in the
wake of the Cold War. But there is an important distinction worth stressing. This RMA
debate must not be confused with the mid-1950s debate about the military revolution that
focused solely on 16th and 17th century developments and did not see it as a possible
reoccurring phenomenon (Murray, 1997: 69). However, this does not exclude the
phenomenon from being a potential RMA.
The origins of the RMA concept we use today has its roots in the Soviet military
thinking of the 1960s. Later, in the early 1970s, it appeared in the title of a major Soviet
book of military theory (Reddel, 1975). This book dealt primarily with the strategic and
operational exploitation of nuclear firepower. However, by the early 1980s the Soviet
General Staff developed the concept of what many call the information revolution in
military affairs today. What they saw was advanced data processing and communications
technology applied to hi-tech conventional firepower potentially increasing the US and
NATO conventional capabilities (Patrick, 1994: 39).
So why was it the Soviets who gained a conceptual understanding of this topic first?
The short answer is that the Soviet military thinking had a doctrinal tradition that was highly
deductive. It was influenced by two cycles of experience. The first one was in the early
1920s. The Russian Revolution and the following Civil War gave impetus to a fundamental
reassessment of the nature of future war among new commanders in the Soviet
Commissariat of War. Some argued that these historical developments completely changed
the nature of war and gave rise to new approaches. The outcome of the assessments done
during the 1920s was the “combined arms” approach, or Unified Military Doctrine, in
which no single service or weapons system was deemed sufficient to win wars alone. This
came out of a long internal feud in the Bolshevik party on how conflict was to be viewed.
The far left in the party – represented by among others Mikhail Tukhachevskii –
advocated an international general staff that would spread revolution through military
4
assistance to all nations. This idea was later picked up by Mikhail Frunze and incorporated
into his reforms. On the right side of the scale was Leon Trotsky. Trotsky didn´t view war
itself as something subject to revolutionary laws. War was unchanging and timeless. Thus,
there was a need to look at past events to prepare for future outcomes. Trotsky therefore
wanted to take the lessons both from the First World War and the Russian Civil War and
codify them into a military doctrine. For him a military doctrine based on proletariat
principles was ludicrous. It was the Civil War's lengthy fronts and small armies that had
produced maneuver warfare, not Bolshevik ideology (a point that should have been obvious
since the White Army had used the same tactics.) Therefore it made no sense to Trotsky to
determine tactics based on ideology. Circumstances would provide that answer (Lafleur,
2004: 45-6 and Higham & Kagan, 2002: 57).
The one who came to champion the military doctrine based on proletariat principles
was Mikhail Frunze. Frunze – a hero of the Civil War – focused on merging the experience
of the Civil War with the principles of Marx and Engels. The First World War was not
relevant because it was fought under the conditions of the old world order. The genius of
Frunze's approach was application of Engels' themes to the specific situation in the young
Soviet State.
Frunze suggested that a future war would have four fundamental characteristics. It
would be a class war, rather than a nationalistic one; second, it would be “mass engaged on
the battlefield”; third, there would be a technical factor; and fourth and last, it would be
dominated by the relations between the social-political and the economic elements within
the society at war. It was this latter characteristic that Frunze thought the greatest distinction
between the Socialist and capitalist societies would become apparent. Therefore it should be
regarded with supreme importance according to Frunze (Erickson, 1962: 210-11).
Since capitalist societies didn't have the advantage of a truly legitimate rule in the
eyes of the proletarian masses, Frunze assumed that capitalist societies would have great
problems mobilizing them to fight fellow proletarians in an event of war. Therefore, one of
the advantages of the Soviet Union would be strength in numbers. However, this could be
offset by technological advances by the capitalist societies. This, combined with the already
extreme backwardness of the Soviet Union, made Frunze fear and admire technology.
Frunze predicted that “since bourgeois armies […] inner-class struggle may prevent them
5
from going ahead with arming the whole nation [they may] take the path relying on
technical means” (Erickson, 1962: 211). And according to communist theory war was
inevitable since the source of war lay in the existing social organization of the world into
classes and in the character of capitalism. Class struggle would eventually lead to a war
between the classes. Since the Soviet Union was the only state representing the proletariat it
had potential enemies on all sides (Jacobs 1969: 102). Consequently, for Frunze two things
where obvious; war was coming, and technology was the Achilles heel of the Soviet Union.
Communist theorists, Engels and Marx, also wrote extensively on issues relating to
armed combat. Some would even say they are among the ancestors of total war (Neuman &
Hagen, 1986: 263). Their writings have to be understood in the context of their communist
materialistic interpretation of history and its emphasis on the prevailing economic
conditions as a key to understanding of sociopolitical dynamics. They were fully aware of
the wider implications of war; hence they operated with a four-folded nature of modern
warfare – diplomatic, economic, psychological, and military (as a last resort). Here a clear
influence from the writings of Clausewitz himself is obvious, something Engels admitted to
Marx (ibid: 265). But Engels took it further and also investigated the impact of
technological change on military organizations. (This was something Clausewitz did not
have a concept of.) In the book Anti-Dühring Engels (1878) wrote: “It is not the ‘free
creations of the mind’ of generals of genius that have had a revolutionizing effect here, but
the invention of better weapons and the change in the human material, the soldiers; at the
very most the part played by generals of genius is limited to adapting methods of fighting to
the new weapons and combatants.” Another important element of Engels’ military thinking
was the idea of “the nation in arms”. He hoped universal compulsory military service could
eradicate feudal traditions within it and awaken its democratic tendencies. One might be so
bold as to say that history would prove that ideal terribly wrong (Neuman & Hagen, 1986:
280). Engels didn’t have much impact on military thinking at the time but he would have a
large influence later on through the Communist doctrine of the inevitability of war.
Post World War II the Soviets found themselves in a similar situation to that of the
early 1920s. Now three new technological developments with potentially great impact on
future wars came into focus. This was the invention of nuclear weapons, the development in
rocketry, and cybernetics (early computers). This sparked a new cycle in military thinking.
6
In Soviet military logic doctrines had two aspects; a) social-political which was
elaborated by the political leadership, and b) the military-technical aspect which was the
General Staffs primary responsibility. This had profound effects on Soviet doctrinal
thinking. The social-political aspect was constrained by Marxist-Leninist ideology, but it
provided justification for a large focus on military means. Because as long as the capitalist
class existed and possessed military means, the “objective conditions” for peace did not
exist. This – according to Marxist-Leninist ideology – made some sort of armed conflict
inevitable. According to Odom the ideological basis for Soviet military needs cannot be
discounted lightly (1988/89: 116).
Further, Soviet political and military leaders in the 60s and 70s still reckoned that
Soviet military capabilities were limited by three objective conditions (Odom, 1988/89:
118). First, the manpower base had a low technical-cultural level when measured against the
requirements for modern war. Second, the Soviet industrial base was insufficiently
developed to provide modern technology and weaponry. Third, new technologies continued
to affect the nature of modern weaponry. The reaction to these limitations has repeatedly
been to define the nature of future war in light of new technologies. This was also very
much in line with the thinking of Frunze as seen above. The fear of technology due to
Soviet’s continuing backwardness might have been the reason for this obsession. Especially
since the Russian Revolution itself as well was an anachronism in relation to Marxist-
Leninist theory which predicted the revolution to take place in a highly developed country,
not a backward one like Russia at the time, and that major post- WWII developments were
in the technological field.
Some authors – like Adamsky (2010) – claim there are slightly other reasons for the
Soviets to be the first to coin the concept of Military-Technical Revolution (MTR) and later
the RMA concept. He stresses that the Soviet-Russian society has an inclination toward
holistic-dialectical thought. This approach relies on experience-based and intuitive
knowledge rather than on formal logic (ibid: 18-9). This also means that there is an
emphasis on change in context, recognition of contradiction, and search for the synthesis
between opposing propositions (ibid). The opposite way of thinking – according to
Adamsky – is analytical thinking. This is similar to what Thomas Kuhn defines as “normal
science”, and it avoids contradictions and does not suffer from conceptual discontinuities
7
(ibid: 19). The differences between the likes of Odom and Adamsky concerning why the
Soviets came out with the starting concept is not hugely relevant to the assignment, but I
will argue that the reason might be a lot simpler than they assume: the Soviet MTR was the
result of an ongoing process within the Soviet doctrinal concept of Unified Military
Doctrine (UMD). This made the Soviets pick up on technological developments quickly
since they feared a canceling out of their strategic advantage; space and numbers. As will be
obvious later in the assignment, consequently this means that the MTRs cannot be RMAs in
the Soviets mind because it needs a premise which is context dependent, namely the
existence of the Soviet state and worldwide class struggle.
So how great was the potential effect of these developments? Well, first of all it
meant – according to the general staff – that the US had potential to reach conventional
parity with the Soviet Union and the Warsaw Pact. In worst case even surpass them. Since
the Soviet's at this time only viewed nuclear weapons as a policy instrument in theory
(because of its destructiveness) this would completely change Soviet strategic position.
8
Brezhnev's Tula address in 1977 marked a shift in Soviet nuclear policy. Nuclear war was from then on seen as too
unpromising and dangerous to be an instrument of policy. It remained so only in theory, and self-defense.
8
reduction in the time allotted to working out decision on battle or operation – all this has
made unusually high demands on Soviet military-scientific thinking and the ideological-
theoretical and professional training of army and navy cadres.” (Gottemoeller, 1989: 4)
What Ogarkov saw in the West’s rise of hi-tech merging with conventional weapons was
the old fear formulated by Frunze that the West now was taking “the path of relying on
technological means.” This was a move to counter the advantages achieved by the
Revolution, a kind of counter-revolution. This was the second Military Technical
Revolution (MTR) after WWII. With the acknowledgment that nuclear weapons no longer
was an expedient instrument of war, it was no big surprise that the biggest focus of his
tenure as Chief of the General Staff would be the effect of technological development on
conventional forces. However, his tenure coincided with another important factor;
increasing budget constraints. These constraints collided with plans for military
modernization and reorganization stemming from the two other factors mentioned above:
nuclear non-option and technological change (ibid).
According to Gottemoeller (1989: 3) this was not the first MTR. According to her the
advances that grew out of technological developments in nuclear weapons, radioelectronic
technology, and automation in the 1950s constituted the first modern revolution in military
affairs. However, there is reason to be unsure if Mikhail Frunze would have thought it a
revolution in military affairs, or just a continuing aspect of it. He believed that the threat
from technological development was ever present since this was the Achilles-heel of the
socialist experiment. The Unified Military Doctrine was formulated to meet this continuing
challenge. So in that sense both the first and second MTR took place within the framework
of the predicted consequences of the Russian Revolution itself.
Another important point worth stressing at this stage is that the Soviet MTR concept
was designed to specifically address the developments in US military capabilities at the
time, even though they reached back as far as the 1920s to get empirical evidence
(Adamsky, 2010: 24-39). So in that sense it resembled the debate among the historians in
the mid-50s. However, the concept evolved – as seen above – and today most people see the
phenomenon of MTR as the precursor to the RMA concept. This is only the case to a certain
extent since MTR rests on a few premises not present today (the existence of the Soviet
9
state and worldwide class struggle.) This was something the American thinkers who picked
up on the term also were aware of.
In the beginning Krepinevich, Marshall and ONA was using the term “military-
technical revolution” which was the Soviet term. Later they realized they needed another
term because people tended to equate the “revolution” (the network-centric one) primarily
(and sometimes exclusively) with advances in technology. Marshall insisted on using the
Soviet inspired RMA while Krepenivich in his subsequent research on the issue adopted the
term “military revolution” which he perceived more consistent with the scholarly literature.
There was another interesting reason as well, Krepinevich wanted to avoid the baggage of
being associated with the Soviet usage of the term. These measures clearly demonstrate the
validity of the opening quote of Wittgenstein that "concepts lead us to make investigations;
are the expression of our interest, and direct our interest" and that Marshall and Krepinevich
wanted to mitigate this effect. But Krepinevich and Marshall was still equated RMA with
change in how wars was fought (character of military competition), independently of
political effect/consequence (Krepinevich, 1992 [2002].)
Today RMA is generally seen as something that has happened repeatedly throughout
history. So what does the phenomenon actually describe then? The Soviets came up with
quite an accurate conceptual understand of how the next generation of military capabilities
would develop. It was not necessarily a conceptual understanding of RMA as a
phenomenon. Would the Soviets predicted the change if it was not technology driven?
There is much evidence – as seen above – to doubt that.
10
In order to gain further understanding it is necessary to look at concepts in general,
conduct an etymological examination, and on the RMA concept in particular.
11
12
3 Conceptual Theory
All concepts that claim scientific or philosophical legitimacy must be articulated in the form
of a definition. Ever since the time of Aristotle there have been very specific logical
requirements for this type of definitions. By using definitions issues can be opened up or
demarcated. They act as useful tools when conducting examinations or research to reduce
ambiguity and lack of clarity due to vagueness in linguistically expressed meanings (terms.)
A definition shall have a set of conceptual characteristics that separate are necessary, and
together constitute the only adequate set. This rule can be formulated as follows:
An expression “U” is applied correctly if and only if the characteristics K1 & K2 &
K3 & …Kn are present.
Within definitions of linguistic expressions, or terms as they also are called, there is a
key distinction between normative and descriptive definitions. The main purpose of the
latter is to explain how a term is actually used, that is what the established usage of a term
is. This is only useful on terms with a high degree of consensus about what constitute the
definiens, for example like with everyday words or objects like a song, car, spoon, chair,
etc. Common for these are that they can be explained with an assertion of what the object or
word is, or means. For example “word A usually means B.” When it comes to normative
definitions – which are the most common in research – they are formulated as “word A must
13
in this context be understood as B.” The purpose with this type of definition is not to explain
how it is used but to provide a particular significance. There are certain requirements for
normative definitions:
These requirements are ideal types since they seldom are possible to satisfy completely in
one single definition. Which of the requirements to be emphasized usually depends on in
which context the definition is used in (Karlsen, 2009.) Since the concept is related to war,
or the prospect of war, it is necessary to say something about war as a phenomenon as well.
14
4 The Nature of War and Warfare
The social institution known as war has been a more or less permanent feature
throughout human history. It survived the agrarian revolution of approx. 6000 BC, the
industrial revolution of the nineteenth century, and the scientific revolution of the
twentieth (Gray, 2005: 29). It would be safe to assume that it would continue to be
present in the time to come whatever changes in technology, economy, social and
political context, that lay ahead of us.
War has been very unpopular at times, for instance in the immediate aftermath
of the Great War (1914-18). But as we know it didn’t prevent mankind from rushing
into another great disaster only 20 years later (the Second World War). Today war is
still being used as a political instrument and there is no known cure for it. Some argue
that the current change in the conduct of war also change the nature of war. That is not
the case. Clausewitz defines war as “an act of violence intended to compel our
opponent to fulfill our will” (Clausewitz, 1827). Gray has another one: “war is
organized violence threatened or waged for political purposes” (Gray, 2005: 30).
These are rough definitions but fully adequate for the purpose of the argument made
here.
1
the great wars of the twentieth century the same way they were valid for the
peacekeeping operations of the twenty-first. Moreover, because war is not an
autonomous activity but a social and human event, it has two tendencies: escalation
and reciprocation. Absent the moderating influence of policy and debilitating force of
friction, these tendencies push war toward a violent extreme. Thus, for Clausewitz war
might change color like a chameleon, but its essential nature remains constant –
violent, unpredictable, and prone to escalation.
The subjective nature on the other hand is unique for every conflict, and in
constant motion. The central elements of the subjective nature are military forces,
doctrines, leadership, weapon systems, and the dimension the war takes place in (land,
sea, air, space , cyberspace ). Clausewitz argues both natures of war continuously
affect each other, and this is where the importance of a Revolution in Military Affairs
(RMA) comes in. The only way to affect the objective nature of war is through change
in the subjective (which one control). But you don’t control how the change in the
subjective nature will affect the objective one because of presence of uncertainty and
chance.
War and warfare do not always change in an evolutionary linear way (Gray,
2005: 25, Knox & Murray, 2001: 176-79). As Gray (2005: 25) points out “surprise is
not merely possible, or even probable, it is certain”, and it is this “surprise” that might
be a RMA. Metz & Kievit (1995: 11) have tried to illustrate this using a simple graph
(see below). They use military development as a function of combat effectiveness and
time to show how RMA can be spotted. Sudden increases in combat effectiveness that
deviate from the normal linear growth pattern indicate a RMA.
2
Figure 1: Effectiveness and Revolutions (Metz & Kievit 1995:11).
As we will come back to later, I don’t agree with Metz & Kievit’s explanation of the
graph, or that it is adequate with only one graph. This graph provides explanatory
power only if combat effectiveness is seen as cumulative, ever increasing, and non-
relational. For this figure to have at least some explanatory power I argue that a second
graph is needed (see below). What I do agree strongly with Metz & Kievit on is the
need for a temporal component.
3
Figure 2: Effectiveness and Revolutions (Metz & Kievit, 1995:11) modified by
author.
Assuming that actor A (solid line) within a given time period have a linear
development while actor B (dotted line) have sudden increases in effectiveness. If
these increases are significant enough they might constitute a RMA if it results in
political concessions. If the difference between the two actors is sufficiently large a
sudden increase in combat effectiveness doesn’t necessary constitute a RMA (see
figure 3 below). For example if an actor that uses sticks and stones finds new ways of
throwing the stones it might provide for a significant increase if the other relational
actor are roughly equal. But if the opponent is the US military of today it wouldn’t
matter much.
4
Figure 3: Effectiveness and Revolutions (Metz & Kievit, 1995:11) modified by
author.
Therefore what is interesting is not increase in combat effectiveness per se, but rather
changes in the power relations between two or more actors and the subsequent ability
to extract political concessions. Power is always relational and reciprocal, and
therefore more suited. It should be noted that Prof. Metz when asked about this agreed
that his figure doesn’t reflect power’s relational and reciprocal nature (Metz, 2012).
5
chance affecting ones side when the two natures interrelate. Even if one side is
superior in the traditional sense this is easier said than done as we saw in Vietnam
(during the U.S. intervention) and Afghanistan (under the Soviet occupation). In short;
the outcome of a conflict cannot be guaranteed.
If the change in power relations manifested itself through conflict one limit the
reliance on inductive reasoning, and perceived effects on the subjective nature of the
conflict. But a sudden change in power relations manifested through combat victory
doesn’t have to be a RMA if it happens as a result of for example total incompetence
of the opponent. Then there isn’t change in any variable that causes it, but rather
circumstances in the subjective nature of the conflict that puts the side at an extreme
disadvantage. On the other hand, if it was an active measure from the opposing side
that caused the incompetence, then it might constitute a RMA.
6
7
5 Defining the RMA concept
Collin S. Gray writes in his landmark book Strategy for Chaos (2002: 1) that
revolution in military affairs (RMA) “was the concept-of-the-decade among strategic
thinkers in the 1990s” and that “RMA was fashionable and therefore literally
bankable”. As Grey points out, this was just one concept in a long line of – what he
calls – “high concepts [of] policy-oriented theory in strategic studies”. This, of course,
produced some interesting definitions of the phenomenon. And every decade have at
least one such fashionable concept. After World War II we have seen containment in
the 1940s, nuclear deterrence in the 1950s, and détente in the 1970s just to name a
few. There is also an intimate relationship between RMA and strategy but it is my
argument that these are two distinctly different phenomena.
Military affairs is generally understood as the policies that come under the
responsibility of the ministry of war or defense – depending on the political
organization. For example, in the US military affairs is the responsibility of the
Department of Defense (DoD). In other agencies – like the Central Intelligence
Agency and State Department – the offices/bureaus that have “Military Affairs” in
their title are those that are concerned with coordinating with the DoD. Also, many
equate military affairs with military science. This I don’t agree with. Military science
is a much narrower category than military affairs. I define military affairs as
everything having to do with defense and security policy. This is somewhat loosely
defined but it will not reduce the precision of the RMA definition devised in this
assignment. On the contrary, it will increase it. This will be elaborated later in the
assignment.
The other term – revolution – is widely used and derives from the Latin word
revolutio, and has several meanings – like rotation, or an instance of revolving – but
here we’ll concentrate on the meaning in political context. According to the Oxford
Dictionaries (2011) a revolution is “a forcible overthrow of a government or social
order, in favor of a new system”, or “a dramatic and wide-reaching change in
conditions, attitudes, or operation”. In other definitions it also has a temporal
component. According to The American Heritage Dictionary and Random House
Dictionary it can also be defined as “a sudden, complete or marked change in
something” or as “a sudden or momentous change in a situation”. What is interesting
is that none of these definitions says that it needs to be both sudden and
momentous/complete/marked. To be able to distinguish revolution from a normal
development process I will argue this need to be the case. In our case what sudden and
momentous means need to be relative according to what time period we are applying
the RMA-definition to. For example in some aspects the pace of change was much
9
slower in the 1600s than in the 1900s. But it is only partly dependent on the time
period. What is maybe more relevant is how fast actors are to counter the advantage
given to a specific actor at their expense. This doesn’t need to be slower in earlier
times than today. For all we know there might have been many events in ancient
history where change in power relations happened suddenly, but where countered
swiftly so that the effects were not momentous. This would of course then not
constitute a RMA. Since we do not know, we cannot rule it out. Whether pace of
change is decreasing or increasing over time depends on in what field the RMA takes
place. If we, for the sake of argument, say the invention of the longbow (for example
Hundley, 1999: 12) and the network-centric warfare (for example Owens, 2000)
constitute RMAs we can make a case that the RMA pace was quicker in the instance
of the Longbow. The scope and extent of change is enormous when it comes to
network-centric warfare systems. However, the relative change in power balance
between the relevant actors may be smaller. Also how quickly the longbow was
counter-measured, while the network-centric system has not yet been, show that the
temporal component doesn’t necessary speed up chronologically.
10
significant political concessions by inflicting just enough casualties so that the social
cost became too high. If the war had ended while the Vietnamese where still primarily
a guerilla army it might have been a more adequate example.
The use of the term revolution like Thomas Kuhn applies it is not directly
relevant to RMA. But, since many scientists talk of RMAs as “paradigm shifts”
(Hundley, 1999; Smith, 2006) I find it necessary to mention Kuhn’s concept of
revolution. The Khunian (scientific) revolution has one premise, what you are
explaining or measuring is unchanging. It’s absolute. Paradigm shifts are more like
gestalt shifts; the phenomenon itself isn’t changing (Khun, 1970 [1962]: 111-12).
Since RMAs are abstract and relational this doesn’t fit very well. They are constantly
subjected to internal and external pressures and therefore in constant motion/process.
The first RMA definition that reached a broader audience was formulated by
Andrew F. Krepinevich in his 1992 assessment “The Military-Technical Revolution: A
Preliminary Assessment” (1992 [2002]). It was undertaken at the behest of the US
Department of Defense’s Office of Net Assessment (ONA) and its head Andrew W.
Marshall. It was a brilliant paper and caught on in many circles in the American
defense establishment. As discussed in chapter 2.2 there are some important
distinctions between how it was used then, and how it is usually employed today. This
process was started by Marshall and Krepinevich themselves by altering the term, even
though they perceived they were addressing the same phenomenon. They recognized
that the term MTR might create a cognitive bias towards the role of technology, but
still stressed that technology was an important part of it.
In 1994 Krepinevich goes further and tries to put RMA into a broader context in
his article “From Cavalry to Computer” (Krepinevich, 1994). Here he defines RMA
as: “It is what occurs when the application of new technologies into a significant
number of military systems combines with innovative operational concepts and
organizational adaptation in a way that fundamentally alters the character and conduct
of conflict. It does so by producing a dramatic increase – often an order of magnitude
or greater – in the combat potential and military effectiveness of armed forces.”
11
What Krepinevich is saying here is that military revolutions comprise of four
elements: technological change, system development, operational innovation, and
organizational adaptation. These are – according to him – necessary and sufficient
conditions for a dramatic increase in military effectiveness that according to him
characterizes a RMA. A perusal of the existing literature show most people agree that
this might be conditions present in a RMA, but not that they are exhaustive. As Grey
(2002: 5) also point out, there are several problems with this definition. First of all, it
claims RMA is a function of new technologies. Without venturing into a debate on the
definition of technology I would argue that application of new technologies is not a
necessary condition to bring about a RMA. I argue it is sufficient for example to use
old technology in new ways. Secondly, a RMA needs to alter the character and
conduct of conflict. This is somewhat vague and doesn’t say much about how much it
needs to change, or if it is relational. But I will give Krepinevich the benefit of the
doubt on this one. The last, and maybe most important, condition is the increase in
combat potential and military effectiveness. Most writers on the subject tend to agree
with this condition. Metz & Kievit (1995: 11) insist that combat effectiveness is
cumulative and not strictly relational:
And Grey even goes as far as to say that the point “is of commonsense nature, and
should be true” (2002: 5). I will argue this is not necessarily the case. Take for
example strategic missile defense. It has the potential for reducing the efficiency of
strategic missile forces of other countries drastically. This would dramatically shift the
12
balance of power decisively in favor of the country that adopts it. So by reducing the
efficiency of others it might increase its standing relatively to other actors. Hundley
(1999: 9) in his definition takes into account this possibility by referring to “[conducts
of military operations that] renders obsolete or irrelevant one or more core
competencies of a dominant player.” The major problem with Hundley’s definition,
however, is that it refers to RMA as a paradigm shift in the nature and conduct of
military operations. In my view this points more in direction of change in military
combat regimes than an actual RMA (which, of course, also might include a change in
combat regime). There is a case to be made that even a strategic missile defense is an
increase in effectiveness but a decrease in combat destructiveness. But this remains
semantically and not vital to the argument made in this assignment.
Another influential book on the subject is Knox & Murrays “The Dynamics of
Military Revolution, 1300-2050” (2001). They take a slightly different approach to the
subject. Knox & Murray operate with both military revolutions and revolution in
military affairs as their analytical framework. What is interesting is that they don’t
provide a definition of either concept. The closest they come to a definition of military
revolution is: “[RMAs] defining feature is that it fundamentally changes the
framework of war” (2001: 6). They continue further by listing five military revolutions
that had that effect in Western history:
13
revolution possible, but the revolution itself takes place only when new concepts of
operations develop and, in many cases, new military organizations are created. Making
these organizational and doctrinal changes is a long process” (Knox & Murray, 2001:
4-5). Further they list a few requirements needed to bring around RMAs. These are:
“the assembly of a complex mix of tactical, organizational, doctrinal, and
technological innovations” (ibid: 12). These are needed to “in order to implement a
new conceptual approach to warfare or to a specialized sub-branch of warfare” (ibid).
They are relying heavily on inductive reasoning which leaves them vulnerable to
(hermeneutical) biases, especially conformation bias based on the experience with the
ongoing change in combat regime at the time. This limits the arguments ability to
predict which becomes clear when they note the following: “[…] in the end, battlefield
outcomes usually make pitilessly clear which military organization has innovated most
effectively.” As we will get back to below, only historians have the luxury of wording
themselves in this way.
There are three problems with this framework. Firstly, the reference to “radical
military innovation” and past military revolutions seems to be more of a debate on
how combat regimes change, not how revolutions come around. By citing Marshall
they have backing for this since he operates without any real temporal requirement. As
mentioned above, it is problematic to discuss revolutionary change without a temporal
component. The second objection to Marshall’s definition is his premise that new
methods of warfare need to be far more powerful than the old. Once again I will use
the missile defense example to point out that this need not be the case. The third, and
last, objection to Knox & Murray is the lack of relativity. By saying “RMAs require
the assembly of a complex mix of tactical, organizational, doctrinal, and technological
innovations in order to implement a new conceptual approach to warfare or to a
specialized sub-branch of warfare”, and “yet in the end, battlefield outcomes usually
make pitilessly clear which military organization has innovated most effectively” they
have devised a framework that – at best – only can serve as a tool in history research.
Given the title of their book is “The Dynamics of Military Revolution, 1300-2050” the
framework isn’t very suited to the task at hand.
14
6 Towards a Definition of Revolution
in Military Affairs (RMA)
So far we have surveyed the relevant terrain around RMA as a concept. What have
other people said about the topic? Returning to the suggested definition in chapter 1,
what should a good RMA definition consist of?
We know from chapter 3 that it needs have decidability, a clear scope and a
clear meaning of what it is. It also needs some proximity to the established meaning of
the terms it is made up of. If not it is difficult creating a common understanding of it,
and it might lead to an unhealthy cognitive bias as we saw in chapter 2.2 when the
term MTR was still used in the ONA circles. After dissecting Krepinevich, Marshall,
Hundley and Knox & Murray’s definitions we see that a good definition need the
following: a) a temporal component, b) say something about the scope of change, c) to
be relational, d) to exclude factors that might create an invalid inference, and e) be as
independent of historical context as possible.
16
6.1 New Definition
The definition constructed for this assignment is somewhat unique in its
approach. It approaches the phenomenon from a slightly different angle than other
definitions. The definition is not very useful for military science in a narrow sense, or
in more of a longue durée approach to the phenomenon. The “analytical level” chosen,
between these two extremes, is done as to best accommodate the criteria of
decidability, a clear scope and a clear meaning. The two most controversial features of
this definition are the temporal component and the measurement of change. Other
approaches with broader focus often lack decidability and are very vague when it
comes to measurable variables. For example the Tofflers (1993) argues that there are
only three RMAs; the Agrarian Revolution, the Industrial Revolution, and the
Information Revolution. Their temporal component spans the entire human existence
which limits the application of their theory significantly when it comes to explaining
changes in power relations within shorter timespans. They would probably argue that
changes within shorter timespans are irrelevant. The argument made here is that the
Tofflers do not address the relevant phenomenon. The ambition for the definition in
this assignment is to provide a clearer meaning of the phenomenon, a clearer scope
and to have better decidability that for example Tofflers’. As mentioned in the
introduction, the working definition for the phenomenon as it is described in this
assignment should be viewed as:
RMA is a sudden change in the power relations9 between two or more political
actors10 as a consequence of changes in variables other than economic or
geopolitical prerequisites. The change has to be large enough to win significant
political concessions through conflict, or through general acknowledgement of
increased power.
9
By «power relations» it is here meant military power relations.
10
By «political actors» it is here meant actors with given political goals and the ability to mobilize resources to
ensure a successful completion of this objective.
17
There are a number of key terms in this definition that need further explanation in
order to limit ambiguity. They might seem vague at first glance but it is a necessity in
order not to create too limited scope.
• Sudden change: By this it is meant that change happens quicker than normal
development in the relevant field, and quicker than other actors in the relevant
dyad, triad, tetrad, etc. relationship. As we see in the text, this could also be a
result of a perceived change.
• Power relations: The noun power has many meanings. It is sometimes referred
to as “military strength or economic or political influence of a nation or other
group” (Houghton, 2011). What is beyond doubt when we speak of power in a
political or social structure is that it operates both relationally and reciprocally.
In lack of a better word, power relations is here meant to indicate military
power/potential that can be used to improve one’s standing vis-à-vis other
actors. It doesn’t have to be of offensive character. An improvement in
defensive capabilities would reduce the other actor(s) offensive capabilities,
thus changing power relations. And to have an effect there needs to be some
proximity in power – or potential power – of the actors (see figure 3, chapter 4).
Power is also very dependent on what objectives it is meant to meet (strategy).
We will not go into detail of that in this assignment since it is beyond its scope.
• Political actors: Here it is simply meant an entity consisting of individuals
organized as group with a common political objective and the ability to
mobilize resources to ensure a successful completion of this objective. In order
not to rule out pre-Westphalian examples, or any future form of organizing
political life, it is here referred to political actors instead of a state.
• Variables (or factors): are the set of attributes that make up the power of the
political actor. These could be organizational, technological, etc. So why have I
excluded economical and geostrategic prerequisites? Because economic and
geopolitical changes might change power relations between actors without there
being a RMA. For example when the Soviet Union collapsed the power
18
relations between the Soviet Union (later Russia) and the US changed
dramatically because the Soviet/Russian economy collapsed. It had nothing to
do with RMA (even though some might claim that it was the cost of the
military arms race that brought this about.) Political revolutions can wreck or
build economies, thus impacting on power relations, but remains outside the
scope of RMA. Change in the economic base of a political actor should be dealt
with in Economics, how one utilizes the economic base for military purposes
will be discussed here. The same goes for changes in geostrategic prerequisites.
Take this example, if a country A has two hostile neighbors – B and C – and
have balanced power relations with both. Suddenly A and C allies. Country A is
then able to redirect more of its resources toward B, thus changing the power
relations between them without anything resembling RMA.
• Through general acknowledgement: This caveat is meant to cover the
possibility of a RMA being brought about without actual fighting taking place.
It is to some degree an attempt to avoid relying too heavily on purely inductive
reasoning. It creates room to “think outside the box” i.e. deductive reasoning.
For example if a successful missile shield – to use a familiar example – is
presented and demonstrated sufficiently it would probably bring about an RMA
without states firing ICBMs at each other. It could also be the case with today’s
network centric combat systems. The Soviets perceived a change in the power
relations between the two countries taking place when it was first demonstrated.
They recognized its potential without actually fighting the US, and changed
behavior accordingly (see also further elaboration on this subject in chapter 9.)
• Political concessions: War is not an end in itself but a mean. That is why to
measure war, or the prospect of, without looking at the political effect is
pointless. That is why the only way to measure the effect of war is in political
gains. This gain can be for a very limited time period but it needs to be a
measurable gain. Political concessions can manifest themselves as physical
control over a geographical territory, officially or unofficially recognized
sphere of interest, tributes, organizational benefits (like the Bretton-Woods
system and the UN Security Council), or other concession (like Sweden letting
19
German troops pass through their neutral territory during World War II.)
There are also a few more points that require explaining in relation to the definition.
First of all I would once again stress the point of changes and perceived changes. Most
of the time power relations are perceived. Berlin May 1945 might not be one of them,
but as soon as fighting stops one enters a period of perceived relations. And further
from the last confrontation one comes, the greater are the uncertainties. Often a change
in the military combat regime starts slowly. Especially the losing side of a conflict has
an interest in starting a process of assessing how to improve weaknesses. This was the
case with the Germans after WWI for example (Conetta, 2006). This could be
inventing new doctrines, increasing manpower, technological developments, etc. The
Germans were willing to take – what others would deem – extreme risks to meet its
revisionist international agenda. They had no guarantee that it would work but pursued
it wholeheartedly anyway. And it paid off. But after a while the paradox of a
successful strategy (Luttwak, 2001) kicked in and the other opposing nations started to
counter it. Even though it is not a theoretical impossibility to perpetuate a RMA it
usually remains a temporary phenomenon thanks to the impact of the strategic
paradox. It is also strategy’s responsibility to cement gains obtained by a RMA in
political concessions. Exactly how one goes about this is more in the realm of strategic
studies than in RMA but it is worth noting that a successful RMA doesn’t necessary
translate into strategic gains if one not push for this while there is a mutual settlement
range.
20
21
7 The Character of the Phenomenon
After going through the historical background, the conceptual theory and defining the
concept, one important aspect remains. Explaining what actually takes place militarily
in situations that might constitute an RMA is not difficult. Those who study war have
conceptual frameworks and terminology to explain exactly what is happening in
concrete examples. This is not the ambition here. What is interesting is the abstract
character of the phenomenon.
22
revolution in order to link it to an existing academic debate while Marshall favored a
new term (RMA.) Whether or not this was out of tactical concerns so that they would
receive funding to do more research into the phenomenon or a altruistic expression of
what Marshall felt needed to be addressed is not vital to the argument made here. What
Hobson claim happens in the US strategic environment due to the characteristics of the
bureaucratic organizing is neatly summed up in the Wittgenstein quote in the
beginning of this assignment (“concepts lead us to make investigations; are the
expression of our interest, and direct our interest.”) But what Wittgenstein argues is
that it is not necessarily the bureaucratic characteristics that give direction, but the
concepts/terms themselves. That debate, however, is outside the scope of this
assignment.
Like any new discovery the full range of the phenomenon was not readily
available when it emerged in the early 1990s and subsequently the term began its
formative period. In that context new research allowed new insight into the
phenomenon the term was intended to describe. This is very common for terms in
formative periods. But instead of changing the term, like what was done when they
moved from MTR to RMA, it is argued here that just a slight adjustment is called for
and the term can be kept and still make sense. The reference to a not yet know variable
in the definition is an attempt to try and mitigate the problem brought up by
Wittgenstein that there cannot be a too rigid list of characteristics if it is to allow for
not yet known examples (Johannesen, 1997: 14-15.)
11
Case Yellow was the German operation plan for the first stage of the invasion of France.
24
actor) the effect of an RMA wears down. A RMA will most likely happen again while
the RMA probably never does. That said, if the main component of an RMA is hard to
find, countermeasures to it might be applied over and over again. For example if China
invent’s something that renders US expeditionary capacity obsolete and the US can not
find out how, or afford to counter it, it might in theory be applied again and again.
Either in combat or in processes to get political concessions. It does, however, require
a degree of ceteris paribus. There is (at least) one example where an actor deliberatly
has tried to bring about an RMA. That is the US transformation effort during the
1990s. That example is useful in many respects and will be covered in chapter 9. It
could also be used to check the predictive power of the definition (to a certain extent.)
This is not a universal requirement of a defintion but necessary for the scope of this
definition. But first the definition need to be tested on a historical example.
25
8 Past RMAs
In this chapter the definition will be tested on one historic event for the purpose of
determine if it constitutes a RMA according to the definition outlined in this
assignment. As explained in the introduction (chapter 1) it will need to be done in two
stages 1) determine if the change in power relations is sudden and large enough to win
political concessions, and 2) which variable(s) caused it so that it can determined if it
is within the scope of the definition (i.e. not caused by change in economic or
geopolitical prerequisites.) The ambition here is to isolate the variables to the greatest
extent. At the same time changes as big as those who bring about RMAs is never the
result of change in only one variable. Still, the purpose here is to find the most
significant of all variables, not to find all variables.
But it was more to it than just mass mobilization; tactics and moral also played
a significant role. On 20 September 1792 a group of French soldiers held off a
Prussian assault at Valmy. The Prussian army commander, the Duke of Brunswick,
was surprised to meet such a resolute opponent and was forced to negotiate a peaceful
retreat. This was the first modern example of a “people's army” defeating the old order
(Rothenberg, 2005: 11). Prior to Valmy wars was, at least since the Thirty Years’ War,
formal affaires, pursued with limited means for limited objectives. With the absence of
any national or ideological content it was not in anyone's interest to seek the total
destruction of the enemy. No general ever thought of fighting to the last man (ibid:
26
12). This was very much the result of political, social, economic, and military
constraints. War was more about maneuver than combat. But these constraints were
about to change.
While France in 1792 was Europe’s second most populous state after Russia, it
had been losing out in relative terms to its neighbors. While the other states like the
German states, the Habsburg Empire and Britain12 doubled their population in the
latter decades of the eighteen century, France had only a 44.5% increase. Britain –
while maybe not growing quite as rapid in population – nearly doubled their national
income between 1712 and 1792 (Rothenberg 1999: 20-1).
It is not just in relation to this example population is a key factor. The primary
resource for any nation is its human resources. Therefore, trends in population are
critical indicators to follow. But it is not only size that matters when it comes to
population, structure and means could be just as important. For example nations must
have sufficient resources to meet the challenges an expanding population brings and
the right structure. Average age for example often play a crucial role. The argument in
this assignment is that France didn’t have any advantages in terms of demography but
still managed to utilize its population in a way that swung power relations in Europe in
its favor. But this is an understudied aspect of the argument made here so further
comparative research into demography in Europe at the time-period in question might
be a possible way of falsifying the hypothesis put forward in this chapter.
12
Britain is not a good example since its population and power in this period was very much dependent on
many other factors, like its empire and rapid industrialization. But if we for example look at the figures just
for England the growth was 46 % in the period between 1751 and 1801 (Evans 2011: 14) while it is reason to
interpret Rothenberg as Britain also doubled its population. It has not been confirmed by other sources,
however.
27
discuss the change in context of military regime the sheer magnitude of the
mobilization of resources led to a fundamental change in the size and character of the
armies. However, this change is not vital to the argument made here. As outlined
previously in the argument it depends on changes that benefit one power relative to
others to such an extent that there is a sudden change in power relations significant
enough to extract political concessions.
In the aftermath of the Seven Years War (1756-1763) a debate about improving
war-fighting capabilities erupted in France. It was brought about by the humiliating
defeats the war had inflicted on the country. One of the things that were experimented
with as early as 1759 was the self-contained all-arms division; a later mainstay of
Napoleonic tactics and strategy. It was, however, not permanently adopted until 1793.
Similar, France was also leading in developing new infantry tactics. A debate of 'line
versus column' had been raging for a while and was resolved in 1772 by a suggestion
put forward by Guibert. He favored a combination were battalions shifted deployment
according to the tactical situation, also known as the ordre mixte. Also, in the area of
field guns there was a development led by France but this effect has been overstated
according to Rothenberg (1999: 22): “while much (sic) historians have made much of
the supposed uniqueness of his [Gribeauval] range of field guns […] Austrians,
Prussians and English artillery was nearly as hard-hitting and mobile as the French,
and was often utilized when captured.”
Still, field armies throughout Europe in 1790 were very similar. They rarely
exceeded 50,000 men and were formed at the opening of hostilities from existing
regiments. There was little variance in organization or armament which resulted in
limited difference in tactics as well (Rothenberg, 2005). While there were
technological developments the biggest transformation of war had its origins in
political, social and ideological change which facilitated conscription.
28
Conscription worked and by the spring of 1794 France had over 750,000 men
available to fight. This would allow France to alter the balance-of-power in Europe in
the years to come (Rothenberg, 1999: 26-7).
Other less significant variables also favored the French. The time from a soldier
was assigned a unit and until it arrived in the field was about 60-70 days (including
one week of training and marching days). This means that they arrived fairly well
trained and in good condition. Further proficiency was obtained through experience in
combat. As Rothenberg (2005: 135-36) put it: “by dispensing with large periods of
formal training, the French armies obtained replacements in the shortest possible
period of time and as long as enough veterans were available to absorb the recruits the
system worked well.” Of course after the failed attempt at crushing Russia in 1812 and
the subsequent heavy casualties during the retreat, the system was weakened. This
difference is easily illustrated if we contrast the quality of The Grand Armé of 1805
which was one of history's most maneuverable and best exercised forces while the two
29
Young Guard Divisions fed into combat at Craonne in 1814 was made up exclusively
of conscripts pressed into the army only a month earlier (Griffith, 2007: 3). Still, the
lead time from recruitment to battle station was not the reason for Napoleon’s rapid
increase in cannon fodder. Like the system of command it made the Grand Armé more
effective for a period but it was not the main reason for success.
But in 1810 Napoleon dominated Europe as no ruler before him. France had
nearly doubled in size since 1789 and beyond its borders were the satellite kingdoms
of Italy, Spain, Naples, and Westphalia. It was his failure to cement his war gains in
lasting political concessions that brought about his downfall, not his later inability to
effectively command his swollen Grand Armée and subsequent collapse of the
veteran/recruit system (Rothenberg, 1999: 69-70). But before we conclude on first
stage of the two-pronged approach, evidence beyond France´s example is needed to
show the correlation between the levée en masse and RMA. It could be useful to look
at another example from the same time period. How did for example Prussia regain its
momentum and rise to great power status again after its initial defeat to Napoleon in
1806-07?
In the period 1807-1814 there was a rapid and almost complete overhaul of the
military system. A new army was built. It also had a huge effect on the state, and to
some extent on society itself. Aristocratic privilege was almost completely eliminated
30
and the process of abolition of serfdom got started, changing the Prussian society in a
direction previously thought of as unthinkable. Politically it changed as well. The
period saw the birth of a responsible government and rational central organization,
henceforth providing the citizens with some basic civil rights. However, a constitution
would not come around and complete the reforms for another four decades.
The biggest reform was – as mentioned – the military one. It started with a self-
controlled purge of the officer corps that rid it of 100 generals and thousands of others
in different officer categories. They included the abolition of corporal punishment, the
opening of the officer corps for commoners, introducing a meritocracy (in principle), a
new central organization for defense under a unified war department, a vastly
improved army structure (introducing self-sustained divisions of all arms), and tactical
reforms emulating the French example. All this – dramatic as it might sound – proved
comparatively easy to implement and were in place already by 1808. The hard part
was agreeing to what everybody knew would be the game-changer: the recruitment
system.
The reformers, the ministry and the king discussed for a full six years before
they reached consensus on what would eventually be the introduction of universal
conscription in Prussia. What they all agreed on at the outset was that for Prussia to
regain her great power status it was necessary with a numerical larger army than what
they had possessed in the past. Even though the motivation for the reforms differed
between the king and his government, and the reformist; the pressing need to make the
state defensible again united these two factions. The only element of this reform that
enjoyed unanimous support was the abolition of foreign recruiting. This occurred
already in November 1807. This – of course – made the need for increased domestic
recruiting even more pressing. But it was not just internal factors limiting possible
outcomes. Prussia was also subjected to external limitations. The Convention of Paris
(1808) that was forced upon Prussia by France imposed severe limitations in regard to
size and formations. The overall limitation on men under arms was 42,000; it
prescribed the exact number and strength of individual formations, and denied them
31
any form of militia or reserve force. The short-term answer to this question was the
Krümpersystem.
When the Prussian army together with its allies crushed France it totaled
300,000 men, a far cry from the 42,000 barely three years earlier. As much as 6
percent of the total population served in the old provinces, a ratio that would not be
surpassed in any major European country until the First World War. Prussia had risen
to meet the French challenge and had prevailed. What is important to note here,
however, is that it did so not by significant changes in tactics or new technological
developments, but by copying the French model (see above and chapter 8.1.2) of
increasing the number of troops. And because of the financial constraints they were
subjected to the only way they could manage it was through conscription (Walter,
2009; Rothenberg, 1999: 174-82; Clark, 2006: 312-38).
But even with conscription there was a limit to the number of forces a nation
could utilize. Even if they didn’t get paid the still needed to be equipped, fed, led, etc.
13
Personell were rotated through companies for terms between one month and one year. The total years of
service was cut to four compared to 20 in the old system.
32
The annual average conscripted men in France up till 1812 was about 85,000. This was
less than the total number of eligible men available, and even including the levies in
1813-14 the number of men actually serving did not exceed 41 percent of the eligible
male population (Rothenberg, 2005: 134-5). This was the French ceiling when other
constraints kicked in and limited the ability to put additional men under arms. Russian
levies also peaked around the same period (1812-13). They operated with quotas of 8
per 500 souls which resulted in 166,563 recruits in the year of 1812 and approximately
200,000 in 1813 (Mikaberidze, 2009: 46-51). This helps to show that there were also
some limitations when conscripting. Not only population size mattered but also access
to other resources matter. More importantly, another point that could be read out if this
is that the Russians – much like the Prussians – were dependent on numbers to counter
the French even though they did not recruit the same way.
8.1.4 Conclusion
As mentioned above, France had from the beginning of the century up till 1792 been
losing out growth wise. While other opposing nations had doubled its population size
France only grew by 44,5 %. At the same time, in relative terms the economic
situation of France didn´t change significantly, no new technological developments
greatly favored them either. So the most striking change was their increased ability to
put men under arms and win political concessions at gun-point along their way. This
was made possible by conscription in France’s instance. Between 1789 and 1810
France nearly doubled its territorial size. This is a significantly small timespan. Prussia
looked at many ways of regaining their great power status after the humiliating defeats
of 1806-07 and ended up copying France by introducing conscription as well. Note
they did not adopt the ideology as some historians maintain as explanation for
France’s success.
33
be inferred that the most significant variable in the example of France in the relevant
time-period is conscription. With the most significant variable established the next step
is to test it against the definition.
Having shown that conscription was the most important factor for change in
France’s situation in the time-period discussed is not sufficient evidence that
conscription constituted a RMA. The pace and significance of change in power
relations needs to addressed as well. So, was there a sudden change in the balance-of-
power between France and other nations stemming from changes other than economic
or geopolitical prerequisites that won France political concessions? It will be argued
that this is indeed the case.
34
With all criteria’s satisfied the hypothesis that conscription in France in the
period between 1792 and 1810 constitute a RMA is strengthened.
There is good reason to believe that Napoleon was – to some degree at least –
aware of the revolutionary nature conscription had on France’s power relations in that
time period. Another, although slightly different example, is the awareness American
policymakers had of the potential revolutionary effect network-centric warfare would
have on the post-Cold War era.
35
9 Transformation
As mentioned earlier, the US defense establishment was the driving force behind
coining the term RMA. The experience from the 1991 Iraq war and the advantageous
geopolitical situation as the hegemon in the international system after the collapse of
the Soviet Union left the US with a window of opportunity. In 1997 Secretary of
Defense, William Cohen, appointed a National Defense Panel (NDP) mandated to
“review and make recommendations to the Secretary of Defense on the department's
ongoing Quadrennial Defense Review (QDR). […] the NDP also will provide an
assessment of alternative force structures for the U.S. military through the year 2010.”
(National Defense Panel, 1997) The panel came up with a blueprint to operationalize
and implement efforts to usher in the “RMA of the 21. century.” As it is stated in the
report ”We are on the cusp of a military revolution stimulated by rapid advances in
information and information-related technologies.” The key to this RMA according to
the panel was “maintaining US information superiority, […] integrate existing and
new information systems while exploiting commercial technology. We must also have
effective defensive and offensive information capabilities. We will need to recognize
that the US lead in space will not go unchallenged. We must coordinate the civil,
commercial, and national security aspects of space, as use of space is a major element
of national power.” (ibid) The result was the doctrine of Transformation. It affected all
major allies of the US and became the new “goldstandard” – to use Hobson’s
expression – in force structure. But did the US succeed? Well, it worked partially. US
and its allies quickly won conventional victories against Afghanistan and Iraq. But the
mission success criterias was broader than they were in the first war against Iraq in
1991. It was not a war of liberation anymore (even though some seem to think so) but
a war of occupation. However, the war was conducted with a high degree of success
initially. This was the phase most similar to the 1991 war and the phase the military
was most adapt to perform. So the inductive approach worked out well thus far. The
next phase (occupation) did not go as well. The war the US went to fight was not the
war the assumptions their “RMA” was based on. The political objectives were
different, the population reacted differently, other external actors reacted differently.
36
And most importantly in relation to the argument in this assignment; these were
adversaries the US would have – and were expected to – beat wheter or not they had
implementet doctrines intended to bring about an RMA. Maybe the new doctrine
reduced casualties among US and its allies but it did not significantly alter the power
relations between the actors. Still, the jury is out wheter or not this is an RMA since
the wars of Iraq and Afghanistan did provide US military victories, but it has not yet
been tested against equal or near equal opponents like Russia or China (with reference
to the criteria in chapter 4, figure 3.) But could it be argued that the US ongoing
Transformation effort is a RMA on the grounds of general acknowledgement of
increased power among other actors? To certain extent, yes. The following challenge
remains: the US is so dominant in all aspects that it is difficult to determine wheter
other states behavior is significantly altered so that the US get political concessions on
the basis of their Transformation effort, or if they only react to their general
dominance in military power. Two indications are relevant in relation to this; a) other
nations seem to move towards network-centric military organizations, and b)
developments to counter these advantages are given high priority among potential
opponents. For the sake of argument we will use China as example here.
37
Defence Panel report mentioned above. Worth noting is the central role of joint efforts
between services and information. Two key components in network-centric operations.
38
39
10 Conclusion
While the term RMA originated in Soviet military thinking as a way of addressing the
offsetting effects of an increase in US conventional capabilities as a function of
technological progress, it lead to an investigating process. When the ONA in Pentagon
started to look into the phenomenon to see if the Soviet assumption was correct the
1991 Gulf War was underway. This led Krepinevich and Marshall to ask themselves if
this phenomenon was something beyond a contemporary phenomenon, if it was a
“fundamental discontinuity in military operations” (Krepinevich, 1992 [2002].) This
again led to a historical investigation to find other examples. They also shed
themselves of the preferred Soviet term MTR eventually and adopted others more in
tune with what they thought corresponded better with the phenomenon and US
interests. Krepinevich used “military revolution” and Marshall “RMA.” And so the
snowball started rolling and the RMA debate found traction way beyond the ONA. It
became prominent in the political debate over what to do with the US armed forces in
the post-Soviet era and it got operationalized in the process called Transformation. It is
a classic example of Wittgenstein’s axiom that concepts lead us to make
investigations; are the expression of our interest, and direct our interest.
But in the debate during the 1990s and up until today several competing
definitions of RMA emerged. Much of the reason for this was/is due to the uncertainty
of what the abstract phenomenon is, or should be understood as. The definition put
forward in this assignment is an attempt to take a step towards creating a common
understanding of the term by doing away with some of the outlying perspectives. The
argument is that a change in combat regime/character of warfare can be addressed by
other terms and RMA is only interesting if there is an effect on power relations. In
extension to this it has also been important to try and keep the established meaning of
the terms “revolution” and “military affairs” closely linked to the definition of RMA
presented here. That is essential if one seeks to create a common understanding and
avoid being too exposed to confirmation bias just based on the name of the term. If
40
there is no link it is smarter to change the term as was done when Marshall and
Krepinevich moved from using MTR to RMA.
Maybe the most crucial and interesting element besides the actual definition of
the phenomenon is the character of the phenomenon. In terms of research this is the
core. It will have a large bearing on the choice of variables and design. Even though
there is nothing in the phenomenon that guarantees a perpetual occurrence it will most
likely do because of the relational nature of it. Theoretically it might become obsolete
through the absence of incentives that might lead to a RMA, or the absence of
coincidences that might lead to it.
With just one case study it is difficult to determine whether the definition
provides sufficient decidability, a clear scope and a clear enough meaning. The
framework provided in this assignment hopefully can contribute to further research
into the phenomenon of RMA by providing a demarcation of the scope of the
phenomenon. Others can use this to narrow the focus, finding more specific variables
and adding predictive power. Hopefully this effort to explain, not just the
41
phenomenon, but also the term/concept itself will contribute to moving the term
towards a more established understanding of it.
42
43
Bibliography
Adamsky, Dima, 2010. The Culture of Military Innovation. Stanford, CA: Stanford
University Press.
Clark, Christopher, 2006. Iron Kingdom. The Rise and Downfall of Prussia, 1600-
1947. London: Penguin Books Ltd.
Clausewitz, Carl von, 1827. On War. [online] Clausewitz Reference Archive. Available
at:http://www.marxists.org/reference/archive/clausewitz/works/on-war/ [Accessed 8
December 2012].
Echevarria, Antulio J. II., 1995-96. “War and Politics: The revolution in military
affairs and the continued relevance of Clausewitz”. Joint Forces Quarterly,
Winter. Washington D.C: National Defense University Press.
Evans, Eric J., 2011. The Shaping of Modern Britain: Identity, Industry and Empire,
1780-1914. Harlow (United Kingdom): Pearson Education Ltd.
Gottemoeller, Rose E., 1989. Conflict and Consensus in the Soviet Armed Forces.
Santa Monica, CA: The RAND Corporation.
Griffith, Paddy, 2007. French Napoleonic Infantry Tactics 1792-1815. Oxford: Osprey
Publishing Ltd.
44
Higham, Robin and Kagan, Fredrick W., 2002. The Military History of the Soviet
Union. New York, NY: Palgrave.
Houghton, 2011. The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language . New
York: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Trade and Reference Publishers. Available at:
http://ahdictionary.com/ [Accessed 5 June 2012].
Information Office of the State Council , 2013. China Internet Information Center. The
Diversified Employment of China's Armed Forces. Available at:
http://www.china.org.cn/government/whitepaper/node_7181425.htm. [Accessed
13 October 2013]
Jacobs, Walter D., 1969. Frunze: The Soviet Clausewitz 1885-1925. Haag: Martinus
Nijhoff.
Khun, Thomas S., 1970. The Structure of Scientific Revolutions. London: University of
Chicago Press.
Krepinevich, Andrew F., 2012. Discussing the origin of the term RMA. [conversation]
(Personal communication 27 November 2012)
Luttwak, Edward N., 2001. Strategy: The Logic of War and Peace. Cambridge:
Harvard University Press.
Metz, Steven K. and Kievit, James, 1995. “Strategy and the Revolution in Military
Affairs”. U.S. Army War College. Available at:
http://www.au.af.mil/au/awc/awcgate/ssi/stratrma.pdf. [Accessed 29 May 2012]
Metz, Steven K., 2013. Discussing RMA and the role of power and political
concessions. [conversation] (Personal communication 28 November 2012)
Mikaberidze, Alexander, 2009. Conscription in Russia in the late eighteenth and early
nineteenth centuries. In: Stoker, Schneid and Blanton, ed. 2009. Conscription in
the Napoleonic Era. A revolution in military affairs? London: Routledge.
46
Murray, Williamson, 1997. Thinking of Revolutions in Military Affairs. Joint Forces
Quarterly, Summer issue.
Neuman, Sigmund and Hagen, Mark Von, 1986. Engels and Marx on Revolution, War,
and the Army in Society. In: P. Paret, ed. 1986. Makers of Modern Strategy from
Machiavelli to the Nuclear Age. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Ch. 9.
Odom, William E., 1988/89. Soviet Military Doctrine. Foreign Affairs, Winter issue.
O’Hanlon, Michael E., 2012. Discussion on RMA and the role of a temporal
component in definitions of the term. [conversation] (Personal communication
27 November 2012)
Owens, William A., 2000. Lifting the Fog of War. New York: Farrar, Straus and
Giroux.
Patrick, John J., 1994. Reflections on the Revolution in Military Affairs. Available
(online) at: www.comw.org/rma/fulltext/reflect.html
Reddel, Carl W., 1975. A Step Toward Understanding the Soviet View of Modern
Warfare. Air University Review, September-October . Available at:
(www.airpower.maxwell.af.mil/airchronicles/aureview/1975/sep-
oct/reddel.html#reddel) [Accessed 16 April 2012]
47
Rothenberg, Gunther E., 1999. The Napoleonic Wars. London: Cassel & Co.
Scmitt, Eric, 2004. Iraq-Bound Troops Confront Rumsfeld Over Lack of Armor. The
New York Times, [online] 08 December. Available at:
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/12/08/international/middleeast/08cnd-
rumsfeld.html?_r=0, [Accessed 10 September 2013].
Smith, Rupert, 2006. The Utility of Force: The Art of War in the Modern World.
London: Peguin Books Ltd.
Tennyson, Alfred, 1850. In Memoriam A.H.H. London: Edward Moxon, Dover Street.
Toffler, Alvin and Toffler, Heidi 1993. War and Anti-War: Survival at the
Dawn of the 21st Century. New York: Little, Brown and Company
Walter, Dierk, 2009. Conscription in Russia in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth
centuries. In: Stoker, Schneid and Blanton, ed. 2009. Conscription in the
Napoleonic Era. A revolution in military affairs? London: Routledge.
Walter, Dierk 2009. Meeting the French challenge: conscription in Prussia, 1807-1815.
I D. Stoker, F. C. Schneid, & B. D. Harold (Red.), Conscription in the
Napoleonic Era: A Revolution in Military Affairs? (ss. 24-45). New York:
Routledge.
48
Appendix
Emails of informed consent from Dr. Krepinevich and Professor Metz can be presented upon
request.
49