Synopsis
The U.S. military’s “AirSea Battle” is short on
specifics, but appears to draw much from earlier concepts of the “revolution in
military affairs.” This begs the question whether ASB is simply a ploy to
repackage the RMA as a “new” warfighting concept.
Commentary
The U.S. military, which has never been at a loss for
buzzwords to describe its warfighting strategies or operational objectives, has
come up with a new nomenclature, AirSea Battle (ASB). It is a supposedly novel approach
to warfare intended to counter 21st century threat, particularly from emerging
nation-state competitors such as China and Iran.
During the 1990s, the prevailing concept inside the
Pentagon was the “revolution in military affairs” (RMA). In the 2000s, this
mutated into “network-centric warfare” and “force transformation.” Today, while
the perils may be “new,” the tools to fight this battle are anything but AirSea
Battle is just the RMA in another guise.
ASB and Anti-Access/Area Denial
Central to the ASB concept is overcoming the
“anti-access/area denial challenge.” According to the Center for Strategic and
Budgetary Affairs (CSBA), “anti-access (A2) strategies aim to prevent U.S.
forces from operating from fixed land bases in a theater of operations,” while
“area-denial (AD) operations aim to prevent the freedom of action of maritime
forces operating in the theater.” CSBA defines the A2/AD threat as strikes by
ballistic and cruise missiles (both land-attack and antiship), artillery and
rocket barrages, submarine operations, and longrange air strikes.
Cyber-attacks, anti-satellite warfare, and even coastal mines are also usually
characteristic of A2/AD.
If the A2/AD threat seems overly broad, AirSea Battle is
equally ambitious. While ASB is short on specifics, it is based on the idea of
carrying out massive counterstrikes against an enemy’s home territory. Cruise
missiles, launched from submarines or ships, along with smart bombs dropped
from stealth aircraft, would blind and incapacitate the adversary by taking out
its military surveillance and communications systems. Other attacks would target
the enemy’s missile bases, airfields, and naval facilities.
ASB = RMA?
Leaving aside this scary scenario of escalating clashes
and counterattacks (how, for instance, might China, or a nuclear-armed Iran,
react to an attack on its national territory?), however, AirSea Battle, as a
warfighting concept, is depressingly familiar, and instantly recognizable, to
anyone who has studied the RMA.
While details are sketchy, ASB seems to revolve around
two major ideas: jointness and networking. In January 2012, the U.S. Department
of Defence (DoD) released its vision for a “Joint Operational Access Concept” (JOAC).
According to the DoD, JOAC is explicitly intended to deal with “opposed
operational access in an advanced anti-access/area-denial environment.”
Central to JOAC, according to this document, is a “future
joint forces [that] will leverage cross-domain synergy [i.e., air, sea, land,
and cyberspace] to establish superiority in some combinations of domains that
will provide the freedom of action required by the mission.” JOAC “envisions a
seamless application of combat power between the domains, with greater
integration at dramatically lower echelons that joint forces currently
achieve.”
And how do we achieve JOAC? By networking. According to a recent article in The American Interest by two U.S. flag officers, ASB would
use “networked, integrated attack-in-depth” in order to “disrupt, destroy, and defeat”
enemy forces. U.S. Representative J. Randy Forbes, in a March 2012 article in
the online magazine, The Diplomat, also emphasized networking in ASB: “More
specifically, the joint force (integrated air, ground, and naval forces) armed
with resilient communications (networked) aims to strike at multiple nodes of
an enemy’s system (attack-in-depth) along three lines of effort.”
If all this sounds familiar it’s because the RMA of the
1990s and 2000s was all about networking, jointness, precision-strike, and the
like. “Integrated joint operations” was a watchword of network-centric warfare
(NCW) and force transformation. In defining NCW the now-defunct U.S. DoD Office
of Force Transformation argued nearly a decade ago that it generated “increased
combat power by networking sensors, decision makers, and shooters to achieve
shared awareness, increased speed of command, high tempo of operations, greater
lethality, increased survivability, and a degree of self-synchronization.”
Above all, the RMA entailed the “linking of people,
platforms, weapons, sensors, and decision aids into a single network,”
resulting in “networked forces that operate with increased speed and
synchronization and are capable of achieving massed effects.”
Everything Old is New Again
AirSea Battle, therefore, is basically the RMA rebranded.
This begs the question: Is it a sincere effort by the U.S. military to apply
lessons learned about the RMA and force transformation to a new global threat environment?
Or is it a cynical attempt to save expensive new weapons programs, preserve
existing force structures, and prop up military expenditures by magnifying
threats and by promoting ambitious warfighting concepts? Either way, the DoD
needs to do a much better job of explaining ASB’s purpose and function than trotting
out the same old clichés of the RMA.
Richard A. Bitzinger is Senior Fellow with the Military
Transformations Programme at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies
(RSIS), Nanyang Technological University. Formerly with the RAND Corp. and the Center
for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments, he has been writing on aerospace and
defence issues for more than 20 years.
This article first appeared on RSIS Commentaries and is
reposted here with permission.
The “JOAC”, “The American Interest” & “The Diplomat” Links in the above were
added by PacificSentinel for clarity & context.