May 30, 2024
Notes from the Pentagon
U.S. Pacific commander says China’s military exercises are practice for future Taiwan invasion
By Bill Gertz
The Chinese exercises, dubbed Joint Sword 2024A, “looked like a rehearsal” for a future assault, the four-star admiral said in an interview with Japan’s Nikkei newspaper. They were held May 23 and 24 and followed the inauguration of Taiwanese President Lai Ching-te three days earlier.
China’s military declared the exercises were meant as “punishment” for Taiwan’s new leader, who announced in his inaugural speech the island is an independent sovereign state.
U.S. forces in the region closely monitored the Taiwan exercises: “We watched it. We took note. We learned from it,” Adm. Paparo said. “And they helped us prepare for the future.”
The admiral said a key to assessing any future action is China’s calculus on whether an attack across the 100-mile-wide Taiwan Strait would succeed. He said China’s military forces are building up at “an alarming rate.”
“The U.S. government charges me with being ready today, tomorrow, next month and next year, in accordance with the Taiwan Relations Act,” Adm. Paparo said.
The 1979 law calls for supplying defensive arms to Taiwan and alerting Congress to any serious threats to the island.
President Biden has said U.S. military forces will intervene if China takes military action against Taiwan. If a conflict does take place, U.S. and allied forces would prevail in the war, Adm. Paparo predicted.
Tensions mark Air Force debate on how to use new B-21 bomber
Two Air Force bomber experts are warning that the B-21’s full capabilities for use in non-nuclear military operations are not well understood and may be limited by bureaucratic tensions within the service.
“Combat air forces tacticians and operational planners have yet to understand the B-21 Raider’s potential capability,” the analysts wrote in a May 7 report in the Air Force journal Air and Space Operations Review. “Leadership’s vision is clear, but service-level parochial interests, insular platform cultures and competition for resources are creating unhealthy tensions within the combat air forces, [the] Department of the Air Force, and across the joint force.”
The authors are Air Force Lt. Col. Shane Praiswater, director of operations for the 31st Test and Evaluation Squadron, B-21 initial cadres at Edwards Air Force Base, California, and retired Air Force Brig. Gen. Paula Thornhill, now with Johns Hopkins University’s School of Advanced International Studies, and the Rand Corp. think tank.
The Air Force showed off the B-21 in flight for the first time this week. The bomber when deployed will be a dual-capable, penetrating strike stealth bomber that will carry both conventional and nuclear weapons.
The report warns that the tensions over the B-21 could limit the bomber’s effective use and weaken Air Force effectiveness against a peer competitor such as China. The differences involve a new Air Force war-fighting concept called “pulsed airpower” — concentrating airpower at certain times and places to set up windows of opportunity for the other airpower.
The concept replaces past Air Force goals of creating air dominance and air superiority in combat zones.
The debate involves whether to emphasize B-21 operations for long-range “standoff” operations — such as firing precision missiles from great distances, and “stand-in” forces that operate in small units in contested areas. The report states the B-21’s cutting-edge stealth and weapons-carrying capabilities make it capable of operating in both environments and thus current doctrine should be revised.
“Such a reconsideration can also help the Air Force transcend stealth/non-stealth and fighter/bomber debates to embrace new levels of tactical creativity,” the report stated.
Unless the debate is resolved, the Air Force may fail to fully utilize the B-21 and result in holes in military planning, the report said.
“The B-21 Raider family of systems addresses these challenges by unlocking the joint force with stand-in capabilities and addressing current Indo-Pacific region shortfalls,” the report said. “In light of aggressive statements from China and the enduring risk of escalation in Ukraine, the U.S. Air Force faces a significant challenge in preparing to fight now while simultaneously planning for future operations.”
The emphasis on pulsed operations might produce a “dangerous perspective” that mistakenly expects a future war with China to be short: “To be clear, the ‘wish-casting’ associated with a short war is hardly the predominant view in the Pentagon or literature, but behind the scenes, this viewpoint is surprisingly common within the [combat air forces],” the authors said.
The B-21 can get close to battles while remaining protected from advanced air defenses.
In a war against China, fuel limitations make it difficult to support jet fighters and thus the fuel-efficient B-21 should be used for attacking mobile and small targets close to the war zone. Also, Chinese missile strikes against regional U.S. bases make operational headquarters unlikely to survive and thus the B-21 would be a better choice for close-in strikes. Dispersing aircraft to avoid missile strikes also will not work.
“Notwithstanding this welcome dose of political realism into planning assumptions, a decision not to target China seems to be driven by the recognition that if China uses its substantial missile arsenals to attack U.S. bases in the Indo-Pacific — if not the U.S. mainland — the Air Force will struggle mightily to counter an invasion of Taiwan,” the report said.
Electronically, the B-21 will provide “unparalleled and novel” gear that can manipulate the enemy and shape its reactions in pulsed operations: “Despite its appearance, the B-21 is not, as some derisively refer to it, a B-2.1,” the report said, noting the bomber’s evolutionary leap in radar-evading stealth technology.
The bomber is also more flexible and adaptable than the B-2 and can be used with timely preparation. It can also switch targets or missions while airborne.
Should China try to stop B-21 close attacks, its air defenses and other resources will be drained, providing a U.S. advantage.
“If the B-21 program — which is still in early testing — remains on track, the Air Force has a game-changing asset coming sooner rather than later,” the report concluded.
Wicker unveils defense buildup plan
“It is far past time to rebuild America’s military. We can avoid war by preparing for it,” Sen. Roger Wicker of Mississippi said in releasing his 52-page buildup blueprint.
America is faced with an emerging “axis of aggressors,” including China, Russia, Iran and North Korea, urgently requiring a major military buildup, the report states.
Mr. Wicker wants to boost U.S. defense spending to a full 5% of gross domestic product, including an immediate boost of $55 billion for the current fiscal year.
“Chinese leader Xi Jinping remains fervently committed to reunifying Taiwan, peacefully or otherwise, and continues to act aggressively toward the Philippines, Australia and others,” the report stated. “U.S. military failure against China would drastically change the course of the 21st century, rendering the decades to come far darker for Americans, as well as the rest of the free world, economically, politically and culturally.”
Currently, the American military lacks modern equipment, and faces a shortage of training and maintenance funding based on the current defense strategy and budget. The U.S. military is stretched thin and outfitted poorly, vulnerabilities recognized by U.S. adversaries, the report states.
Mr. Wicker’s military expansion would recapitalize the force and set up a robust defense industrial base for decades. Current needs include large numbers of new ships, aircraft, vehicles, munitions and logistics equipment.
“Defense investment does not guarantee victory. But failing to invest properly denies us a chance to deter war,” the report stated. “’Peace through strength’ continues to be the most cost-effective national security policy.”
The report, “21st Century Peace Through Strength: A Generational Investment in the U.S. Military,” includes a detailed list of recommendations that includes rapid munitions production, accelerating the deployment of a Guam air and missile defense system, and devoting more resources to developing advanced technology arms.
|